H IF
? T
V
!
'1
a.
'Ml
TELEPHONE 365STAR
Business Office
VOL. XV.
1,500
Go On
Strike
BOARD OF 'HEALTH OFFICERS
QiVEN POLICE POWER TO
Several hundred Japanese laborerswent out Btrlko at Alea plantation lastevening and presented the manage-ment with a long list of alleged grievances which they asked to be remedied before they will consent to go
out into the flel again.About midnight a telephonemessage
was received at the police stationfrom Alea to the effect that 1500 menwere on strike. The man at the Aleaend of the telephone wire was some-what excited and the communicationwas not as clear as It might havebeen. Whother tho number of strik-ers was exaggerated Is not Known.
Today, at tho request or the oBardof Health, six men were commission-ed as special police officers and thisafternoon they went down to Alea Inthe train to enforce certain sanitaryregulations which are said to bo- - tnecause of the trouble. .
There has been sickness at Aiea ota contagious nature and strict regura-tlon- s
have to be enforced for thesafety of those living on the planta-tion.
Deputy Sheriff Jarrott stated thisafternoon thaif beyond the commission-
ing of the officers of tho Board ofHealth there had been no other actiontaken fcy the Honolulu police. If as-
sistance was noeded at Alea It could besent for and would be supplied at once.
When the fact of the strike was tele-
phoned In last night there was no re-
quest for police aid.
FIVE BILLS SIGNED
BY THEJMRNOR
NEW LAWS MADE EFFECTIVE BY' EXECUTIVE ACTION SINKING
FUND BILL BECOMES LAW.
The governor today signed tho following bills:
Senate bill 72, to exempt lepers at thesettlement from taxation;
Senate bill 85, making special approprlatton for uso of the College of Agriculture and Mochanlo Arts;
Houso Bill 133 making special appropriation for tho Immediate uso of theHawaii Agricultural Experimental Statlon;
Houso bill 187 relating to licenses;House bill 191 to provide a sinking
fund for redemption or purchase ofTerritorial bonds.
Delicious pies and cakes. Candyfresh every day. New England Bakery,
Whento Buy Wheat
Whento Sell Corn
Only those on the "inside" know,and we do not assume the responsibility of advising our clients. Wegladly, however furnish full data onevery security.
If you place the charge of youestate in our nanus It will be managed conservatively and the dividendswill be good and sure.
Hawaiian Trust Do
Foil Slroel
1 1 1 1
THE
WANTED A WARRANT
FOR "BITING EELS"
TURNKEY JACK MELANPHY PRAC-
TICES MEDICINE WITHOUT THE
HEALTH BOARD'S PERMIT.
Antone Pierre, driver of a milk wagon, punched an eel In the Jaw with histhumb at the fish market at 7:30 o'clock
this morning and asked the Chinese!atall-keep- or the price of tho squirmer.The eel Itself answored by getting holdof iPlorse's thumb nnd rofuslng to letgo. Pierre yelled and swung the eel I
round his head. He hit a couple ofChinese In the neck, accidentally, andthis added to the confusion. The eel'shead was cut off but tho Jaw still bitand Pierre still yelled, whereupon thoJaws were pried open.
Then Pierre drove like mad to thepolice station, sucking his Jorn andbleeding thumb, and appealed to theman nt tre desk to arrest the Chinesestall-keep- er "for keeping bltlng-eels.- "
He got tho merriest laugh that hasever shaken 'th none too secure plasterof the station.
Turnkey Jack Melanphy doctored theman's torn thumb and fixed It up sothat It is now resting easy. Good- -
hearted Melanphy was so Intent on hisdeed of mercy that he forgot that h(was defying the Board of Health bycuring without a permit from thataugust aggregation. When his comrades in arms Informed him that Itwas their sacred duty to inform on himhe nearly fainted.
"Carn't a chap heal an eel bite?"he pleaded.
"Remember Wallach," was all thecomfort h got.
GOVERNOR VETOES
HOUSE LEPER BILL
GIVES STRONG REASONS WHYTHE MEASURE IN ITS PRESENTSHAPE SHOULD NOT BE A LAW.
The Governor sent his veto of Housebill No. 34, which provides for tho preliminary examination and detention ofpersons afflicted with leprosy, to thelegislature this morning. The reasonsglvon by tho Governor for vetoing themeasure wero admitted by Senators tobo very sound .
One of them was that tho bill failed toprovide that any person "alleged" to boafflicted with the disease could bo citedto appear for examination for commit-ment to tho settlement. Under thebill it is provided that a citation to aperson to appear for a medical examlnatlon, can Issue only to one actually having tho disease. Tho governorstated that he would have no objectionto tho passage of a bill that would requtro a ponal summons to bo Issued to
person before such person could bodeprived of his or her liberty on account of having leprosy.
Tho Senate postponed considerationof tho veto until tomorrow afternoon.It Is realised that the bill In its present.shape, Is worthless. It Is likely that ameasure will bo Introduced, seeking tomeet tho objections raised by the governor.
CHAMBERLAIN'S COUGH REMEDY.This Is "a medicine of great worth
and merit. Try It when you have acough or cold and you are certain tobe pleased with the quick relief whichit affords. It Is pleasant to take andcan always ho depended upon. For salaby all dealers, Benson, Smith & Co--agents for Hawaii.
Wat Dyer Sboes
IMMENSE NEW STOCK
IN ALL STYLES.
34.50 S4.00 $5.00
Ladies Sorosis Shoe
HLAOIC AND TAN,
TINTHD QANVAH RAMI.
j, 13t Ite & Oqu Ltd
HAWAIIAN STARi
New Ornamental Parlor Alarm Clock Free to Star Subscribers.
HONOLULU, ' WEDNESDAY, APRIL 24, 1907.
Charles Moyer With
Whose Name Roosevelt
Links That Of Harriman
CJTA7?.T.T
Tederoc4on kiln
Charles H. Moyer with whose name 30, 1D03. The murder of Governor
President "Roosevelt has associated thatof Harriman Is the president of theWestern Federation ot MIiutb, whowith William D. Haywood the Secretary-T-
reasurer of the organization, andGeorgo A. Pettibone formerly a mem-
ber of tho executive board ot tho Fede-ration, aro charged with the murder offormer Governor Frank Steunenbergerwho was blown to atoms by a bombplaced at hlsown gateway, December
e 9
carefulcase,
boon
Uy
Steuncnberg appears have been onetho results- of tho feud that
for ycaro the Mine Asand the
of Miners, course100 wero
at theof the Mine Owners'
and some instigation otthe .Thirty inare agnlnst Moyer,
Pettibone.
SCHDYLEBS REPOIT
1
9 Engineer Schuyler finds the plans for tho Nuuanu welled und well 'the In some particulars butstill workable; the wooden stuvo pipe for effluent and waste
a novel construction for a dam of this type, but byentirely the problem easily, and
practically the carried out; the damentirely safe. .
Ho recommends Increasing the height of the dam ten feet, Increasingir
the capacity of tho reservoir per cent; tho sluicing of earth fromthe bottom of tho reservoir for dam
He estimates the cost to tho dam at 160,865, that Itought to completedl In a year.
e 9see eeeThe are the main .portions enco of G. designing
of Engineer Sohuyler's report to the glneer, tho with L. White- -
Joint A consld- - houso and tho subsequent correspond-erablo of tho report taken enco between the Dpsrtment of Publicup with a discussion of the advantages Works1 and tho tho reportof the dam and of tho In- - of H. Clay Kollogg. C. J3., submittingcrease in height and capacity.
Following the usual formal address totho committee, the roport proceeds:
Tho Intervening time since my arrivalhas boon spent in a thorough
of the and a exa-
mination of the documents in thowhich havoperusal, including
submitted tie work amo unginui pinna,
correspond- -
DUVAUCHELLE
INDICTED T
GRAND JURY INDIOT- -
M10NT AOA'INBT THJ9 FORMIOIt
PQL10M OWIO10R.
An indlelinant utfalnit Huipne Du- -11. ..nil- -- nftl-Ul- -t U
UtOU rsturtutd (HI. marati) T.rrlt.riu rmmui jury, lis la cmmhmnofwpUNg from Alt Wmi.
t an nt llwll-- u Fr In
toof existed
between Owners'sociation Western Federation
durlnc the of whichmore than uMtrie,ns Is charged on behalf nnd In-
stigation Asso--elatio- n,
at theFederation. murders allcharged Haywood
and
ON ill 1
Dam consider- -drawn; lacking
quitepipes as modlfleuKellogg sufficient; seepage one already
solved; Kellogg and
sixty
complete andO be
following Wilder,contract
legislative committee,portion
contractor;
ground
00ft
(It.
A
specifications
modifications
construction.
e0
a
S. en-
M.
Is
recommended
Investiga-tion
of the jlans recommond- -
ed by him, and tho svorn testimony ofWltnessos summoned y the Investlgat
5
lng committee regarllng the generalconduct or the worn, to enable moto arrive at a deflnte conclusion onthe nature of the materials used and
for my available fpr use in I oausod
specifications .reports and (Continued on Page Five.)
UWTUUK8
I1IU
ft,QU $D.UU
HAWAII.
"brlb
rm
asbJSlnatell,
VI
modifications
IN THE FEDB.IAL COURT.
George Kekauoha, the former Dspirty Sheriff of Koolau pleaded not gullty yesterday before Judge pals, to
wa thftt against Ama Llllll who wasehargatl 'with a slmlar offence. Uethare out under bonds
A nolle proeMqiil v In thecaw against Ooo Hay, tmtmwith Mndinir ohcoeit letters throujfl)tlie'mall, ills HtUirnty. I. llumjili- -
rays, entered a dinirrr to ttte iMdlet.inent.
tiiii li Tigo I'uon.To Ulii Orltfrioil, Ptttf HuUti &it4
SffiM BtfMto. m wsat La
uu uy. Mm MMluA Mkuv tM M W & m mm m h mm
DEADLOCK D
There seems likely to bo an attempt iown or slash those Items In a waymade by cot-tai- n elements In the legis- - that will cripple tho department hope- -
lature to force an extension of 'the lessly. If however, the Board of Healthsession, and to Incidentally accedes to the desire of the legislature
fOrco the Board ot Health Ho permit J. In tho Wallach affair, 'then the variousLor Wallach to treat the lepers. The appropriations requested will befeollng that the Board should bo forced promptly passed.to accede to tho wishes of tho loglsla-- There has thus far been no publicturo In this Wallach matter Is growing, expression of Intention to adopt suchand there Is tho most Intense sentiment a. policy, but underneath the surfaco the Tho todav nresented a demandIn favor of pursuing such a policy.
At the present time the variouspropriation measures are before tho
conference committee. Pressure will, itIs, thought, bo brought by the House onIts members in tho conference commit-tee, to force them to haggle and wastetinq over various Items In order to force an extension session andsidetrack the measures. Incidentally to enact some legislativeTJje Hems or tne or iieaun ap- - measure mat will permit wallach toproprlatlons aro likely to be center to settlement. The Intense feollngof onslaught. Tho House on this matter was Indicated thewill, Is now feared, led through resolution adopted yesterday by theoutsldo pressure from the House to hold House.
RUKAUAI
BRITISH UARKENTINE'S YOUNG
''FAVORITE SNATCHED BY GIANT
WAVE LAST FRIDAY MORNING.
The British barkentine Iltlga, Cap
tain Pearson, arrived at Makawell, Kauai, at noon on Monday with her flag
at half-ma- st In token of tho loss at seaat 5:10 a.m., Friday, April 19. of haractlng-thlrd-ofllco- r, C. A. Stacy,prentice but' 18 years ot age.
The I.-- I. S. N. Co.'s steamer Mlka- -
hala, Captain Gregory, was at Walmoa,Kauai, when the Helga was sightedbound for Makawell. Purser W. E.Miles of the Mikahala later telephonedMakawell to ascertain the cause of thohalf-mastin- g of the bnrkentlne's ensign.He then learned the details of thedrowning of Stacy and roported thofacts on tho Mikahala's arrival here3 o'clock this morning.
Early Friday morning last youngStacy, during a heavy storm, went for.yard to lash an anchor that was throatenlng to work loose from Its fastonlngsand perhaps pound a hole In the ves-
sel. A great wave curled ovor the forepart and when she shed the tons ofwater Stacy was no longer thero.
Lines wero thrown out nnd a llfobuoy droonod ovor at once; and 'thoHelga's crew, under tho personnl direction of the master who was summoneddid everything that could be done torescue the boy.
Stacy was a great favorite with allhands foro nnd nft. Ho came of goodfamily and his folks are In Australia.It was his ambition to became mnstorof a vessel nnd he was an apprentice,learning tho profession. At the timeof his being washed overboard he wasrated ns He hadbut two years more to serve before howould have been glvon a master'sticket.
Members of the Helga's crow aro pre-
paring a memorial to send to his peopleunder the Southern Cross. I
The Il-l-ga sailed from Honolulu oneweek ago today for Makawell to dis-
charge coal. She oame here from New-
castle and lay at anchor off 'file harborfor orders. AVhlla here her master.Captain Pearson, was called to sit onthe special board of Inquiry tVt Invest!- -
adultery. Ill trial was continued as gate the conduct of Captain Ritchie In
entered
A,
la vkm
present
ap
connection with his vessel, the Britishship Loch Carve, going aslwre at Ka-inm- lo.
The eourt oame to Its decisionat 11:10 o'oloek Tuesday nlHlrt, April IS.
and Penraen was able to take his vea--
sal out tlo day follow! hit.i -
11LAMKBT BOONOMY.The sale of Dot ton BlanWsts and
aomforUr how on at teens shuul.lUret all aitrawtf hAuaekeeoerSi Its an
opportunity i v nvwsy. tola willtw fr t ton ly, Tkuratoy,
WALLACHS
nauvo memoers arouseu in to the UnUed Rallroads for an inorcaseuna muner. i uio UKeiy 10 o ot wnco to thrco dollars Ter dav ofa support of such action from .piht hoursthe
At tho present time 'the generalstmcme seems to be to hold up the various appropriation measures In order to
the of theappropriation
uoara gotho the
the members InIt be
an ap
at
actlng-thlrd-mat- e.
IAUKEASTOPSRAIDSEXCEPTBY HISORDER
POSTS NOTICE THAT GAMBIJERS
MUST NOT BE PULLED WITHOUT
HIS, AUTHORITY.
24.
are
24.
won tho
24.
was at tho hw Apn i Arcn- -
this the of has been with'the following order signed by lno
'v'Hereafter no raid upon Chinese orJnpancso premises for arrest of persons alleged to be gambling shall bemade authority from tho
"Reports of gambling by Informersshall bo to the of De
Heretofore raids havo beensomewnat promiscuously and In somecases more zeal than sense has beenexhibited.
LONG MAY SHEHereafter tho Stars and Stripes will
float from a staff abovocourt when the Magistrate isassessing drunks, lining gamblers, dlsclplining and wnywards, reconcuing llat-lro- n lighters, reproving red-llp- ht and
dispensing Justice. Yestertho government sent a United
States flag to Sheriff Iaukea who willsee that It to the breozo
court Is In sosslon.
PASSENGERS DEPARTED.Por S. S. W. G. Hall, for Kauai iports,
23. Mr. and Mrs. A. S. Wilcox,Mr, and Mrs. J. 51. Moragne, F. C.Crawford, Rov. O. H. Itev. E.
TImoteo, C. B. Gray, Miss Kelter, J.M. Ltdgate and
RESUMED PRACTICE.Dr. McLennan after long
has and resumed practice.Royal Hawaiian Hotel grounds corner
and PhoneMain 229.
A MATTER OFHEALTH
POWDERAbaolntsiyenre
IMHO&UBiTITUmAOrram f Turtwr Pswrfar.frtfrm mum r nliM-ilRH- 9
SECONDEDITION
No.
CARMEN
DEMAND
INCREASE(Associated Press Cable to The Star.)
SAN FRANCISCO, Co!.. Aprilcarmen
aoopiyinure
strongSenate.
Chief
.the
day
April
child.
The will be refused.
VELOCIFY
(Associated Press Cable to The Star.)
I
a
LONDON, England, April Velocity has City and Suburban.
(Associated Press Cable to TheSAN FRANCISCO, Cal., April
The sale ot some of the roads of theUnited Railroads Is roported llkclyj
PalliumFor
eli
ailroad
(Associated Press Cable to TheA surprise sprung police ouLi.ArH, La..
morning In posting bishop Blenk InvestedSheriff pauium.
Iaukea:
without
presentedtectives."
WAVE.
policeDistrict
domesticdistrict girlies
otherwise
Is thrownwhenever
Gullck,S.
absencereturned,
Boretanla Richards streets.
Mid
demand
REA6M
4705
Star.)
lenkStar.)
statlon
truants
PEACE(Associated Press Cable to The Star.)
WASHINGTON, D. C, April 24. Apeace agreemont han been reached at
made Amapala, between the governments ofHonduras and Nicaragua.
WAGES .
GO UP(Associated Press Cable to The Star.)
PROVIDENCE, R. I., April 24. TheProvidence street railway company hasIncreased wages ton per cent.
BRIGAND IS CAPTURED(Associated Press Cable to The Star.)
WARSAW, Rusla, April 24. BrigandStanislaus Lis has been captured andmortally wounded.
CLOSE TOUCH.
With the most prominent exportingmercantilo house of Yokohama, together with the large trade he carries onwith the plantation stores all over theislands, enablo K. Ynmamoto to dealIn all kinds of Japanese goods at asmaller price than any other Japanesemerchant in Honolulu. Hotel street,near Nuuanu.
All AmericaSHOESFOR MEN
$3.50 8 4.00
Just on hand a larno ne of these
wShoQi, The world over J'All
joes are for th.!runlfoj-- hloll quality.
Balmorals and Onfords InColt, Kid, Quo Metal and Tan RlJiila.Try a pair.
MAHUFACTUREnS $11 CO,
m mm mm mtm W mi mm
Known
Ratent
uunm
1
1
11
Oceanic Steamship Company.
Tho nno Fasnenger Steamers of th Is line will arrive at and leave this
port as hereunder:
FROM SAN FRANCISCO.ALAMEDA APRIL 26
SIERRA MAY G
ALAMEDA MAY 17
ALAMEDA JUNE 7
ALAMEDA JUNE 23
FOR SAN FRANCISCO.SONOMA ...ALAMEDA..SIERRA ....ALAMEDA ,
ALAMEDA ,
APRIL 30
,. 1.. 11
.. 22
. 12
In connection with the sailing of tho steamers, tho Agents areprepared to Issue to Intending passengers through tickets by any
railroad from San Francisco to all In the States, and fromNew York by steamship line to all European
FOR FURTHER PARTICULARS APPLY TO
W. G. Irwin k C(LIMITED).
General JlgezxAs Oceanic S. S. Company,
Canadian -- Australian Royal Mail
STEAMSHIP COMPANYSteamers of tho line running In connection with the CANADIAN-PACIFI- C
HAILWAY COMPANY between Vancouver, B. C, and Sydney,N. S. W., and calling at Victoria, B. C, Honolulu and. Brisbane, Q.
DUE AT HONOLULU ON OR ABOUT THE DATES BELOW STATED, VIZ
FOR AUSTRALIA. FOR VANCOUVER.
MOANA MAY 4 MANUKA MAY
MANUKA 1 MIOWERA 2G
AORANG.I 29 MANUKA 24
CALLING AT SUVA, ON UP AND DOWN VOYAGES.
THEO. H. DAVIES & CO., Ltd,, Gen'I Agts.
ERIC AN HAWAIIAN STEAMSHIP COMPANY.
DIRECT SERVICE BETWEEN NEW YORK AND HAWAIIANISLANDS, VIA PACIFIC COAST PORTS.
FROM NEW YORK HONOLULU. ,
Weekly Sailings, Tehuantepec.Freight received at all times at the company's wharf, Street,
South Brooklyn.HONOLULU SAN FRANCISCO.
NEVADAN MAY 18SAN FRANCISCO TO HONOLULU.
MEXICAN '.-- APRIL 25JNKVAJJAN 3
SEATTLE AND TACOMA TO HONOLULU.CALIFORNIAN Direct MAY 1
MISSOURI MAY 10
83. IlaolrfeJclC P. MORSE, General Freight Agent.
:
&
ifci- - T
MAY
Co.,Agents,
AgentsF. A. SCHAEFER CO., HONOLULU.
Pnlifnnmn imiln1
MAYMAY
JUNE
abovecoupon
points UnitedPorts.
above
JUNE JUNEJUNE JULY
FIJI, BOTH
AW
TOVia
41st
TO
MAY
1 1, i in 1 1 111 1 ii m iiiiinnii i
1iPor and later see sailed from for Ma
nages 4, S or S.)
SUN AND MOON.
Full moon April 27th at 7:34 p.
I,h " S O p M .
p. . Sr
W o
Ap. p.m. a.m. p.m.
Co
ar
12.39 G.40 5.32 C31 6.22
a.m.23 0.02 1.4 1.21 7.07 G.41 0.31
24 0.50 1.4 1.53 7.32 7.37 5.33
23 1.41 1.4 2.23 7.59 S.28 5.32
p.m. a.m.
10.03
10.57
THE HAWAIIAN STAR, APRIL 24,
WWW
additional shipping Thomas, Honolulu
TIDES,
axs
mt;
G.22
ispo O
re
Sots2.03
2.43
4.03
2G 3.00 1.8 2.21 S.33 9.17 C.32 6.23 4.45
27 3.37 1.7 2.5S 9.02 5.31
28 4.1G 1.8 3.3" 9.30 5.30
6.23
C.23
3.25
Times of the tide are taken from theit a Pnnat nnii Geodct.la Survey ta
U. S. A.
14.
Sanfor Ma
nila,out of
mission.from Ma
21
G. for
S. foi
S.lokal and p. m.
forG.24 7.11 way with p.m.
bles The tides at Kahulnl and Hllo Helen N Ro.u (widow) to Wilfred A
occur about one hour earlier than at Grecnwell Tr, M; lot 6 of kulHonolulu. sta dard time m mo .Kitttc at. Honolulu. lot 4 of10 hours 80 minutes slower than reen- -
lots F mi(1 ot S659B, apwich time, oeing :w 32, Honolulu, Oahu $3250,0: aegrees " n on, r,t,i .,. h?.' inn'
apnwlPi. hours. mln- - Leo St John Gilbert to Dowsott Co
utcs. The Sun and Moon are for local itd a; right to livestock,time for whole trroup. build cattlo pun. etc. 011 lot 4 (5S3
iwrosl.OF L annum. B
TURE WEATHER 2S8. p 318. Dated 1907.
Tho data, covering a per'od T y K to D0WSCtt Co Ltd, L;ot 32 years, been compiled from rgnt to pasture, build cattle
Weather Bureau McKlbbln re- - I)enS( otC( 011 iot (590 .,cres) Lualuacords Honolulu, H. 'inoy arc jel yrs at 25c
Issued show the that have per a annum. y ogs, pduring tho month in question Feb s 1907i
for the above period of but must A Dowsett to Dowsott Co Ltd, L;not be as forecast of tho rgnt to pasturo build cat- -
vveathor for tno comma tlo pens, etc on lot )389 acres), Lua--month.
Month for 32 years.TEMPERATURE.
Mean or normal temperature, 73 deg.
The wormest month was that of 1S93,
with an averago of 75 deg.
Tho coldest was that of 1S93, $80... 294, p 141. Dated Mar 15, 1907.
with an average of 71 deg. Magoon to TrsTho highest was deg Io. 3, o F, A M. mtg M
on April 25, 1S92. Hartman 011 landThe was deg. near Oahu. $700
on April 21 1899.
PRECIPITATION.(Rrain 1S77-189- 4,
WEDNESDAY,
Average for the month, 2.41 inches.
Average number of days with .01 of
an Inch or more, 13.
Tho greatest monthlywas 7.95 Inches In 1890.
Tho least monthly wasinchese In 1906.
m.
The greatesct amount ot preclpitatlon recorded In any 24 consecutivehours was 3:30 on April SO, 1885.
RELATIVEAverage 9 a. m., average
74 Average a. m., G6:average p. m., 70 (1093-6- .)
CLOUDS WEATHER.(1890-1906- .)
Average number clear days, 11;
northeast (1875-189- 4
partly cloudy days 14; cloudy days, 5,
WIND.Tho prevailing winds are from the
northeast (1876-189- 4, 1905-6- ).
The average hourly velocity of' thewind Is 9.3 miles (1905-6- .)
1907.
68;
AND
The highest velocity the wind in1903 and 1906 was 29 miles from theNE on April 20, 1906.
Station: Date of issue: 29, 1907,
o'clock averages from recordso'clock
averages from Weather records.WM.
Section Director, Weather Bureau.
.24
in 8 Herbert
(Army and Navy)U. R. C. Joynes, from
Kamalo where sp. Loch Garve strand-ed, March
(Merchant Marine.)Steamships.
Br. cableshlp Restorer, Combe, ES'qulmalt, March 31.
Sailing --Vessels.
8.
I'.h.
marines and
Br. sp. Loch Garve, Ritcnie, nitrate
Am.
April
BK
ii lToi ."a re re
For San pr S.30.
For CoIo-nlM- , pr S. S. May4.
For Vlotorla, par S. S. Manuka,1.
For Am pr g. Nlarre,&W 11.
From gn FranelMo, g, g.W.
! iCer,
OdIahIm, tr I. I, Itmmn,
Victoria, r g,
I From San Francisco, jior S, S. Sierra,May C.
TltANSl'OKTS.
nlla, MarchBuford, at San Francisco.Logan at Francisco.Sherman sailed from Honolulu
April 14.
Sheridan, at San Francisco
Dlx sailed Coast direct tonila, 9.
Tuesday,S. S. W. Hall, Kauai ports, 6
p.S., Noeau, Pedorson, tlahukona,
Honokaa and Kukulhaelo, p. m.
S. Iwalanl, Pllt2, fu-- Maul, Mo- -
Lanai, 5
U. S. S. Annapolis, Clark, Mid- -
26 mall,
REALTY TRANSACTIONS.
subdlvl'ar:ailan Onhu:
vub(Uv G ku(w Kauluwal.
isi "a. 0 0
pasturothe
T.unlnnlnl Tract. Wulanae. Oa- -U. S. DEPARTMENT AGRICUL- -
BUREAU. Feb 8,
followinghavo livestock,
tho and e
at T. Tract, Walanae, Oahu. G
to conditions per 321. Datedprevailed,
years, cconstrued a livestock,
conditions
April
0.18
p.
Bureau
S. Manning,
Sonoma,
liOMi,
lualel Travet, Waianae, Oahu yrs at25c per a per annum. B 2S8, p 324
Dated Feb 8, 1907.
Hldesuke Omaye to Genzo Harloka,B S; bldgs, wagons etc onpremises, Punahou. Honolulu, Oahu.
month BJ Alfred of Harmony
temperature 8G Lodgo I o Lpe at Mariuesvlllo.
lowest temperature 59 Punahou, Honolulu,
1903-C- .)
precipitation
precipitation
InchesHUMIDITY.
9 m(1893-1904- ). 8
S
ofeonq80fl31.in08
of
March9 of
Territorial Meteorologist; 8
B. STOCKMAN,
8.
4
livestock,
B 293, p 68. Dated Dec 100Tr Harmony Lodge No. 3, O O F
to M L Hartman, Rcl; pc land atnear Punahou, Honolulu, Oa
hu. ?.00. U 295, p 67. Dated Apr 8,
1907
Entered for Record April 22, 1907.
Western & Hawullan Co LtdTo Annlo K. Watkins R
Annie K Watkins and hsb 13 FBishop tr M
Henry K Hull and wf ct at to Kuala Land Co Ltd D
Mrs. Koleka to AneKeanu (w).. ...D
Wm P KapulanI by atty to Notice.... NKue anJ hsb vt S P Correa., DHenry Smith tr'to AVlllIam 01epau..PR,WB Opul&uoho and wf to George K
Opulauoho .., DPolpo Hanuna and hsb to H P Bald-
win DKuala Ako and hsb to H P
DKapohull and wf to Hawn Comrcl
& Co DMrs. Mary Kalclklnl Lam Sny
Knu LChas S Desky ,tr and wf to T B
Murray DCecil Brown to James L Akana..RYIm Leong to Eng BSMaria J VIeIra and hsb to Lewei-- &
Cooke Ltd MH E Walker to S K Nalnoa ALHawrt Agrctl Co Ltd Mlamoto
Cane Pits Co..,. A15, 1907.
STiirmino- - Qut'eKS "sPitoi to p EakmOlliplllg . Rel; por gr 3291, ',Hassinger and Piikol
IBaHBHHBHHaHMI .
Mailsi i
Moana,
UW4I.April
.
.DEPARTING.
5
.,
7
6
I
Kamanonahu,.
.'
Recordedi.April
Vnrtnix 1Tnn..l,.l.. zi.iV... tennn tt n
69. Dated Apr 13, 1907
Herbert P Eakln and wf to OnnondE Wall, D; por gr 3291, Hasslngor andPiikol sts, Honolulu ,Oahu. $6,500. B291, p 103. Dated Upr 13, 1907.
Ormond 12 Wall and wf to Queen'sHospital, M; poil gr 3291, Hasslngerand Piikol sts, Honolulu, Oahu. $5,000.B 293, j) 69. Dated Apr 13, 1907.
Bishop & Co toports (3 days ashore at Kamalo) March mtg M Macdonald
30 dnd Kokio Tract,Am. bkt Mary Winkelman, KureKa, Honolulu, Oahu
March 22. Dated Apr 15. 190tAm. bk. George Curtis, Herbert, San August Drelor bv
Francisco, April 6. , lendorf ,Rel; porbkt, irmgara Kcnmmt, urays bldgs, etc, MaklHI
Harbor, April 14. $0000. B 295, p 73
Br. bk. Addarly, Berqulst, Newcastle, s K Kln t0 H21.
Theo '.Tato
Fmnolwo,April
Frno!oo,
pr Ala.BlKlb April
Ian wl.Jhmm
as.
Tm UW
com
April
April
Rlsos
12,
to
Bald-win
Sugarto
tr
to
on premlaos.$G00. B 295, 73,
Christopher HHolt, Int in
);
'.
pJ
Aujflst G Srrau,cowr, r$811.30 B 200, p1907.
da toVmo, D; -3 1
4901, WalkuunmlO,tu. 22, p
AirlUflokii Uuf OoI
If 1 T.m vu nAv I Bk Tj; Int In m HU m, 1M. Dt1 I 7!mZ 1
Potor Jacobs, A M;and hsb on lots 25,
26, 27, 28, 29, 31,
D;
$1429. B 295, 71.
atty to Paul Muh- -
R P 4518, kul G489,
Honolulu, Oahu.Dated Apr 15, 1907.
C M; bldgsHonpullull, Ewa,
Mar 5, 1907.
It and wf to R W2243, kul 10013,
M; bldn and 12
Hllo, Huwall,hi. Dated Apr
MHiiuel PtlM Louisa (lit, S
li lMS.lli
PITS.
hvhhv
Harh,
"Dated
P
in lot 2, PtntIlR.WHli. $1.
DHltMl Jun S. 1907
.td V Alufm,
Han, Maul
Ali It,
KeawoFirst Bank of Hllo Ltd to Nicholas
Russol and wlfoN Jonos ot al to Kaala Land Co Ld.O
Mnlaea and hsb to McCandles..l)H Hockfeld Co Ltd ts M Ru?s..DChlng Soo to Wong Kam Yuk PAChlng See to Leong Che PAW M Kalalwaa to W Achl DWm Olopau and wf to Joo Barboza..DJlml Markues to Hop Kee
Kid well to PetorsonPeterson and wf to Hawn Evan- -
gollcal AssnKidwell to Haw. Evan Assn
Recorded April 16, 1907.
Kaane (w) to A F Cooko, Agrint;connrmation ns to an .provisions
agrmt in Llbor 274, fol 354, relativeto water rts, Palolo Valley, Honolulu,Oahu. B 294, 142. Dated Apr 16, 1907.
(w) to A Cooko tr, Receipt;f$90, being rent for 10 years from Jan1912, to Doc 31, 1921, of R 2539, kul
1912, Palolo, Honolulu, Oahu. 294,
142. Dated Apr 15, 1907.
John H D'Almelda to Mnrtln Condon. AM; mtg M Mnlnao et al onlot 20, blk 7a, bldgs, etc, Kapahulu,Honolulu, Oahu. $100. 293, 7G.
Dated Feb 21. 1907.
M Condon to M Malnne ot al,Rcl; lot 20, blk 7o, bldgs, etc, Kapahulu, Honolulu,, Oahu. $100.1 293,
Dated April 15, 1907.
Mahelona and wf to John 51 D'Almelda, M; por ,R 2429, kul 8S5G,
Kapalatna, Honolulu, Oahu. $104.
293, 76. Dated Apr 28. 1906.Bolto tr to Martha Kahakaulla
Rol; ap ,H 4300, kul 6233, bldgs, otc,Niolopa, Honolulu, Oahu. $200. 295,
78. Dated Apr 15, 1907.
Tseu Shlng to Hoffschlaeger Co, Ltd,M; lots and big M, KaplolanIPark Addn, Honolulu, Oahu. $256.19.
295, 79. Dated Apr 15, 1907.Samuel Kalapa and wf to KaiwI- -
haona (w), D; Int In pes land, Lalo,Koolauloa, Oahu. $15. 292, 146.
Dated Nov 20, 1893.
Joao de Colto and wf to Maria Mde Teixelra, D; lot 38, gr 4044 and porlot 10, gr 3842, Ahualoa, Hamakua, Hawall. $850. 292, 141. Dated Feb
1907.
H Kamaka Paea and wf to Trs ofEst of James Wight, D; 14a land, Ha- -lawa. Kohala, Hawaii. $700. 292.
142.. Dated Apr 1907.
Luzlo. Barozo et al toCo, CM;, cane crop, livestock andgon, Mountain View, Puna, Hawaii;Int In Judgmt John K Kau,Hawaii. $154.65. 295. 74. DatedApril 10, 1907.
K Kealoha to Pacific Sugar MillL; Int In por R G374, kul 11118, u,
Hamakua, Hawaii, yrs at $4
per 2S8, 327. Dated Ap 11, 1907.
Owners of Kukuau 2nd by tr to JuliaDe Mello, D; por R 5706, kul 8521B,Hllo, Hawaii. $23. 292, 145. DatedApr 1907.
Annie Kama and hsb K) toWongkong, D; por 33S5, kul 442,
Walhee, Maul. $1. etc. 292' 144
Dated Juno 12, 190G.
Martin Hartman and wf to EvelyM 'Marques (Mrs), D; por 194
and Wilder avo and ClementLane, Honolulu, Oahu. $1600. 291
100. Dated April 1907.
RESULTS.It is seldom necessary to take sec-
ond dose of Dr. Miles Anti-Pai- n Pills.One pill will, in most cases, relieveall distress caused by headache, back-ache, neuralgia, nerviusness,
stomach ache, etc. Whennot entirely relieved, take anotherin 30 minutes. That's about tho li-
mit to which you endure pain. 23doses, 25c. Never sold in bulk.
Fine Job Printing, Star Pfflco.
OCEANIC CO.
Due at Honolulu Mny will sailfor tho above port 11
For freight and passenger accommodations, apply at of
NewspaperPress
aX LHl iM X mi V Makaha, Waianae, Rahu. $1500 and mtg fvi iP, OA tfM $1000. 292, 140. Dated Jan 28, 1904. 11 IMtttV ILbH jjm Jaclntho da Costk and wf to Est of I tf II
h
OUTGOING.S.
May
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INCOMING.
Prem fHlMiacw,
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of
Invst
Oahu
Jtuumana fl,
lljlO,
Cabrlnha
Kekaula,
QUICK
STEAMSHIP
SIER
Ray
officeWM. G. IRWIN CO., LTD.
General Agents.
SALE !
This was made by Cottrell and
formerly used the Star Office.
frBt,ca8s condition arid will be
sold reasonable price. This
opportunity to secure press
small cost,
CD
Om
' I I tlo Rsffu uul hub (A de) Wf:' 1 T0 Ctmr HwrlguaC tali te land, !?J
1 . I IMiuulmra, WalluHu JMhuI. $)I,I40. SOO, fti ' I L'lllCairO III O JJaVS .Dated lli
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lid 1 Alona JUikU 8UH- -I' Ou LUl,With ttUa ukri
I WMlu, IUiuj, il IN,II opat, W, G. Irwin & Oo Qfllou m 1 uTZ K S. HflWaJlan Itar
03
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Amelia to
O F n.r 1P0T. S:
HOT.
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KIKKOTBNBest Soy
O(0
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P
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cr
The attention of Plantation Managers is called to brand dSoy. Years of experience have brought it to the front it nowranks as the best Soy in the market.
33L. YAMAMOTOSOLE AGENT.
25 Hotel Street near Nuuanu. Telephone Main 3Qq.
An Evidenc
Thrift
BRANCH HUSTACE PECK CO., LTD.
63 Queen Street
H
thisand
Co. 9
Having baggage contracts with the following Steamship Co.'s Lines: r
OCEANIC STEAMSHIP CO.OCCIDENTAL & ORIENTAL STEAMSHIP CO.PACIFIC MAIL STEAMSHIP CO.TOYO KISEN KAISHA U 1 EAMSHIP CO.
We check your outgoing baggage at your homes, saving you the troubleand annoyance of checking on tho wharf.
Incoming baggage checked on steamers of above companies and deliv-ered with quickness and dispatch at your homes.
An Old BeggarAsked for Food
Thi& poor old man was sitting by the roadside as he madehis plea to a sympathetic passer-b- y. ioc. was given on promisethat he would spend this money for food. The beggar made hisway to town where many of us might say he broke his promisebut he really didn't. What he bought was a liquid food whichcontained lots of nourishment a glass of fine
BockBeerthe kind just put out by the Honolulu Brewery.
THIS BEER IS SOLD ALSO IN BOTTLES.
r
Printing : Officeid '
For years the Star's printing office has been a busy place. We have "ft
gained a reputation for doing good work at fair prices and delivering Othe Job when promised. Few printing offices can make a similarclaim. With addition to our plant we are In a better positionthan ever to handle commercial printing. Our three Linotypes areat your service for book and brief work. If you are not a Starcustomer, send us a trial order; you will be pleased with theresult.
Star Printing OfficeMgOandless Bulldlna. Telephone 3M
fj
WITH TIIU nifl'MHUKOB,JtlkW Mil lr wlui l wrtiiug W- - l,lM,ur of worrying lb trmu lulu
m mr thJnlui bli Mi U Iwlitv Wu fuuk ii wrUi Hut MumQm Milam ngtwynU'i. But tut t tin tm.ii)ilAltaB Pm(.
i
j
The Latest in Fine Stations j
Tho Latest Autocrat Papetrlcs.Royal Court Band Tablets.Linen Parchmout Tablets.
Hare you scon our Dlmond HeadTablet?
Just Arrired, for a Cheap Tabiotthore are none better.
REMEMBER THE PLACE.
Wall, Nichols Co,, Ltd,
71, 73, 7B KINO STREET.
W, G. Irwin & 0.AGENTS FOR THE
Royal Insurance Co. of Liverpool, Eng.Scottish Union & National Ins. Co. or
Mdlngbur0, Scotland."Wllhelmlna of Madgeburg General
Insurance Company.Commercial Union Assurance Co. of
London.
M. PHILLIPS & CO.,Wholesale Importersand Jobbers of
AMERICA!! AHD EUROPEAN DRY GOODS
Corner of Port and Queen Streets.
4 CASES NEW' MOULDING per S. S,
Nevada.LATEST STYLES
PACIFIC PICTURE FRAMING CO.
Nuuanu St. near Hotel.
THE HAWAIIAN REALTYAND MATURITY CO. Ltd. .
L. K. KENTWELL, General Manager,Real Estate, Mortgages, Loans and
Investment Securities. Homes built onthe Installment Plan.Home Office. Mclntyre Building, T. H.
Telephones Residence, White 861;
Office, Main 29S.
GOMES' EXPRESS COFurniture Moved With Care to All
Parts of the CityOFFICE: 716 FORT STREET.
Near Queen, opp. Hackfeld Building
COMPANY, LTD.
Sole manufacturers and Agents ofGenuine Kola Mint. (Don't buy poorimitations.) PHONE MAIN 71.
CLOTHES CLEANED ANDPRESSED BY THE
Honolulu Renovating Co.T. FUJI, MANAGER.
All Telephone Messages PromptlyAttended To. We Call For and . DeKTer. TELEPHONE MAIN 378.
Richard Street near Queen.
. Y. "WO SING CO.GROCERIES, FRUITS,
VEGETABLES, ETC
California Butter, 40c. lb.; CookingButter, 30c. lb.; Island Butter, 35c. lb.
1186-11- Nuuanu Street.Telephone Main 238. Box 932.
Honouu Works
STEAM ENGINES, SUGAR MILLS,
BOILERS, COOLERS, IRON, BRASSAND LEAD CASTINGS.
Machinery of Every DescriptionMade to Order. Particular Attentionpaid to Ship's Blacksmlthing. JobWork Executed on Short Notice.
c, & CO, LTD,
QUEEN STREET.HONOLULU. H. T
AGENTS FORHawailaa Agricultural Company, Ono-m- ea
Sugar Company, Honomu SugarCompany, Walluku Sugar Company,OokaJa Sugar Plantation Company,Pepeekeo Sugar Co., ICapapala Ranoh.
Charles M. Cooko PresldontCeo. II. Otobertson.V-Pre-s. & Mgr.B. Faxon Bishop.,.. Treas. & Seoy,
r. W. Maofarlano AuditorP. C. Jones DlrootorC. H. Cooke DlrootorJ. It. aalt . DlrootorATI of the above named oonstltule
th Board of Dlwators.
JAPANESE AND AMERICANDRY Q00D8,
(Straw !(Ht ManufMtur!.
id punyROPA,W1H Ntmt, BUT BUbtf
For SaleImproved Residence Properties.
Collego Street ?4,000Klnau Street 4,500Anapunl Street 3,000Hotel Street 2,700Wilder Avenuo 4,250Youflg Street . . 2,100Young Street 2,000Pacific Heights .' 3,500Pmipuco Tract 2,500Ceretanla Street 4,000Boretanla Street : 1,800Klnau Street . , 4,250Young Street 3,500King Street (Pawaa) 1,800Waiklkl 5,000Punchbowl Street 1,750
UNIMPROVED LOTS:Kalmukl, Sheridan Street, Palolo,
Boretanla Street, Manoa, College Hills,Punahou, Kowalo Street, Puunul, Pa- -
lama.
111 CO.. LTD
924 BETHEL STREET.
Fire insurance!Atlas Assurance Company
ot .London.New York Underwriters
Providence Washington In- -mrance Uompany.
hK B. F. DILLINGHAM CO., L1MITEI
General Agents for Hawaii.Fourth Floor Stangenwald Building
LflTEST TBPIK IKSOWE . . . .
Kinds . of annuities to protect jrovagainst the vicissitudes of old age
. JUST OUT.
'It will pay you, as .It has p'ald etherto investigate these puMcles befor increasing your Insurance. Call or writtfor particulars.
casti GooKe
GENERAL, AGENTS.
A. B. EBNER, Special Agent.
W.G. Irwin & Co., Ltt'
Wm. G. Irwin.. President and ManagerJohn D. Spreckels. First Vice-Preside- nt
W. M. GIffard... Second Vice-Preside-
H. M. Whitney TreasurerRichard Ivers 'SecretaryW. F. Wilson . Auditor
SUGAR FACTORS, COMMISSION AGENTS
AGENTS FOROceanic Steamship Co., San Francisco,
Cal.Western Sugar Refining Co., San Fran-
cisco, Cal.Baldwin Locomotive Works, Philadel-
phia, Pa.Newall Universal Mill Co., Manufac-
turers of National Cane Shredder,New York, N. Y
Pacific Oil Transportation Co., SanFrancisco, Cal.
ILUi 'I BftLIIUTDJ. P. COOKE, MANAGER.
OFFICERS:
H. P. Baldwin , PresidentJ. B. Castlo 1st Vice-Preside- nt
W, M. Alexander... 2nd Vice-Preside- nt
L. T. Peck 3rd Vice-Preside- nt
J. Waterhouso TreasurerE. E. Paxton , SecretaryW. O. Smith Director
Sugar Factors andCommissionHerchantB
AGENTS FOR
Hawaiian Commercial & fjugar .ggni.rny.
JIbIKu Sur Company. --
Pla Plantation.Maul Arloiilturl Company.iCllul PtentftUfw Ctompw.Uswftllsn tfuar Ostnpny.Kstiuku Plttln Osmpiiy.Kaliulul Hfllmd Oewtvw.
SPQRINDICATIONS POINT I
TO HIGH GRADE BALL
RIVALRY BETWEEN PLAYERS OP
LEAGUE TEAMS UNUSUALLY
KEEN HARD AT WORK.
Tho prospect for good baseball thisseason In Honolulu Is better than Itever was before and unless plana badly miscarry the local fans will bo treated to some rare exhibitions of the na-
tional sport. Several circumstancesIndicate this, tho flrst and moat important of which la tho fact there neverbefore has been tho keen rivalry between individual players ua there Is
this year. Tho scarcity of good menhaa stirred up a great deal of compe-
tition among tho teams and thcro will
not likely be anything but best effortsput forward when the season opens.
All four of tho teams nre practisinghard three times a week and will keepthla up until tho opening of the seasonon May 11. Tho schedule which haabeen arranged contemplates the Ka- -mehamehas playing In the first gameeach Saturday owing to tho fact thatmany of 'the players of this club areRapid Transit car men .whose hoursof work prevent them from playing Intho latter game. All four teams oftho league will be on tho diamond,however, each Saturday In one or theother of the games.
SPORT NOTES.The Hawaiian Gun Club will hold Its
weekly shoot this afternoon at theKakadko traps.
-
The Hawaiian Tennis Association willhold an Important meeting thla after-noon at the Pacific Tennis Club, at 4
o'clock.-
Tho Riverside Baseball Leaguo heldtheir Anal meeting last night at thoChinese Aloha clubhouse, Dowsett lane.
THE HAWAIIAN 8TAR, WEDNE8DAY, APRIL 24, 1907.
REMOVABLE.
T SBASE BALL ON
The result and lino-tu- p of the baseball games at Walluku last Saturdaywere as follows:
Walkapus Viola, p.; Kaloa, o.j J.Enos, sa.; Smith, rf.; W. Enos, lb.;Cedorloff, 2b.; A. Jackson, 3b.; Kaulia,If.; Sylvn, cf.
Lahalnas D. Esplndn, p.; J. Esplnda,c; R. Keaupunl, ss.; E. Napaepue, rf.;Kanamu, lb.; P. Esplnda, 2b.; KUa, 3b.;AhFong, If.; Miner, cf.
Score by Innings: 12345G7S9'Walkapus 2 000303 1 514Lahalnas 0 2131010O8
Time of gamo, 1 hour 33 minutes.Stars Jno. Garcia, p.; T. Krugor, c;
A. Garcia, ss.; W. Bal, lb.; JoaquinGarcia, 2b.; G. H. Cummlngs, 3b.; T.Wilson, rf.; K. Walwalole, If.; D.
cf.
Kahululs Jas. Hattlc, p.; Simpson,c; M. Joseph, ss.; Smith, lb.; Hender-son, 2b.; Lloyd, 3b.; Smytho, rf.; IIus-sl- e,
If.; W. Morris, cf.Score by Innings: 12345GTS9
Kahululs 0 001000001Morning Stars 1 0000002 3
Time of game, 1 hour 28 minutes.Umplres-M- . K. 'Keohokalole, W. F.
Koao.Scorer Dr. W. R. Boote.
i jSPORT NOTES.
The Hawaii Yacht Club's openingcruise of the season will be on noxtSaturday, when the fleet will make acruise to Walanao, returning homo onSunday.
There Is a chance that a socker football team will bo put together hero forthe purpose of playing at Hllo on theFourth of July. The Hllo Jockey Clubhas put up a trophy to bo played for,and has written a fember of the Mallosregarding tho matter. As this organ-ization is greatly depleted, however. Itwould mean that organizing of a nev,team If the offer ia accepted.
W. R. Sims waa admitted to practice In district courts yesterday by
Judge Lindsay.
yivXNiiED
P6
ONLY
"I . -
AT
THIS IS THE FIFTH ENGAGEMENT
OF THIS COMPANY AND IS FOR
SIX WEEKS.
Tho Elloford Company will open theirengagement of C weeks at the Orpheumon Friday, April 2G. This well knownmanager has visited Honolulu fourtimes with his company beforo nndour pcoplo havo grown to look for-ward to the yearly engagement withpleasure as they know that thoy willseo soma of the leading successes pre-
sented by a strong company. Thisyear ho has 18 playa selected from alist of over 100. They embrace comedy,farco and melodrama. Tho companycontains several of tho old favoritesand somo new people. Tho bill selectedfor tho opening, and Saturday Matineeand night la "A Royal Reception," or"Incog," a farce written by a Cali-fornia woman. Mrs. Pachcco. tho wlfoof tho flrst governor of tho state. Itwas used by tho well known comedian.Charles Dickson for a starring vehiclefor sovoral seasons. Tho comedy com-plications arise from the wonderfulfamily resemblanco of the twobrothers, Dick and Harry. Tprrt acousin .disguises himself to resemblethorn In order to help along In his lovomaking and gets tho three In a host of
difficulties. The .three pels bubbleover with laughter. Between acta theOsborn children, two Httlo tots, Intro-
duce a high class specialty. They arothe most clever child artists that havoever appeared on a local stage. Mat'tie Lloyd Luce, tho potlto little sou-bret- to
Introduces some of tho latestpopular songs. Tho bill for Mondayand Tuesday Is "Tho American Girl,'a pretty American comedy. It servesto Introduce tho Osborn children Intwo prominent parts. Tho salo of seatsopens at tho Orpheum box office on tomorrow morning at 10 o'clock.
Judge Lindsay signed an order yes-
terday releasing John Marcalllno asguardian of Kam Yeo who has become
of age.
There Is only ono cleanablo Refrigerator and therefore GERM PROOF,and that is the Gurney Refrigerator handled by us.
No other make has ever stood tho tost and by means of the removableIce chamber as well as removable shelves, drain pipes, traps, etc., wo havesolved the problem.
Assail us where you will you cannot help but admit our claim. All othermakes fall when It comes to keeping the Ice chamber pure, sweet, clean andgerm proof, but
Ice Cov.mem'.
piThe- -
IE
MANUFACTURED BY
gelten ftnfotaj
ELLEFORD COMPANY
TUEORPHEUM
Deceived
iilO $Ntf(pABLE
EFPJGEPR,
9smsmjU,
THE GURNEYListen not to idle talk and arguments put forth In favor ot cleanablo pro-
vision compartment. All refrigerators havo this feature. You cannot denythat unless ALL COMPARTMENTS can be kept absolutely pure and wholo-som- e
that a refrigerator Is germ-proo- f. Go from the provision chamber to thoreceptacle for tho lco and it is hero where all other makes fall. Thoro's thoweakness that cannot bo overcomo by them.
Tho Gurney with Its removal lco Chamber feature has suppllod tho groatwant and therefore
Is the Only ClganableCome In and bring forth your arguments and It we fall to convince you
we aro ready to take your decision A full llnnlways on hand. They areused In almost every household. Do you poshqmi one. It not why not, Itcosts no, moro than other makes
W. W. Dimond & Co., Ltd
ator
THREE
THE LEONARD CLEANABLE is superior to any other refriger--
ist. It lasts longer. 2nd. Keeps food purer. 3rd. Uses lessice. 4th Gives more general satisfaction.
H, Hackfeld & Co., LtdHARDWARE DEPARTMENT.
FOR ALL SPARKING PURPOSES'
Columbia Dry Battery No. 2IS THE BEST MADE
t
'Sold also by The Associated Garage Co., Schuman Carriage Co.,
Ltd., E. O. Hal & Son Ltd., Ha wallan Electric Co., Ltd.
Hawaiian E
King Street near Alakea- -
ectric Co,, lit .DISTRIBUTORS.
There Is a flavor In tho meats .you
buy at tho Metropoplltan' that cannot
J o found In those sold In other estab-
lishments. The feeding of the stock
has a lot to do with It.
v
--'Phone Main 390
J Metropolitan Meat Co., Ltd
Late Novels for Leisure floments'THE MOST POPULAR BOOKS OF THE DAY
THE STORY OF THE OUTLAW Emerson HoughTHE VEILED LADY F. Hopklnson SmithTHE PORT OF MISSING MEN Merldlth NicholsonPOISON ISLAND Qulller-Coug- h
THE SECRET OF TONI '.' Molly Elliott SeawellDIMBIE AND I Mabel Barnes GrundyTHE MALEFACTOR E. Phillips OppenhelmTHE COURT OF THE MAHARAJA Louis Tracy
Hawaiian News Company, Ltd.,YOUNG BUILDING.
" Take a Plumaria ii
He was a trifle new In town,But thought he knew a lot,That nothing more he had to learnRegarding a "cold bot."But when they asked him If he owuldJust one "Plumaria" take, iHe said he'd rather ha e a lei;It's "up to him" to wake.DRINK RAINEER BEER
"NEW STRENTH AND VIGOURIN EVERY 'DROP."IT WILL MAKE YOU WIDEAWAKE.
C. A. NELSONAGENT.
'PHONE WHITE) 1381.
i
1
4.
I I I 1I t , H
Distributors. m jf' ,m
M.T Kin it., Jlwielulii. I Vm I'anty QmU, 811k Ulilrt V,'it I'&Umm (I N a piats, MI 1 OlilnftM QfM unm, Penim auk, an km t biidriM ami Val 'm1 Urn aiui Undanmr. Ik (,, IK m
TA OA. !i Ka. It mul Ifl irinv BL W
FOUR
1?lx Hawaiian StarDAILY AND SEMI-WEEKL- Y.
Published every afternoon (except Sunday) by the Hawaiian StarNewspaper Association, Limited.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES :
Local, per annumForeign, per annum . .
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Payable in advance,i Entered at Post Office at Honolulu, Hawaii, as second class mall matter.
Subscribers who do not get their papers regularly will confer a favorby notifying the Star Office; Teleph one 365.
FRANK L. HOOGS MANAGER
WEDNESDAY APRIL 24, 1907
M A1G IVUUCillU LJCIUI
Seepage Bogie.Jt.......fc5..j...3..A;:
One the most striking thingsin Engineer Schuyler's report tothe Nuuanu Dam committee, is the captains saycoup de grace he gives to the "seepage" bogie. It is Quite within the'possibiiit.es that there never wouldhave been any dam investigation, c.r
ineee
EARTHQUAKES
ARE RESPONSIBLE POlt MANY
SEEMINGLY STRANGE ACCI-
DENTS OP LATE.
at any rate no great public perturbation, if it had not been for the wide- -ly announced iact that in cutting the trench for the core wall, what I2ver slnco tho San Francisco earth-Wer- e
apparently water bearing strata were cut through, the trench (iuake mastors ot vessels, particularly
filled vMh water, and the flow was not checked. Not merely the man steamh'P captains, have containedwith the usual school instruction in physics, but men of a good deal thatuw current-ar- e not to
practical experience, very naturally deduced from this, that as that Theynsay theso things to their friendswater was there and as it would seem, would have to go somewhere, but i,avo not yet come to tho point ofit would constantly seep through the substance of the dam and ulti- - making oiiiclai reports, fearing, per-mate- ly
undermine and weaken it. It was upon this seepage matter haps, that such reports might bo con-th- at
Patterson made his strongest appeals to the public. sidercd excuses for the going ashore of
But Engineer Schuyler takes hold of the seepage matter and shows big boats In theso waters within lessthat it is simnlv .1 home : that indeed it is one of tlie least of thp. mat- - tnan 010 last year
ters to be considered in the. construction of the dam. There is some- - Nevertheless they arc confident that. . . t. .. seismic disturbances dre responsible forthing convincing in what Mr. Schuyler says. He takes it up as a
. tho Unreliability of currents and thothat has and therefore about whichmatter given public concern one confusIon of currents is responsible for
the public is to be fully informed. But there is in his treatment of tj10 going aground of monster boats,it the tone of the master, one who has fully gone into the matter, who captained by the best,has had abundant experience with it, and who has no fears regarding The p. m. s. S. Manchuria wentit because he knows about it. He decs not treat it cavalierly, as some ashoro at Walmanaio on tho windwardmight be disposed to do. He dees not belittle apprehensions. But side of this island, at the time of the
recognizing the laws of physics upon which the fears were based he Valparaiso earthquake. This was re- -
shows by simple and homely illustration based upon almost universal marked at tho "me ut the Manchu-- .rla's accident was about the beginning
experience or at least w.thm almost universal comprehensionof tho. epIdemc of, apparently cause.
and knowledge, that such apprehensions arc without founda- - esg KroundInBS and thc ,esson nad n0ttion ; that a further consideration of the very laws that bred been earned, Thjjn the transport Sher--
them will show that such fears arc groundless. He treats the whole )(lan spiked herself off Barber's Point.subject very fully, and very convincingly. The Mongolia stuck her nose on Mid- -
His explanation of that one matter which has caused more public way and only 'Monday she shufflesfear than any other regarding thc ultimate safety of the dam, is alone ashoro on tho Japanese coast, fortun- -
worth the trouble that this investigation has cost. atel' s,ldln ofT ln tho nitng with thetide.
rrr.ywrvtta Tko lielief that. thf. enidemic of The slant Dakota goes to smash ln" o Japanese waters, and, off Land's End,
6 & vessels going ashore, which haso Are Currents
Responsible?
Crazy
urrentTo Blame
For Ships
Hit
claimed so victims during themany Hh,ps pe aahore wtWn thpty mmutespast year, is due to variations m of each other and withln a r0idlU8 ofthe usual course and velocity ct two mllef, and De0nie wonder.
cWOCO;cCm;CKtC5K8aa ocean currents, is one that, though There is nothing to wonder at, sayit has not been put forth formally the big men who pass'across the ocean
either by navigators or hydrograpehrs, i s yet very widely believed, at working tho signal-cran- k. Currents,
least as a tentative or hypothetical theory. In another column is an 'Tny currents are responsible,
article dealing with thc belief itself, and some of thc reasons why it Naturally the master of a great linerdoes noi want to state his namo and
is held more strongly and more generally than it :is put forward ornQrth &
subscribed to. Men do not like to put forward a theory which seems lsmc ag or tho equator tghtenlike offering an excuse in advance. cd lta belt up a hole or two, or the
That so many steamships should have gone aground seemingly un- - 80uth pole is bulging and the old earthaccountably, within the past few months, is a fact that certainly chal- - is shaking herself together fter a badlenrres cxnlanation. It can hardly he accounted for on the ground case of ingrowing mumps. But it isof an epidemic or a series of coincidences of carelessness on the part true, nevertheless, in tho opinion of
of masters. Masters, like every other class ot men, nave individuals u.
among them who do get careless. --a" nTS heeait seems incredible that there should be an epidemic of carelessness. can be that ofAnother thing, too, is thc fact that thc epidemic has been among eartnnunkes continues and until the
steamships. This accords with thc theory of erratic currents. Sail- - earth .hns com,p.IeteIy recovered froming vessels, by the necessities and rules of their navigation, keep far- - tho attack there will be no dependingthcr away from the coasts than steamships do, and between the time on currents ami unless a captain can
of one observation for location and thc next would have to drift far- - allow for things of which he knows
ther by unknown currents, to put them in danger than a steamship nt"'n& tiwro are likely to be a few
seeking thc shortest and most expeditions route, ,n"re "tumblings on reefs,tr within themselves not affected by calms and equal to the 5 Stleffects of unfavorable winds or currents, where such are known, pass dop The T lzara wUhIn a ft rnutei(.close along shores where a sailing vessel would keep well off. An of oach other At ,eas(. thore Js comunexpected drift of a few miles may therefore more readily bring a rort, mtio tho it be, for masters in thosteamship in danger of a reef than it would a sailing vessel. number of such accidents.
The possibility of the theory must be admitted. It scarcely admits , ,
nf n doiiht that such widespread and violent seismic disturbances as sut,A" ON
r, the earth has suffered during thc past year, would be potent to so dis- - ' ur 'aturb Ocean currents as to create thc effect the theory supposes mvmont w Kaual;" KOne of the most striking in the series of these steamship disasters im. Mak i 16 575. Q .& R 4ow
is that one described, where three steamships went ashore within a 35 4S1. K ,p L pv M6t; pradius of two miles at The Lizard, within half an hour of each other. 20,945; ic. m., 22,661; f., 40,ooo; k. s..Such a series of tragedies can scarcely be explained on any less a ssoo
theory than that of seismic disturbance ot ocean currents
THE
LIKE
' '
to to reason theThe issues
.
in county1 A ? Prol)Qsed with such av5dit' cach county sees, things that be done for the betterment4 as sooa as it possible for of It is to satisfy legitimate2 Issues
"Kx-::::-:o:x:-:- -:"
be
of
of
i . . . n . . t , i rr J Q U1A OUCIIIS lit iiUVO.j, to an iu uie to a county has proposed, announces his
off. I lie wanting to borrow money for the for of a::-- ty in her-- it is is to the as a practical a
plication, the killed probably to i
Maui's proposal. Oalut jio to a - hoar Joph Ralphf nf f- - fi, f !, .,1 one it
to a bond issue. So far as heard l4iai dees not,n "onolulu ask,nff
is to (ukiibh in anu iiugnes
thc tax-paye- rs standpoint, all is not regrettable. It was Isow ork wll0' nuh0B ln
.proper enough for thc legislature to provide a by which coun- - Honolui- - Ono is in who's Whotig borrow money by loud, wheneverr of nd our other Hugheskind were really Such a right is an ordinary right of President be in who's who astlos, ought to be provided it not follow imme- - Huh!UfStcly the right must exercised.
sqe be
Uninty government is new here, and though it has so At the election in ChiegoisscQollent, bringing concerning the thc territory in mchln were given a trial in
,:flach county within direct and of the people of . w different wasit 1ms not the accustomed thing much hns , WRnl ftm, WQr9 on9
Still to be learned. I, ,n Hmfl jvarnl different kind ofOne of the to practical until it becomes automatic 51ml
lmoMim Wir. M a Xmlia rvf viuii(liliiri. n riwnniiitlmi Mm fnnf (lior
Zr ZUhZ a .VLnljV aw, t Zr raZ of IU Mrit. m well a a m'"vrionei in county ao fur iliown In ef,th" Mn (r
ricoatiiUaii nraetlM ol tins, nitre u every to believe ' ' "
that For thishad and
nHnu
But
think
this
coun- -But
and
yet
liJ enutiliM Wave i mart afftetiva In maat t '
h Utsit WW uiuel under Territory, it not hurt to practice' ibaakUN at iimnm
UiU lint U11 more. twm m n
HAWAIIAN 8TAR1 WEDNE8DAY, APRIL 1907.
Pompadour
OdorTHE BEST, NONE BETTER.
ExtractToilet WaterFace Powder
YOU WILL
60
way.
BY
AND PIANOS.PIANO CO.
3IE6 Opp. Young Hotel.Main 218.
TUNING
Palencia CigarsDISTRIBUTORS
Hnyscldon Tobacco
GAHRIAGECO.
Any kind of work onshoed.
street, Honolulu.
Oatton, & Co.
Engineers, Mnchlnlsts, Blacksmithmd
First class work at rates
Fine Star Ofrtlce,
Whitney & Marsh
New WashFOR
Printing.
and
JEOie arHE BOYSt
We have the celebrated
Mother's Friend Wash Suitsin Sailor and Russian Blouse Sizes 2 Years
Prices from $1.00 a Suit
FOR 'X'OK: GIRLSAn elegant line of
White Wash Dressesin Net, Mulls, Etc. Sizes up 14
EE OUR WINDOW DISPLAYS
K McBrayer 0IN
C.
y
fl
SOUR MASH WHISKEY MATURED BOND
Anderson Co.,
BOTTLED
to R. COLLINS, Z2Z for your Stable
Low Prices.at
Soap, Oils, Dressing, Axle Grease Washers, Hoof Oil, GallChamois, Sponges, Dandy Body Brushes, Mane Combs,
Tie Ropes, Halters, Wheel-Jack- s. Hitching Polish, DogChains and all
King Street Fort Street 'Phono Main
selves, things ought done.v.wvM-.M-:-(X'"K-w-x!-t- .w county bond which people every have their local patriotism developed
wcre manyLOUnueS became its people and its these veryBond
thowork of
uuil.l(j iUlissue see.u He's out andHawaii fact of Intentionpurposes newspaper
too late getting ap- - wanted, creditable counties. book.and Senate has it is wait awhile.
has farther yet call meeting t4ithn .f-f- !r, talk was tho18 ,s
borrow xortc in,miy n8k
issuing whn theneeded. lH may
pn and for. Governor.
far proved hue vot- -
matters people of --hir-the immediate control preoinetii.
L.tbat county, Income and t,m
things bewtHiiil nt
MLgovwam-n- t idmlrablo
and
and
tha !"!!'
Utt OeseuiesemjAlong
24,
FormerCounwl
STEINWAYSTARR OTHER
St.,Phone
GUARANTEED.
El
NEWMANUFACTUMNG
repair
No. 1179
Neill
Job
Suits
Boys Girls
effects. to 10
to
Hciurhnn
Kentucky
HONOLULU.
and get Standard
Harness Oil,and and
MentalCollars, HORSE GOODS.
near 427.
could
(From Detroitsending States
gUIlUuonus, wauib. uiai enort make bond issue been naught.have been shut Coun- - very which editing and
was matter writingbetter
gone than -- vw.TW,1 Burton wouldIIUBhessecure from, want
FromHughosmeans
could that
docs that
Thereevery
umilltraltltnal
most case,retion tint
Ivan afTairaBut will
mm
Cure, Curry
Vla tt"d not the that tried,amusement and diversion of the peopleuiiu Kuniunceu nna.employed on tho who find life
j
dull for lack of amusement. Still It "Only my body," reports R.was generally supposed that the lath Burton of Kansas "has been in Jail."
We t,,at hta splrlt llM hMnmus of ITma that Is .the naturalhabitat of. comic
President Graver" Cleveland,as for the American Aasoolft- -
Co.
0A11U
carriages,ftorses
reasonable
Years
tea.
Articles
Weights,
BURTON.Journal.)
counues
loans
THEM.
tuunuicucanal
J"dfr
opra.
Hotel
ouurviiuig uid umiioimry lor jong anaslnlster to toRoosevelt.
At Senalor ' Burton ot
tion of Life insurance Presidents, has ",liy .v?' " e ? ingoerveu nis country wall hm a sfliutaryrecently prepared a trlaf to show'that 'wnln, nml 0XQm,e.
1
Life Insurance Presents Jp not get 1
too large Mlarles. Cflrtolnly no ona) r"or,,'8r Sntor Burton Is making aauppestf he wu hired "to nrgue the n,0,f llke tt mm wlth oxnser- -
otlier
II Is to lta smii tlmt xiiRtrIoubtlMw Nurrliwu JlsJIamy atorar.nurtan oflCHniMN ncUugliy ragnrdM
awn win isniuve wit a.lf deeply Injur) mwn.
smtar Hurto Hy wut fleeeevelt.
Jeli Prtslfeg. gi&A6Qfti.
THAYER
River
Boilermakers.
Lawns,
territory.
Tho United
courts
n.
words apply Theodore
least, "Kansas
moi
plHlii
otbers This
WW
weuli) ba tunufthig If it wara mi In aW wUietle, fljwl It might be laekadutN a DftUteUe If it were satimueJNf.
One of Many of McCall's Patterns
0w Jordan
Rare and Delicious is the Flavor of
OLD K O N A
COFFBBFresh every day we grind and roast the berries. These ber-
ries have been kept in storage for several years. This is thesecret of "Old Kona"- - flavour.
Try a pound of this coffee for 25c
Henry MayTelephones 22 and 92
ASummerProposition"Well, now, there's the
ICE QUESTlOxM!You know you'll need Ice, you know
It Is a necessity In hot weather. "Webellovo you aro anxious to get that Icewhich will give you satisfaction, andwe'd like to supply you. Order from
I OH ICE 10 BEEIRHS CO
Telephone 3151 Blue. P. O.' Box 600.
MATTRESSES
J. HOPP & CO.
YOUNG BUILDING.
nfflJ Pull
MERCHANT TAILOR.Suits Made to Order.
Best Linen Duck and Silk Pongee.All Suits In the Latest Style.
10,006 Nuuanu, near King, P. O. Box 847
Won 'liQiii & Oo.Plumbers and Tinners
77 Hotel Street nmr Uaiinnken.
Orogon RestaurantHOY WO, Preprlstar.
neepeeed nar mw mmmumi,Um tf Otsts Meal In Tsmu
& Co., LtdBoston JBlopk, Fort Street
May we suggest that If youdo not use an Oscillator, youought to use one, you should;it will pay you, and lncreaayour business.
If you send out circulars,you cannot afford to Ignorethe quick practical, econo-mical method, of printingthem through the medium ofthe Edl n Oscillating
Hawaiian Office Specialty
O OTUTT ANY
931 Fort Street Tel. Main Hi
Y. ISHII,Corner Beretanla and Nuuanu Sts.
JAPANESE DRUGGISTSGENERAL MERCHANDISE
All Kinds of American Patent Medicines at Low Prices.
CAHARA & COLIQUOR DEALERS.
Corner Queen and Alakea Streets.PHONE MAIN 492. P. O. BOX 664.
FOR SALE!6 Cottages and Leasehold Interest at
Cunha's Lane. These houses are con-nected with sewer and brings a month-ly rental of $72.50.
APPLY TO
C. F. GILLILAND,023 FORT STREET.
Telephone Main 101. P. O. Box 6S3.
HA11RY ARMITAGE(Stools unci LlontJUrolcur....
Member of Honolulu Stoek and BondExohunge,
Vw sjiares of following-- utogks foralei PJonwr Mill Co,, Qahu Suear
Co.. IJwa PlantfttlBH Oo, HawaiianIU0r Q6, Wftldlua Ailsu(tural QoH
His.
Qffle&i CfewBlislI lllek-M$f- Lst wu
COX'S CALIFORNIA SEEDS Hfl
I run Line of
. i
ii.
FLOWER SEEDS, VEGETABLE SEEDS, SORGHUM ANDALFALFA SEEDS.
"The Best Seeds Make the Best Plants." Cox Seeds Are the Best.
HONOLULU DRUG COMPANY.Fort Street, between King and Merchant.
SWIMMING, BOWLING, TURKISH BATHS AND PHYSICALCULTURE at
HOTEL BATHSHOURS 7 A. M. TO 10 P. M.
1. II. SanfordGRADUATE OPTICIAN
Boston Buildlne Fort Bt
Guaranteed Tools
Never buy a nameless tool.Never buy a tool that the manu
facturer does not guar-antee. He is" the onlyone who really knows its
quality.
KmKDTTmQuality Tools
m3 are guaranteed, and rj?Gjjtj stamped with the IB
;' trademark. Each is Iff
the very best of its ifkind. Iff
We have just received a new stock
of "KEEN KUTTER" metal cutting
. OUR WINDOW DISPLAY
TOOL'S
U 1181,1Cor. King Fort Sts.
ere s u
OasisIn the desert of commercialism.A place where you meetyour friends, have the of atelephone, search the directory,net weighed without cost, recelve answers to your questions,walt for your car or get a glassof the water ever.Yours for accommodation,
inpooiind iuuy Aft' numun.
in
Itdlif at KMWt. btviHg
sirtiwi tbfe !( toturtoy mmliturn wmm
The Meal DepartmentOpens at 6:30 a. m.,Closes at 8 p. m.
HAWAII
TOD SLOW
111 GET
BOND IS!!COMING
CONFIRMED BY LEGISLATURE.
Hawaii wants to issuo bonds under
tho new act passed on 'the 16th inst., butshe has been slow in thenecessarydo it the next legislature con
venes. Maul got In In good timeher resolution and may get tho legislative sanction in due time. Hawaii hasevidently heen The followingwlrfiliioa TnOQcin pnl Vipt wnnn fh.lirman
and Speakor Holsteln oxplains tho slt--
uatlon:Hllo, April 23. 1907.
Holsteln, Speaker:Can you obtain Itwo day's recess to
allow of act ratifying HawaiiSEE OF bond Issue? Resolution coming by
and
mayuse
best soda
with
nau. Answer suggestions.TODD, Chairman.
Speaker Holstein's answer this morning follows:Todd, Hllo:
businessTerritory, has
Inlinthvl nf Alinnrv will I
10 MSEORGANIC ACT
ABOUT $40,000 COLLECTED ILLEGALLY AFTER ORGANIC ACT MAY BE
SE
USE PASSES BILL
TO REFUND LICEN
RETURNED CLAIMS BILL PASSES HOUSE BILL EXEMPT tor in tho third degree. Ho was ssn- -
SHIPS OP CABLE FROM TAXATION KILLED 'MONEY I 'once 2. srVe.
Ke
FOR SCHOOL REFUSED. Walnlo. Era. November, whllo tho
IN THE HOUSE, funding of $48,658.75, money collectedFIFTY-FOURT- H DAY. for licenses to sell Imported goods after
The Houso was called to order at 9 the Organic Act, camo up for Wilrd
o'clock by Speaker Holsteln. After rending.prayer by tho chaplain, the minutes of Rawlins raised the point that someyesterday's were read and ap-- of tho claims in the bill were for licenseproved. ' money which was due before the Or- -
House Bill 240, relating to hunting ganlc Act. Ho submitted a list furnlsh- -wlth firearms, was passed a second ed by the Treasurer of ' 'tho Territory,reading. showing that stfch items the , . . ,ur ul pus unu irei.uuea iu uv.. nm n ,i,i .' , torniAi ...i t,m 0,i ueducational and Judicial districts, was moved for throe minutes recoss in or- -up for a roll call on third reading. It der that he might amend the bill ac- -
lost, the vote standing 9 ayos, 18 noes, cordlngly. Tho motion carried, andas follows: Ayes Akau, Coi when the amendments wore made thoyney, Kaluna, Keoull, Moanaull, were adopted.ka, Rawlins Walwnlole. Noes Sheldon moved of the bill,
"vVorks and J- - n- - nwland. c- - E--Correa, Hughos, Joseph, Kalann, Kaleo, a vote taken, and stood 19 toKalolopu, Kalann, Lelelwl, Long, Ma- - 7 In favor passage, and itho bill was Sl8lunl wnu imvo xur--
hoe, Nalllmn, Pall, Paoo Qulnn, Rice, declared passed a third reading. TheSheldon, Sllva and Mr. Speaker, votes against tho were:
WOULD REFUND MONEY. Meoull, Pall, WalwaloleHouso Bill 217, providing for the re- - and Mr. Speaker.
NATE KILLED MA
COUNTY BON
NAILED THE MEASURE ON THIRD READING THIS MORNING ON A
VERY NARROW MARGIN DEFERRED ACTION ON THE HOUSE'
ROASTING BOARD OF HEALTH RESOLUTION RE J. LOR WAL- -
LACH OTHER MEASURES UPON THIS MORNING.
SENATE.FIFTY-FOURT- H DAY.
MORNING SESSION.
I
by
touj, v.,v. . . , unnn tin.
ouiiuio was was n u.iiu.uuu.- - MnfcnVn,. lnm,lr,i r .i. u ii ..u.b aitfiau Hi I " until .viTiriM nn. . ' I...... - legislature had to tell thn nnvt. ...... - (,..... 1 ,. ).... Ino.v.....t. c , , k on thn Aiwvviirln" thn micHlion I must say
TO GET tliat Lano replied that no demand that aro drawnICINAU. " 11 slml',v 'lxt aro complete
taking
asleep.
passage
years."
session
Alawa,Nakale- -
passage
Alawa,Kaleo, Mahoe,
ACTED
efficiency,.,,m,l(n,l?
uilB W Bl!liuiwiui.l!iu.u. ,,,,, IHlplatnU nu ,,,,. 1mnBwas of
length. Makeknu moved that tho mat- -
tor be referred to the printing com-
mittee as ho desired a copy in tostudy the matter carefully.
Coelho. suggested not to go to the ex- -
and will be ablo to pense of haying measure specially
until
MnnHrr
order
printed but to have It printed In theregular' Senate Journal save expenses.
Makekau demurred nswould printed until after tho
His motionto have tho reply printed at once, was
Todd of the Hawaii County carried,Houso bill Nu. 223 limiting timo
InstltiiHiiir flnmncn nrnpemllncrs.fordid tract
IflK oninu uuu
and of fresh fruits to main-land. Houso resolution No.
want of confidence In Boardof Health In J. Wallach mat-to- r
received. Lane moved itsSmith moved that the
ter go to Health ,asthere were certain contain
Ul
ISSUE
expressions
legislature adjourned.
concurrent
adoption.committee
CHUYLER'S REPORT
NUUANU DM
facilitated
compiled
considered- -
completed
JiESOLUTION Z""?JZ,... generally
communication
Supervisors
proposed,
education,
Improvements "sao
Resolution contingencies.00nslcleredl
Lane withdrewThereforo be done. that havo imt,0rtanco.
HOLSTEIN. to confidence wo0llthey instruction
should ndopted;holidays
Sundays excepted. Supervisors Us Sol beTnconception providing government duplication overlapping describing
legislative work. If not mudo clear provisions therein.sleep had kept awako llko the lt was reasonable expectation
Maul County Supervisors, would Congress tho principles ofsomething doing Hawaii. local self government would time
"The bill providing Counties to developed Territory,borrow money Introduced Marrh formable to the spirit and of22, to ithe Senate-Apri- l 3rd. American institutions, and oxprossly
the cities nHnnnnmay
'uoara supervisors or Hawaii wlmr(ms Tt h.mample time a uftort to carry this reasonable ox- -certainiy nave asieep. uopios ConCTasB.
bills introduced mealate undera nmMa form and
ferent and commercial bodlosthroughout 'the and Hllo
UttUUUH.ieiulIhn
back adJustlnBimprovements for
lofln
tncro wero con- -Journalnot bo
thefnr
the
thothe
wasmat
ed be
con
dui
on.Im
mesystem government adequate to meet
peculiarities of tho situation,JHIU BllU.e Ul illB , In
f tho governmentHawaii County InternalTorrltory to local self government,
along line the moetdevelopment, moet
forms local self government such aand cities resulting unavoid-
ably ln burdensome obstructiveoverlapping duplications gov-
ernmental fu'iictlonpi.Therefore, It the
Senate the Territory Hawaii, the
that the 1m respectfully urged,McUAUTHY INTIIODUCISH CONOUll- - upon the
Ito InvestlKftteHUNT lUWOLUTIQN A8KINO KtmltMlonr)H)rt the Hiibjeot or upon sueli
Onmu TO APPOINT COMMIMION. Qiu-- p ,ntormilUin ,ivloe a nIwII
-- . ohoowt Mt uiMwi, mneiul l)i
McCarthy UitrtMluowl ta- - wthl Hot onsllnif tU Terrtlory, tlutte&naurnml ntoluliuii there apitraprtaW and !tU
MiMte this iMiniiHiri eirtiau owl dtsUlbuUw AiM
wmrMu. tum OaMKNM tk Uuiie4 um wuwummi Wm itoaini, Biwad Aiu41 U. rllOfUl MWrMMNl ilMi IMNH
he
..Jseo fit.of
hisare
leaacK
acted had but
mat reltbo modified.
D
Makekau to defer action until
46tho Issuo of
conXV. Mm tlnn
12,
be be
tho
me lor to
thewas
be
said that bethoy have
statements.
Contfrdea. asOatJthy
resolution betr
iMturday,
from
from IlQMlulUi
hvnii iwfttN.
EUGENE DEVAUCHBLLKEugene special
officer bribearrosted yesterday "In-
vestigation," having, itsailing 'mato
Lovl Woodbury for
GOT ALong yesterday
Bolt's court manslaugh- -
COMPANY ,n,,rlso":a nanieu i.uin unin
KAXiIHIWAENA last
and
puttwo
and
salo
even
and
stealing part Kee'scrop.
(Continued from Page One).,.,.dug, andwhich were value infinal
My has beenIn ovary possible C. SHolloway Superintendent
As"andof aupennionoeni,
considerable
expressions
maps, documents andstatistics bearing anyway upon and have ctyir- -
fully everyhave mado reserve hcslta
lion.After fully and
digested tho data thus secured,prepared tho following
my conclusions and
1. Are sjucificatlons,as by Mr. and approved
Mr. Howland and Mr. Hollowaytho Dopartent, forreservoir commonly
dam, completeovery
Are the suggestedKellogg out?
3. tho DamIn state of construction
"I consider that Board of proper safe?might have used a little dlnlo- - i.,flf dam underinacy," continued, "and the tho, present plans specifications,
. gentleman namea therein ef- - will safennlnlrm
munuiiii ,hn(a...a...,u ill"frum T.nrwl Prnrt. action miittnr.
ltlnds. beGn Put there was whllo the plansON i a and
,, 111 Of
steps, not
Kl- -
0h
had
Lor
tho
- " ow rwork being evidently
The motion refer was work n man of good engineeringLane motion to pass the training and speclflca- -
measuro. .Then spoko against Hons In some respects lacking inthe adoption of resolution, detail defect muy navetr fmtnr.. nf .mn,.nji.,. the nub.ic or
VVUIIHUVtlUliLlUUnext Smith said which causo of
regretted or proBont Investigation. rlnchealth had as It donefult tnattho
tho
mmea resolution
moved2 m. tho motion carried
Third reading ofSonate No.authorizing bond
50reading,nrnmnlln tt--n onnrtn lu
item or ?3u,uuu NanikuKallua. '
' 1 11 I t .
l
"n
Smith said they betteritem remain, as imperativethat bonds should
Coelho might thatwould a responsible
have
that
HBLDDevauoholle, police
Coast today.
SENTENCE.
Judgo
latter
amount
various made,
investigation
asked
or
submit
drawn
Public
detail?
carriedwork
TWO I,ubllc
qulto
matterI particularly refer wooden
stavopipes dam. Tho o
this class of pipe for outlotsqulto novel. I know
having used beforeat least a of
tonj'iM1well
first bill withmuvtu
letnot
the
and
minutely specifying howIs made
in f M. stavo pipe
as to t
It
it
The specifications evidentlynecessity for
minor alterations which mustevery
this and the clauses underland "Altei-a- -
Impossible recess. ln lti tlmt lt woum wen to havo oard of supervisors and tho .. for tncB0nau too expires might Issue tho .bonds to tho limit. ai, i t mnVn in ruillntr nt- -
day night. Takes days pass bill. onoosed motion refer. Kalama his . ti,i feature, whichnothing f..lt that tllG B(mrd 0f Health not Bshop said if thoy did not unam nf is that
acted respectfully the legislature in their boards super- - tno of Btavo pipe, armoredSpeakor Holsteln in speaking tho ho rolt that lt a matter of principle visors had better kill the tvnn nf as a reservoir out- -
matter said: ...in, nnil hn felt hill. ballot bill was ....... i i hnlno n nnvel.v. ' - . ; mil. MJilUl'lViA. n "the resolution by the vote 8 7. which contractors would
against us. Only and 'The of "explicit
Mawau nave a or and a tnererore, , that and anA mnute in tho prcclsothey had lt by
to but that thethere of tho that
lnfor within tho
was methodsand sent On
it localI 1 . r r 1. inn. I . . . I
vn u De ! I rcconor hn found, in
to got move They outmust neon ... of the
of in was at thosoon to .. , mniBt
ofthe has
UB ,.
ofin wny
thoof conser-
vative andof
andof
be reaolved, byof
ItepreMiiUtlves concurring,
m,Br refloinmeiulfttlona of a
ppoliUlhiu! on
WIlli It- to to ao
UIn iway
Uwfiw.
B Ami
Maul
suspected
ofof
of
nlshcdin
at
andIs
andto be
i..ak
hadWAITand
to
and thisthn I
legislature. thhe had
he
me ne
and11111
of moved.
not
P.
as
bo
ofof
od bo
five Ho
had ,t.and of
ofthn thnl
bam
be to
ofof
functions avoided; Tor- - for ,loInir ,vork anrltorlal offices whose functions and cepUlblo unmJstakabCtoduties havo or transferred reHUlt of neglecting minutlallocal offices that of dotaJl apparontiy to a class of
of given of duties WQrk whIch to controversytransferred from Territorial to wltn contmctor,Jurisdiction; and generally, them inspector and a of
April passed Senate provided counties, and towns ha n,nfmnnt and I,, thn stabllltv of construe- -c.euv-- u u, u..o mignt createa, Territorial functions, duties
the Houee ne0O8Blty ,tmrnisnea as
,lim,.iilHnuTTnwnll
usual
counties
HouseCongress
CON- -
HeiwtarIqwIiik
t
iL
It
""denco
mshould
p.
so
abolished;classes
criticismgenoral
ponslbllltles than Is possible, bo structlon of as recommendedobstacle Increased cost of Kollogg and Increased
constantly bo thickness of concroto covering appllodof development of hae remedied all their defoots and
prlnclplo of loell self government in outlet plpos which aroTerritory, strong, substlntlal and safo. The
Coelho moved ijM adoption
Smith wantedrUm measure ruto commltt'eo . (t was not specificenough in explained that it would be wleer to
details of orange preparedln clear style consideration or
he. iwetwilling .there, be revision.'
of It datynejl
bo tjie meaaure was referredHfwclai eounty eommlttee.
AjtmviNa. J
. Aftrtl )!
At UWuj'saih INwhng iutytllniiflluUl. 9iW
Mody, April '
At nr. llalkW, fmooh.
WMlHadsy. Awll II
it vim uBiueAalM. I Isu lUMMA
suspendedtaking, was for
Is alleged, In-
tended of the schooner
LIGHTKee pleaded guilty
In Do to
kihou uninese ui
wan of
tolesi
toetsforming
judgmont.
way by Messrs.Public
was
mo all
tho case,with request that
without
havingall
atn toreport embodyingrccommeendatlons:
tho plansWalker
by ofWorks
in Nuuanu valley,known Nuuanu in
altemtlonabeing
Is NuuanuIts present
Healthmoraallowed
try
o...PnmmkolnnBI'
tho toMUST YEARSrecluest tl,at
tootho
with
that
MWm
tho
renewed thoKalama
owingto criticism con
"tliat wore thetho board"
had
m
which ispipes used for eflluent wastothrough tho use
reservoirIs do of its
been In this mannorany magnitude.
Theunderstood asnot
passed House public was foriout very Justt to
i Is
originalcontemplated tho such
always occur Insort, tho
headlncs "Omlsslonsvby Ki- -
late. Session Wednes- - intthe to He motion. nrtinuinr
can ,,,UK0
waaWUliitni-- On thn the kill' vuiiv.".b,
of tet withcounts thn
verymust poor end
gone
for
the
thnare
priniou ait- -
OHIH.
uat
all plans
board
entire
of may be .,..,. tne in acand manneSi.
may be to Thg thismay bo led
all may be ln tmo led,lqoaI tho by the
lack con- -
and was thut ,v of thoviU,Ciui me mm. and res- - tlon. say hero tho
tne iiaa
.....
the
now the pipesthat tho of by Mr. thogovernment will not lntho way the the pro- -
duced amplythis " oon
asits He
farthe desired
f6r the
shouldtho was
tar. to the
,
bk.'
M.
MkftWMli bkt.
mu
wwtt
for
nstho
TO
the
bill
rice
allmy
ftr,
anil
tho
Mr.tho
thotho
well
thelost.
theand.
thethut
tho
not
for dam
construction
.nntnnot
that
that12th
that
said
orete alone is sufficient without rollancefui-m- upbn tho wood, while the oomplato satu- -
ration of the latter witn mo oxciusionof air, will protect It from dooay lndefinitely.
fUndor Hub-hoa- d "C" of "Embankinjent" it Is evident that tho use of;ftteeNscrapers or ra wasnet coividoreu n admissible, uououesfor the reason tliat in a preceding para
Lgraph it wan provided that "no borrow,plU hIihII be opened within the limitsfl.the reservoir" and this stipulationinoreHsed the leiiKth of haul requireuto obtain the nmuerlal for the damlHyoml the praotluHlile limits of sorap-Mi-
In my oplnloi) thla was anstlpuUitluii, tut It evidently
In umeli lililwr IiIiIm tlinn mltflttUAVe been iMouNtl had the eantmutorbMii t IHwrty Ul mwum wtrlli fromlb luliMMt INM Of UTMMj m Weiu b
H4 IntiMikUtfiy tv (to tern, n
ym wm mmm ir vm u vim
Itoitlble leakage from the niMrvolr, asthe top Mil la much more liripervlousthan the deeper layers through whichwater is percolating down the valley.
From the test pits which I had dugin the lints above the dam I am con-
vinced that the engineers were overcautions in this regard and am positivethat the removal of three to four feetof the soil Is entirely admissible without affecting the seepage loss from thereservoir. These pits showed a. depthof eight to eighteen feet of plastic ma-
terial over the lloor of the reservoir.For all future work the material torthe embankment which cannot be de-
posited by sulclng should be taken fromborrow-plt- s In the reservoir at a costwhich should not exceed 30 cents a yardinstead of hauling It from n long dis-
tance outside the reservoir and payingCO cents a yard for It. This latter com-ment on the soundness of tho policy ofta'klng nil material for the dam fromoutside the reservoir, is, however, mere- -
a difference In Judgment betweenengineers and is not strictly a part ofmy anewar to the Interrogatory as tothe completeness of the specification.Taken as a whole I may say that thespecifications compare favorably withthe average run of specifications forsuch works, and are not so seriouslydefective, but that tho work might hivebeen wfJ8ftMrtorlty yomplefced itndotthem within the timo stipulated bytho contract with a proper plant andan adequate organization and system.I have known of larger works havingbeen oxecuted by an exporloncod contractor without specifications, plans orwritten -- contract other than a fewsketches and th'o verbal directions oftho engineer, but of course, thfs loosemethod cannot be applied to publicworks and Is not to be commended under any clrcustances.
THE KELLOGG ALTERATIONS.In reply to the second question, I find
on careful Inquiry and examination thatovery alteration suggested by Mr. Kel-
logg has been cairled out and aro allj.ractlcally completed oxeept tho rockfill portion of the dam, which has beencommenced.
THE SAFETY' OF THE DAM.
In reply to the third and fourth quos
tlons as to whethei re work In Itsprosont stato of oonsliuctlon Is propor and safe and If tho dam will be safeIf completed uudir the prosont plansand specifications, I ,im glad to bo ableto express tin jnmiailficd op'nlon in thoaffirmative. Aftor thorough scrutinyof every part of the work, and a studyof tho geology and topography of theslto and after lostlng tho quality ofthe materials used and available foiuse, I am convinced that tho work Is
being property done, and when complet-ed will bo absolutely securo and Eaf.o
There are three ways by which earthdams may fall.' First: By being over-topp- by Hoodsaftor filling tho reservoir from whichtho earth on tho lower side Is washedavay uti.tll tho sliueturo Is finallyweakened and destroyed. This Is thomost common source of failure, dueo toinadequate capacity of spillway to car-ry nxtieme Hoods.
Second
insufiit'lently and
Is lu-
bricated avenue
water
Propertypraising,
Trans
Streetnear
couimoilRilons
UltjlkBBIWill
He
An Exceptional
Opportunity
We offer for sale for a dayshome a Heights
with all improvements.
and mountain view. Good
stables, shade and fruit tree. Lot150x2G0. A few minutes walk oarline. Only $750.00 in
If you looking for n home abargain, you afford to mlee this
Call see us befor Istoo late."
Henry Waterhouse Trust Co,, Ltd
Estate Department.
Fort Morchant Sts.,
Classified AdvertisingWANTED.
Try "William Penn ana tho Ada-Un- a
Pattl tho king queen; of IIcigars.
Pass Book No. 67S9.
return to lilshop Co.
WnptctlA compositor. at Office.
If you aro for a good CO'
try tho orat tho Cigar Store or
Fitzpatrlck
a house in Pawaa, fourbedrooms, rdom, break-fast room, bath, kitchen, pantry,
quarters, artesianSplendid seven-roo- m house
R. Office
IN COURT OF THETerritory of
In Probate AtIn tho of the Estate
deceased.Before W. J. Robinson.Order of Notlco of for Allow
ance of Final anaBy a complete saturation of in this Estate.
LOST.
Finder
Apply
Sale
cigar
water.
street,
Knpu,
cbViStar
Judgo
tho mass of to the point whero On Reading and Filing theIts iipecitlc gravity is to a and accounts of A. J. Campboll, Ad--condition of unstable equilibrium, when minlstrator of Estate Lavlnia Kaputho entire may slldo on Its deceased, ho asks that tnebase under the prossuro of the water samp may bo examined and approved.behind. This can only when the and that a final order may bo madesection of the dam Is slight of Distribution of tho property rpmain- -
and tho materials are oxtromoly porous .ing In his hands to tho creditors thore--
compacted found up-
on a Hlippery substratum of clay orsmooth rock whoso surface well
by springs, that havo.noof escape.
and
andvana
Star
Tho
occur
to and him and .
his all fas
It Is that 17thut 10 a.
By a of the m. the Judgo of said Court at thoouter slopes tho of Court of the Court atseepage water tho of Oahu, and the same hero- -
Thls is a by 1 as tho timo andwith away of tho outer for saidtoo and If takon In timo can be and that nil may
by for the then and there and causeseepage by siplo moans. A " any the same40 foot dam In that started to fall not and may cvl- -
in this way was my dl- - donco as to who aro to therectlon by a well way "a'd And of thistho down to a foot order in tho
tho of wltli a in tho Starsmall laid tho woll to tho and In for
Tho In tho tho last pub- -well and was carried off bv the nine. to b not leas two
dam dry and a when to the timebuilt. At the time well for 881(1
was started wasthrough the dam and oq andoarrlod away of tho lower toe
on Pane
F. J. doesRecords. Realt
and ApAn
andlatlng, and Business.lloor. Bethel
beimIi
alii'
from
are atcannot
ploase
For
Doctor
Bros.
At
ser-
vants
Young
THEFirst Circuit
of
Accounts Discharge
ofstructure
entitled,sureties urthor respon
sibility suchordored, Friday, the
day May, A. D. 1907, o'clockThird: super-saturati- before
from Room Honolulu,through ombankont Island be
gradual process, beginning appolntod placetho Hearing Fetltiomand Accounts
persons Interestedchecked providing drainago appear show
wators they have, why shouldIdaho be
secured under,up proporty. that notice
slope, several English language be pub-belo- w
piano saturation, Hsbed Hawaiian newspaperplpo from published Honolulu,
outsldo. water collected tne successive weeks,than weeks
fcaving tho stable Provlous therein appointedoriginally the hearing.
streaminghatreaved
'Continued
TESTA ConveyancingSearching Adjusting
DealingsCollecting, Typewriting,
InterpretingGeneral Orounf
Waverley Block,Hotel.
latter
Pawaa.
IxtuwaAwn.
required.
Honolulu.
Chambers.
oxtromoly
sloughing
Dated at Honolulu, day' of
W. ROBINSON,.Third judge of the Ceurt sf
FirstAttest:
M. T. 8IMONTON,Clerk of tlw Oireult Court of Flrat
April 3, 10. IT .)- " m "' i"'
TO CREDITORS.
Estate BENJAMIN R.All Dttraona havinir nlntniu uvnlimt
TRIP IS UNJOYABLE. l&iUte of Ueniau.iB II, Tvir i.t.The who o down to Uf Honolulu. Omi.,. .ii .
Invariably oome baok to town feeling ut0 artt nraaenttrip. The ,1a!Mno,18ame a, withof hotel pays attention to the nod
wants of nnil ln most ln P,a"r vouohere. If any eilst. even ifthey are antlolpated. The bed u, oMm l ly ujion
ding la rooma olefin nnd al estate, to undersigned, atwell aired well kept and the office of 601 Stan
la better than anything off ared I wulil llulldlag, Uouolulu,In the other hotels throughout the six mouths from this date, or seine
Possibly it Is beoAtiee the aenre llmltexl anil the
ttT'liMJ?J2rJ!Z Uaiuutr.tH h.llofline may etigagwnr by d rUSiisbjVt IlKHltMllatg dUailtlMk LilliMtimid U ulartMAd ti 1U QliTr
mm mmm
few
beautifulmodern Splen-
did marlnl
cash
chance. and it
Real
tho
&
looking
Myrtle
bargain,parlor, dining
CIRCUITHawaii.
Matter Lavlnia
Petition
material Petitionreduced
wherein
from
of
readily
granted, proeentontltled
sinking partlevel
Printed
Hoation
enough
Six.
Claims,
this 2ndAprll.1907.
(jjonolulu.
Rough-rider- s
discharging
Administrator.
accumulation
J.Circuit the
Circuit.
theCircuit.
ts and
NOTICE
of TAYLOR.
Uiapeople Halalwa iim.
battar for tha manngemanttllBthe
the gueetsstances wwurexl inortgairo
awaet, tho real theways and the Antonio Perry,oulslne gen wlthlu'
Ter therltnry.
by
will be forever barred.QUUX It. TAYI.OU,...., It
Dtid UwAm, ehti, AHI 10. 1W
I
,1
i4
six
Orpheum TheatreCOMMENCING FRIDAY, APRIL 26th
18x ten tied Engagement of theHONOLULU FAVORITES
The Elleford Go.Presenting a Repertoire of Comedy.
Farce and Melodrama.FRIDAY AND SATURDAY NIGHTS
AND SATURDAY MATINEE
"A Royal Reception"OR
IN GOGMONDAY and TUESDAYTHE AHERICAN (JIRL
rollto Vaudeville Hetween Acts, lioaaed by tho Clever Child Duo,
THE OSBORN CHILDRENA Ilig Double Show
The Salo of Seats Opens at thoBox Office 'Wednesday morn-
ing, at 10 o'clock.
B ATUHOHITYSPECIFICATIONS FOR. PRINTING
THE SENATE JOURNAL.
Rids for printing tho Journal of thoSenate of tho Legislature of the Terri-tory of Hawaii, Session of 1907, willbo received until 12 o'clock noon onThursday, the 25th day of April, A.D. 1907, nealed and addressed to Hon.E. Faxon Bishop, President of theSenate.
Rids must specify tho price per pageat which the work will bo done, sucnprice to Include all and every expensefor composition, paper, presswonc.binding, lettering and delivering withIn fifteen days after tho receipt of tholast copy by the successful bidder, thowholo to bo finished In first class anagood workmanlike manner and condltlon without additional charges of anykind.
Typo to used will be Long Primer,leaded, for the body of said Journal,with inserts to be set In Brevier, lead-ed, and Indonted.
Paper to bo 4Slb. "A" Grade B00Kand sample to accompany bid.
Ninoty copies of tho said Journal tobo bound in Law Sheep, and One Hun-dred and ten copies in cloth.
One proof of all matter set In typoto be furnished in galley form and onorevised proof in page form.
An approved bond of Two ThousandDollars to bo furnished by tho success-ful bidder to Insure faithful performanco and prompt delivery of tho work.A fine of fifty dollars per day to beImposed and deducted from thoamount of the but, for y ofany or all of tho books at the timeherein specified. A further fine of TwoHundred and Fifty Dollars to be Imposed for of any ono01 all of the conditions hero men-
tloned.Bids will be opened at the Senate
Chamber. Capitol Building, on Thurs-day, tho 25th day of April, A. D. 1907,at 12 o'clock noon. The lowest or anyT)Id not necessarily accepted.
Honolulu, u. i, April 20th, 1907.WILLIAM SAVIDGE,
Clerk of the Senate.
OAHU COUNTRY CLUB OPENING
The Oahu Country Club announcesthat it will open its Club House andGrounds on Saturday the 27th. Inst,p. m. Tho ladles of the Club will re-
ceive and sorve tea from 3 to G o'clockp. m. and all members and well wish-ers of the Club are invited to bo pre-
sent and inspect tho premises.No cards of invitation will bo Is-
sued.E. F. BISHOP,
President Oahu Country Club
1 PROPFRI
MinrFLOORS
WOODWORK
FURNITURE
Johnson's Preoared
I (I
IlLfllU VA UVUIIULIMITED
177 SOUT.I ICING gIthlMT.
UMUffflM, UAXJM A HAUL.
Polio UeuWiWlU Luahtwa on MoteMy mint HTtmi IT imWlwtr cm.utm t PumIuu, wtwlwartl 0itu. TUrwar rlNMM4 on lUi mmh ImUI wMon
wh frfU4.
TiredEasily
I
If you fee) fagged, tlrcout easlly, it is probably your nerves.
You can't afford to be carelessabout your nerves or to neglectthem.
If you want to feci active, alert,alive, take a nerve tonic that willInvigorate and animate you.
Paine's Celery Compound forover 19 years has been recogniz-ed as a trustworthy nerve tonic.
Read the f rmula and thestatements of the medical au-
thorities and you will understandjust how and Just why it is.
Paine's Celery Compound con-
tains no alcohol, no cocain, noopium, no harmful drugs of anynature. It has stood the test ofgenerations.
MRS. GUNN'S
II v 111of
CHILDREN'S FANCY
DANCING
OPERA HOUSETHURSDAY, APRIL 25.
Box plan opens at Wall, Nichols Co
Monday, April 22nd.
In Our OPTICALDEPARTMENT willbe found ajull line ofOptical Instrument's
We are manufacturersof all kinds of eyeglass lenses, our prices ,
arfe right
. F. Wichman & Co.Ltd.
Leading Jewelers and Opticians.
JL, Konfj; HMERCHANT TAILOR.
Hotel St. near Nuuanu.Fashionable Suits at Reasonable
Rates a Specialty.Rates very reasonable. Give us a
call.
BAND CONCERT
Tho band will give a public moon-
light concert ht at Aala.' Park,commencing at 7:30 o'clock. Follow-ing Is the program:'
tPART I.March, "The Victor" PryorOverture, "Anthony and Cleopatra"..
VUllersBallad, "Coon and Moon" FlgherSelection, ".Fantan" Hubbell
PART II.Vooal, "American Song"Ar by BergerSelection, "FIddle-dedee- " ..StrombergIntermezzo, "Golden Rod".. ..MeKinleyFinale, "Old Acquaintance" ....LJddell
"Star Spanglsd Banner."
When we find a man who enjoyfat and bald-head- we glial) be
lieve in Christian Science. Atdilnon(Kan.) Globe.
nBW ARK OF A COUGH.Now la the time to get rid of that
eough, for it you 1st It hang on, no onecan tell what the end may )). Otherliive ben cured of tiislr Mtighg varyquickly by uilw OtuMHlMrlftJn' CteimiiHmUy, Why net youT Try It midyou will Im lurprlMMj at the f?Hlk rIM whiflb it kffvrdi. Sold by aU dMlnv, Pmwon mlth A Oo, ftftflt fJr
(Continued from Page Fivo).with
to leave a bank 8 feot tor In various Irregular strata which
OF POSSIBLE FAIL- - water In every deep excavationUHE OF NUUANU DAM BY
EITHER OF THE MEANSSUGGESTED.
The failure of thor Dam byovertopping duo to floods exceeding thocnpaclty of the spillway cannot In myJudgment bo regarded as a possibilityfor tho reason that the cupaclty pro- -
Ided by tho plans appears to bo reasonably ample and In oxcess ofprobable Btream flow under extremoondltions.In this connection It 1ms secerned to
at
before
It is discuss
THE HAWAIIAN STAR, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 24,
SCHUYLER S REPORT
ON NUUANU 1arisen from tho fact the resorvolrbasin is percolating wa.
verticalDISCUSSION appears
Nuuiinu
which Intersects strata and Hows
In little streams; the highest ofstrata Is about at olov. !)70 or
11 feet above the lowest part oftho original stream bed and percola-
tions from It are coming thostream on both sides above tho corewall. In excavating the core trench on
tho a stratum of porous ma-
terial was encountered at olev.
from which some 45 gallons por mlnutothe trench. An attempt was
made under Mr. Kollogg's direction to1110 that a modlllcatlon of the' plan of glyo fr(?e draInnB0 to this water by puttlie spillway woivu no uesiruoie 10 . rrllShed rock drain 18 In- -
avoid tho use of ovable Hash-board- s,
chog dc(jp Inftka ot the core wall. Whenand reduce tho height of overflow un- - . . rnh ...as renile"d over the rockdor oMtreme (conditions tyy Win. ,1rnln ,f nnnears to have stopped tho
hlch meets tho approval of tho en- -fl
... th TeminB on the maukaglneros with whom I have discussed It sUlo ,s ft,so tgnt and 8olI(1 withoutIs to extend tho spillway channl nuka appearanCo of seepage at tho 'Ewa sideof the dam, parallel with tho edge of Qf the stream, m other words,the reservoir!! forming n long 01 the core.wan and refilling ofoverflow, some 300 feet In lngth, pro- -
tho trcncnes have made an effectualtoe 'd by a lining of reinforced concrete of tne percoiation downtho" channel being ado deepr and wiuer stream past tne ,ino of the aam, Onand of Increased capacity from the up- -
walklkl the core trench Isper end down to tho line ot me uam. st)u openi BlvIhg. an opportunity ofln'thls way It is Impossible to secure thorou hly lnspoctlng the character ofthe desired capacity a deptn or
formatl0n throughout,overflow not exceeding ono foot. Such Jn thIs trench( at n pomt 150 feet Wal- -
an arrangement would admit of per- -klw of thQ stream channel, a small
manently Increasing tho height of wu- -sprlng was enc0Untcerd at elev. 969, 30
tor In tho reservoir oy iwo leui n., beow lho surface, flowing 20 gal-th- o
same height of dam. The avoidance minute. An attempt has beenof any echanical device for regulating
made un,icr my direction to confine thistho height of water automaucauj aii- -
sprJng ,n such a way as to produco apears to me desirable and 1 recommend' hpad b(U wlthout success as the waterthe adoption of this pian ior uu-- im.- -
flndg Ua wnter thropgh porousWHY. n rmmrl .ill thn orlclnnl nolnt of exit.
Tho second described cans of failure . . whlch sucn a springof earth dams could not occur 10 injure the dam Is to develop sufll- -
dam under consideration wnen uuuw
with tho dimensions planned and with
the atcrials hand. The corewallwill prevent such supcrsaturatlon of
tho makal half of the dam, until themass had becoo solidified by its own
,.it,- - ovon if wn assume that tho
copletcly compacted the reser
voir is filled.FAILURE BY SATURATION OF OUT
FAILURE BY SATURATION OFTHROUGH
SEEPAGE.unnecessary this pos
1907.
thatunderlaid
high.
thoseoutthosesome
into
Ewa side060,
came Into
cresi
side
with
feot
strata
clent head 'to work Its way upward tovio nrttrinni surface and And exit
through tho embankment. I am now
fully convinced that the refilling thotrench with earth will restore 'the on
clnal conditions, and the water will
henceforth percolate out underneath theportion mauka of tho corewall were not hoavy blanket of soil overlaying with
OUTER TOE
to
of
out any possible connection with thereservoir,
If the Nuuanu stream bod had never
cut down lower than elevation 970 or975 at the place where the dam Is locat
ed I think there would be no seepagesappearing along Its banks, as are, now
slblllty further than to say that tho . t ,,h water Wuld percorock-fl- ll section of 'the dam will afford slowly underneath the surfacesuch complete drainage of the makal th Vnliev. Tho velocity ot suchside of the embankment as to entirely rcrqJjatlon through the fine characteralter tne conuiuuno uuu piuuvc of fflatorlal' in these porous suu-irii- iu
blllty against such action. , almost inconceivably slow and pow
In order 'to preserve the wood dlapli- - crlegg to away the finest silt, oth- -
ro'frn which is to be built of redwood on erwise tho Water would not come outthe top of the concrete core-wa- ll from cC!ip ag ,t mvarabiy does. The velo- -
future decay, I should advise moving cUy of 8Ucn percoiating waters as do- -
the rock-fl- ll makal, a distance of ten ,nrmIne,i bv experiment Is as slow asfeet, filling the space with selected 10Q0 (() 2000 f(Jet m a year. Those deepclay, rammed In place and puddled next lyng strata have been Intercepted byto the wood with water, his will have thp concrcte core wall which rests on
the effect of excluding the air and pro- -bed rQck 15 to 23 foet aeeper than the
long the life o tho wood indefinitely (jfid of tne stream an(1 ex'tonds well intoagainst tho ravages o decay. t()e bank on eltht.r siae 0f Its channel,
It Involves a very slight change rom r totaJ lengtn ot 150 foet, while beyondthe KelloBg plans but one quite as im- -
ahe endH of thc concrote tho wood coreportnnt as the change made from Ore- -
wa1 regtg on impervious material forgon pine to California redwood in the te r0maininf length of tho dam 1600
material of the core-wal- l, and In the f(?et Thus the down-strea- porcola- -
same lino, tlie prolongation of the dura- - tong wlu nocessarily either bo checkedblllty of the core wall. Tho material at (he dum or diverted around tho damfor this can be partially obtained by u oltner end The condition then maylessening the thickness of the earth fill
bo clomparo,i to the excavation of amauka of tho core wall by about 4 feet, weJ or svmft through various wateropposite tho rock-fll- l. bearing strata. As long as the well is
Regarding tho general dimensions ot kept pumped out Wator will come intothe dam, I may say that they conform u j.gm aU gldeS( but wh0n pumpingto the dimensions almost universally ceases tll0 water will assume a certainadopted for oarth dams. Thes lopes of statIc lovel and remain quiet without3 to 1 insido and 2 on 1 outside are those vslble motion. If tho well were to beomployod on most of the dams with fll,ed solldiy wtn earth itho effect ofwhich I am now familiar. tne porcoating water upon such earth
filling would be nil. The slow downPROPOSED INCREASE OF HEIGHT stroam movement would continue
OF NUUANU 'DAM. around the filling without in any wayAn examination of tht contour map affeotnfr or moving the earth filling
of the reservoir reveals tho fact that ,n the weli So. it mUst be with thoby raising the water level ton feet dam; wnich would constitute the earthabovo tho crost of the spillway as pro- - niltng Jn the woll Ulustra'tlon. Theposed by Mr. Walker will Increase tho stream cnannoi may bo likened to acapacity of the reservoir by 236,700,000 broadi Bhallow weu which has been
or more than 60 per cent, giving cavated through tho porous strata,a Hotal capacity of 629,340,000 gallons. wh(m thfJ oarth n,lm& of the dam ja inThe Increase In capacity abpvo the top p,nCe ,t w,u TOStoro ithe conditionsof the Walker flash-boar- would be that mght bQ imagined to exist had not172,620,000 or 38 per cent. the stream channel been cut down
through the porous strata carrying fll- -Conslderlng the feet that tho cost of tratlons of water nnd the core wall will
raising the dam to elevation of 1038 Is form an ,mporvl0us side to the woll.liberally estimated at J31.000, U would Jn order that any wator 8naU oapeappear to be a wise expenditure, and I from th8 raBerVoir by loakage'lt mustrecommend that the plans be changed nnd way ,nto t,le poroua 8trata andto provide for thls Increase. pawl entlreiy around the dam. It may
do ao to aomo small extent but InSTIMATWD COST OF COM PLET- - capn(? u mn Oo no p088,b,0 lnJury.
ING THE DAM. ThIl) reaBonlng r tl,ink , ineon'trovertl- -Th approximate eatlmate of the en- - bIe
tire oot of dam theoomplBtlng the to WORKrnmimT APPEARANCE OFInomMKkl height Mcommended I 160,- - damTo the taynian unfamlllar with
the work is not encouraging, and It IsAllowing liberally for delay the dam (umoult to appreciate what has been
houkl be entiwJy rinlahed within aocompllHhed or where the money hasyear from the prwnt time. Tim time BpelU TJ)e mot (,,ncult purt ofcan It alwrtoned, If nowNwary by work- - every dam , Uie pranaratlon of theIn ait nlht far at leant a part of the fuumutloiM, and It Is the part which
take HttMit time. I am building a damT Uwr Oowi M wliiiHally plMBniHl moi, wi,ar W have been at work
pan bo oomplotod In Qm W (nut with twu 8ttil)ievU and sevemlmoNttii oitortor Umo. liundrod won fer it M yoar ami Iwva
Till MWaUJOW. iul U) atuiito to 1mIhMu of tteo orltMnw of Uw Mm hM lluMn. tH Muiwau IHtn mwuid u.mrm mi la lit mUim mlly m it it mw rtWly fruw row ok, ond
begin to tAe the fbrm and body of adam, a tho important foundation workIs practically flnlshwl.
RECOMMENDATIONS.I will briefly review the changes In
plan which I have hitherto touched up-
on and recommend:First Increaso the height of tho dam
from a crest elevation of 1088 to olev.1038, Increasing the capacity 60 por cent.
Second Chango, the plan of spillwayto a channel parallel with tho side oftho reservoir, extending the longth ofthe overflow lip to 300 feot, giving acapacity of 1000 see-f- t. with a rise of 1
ft. and doing away with movable flash-boar-
and foot brldgo.Third Move tho rock fill portion of
the dam ten feet makal, filling thospaco between the rock All and thoredwood coro wall on top of tho con-crete wall with selected clay, rammedIn place, and puddled with water nextto tho core wall. This filling shouldstart about 3 feot below the top of theconcrete part of tho wall and extendto thc top.
Fourth I recommend that the plpothrough tho core wall on the Walklklside already In place Is of no sorvlceas no water can roach It. The trenchbeing filled with Impervious materialall percolation to the head of the pipeIs cut off.
Fifth Install a two-sta- centrifugalpump and engine with capacity forpumping throe cubic feet per second toa halght of 150 feet for sluicing purposes.
Sixth Omit the marginal excavationaround the reservoir provided, for Inthe original plans, estimated at 30,000
cubic yards and costing $7,500. Thoevident Intent of this marginal excavation was to provide against tho growthswhich accumulate In shallow wateraround thc margin. This would bo anexcellent provision If the resorvolr worealways full, but as tho working levelof tho water will be below tho depth ofexcavation planned the conditionssought to be avoided would still prevail at the lower levels. Hence it rs
to be a useless expense to makesuch excavation.
Seventh To provide for securing aslarge a proportion of freshet wator aspossible from the Lulumahu stream Ithink the dimensions of the ditch fordiverting its water should bo consid-erably Increased. As the ditch is onlyabout 42.") feet lon.g the expense of en-
larging it Is not very great. I havomade no estimates on thfs point, asthe necessity for the diversion Is notImmediate further than to carry thelow water flow, which the sluice-ditc- h
will convey for some years to come.The original estimate for this diversionwas $1230. The diversion of tho Maolostream by pipe and tunnel is also amatter for subsequent considerationand construction, and does not enterinto the estimates for tho Nuuanu Damfor tho present. The cost of the Maolodiversion by a tunnel 900 feet long and3900 foet of and woodstave pipe, with a branch ofpipe, 1000 feet long, was estimated byMr. Wakler at $13,680.00.
Eighth I recommend, most emphatically that tho sllucihg operations bepushed to the utmost to the end thatall material possible to bo moved bythat process shall bo so moved, andthat practically all of the earth fromStation 4.75 to the Walklkl end, except that at tho mauka toe now beingdeposited by cars to the extent of 4600cu. yds. bo put In place by sluicing.
Foreign JSewsBy
ROOSEVELT TO CRITIC i.WASHINGTON, D. C, April 24.
President Roosevelt has issued a letter,replying to tho criticisms of his recentcoupling of tho names of Harriman,Moyer and Haywood as undesirablecitizens and reaffirming the statementsIn which he declared them to be dlscreditors of labor.
Moyer and .Haywood are tho leadersof the Western Federation of MIncts,now in an Idaho prison, charged withcomplicity In tho assassination of ex- -Governor Steuonberg of that state.
LORD LI FOR MINISTER.PEKING, " April 24. LI Chimr Fane.
eon of LI Hung Chang, has been appointed Chinese Minister of England.
LI Chlng Fang has long been knownIn China as lyord LI and Is roputod tobe n progressive statesman.
I .PLAGUE IN VENEZUELA.
CARTAGENA. April 24. Three nundred plaguo patients are In the hos-pltal-
4CAN'T HELP ITSc-L-
Heart dlseaso never grows betterof itself. Unless something is doneto assist its recovory, it will surelyload to death, through somo chronicdisorder which it has induced, or bysudden heart failure. The vory hostrestorative known is Dr. MIIob'Heart Cure, which strengthens thohoart muscles and norvos. If firstbpttlo falls to honeflt, inonoy back.
Cam I n I , -rvi muiibj anu uiauaer iroub a
mm
Cable
RELIEVES IK
24 HoursALL URINARYDISCHARGES
the luiuulin
'LU...U
APPEALED CASE WON OUT. was ncqulttod yesterday by a jury In
Jaclntho 'Miguel who had nppealed to Judge Do Holt's court. John M, Martinthp Circuit Court from a fine of $250 of tho Anti-Saloo- n Lenguc was aotlvonnd costs for selling liquor to a minor, lr. this prosecution.
WORKING WOMEN,WHAT THEY SHOULD KNOW
MRS.SADIE ABBOTTWomen for the most part spend
their lives at home, and it is thosewomen who are willing and ambitiousthat their homes shall bo kept neatand pretty, their children well dressedand tidy, who do their own cooking1,sweoping, dusting and often washing,ironing and sewing for tho entirefamily, who call for ajir sympathy.
Truly the work of sucli a womanis "never done" and is it any wonderthat she breaks down at the end of afew years, the back begins to ache,there is a displacement, inflammationorulceration of the abdominal organs,a female weakness is brought on, andtho struggle of that wife and motherto continue her duties is pitiful,
Lydia E. Plnkham's VegetableCompound, made from native rootsand herbs, is the exact medicine awoman needs whose strength is over-taxed. It keeps the feminine organsin a strong and healthy condition.In preparing for childbirth and re-cuperating therefrom it is most eff-icient. It carries a woman safelythrough the change of life and inmaking her strong and well assistsher to be a good wife and mother.
Mrs. Sadie Abbott, of Jeannette,Pa., writes :Dear Mrs. Pinkham
"I suffered soverely with pain everymonth and also a pain In my left side. Mydoctor prescribed for me but did me nogood: a friend advised Lydia E. Pinkham'sVegetable Compound and I wrote you Inregard to ray condition. I followed youradvice and am a perfectly well woman. Thopains have all disappeared and I cannot
THAN
MRS. PRE E IyIKITRICK'
Mrs. Prce McKitrick, of La Fargo,Wis., writes :
Dear Mrs. Pinkham :
"For six years I euffored from 'femaleweakness. I was so Irregular that I would
from three weeks to bIx months, so Ihought I would give Lydia E. Pinkham's
Vcgetablo Compound a trial,' 'Now I am once more well and can do my
work without a pain. Any one who wishes,can write to me and I will answer all lettersgladly."
Women should remember that LydiaE. Pinkham's Vegetable Compoundholds the record for tho greatestnumber of actual cures of female ills.Every suffering woman in thoUnited States is asked to accept thofollowing invitation. It is f.?e, willbring you health and may s'lfr'eyour life.
. r '
Mrs. Pinkham's Invitation (0 Women.
Women.suffering from any form offemalo weakness are invited topromptly communicate with. Mrs.Pinkham, at Lynn, Mass. From thosymptoms given, tho trouble may belocated and the quickest and surestway of recovery advised. Out of hervast volume of experience in treatingfemale ills Mrs. Pinkham probablyhas tho very knowledge that willhelp your case. Her advice is freeand always helpful.
Lydia E. Pinkham's .Vegetable Compound Succeeds Where Others Fall.
CKCOCOCKX000000000000000'XXCOCOOOOOCOOOOOOCOOOOOO
Serial Number Sixty One Ninety
In accordance with the Pure Food and Drug Law we filed our applica-tion with the Department of Agriculture and have received' the follow-ing reply:
DEPARTMENT O F AGRICULTURE.OFFICE OF THE SECRETARY.
WASHINGTON, March 2, 1907.
BENSON, SMITH AND CO., LTD., Honolulu, T. H.Gentlemen: I beg to acknowledge receipt of your guaranty made out
and properly acknowledged before a notary, and to state that It has beenregularly filed under Serial Number 6190.
v Respectfully,(Signed) JAMES WILSON.
Secretary.
5 33and over The Only Double-Trac- k Railway between the Missouri River anaChicago.
Throe xr-c&a-t Trains TiexltyVIA
SOUTHERN PACIFIC. UNION PACIFIC ANDCHICAGO & NORTHWESTERN RAILWAYS.
R1LAND LIMITED, YESTIBTJ LED. Leave San Francisco tallyThe most luxurloua train In the world. New Pullman drawing room andstateroom cars built expressly for this famous train. Gentleman's buffet aadLady a parlor observation car. Book-love- rs Library. Dlnlne car-- mal ala carte. Electric lighted throughout.EASTERN EXPRESS VESTIBU LED. Leaves San Francisco at 1:00 p.m. dally. Through Pullman Palace and Tourist Sleeping Cara to Chleam.Dining Cars. Free Chair Cars.ATLANTIC EXPRESS. VESTIBU LED. Leavea San Francisco nt l:Na. m. Dally. Standard and Tourist Sleepers.
PERSONALLY CONDUCTED EXCURSIONSWednesday, Thursdays and Fridays. The best of everything.
Tickets to and from all points in Europe.
Cliioao &? NorthwesternR. R. RITCHIE, a A. P.617 Market Street. '
Central Building. Ban Franc!..
ShippingReceiptBooks
BOM) AT
8TAIJ 0WIU3tsuen vtLssf
J
THE
Bank of JJawaiiLIMITED.
Incorporated Under tho Laws of thoTerritory of Hawaii,
CAPITAL, SURPLUS AND PROFITS
$1,029,3GG.J0
OFFICERS.
Charles M. Cooko PresidentP. C. Jones First nt
F. W. Macfarlano...2nd nt
C. H. Cooke CashierC. Hustace Jr Assistant CashierF. B. Damon Assistant CashierZeno K. Myers...; Auditor
DIRECTORS: ChaB. M. Cooke, P. C.
Jones, F. W. Macfarlane, E. F. Bishop,E. D. Tenney, J. A. McCandless, C. H.Atherton. C. H. Cooke, F. B. Damon,F. C. Atherton. .
COMMERCIAL AND SAVINGS- - DE- -PARTMENTS.
Strict attention given to all branchesof Ranking
JUDD BUILDING, - FORT STREET.
Claus Spreckels. ."Wm. G. Irwin.
CHpdels&CoBANKERS
HONOLULU, .' H. T.
Smi Francisco Agents The NevadaNational Bank of San Francisco.
DRAW EXCHANGE ONBAN FRANCISCO The Nevada Na-
tional Bank of San Francisco.LONDON Union of London & Smith's
Bank, Ltd.NEW YORK American Exchange Na-
tional Bank.CHICAGO Corn Exchange National
Bank.PARIS Credit Lyonnais.BERLIN Dresdncr Bank.HONGKONG- - AND YOKOHAMA The
Hongkong Shanghai BankingCorporation.
NEW ZEALANi AUSTRALIABank of New Zealand, and Bank ofAustralasia.
VICTORIA AND VANCOUVER Bankof British North America.
TRANSACT A GENERAL BANKINGAND EXCHANGE BUSINESS.
Deposits Received, Loans Made onApprovp.d Security, Commercial andTravellers' Credits Issued. Bills of Ex--ian- go
Bought and Sold.
COLLECTIONS" P.ROMPTLY AC-
COUNTED FOP--
ESTABLISHED IN 1858.
BISHOP SCO.BANKERS
Commercial and Travellers'Letters of Credit issued on theBank of California and The Lon-
don Joint Stock Bank, Limited,London.
Correspondents for the Amer-
ican Express Company, andThos. Cook & Son.
Interest allowed on term andSavings Bank Deposits,
THE
Limited.ESTABLISHED 18SC.
Capital Subscribed Yen 24,000.000Capital Paid Up 21,000,000
Reserve Fund 13,700,000
HEAD OFFICE, YOKOHAMA.
Branches and Agencies:Honolulu, Now York, San FrancU
London, Lyons, Bombay, Hongkong,Dalny, Newchwang, Leayang, Pekln,Hangkaw, Shanghai, Chefoo, Tientsin,Mukden, Antung Hslen, Kobe, Naga- -
aaki, Toklo, Osaka.Tho Banks buys and receives for Col
lection Bills of Exchange, Issue Draftsand Letters of Credit, and transacts a
! general banking business.
Honolulu Branch 67 King Street
HAND PAINTED NOVELTIES.
At
O. Y. ITOW
BereUnla St. near Emma Honolulu,
Flwt Class Meals Served.
Hit el Street, near Nuuanu.OFDN ALL NIGHT.
Short Otfers i Specialty. 21 Meals,
IF YMWISII Tfl imFRTISFtr I'llllWM iwilHlHMiiaa A.
in NEwaPAPuniiAHWII8K8 AT ANYTIMU
l en or Writ
I
$1.50
R 3Mw ADVERTISING MM
LBOOM PA NS
GO OOTJ STRIKE
Y. W. C. A. GIRLS REFUSE TO
WAIT ON THEMSELVES AND
SHAKE PLACE AFTER NOTICE.
A strike Is on at thhe Young Women'sChristian Association lunch rooms Intho Boston building It Isn't Just anordinary avoryJuy San Francisco styleof strike whow the waiters pull off theiraprons and walk out, or u double linoot union picket. stand guard In frontof the condemned place and warn awaywould bo cuMcomurs with a formidablearray of brick-bat-s. Not anything likethat; Honolulu Isn't- patterning aftertho ordinary.
In this case it Is a strlko of thepatrons of tho ptucc. They "servednotice" yostorday and the war Is on.All tho trouble aroso ovor a now system Inaugurated this week whereby thocustomers perform the part of wait-ers for themselves. Each girl as shocame in for her lunch at noon Tues-day, was pointed to a big pllo of traysand directed to the culinary depart-e- nt
where her allotment of salad, meat,vegetables, bread and tea were passedout to her and sho was compelled tocarry her lunch to tho tablo and waiton herself. This didn't suit at allwith tho majority and an indignationmeeting was at onco held with tho result that an ultimatum was Issued, andon tho refusal of tho management toconsider it, the strike was called.
Miss Moycr, who Is in chargo of tholunch room says that sho will notback down - from her position. ThoOften cent lunch is being furnished atbarely cost prices and regular waiterscannot bo afforded. 'Heretofore thowaiting has been done by girls whoperformed tho service In return for
'e
CLOCK STANDSABOUT TWELVE
INCHES HIGH.
by Manufacturerto be a perfect timepiece. The.clock can be seen at THE STARoffice. It Is an attractive plecoof furniture and when you see Ityou will want.one to replaco thatcheap nickel affair which is usu-
ally called an Alarm Clock. Thisclock Is made of Gun Metal andthe movement Is guaranteed trkeep correct time.
THE HAWAIIAN STAR, WEDNE8DAY, APRIL 24, 1907.
their moal frco but tho work has beentoo hard on thoso girls and hud to bodiscontinued. Milss Mpye!r declaresthat If the girls can do better than thoassociation Is doing for them they nrowolcomo to do so and sho won't losoany sleep ovor It. There aro aboutfifty working girls stenographers,clerks, etc., wo have heretofore ob-
tained their noonday luncheon nt thoassociation room.
111 THE SENATE
FIFTY-THIR- D DAY.AFTERNOON SESSION.
Tho first business taken up by thoSenuto was tho consideration of theGovernor's veto of Scnato Bill No. 64
the Maul electric franchise measure.Haysoldon inoved that the bill passnotwithstanding the veto. Coolhoseconded tho measure. He spoko In
favor of the measure and said that cor-ta- ln
raised by tho governorwere not borne out by tho oftho act.
Woods moved to make tho mousurothe special order of tho day tomorrow.Ho later withdraw his motion.
, Smith said that In Its prosont shapeho. did not think that tho bill wouldmeet with the approval of Congress. He
(was In favor of (passlng tho bill overthe governor's veto as tho measure
j would go before congress and benmonaeu or else lort to tile. There werecertain defects to tho meaoure and ifthe action of tho Senate were to bo thefinal consideration ho would not be Infavor of tho measuro but the measurewould go before Congress and theretho defects could be remedied.
Woods said that much as he dislikedto sustain tho veto ho felt uncertainover tho measure. Ho bad voted forthe gas and rapid transit franchisesand had seen that tho Territory hadnot gotten anything out of them.
Smith Interrupted by 'saying they got2 2 per cent out of tho Rapid Transit.
Woods wanted tho matter continued
4
CQNSU L
SCRAPPING 0
PUTS MATTER TO A TEST VOTE
YESTERDAY AND SOCIETY IS
NOW OUT OF EXISTENCE.
Chlnosc consul Chang Tso Fun hold aconforonco yostorday at Aula Park toconsldor tho troubles between tho op-
posing factions of tho Bok on Society.Tho factions of tho organization hudbeen quarrelling over tho election ofolllcors.
The consul addressed tho meeting andurged upon his hearers tho necesscltyofthe Chinese pearyclng itholr ilnternalstrife. Ho called for a vote as towhothor tho society was to bo disband-ed or not. About two hundred votedngnlnst .the dlsbandmcnt of tho or-
ganization while about four or. fivehundred voted In favor of the abolitionof tho society. Tho consul accordinglydeclared tho society disbanded. Therewas much enthusiasm shown.
SET BACK FIFTY.Capt. Cockran, Twentieth Infantry,
who was court-martlall- in Manilaand ordered dismissed from tho army,has had tho court-martlal- 's findingsreviewed by the President with tho re-
sult that Instead of being dismissedho has been reduced fifty numberswhich places him Just below Capt.Heldt of the Tenth Infantry, now sta-
tioned In Honolulu.
In order that ho could consider it morocarefully. He moved to defer actionuntil 10:30 a. m. tomorrow. Chllllng-wort- h
supported this motion and Itcarried.
At 2:25 p. m. tho Senate adjourned foithe day.
Am. sp. Edward Bewail, Quick, San
atest Premium
THIS ILLUSTRATION WILL GIVE THE READER A GOODIDEA OF THE OF THE NEW ORNAMENTAL PAR-LOR ALARM CLOCK, BUT THE ACTUAL SIZE OF THE CLOCKIS LARGER; IT STANDS ABOUT 12 INCHES HIGH AND ISMASSIVE IN IT IS MADE OF BARBUFF GUN METAL, OF VERY ORNAMENTAL DESIGN, AND ISFITTED WITH AN EXTRA LOUD BELL ENTIRELY HIDDENFROM VIEW.
mob E
H01U KEEPERS
CAN GET LABOR-WITHOU-
THEM FAVORED FEWCAUGHT GRAFTING.
Slnco Japanese laborers can nogo to tho United States mainland fromthis Territory nnd thoro are plenty ofJapanese hero to call upon for planta-tion labor, tho sugar plantations havoceased to pay Japanese hotel keeperstho former customnry fco of $2 per headfor laborers secured by the hotel keepers for work on tho plantations.
Until recontly thero wero four hotelkeepers who were still paid fees forsupplying such labor as was not other-wise secured. It now develops thattheso four have been running a littlegraft and they are now cut oft frombenefits formerly recolvcd.
ON THE ROAD TO 1 WILE I.Thero is a movement on foot to shift
the denizens of Iwllel from tho mainroad to a loss conspicuous part of thodistrict. Tho pineapple cannery andfactory at Iwllel will shortly bo em-ploying several hundred men. womenand chlldron who will have to uso thoroad to go to and from work. At pres-ent the women go a roundabout routeby tho railway track to avoid n.isslnialong the notorious road.
ST. VITUS' DANCEyields quite readily to tho soothingana strengthening influence of Dr,Miles Nervine, because it is a Duro- -
ly nervous affection. Even The chronic form, while often stubborn. Iseventually cured by its persistent use.Sold by druggists on a guaranteethat first bottle will benefit, or money refunded.
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6
to Obtain a Ornamental Parlor Alarm ClockSubscribers to STAR, old and new.
pay $8.00 in advance for one year's subscriptionreceive one Ornamental Parlor Alarm
Clock free of chargeCALL AT THE STAR OFFICE ANDIE THE PARLOR ALARM OLOOK
Hfesilutft
FEES
ck
How NewTHE both who
willwill New
LAME SHOULDER.Whether resulting from a pain or
from rheumatic pains, there Is nothingso good for a lamo shoulder as Chamberlaln's Pain Balm. Apply it freelyand rub the parts vigorously at eachapplication and a quick cure is cer-tain. For sulo by all dealers, Benson,Smith & Co., agents for Hawaii.
Fraternal Meetings
1ARMONY LODGE NO 3, I. O. O. F.Meets every Monday evening, at 7:30,
n Odd Fellows' Hall, Fort street. Vis.ting brothers cordially Invited to at-'n- L
C. A. SIMPSON, N. G.B. R. HENDRY. Secretary.
HONOLULU LODGE 616. B. P. O. E.will moot in tholr hall. King street.near Fort, every Friday evening. Byorder of tho E. It.
FRANK E. RICHARDSON, B. R.HARRY H. SIMPSON, Secy.
Ring up Main 493.
LEADING HAT ANDCLOTHES CLEANERS
Alfred Gumbs, Manager.
All kinds of Hats Cleaned and Block-ed. Ladier' and Gents' Clothes. Clean-ed, Dyed and Repaired. Prices Mod-erate.1154 Fort St. opp. Convent. Honolulu.
T, SHIMATHE DYER.
CLOTHES DYED AND CLEANED.All Work Guaranteed.
Suits Cleaned ond Pressed, GOc;Tuxedo, J75c.
No. 1230 Fort Street, near OrpheumTheater, Honolulu, T. H.
MCommlKsio.i MerchantsSugar Fact vs.
AGENTS FORTho Ewa Plantation Company.The Walalua Agricultural Co., Ltd.The Kohala Sugar Company.Tho Walmea Sugar Mill Company.The Fulton Iron Wonts, St. Louis, Mo.Vmerlcan Steam Pump Co.The George R. Blake Steam Pumps.Weston's Centrifugals.fho New England Mutual LIfo Insur-
ance Company of Boston.Tho Aetna Fire Insurance Company of
Hartford, Conn.National Fire Insurance Co., of
Union Pacific
KailroadSUGGESTS
Speed aiOLcl
ComfortThree trains dally, through cars,
first and second class to all points.Reduced rates take effect soon. Writenow.
S. E. BoothGENERAL AGENT.
NO. 1 Montgomery Street,
SAN FRANCISCO.
OSH OURSTo Chicago
From San Francisco. The
Fastest transaontinental train.
OverlandLimited
aiMtrla llg)Ud, Buffet, Li-
brary and Drawing room it,
olmryatlQn gar. with
dlnr. Telwranhtt newi pot-- d
on train.
UU U I 111 lUUlll J
SEVEN
CHAN KEES3 Hotel Street, noar Bethel.
Dry Goods Ladles' and Gents' FanoyGoods.
XI. AKAGISIIIRTMAKER.
Shirts made with materia' furnlshet11.00, $1.60 ,$2.00, $2.50. When cus-tomer furnishes material 60c and 76c.Ewa side Nuuanu St. near Beretanla
James T. Taylor,M. Am. Soc. C. E.
CONSULTING HYDRAULICHNGINGGR.
Honolulu, T. H.
River 3tieet near Hotel.PHONE WHITE 2576.
Bamboo FurnitureAND PICTURE FRAMES.
Neat and Handsome Designs MadoTo Order.
803 Beretanla Street, near Punchbowl.TELEPHONE BLUE 881.
BE ..Queen Street.DEALERS IN
ID
Firewood, Stove,Steam and Blacksmith
CoalWHOLESALE AND RETAIL.Special Attention Given To
DRAYINGALSO WHITE AND BLACK SAND.
Vienna BakeryGOOD Bread the only HOME-MAD- E
BREAD in town. All kinds of cakesour specialty. Wagon delivery throughcity.Phono ' Iain 179. No. 1120 Fort St.
0 1 otIx as jSCg tvtlyCLEANED AND PRESSES
Honolulu Clothes Clonhing Co
Alakca St., near King. Phone Main 148
Koa FurnitureUPHOLSTERING AND REPAIRING.
WING CHONG CO.Cor. King and Bethel. P. O. Box 1030.
JMC. OHTA,JAPANESE CONTRACTORAND CARPENTER. '
House No. 762 Shoridnn StTelephone White 601.
Horse Clipping.Luke Rogers Is back again from
Maul, clipping horsos at the old stand,corner Punrhbowl nnd King streets.
THE LATEST PATTERNSIn suitings for Spring and Summer
wear. These goods are limited to onesuit per pattern. ,
Good dreeaera will not have theirIdeas Imitated if they buy here.
Try us and be satUfled.,
WAV.A baniai Go. ItClMerohant Tailors.Phone Bluo 2741.No. 62 King Street
MIR1KIDAMI2AABBR IIQP.
Open from C:0 a. m. to 9 p. m.HOT AND COLD RATI If.
Four modern buth tuba with stowNuuanu Street near Pwuaiil.
Importers and dealers In KosilaH,American und Clflnese Dry Ooodi. OM
nsse Ores Linens, LatliM' Shirt WiMIHttenii, arsis Ololh sitd UrM UMTabid Covers, Pongee ft'" " lntU t8llk, Matting and OMmuhor fNHTrunk. MM Nuuanu itrt kftWMnKIWI and Hulel airesis. Rwft.p. O Hut Ml HuAtfim, , f ,
V N
I
- iZ - E--f i2 E.sET UBS nriBBBBBBBBBBBl
EIGHT
A ihno Assortment
ot Cat-eye- s, Moon and Coral Shellson display at
W oman's ExchangeHotel Street near Union.
Corner Hotel and Union Streets.
iffliiiiiiffWITH COMBOR HAIR BRUSH.
Pacheco's Dandruff Killer Is the onlymedy that will effectually destroy thendruff germ, and promote a luxu-u- nt
growth of hair.Sold by all Druggists and at Pache-Barb- er
Shop, Fort street.
PHONE MAIN 232.
YOUR FACEw
No matter how bright, your lace loseshalf its charm Iiy the exhibition ol unsight-
ly teeth. If extracted the Rum may shrinkand make bad wrinkles. If neglected theywill spread decay to others aad make yourbreath bad. Have your tetth attended tonow.
F. L. FERGUSON, D. D. S.TIIK EXPERT DENTISTS
Arlington Hotel, -- Hotel St.
J. Hi
VQUNGr H2:r CENTRALABSOLUTELYFIRE-PROO- F
HONOLULU
jflOANft HOTELWAMOKI BEACH
HERTSCHE, GENERAL MANAGER
Telephone Main 193. Box 192.
3d J. JLoi?3LSuccessor
LORD BELSER,GENERAL CONTRACTOR.
Sewers, Dredging, Grading, Paving,Teaming, Crushed Rock.
Black and White Sand and SoilFor Sale.
Office and Yard, South and Kawaiahao
J.
A
P. O.
to&
Streets.
Cannibal FoodBowls. Drink'Ing Cups. Fans, Bas
kets, Mats anaTapas. HAWAII &
SOUTH SEAS CU
RIO
Alexander YoungBuilding.
ENAMELED JEWELRY.At Half Prices.
Hotel Street near Fort.
A. R. VIEIRA &
115 Hotel Street.
PETER BARON.
will ba ready April 1 to lnstruot ladleagentleman aad ohlldreu in the delight- -
ful art ofSwimming
at any hour at the Tlaalanl Boat ClubHouse. Tel. Illue 281.
Awa
STORE CO.,
CO.
Telanlione Main W . P, 0. Box 941,
WINGr WO TAI& COQOMMIIilON MWUOIIAHT8.
9U Nuuaau near' King.ImHerttrs wl Dalein In Gaswal
MirwiandlMt.OulHtM arookarywaM. UslUilXa. VM
m. Ouutborwuod TrugluL lUlUmWain gad OMmm mJ Jipmimimf m luvtr wim.
Hit M mmg, Mm
NEW ADVERTISEMENTS.
wTw. Dlrnontl & Go 1'ago "Wah Ylng Cnong Co..... I'ag sN. 8. Baches Dry Goods Co... Page 8
Hotel Baths Page 5
I'mugi-iiul- Hial ,l!lvu UondcLAGil
Svns ol the Day.
THE WEATHER,Laocl Onice, U. S. Woathor Buroau,
Young Building. :
Temporatures at 6 n. m.i 8 a. m.; 10
a. m. j and morning minimum:Barometer reading; absolutes humidity
(grains per cubic foot); relative hu-
midity, and dew point: At 8 a. m.:
Wind: Voloclty and direction at 8 a.m.; 10 a. m.; and noon:
Rainfall during 24 hours ending S a.m.:
Total wind movement during 24 hoursending at noon:
WM. B. STOCKMAN,Section Director.
LONDON BESTS: April 24, 9 shillings, 5V1 ponce; last previous quota-
tion, April 20, 9 shillings, 4 ponce.SUGAR: April 24, 8:30 A. M., 3
cents a pound, or $74.00 a ton; lastnrovious nuotatlon, April 20. 3.7C5
conts a pound or ?7G.30 a ton.
I.nw prices at Now England Bakery.The County Board of Supervisors
will meet on Friday night of this week.An acceptable gift cat-ey- es lels Just
tho thing to send to that friend otyours abroad.
County Clerk Kalauokalanl wasfrom hla offlco 'today by tho serious
illness of his mother.Tho Mongolia is duo to arrive here onMay 7th, unless delayed by lier running ashore on Monday.
Housekeepers can't afford to overlookSachs' add In today's Issue, a throeday's opportunity of saving money.
Swimming-- bowling, Turkish bathsand physical culture constitute tho attractions at the Hotel Baths.
Miss Kate Kelley, stenographer fortho Judiciary Departmont,left for Ka- -
ilua yesterday to attend the term ofcourt there.
The Honolulu Symphony Society willgivo an invitational concert to Its membors and friends next Sunday afternoonn the Elks new hall.
We pay honest prices for Jewelry,
and tho like and do business on asmall margin of profit. J. Carlo PawnCo.
Have you tried a Wachusett shirt?They aro the latest in the market. On
sale at Wah Ylng Chong Co., Kingstreet near the Fish Market.
A good sewing machine can bo ruinedby allowing incompetent persons to re-
pair it. All our work guaranteed. Bon-ny & Co., 1266 Fort street. Phone Main4SS.
Former Treasurer Davles, of theWorld's Student Christian Federation,which has Just been in session at To-ki- o,
Is a brother of T. CHve Davles, ofHonolulu. He is a passenger on theMongolia on his way homo to England.
The Gleaners mot this morning withMiss Dora Atwater, 1221 Pensacolastreet. Miss Mnhoney spoke of herlife In Africa. A feature of the gather-ing will bo tho opening of the miteboxes.
'Have you got your costume for themasquorado ball made yet? Got busyand have your best girl make one foryou if you haven't time yourself. Ittakes place in K. of P. hall on May 1st,(Wednesday ovo). Unmasking at 10
o'clock. Special car at 12 o'clock.W. It. Castle, Jr., assistant dean at
Harvard University, has been appoint-ed by the local Chamber of Commerceas delogate of that body to the MohonkConference to bo hold on May 22, 23
and 24. News of his appointment wentforward to Mr. Castle by the S. S. Siberia on Monday.
A lot of undelivered certificates ofmembership in tho Citizens' Guard, anununlformod military organization ofthe days of the Provisional Governmentand tho Republic, were found by SheriffIaukea and Chief Taylor among somoold papers In the polico station. Theyhave been given to tho Gazette Company to distribute.
Y RECOMME
CONTRACJCANCELLED
SOME MEMBERS OF DAM COMMIT- -
TBSE FAVOR CONTINUING WORK
WITHOUT CONTRACTOR.
The House may take up the matter of
the Nuuanu dam, investigation this af-
ternoon. It Is understood that Representative Hughee will make a report on
the matter, with sweeping denunciationof the manner under whloh the work !
being done, ond recommending that thecontract for the' work be annuled andthe work ooutimied under direct gov-
ernmental supervision.The report of Xxpert Soliuyler will
hI'i coma in (or dissuasion, althoughthis ruport la very favorable towardsthe project.
PAMMKNQHHH ARKIVKD.Her N. g. Mlkttliela, from Kauai, Ap
ril 14: Mrs. (1 llotgar4, IMr Hrn, lira, U. T ftreig, Mia A. M Do,W M, M M HimInm4Ii, WIIMMI
FRUIT SHIPPING
ILVIEWS OP A FRUIT GROWER
SUGGESTS THAT BOUNTY BE
FOIL REAL SERVloJ.
EDITOR STAR; As a fruit grower-- I
would llko to offer somo sugges-
tions as to House Bill 19G providinga bounty to shipping companies car-rying fresh fruit. Not having readtho bill I am not prepared to speakon tho bill as formulated, but thisTerritory should bo careful to guardtho growers' interests; which is sol-do-
dono in bills passed ostensiblyfor tho bonoflt of the agriculturalclasses, yet who aro seldom partici-pants in benefits of bounties to tnooxtont they should bo. As an exam-ple tho bounty of ono and a halfconts per pound plaped on beet sugarby tho Federal government. Duringtho last year of tho bounty, one fac-tory in Southorn California, realized$10,000.00; moro than enough fromtho bounty to pay for all the beetsused that season; yet tlio price paidto growers for beets was so low-tha-
most ol them came out In debt;not realizing enough to pay for grow-ing tho crop; tho next year thoyunitedly refused to enter Into anycontract to grow a crop; the fac-tory people then raised the price,notwithstanding tho fact that theywould not get tho bounty of ono anaono half cents on the next crop;proof that thoy could well afford topay moro for the beets; yet duringthe life of the bounty they got alltho benefit and tho growers noth-ing.
Now if tho people of this Territoryare to be taxed, fruit growers Incli'ed, for the purpose of paying anyliansportatlon company a bounty, lotus be sure they will make good by1st. providing a modernfruit transportation service. 2nd. paythe bounty only on such fruit as tnoydeliver to destination In good order.3rd. Make tho bounty a certain rateper pound on all sbldmcnt, with tno.condition that the charge to growersshall not exceed say ?5.0j per ton or2000 lbs; (not u cubic feet as thebasis Is now,) for all shipments Inopen storage; and not exceeding$10.00 per ton on cold storage. Thepresent rates are $3.5o per ton, 40feet cubic measure; tho equivalent otabout $7.00 per ton weight In openstorage, and $40.00 per ton weightcold storage.
At the present, time fruit shipped inopen storage spoils so badly that thereis no profit In shipping. It payingbetter to sell pineapples to the can-
neries at lower pr.co; while the rateof two cents per lb. cold storage Isprohibitive. I have been Informedthat pineapples aro shipped from CapeTown S. A. In cold storage for $6.00per ton, taking a trip of 21 days. Kthis is true a seven days trip for$10.00 per ton is surely a paying proposition. Besides this, the proposedbonus woulu add materially to theearnings. This bounty should be astorage; and $2.00 per tin In cold stor-o- n
fresh fruits and vegetables In openstorage; and $2.00 per to nln cold stor- -
nge, providing a sum not exceeding$50,000 por year shall be paid, and Iftho limit shall bo reached before tnefiscal year expires, the bonous shallcease until the next fiscal year bo- -
gins; when the bonous shall be re-
newod; providing that only thosetransportation companies who Iiavecomplied with the conditions and furnished satisfactory servlco for the fullfiscal year previous, be entitled, toshare tho benefits tho ensuing year.
If such a plan, giving satisfactoryprotection to our interests can be embodied In the act, I would say It wouldbo a very good thing for tho Lcglslature to enact such a law; otherwisenot.
Your truly,TAXPAYER.
Honolulu, April 23, 1907.
DMLY STOCK REPORT
Betwon Boards Sales: B0 Oahu SugarCo., $24.50; 20 Ewa $26.75.
Session Sales: 20 Ewa, $35.75.
Quotations. Bid. Asked.Ewa 26.626 26.876
Hawaiian Agrl 150.00 175.00
Hawaiian Com 84.00
Hawaiian Sugar 30.00 31.00
Honomu 140.00 150,00
Honokaa gug. Co
BTAR, APRIL 24,
Kahuku Co 25.00 7.!08.00 ,'j&375
Koloa ilOJOO
McBrydi , 4,50
Oahu Sugar Co 21. SB i,76OnoineaOokala 9.M $KOlaa Sugar Co 3.SS p.wPala 175,00
Pepeakeo 141.00 ..Pioneer Mill Co 114.00
Welulua Agrl 78.00 ..
will buy a Hue bam.Mr terms.
RENT & QQ,
THE HAWAIIAN WEDNESDAY, 1907.
Plan.Klhel
9O0
mm INSTITUTE
SHIP'SI
OUR DRUNK
HOPE OF HEAVEN AND FEAR OF
HELL- - FAIL TO KEEP OUT
CHOICE JAGS.
"You're drunk," says O'Grady. "So
are you," says iDovanoy. "and Hack-ley- ,
tho Finn ,1s drunk too. And bo Is
Dolph Hansen, who hasn't a chanco ina hundred to hit It llko you."
O'Grady, Devaney, Hackloy and Han-sen went aboard tho big American shipEdward Sowall drunk last night. Twen-ty mon shipped cold sober, but tho bigfour Just mentioned, shipped by thoSeamen's Institute wcro drunk enoughfor tho wholo crew. No ono knowshow ithoy got hold of the liquor, fortho Institute was taking pains to shiptho men sober, but they certainly didacquire Borne several bottles and fourseparate stinko profundo Jags thatwore prodlgous.
O'Grady and Dovanoy nro Irish.Hackloy was born In Finland and Han-sen In Norway. Hansen is the manwho refused to ship In tho schoonerMalolo to San Pedro and sworo howould not bo shanghaied, though no-
body was anxious tp steal him.The Sowall, Captain Quick, gets away
for Now York with sugar thlg after-noon. She is now off tho harbor atanchor, having moved out yesterdayafternoon Tho two ''men shipped bypooplp outsido tho Seamen's Institutewont aboard sober.
It is safe to say that had it not beenfor tho careful and conscientious workof tho Seamen's Institute tho majorityot the crew would havo manned thoSowall drunk, but prayers and moralsuasion and fair treatment could notpluck the thirst from the throats of thefour who got so drunk that thoy didn'tknow the Sowall from a sandwich.Thcso men havo given a lot of troublewhile hero and aro well known to thopolico who are glad thus to bo rid ofthem.
STAR WITNESS IN
MANCHURIA
CAPT. METCALF THE DISTIN
GUISHED SALVAGE TAKES THE
STAND FOR DEFENCE.
Captain John Metcalf the principalvilBess for tho defence In the Man- -
:hurla libel caso, took the witnessstand this morning In Judge Dolescourt. The greatest interest is beingtaken In-th- o evidence of Captain Metcalf for he will, under oath, tell ofthe manner of conducting extensivesalvage operations. His evidence willbe followed by men In his profession,as ho is recognized as ono of theforemost men engaged in salvage oporations. His evidence this morningwas related to his position as representative of Lloyd's In San FranciscoIt is likely that Captain Metcalf willbe on the witness stand for some daysa It was under his executive cuarge,that tho operations for refloating tneManchuria from Walmanalo reet wereconducted.
Captain Plllsbury completed his evidence this morning.
Walluku 200.00
Walmanalo 155.00 .....vWalmea 0
Inter-Islan- d 131. W
Hawaiian Electric 140.00
Hon. It. T. Co. pfd 102.50
Hon. R. T. Co com 55.00
Mutual Telophono 9.00
Nihuku Rubber pdOahu R. & L. CoHon. B. & M. CoHaw Ter. 4s F C 100.00
Haw Ter 4s, R 1905 100.00
Haw. Ter. 4 l-- 4s 100.00
Haw Tor 4 l-- 100.00
Haw Ter 31-2- 3 100,00
Haw Govt 6s 100.00
Cal. Ref Co. 6s
Haiku 6s 102.00
Hawaiian Sugar 63..,Jtr. 100.00
I11IO 11. 11. uo.Hon. R. T .CoKahuku 62....
.....100.00
Oahu R. & L. Co. 6s.... 102.00
Oahu Sutrar 5s. ..v.'. 100.60
Pala Plan 6s ..J,,.., 102.00
Plonoor 6s 105.00
Walalua. Agrl. 6s
McBryde Co 6s
JUMPED THRBE STORIES.
60.00
90.0094.5027.25
103.60102.75
75.00108.25
102.75
102.75
99.0098.50
Ah Sin Jumped from tho third Btoryol the building at Palama junction at1:30 p. m. today to avoid arrest asgambler. Ho Is In a serious conditionIn the hospital.
Koot May SoonQuit Cabinet
JT 1 11UPORT1CI) THAT HW D
WITH lnMilDKT IN
TIIK HAIUUM4W OONUQVBUiV.
WAMinNOTON, April 8- -U ll re-fr- tl
ibai mrUW "f IUt RAt In-
lands to reatjN te mow his dUpleasur
James Jb Morgan,AUCTION. jOR ' AtttrBROKER.
W-- m Kaakumanu 8L 11. Mil 7:.V. O IM.
OF
AT 12 NOON
At 857
street, I will offer for salo at PublicAuction,
Auction Sale
Saturday, April 27th,O'CLOCK
salesroom, Kaahumanu
AT THE PENINSULA
Being Lots 33 and 34, Block 25, cornerof Coral and Franklin Avenues, diagonally across from tho Park. Therearo no buildings to obstruct the view.Flno water front.
M -- MM ani Boatins
Bungalow containing large roombath, kitchen, covered lanal, two-room-
servant's house. Fine lawnand large trees.
Most attractive small property onthe Peninsula.
Bo- -
my
6 ,
JAS. F.
his advice in some cases and Ignoredhim in others Ho did not favor thePresident's courso regarding the Harri- -man letter, It Is said, and ho favoredtho President making a reassuringspeech on tho railroad question. RootIs expected to remain in tho Cabinetonly to see certain measures he Is in-
terested Jn carried out.. Loeb declaresVq, Is no truth in the, story.
Lot your will govern your ac-
tion. Put your valuables where
they will be safe and relievot
yourself of a source of worry.
Private boxes $4.00 a year at
Henry Trust Co.
THREE MAD MEN
FROM THE OREINT
Bedlam has been corralled. A Japand two Chinamen wore hauled In bytho police today nnd held for invest!gatlon as for tho insaneasylum.
Ono of tho Chinese, Ah Mun, wascaught out near Diamond Head. Hehas boon biding in a cave and bas notcombod his hair or washed his headslnco Annexation.
Wong Moon was found raving withpolico whistlos, n ltnlfo and a pursein his clothes. The purso was emptyand the ltnlfe broken.
Tndo has been in the habit of standing in tho middle of tho railway traolrnl Walanae and refusing to movo atthe approaoh ot trains.
MORGAN,Auctloneee
Waterhouse
canc.uates
Huglneers have often had to Btnpand get out to Itlok liltn off the malnisand the oondiiotors know what it isto hold the madman until the traingeta by, for faar lie will throw lilmml under the wliMtw anil itwk nnasty mm.
Dr. UfBMwn will waifilBg Uig mvtIMtlMttM.
?tb PrUUNg, Star 0fl '
ANOTHER OPPORTUNITY TO ECONOMIZE
SPEGllLSflLt OF C0TT0N BLANKETS AND fiOMFORTERS
THURSDAY, FRIDAT AND SATURDAY.Now is the tlmo to buy your Summer Blankets and Save Money.
2
:;...
?!
'8
e.1
$2.25 Quality For.2.00 " " .
1.75 " " .'
1.50 " " .
1.25 " .
1.00 " " .
.85 '
Sateen,2.25 Quality For..3.75 " ". .,6.50 " " .,7.00 .,9.00 " " .,
COTTON BLANKETS.White, Tan and Gray.
COMFPRTERS.Sllkollno and Silk Covered.
I
.$1.95
. 1.65
. 1.45
. 1.20
. .95
. .80
.' '.75
IF YOU VALUE BLANKET ECONOMY, COME EARLY.PRICES ARE FOR 3 DAYS ONLY.
THURSDAY, FRIDAY AND SATURDAY.
.'2.9. 5. CO
. 6.9. 7.6t
I. S. Sachs Dry Goods Go.THE STORE THAT KEEPS THE PRICES DOWN.
Use Our Homesmoked
Fine Sugar Cured
Qunlity and Flavor
pair.
.$1.9
c. q. yee hop & eo.
Tel. Jltairx SSI
THE FINEST CANDIES
iS. . m
are Gunter's. A new shipment has been receivedby THE PALM. .
WHEN IT .COMES to home-ma- de Candies,THE PADM is far ahead of all, A large assort-ment of home-mad- e also at
Palm CafeHotel Street.
Simple FactA.
Don't be fooled into buying anything, but a Wachusett Shirt,nsist upon it. Pajamas, light and heavy. Shoes of all description.
We also carry a large assortment of Men's Furnishing Goods.
ah Ying Chong Go.KING STREET EWA FISH MARKET
K1IE!n. Jard SSc- - each.
8- -In. Jard tt.00 each.9- - ln. Jard $1.25 e&cm.
10-l- n. Jard $1.50 eaok.
::
Big Values In JardinereSiTho American aw well as, the European Manufaotiirora have prodicl
eome very striking and highly artistic specimens thla season, th b.ei ofwhloh we are now showing to the delight of our customers. J
The low prlees at whloh some styles (and they aro all goo4) m bebought obviate the reason of economy for makeshift coverings for ujfshUyflower notsi eoverlnge whloh do not insure against tiegiuemai mtufsarsiover-waterin- g.
Ke flewer pot should without tt Jardlnter when tt essleg4 inea so lmioh jiraatleally and aniitlwUly.
KVL PlitWI IN OIWW11HT 1TVWW.
W. W. Dlmontf & Co,,mm King itmt, HwaiwiH, r.
(91 UIU