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A mm · 4-AProm San Francisco hurling Jan. 12. For From For Indefinite. Korea. Vancouver; San...

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4 - A Prom San Francisco hurling Jan. 12. For From For Indefinite. Korea. Vancouver; San Vancouver: Francisco: Jan. 12. mm JJ 1J Edition Makura, Jan. 8. livening Bulletin. Kt. 12. No. G'KiH 12 PAQER-noSOLU- LU" TERRITORY OF-HAWA- II) MONDAY, JAXUAKY- H. 1M5. 12 PAGES. PRICE FIVE CENTS Hawaiian Star. Vol. XXII. No. 7037 ALLIES AMD RESERVE FORCES o-- o U. S. RED' CROSS EXPEDITION TO SIBERIA IS HALTED BY -- RUSSIA DECLARING AFFIDAVITS FALSE. SdART SAYS BABY SON SHALL MOT BETAIlEHAVJAYFROtl HIM Wife's Will IsYet Not Filed Important Legal Moves Expected by Each "Side in Battle for Child and Estate of Hawaiian Heiress Attorney Kinney is Due to Join Counsel for Mrs. Knight in Week Sworn Declar- ation of San Francisco Nurse Says Smart Neglected Thefma Says Disinheriting of Child Due to Smart's Dominance of His Girl-Wi- fe "They can have every red cent that I poaaest. I would be juat aa hap- py without the money. But they anal I not have my child. There it no more reason why I thould lose custody of my child because of a will con- test than that any other father should lose his without one." N Henry Calllard Smart, defendant in the legal, fight 'to remove his son from his custody, made the above declaration this morning preliminary to his announcement that he 4rill return to Hawaii Wednesday on tha Mauna Kea to rejoin his child, who was temporarily removed from his custody by court order last week. "These affidavits which have been filed for the purpose of establishing tha alleged fact that I am unfit to be- - the guardian of my own child are com posed of 'I surmises,' thinks' and I believes'," smart.deciared, -- ana wnen all the facts are developed it will be noticed that most of these affidavits will b found to be a long ways from the truth and it will appear that . ' there Is no more reason why I should lose my child because of a will suit than that any other father should lose his without one," he reiterated. . smart conferred witn nis attorneys, Thompson, Wilder, Mllverton & Ly- - rher, again this morning. It is charged that Mrs. Elizabeth J. Knight, mother of Thetma Parker, has a plan whereby the expects to gain possession of the child first. In that manner, In the event that the second suit for the Jreaklng of the wilL which, is fore- shadowed in the present petition of Mrs. Knight, fails,, the portion of the $1,500,000 or (2,000000 estate due the child would come into Mrs. KnightQ . possession. WILL NOT YET FILED. .; , The will of Thelma Parker has not ytt been filed. No statement could be secured from Smart's attorneys this , morning In regard to ita filing except v that the date cf fla Cling is uncertain. Under the Hawaiian statutes, Immed- iate filing is not necessary, In fact. It Vmlght be delayed for several , years.' Until It la filed In the circuit court here, the expected contest cannot de. VeloD. Meanwhile the legal for possession child will shaping . ; 1 hSrt,m a,,0.k ? I pain disappointment. ' Attorney A. one a ir ile Tnt, el for i5Z wm He fiee.S!rra-.iI- l P1!!3' a because was n0'WelSht of whom ney wa "T' Zul..!? u ing here, it was said .that ht will probably next .. Attorneya Mrs. Knight were in conference this morning but nothing had developed up to an hour this afternoon. - -- 1 , - SMARTS DOMINANCE AND SON'S DISINHERITANCE ..-.,- r,iHir rniri ,J?.G?Urd. Chrlt'n smarfon This affidavit of pf Judge support ftuardianthlp. ,n rnlnc the fylnc battle Ulllnnen Week sworn placed! iec-el- " Xrse ;i v'lic: ol id ffAll-tLN"i)- P CHlrfsTf'A h"A Cd!ChrIsUna May Hck. haveltved my started professional in It been since. Mrs. there, which days died. It was November o'clock. Im- pression Smart, would fciy arrived about o'clock Miss Dozier Mrs. from sleeping-- porch Mrs. hand under other back, Miss Dotier was sup-portin- g head. Miss Dozier IRON FENCE URON SETTEES, VASES AND RAILINGS. LTD, Merchant Alakea to Smart, "Will support feet?" He "I cannot, heart trouble." did not to lift weight, to bis hands under support them. was first time noticed r in house about half an hour. distinctly un favorible impression of him, to as When he spoke of having heart Smart did not make when we bringing to sleeping-porch- , said, "Daddy, can't something?" body very sensitive frightened movement. He doing at was to just watching. made no to remark. then sick, dying woman. When said, "Daddy, help?" In nature of an to large luminous when made it When of he face made re,p,y hV Kinney, of arn1fl,p naa Knihf what ad was Vi!! thing, so sesitlve Marx, Kln.' fnd the?e 'or,hIm associated when he llv.':" r"f'. morning arrive early yreek. early Smart bdtaV be- fore Smart tL reaching character mark; hour between asked to help het from sleeping-porc- h to make fresh, when we brought back made appeal to .1 much 1i response to Impression he lacked something Is found in normal persons. He struck as a force U I j, 1 nuiungi manner. I n 2 TM ma D..L.. ca -- i t - i ! Ited . l t . . a -- i A tina Jamlnir tm' u . I nun fovv m pccwiuft vri cii- - i Hur sun mm niw. rrn ti. ..t l u u?" , Smart do"nted all morning, looking at a maga- - "..n ane acted If 2ine, which It wm-power- ,- reading, waiting r , w- Tncisco to That was Sunday morn-'R- ! H r?ntl May infand he go of room w.v n urf lunch time. and aeam qpa. declaratlo nu Matthew in o petition that the Voung a nc . . I l think she7 i b. Pi detau , ji . . he . ' . - i"n , . f i I tor Ttnn In luncheon ntfcontiined r '.the I ,onToT 1 u - f i I r WWUJU A .ill o iuuui. xir. uau A atfCal'"' Ith them. On Snndav he rs. r.ed .hfs in un ft iid VIs et ng ; tie i lit In 1 ... . s t t I A I 1' ; "et? Mr Ht Vi I all tTancisco. I nurs ing 1901 and has m v cnpatlon ever first knew Smart Sunday morning was call-je- d In was three she. November End she died Tuesday, 17 at As regards my of Mr. there Sunday morning, and were carrying Smart her Into bedroom. sup- ported one her knees under her and her V ;i, H. E. HENDRICK, and Sta. hl Mr. you her said,; have He have any Jhst put her feet and That the and had then been the got right his -- man trou ble, Mrs. any re were her back she you do Her was and she was. of the was. nothing the time he ed lift her feet but He reply her was very she can't you Jt was the ap peal him her eyes were1 and she he the tip. wu nave W. Mm. Jl just she with some Mr. "J was this for pier the but her time Miss Dozier when we took hei bed and the time and she het him. sur- prised that not do anything request got the that that most me man lacking of character. ieung tmht o ucciuu the -- aa. she did not seem that he is the was but just for the pro- - time pass. KJrk- - did not out the lCnaea mrs. Mr. Mrs. Dal A came for .... uu last tlds rVlltJS. KICK- - ti .Idav life in; In I the I 15, 7 first I that I 9 and I the I I had and said J I I him I a a but ask She a 8 3 the him the her was very did her I xy II XI am. " I and ouiwv a her 3 the ted by loom 't how lone ther dn Mnnrtnv. hut hn ium a his .at Ihe time she ing to have her liesert Hei i had been there Uth her, feed Vf; he mother fedT her most Oi ke, and wanted to be with het ( q the time. At that time when on page eight) .lval heads meet With aIVmy committee hmes D. Dougherty, director-gener- - of the and 1 spent several (hpurs alFday. remember exactly limcheon ontinued Mid-Pacif- ic Carnival, Wayne, secretary, at scnorieia iiarracts tnis morn- - confering with tha board appoint- - Maj.-ge- n William H. Carter to handle the military . features of the celebration. The board consists of the commanding officers of the var- ious organizations on Oahu. As a result of th,e conference 1st Uevf. Robert P. Harbold, 25th Infan- try, probably will be appointed ath letic officer, and 1st Lieut Charles ii. Rich, chairman of the committee in CORNELLIANS TO BANQUET. Cornell Club will its annual banquet this evening' at 6:30 o'clock at the University Clubt LIEUT. A. K. PALMER NEARLY KILLED; FALLS FROM HORSE ON TRAIL Special Star-Bulleti- n Conrspondencel SCHOFIELD BARRACKS, Jan. 11 Lieut. Albert K. C. Palmer of the 1st Field Artillery had a very narrow escape from death Saturday night when tie horse upon which he was mounted missed his footing while de BPondinr a nror-initm- i trail drtwn the Opaeula gulch and rolled down the Method of Handling Finances steep and rocky entf more than six) taut Lieut. Palmer was returning to Says After Examining Books Schofield Barracks from the Haleiwa hotel on horseback by a roundabout PRESENT VOUCHER FORM route, exploring some ot the less fre quented trails and roads. Reaching a small IsnsnceA villnfo tvn mlloi southeast of Haleiwa on the Opaeula AISO Expense Of, guicn, ne mquirea aoout a trail wnicn was shown on the map as crossing the gulch at this point. The villagers showed him where the trail began, but refused to go with across the gulch on account of the darkness. He had hardly gone 20 feet down the trail when he and his horse went by H. E. the ac- - into the canycn. Lieut. Pal- - countant to make the audit raer says, he does not part- ing company with his horse. When he regained consciousness there were several men around him with lanterns, rwbo proceeded to help him to the top of the gulch. They refused to help him find hia horse or to go with him to Haleiwa. but a warrant system ana lantern, and about 9 o'clock Lieut Palmer reached the Haleiwa hotel in a semi-conscio- condition. Though covered with cuts and bruises there were no broken bones oor injuries of a serious nature. Relapsing into ' unconsciousness Lieut Palmer was transported by to the Schofield (hospital, but the next morning he insisted upon organizing a party to search for his horse, a very fine animal valued at over 500 that he had purchased from the Juarez race track, and to which he was greatly devoted. The horse waa found. 200 feetbelow the point from which It had fallen, its hip broken and otherwise terribly Injured. It bad to be shot. It was found that Lieut" Palmer had fallen 75 the steep lope, with two sheer drops of 20 feet. His escape from death or serious injury is considered almost miraculous. MISS DOROTHY BECKER TO ARRIVE SOON AND TRAIN OUT AT WAIKIKI Definite news wis received by mail this morning that Dorothy Becker, the ycung girl who is a champion coast will come to Honolulu to compete in the Carnival championship races. She will leave San Francisco on. 2. Miss Becker will! be accompanied by her mother as chap- - erone. un arrival she win be met by Miss Ruth Stacker of Honolulu, who is the American record-holde- r In the woman's 50-ya- rd division. Miss Miriam Stackeri of the Hui Au Kai, which is helping to bring Miss Becker here. and Carnival officials. Miss Becker will stop at the Seaside hotel and train at WaikikL EXPERTS COME ?T0 START VORK ON BIG DRYDOCI and these be engineer , of the San Francisco Bridge Company-Hawaiia- n combination that holds the Pearl Har- bor Drydock was a return ing passenger in Sierra this morn ing. He has been away from Hono- - ulu an extended period, first in Washington as an expert in the' long- - drawn-cu- t drydock controversy and axer, aiier tne new contract was superintending the fabrication of steel that is to be used in the dock under the new construction plans. Accompanying "Drydock" Smith 1& W. Camp, a concrete expert who will have Charge of removing the con crete that was placed in bottom of the sections which "blew up" pumping was started almost two years ago. To ship out this old concrete has proved a stupendous job, and it Is understood that some new methods will be tried out in handling part of the w ork. Drydock" Smith and Camp, accom panied by Walter F. Dillingham,, gen charge of military bands. Director-- . eral manager of the Hawaiian Dredg General Dougherty said today that the inS Company, left for Pearl Harbor plans for the part which the army will 11113 morning inspect the work that take in the Carnival are rapidly , ma- - k8 already been done clear-terializin- g. and that th program will inS debris out of the ship basin, be arranged to suit the convenience' Accordm8 to recent estimates it may of the board. oe a run year before new construction The hold him this work started, being necessary to clean out dock site, do consider- able and build a floating dock to handle huge concrete blocks that are to be sunk in place to form i the bottom of the new drydock. FAULTS IN COUNTY BUSINESS SYSTEM SHOWN N REPORT IS CALLED INEFFICIENT ReCOmmendS Hawaiian Band Be Shared By Hotels and Societies A number of changes in the present bcokkeeDine and business system of handling this County's finances is rec- - ommended Westcott, ... tumbling appointed remember Japanese au- tomobile fet.down swimmer, February Dredging Company contracts, dredging of accounts of the county auditor and treasurer for the years 1913 and 1914 Westcott finished his report Saturday afternoon and submitted it to Territo rial Treasurer McCarthy. Among other features of his report is a condemnation of the present form sold him oi voucners, coi signed, to is it or system, ana a recommenaauon that the burden of maintaining the Hawaiian band be borne, at least in part by the hotels and societies re ceiving benefits from it This latter item amounts to (28,000 annually. ine expert submits a drart or a voucher form which he advises be adopted in place of present one, also a proposed form of cash book for the treasurer's office and a of ad ditional ledger accounts. Among his suggestions are:. "A revision of Section 84, Act 118, respecting the duties of the auditor, making it necessary to audit each and every claim and certify thereto before passing to board of supervisors fot disposition. "Require more details on claims, such as dates, quantities, etc., etc. I have notes of a number of demands paid for teaming, etc., without dates or description of work done. "A department under jurisdiction of auditor for standardizing purchases of efflce supplies for all city and coun- ty offices, furniture and fixtures and printing, etc., to verify bills for such and maintain a jobbers' index of ac counts payable to prevent duplicate charges passing for payment. a portion at least of the (Continued on page three) IVy WIRELESS REACffHONOLULU That the wireless that is to connect the nation's capital with the nations farthest outpost in the Phil ippines is soon to be completed, with Hawaii an important link, is indicated by advices just received from Wash ington. Bids have been asked for the construction of 600-fo- ot towers A. Sin Diego, Pearl Harbor and Cavite, P. I.. three of monster masts befci? contemplated for each station. The original project for navy wire less communication, announced more than a year ago, included stations at Francis B. (Drydock) Smith, chief Samoa Guam, but have the for the when towards the the the list expense these cut out now. The chain will be Wash ington-Sa- n Diego-Pea- cj Harbor-Cavit- e. There is a big station, nearing com- pletion at Darien, in the Canal Zone, and this may be used as a relay be tween San Diego and Washington, al though experiments have proved that San Francisco and Arlington can get direct communication without trouble. The wireless eowers at Pearl Har bor will be located between the dry-doc- k and the hospital site, near the harbor line. No definite information regarding the bidding ha been re- ceived as yet.by the navy civil engi neers here, btfc. the following was re-- j ceived - this morning by the Star- - Bulletin from the Bureau of Yards and Docks in Washington: Sealed proposals, indorsed, 'Pro posals for Steel Towers,' will be re ceived at the bureau of yards and docks, navy department, Washington, D. C, and at the U. S. naval station. Cavite, P. I., until 11 o'clock a. m., February 27. 1915. and then and there publicly opened, for the construction and erection of three 600-fo- ot steel towers at each of the following naval stations: San Diego. Cal., Pearl Har- bor, Hawaii, and Cavite. P: I. Plans and specifications may be obtained on 'application to the bureau or at the naval stations namei, upon deposit of $25 as security for their return. H. R. Stanford, chief of bureau. December 25, 1914." The letting of this contract has been delayed owing to the difficulty in se BRITISH COMMANDER MAKES SECRET TRIP TO COUNCIL OF WAR I '.; - ' . ?- - ,.:.'.v f vr '.x;::.;V Sir John French, commander-in-chie- f of the British forces in Europe. Associated Press by Federal Wireless NEW YORK, N. Y., Jan. 11. (By mail from London, dated January 1.) For three days Gen. Sir John French recently directed the operations of the British army in Flanders by telephone from his home near Hyde Park. He had been summoned to London to at- tend the war council called a few days ago. He traveled unrecognized in a private's war-staine- d cap and cloak. Sir Archibald Murray was left in command of base headquarters at Saint Omer, France. AUTOMOBILE ROAD AROUND ISLAND HELD FEASIBLE Smooth Highway Within -- Year and Half Planned After City Officials' Tour A smooth automobile highway alii around the island, or the practical I - of the belt road within 12' ener. It is that he "I do the war will but I will n the minds of some members of the municipal party that made the circuit on Saturday. The chairmen of the road and the ways and means commit- tees were In .Engineer Wall's auto. and the way the trio sized up the work necessary to attain the consummation jost mentioned made it appear feas ible. There is not much grading to be done anywhere in the presently bad held waii that the best the The left lias the! from the and transport by rail the termi- nus of the Koolau railroad, whence would be distributed by wagons along At present the belt road in good condition from to Honolulu, ALLIES SIL C 1 Generals Plan Weld Anl Iron Ring Around Germans BELLIGERENTS ADDITIONAL GER- MANY RESERVES LONDON SENDING MILLION ANOTHER MILLION TRAINING-HAL- TING AMERICAN EXPEDITION START- ED WASHINGTON-DEADL- OCK WESTERN BATTLE-LIN- E GENERAL: by LONDON, England, massing training through preparation 1,200,-00- 0 approximately number, replacing training-camps- . Germany's However, Germany reinforcements recaptured Burnhaupt-Lehau- t weakening elsewhere. British Believe MieTWill Weld "Iron Ring," Then Strike Germany LONDON, England, nothing a Germany anecdote imputed knowwhen FZLX,EFZ rJTt it Denying Approval American Red Cross Expedition Russia Halts WASHINGTON, Washington approval American expedition organized of ' prisoners in in for superstructure is expedition, halted K is to . , . s - - j at b - r it to it the is only in one or, Rouv two spots. With the work us t,, rr . ed from in the direc-- ' UttS uciajrcu iuc cumauw mx tion, which make a coral road to the foot of the pall, the only stretch left would be that cross- ing the divide. be done with th"e latter section may be decided 'while the rest of the road is belflg made. . An inspection of the road at Hauula showed it to befJn as bad condition as short of absolute rThe B'lnl . with Mr. and MrsOscarP. (hx as' jpJ host and hnstR FUfn--o th Itdiiith . KJCVLq. district road stables' were There was fine weather narlf all he way and the party arrived Intown at 6:30 In the evening. MAN H PR P , a Old acquaintances Theodore E. NIvison, commercial of the Federal Telegraph Com- - pany, upon nis arrival in nonoiuiu this morning on the Sierra. Mr. formerly was Sta tioned in but In recent years has been in Portland and San Frarfcisco. leaving Honolulu I so for the islands that at the first opportunity I returued. ,1 will be here and will be with the local Federal tele- graph office," Mr. NIvison stated. He is stopping at The San station. The fact that con- struction work at nil three stations is to be in one contract it certain that there will be no local bidders In the field. Steps have been taken' whereby the Peru turnpike In VermO one of the best toll roads in will curing title to, the site for the i become a free state highway. to ALL CALL OUT HAS AMPLE UNDER ARMS, ADMITS RUSSIA MORE THAN MEN INTO FIELD AND INTO OF RED CROSS FOR SIBERIA IS TAKEN UP WITH STILL Press Service Federal Wireless. Jan. 11. The Russians are further enormous reserve forces. The levies are just leaving the camps, they have been for service in the field. They strong. : ' The 1915 levies, same are the 1914 recruits in the latest levy numbers 600,000 youths, 19v; has ample reserves under arms, and can send wherever needed, as was shown when the Germans without their lines ' Jan. 11. The British experts believe the Allies will decisive in the way of concerted offensive move until an ring" has been around on all the fronts. This plan accords with an to Lord Kitch completion reported saidt not end know when begin. Next May." to it D. C., Jan. 11. has been informed that Russia has withheld of the Red Cross for the relief German and Austrian numbers detention and chairman ouinn camps material in Siberia. which Peking, been coral. proposed obtain material deposit Kahukul Odium. motor-draw- n route. Walmea will the Roumania Expected Join: War Soon LONDON, England, Jan. 11. Difficulties in- - financing, requiring slight repairs provisioninff and providinfiT guns and ammunition for the contemplat- - i,;tv,AA aa Waimea other maJ"a,u wmJ uiwiciw would diffi- cult What hometead about fossfble impassabililw Inipetted. WIRELESS BACK agent steamer NIvison Honolulu, "After became homesick con-necte-d'- Diego makes almost thefcountry, LEVIES ON Associated 1914 where stiff number aged already that attempt welded great to into the war. The difficulties have now been surmounted and early participation of this country is probable, according to reports received here from the capital. fieriinies French Making Gains nieU afinarf Lratherjc river Ly'Y; j Sermany, Jan, 11. Today's official buHetiji French and assertsf that'somo n recaptured before Penhes, where the French .have lost heaVily. Weather is bad on tha east in Poland continues. France, Jan; y. Official. ''Intermittent and lUannonadinsr is taking plice from the sea to the' in WITW PPnPRAI "IT X r.bassee we have captured German trench. Hear wererenewed Oceanic indefinitely Donna. included chosen put 'iron : nsoisso" yve repulsed attacks against Spur 132 and fO suringennihent possession of the spur. North of Perthes weve gaijed 200 yards of trenches. North of Beacjour the, enemy tttce desperately attempted and twice failed to re- capture a snfill fort." i The remainder of the front is calm." French far Aeroplane Basts German ; PARIS prance, Jan. 11. A French war aeroplane after v a thrilling dffel in the air with a German plane brought down the Germanl within the lines at' Amiens. The German pilot was killed, - NO FURTHER NEWS ON REPORTED SINKING OF GERMAN CRUISER. Up to 2 o'clock this afternoon no further news had been received fcy the .'Star-Bulleti- n concerning the reported einkinj of the German crui;r Von Der Tann by the British warship Invincible. Associated Prett es this, morning casf doubt on the story. A local German rcsid- -t adds that the Von der Tann participated in the recent naval raid on t i shores of England and hence could not have been in the rumorei fcattls c South Americat . ' ' ;
Transcript
Page 1: A mm · 4-AProm San Francisco hurling Jan. 12. For From For Indefinite. Korea. Vancouver; San Vancouver: Francisco: Jan. 12. mm JJ 1J Edition Makura, Jan. 8. livening Bulletin. Kt.

4

-A

Prom San Franciscohurling Jan. 12.

For

From

For

Indefinite.

Korea.

Vancouver;

San

Vancouver:

Francisco:Jan. 12. mm JJ 1J Edition

Makura, Jan. 8.

livening Bulletin. Kt. 12. No. G'KiH 12 PAQER-noSOLU- LU" TERRITORY OF-HAWA-II) MONDAY, JAXUAKY- H. 1M5. 12 PAGES. PRICE FIVE CENTS

Hawaiian Star. Vol. XXII. No. 7037

ALLIES AMD RESERVE FORCESo--o

U. S. RED' CROSS EXPEDITION TO SIBERIA IS HALTED BY --RUSSIADECLARING AFFIDAVITS FALSE.

SdART SAYS BABY SON SHALL

MOT BETAIlEHAVJAYFROtl HIM

Wife's Will IsYet Not FiledImportant Legal Moves Expected by Each "Side in Battle for

Child and Estate of Hawaiian Heiress Attorney Kinney isDue to Join Counsel for Mrs. Knight in Week Sworn Declar-

ation of San Francisco Nurse Says Smart Neglected ThefmaSays Disinheriting of Child Due to Smart's Dominance of

His Girl-Wi- fe

"They can have every red cent that I poaaest. I would be juat aa hap-

py without the money. But they anal I not have my child. There it nomore reason why I thould lose custody of my child because of a will con-

test than that any other father should lose his without one." N

Henry Calllard Smart, defendant in the legal, fight 'to remove hisson from his custody, made the above declaration this morning

preliminary to his announcement that he 4rill return to Hawaii Wednesdayon tha Mauna Kea to rejoin his child, who was temporarily removed fromhis custody by court order last week.

"These affidavits which have been filed for the purpose of establishingtha alleged fact that I am unfit to be- - the guardian of my own child are composed of 'I surmises,' thinks' and I believes'," smart.deciared, --ana wnenall the facts are developed it will be noticed that most of these affidavitswill b found to be a long ways from the truth and it will appear that

.' there Is no more reason why I should lose my child because of a will suit

than that any other father should lose his without one," he reiterated.. smart conferred witn nis attorneys,

Thompson, Wilder, Mllverton & Ly- -

rher, again this morning. It is chargedthat Mrs. Elizabeth J. Knight, motherof Thetma Parker, has a plan wherebythe expects to gain possession of thechild first. In that manner, In theevent that the second suit for theJreaklng of the wilL which, is fore-shadowed in the present petition ofMrs. Knight, fails,, the portion of the$1,500,000 or (2,000000 estate due thechild would come into Mrs. KnightQ

. possession.WILL NOT YET FILED. .;

, The will of Thelma Parker has notytt been filed. No statement could besecured from Smart's attorneys this

, morning In regard to ita filing exceptv that the date cf fla Cling is uncertain.

Under the Hawaiian statutes, Immed-iate filing is not necessary, In fact. It

Vmlght be delayed for several , years.'Until It la filed In the circuit courthere, the expected contest cannot de.VeloD. Meanwhile the legal forpossession child will shaping

.

; 1 hSrt,m a,,0.k ?I pain disappointment.

' Attorney A. one a ir ile Tnt,el for i5Z wm He

fiee.S!rra-.iI-l P1!!3' a because wasn0'WelShtof whom

ney wa "T' Zul..!? uing here, it was said.that ht will probably next..

Attorneya Mrs. Knight were inconference this morning but nothinghad developed up to an hour thisafternoon. -

-- 1 , -

SMARTS DOMINANCE ANDSON'S DISINHERITANCE

..-.,- r,iHir rniri

,J?.G?Urd.

Chrlt'nsmarfon

Thisaffidavit ofpf Judge

support

ftuardianthlp.

,nrnlnc

the

fylnc

battle

Ulllnnen

Week

sworn

placed!

iec-el-"

Xrse;i v'lic:

ol

id

ffAll-tLN"i)-P CHlrfsTf'A

h"A

Cd!ChrIsUna MayHck. haveltved my

started professionalin It been

since. Mrs.

there, which daysdied. It was

Novembero'clock. Im-

pression Smart, would fciyarrived about o'clock

Miss DozierMrs. from sleeping--

porch

Mrs. handunder other

back, Miss Dotier was sup-portin- g

head. Miss Dozier

IRON FENCEURON SETTEES, VASES AND

RAILINGS.LTD,

Merchant Alakea

to Smart, "Will supportfeet?" He "I cannot,heart trouble." did not to lift

weight, to bis handsunder support them.was first time noticedr in house abouthalf an hour. distinctly unfavorible impression of him,

to asWhen he spoke of having heart

Smart did not makewhen we bringing

to sleeping-porch- , said,"Daddy, can't something?"body very sensitivefrightened movement. Hedoing at was

to just watching.made no to remark.

then sick, dying woman.When said, "Daddy,help?" In nature of an

to largeluminous when made it When

of he facemade re,p,y hV

Kinney, of arn1fl,p naaKnihf what ad was

Vi!! thing, so sesitlveMarx, Kln.' fnd the?e 'or,hIm

associated when he llv.':" r"f'.morning

arrive earlyyreek.

early

SmartbdtaV

be-fore

Smart

tL

reachingcharacter

mark;

hour betweenasked to help hetfrom sleeping-porc- h to make

fresh, when webrought back madeappeal to .1 much

1iresponse toImpression he lacked something

Is found in normal persons.He struck as a force

U Ij, 1 nuiungi manner.I n 2 TM ma D..L.. ca --i t - i !

Ited. l

t . . a-- i

A tina Jamlnir tm'u . I nun fovv m pccwiuft vri cii- -

i Hur sun mm niw. rrn ti. ..t l u

u?" , Smart do"nted all morning, looking at a maga- -"..n ane acted If 2ine, which Itwm-power- ,- reading, waitingr ,

w- Tncisco to That was Sunday morn-'R- !

H r?ntl May infand he go of roomw.v n urf lunch time. andaeam qpa.

declaratlonu

Matthewin o

petition that theVoung a nc

. . Il think she7

ib.Pi

detau,

ji

.

.

he

.

'

.-

i"n,

. f i I tor Ttnn In luncheonntfcontiined r '.the I

,onToT

1 u - f i I r WWUJU A .ill oiuuui. xir. uau

A atfCal'"' Ith them. On Snndav hers. r.ed .hfs in

un

ftiid

VIs

etng ;

tie ilit In 1

... .st

t

I A I

1';

"et?

Mr Ht ViI all

tTancisco. I nursing 1901 and has m vcnpatlon ever first knewSmart Sunday morning was call-je-d

In was threeshe. November

End she died Tuesday, 17at As regards my

of Mr.there Sunday

morning, and werecarrying Smart her

Into bedroom. sup-ported one

her knees underher and

her

V;i, H. E. HENDRICK,

and Sta.

hl

Mr. you hersaid,; have

He haveany Jhst put

her feet and Thatthe and

had then been thegot

right his -- mantrou

ble, Mrs. any rewere her

back sheyou do Her

was and she was.of the was.

nothing the time heed lift her feet butHe reply herwas very

she can't youJt was the ap

peal him her eyes were1 andshe he

thetip. wu naveW.

Mm. Jl just

shewith some Mr. "J

wasthis

for

pier

the

but

her

time Miss Dozierwhen we took

heibed and the time

and she hethim. sur-

prised that not do anythingrequest got the

thatthat most

me man lackingof character.ieung

tmht oucciuu

the--aa. she did not seem that heis the was but just for the

pro- - time pass.KJrk- - did not out the

lCnaea mrs. Mr. Mrs. DalA came for

.... uulast tlds

rVlltJS. KICK- -

ti.Idav

life in; In

Ithe I

15,

7 firstI that

I 9and I

the II had

and

said

J

I

I him

I a

a

but

ask

Shea

8

3the

himthe

herwas very

didher I

xy IIXI am.

"

I

and

ouiwv a

her

3

the

ted by

loom't how lonether dn Mnnrtnv. hut hn ium

a his .at Ihe time sheing to have her liesert Hei

i had been there Uth her, feedVf; he mother fedT her most Oi

ke, and wanted to be with het( q the time. At that time when

on page eight)

.lval heads meetWith aIVmy committee

hmes D. Dougherty, director-gener- -

of the and1 spent several

(hpurs

alFday.remember exactly

limcheon

ontinued

Mid-Pacif- ic Carnival,Wayne, secretary,at scnorieia iiarracts tnis morn- -

confering with tha board appoint- -

Maj.-ge- n William H. Carter tohandle the military . features of thecelebration. The board consists ofthe commanding officers of the var-ious organizations on Oahu.

As a result of th,e conference 1stUevf. Robert P. Harbold, 25th Infan-try, probably will be appointed athletic officer, and 1st Lieut Charlesii. Rich, chairman of the committee in

CORNELLIANS TO BANQUET.

Cornell Club will its annualbanquet this evening' at 6:30 o'clockat the University Clubt

LIEUT. A. K. PALMER

NEARLY KILLED; FALLSFROM HORSE ON TRAIL

Special Star-Bulleti- n ConrspondencelSCHOFIELD BARRACKS, Jan. 11Lieut. Albert K. C. Palmer of the

1st Field Artillery had a very narrowescape from death Saturday nightwhen tie horse upon which he wasmounted missed his footing while deBPondinr a nror-initm- i trail drtwn theOpaeula gulch and rolled down the Method of Handling Financessteep and rocky entf more than six)taut

Lieut. Palmer was returning to Says After Examining BooksSchofield Barracks from the Haleiwahotel on horseback by a roundabout PRESENT VOUCHER FORMroute, exploring some ot the less frequented trails and roads. Reaching asmall IsnsnceA villnfo tvn mlloisoutheast of Haleiwa on the Opaeula AISO Expense Of,guicn, ne mquirea aoout a trail wnicnwas shown on the map as crossing thegulch at this point. The villagersshowed him where the trail began,but refused to go with across thegulch on account of the darkness.

He had hardly gone 20 feet downthe trail when he and his horse went by H. E. the ac- -

into the canycn. Lieut. Pal- - countant to make the auditraer says, he does not part-ing company with his horse. When heregained consciousness there wereseveral men around him withlanterns, rwbo proceeded to help himto the top of the gulch. They refusedto help him find hia horse or to gowith him to Haleiwa. but a warrant system analantern, and about 9 o'clock LieutPalmer reached the Haleiwa hotel ina semi-conscio- condition. Thoughcovered with cuts and bruises therewere no broken bones oor injuries ofa serious nature.

Relapsing into ' unconsciousnessLieut Palmer was transported by

to the Schofield (hospital,but the next morning he insisted uponorganizing a party to search for hishorse, a very fine animal valued atover 500 that he had purchased fromthe Juarez race track, and to whichhe was greatly devoted. The horsewaa found. 200 feetbelow the pointfrom which It had fallen, its hipbroken and otherwise terribly Injured.It bad to be shot. It was found thatLieut" Palmer had fallen 75the steep lope, with two sheer dropsof 20 feet. His escape from death orserious injury is considered almostmiraculous.

MISS DOROTHY BECKER

TO ARRIVE SOON AND

TRAIN OUT AT WAIKIKI

Definite news wis received by mailthis morning that Dorothy Becker, theycung girl who is a champion coast

will come to Honolulu tocompete in the Carnival championshipraces. She will leave San Franciscoon. 2. Miss Becker will! beaccompanied by her mother as chap- -

erone. un arrival she win be met byMiss Ruth Stacker of Honolulu, whois the American record-holde- r In thewoman's 50-ya- rd division. Miss MiriamStackeri of the Hui Au Kai, which ishelping to bring Miss Becker here.and Carnival officials. Miss Beckerwill stop at the Seaside hotel andtrain at WaikikL

EXPERTS COME

?T0 START VORK

ON BIG DRYDOCI

and these beengineer , of the San Francisco BridgeCompany-Hawaiia- n

combination that holds the Pearl Har-bor Drydock was a returning passenger in Sierra this morning. He has been away from Hono- -

ulu an extended period, first inWashington as an expert in the' long--

drawn-cu- t drydock controversy andaxer, aiier tne new contract was

superintending the fabricationof steel that is to be used in the dockunder the new construction plans.

Accompanying "Drydock" Smith 1&

W. Camp, a concrete expert whowill have Charge of removing the concrete that was placed in bottomof the sections which "blew up"pumping was started almost two yearsago. To ship out this old concretehas proved a stupendous job, and it Isunderstood that some new methodswill be tried out in handling partof the w ork.

Drydock" Smith and Camp, accompanied by Walter F. Dillingham,, gen

charge of military bands. Director-- . eral manager of the Hawaiian DredgGeneral Dougherty said today that the inS Company, left for Pearl Harborplans for the part which the army will 11113 morning inspect the work thattake in the Carnival are rapidly , ma- - k8 already been done clear-terializin- g.

and that th program will inS debris out of the ship basin,be arranged to suit the convenience' Accordm8 to recent estimates it mayof the board. oe a run year before new construction

The hold

him

this

work started, being necessary toclean out dock site, do consider-able and build a floating dockto handle huge concrete blocksthat are to be sunk in place to form

i the bottom of the new drydock.

FAULTS IN COUNTY

BUSINESS SYSTEM

SHOWN N REPORT

IS CALLED INEFFICIENT

ReCOmmendSHawaiian Band Be Shared By

Hotels and Societies

A number of changes in the presentbcokkeeDine and business system ofhandling this County's finances is rec- -

ommended Westcott, ...tumbling appointed

remember

Japanese

au-

tomobile

fet.down

swimmer,

February

Dredging Company

contracts,

dredging

of accounts of the county auditor andtreasurer for the years 1913 and 1914Westcott finished his report Saturdayafternoon and submitted it to Territorial Treasurer McCarthy.

Among other features of his reportis a condemnation of the present form

sold him oi voucners, coi

signed,

to

is it

or system, ana a recommenaauonthat the burden of maintaining theHawaiian band be borne, at least inpart by the hotels and societies receiving benefits from it This latteritem amounts to (28,000 annually.

ine expert submits a drart or avoucher form which he advises beadopted in place of present one,also a proposed form of cash book forthe treasurer's office and a of additional ledger accounts. Among hissuggestions are:.

"A revision of Section 84, Act 118,respecting the duties of the auditor,making it necessary to audit each andevery claim and certify thereto beforepassing to board of supervisors fotdisposition.

"Require more details on claims,such as dates, quantities, etc., etc. Ihave notes of a number of demandspaid for teaming, etc., without datesor description of work done.

"A department under jurisdiction ofauditor for standardizing purchasesof efflce supplies for all city and coun-ty offices, furniture and fixtures andprinting, etc., to verify bills for suchand maintain a jobbers' index of accounts payable to prevent duplicatecharges passing for payment.

a portion at least of the

(Continued on page three)

IVyWIRELESS

REACffHONOLULU

That the wireless that is toconnect the nation's capital with thenations farthest outpost in the Philippines is soon to be completed, withHawaii an important link, is indicatedby advices just received from Washington. Bids have been asked for theconstruction of 600-fo- ot towers A. SinDiego, Pearl Harbor and Cavite, P. I..three of monster masts befci?contemplated for each station.

The original project for navy wireless communication, announced morethan a year ago, included stations at

Francis B. (Drydock) Smith, chief Samoa Guam, but have

the

for

thewhen

towards

the

the

the

list

expense

these

cut out now. The chain will be Washington-Sa- n Diego-Pea- cj Harbor-Cavit- e.

There is a big station, nearing com-pletion at Darien, in the Canal Zone,and this may be used as a relay between San Diego and Washington, although experiments have proved thatSan Francisco and Arlington can getdirect communication without trouble.

The wireless eowers at Pearl Harbor will be located between the dry-doc- k

and the hospital site, near theharbor line. No definite informationregarding the bidding ha been re-

ceived as yet.by the navy civil engineers here, btfc. the following was re-- jceived - this morning by the Star- -Bulletin from the Bureau of Yardsand Docks in Washington:

Sealed proposals, indorsed, 'Proposals for Steel Towers,' will be received at the bureau of yards anddocks, navy department, Washington,D. C, and at the U. S. naval station.Cavite, P. I., until 11 o'clock a. m.,February 27. 1915. and then and therepublicly opened, for the constructionand erection of three 600-fo- ot steeltowers at each of the following navalstations: San Diego. Cal., Pearl Har-bor, Hawaii, and Cavite. P: I. Plansand specifications may be obtained on'application to the bureau or at thenaval stations namei, upon deposit of$25 as security for their return. H. R.Stanford, chief of bureau. December25, 1914."

The letting of this contract has beendelayed owing to the difficulty in se

BRITISH COMMANDERMAKES SECRET TRIP

TO COUNCIL OF WAR

I '.; - '. ?- - ,.:.'.v

f vr '.x;::.;V

Sir John French, commander-in-chie- fof the British forces in Europe.

Associated Press by Federal WirelessNEW YORK, N. Y., Jan. 11. (By

mail from London, dated January 1.)For three days Gen. Sir John Frenchrecently directed the operations of theBritish army in Flanders by telephonefrom his home near Hyde Park. Hehad been summoned to London to at-tend the war council called a few daysago. He traveled unrecognized in aprivate's war-staine- d cap and cloak.

Sir Archibald Murray was left incommand of base headquarters atSaint Omer, France.

AUTOMOBILE ROAD

AROUND ISLAND

HELD FEASIBLE

Smooth Highway Within --Yearand Half Planned After City

Officials' Tour

A smooth automobile highway aliiaround the island, or the practical I

-

of the belt road within 12' ener. It is that he "I do thewar will but I willn

the minds of some members of themunicipal party that made the circuiton Saturday. The chairmen of theroad and the ways and means commit-tees were In .Engineer Wall's auto.and the way the trio sized up the worknecessary to attain the consummationjost mentioned made it appear feasible.

There is not much grading to bedone anywhere in the presently bad

heldwaii that thebest the The left lias

the!from the

and transport by rail the termi-nus of the Koolau railroad, whencewould be distributed bywagons along

At present the belt road in goodcondition from to Honolulu,

ALLIES SIL C 1Generals Plan Weld AnlIron Ring Around Germans

BELLIGERENTS ADDITIONAL GER-

MANY RESERVESLONDON SENDING MILLION

ANOTHER MILLION TRAINING-HAL- TING

AMERICAN EXPEDITION START-ED WASHINGTON-DEADL- OCK

WESTERN BATTLE-LIN- E GENERAL:

by

LONDON, England, massing

training throughpreparation 1,200,-00- 0

approximately number,replacing training-camps- .

Germany'sHowever, Germany

reinforcementsrecaptured Burnhaupt-Lehau- t

weakening elsewhere.

British Believe MieTWill Weld"Iron Ring," Then Strike GermanyLONDON, England,

nothing a

Germanyanecdote imputed

knowwhenFZLX,EFZ rJTt it

Denying Approval American RedCross Expedition Russia Halts

WASHINGTON, Washingtonapproval American

expedition organized of' prisoners in in

for superstructure is expedition, haltedK is to . , . s - -

j at b - rit to

it

theis

only in one or, Rouvtwo spots. With the work us t,, r r .

ed from in the direc-- ' UttS uciajrcu iuc cumauw mx

tion, which make a coral roadto the foot of the pall, the only

stretch left would be that cross-ing the divide. be donewith th"e latter section may be decided

'while the rest of the road is belflgmade. .

An inspection of theroad at Hauula showed it to befJn

as bad condition asshort of absolute rTheB'lnl .

with Mr. and MrsOscarP. (hx as' jpJhost and hnstR FUfn--o th Itdiiith . KJCVLq.district road stables' wereThere was fine weather narlf all heway and the party arrived Intown at6:30 In the evening.

MANH PR P , a

Old acquaintancesTheodore E. NIvison, commercial

of the Federal Telegraph Com- -

pany, upon nis arrival in nonoiuiuthis morning on theSierra. Mr. formerly was Stationed in but In recentyears has been in Portland and SanFrarfcisco.

leaving Honolulu Iso for the islands that at thefirst opportunity I returued. ,1 willbe here and will be

with the local Federal tele-graph office," Mr. NIvison stated. Heis stopping at The

San station. The fact that con-struction work at nil three stations isto be in one contractit certain that there will be nolocal bidders In the field.

Steps have been taken' whereby thePeru turnpike In VermO one of thebest toll roads in will

curing title to, the site for the i become a free state highway.

to

ALL CALL OUTHAS AMPLE UNDER ARMS, ADMITS

RUSSIA MORE THAN MENINTO FIELD AND INTO

OF RED CROSSFOR SIBERIA IS TAKEN UP WITH

STILL

Press Service Federal Wireless.

Jan. 11. The Russians arefurther enormous reserve forces. The levies are justleaving the camps, they have been

for service in the field. Theystrong. : 'The 1915 levies, same are

the 1914 recruits in thelatest levy numbers 600,000 youths, 19v;

has ample reserves under arms,and can send wherever needed, as was shownwhen the Germans without

their lines

'

Jan. 11. The British experts believethe Allies will decisive in the way of

concerted offensive move until an ring" has beenaround on all the fronts.

This plan accords with an to Lord Kitchcompletion reported saidt not

end know when begin. Next May."

toit

D. C., Jan. 11. has beeninformed that Russia has withheld of theRed Cross for the relief German andAustrian numbers detentionand chairman ouinn camps

material in Siberia. which Peking, beencoral. proposed obtainmaterial deposit Kahukul Odium.

motor-draw- n

route.

Walmea

will

the

Roumania Expected Join:War SoonLONDON, England, Jan. 11. Difficulties in- - financing,

requiring slight repairs provisioninff and providinfiT guns and ammunition for thecontemplat- - i,;tv,AA aaWaimea other maJ"a,u wmJ uiwiciw

woulddiffi-

cultWhat

hometead

about fossfbleimpassabililw

Inipetted.

WIRELESS BACK

agent

steamerNIvison

Honolulu,

"After becamehomesick

con-necte-d'-

Diego

makesalmost

thefcountry,

LEVIES

ON

Associated

1914where

stiff number

agedalready

that attemptwelded

great

to

into the war. The difficulties have now been surmounted andearly participation of this country is probable, according toreports received here from the capital.

fieriinies French Making Gains

nieU

afinarf

Lratherjcriver Ly'Y;

j

Sermany, Jan, 11. Today's official buHetijiFrench and assertsf that'somo

n recaptured before Penhes, where the French.have lost heaVily. Weather is bad on tha eastin Poland continues.

France, Jan; y. Official. ''Intermittent andlUannonadinsr is taking plice from the sea to the'in

WITW PPnPRAI "IT X r.bassee we have captured German trench. Hear

wererenewed

Oceanic

indefinitely

Donna.

included

chosen

put

'iron

: nsoisso" yve repulsed attacks against Spur 132 and fOsuringennihent possession of the spur. North of Perthesweve gaijed 200 yards of trenches. North of Beacjourthe, enemy tttce desperately attempted and twice failed to re-

capture a snfill fort." i The remainder of the front is calm."

French far Aeroplane Basts German; PARIS prance, Jan. 11. A French war aeroplane after v

a thrilling dffel in the air with a German plane brought downthe Germanl within the lines at' Amiens. The German pilotwas killed, -

NO FURTHER NEWS ON REPORTED SINKING OF GERMAN CRUISER.Up to 2 o'clock this afternoon no further news had been received fcy

the .'Star-Bulleti- n concerning the reported einkinj of the German crui;rVon Der Tann by the British warship Invincible. Associated Prett es

this, morning casf doubt on the story. A local German rcsid- -t

adds that the Von der Tann participated in the recent naval raid on t ishores of England and hence could not have been in the rumorei fcattls cSouth Americat . '

' ;

Page 2: A mm · 4-AProm San Francisco hurling Jan. 12. For From For Indefinite. Korea. Vancouver; San Vancouver: Francisco: Jan. 12. mm JJ 1J Edition Makura, Jan. 8. livening Bulletin. Kt.

lM

Hi

TWO

HAWAII VQRLDIS PIAYGROID ... , .

IK FEW YEARS, SAYS TAYLORi

Knthuslaf tie over the outlook Jor Itors..heavy tntirUr travel to Hawaii during "The uubUc is looking forward to1$1; advocating that the mainland Hawaii's fish exhibit.. They want tooffice of th rromotknr Committee be see the 'painted fishes." This feature'

j

located in Chicago or Los Angeles, has been well aivertixed. The Ha .. , ...and boosting the Panama Pacific expo-- wall building really is very beautiful. Protest AgaiOSt SearXn OT trie and J. K t..it1on and the part which will be tak- - The color work on Hie outside and. Mnnnnjia hv IflnSnCSe Taken HanenS Look Over PfTjjeCt.n In it bv the territory. Albert P. the arrangement of the interior has j -r- - j

Taylor, formerly Sah Francisco repre- - been well tarried out.'nfativo nf th- - Prom.-.tio- Commit- - Mr Tavlor sixjke but briefly of the

to

ice returned to Honolulu this mem- - work of the San Francisco office of Because Japanese officers demand- - Governr r IMnkham s signature to atog' .. which he recently has been in charge, ed and conducted a search for alleged temporary franchise and the riht-of- -

Mr Tayior was accompanied by! "One of the mont intangible endear- - contraband in the cargo of the Par-li- way pajw-r- s trom Superintendent of

Mrs Taylor He has returned to Ho- - ors is the tourist-gettin- g business," he Mail liner Mongolia, an emphatic iro- - Public Works Forbes are virtually all-- You filed at Washington, char-sm- s that is delaying ( c,nstru Urn ct thenolulu to take the portion ofvoutstde continued. can t put a finger test was

with American shipping proposed Kapaa railroad on the inlandman" with the Promotion Commit- - here and a thumb there and say that interferencetee He will serve largely fn the ca- - these are the results. vou have got to in the Orient. Immediately following cf Kauai, which will serve many home- -

the first news of the act broad- - steaders.of secretary, during the ah-- employ both literature and word oflence leaves for mouth to get the travel rat with the arrival of the Mongol; F. K. Thompson of the la. firm of

I "I believe that the work of the San at Honolulu, the matter wes taken up Thompson. WUder. M.lvert.m Ly- -

In JfS o luss from which Francisco office of the Promotion Com-- , by R. P. Schwerin rnanager cf the mer returned yesterday from Kauai

suK cinc Mail, with the United States where he secured the approval cfhe has been mittee has been worth while. The

leaked the government The protest lodged three homesteaders on the kapaa lands ufew months Tiylor flee was useful in a dcten different

Jm L ..1 L ! Jw.v-- - charges which, it is reported, caused the proposed extension f the. i.ihue

S J5i' Resident Wilson to send a note to plantation fa.lroad Iran, its present

friwds wethe T4rf to Xt Q rious matters pertaining to the the Japanese government regarding terminus to a government spur on theSe unwarranted interference with Ameri- - Kapaa lands.W. and assisting the steamshiphim To them be made statement

-..-- -L, vessels and cargoes on the higti "The homesteaders want this rail-th- at

althongh be liked California henj f 'seas. - road made a common carrier so thatwas glad to be back in Honolulu oncej 1 e that the otnee has aone, brought in the Oceanic liner they can transport their sugar can,ror,e- -

' Relieve ?SS Sl todav ls ,n ?ci 1!rit,sb 1f,can? is to be pr0Wn' lo a yarI the udUonspite of our Idea that everything ,e, and Japanese secret 'service men were mill and also their pineapples and

in Honolulu is he said n nd "Jf T led to 'suspect that the Mongolia on other products to a port." Mr. Thomp.reau after the exposition, it beIn an Interview with the Star-Bulleti- v Mtj tn the son said this morning. "A temncrarvthe rtty after U is a wonderful tour, ..! Chlcagoor Los Angeles. The reason franchise can be granted and work

1st atL I foami this out when I '"L8 "i" cargo taken from German vessels war- -

stood on the deck of the steamer this fM-rrauil- wu7 "7 u,uu", bound at Manila. The Mongolia inci- - however, must be given by the super-mornin- g.

and looked the city over asl llre extelV? ft rea. l.CCV 1Iorma'l dent, which caused great friction be-- intendent of public works. Immedi-w- e

approached the harbor. , The trees, f,on Sng tne islands to per- -

twpen thg cfficers of tne steamer and ate action is imperative that thisthe color ell these hare brought me, ?113 patronizing tnem. The Matson t

lhe Japanese 0ffirfai8f was caused by year s crops might be transited,now why Honolulu has! 51m L,ornpaIlv .an Uemcf 21 bags of saltpeter oh Later an act of Congress can make

such a reputation for attractiveness. "P'endid bnreau for the islands and th ttanifegt 0f the vessel out of Ma- - the railroad a permanent commonWar UDsata-Plans. lluo D",,1C ,a "u i " """'.nlla- - earner

Asked for his opinion regarding thetourist traffic, and the outlook lortravel to Hawaii in 1815, Mr. TaylorBald:

As to the tourists, the PromotionCommittee is no more at a, dlsadvant-mfo- ,

In its ; estimates than ; are , thtsteamship and railroad companies oqthe mamland. Now that the war hasbegun . estimates ' of the varicmssteamship and railroad companies and

'tcar!st bureans rcgardhtK tontlst trar-m-.el have been, sadly Jatred. And thetourist travel has not jeeo nputo the

Estimate Tot tarious .reasons. ..;"In the first place, the at hai

greatly felt . the erfecU --of the , war..TJIyidends have teen cut off and. conporations have ..been, affected In otherways. .., Captain Matson recently, toldroe that 15,000 bank clerks were outW 'employment In the EasL So youcan see Just how the war Is preventing

'i travel -

' 3ut ifitwall , nevertheless, . will getits tourists. When I left, theteamerbookings In fean francls'co Were onthe increase, but of course the steam-hip- :

companies are making efforts toseJI .Uirofish .'tickets where pfsslble,Thtt ls business.

"A;t$ there. Is little'.need of .going into, that, .More, conn.-- trtes, however, are i;o!ng Into" it than

?lt Vas beMered would participate aftefthe war had started. There, undoubtf

iedly wUl.be a large travel to Califor- -

&!a and a large attendance at the ex-- .position, iwit, Juat as the. transportatldn "people fell down in their eeti-matea-,'

lt may be that there will notbe as many persons "visit the exposi-tion as th,e heads of the fair had cal-culate-

. ,v . : V;v;.,;."Thtre'ls no need to tell whit the

."It one the Sunday tordrgeooa tirchUectural and color

could be wrwight but 6f thetnlnds of men. R ,The night., before wesailed I saw the tower of Jewels, theK05t consplcucms monument of: the ex- -

posiuon, illuminated, it seemed. Ukean ethereal mirage rising out of theoceaaJ, If there. are nine wonders ofCie world, the X;er-Ulnry'- ls

the tenth.: practically is situated atthe r crossroads ; of the expositiongrounds, named the .Hawaii sitethrerossroads frbm the fact that fromthe taiidpotnt of the, ffoVof vlsltbrs

. Is In the same .position ; in theaTroiinda as It !s in, the. Pacific

'The California bulldlfts wil , be thecenter Of 'the Deonlea attention nnrtth --Ha waii buiMiag Just opposite willJret thpeneXiL th

Hawaii building alone will attract vis- -

Breakfast!A bowl of

?i cashesj -. .... i

fend cream- - or milk the

thing's done!

- .

;

; 'Keady to sene direct

from-tli- e packet.

and Oceanic offices. I will give themcredit for securing many visitors tothe islands. While in San Francisco I

distributed a large amount of litera-- ;

ture by mall. There was a growingdemand for it. Therefore, a distribut-ing center further East would be pre-

ferable. I believe."I believe that in the last. 12 or 13

years the Hawaii Promotion .Commit-tee has done more toward the advertising of the entire Pacific region thanany . other organization. Today it isthe bait by which the transportationcompanies .draw ihelr , travel to thePacific coast. .

"With the cessation of the war I beneve Hawaii, with . the new routethrough the Panama canal, is .destinedto become one of the greatest shippingpdlnif and playgrounds Of the: world

fliER:iClSlflNWILl'BE

rVhen' the harbor, commission meetstomorrow morning a definite decisionob CO. jBockus request for perm isslon to eonstrnct an amusement pieiat Waikikl beach will be announced;The special commftee, consisting o(T. M. Church, chairman; E. E. Bodgtand James Wakefield, has been holdingsessions almost every day the lastweek, dev6tln a laree Dart of

exposition Is. Is of most a careful consideration ol

I.

It

the proposalChairman C. R. Forbes of the com-

mission said today that he. will askthe committee for, a definite recom.mendation tomorrow . evening. ' - Chainman Churph is on Maui c today, henct.the committee could not arrive at aconclusion, but , he will fetnrn tomorrow morning and the committee willget Into Conference before the commission's session at 9:30 o'clock "andat the earlier conference the committees, report will be determined. Neither. Wakefield nor Bodge wirliffgto t"say whether the cdnrmlttee Is Indined to favor Bockus' request.

. There appears practically no oppositlon to the . proposal thtt an amusetnent pier be allowed Jsomewaere neaiHonolulu.-- : The .objection Is '.that olocation, many believing it should .notbe established on . the ' beach betweentire, Castle home and the Seaside, ho-tel. This stretch of sea frontage ineludes the site In the Vicinity of theMcraita hotel and the Outrigger Club.

r.tt ajtr it

Th: following resolution of appre-ciation- ol the life of the late Dr.-W- .. P.Ferguson was passed by the HawaiianErangelieal Association at its meetinglast Friday: -

In the recent sudden death of theRev. Wilbert Perry Ferguson, D. D.,pilncipal of Mills school, the . membersof the Board of the Hawaiian Evangel-ical Association recognize a well-nig- h

irreparable loss to the interests ofChristian education in Hawaii. 'HeWas a trained educator, wise and re-sourceful in staunchand outspoken in his religious convic-tions, affable and winsome in his socialrelations, and devoted to the best in-

terests of this community. As a meni-le- r

of this board, as chairman of itseducational committee, and memberof its Chinese eonimittee, he manifest-ed the deejest interest in all plans andefforts for the betterment of our "mi-ssionary agencies. We would, especiallyrecord our. grateful recognition of hispersonal services in the activities ofour local Chinese church; and of hisstimulating leadership among theyoung men of Mills school.

nOXOMJLU .I 11, 1913.

,

ILSLTOHARD

Direct

KAUAI RAILROAD

COMMERCE PUN MAKING

ORIENT RAPID PROGRESS

TnOrTipSOn

i

',

;

,

Panama-Expositio- n

Easy

AppeBzingNourishing;

Convenient

;

administration,

STAR-BULLETI- MONDAY, ANTARY

SEA IS

IN THE

AttOmey

Washington

threxpositkm Wednesday

"vumerou hi?tcSlY

commonplace,"

SeT

thiexposltlon.

Jlve.iausicIn

According to the best authority the1 J- - Hagens of Hackfeld Co..Mcogolla refused to accept this ship-- agents for Llhue plantation, went withment. Upon arrival of "the steamer Attorney Thompson to Kauai and re-

in Hongkong, w hich was under mar- - j turned yesterday also,tlal law. the British officials came on I

troard and when'they Inquired for thisshipment" they were toM that while itappeared cn the manifest it was not.on beard, as It had been refused inManHa, notwithstanding it was a ship,rnent from; one neutral port to an-other, Shanghai.

The.' British 'officials took the wordcf the officers of the' ship as to the

the Mongolia Was boarded by Japaiir, hnnnJ i r1" Mrs Dyspeptic Jat down: Pape's

Zn :Z f'DIapepsIn digests everything, leavingof the officers that there was no coutraband on board.

They told the officers, it is said, thatIn case, they 'found, the contrabandthey would send the Slongolia toSasedo, the Japanese naval base, "andIn case you lose your we willsend a cruiser along with you," theysaid. .

'Lieut-Col- . W. L. Slebert was a pas.

senger on the Mongolia at the time,returplng from overseeing the distri-bution of American, Red Cross supipiles td the flood 'sufferers In ' theYan;-ts- e valley. . It, is supposed herethat CoL'Sleberfyeported the'holdlngof the Mongolia in Keelurig to the au-thorities in Washington and that thepretest lodged there officially camefrom the repOrfthat he: made "of thactions of the Japanese 6fficials

GOVERNOR REQUESTS : :HEADS OF DEPARTMENTS

TO MAKE INVENTORIES

The governorIs sencMne nntfce trtthe heads "of all territorial denartments requesting them to make ndfile with the tax 'assester complete Inventories of; the assets of their departments. this Is' asked inance with Section 1. Act 77. of the'session . laws of' 1$09, which contem-- !plates an alin'ual bv received hv the miartermasterterritortardepartments, l.ment

iuuuu ucucBsary u maae such accounting ,coherent and intelligible In athorough way.- - --

It is possible the chief execiutfvflmay ask the coming legislature toamend Act 77, "S. L. 1909. in its prese-nt-form the inventory and account-ing" Is dnly

. discretionary. He mayseek to. have annual accountingmaae mandatory.

'

The steamer Masapequa, chararter:ed by the' Rockefeller Foundation, ar-rived at Havre with a cargo of food

lh aa'a 8rvi.ns --Belgians vajued ,at

NURSING WANTED.

Male nurse,; disengaged; 3 years'hospital experience. Address box131, this office. , 6058-- 3

BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY.

Wanted a partner with $3000; a good' mercantile proposition; can make

$5000 yearly; salary '$100 monthly;must give full time; furnish refer-ences; will stand closest investiga-tion. Address A. T office.

6058-l- t

FOR RENT.

Three-bedroo- m house on Kewalo, bet.Wilder and Lunalilo sts.; $40.ply Olive G. Lansfns, 80 Merchantst .. .5058-t- f

DRESSMAKING.

Dressmaking of all kinds; eveninggowns a specialty. AnnaThe McDonald, Punahou . st. Phone

, 1873. 6058-t- f

FURNISHED COTTAGE.

Furnished cottage and light house-keeping rooms; all conveniences;electric lights; bmth. running water;short flistance from postoff ice. Mod-crat- e.

Ganzel place, Fort and Vine-yard. Telitl. 5994-t- f

on Behalf of Plantation

sent

the

even

was

started immediately. A right-of-way- ,

k

EAT CABBAGE. FISH.SAUSAGE, AfEW BREAD

Jfo Indigestion, Gas, Sourness or Upset Stomach If you'll take Tape's

Dlapepsln Try This I

Do some fooaa you eat ht back

into stubborn lumps and cause a sick,

Ta thisi

way

1

never anything so safely quick, socertainly effective. No differencebadly your stomach Is disordered youwill et happy relief In five minutes,but What . pleases you most is that itstrengthens and regulates your stom-ach so you can eat your favorite foodswithout fear.

Most remedies give you relief som-etimesthey are .slow, but not sure."Pape's Dlapepsln" is quick, positive

puts your stomach In a healthycondition so the v misery won't comeback. ,

You ; feel different as soon as"Pape's Wapeslltw comes In contactwith the stomach distress Just vanishes your stomach gets sweet, nogases, no belching, no eructations ofundigested food, your head clears andyou feel fine.

:Go now, make the best investmenryou ever made by getting a large rifty-ce- nt

case of Pape's Diapepsin fromsnd drug store. You realize In fiveminutes bow needless it is to sufferfrom indigestion, dyspepsia or anystomach disorder: advertisement.

"Sherman to Arrive Wednesday.The United States army transport

Sherman from San Francisco for Gnamand ManifV with the 93th company Of

Coast Artillery for Oahu will arriveat Honolulu on Wednesday afternoonSLCrnrAinir tn n lnte wfrolosa massacre

accoufitlne all dertartthe Inventory this morning. The Sherman if

the

this

Ap:

Fedotoff,

"washow

and

reported to carry 1500 recruits for thevarious branches of the mflJtarv service In the Philippines? TheeveSselsteamed from San Fjanclsco .in com-mand of Capt. F. Hall, with CharlesRoman as quartermaster agent.

i

LEGAL NOTICE

IN THK DISTRICT CCl'KT FORthe l)i:trict of Hawaii Territory ofHawaii- - n KankrtipTc: No. 3K.

In the tr.attiT of Tht Kre A Simp-son, voluntary bankrupt.

To the creditors ul Theodore A.Pimp.n. f Leilehiia. Honolulu, t'ityand (Vjnty of Honolulu. Territory ofHawaii and District aforesaid, a bank-rupt:

Notice is hereby givn that on the!th day oi January, A. l). 191.. thefaid Theodore A. imvscn was duiy

. adjudicated !ankrupt. and that ther first meeting cf the creditors will be

held at my offices, mom "."7. Stangen-wal- d

building. Hcnol!i! i. T. 11.. oh the.".'Hh day of January. A L 191.. at if

r'clock in the forenoon, at which timethe said creditors ma attend, provetheir ciairrs. appoint a trustee, o.iaavine the bankrupt and transact suchether business a may properly comebefore said meeting.

ALEXANDKR LINDSAY: JR.Referee in Ban-kVuptcy- .

Honolulu. January 11. 191"),60.S-l- t

AD CLUB NOTICE.

Wednesday, January ;'.. will be Wo-men's Day at the Honolulu Ad Cluband a general invitation is extendedto the ladles of Honolulu wife are In

terested in civic betterment to le pre- -

' sent at the meeting, whfch will beheld in the sixth floor dining-roo- ofthe Alexander Young hotel during thelunch hour from 12 to I o'clock.

Five-mimit- e addresses will be givenj by ladles prominent in Honolulu, so--

! clal life and the meeting promises tobe most interesting. An opportunity

I will be given to any lady present to: address tne cjud.I The hotel makes n charge of .")cents for the luncheon.

H. L. STRANGK,Secretary.

60r,8-2- t

NOT1CF.

All members of the Phoenix lodgeare requested to attertd the meetingon Thursday evening. Jan. '14. 191 .

Matters of great importance to be dis-cussed. 60n8-Ja- n. 11,12, 13, 14.

IT. S. Engineer Office. Honolulu. Ha-

waii. Jan. 11, 1915. Sealed proposalsfor dredging in HonobiUi harbor. Ha-

waii, will be received at this officeuntil 11 a. m., Feb. 15, 1915. and thenpublicly opened. Information on ap-

plication. Chas. S. Bromwell, Lieut.'Col. Engineers.6058 Jan. 11, 12. 13. 14. Feb. 12, 13.

SEALED PROPOSALS, endorsed"Proposals for Steel Towers." will bereceived at the Bureau of Yards andDocks, Navy Department, Washing-ton, D. C, and at the V. S. Naval Sta-tion, Cavite, , I., until 11 o'clock a.m., February 27, 1915, and' then andthere pnblicly opened, for the con-struction and erection of three 600,foot steel towerf at each of the fol-lowing naval stations: San Diego,Cal., Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, and Ca-

vite, P. I. Plans and specificationsmay be obtained on application to theBureau or at the naval stations nam-d- ,

upon deposit of $25 as security fortheir return. H. R. STANFORD, Chiefof Bureau, December 26, 1914.

6058-Jan- . 11. 18.

NOTICE.

Notice Is hereby given that the fol-lowing rule governing traffic on Ter-ritorial Government wharves wasadopted at a special meeting of theBoard of Harbor Commissioners heldTuesday, January 5, 1915.

"No person shall be allowed on anywharf, the property of the Territoryof Hawaii, for the purpose of solicitingbusiness for baggage-transfe- r compa-nies, hotels, rooming-house- s, automo-biles, hacks or other vehicles plyingfor hire, or for the sale of merchan-dise."

POARD OF HARBOR COMMIS-SIONERS.

By Its Chairman,(S) CHARLES R. FORBES.

Attest: (S) T. M. CHURCH, Secretary.6057-3- t - ..

....... . f.f

: r -

O

7"i

WE STORE CITYJMES M. LOVt Phone 12S1

The Santi .Maria, a tanker ojerateby the Tnlon Oil Compan . put in anappearance at the iort todav and arf.t.

AGEEVERYTHING. TRANSFER COMPANY

Maria Is credited with a lone pasnag.due mainly to the vessel meeting witha succession of strong gales and heavy

ed much to the air of activity rmmits.s Th -t- -. k . . ii..nalcn:; the waterfront. It was berthe M'te and gasoline for l.cal importersf rie,f 1?,.Wk a, shipment of t The vessel may renrn to the constfuel oil will be discharged. The Sant: by the way of an Wand port.

,...;. .....f.... ... n ,1 i'm1 rm'ff ' u?

WALL DQUGHERTYj

Precious StoneJewelryModtMiiized

Doiirns antl estimntt's sulmiittoil for roniotK'Hiiiir jowelry.

WW. 9mF

TheJAS. A. BANISTERShoeshave come in all sizes

(Of course you the Banister quality.)

are Hals and Oxfords-i- n Black, Tan and

White

and

Manufacturers' Shoe Store1051 Fort Street

Si

--rl

know

There

Buek

$6.50 $7.00

Dirge faper - Mgirigs" of undisputed superiority. 39

are being shown by

Mr. Morgan thalerof M. II. Bii-- e & Sons Co., Buffalo, X. Y.

at our show-room- s.

Special appointments canbe arranged with Mr.Morganthaler fo r theshowing and selectionof Wall Decorations, etc.

Phone 1261

Lewers & Gookej Ltd.;,Lumber and Building: Materials

.p 4

r

t .

177 So. Kiri St.

5

Page 3: A mm · 4-AProm San Francisco hurling Jan. 12. For From For Indefinite. Korea. Vancouver; San Vancouver: Francisco: Jan. 12. mm JJ 1J Edition Makura, Jan. 8. livening Bulletin. Kt.

His SavingsHelped Him

fe" i v : "I"I mi v

; ; - i.

v-- M v1'

HON. LYMAN J. GAGE,

ri

i

Who Saved to Such - Good PurposeThat He Was U.'S. Treasurer.

Out in 'aHfimfa. r. :iid flowers andtrujdcal verdure, Jivr: a man whoselife should be an exar-- i le to every ambitious youth In Honolulu.

When but 14 yearn oage Lyman J.Game was comoellej to leave schooland found work in h jHst office atHome, N. Y. In anc!!u.T year he wasmail' agent on a raW'-v't- and soon aft-erward hern me erraii 1 hoy in a eoun- -

try bank, rising to junior clerk inrhort order.

reeling that the West held his op- -

iKirtunlty. he took hir. savings to Chiago when 19 and l) ;',an life there as

a clerk in. a : vlanlr e mill. When.through th stress ;j n jianie, the mill

Icsed, young Lyman remained as awatchman to avoid tiding his savingsfor bis living expense..

At 22 he was aga!n a bank clerk, ineix months a teller. n a year assist-ant cashier; then s .cresstvely cashier, vice-preside- nt and president. From1902 to 1S06 Lyman J. Gage, the boy.who was thrown on Ms own resourcesut 14, served his country! as Secretaryof the Treasury.' He aaxW. somethingout of every dollar he earned. So canyon. Today start on th road to Pros-perity by owning au account with

BISHOP & CO.

Savings Dept.

Electric RonsRepaired

ALL WORK AESOLUTELYGUARANTEED. ALL MAN-

NER OF ELECTRIC WORKSATISFACTORILY A N DREASONABLY HANDLED.

X'V

Need ice?---

PHONE 1128

OAHU ICE CO.

Honolulu Photo:. Sujpplx Ck).;KODAK HEADQUARTERS'

-. M059 F6rt Street -

BIG ; BARGAIN IN LITTLE-USE- D

KROEGCR PIANO

BERGSTROM MUSIC CO, Ltd.

John Queally of Ycnkers, N. tiediron dumb bells around his waist andcommitted suicide by drowning in six

rt via t nin iii c a t aci uuA new railroad, th?.Gu!f. Florida &

Alabama, will begin operations in Ala-bama shortly.

EXTRA DREDGING

OF HONOLULU'S

HARBOR PLANNED

SpM iti .itii.ns and !'!'!' rint.s weresent u t'Kl;i f'roiii th- - uifi(M or tndisfrirt ni;iti- - r. f r a aretj-ii- m inHf.uolulu ha!:..r tint invoives about$loo.i(n in round ti.itun-s- . A recentali ttiK-ti- t of "i"'. out of a total of4o.tM.n,oi.ii.-- , pui in the hand of the

hi-- f of engineers. o r nost oftin eiilitiiated t of th- - MoikMuIu

(;iitrac t, and there a a hoJi-iv- r sumor about 1 .'i.tmii that caii applied U.

this work. .h'-ition- s will di.vtributed loyally and will ais--o sentto San rraiK'-isc- tor jinsp"t'tive ridern there.

The pn-tw'h- t dredging pr-.je- t willnieari a gre;i :iiijinvemnit in harborconditions, esjeciaiy in Hie handliim

f larue vessels. The entire east sideof the hartfor will be dredged to a ininwnuni ueiitn or teet ngnt to ukliarbor lines, making it much simple;to turn large shis. This wcrk willnecessitate the removal . of the,wharves of Voting Hros., and the Mr--

tle l5o,it Club, these being inside theharbor lines. There is a small shoalin the tenter of the harlor oppositeFcrt street that will be cut down alnuta foot. The dredging on the east side.of the liarbor will extend as far asBeacon No. 6. There will also besome deepening at the north end ofthe harbor.

The job includes the taking;out of about '.o,ouo cubic yards. Midswill be ojened February la.

DAILY REMINDERS

Kouud the Island in autoIwis Stables. I'hone 2141. -- Adv.

Candy that she likes best-ma- de byHhe Sweet Shoo and sold at eitherstore.

It's at the Seaside Hotel, at Waikiki, that you really enjoy dining.dancing ard a night's re nose.

Need ice? Just phone 1128. and theOahu Ice Co. will delivetxil you needand at any time yon need it.

Milton & Parsons, milliners, havereduced prices on their attractive bonnets for pre-invento- ry sale.-Ad- v.

Miss Alice Rice. will continue herpiano classes at her new home, Beverly court. 'Lunalilo. nr. Pensacola. Adv

When anything needs plating, takeit to the Electro Plating Works, 910Alakea street. It will be handled onlyby expert workmen.

There's a big bargain in a slightlyused Kroeger piano at the BergstromMusic Co. piano very little usedwill sell for $225 on easy payments.

You know all those pictures youhave been saving so carefully! Havethem framed at the Honolulu PictureFraming Co., Bethel street near Ho-tel.

; Visit Wichman's if for no otherpurpose than to see their xn,uisitepieces, of cut glass. More than onepleasant hour can be spent enjoyingthe "beauty of these beautiful articles.

Swift's premium ham and bacon aremild sweet tender, Carefully selecte-d,- uniformly cured and perfectlyBmoked over hardwood fires. Ask yourdealer for these genuinely excellentproducts. ,

Up late last night? Dull, heavyheadache this morning? Don't worry,take Shacone wafer one swallowof water relief in a minute. advertisement.

MRS. MATILDA SEXTON

DIES k SAN FRANCISCO

rJIrs. Matilda Sexton, well known inHonolulu, died in San Francisco at thehome of her daughter, Mrs. LawTenceH. Dee on January 8 according to

I wireless advices received In this city.Death was due to pneumonia. Mrs.Sexton, who was 6 years old, ,1s sur-vived by two daughters. Miss MarySexton and Mrs. li W. Dee, and threegrandchildren, Mamy, Norah and Ar-

thur Pee.Coming to the Islands for the first

time about 50 years ago, Mrs. Sextonpractised as a nurse for 33 years. Shemade numerous visits to the other islands and became well known throughout the territory. In the last 10 yearsshe made several trips to Honolulu tovisit friends and relatives.

The body of Mrs. Walter C. Spriugermissing from Marlboro, Mass., for tendays, was found In a pond near Marl-bolo- r.

It is thought she committedsuicide.

'

'

!

l

Table Glassware ,Is on of thernost important items irtyour table arrangement.

Like the open-t!t- dinner pattern idea' we have 12 complete linesof glassware from which; with a initial purchase, you can start your

W. W. DIM0ND & CO., Ltd.The House of Housewares. 53-6- 5 King Street

HONOLULU STAR-BULLETI- M XIAY. JANUARY itm.

LOCAL AND GENERAL 1

- -The handsome Tie annex of the

Pleasautou liotl has beea completed.

i The annual meeting and election ofthe Cornell Club will be held at theCi.iierwifv f'ln th vrnnin? i

The second degree will be put on inHarmony lnige this evening. All OddFellows are requested to attend. j

A for uaturaliat i'Mi a an'AiinT.'-a- ifi.'ii ha b'-i- i til--- l in thtt..i.-ra- l .'Mirt bv Iiern.lt tlaf iVnon. a'rati", c of Germany.

Regular meeting of Honolulu IxxlgeNo 4'!, F. arid A. M . for transactionof business this evening at half-pas- t

seven o'clock.

1L

Carl Friederich Durikhase, a nativeof Bremen. Germany, has tiled in thefederal court a declaration of inten-tion to become an American citizen.

How John W. Wad man united Pai S.Lee and Miss Lily Park in marriageyesterday afternoon in the KoreanMethodist F.piscopal church in Kwa-- .

Lee is an employe of the HonolulupostofTiec.

Sam Blair of the Popular Theater!has just received a letter from theFamous Players Photo Company, ask-ing if it is possible for motion pic-

tures to be taken of Kilauea, show-ing the fire and molten lava.

The promotion committee will holda special meeting tomorrow. As Sec-

retary Wood expects to leave for SanFrancisco Wednesday, this meetinglias been calfed to complete the busi

ness unfinished at the former meeting.

Under the auspices of the Trail andMountain club a crowd of hikerstramped over the Pali yesterday and.sent the day at th coral gardens onKaneohe bay. A trip to Koko Headc rater and llanama bay is planned fornext Sunday.

Supervisor Qulnn may recommend tothe Board of Supervisors that a forceof road cantoneers be engaged to workon city streets, according to a state-ment made this morning. Mr. Quinnsaid that the city once had a crew of

cantoneers and that their workproved of great value to the city.

The women of Honolulu have beeninvited to a meeting iu4he Library ofHawaii at :5 o'clock Thursday after-noon to further discuss child welfarework. The meeting will be presidedever by Mrs. A.'L. Andrews, presidentof the Woman's Society of CentralUnion church.

Taking the witness stmd In his owndefense In the federal court this morning. Manual M. Pavao, on trial on astatutory charge, emphatically deified,he had contributed to the delinquencyof Maria-Pimenta- l, a deaf and dumbgirl. The case has been continued un-

til 8:30 o'clock tomorrow morning, andprobably will go to the jury beforenoon.

FAULTS IN COUNTY

BUSINESS SYSTEM

(Continued from page one)

of supporting the Hawaiian band ($28,000' annually) should be borne by hotels and societies receiving benefitstherefrom.

"Proper care and accounting forgame birds Imported.

"A general vash book for city andcounty treasurer s office into whichall receipts and disbursements maybe classified and discontinue the expense of duplicating the auditor's ledger and warrant registers.

On the subject of vouchers he says:"The form of voucher or 'demand

in use at present, is not modern. Provision on reverse side for certificationof beard of supervisors, clerk and mayor, is a aeiect responsible for largenumber of these documents passinginto the files without proper certifica-tions. The 'color system' is not prov-ing the safeguard anticipated; a vou-cher rendered on a pink form (generalfund) may be passed by the board ofsupervisors for payment; later, dis-covery is made by originator that billshould have been drawn on greenform (road tax fund) and sends it inso, whereupon the board of supervis-ors pass the duplicate along for pay-ment from road tax fund.

"Three cases of duplicate paymentswere discovered during, ray audit andrecovery of overpayment was effectedin each case.

"Cost of maintaining a supply ofvouchers in the various colors (six atpresent) and the time consumed infolding for files is enormous compar-ed with a simple form of one colorprinted on one side only, per' samplesubmitted."

SUPERVISORS TO HEARFROM COMMITTEES

Reports of standing committees willbe heard by the board of supervisorsand Mayor Lane at the meeting of theboard in the city han tonight.

One of the most important matterswhich will come before the board willbe tiie appropriation bill, which willbe up for second reading. One or twoappointments may be made by themayor and placed before the board forapproval touight. but the bulk ofthese probably will come up at a latermeeting.

More than 1200 men have been in-

dicted .in Pike County. Ky.. for buyingand selling votes at the judicial elec-tion of 1012.

BITULITHIC PAVEMENT ISSUCCESS IN PETftOGRAD.

SAYS RUSSIAN VISITOR

Supervisor Ben Hollmger.' proio-a- l

to adopt biTuIithic ,ave:nent per-manently for local streets receivedstrong endorsement fro.n an unexpected source today.

Demetrius Magula. Imperial Commis-sioner of the mint at I etngrad, Rus-sia, who is visiting Honolulu, voicedhis hearty approval of i iting to the Star-liu!letia- .

"In Russia we have three kinds oftaving," Mr. Magula said, "tht- - Bou-Jishni-

hexagonal creosote block andthe bituminous paving. These threetypes are used almost exclusively.The boulishnik type probably has giv-en the most satisfaction in parts ofthe city where traffic is of the heavysort, although not on't'.e main streets.

"This boulishnik pa. ing is seldomseen in America. I don't think thereis any of it nere. it ;s made fromsmall pebbles and is set on the streetsby hand. It wears for ears andyears and the older it - the smootherit gets. On the main streets we usehexagonal creosote blocks. I thinkthis type of creosote block is superiorto the square blocks used in Honoluluas they are more uniform and fitcloser together.

"On the capitol streets and resi-dence rottds we use bituminous pavingalmost altogether and it has provedvery satisfactory. It is laid about thesame as Fort street in Honolulu.'

CHAMBER TO REVIEW

PROMOTION RESULTS

Results obtained thn ugh promotionefforts during the past year "and sug-gestions for the improvement of localpublicity systems will be discussed ata meeting to be devoted exclusivelyto promotion matters of the Chamberof Commerce on the afternoon of Jan-uary 20.

The financial statement of the com-mittee and the budget for the comingyear will be file.d with the chamber onthat date. Secretary H. P. Wood ofthe committee expects to depart forSan Francisco Wednesday, where hewill act as fair commissioner fromHawaii, but he may submit the finan-cial statement before he leaves

HEAR TALKS TONIGHT

ON HAWAIIAN HISTORY

The members of the. Hawaiian His-torical Society .will gather in the Li-

brary of Hawaii at 8 o'clock this-- eve- -

PHONE 3451

CHAIRMAN NAMED

FOR COMMITTEES

OF CELEDRATION

An important step toward the otn-pletio- n

of plans for the Mid-Pacifi-

Carnival has bet-- n taken through theappointment by lirectr-Genera- l

James D. Dougherty of the chairmenof the committees which will le i:icharge of the various events. Withthese apiointuieiils made, the omniil-te- e

chairmen in turn shortly will se-le-

their and begin atence with the work of completing trmarrangements for their resistiveevents.

Following is a list of the commit-tees and chairmen:

Mardi (Iras ball George Angus.Grounds- - George- Deiiison.Pennants ami badges Percy Dever-il-

Prizes and awards- - Frank .1. iKmgh-ert- y.

Hibiscus, ferns, etc. P. Wil-

der.Construction J. W. Culd wc-II-

Transportation--J- . J. Melser.Religious and musi- c- Paul Super.Decorations--Hmi- l A. Hermit.Swimming William T.. Rawlins.Tennis A. L. Castle.Baseball- - Keily Henshaw .

Directors' ball- - Lieut. Clarence H.Lyman.

'Cosmopolitan ball Lieut. X. W.Campanole.

Mission play Miss K. V. Warinner.Bicycle race meet L. P. George.Walking contest H. M. Ayres.Pyrotechnics at Moiliili J. A. M.

Johnson.Carnival ball of nations S. A. Walk-

er.Water carnival Jack Young.Hotels and accommodations ('. G.

Heiser, Jr. .

Punchbowl eruption Harry Denj-so- n.

ning to attend the twenty-thir- d annualmeeting of that organization. Themeeting w ill be public and all personsinterested in the work of the societyare invited.

Paiers will be read by Judge V. M.Hatch on "The Constitutional Conven-tion of 1894" and by Judge SanfordB. Dole on "The' Accession of Luna-lilo to the Throne." Other speakerswill be W. R. Castle and Rev. J. M.Lydgate of Lihue, Kauai.

; Zealand Spring Lamb

New ZealandPutterSweet Violet ButterOUR SERVICE AND PRICES ARE THE WONDER OF OUR PAT-RON- S,

OLD AND NEW. ORDER NOW FROM OUR MARKET ORGROCERY DEPARTMENT.

C. Q. Yee Hop & Co.

in

SOUTH KING STREET

MAYr i

It's a Wisconsin,Elkhorn Brandcheese weighing

552TITI

H4

IL,

ere are

Glorious Shadesin PhoenixSilk Hosefor Ladies:

Ta 'ipe Hark GreenPalm ReachK;i'eralt ChampagneOld Rose Black-Gold TanNile Gren WhiteReseda TangoLight Wisteria American BeautyWisteria Light GoldKing's Blue Del:' BluePurple CanaryNavy C i iseSky Blue RedPink HelioSuede TurquoiseLight Gray lavenderMahogany Flesh

Pure Silk Yet only 75c the Pair

Sold only at

We

for

f.

,.'

Full on hand J.;!'

Electric Co., Ltd.Phone 3431

- .'

o

a slice now.It will be cut on

theat 10 a. m.

Henry &

1271- -

TURKS

31

CLARION" H

"" "W

Best this climate

GolumbiaNo:;6

Dry Batteriesstock

Hawaiian

Some; Cheese

Ai&HM 'l-toimg-g t see

Order

Saturday, 16th

May Co., Ltd.LEADING GROCERS

Phone

the

.o

I- -

I

iI

. ...

Page 4: A mm · 4-AProm San Francisco hurling Jan. 12. For From For Indefinite. Korea. Vancouver; San Vancouver: Francisco: Jan. 12. mm JJ 1J Edition Makura, Jan. 8. livening Bulletin. Kt.

FOUR

ii&ifljsMis1

RILEY H. ALI EN ........ EDITOR

MONDAY..

The frst condition of antoul(l leave tint' for silence

11, 1915. Jn New York the story has already been told

inner life in that ireami reflection. The

toul'n vision clears hen the yohlen tjatex of it innerJ'fe are closely shut upon the outside irorbl. VictorCharbonw'l.

I tDECORATE FOR THE

fcsi

.JANUARY

CARNIVAL.

, Jteady response should meet the efforts ofthe Carnival eommittee on decorations in itplan to enlist the .support of businesshouses andbusinessmen generally in decorating tlie city.Not only this, but the municipality and theterritorial government should see that the pub-

lic buildings are si;fficiemtly draied in thepatriotic and carnival colors to carry out thegay deco rati ve scheme proposed by the com-

mittee.Within a short time detailed plans will be

announced bv the committee, outlining thcscheme proposed. The community should takea personal interest in seeing that business- -

houses and residences in the doTOrrtowir districtare not behind in the display of colors. It is avery essential part of the Carnival and deservesactive support by the city and territory as wellas the individual citizens.

r ;

...- -

-

u

WORSE THAN BELGIUM.

Renorts from the war-zon- e indicate that: i

Servia is' in even a Tvors plight than BelgiumThis little country of four million people senltowar nearly half of its inale population. Theirvery success against the Austnans helped toaggravate; the plight of the country becausein addition to their own disabled soldiers, theSerbs have had to care for tens oL thousandsof the enemy. Hospital and medical servicesnave oeen entirely over-iaxe- u. r ouu suppliesare reduced to a minimum. It is decfafed thathundreds of people are literally starving todeath, and that the rate oi mortality! amongthe wounded is appalling a needless mortalityif elTicient care could be given the soldiers atthe time, of being disabled" in battle. l Neverthcieisl'the Serbs haver driven the Anstriahsfrom their soil and have carried the campaigninto Ihe. enemy 's country. And like Belgium,their courage is costing them dearly, p f

; ; IS TH ALIANCE .

For several political generations it has beena favorite taunt of Democratic stump-speake- rs

that the national Republican party was alliedwith the "liquor trust." That taunt: can beflung 0 longer. '.When the prohibition questioncame to a 'show-down- " in the vote on the Hob- -

son resolution in the lower house of Congress,more Republicans voted for the resolution thanvoted against it, but more Democrats votedc gainst than for it .

", -

The Hobson resolution provided for nationwide prohibition. Herej is the " way the vote

V - - FOR THIJ RESOLUTION.t Democrats .. . y . . 4. -- .... ... . . fi . 114

Remiblicans . ...... . . ...... . . . ... 67Progressives ."..'Ui.vitii.Progressive Republicans .... 4

TotalAGAINST THE RESOLUTION.

Democrats .......Republicans .. ...ProgressiveIndependent ...

: 11.V. . . ... .

. .. .

. . .

.

. 4 .

,196

..1417. 46;V; 1;.. i

Total ...... . ..........'.... 189j,

Itwr.s Democratic votes that beat tieby a narrow margipj . . f

, t ,

1JSZ PROGRESSIVE

The Progressive bubble, has "busted," andbustedcompletelyj in? the bfnnion $Pmose ob-

servers of the recent mainland ,elecfions. TheBull Moose vote was as ridiculously small inmost of the states as it 'was. in ItaaiL Cali- -

forma, a' notable eicentQvbYrt&PQiiot Aparty but for a Jolinson, as shown by the defeatof other. Progressive candidates wno ran so iarbehind Johnson's vote they were almost in-

visible vwh en the returns came in.In Massachusetts the Progressive guberna-

torial vote fell from 127,655 for Bird in 1913

.to about 32,000 for Walker this year. Col.

Roosevelt and the Progressive campaigners and

HONOLULU JANUARY 11, 1913.

DjivpnnnH- - ninninir ntminst Wrntrmin and. 0t o n ' re-- 1

Glynn, hardly received any attention. In Illinois the Progressive vote fell off 70 per cent.Senator ISeveridge, Progressive, was a poorthird in the race for the Indiana senatorship.

From a Republican standpoint, the mostcheering feature of the Progressive collapsewas the simultaneous gain of the Republicanparty by the same number of votes the Pro-

gressives lost. It has been shown conclusivelythat the Bull Moosers have gone back into theRepublican fold. Thus in Connecticut the re-

union of the Republican factions swept theDemocrats out of office, elected a Republicangovernor, senator and five congressmen.

In this state, Governor Simeon E. Baldwin,Democrat, was a candidate for senator againstFrank E. Brandegee, Republican, who was run-ning for reelection. After his defeat Baldwinsaid:

i

"The key to the election is verv simple. TheJ Progressives of Connecticut got tired of fol

lowing the vagaries of Ex-Preside-nt Roosevelt

and most of them returned to the Republicanfold, from which they had gone out originally.

"I think also that the indictment of morethan 20 of the New York, New Haven & Hart-ford Company's directors and the labeling asconspirators of a good many highly esteemedcitizens of Connecticut who are in their graveshad an unfavorable effect ,on the Democraticprospects. "

Superintendent Forbes plan for the reclama-tion of Waikikwshould be backed up by theHonolulu public and semi-publi- c organizationsand adopted by the legislature. If the legisla-ture grants an ijJcrease of $150,000 to the sani-

tation fund, the work can'be done and $150,-00- 0

of prevention is worth $10,000,000 of cure.

Cole Blease, discredited governor of SouthCarolina, is disappearing from public life andit should . be forever. His official; carreer hasbeen that of an intemperate "rough-neck- "

sullied the South 'sreputation for high-mind- ed,

statesmen.

A richer man than John D. Rockefeller hasbeen discovered. He is the Iutuktu of Mon-

golia and part of his wealth consists of 150,000slaves.record.

That's even better than John D.'s

We suggest that the new supervisors includein their V Seeing Honolulu" tours a little side-tri- p

down to the public garbage incinerator.It's a melancholy and instructive spectacle.

Col. 'Roosevelt is going to tour America, giv-

ing his lecture proceeds t to the unemployed.Nebraska papers, including The Commoner,please: copy. .

;Jf0e

of being softened by time and circum- -

stances.-

War's effect on fashions is shown in despatches saying that there's not aalong any of the battle-line- s.

Hawaii must be for free sugar, saybusiness experts. Yes, but why accompany thepreparation with a grouch?

The Progressive party.' declares that it isn'tdead. Well, there are some mighty expectant

sure of it.

Vera Cruz's relapse after evacuation ofAmerican troops took. the form of a smallpoxepidemic.

Some of oilr friends appear to lelieve thatneutrality consists in roasting both im-

partially.

"What would some our statesmen do without Mexico as a horrible example

Some knockers so closelv humanuuu jvioosenewsrrwrsmaueauperuiecuui.j Ulat difficnltt0 tell them apart.to beat for senator in Pennsylvania,but Penrose won by a plurality of 100,000 votes !

'Spite of that million-dolla- r corruption"pud Pinchot, Bull Penrose continues to bloom.

STAR-BULLETI- N, MONDAY,

whosesensationalactssplendidly-deserve- d

FRAMMS CAY arrivalon the Kinau from Kauai.

I'AI L K.

wster-la-

ISKNHKHft ha returnedHi is Viiji-ol- a

DR. CiKORtf; Mc-rO- has returnedfrom a short'fj? it to Molokai.

V. C. PARKE is back from a Lusiness trip to the island of Kauai.

J. H. NVlLSp.V.. the contractor, hasreturned from an Inspection tripMolokai.

MRS. A. aliVILrOJof Kauai is aisitor in the city, hatiBtf arrived yes-t- f

r.lav mqrBiiir on the Kpiau.V .

A. G ART.LEY has returned from atour of plantations on the island ofKauai. He was a passenger in thesteamer Kinau.

MR. AND MRS. .IOH AXPKR-SO- f

an.i family ara-wtxliuf-r a week

at thir Ebukai honM,evomi DiamondHead.

DR. CARL HOCH. for years identified with the medical profession in

China with headquarters atHongkong, is returning to the mainland in the Pacific Mail steamer

V. MORONI, traveling steward fojthe Paciflij Mail Company, is a pasBenger in the Korea as far as Honolulu. He will await a later steamer.

MISS KATE MILNE of SouthernCalifornia arrived in the city aa apassenger in the Oceanic liner Sierra.She will soon become the bride of aHawaii ranch owner.

ROBERT P. GREER and Mrs. Greer,prominent In California, will remainhere for some weeks on a tour of theIslands. Mr. and Mrs. Greer arrivedin the Oceanic liner Sierra

A. M. MORGENTHALER. identifiedwith wallpaper and decorating inter-ests on the Pacific coast, is making aperiodical trip to Hawaii. He reachedthe city in the Sierra today.

J. DARCY, a former well-know- i.

baseball player with an island team,returned today from aniartended visitto the mainland. He wa. a passengerin the Oceanic steamer'SIerra.

F. A. LUFKIN, son of the Mauibanker, has 'returned to the islandsafter spending some months on themainland. He was numbered with thepassengers In the steamer Sierra.

CHARLES L. HALL, for tei yearsehief elerk 9f the Alexander" Yoilngaotel. hat resigned to join tke Hono-lulu Jewelry and Supply; Company.

.ALBERT HARRIS, deputy UnitedMates marshal, is expected to returnTuesday from Hilo with a Chinese pris-oner,, who was arrested on Hawaii forusing opium..

MRS. ANTONIO GARCIA of Wailu- -u, muui, was operated on in thf

U. WAFERS, who .arrived in Ho- -

an- -

an

is

in

is

inne no

on

or re

nu to

,or nt

2 elyIn his

re is

H !t andarrive on " f?ir

6 a newees. Air. Dickey is treasurerThe Mother Church. Th First n,n.h

Scientist, at Boston, and oneHoward Jading

H n Kriai rrtn ton i m tho nTTIArv' I

,

, ;

?

4

I

i

(

-- FipT LIiiiiT. CLARENCE K.4th Cavalry, IT. S. A, has

of committeewhich have: charge of thewhich .Director gendral . James D.Dougherty giw'fo4he

of the Hawaiian depart-ment as the closing of the

. members iiaLieut. Lyman has chosen1st Lieut. Albert K. R Lyman,

and 2nd Lieut. Charles Lvman2nd Infantry. " '

VERN VONfrom North joinedGerman refugee party now on the waV

iub rituiernna m me Pacific

EFFICIENCY OF

SCHOOLS HIGHER,

REPORT SHOWS

Attendance Second Term of1914 Shows Increase,

Superintendent Kinney

With considerable elation Superin-

tendent Henry W. Kinney of the de-

partment of public instructionto ncunced this that the schools

of the territory have shown in-

creased of 1 per thelast term over the one ThiJ

in ioint of school attendance, dfimeans, in plain terms, an average of 20 more children were In thepublic schools every day the" lastterm than were attending thesecond term of the former year.

This the inclement weath-er which .the frequent heavystorms of the last four months havemade the worst season many yearsi increased attendance causesextra expense to the territory', butgives the school children the additional which they had not

receiving before.There are approximately 2S.0O

school children the territory.percentage is figured

the basis cf those enrolled. If thereare 80 pupils in one schx! and allattended every day of the term theaverage would be 100 per cent Su-perintendent Kinney has worked outthe average attendances by islandsfor the last term and the precedingone. the

Oahu ....KauaiHawaii ..Maui ....Molokai .

General average.

ESCHEW D

191394.4!:.:90.8

2Sf,.l92.1

94.",95.99J.87.6

93.1

10

administering the oath to his newtrial jurors, who are to sit in all civiland equity suits coming before thethird division of the first circuit courtin 1915, Judge T. B. today de-livered a little lecture, in which heIn heavily against th evils ofstrong drink, and also against thdangers disagreement of juries,BUlting in failure to arrive at

' far as possible you shouldto reach unanimous agree

' ments," he said. "The court doesnot ask any juror to sacrifice his con-science to that end, however."

On the subject of liquor the courtsaid that he himself was not a to.

"vofm.-- ., m reported totaier. tnough he had never been in.fj eonsnlering the short toxlcated. but he did not. believe thatwhich .has planal ina .

atjon- t vi-.au- y juiur juage was to pass

J.juuguieui uu u wasdrinking,

Judge Stuart advised his Jurors notSe theS1 J fjfe to abstain from drinking whileLibbv M,v0m Tt 1 court, but refrainhi. fheanfe finf the stuff

' "If Juror feels that he cannotMR, and MRS, --ADAM DICKEY fUy away from however, that

of Boston will In Honolulu f6, Can.l sit and imParUlme Mongolia for a visit of several i J ewuieBimM oi case btowq

of

of Christ,As.Wjlliam Taft looks southward figures in the church's

innrnrH anrina TY1

straight-fron- t

prepared

sides

of

LY-MAN, beenappointed chairman the

will ball.

will commanderand officersevent car-

nival. As OT committeehis brothers.

Engin-eers, B.

SISTER GELDRENChina, who the

w Mali

InSays

morning

efficiency cent inpreceding.

that

ofthem

despiteand

instructionbeen

in Theattendance

disclosing following

SG

9L7

In

Stuart

weighed,

verdict."So en-deav- or

Hiiy coun case ne

to

any

wuic iu uie yvrsuuaiiy anQ PYe Uman-to-ma- n talk, and I will be able toexcuse him from duty." he aaid.

FORBES:Reclamation of the Waikikl swampawill increase the valuo of the prop-erty appreciably aa well as do A waywith its unsightly and. Insanitary

JONAH KUMALAE: It is reported that I objected to some ot thesongs to be sung at the Hawaii failbuilding by the Hawaiian musiciansThat is Incorrect It was Ssm Manuof the Kaai Glee Club who objected.Ave are prepared to sing the songs.

learner Korea, is a member of thf J DEMETRIUS MAGULA (Russiancorps or Kea Cross nurses recruited mint official) : I noticed several sailm iue vneni. &ne Is on her war in ors from the German fihUnp- ohfii - w . . 9ui,uiiuci tai&vio oiiiiiif. . ..oul..ua .

--vi.mreo w UIAC up DlJ. ucici BIUU1IU nuuWUlt'. IlOWeTeT,. IUeS in the field. Aronm tip n r Ho-- MAn't nttomnt tn tallr K-- w, rtGutierrez saVS MeXICO IS abOUt tO DC pacinea. "e!ene Koltz who was num ther did I visit the Geier. Instead.. 1

n?o. f drn ITn Artn. nnd Oairanza were also m ohUd 1 a.m ?.oi?K P"1 to p Harbor and e

the

Washington

resembleit,g

Penrose

South

fanSUPERINTENDENT

the United States ships and docks.

i FOR SALE

II.JUDGE'S ADVICE

NEW JURORS

S'?

u.::utJmotaBt

Moosctvcitrfa

In Puunui House and lot in good location, with allimprovements. House just recently erected.

Desirable home on Wilder Ave., in Makiki district,close to Oahu College. May be bought on easy terms.

PRICE $4250Call at our office and gain further information.

Stangenwald Building. JvGuardian Trust Co., Ltd.

Stangenwald Building, Merchant St

1914.

I

The beaut v of

Cut Glassis a joy forever

Whether a small piece for her Toilet

Table, an artirle for the Dining-room- ,

or a handsome, showy piece for gen-

eral display a gift of Cut Glass en-

riches the home and brings happiness

to the fair recipient.

Wichmah;-- & Go.leading i.jewelers

NATIONAL GUARD THANKSPOPULAR FOR FILM-SHO- W

'On behalf of the ouieers an.l en-listed men of the National Guard, Idesire to express their appreciation ofthe pleasure given them on Sundayevening, December 27, 1914, by yourgenerous exhibition of moving pictures

FOR

guardsmen

corporation

SALE $1200

Five room house, modernimprovements, plumbing,gas and electric lights in-

stalled . . .... .

Close to Punahou School

lot is 105 feet

VIEIRA JBVELRY GO.

WaterhoHS

Manoa . . . 4 bedroomsKinau Armstrong

Vancouer Aves., Manoa ...Rooke Puunui

Cottage, Adams La ne.

" 770 Kinau St...:.1339 Wilder Are..

MaUock Ave.. .

3328 Kinau St....1877 Kalakaua Are.1915 Kalakaua Ave.

Beretania1126 King St,....

Manoa R oad,. v.

Manoa l Valley. .....89 Young St....

2 coiages, Adama 1 ane, Cltjr..,..

it

the National Guard armory."This letter from Col. J. W. JoneiTto

Mesitrs. lilair and Bredhoff of the Poptheater the result of the especi-

ally fine shown therecently.

mwith capital of $1.?

000,000 has been 'formed In Pittsburgmanufacture potash.

53 x

Oahu Aenue,

1252 St, cor. and

2568 St.,

1231

1417 St.2524 East

ularfilms

2336

JEWELERS113 Ho tel St.

HOUSES FOR RENT

FURNISHED

bedrooms ...... 60.00

bedrooms.... 75.00bedrooms. , 50,00- -

UNFURNISHED

bedrooms ...;i.32.50.. . bedrooms. . . 40.00

0 . . . .

. .

. ,

. . .

. . . .

.

bedrooms..... 22.50.Wdrooma... 35.00bedroomi....;. 20U)0

bedrooms.4.... 30.00bedrooms...,.; 30.00,bedrooms...... 60.00

bedrooms.'....; 40.00bedrooms...... 35.00bedrooms...... 35.00

Cor. fcrl tad Mtrcixit CU.

.it -

at

is

'

A a

to

T.

14

3

53 1

332

-- 3

3Z5

333

ii

'V:IS

:

Page 5: A mm · 4-AProm San Francisco hurling Jan. 12. For From For Indefinite. Korea. Vancouver; San Vancouver: Francisco: Jan. 12. mm JJ 1J Edition Makura, Jan. 8. livening Bulletin. Kt.

Sa

Z. A. iK?

. 1 v. :

Situate on the Waikiki side of Liliha Street, about 200 feet mauka of Kuakini Street, comprising

Terms:

. ' nr... v.-- u

on O. A.

r

3Z80

9!

To be at Auction on the Property

A

at 3 6Quarter cash, balance STEVEN,

mm

eterested?

MA

1915.

.3200 3200 3200 3200

3600 2&00 &, .,

' ''

.20 S00 S?.

J '.

S03o KTZcz

0.

J20

--Well, last has proved that wife and husband both interested, that getting arountheirr home which thev own:-i- s sweet wife Working Man. wife theMillionaire, that the approbation wealthy employer regarding advertisements benefit

been marked manner that spurs further effort.

MR. WORKING MAN rnmYour Employer fishes your home. Did realize worth more your employercause your YOU ARE! H'::into

very spine vim, get-u- p, comes nome, asset, same spine carrieuJDiiipiuyer

time.

oroiect

shown

home?

Dusmess maKes mm greater money earner employer.

S3200

4

3200 326

V 3SS SpiS.

j the we ek-- the are the da as a to the of the as to the of

--

V

of the my for the of the emh as me in a me on to

"Civ

ee,

r jto see you own own you ever you are to - be--

t

v you do own owni ne mat to a man wno owns nis own is a net ana tne

s a ior nis

i

1 A man who owns his own home carries his head high, shoulders square, talks straight, looks a man dead square i in theeye. He knows if he died today his family would have their own home over their'heads. He has insured his life in IlealProperty. No ifs or ands. It;is there, a tangible, solid asset. v

'

J Why! The man who owns his own home can die and as he enters go in with head up andclaiming all the rewards of one who has proved a man Insomuch that he has provided for wife arid

1 1 shall sell these lots Saturday, January 16th, 1915, on the property, at 3 o'clock in the afternoon L can show -- you theDlanof your house on Monday, the 18th, at 8 o'clock in the morning. It may be for you to lay . the foundationyour nouse on luesday, the lyth.

Sold

WELL,

heaven,

possible

NOW GOME AND SEE ME--I AM READY-1--AR- E YOU?

A

&?sAr

himself

; STE AuiKCitaoinieeljf'

''4-1-- 1 'W'- - V'fk

'' ', - ';

.k ....

V

Page 6: A mm · 4-AProm San Francisco hurling Jan. 12. For From For Indefinite. Korea. Vancouver; San Vancouver: Francisco: Jan. 12. mm JJ 1J Edition Makura, Jan. 8. livening Bulletin. Kt.

SIX

Are Ybu InsuredIf Not, See

'

MORE MONEY IN

THE BANK, LESS

OF SAY-

ING

TO

Y

BANK OF HAWAII

LTD.

7 5.4

USCastle & Cooke, Ltd.

Fire, Life, Marine, Automobile andAccident Insurance Agents

CHANCE

"HOW-DE-DO- "

POVERTY,

C: Brewer & Co.

' 8UOAR FACTOR 8,;'COMMISSION 'MERCHANTS

SHIPPING and INSUR- -

. ance agents:

PORT ST, HONOLULU, T. H.

list of Officers ..and Directors:,E. I". BISHOP7. . .V.1". Vv President -

G. IL ROBERTSON. ..Vice-Preside- nt and ManagerR. IVERS .... . .1 . Secretary

: E. A. R, ROSS.... ...Treasurer; a R. CARTER..... . .Director" C. H. COOKE. ,V. i... Director.J. R. GALT. ....... . . .DirectorR. A." COOKE.... , . . . .Director

v A. GARTLEYo . . . 1 ... .DirectorD. G. MAT. . .. . i ... . ..Auditor

V

i

IIQIWUJLUA LIMItEO ;';-v:-

:i

Issues K. N. it K. Letters otCredit and Trayelera 'Ghecksjjt liable throughout the world.

t Rre insurance'" " '"'THE ,

B. a DUlinjiham Co;. ..::umitu

General Agent for Hawaii:Atlas Assurance Company o- London,' New. York,' Under-- .

"Titera'v Agehcy; Providence.Washington Insurance Co. :

4th floor Stangenwald Building

1 THE YOKOHAMA SPECIE"r nkHve.' t tuiTFn. : v

'"" ;"'':,V;.v .' Ten. "

Capital subscribed... . 4 8,000,000; Capital paJl up. 30.000,000 ;

Reserve funu. ... I .i. .1.?50,0008. AVYOKI. Locrl Mner

Giffard & Steinlungenwald Bld3, 102 Merchant St.

' STOCK AND BOND BROKERS

Members Honolulu Stock and BondExhangs :

Alexander

BaldwinLimited.

Sugar FactorsCommission Merchantsand Insurance Agents

Aegnts forHawaiian Commercial & Sugar

Co. ;

Haiku Sugar Company.Plantation.Paia -

Maui Agricultural Company.Hawaiian Sugar Company.Kahuku Plantation Company.

. MtfBryde Sugar Co., Ltd,' Kahuluf Railroad Company.

Kauai Railway Company.Kauai Fruit tc Land Co., LtdHonolua Ranch.

Bishop & Co;- .bankers : r

Pay 4 yearly on Savings De--:1

posits, compounded twiceAnnually.

MEAT MARKET & GROCERY

Phong 3451C Q. YEE HOP & CO.

FOR SALE

$300 Corner 4th and Palolo ave4 60Z100. ..

- ';.J250 Lot 50x100, 4th-

- Ave.375 Lot 50x150, Palolo Ave.

I'All these lots 'are, only, one .blockfrom Watalae carllne.' '

Terms are $25 down and $10 per, mo.Here is your chance.

RE E, STBAUCHWalty Bldg. ; 74 a Klxg BL

AGENTS WANTED

HOME INSURANCE CO. OF HAVyAIILtd O'Neil Bldg9 King'sC cornerPort SL Telephone 3529 : I

FOR RENTFine cottage in town; gas;

screened; electricity; $22.Renovated house; SO.

FOR SALE Large house and lot withbearing trees and grapevines; $2500.

L Hv Schnacn,- Heal "Estale '

842 Kaahumanu St. Telephone 3533

. STAR-BULLETI- N, 11, 1015.

Honolulu Stock ExchangtMonday. Jan. 11.

MERCANTILE. Bid. Asked.Alexander 4: BaldwinLtd 2o0 225C. Brewer & Co.

SUGAR.E-- Plantation Co 214 22

Haiku Sugar Co 12".

Haw. Agri. Co.'Haw. C. & Sug. Co... . 324 32Haw. Sugar Co Zi 34 4Honokaa Sugar Co 4 4Li

'Honomu Sugar Co 140

Hutchinson S. Plan. Co 15

Kabuku Plan. Co .... 16

Kekaha Sugar Co. ..... 120Koloa Sugar Co 13oMcBryde Sugar Co.. Ltd. "&8 5.VOahu Sugar Co .. W lt4Oiaa Sugar Co., Ltd 5 V ,

Onomea Sugar Co 2si 29

Paauhau Sugar Plan. CoPacific Sugar Mill 824Paia Plan. Co 125Pepeekeo Sugar Co.Pioneer Mill Co 23 Vi 24Waialua Agri. Co 90 924Wailuku Sugar Co. .

'

Waimanalo Sugar Co 22".

Waimea Sugar Mill Co.

Haiku F. & P. Co.. PM. .

Haiku F. & P. Co., Com,Haw. Electric Co 165Haw. Irr. Co.. LtdHaw, PlneapiJe Co 3r,4 364Hilo R. R. Co., PfdHilo R.R. Co.. ComHcno. B. & M. Co., Ltd. . . 14Hon. Gas Co.. Pfd 100Hon. Gas Co., Com.... 100Hon. R. T. & L. Co 140Inter-Islan- d S. Nav. Co.. 140Mutual Tel. Co 18Oahu Ry. & Land Co... 131Pahang Rubpber CoTanjong Olok Rubber Co.

BONDS.Hamakua Ditch Co. 6s...Haw. C. & Sug. Co. fig..Haw. Irr. Co. 6s... 90Haw. Ter. 4s, Ref. 1905..Haw. Ter. 5s, Pub. Imp..Haw. Ter. Pub. Imp. 4s..Haw. Ter. 4V.sHaw. Ter. S 4sHilo It.It.Co. 6s Is. '01..Hilo R.R.Co. R.&E.Con. 6s

Honokaa Sug. Co. 6s...Hon. Gas Co., Ltd.. 5s. . 994Hon. R. T, & L. Co. 6s. .103Kauai Ry. Co. '5s. .7. .7. 100Kohala Ditch Co. 6s....McBryde Sugar Co. 5s. 96Mutual Tel. 6s . 101Oahu.Ry. & Land Co. Cs 103Oahu Sugar Co. 6s. ;7. . - 102Olaa Sugar Co. 6s 75 80Pacific G. & F. Co. 6s... 101 V&

Pac. Sugar Mill Co. 6sPioneer. Mill Co. 5a.v ... 100San1 Carlos Mill. Co. 6s.. 100Waialua AgrL Co.'Sjj... 100

Sales f Between Boards 5 OahuSug. Co. 45, 3a H. B. & M. Co.

j 14; 15 Ewa 22.J Session Sales 5 Oahu Sug. Co.19V; SO, 70 McBryde' 5; 5 I.-- I. S. N,Co. 141; 100-Ol-aa 5; 25 H. C. & S.Co. 22: 100 Olaa 5.

DIVIDENDS.

Jan. 10. Hutchinson- - .15; Paauhau.15; Wailuku .50.

Latest sugar quotation: 95 degreestest, 4.05 cents, or $81 per ton.

4.05cts

Henry Va!erhbuse Trust CoHLtd.

Members. Honolulu Stock and Bolid. 'Exchange." " ';

Fort and Merchant StreetsTelephone 1208 - -

J. F. MORGAN C-O- LTD.1

STOCK BROKERSInformation Furnished anff Loans

Made.Merchant Street Star Building

Phone 1572

Two persons were shot, one fatally,'during a riot rn Buffalo, when a mobtried io free two women arrested torstealing coal from the liew York Cen-tral; ' ' ' v 'railroad, yards.

To alleviate the anxiety of husbandsat the front, thq Bundesrath .of Ger-many has decided to furnish financialand medical assistance to women atthe time of childbirth' '

Because neighbors didn't like thenoise they made during nights, the30 dogs kept by Miss Ludwlch of Chi-cago during; the last two years, weretaken by the health department to thetfrwn pound.

; ; i; r ;D01i?T POSTPONEthe making of 'yoiir AVillv Pat off otliernint tors if you must, but make your WillNOW before anything happens to inter-fere.

Our Officers will be pfeased to help youin drawing up the document and if thisCompany is named as Executor no elfcrgewill be made for assisting vou with vourWill or for keeping it in our fire and burgla-

r-proof vault

HONOLULU MONDAY, JANUARY.

MISCELTJkN'EOUS.

w-- m . I , I . m m I m I m , .'

f f

1 SHIPPING AND WATERFRONT NEWS !

T. H. DAWSON IS GERMANS FLEEING WEATHER AND NOT

GIVEN COMMAND FROM TSINGTAU WAR DELAYED

OF VENTURA

John H Dawson, senior chief offi-cer in the Oceanic liner Sierra, wa3missing when that vessel steamed toa berth at PUr 1" from San Franciscothis morning. It's Captain Dawsonhow, the well-like- d oificer havingbeen promoted to the command of the)Ventura, followine the death of Cau- -

tain J. L. Cowell.For vears Captain Dawson has been

Identified with the Oceanic line, first ;

as an officer in Australian packetsand afterward going into its earlieststeamers. He also ser ed in the Mari-posa while that vessel was employedon a run between Tahiti and SanFrancisco.

Officers in the Sierra this morningexpressed much regret over the de-

parture of Dawson from their ranks.As a tribute to their loyalty andfriendship a fine pair of binocularswas presented the returning officerbefore the Sierra departed from SanFrancisco for Honolulu.

P. F. Johnson, former second officer, has received merited promotionto chief. Johnson is no stranger tothe islands, having been with the Si-

erra for a number of years. He ispopular with passengers and shippersalike.

E. J. Preston, now second officerwas moved up a notch in the generalpromotion that followed the transferof Dawson.

The Sierra was favored with fineweather on the journey to the islands.Among '40 cabin passengers about ascore are tourists Who may elect toremain some weeks In visiting pointsof interest in the islands. Elevensteerage travelers arrived in tlfe ves-sel. During the stay, of the vessel103R tons of cargo will be discharged,.A mail 'of 38." sacks was received.

The Sierra spent' about 36 hours indrydock at San Francisco when anew blade was fitted to its propeller,Officers slate that It mlght have beenknocked off in striking a sleepingwhale. The accident diri not delay thevessel to great extent the liner arrivihg" at the coast port on Christmasday.

A shipment of sugar and other pro-

ducts will be given the vessef beforeIts departure for San Francisco atnoon next Saturday

HARBOR NOTES

The steamlr MIkahala brought thefirst 'of new crop sugar from the, island of Maul? ""; :'

.

A shipment of fuel oil for the agen-cy of the Union Oil Company is duedaily in the steamer. Santa Maria.

.Scheduled, to steam for San Fran-cisco at 1(J o'clock tomorrow morning,the Pacific Mail liner Korea will car-ry

Imail....... to the mainland.... .

1

With the Drincioal shipment fromMaui ports consisting of 56 sacks ofjorn, the, steaine.r Claudine was an ar-

rival at the port yesterday "morning.

The Matson steamer Matsonia re-

turned from Hawaii yesterday bring-ing two-scor- e passengers, many hav-

ing journeyed to the crater of Ifilauea.

The cargo brought by, the steamerKinau from 'Kauai ports yesterday in-

cluded 2650 sacks of sugar. Fine wea-

ther was reported on the outward and

bonyward trip.

Following the Matson steamer Lur-lln- e

the Pacific Mail liner Mongoliafrom San Francisco, due at the porton Friday morning. Is bringing thenext mainland mail.

Repairs and repainting at a localdrydock will be completed before theschooner Repeat proceeds to sea. Thovessel is destined for the Sound toload a shipment of lumber.

Kauai Sugar Report.Officers in the steamer Kinau. an

arrival from Kauaif report the follow-ing sugar awaiting shipment to Hono-lulu and to the, mainland: KekahaSugar Co.. 200;- - Hawaiian Sugar Co.,7792; Mfclryde Plantation Co., 1083;Koloa Plantation Co., 13.300; LlhuePlantation Co. 2000; Kealia Sugar Co..4400; KHauea Plantation Co:, 1100

sacks.

"PASSENGERS BOOKED I

Per stmr. Claudine, for Maui portsJan 11 U W. Wolcott. E. W. Nulse.M. A. Nlctfll, Rev. T. Okamura. PaulSchraldC A. B. Angus, wife and child.A." P. Lufkin.'C. D. Lufkin.

Per stmr. Kinau. for Kauai portsJan. 12 A. M. McBryde, Geo. C. Car-

ter, Miss Kopke, Miss Weber, C. B.Blum, V. C. Jamesi

Per stmr. Mikahala, for Maui, Molo-ka- iand Lanal ports Jan. 12 Mrs.

Chas. Lindh.Per stmr. Mauna Kea. for Hilo and

way ports Jan. 13 Mrs. R. C. Byers.Master Byers. W. R. Fiest. Sid Spit-ze- r,

Mrs. R. L. Prauty, Miss Lewin,Mrs. M. S. Poiseel. L. W Wolcott, E.Waddin and wife, T. Osaki.

Mrs. David Shaw. 75 years old, ofCircleville, N. Y.. was struck andkilled by an Ontario & Western trainat Crawford Junction. Her body wasthrown forty feet.

STAR-BULLET- IN GIYES TODTODAFS SEWS TODAY

ARE ON KOREA

Refugees from the German fortifiednaval and military base a: Tsingtau ' counter with a hostile war vessel, butand the Kaiochau penmsula. more ' sn actual meeting w ith strong head-tha- n

one-ha:- f of whom are children i winds and ht-av- y seas ti at delayed theunder 10 years of age. are through j British steamer Strathgarry. eml

to the United States and 'en frcm Newcastle, X. S. . in Itsthe Fatherland in the Pacific Mai.liner Korea, an arrival at Pier T short- -

i' before noon today.With fathers, husbands and broth

ers now prisoners at several niilitanreservations in japan, ine uepenuenifamilies are at the expense of the German government given first-clas- s trnsportation across the Pacific and overthe trans-continent- railway lines toNew York.

Never in the history of the Koreaas a Pacific liner has tha. vessel cirried as large a complement of children

Works of art valued at many thou-sand dollars, from the collection belonging to Luni Sing Fu. a wealtl jChinese from Tinglni district in fhtnorthern part of the republic, are er.route to San Francisco and the Panama-Pacif- ic exposition in Lhe steamer.

The paintings, embroideries, interwoven silk and other objects, number-ing more thatt 650, are taken to theUnited Statt3 at the expense of theChinese capitalist

Numbered" In the collection areworks which have served as familyheirlooms for more than OdO years. Anumber of magnificent specimens ofcolored feither work aro to be shownAlso many jmintings representing tstyle and school now practically forgotten. '

Two deaths occurred in the Koreaduring Its long voyage from the Philippines by the way of Hongkong, Shanghai and tne Japanese ports. WalteiA. Basslt', a cabin passenger from

to the United. States, died mann. Rev. M. Willis Mrs.on. January 2, as a result of "Leille! Karl

buried at A Fitz ::, Mrs.ond death occurred on the followingaay wnen long Sing, a wealthy Chinese returning to the United States,passed .away. The remains were emuu-nnc- auu wm oe iaKen back tc

The vessel is reported to carry p

re2-- '5fifakirng carE of ,rietal rodKorea has seldom visited

port a deeper draugh.than on the present trip

Leaving the Korea at Honolulu arcAnKin nnl'(1 A -- 1.11 . iiuui -- auu auu mi. Amanc steerage pas- -

sengers. Proceeding th

passen- -

steamat tomorrow

elers. Five hundred tons of cargobe left behind. The vessel will hicoaled 'at" this port

FASSENGEB3 ABBITED Xi m imii mmrufif'P.M. S. S. Korea, Manila

via Shanghai and JapanJan. 11 For Honolulu Y. Ho- -

.risugl, Wong "Vun. S. A. Perris.' Mrs.A. Perris. Through to San Fran--

cisco Mrs. ' Helnsbach, Hans Altenbach, Mrs. H.

Bastain, Miss Elsa Baa- -'

tain, MlssrKlara Bastain, Bock,Walter Bock," Rudolf Bock, Mrs. A.

Heins Bollman, Mrs. A- -,

Braun, Mrs. S. Braun, A. A.,Kurt A. Bruch, Miss

Bruch, A. Jr., Ignatz CaziiT,

Mrs. C. Cazin, George Cazin, AntonCazin. Heinrich Cazin. Hans Cazin,Prof P. Coleman, William Crooks,;;Miss Doerfel, Rev. Isaac, Door-man, Dr. Ernest Dub, Dr. E. J. Duffy;Mrs. E. Dumpace, A.eDupre, Master A.Dupre, Mrs. L. Heinz Eid-man- n,

Ettinger, Carl Mrs.Marta Ettinger, Master FengMrs. L. Fleith, Gustav Fleith, MlasKlara Flieth, Miss Flleth, FongFat,' Andrew Fong Zone, Fong Hong.Sister Vera von Geldern, Charlie Grea-

ser, Kurt Greaser, Mrs, B. Gressei,Mrs. R. Karl Hoch, Mrs.K. Hoch. Theodor Jokiel. Mrs. 0. Jo--

kiel. Master Enrhardt Klein, Mrs.ma Klein, Miss Elfrlede Klein, MissElla Knothe, Sister Koltz, MissAnna Hermann Lemke,Lemke; Mrs. B. Lemke, Lin TslngTsao, Lin Kan Kuan, .Miss Man. KimHeong, Mrs. Man Shee, Miss M. Marr,Miss Charlotte Meyer, Mrs. Dora

Miss Erika Meyer,

The First

Bldg.

STRATHGARRY

It - was not the prospect of an en- -

arrival at Honolulu.With 570 tons of Australian fuel

the Strathgarry. in coannand of Capt.A. C. Xiels. was given ?. berth at thelater-Islan- d bunkers yesterday. The

lne Sf,uih corner of Pouahawai andnrtSttnt streets. ?aid Mnt being bytrue aximuth andstance 22' 58' 19feet from the center of a sewer man-dela- y.

hole at the if PonahawalPleasant street, and the coordln-consquentl- y

fre-Jte- s of said point of beginningred to Survey Trig Su-

ing tion "Halai" being 113X6". feet north3212.40 feet east; running by

eni-Jtru- e azimuths:

Hpngkona j Greenfield.a hemor Koch;".Miss M".

He was sea. &ec-'man- n. Staatsmar M. Stahl- -

Jlongkong.

the displaying

Hongkong,

Altenbach,

liollmann,

Cambridge,

IL

Gregor.'Dr.

intersection

refer-Mucnte- d

(lovernme.pt

Staats-rhag- e.

- i : J - , .1 .... I

vessel as nsieu a iour uuvoverdue, although no anxiety asmanifested by representatives of thoowners or the charter party over the

The Strathgarrv is not pro- -

vided with wireless equipment andfollowed a track lesa

by the regular liners in steam-- ;

from Australia to the Hawaiianislands. The Strathgarry has made.andfrequent visits to this port whileployed in the coal trade. The vesselwill remain here about 10 days beforeproceeding to the North Pacific coasLwhere It Is stated that a lumber

for Australia awaits the vessel.

Benjamin Moore, Mrs. B. .Moore. V.

Moroni. Miss .Martha Lemke, E, Birsi.Harry Boshi. Mrs. C. 1. Bflins, J. B. I.Gibbs, Jchn C. Goold. J. Heuser,Miss Elizabeth Nieleboek. Miss Hilde--gard Nieleboek, P. vv. I'arker, Mrs. S.B. Payne and Infant. Miss Martha

Miss Edna Petersmann,Mrs. Dina Petersmann, Miss AnnaPfcrte, W. A. Rannie. Sister (2. Rudat.Jack Ryan, Miss Elizalieth Scheffel.Sigrid Schmidt. Mrs. D. Schmidt. A.W. Schneider, Irmgard Schrader, Mrs.C. Schrader. Miss Charlotte Schrader,Colin C. Scott, Mrs. M. Staatsmann.Mi88 Bert Staatsmann. Haus Staat- -

mann Scheffel. John K. Swire. RevJ.n. iuius. xir. j. a. o. lonis. itoo- -

ert H. Terns, P. T. Watson. Miss RuthJ. Watson, William Watson. MisEdith Watson, Mrs. Anna Wolter. MissRosalie Wolter. Miss Herta Wolter.

hard WoUer. Wong Kock Iu. Wui.w k-n-oi toiut 7,.n r--.

, Zcll. Miss Johanna Zoil. mIh r Smoi.ler. J. J. WiIkfns,"E. H. Wilson. Mrs.E. H. Wilson, Miss .Muriel P. Wilson.w Honn

mon J- - H- - Ellis. Mrs. Ellis, W. J.dey, Thosj Flood Rob t. P. Geer, Mrs.Geer, W. Kieswetter, F. Lufkin, D.McCune, Mrs. E. S. Mahlam, C.traia. B. B. Mayer, Miss E. H. Met- -

calf,' Miss" S. Metcalf, Miss KateMilne, A. M. Morgenthaler. Mrs. C. G.Murasky. Mrs. Harriett Newland. MissM. Parsons, W. J. Robinson. L. S. Sid--dall, F. B. A. Switzer. A. P. I

Taylor, Mrs. Taylor, W. Q. ' Vodden.'Mrs. Vodden. Miss Elizabeth Whit- -

S. G.Per str. Kinau from Jan. 10:

W. E. Shaw, Yep Chung, Ma Lum, LeeSam, Miss A. Awana, Albert Kiaaina,Mrs. D. Keys. D. Keys. C. H. Dye, W.c. Parke. E. M. Kulse. M. A. NIchoII.e. J. Nell, Mrs. Kealo Makint, Miss S.Makini, Mrs. A. T. Rodriques, A. Gart-ley- ,

R. Ivers. J. F. C. Hagens, F. E.Thompson. H. C. Waldron, A Horner,A. S. Wilcox, Francis Gay Nakaya,3V. Hookano, Mrs. Sakai, Miss Kura-mct- o,

W. H. Kruse, A." Mikaela, Mrs.M. AL

Per str. Mikahala from Maul - andMolckai, January ' Sal You. J. 'H.Wilson, Miss L. Searle, Miss D.t n,

Miss D. CooKe, Mrs, AgnesH, Judd. Dr. X R. Judd and wife. Dr.'George W. McCoy and wife, F. Reim-enschneld- er

and 18 deck passengers.Per str. Claudine from Maul, Janu- -

Francisco are 142 cabin, 46 seconr Per - S- - S- - Slerra fr0In Sa Fran-clas- s

and 208 Asiatic steerage cIsco- - For Honolulu, Jan. 11. Mrs.gers? ' ' jJ- - Armstrong. T. M. Ball, C L. Ba.rt- -

The vessel will for San Fran lett, F. W. Camp, R, R. "Carlisle, Misacisco 10 o'clock morn- -

Claypool, A. P. Crawford, Mrs. A.Ins taking: a score of additional trov. W. Cummings, J. Darcy. Mrs. Lea Del--

will

mi i

Per from

ports,

S.

Bas-- 1

tain, WalterMrs. F."

Mrs.Bruch, Hildegard

A.Helene

Eidmann,Ettinger,

Leong,

Anna

Sel- -

HeleneLemk, Joseptt

Mey-

er, Meyer, Dr. Paul

and

and

uuuiu

char-ter

Mrs.

o.

A.

E.

Smith.

WestKauai.

10:

ary 10: C. Aku, IL Hutchins. S. Hock-10f- ,

mg, iv. xsaai, airs. ir.. victor, miss .

v ictor, A. Kepipi, Edwin Farmer,Chuch Hoy.'

tv. . .. ... s.. . a.

a

Hill trnii.iikif 1 i titi .it . iiii

made federal bureau of edu--ication.

?

Preferred Stock

I

I

c,

j

1

i

Phone 2784

the PacifiG Gas and Electric Company 'is anof unusual merit, as the gain w ith

the increase? in population, and are not' materiallyaffected changed business conditions. Kveryshare of this stock has back of it more $100property value. The earnings have steadily in-

creased since the Company was formed, and arenow .several times the dividend requirements of thisstock.It is Xon-Assessab-

le and Tax Free in California,and is issued the authority of the RailroadCommission.Price $82.50 per share, netting 7:27 on investment.

For Further ParticularsApply to

C. G. BOCKUSAuthorized Agent for Hawaii

503 Stangenwald

LEGAL NOTICE.

TERRITORY OF HAWAII. LANDCourt. No. 319.

Territory of Hawaii to J. SCHAFF-SNfA- ;

K. A. BROWN; J. II AZ ELTON;J. CACKRES; F.LLKN A. POME ROY;MRS. LOC1SA P. HAPAI: D. S. BOW-MAN ; U AKAA1C tnd C. Y. AIONA,Trustees for ChliKse Cemetery Asso-ciation; TERRITORY OK HAWAII,by I. M. Stanback. Attorney-Onera- l

rnd Joshua I. Tucker. COMMISSION-E- R

OF Pl'HLIC LANDS; COPNTYOF HAWAII, by David K. Kwaliko.Chairman Hoard of Supervisors;HEIRS OF MOKMOK; and to ALLwhom it may concern:

Whereas, a petition has been pre-sented to said Court by MAY T. WIL-COX to register a ad confirm her titlein the following uVsuribed laud:

That certain parcel of land with thebuildings thereon, situate in Ponoha-wai- .

Hilo. County of Hawaii and theTerritory of Hawaii, and particularlydescried as follow.

Beginning at an old redwood wistat the north cormr of this piece and

1. 331" 3S 30" :il2.8 feet along thesouthwest side of Pleasant street to agranite iost:

2. S2a 5S' 2ir,.7 feet along the Chi-nese Cemetery lot to a granite post;

3. 153' 41 r.:..7 f;--et along lanQ de-scribed in Land COurt Petition No. --

229 (D. S, Bowman, Petitioner) to agalvanized Iron pipe;

"

4. l."2a 31' 2o2.3. feet along propertyof Ellen A. Pomeroy and Mrs. LouisaP. Ha pal to a cross (X) on stone;

5. 231 2.7 30" 210.7i feet alongthe southeast side of Ponahawal streetto the iK.int of beginning. Area 6a03isquare feet. Being portion of Grant'252 to B. Pitmnn.

You are hereby cited to appear atthe Land Court to held at the Cityand County of Honolulu on the 10thday of February, A. I). 1915. at twoo'clock in the afternoon, to showcause If any you fsave, why the pray-e- r

of said petition should not be grant-ed. And unless you appear at saidCourt at the time and place aforesaidyour will be recorded, and thesaid petition will be taken as confessed, .and you will be forever barredfrom contesting said Detition or inrdecree entered thereon.

Witness the Honorable William IWhitney. Judge of said Court, this11th" lay ot January, in ithe jyearnineteen h

Attest with seal of said Court:(Seal) JOHN MARCALLINO.

Registrar.6058-Ja- n. 11. 18. 23. Feb. I.:

TERRITORY OF HAW AIL LANDCourt.' No. 231. ' '

Territory of Hawaii to RICHARDTERRITORY OF HAWAII,

L M. Sta'nback. Attorney General,and Joshua D. Tucker. COM MISSION- -

OF PUBLIC LANDS; CITY ANDCOUNT.Y OF - HONOLULU, . by JohnC. Lane, Mayor and President of theBoard of Supervisors: FREDERICK

pils in the grammar grades in 119' hydrant being 265" 50' 38.6 feeV andschools cut of 433 can sing an ordinary to the north corner of the Cooke Lt-hvm- n

at sieht is disclosed in reDorCrary bu'.Idmg in.

Oahu Collegeby the

of in-

vestment earnings

bythan

under

default

M. LOWREY, Chairman of Trustees ofAmerican Board of Commisslonera ofForeign Missions; GEORGE IIBROWN FRANCIS HYDE IIBROWN, by A. A. Wilder.' his ruard- -ian ad litem: FRA?scr3 HYDE IIBROWN; JOHN n ESTATE, LTD,and to ALL whom it may conjeernf ,

Whereas, a petition has been pre-sented to said Court by RANNEYCONVERSE SCOTT to register . andconfirm his title in the following-describe- d

land: ".

All that certain parcel of land with;the buildings thereon, situate in Puna-bo-u

District n the City and Countyof Honolulu, and the Territory of Ha-waii, and particularly described asfollows : ,

"

Being portions of R. P. 1931, L. C,A. 387 to A. P. Mission, and R. P.5704, L. C. A. 8241 to J. II. Section 2,at the north corner" of Manoa roadand Hastings avenue. Manoa, Hono-lulu, Kona, Oahu.T. IL

Beginning at a Iron pipe filled with concrete at the south corner

this Tot. and tho north corner otManoa road and Hastings avenue, thetrue azimuth to "Rocky Hiir, trianglebeing 291 24' and the true azimuthand distance to a sewer manhole be--

line us . .i: i ecu 10 a waier- - v

grounds being 327 39' 242.9 feet, andrunning Dy irue. aziraums: :

M. UJ7 feit ; ijong '

the.tlinndt q!1a i-- t IToffMnira ntrnnim v

a pipe filled with concrete;2. 228 08' 285.0 feet- - along the

south side of Uaiakaa street to a ch

plje filled with concrete; .'

3. 280 31 100.0 fet along sameto a pipe;' filled with concrete;

4. 259 1.7 57.0 feet along same toa pipe fiHert'wlttt concrete;

5. 345 34' 394.8 feet along R. Iversto a pipe filled with 'concrete;

6. 77" 28' 243-- 0 feet along the northside of Manoa road to the point of

.beginning. Area 2.972 acres,You are hereby cited to appear at

the Land Court to be hold at the Cityand County of Honolulu on the 10th .

day of February, A. D. 19.15. at 2.o'clock in the afternoon, to show cause

If any you have, why the prayer of ?

'Faid petition should not be grante- d-And unless ycu appear at said Courtat the time and place aforesaid yourdefault will be recorded, and the saidpetition will be taken as confessed.

f . f 1 . 1 . - . . ., ana you wm oe iorever oarreu iroiucontesting said petition or any decreeentered thereon. .

Witness the HonoraMe William LTf -- 1. : T...IA M J tvu11th day of January . in the year 1915.

Attest with seal of said court: '(Seal) JOHN MARCALLINO,Registrar, .:

6038-Ja- n. 11, 18, 23, Feb. ,1,

Page 7: A mm · 4-AProm San Francisco hurling Jan. 12. For From For Indefinite. Korea. Vancouver; San Vancouver: Francisco: Jan. 12. mm JJ 1J Edition Makura, Jan. 8. livening Bulletin. Kt.

3

( i

'

ti

HONOLULU STAK-BULLETI- N, M JCJU V, J AXKAttY IK 1015. seven:. .

- "

i

TONIGHT KRVALO HIUHB .SUMNERi ,.,..:tiwr

f

Tonight andTomorrow NightTUESDAY

Wednesday TOBERESDMED F0UIIDEAD N Vs. c Only.V i Matinee Daily

George Webb Presents His Players All-Sta- r Company in N S X ! ONTHSED Blondell & Co. - A Real Orphcum Act

WfPMT 'Attorney-Gener- al Must Decide Picturesque Career of Kama- -

EDESOK inROBERTWhich fund WillPay for aina, 94 Years Old, Is

Reclamation Project Brought to Close

Old Kashionwl Comedy and Love Story Portrayed inIoth Countrv and Citv

PRICES: 25, 50 and 75'Cents. TELEPHONE 3937.

Coming 17Jrni . Itl hursuay . .

ill

THE HOUSE

FEATURE FILMS

TONIGHT

."'Gripping Western Comedy-Dram- a in Four Keels Featur-ing CliarJ (lebhardt-aui- l .Jennie IcPljorpon

The Oiitlav ReformLITTLE MARY PICKFORDr in different reels

ARCADIA MAID THE SEASON BUDSKEYSTONE COMEDY THE CHAMPION DRIVER

V-- v TWO SHOWSr 7:15 and 8:45 P.M."Prices: 10, 20 and 30 Cents. Reserved Seats, 50 Cents

uTHtzATtf Hi

THE HOUSE

SILENT DRAMA

FOR THE LOVE A MAN V

Two-Re- el Reliance feature Story of Woman Who GaveUp for Man She --Loved

Thfe'IIaYriage lafataha (Indian Dratna) jMaJesticUnder Desperation's Spur ratna): v -- KalwnThe Chicken Inspector (Comedy) Vitagraph

Arien

-

.

t

Y -

OF

two

AN IN OF

OF

tt OF

All the

advantage of that re-marka- ble

offer of YeRegal Boot

a 10$ Discqunt oilshoes

this rnonth.

Shop

bou

discount isproving a greatattraction: takeadvantage of it

t - '

a - ; v

':

I

i a,

. ... .

... . V : .

7

takjn

- -

STAR-BULLETI-N

whogive

COUPON

there

WAR MAP OF EUROPESend three ct 'these conpdns and fifteen tlents

to . tne Star-Bulleti- n Jahd receive the hew and

cp-to-da- te map of Europe.

v-- " ;

In a review of the Kewalo reclama-- 1 John K. Snmher, bom 94 rears agotlon project and the egal technical!- - in, Hawaii, the son of one of the firstties wnicn nave ansen to cnecK ine wnne TmniiRmnis 10 ine isianas. asimprovement work temporarily Super- - found dead in hl9 bed Saturday. Death

" intendent Charles R. Forbes estimates was due to eld age. Funeral servicesi that the entire improvement should be were conducted Saturday from thej completed in six months' thr.e. 'residence of R. W. Davis, a nephew,

The amonnt of nil by property-own- - and interment was in i rrivate plot' at'era remaining to be made, he esti- - Mokapu.'mates, amonnts to 124.398 cubic yards. I Mr. Sumner's death occurred in the

The amount already filled by the con- - residence of his nephey. R. Davis,tractor and property-owner- s is 284.933 at Mokapu. where he had resided forcubic yards. many years Mr. Sumner was the son

J Another lexal question has come up of Capt. William Sumner, who camo'which the attorney-genera- l will be to the island of Kauai as a cabfn boy.

asked to answer respecting 'the fund He deserted the ship and was adoptedfrom which money shall be taken for later by the king of that island. Cap-- 'the filling of the streets fn the Ke-- tain Sumner married a member of the

'.walo district It is held that the ter- - Hawaiian royal househoud.J ritory must stand this expense, but A biography written some years ago' Superintendent . Forbes is in doubt of Mr. Sumner gives the followingwhether the law which created the re- - account:volvlng fund gives authority to expend John K. Sumner was born Septem-fro-

that for streets, s the property- - ber 16. 1820. Then followed his onlyowners will not be required, under sister, Maria S. Davis, born Januarythe attorney-fcenerars opinion, to re- - 16. 1825. There was also a brother,fmbnrse the territory Tor the improve-- William. The Ellises, known as tTu'menf of the thoroughfares. If the re- - Sumner heirs were William Sumner'3

! volvlng tmL cannot be used to pay for grandchildren. R. W. Davis, better' these fills Superintendent Forbes known as Wallie Davis, only son ofwants to know wha fund or appropria- - Maria Davis, was born some 38 yearstlen is;avaflabie bt Iti l.J

It is

see'sure

orgive

and

of

ago and he has figured in this case

His John K.second son. When he

had grown to be boy fatherthe brig

theSumner

took up at his"Willfam and John K. as

head cattle. Inin 1849.

when the gold fever broke Cali-- I

Sumner wentDr. pastor or cen- - the year, 1850. and returned

tral Union last told a aftr. large congregation the story or ms re- - nard tot

t Tlsit to the. in the m- - it then he met his future wife.lerests of the Of "good wHl. hl brother WflHnraVi hnna h

laid special stress on the endeay6r being a . named Ni- -: which , was made to me Vho was married to him by a. friendship now between Ja-- . named Arm-- ,pan .and the United States and intl- - gtrong. beingmated that the was success- - Kekuanaoa. father of Kamehameha

-- ful In large measure. i V.iHls Vame on the French manj, ;Dr. Scudder related briefly the in- - of-w- ar from Tahiti In which de--

oi me campaign ana uivmanded' Justice on behalf of someappointment, by the Federal Council t French been ill-trea- t-

; or me v;nurcnea or nnsi oi Amenc , 'r

of two Committees, one to Vork ajnong t prom the 1 ntatrfeire no off"and th 5 ether to Inter- - gnHng. leavlns: sister'. MaHa

.Tlew legislators businessmen to Davis, 'next; then her son, Wrallieagainst the Intro- - Davis ; , then Ihe the Jatter

In the leglslatnre ; ing gfand and niece.legislation. ' ;

yOn arrival at he

U Dr, work kepf him In went Into the of sea-islan- d cotMasx me greater part me nme, ton, which at that time was In de--

j rrmgnrg nim jinio con?act witn sen-- ; mand In Europe and: hiutb, auu iwum5 uuy tnree and a half years he gave up thei measiuen aau vaurcu no cotton and Went Into the cat-ha- d

a "brief with tta.t Wilson American-Japanes- e Nihtto and with yotrag Wallie Da--

umunB, um uo wu ue h.uui i Tis as made a' number Ofto make nubile the details of trips froni to Tahiti,

jthls - " "Ibnylngall his cattle from John Park- -

It is. hot as yet. r nncle the Sam Park--, the cutlln er. '

led by Dr. Sidney L. Gullck to handle J At ' last success fallod in . hisT matters legis- - hv sen rnnrio aiiauon win ue aaopiea in us days' "voyage from here to Tahiti,I up to the public toride, he In an addfess neitounaay evenmg ur. ocuaaer win leuof ; the snggestlons which have been

by theto part in pro- - Tahtt on April 1. 1901. he

gram.. Of .Apierlca'8 with Japan ana me unenu , '

MOTHER! CHILDI v ' IS COSTIVE, vfiiLi0U

Dent A' fs neccs- -i sary If tongue is breath. . , . , bad '.or stomach sour. ..f

. Give "California Synrp xat TIs" atonoea teaspdbhful today often savesa sick child ''

If your little, one Is'dut-of-sbrt- s,

Isn't eating and actingMother! If tongue

is boated. Is a sign that Itslittle : 'lifer, and bowels are

with waste. When cross, irri-table, sour, breathbad has stomach-ache- ,s-r-

e throat, full of cold, a tea-spoonf- ul

of Syrup of Figs,"and, In a few hours all the consti-pated poison, indigested food andsour bile gently moves out of itslittle , bowels, without and youn'ateawell,playful child again."r can rest easy after givingthis harmless "fruit becauseit never falls H to cleanse the littleone's liver, and bowels, and sweetenthe stomach, and they dearly love itspleasant Ful for ta-bles, children of all ages for

printed on each bottle.; Beware of fig syrups.Aik your for a 50-ce-nt bottleof Syrup of Figs," and thensee that it is made by the "Californiar Company." Don't be

advertisement

The regular annual meeting of theLadiesVAId will be

held at Mrs. JohnBowler. 3111 Head road. Fri-day, 13. at 2 p m. Officerswill be elected at this and itIs all mem-bers will atend. Adv.

French steamer Puehesse deCJuIche in the Havre

during a gale, cloven ier$ons

inprotecting his uncle's Interests.

father's partner, Sum-ner, Was the

a his tooksea on trad-

ing and filr alongcoast. Then

land Molanalua, takingsons, In part-ners,Van- d

at imes hal several thousand of 1847, CaptainWilliam "Sumner died, and

I out Infornla, Jr., went and returned

I home. K.Dorenws Scudder, following

church, evening crtnKider&MeHonolulu

mainland wasCampaign

He Tahitlari princessperpetuate nho,

existing Protestant missionaryhis spdnsor Governor

campaignwife

1849,augurauon

priests "whb'had

camethe churchmen thns his

and s.turn-ptibli- c opinion fnilses, be-ductl-

California nephewsW anti-alie- n Sumtter'a Tahiti

Scndders the raising

America. AfterreyreacniM.ue

wumcrs.interview President

Tegafdlng theDoatswain,

liberty successful Hawiiiconference.

known said "Dr. of weU-know- n

Scaidder, whether programhim

pertaining to trflTisnni-tjStiA- n hnvimrenureiy.i60

Amerlcaj'added..

presented mainland campaignpertahtag

relations

THE

htwtlhiie! larallrecoated,

tomorrow."half-sic-k.

resting,naturally

Thisstomach,

cloggedfeverish, stomach

diarrhoea,

"California

griping.,

laxative,"

directions

grown-up- s

counterfeit'drnggist

"California

igByrup fooled!

MEETING fJOTlCE.

Catholicthe residence

DiamondJanuary

meetingearnestly requested that

Thefoundered road-

steaddrowniup.

hlm'to Waverly,hunting Cali-I6rnl- a

Captain

William.Then-Joh- n

Industry

Japanese

Mothers

I68lflg the great majority of his cattle.In 1897, John K. Sumner catoe back

from Tahiti and shortly, after his wife'died, on, July 29, 1898. . He remained

Hawaii's the Ua resldmg

look,

taste.

Society

there until 1902. arriving in Honolulujoh August fco. that year, on the steam-er Sierra and falling into the clutchesof lawyers.

BleVen years ago, John K. Sumnerwas the center of a legal battle inwhich he strove, to regain possessionof such of his fortune as remained Intact

EASTERN STAR CHAPTERINSTALLS OFFICERS

Xewly elected officers of Lei AlchaChapter No. 3. Order of Eastern Star,were installed into office Saturdaynight Past Worthy .Matron .Mrs.Henry H. Williams had charge of theceremonies.'

.The officers installed arc as follows:V6rjhy matron, Mrs. Harry T. Holl- -

mann; worthy patron, Lyman I.George; associate matron, Mrs.Creighton; treasurer, Mrs. Eleanor S.Barry; secretary. Miss M. E. Lishman;marshal, ifrs. Alice Stephenson; cjiap- -

lain, Mark "P. Robinson; conductress.'Mrs. Dodge; associate conductress,Mrs. Jacobsori; Adah, Mrs. Wright;lluth. Mrs, Burrell; Esther, Mrs. BelleLowry; .Martha. Mrs. George; Electa.Mrs. Sutherland; warder, Mrs. Co--

VeHs; Sentinel, Edgar, S. Barry, andorganist Margaret McAllister.

A banquet followed the installationceremonies in the Chapter s hall attfie Masonic Temple. . t

OLIVE BRANCH LODGEINSTALLS OFFICERS

Impressive ceremonies marked theinstallation cf new officers of Olive.Branch Rebekah lodge No. 2. Indepen-dent Order cf Odd Fellows, in OddFellows' hall. Fort and King streets.The installation was conducted byMrs. Jennie Jaccbson. vP. X. G andassistants. Following are the new of-ficers:

Mary Cross, noble grand; MyrtleMartin, vice grand; Susan l.ando. sec-retary; Rose l.nndo. 1. . f;., trensnrer; Helen Armstronc. v.nr.lrn- - iipn.rietta HicIow, renductor: 7elirn Wil-liams, F, X. G., chaplain: Jacob Landn.

COMING

WEDNESDAY

THE GttPATHE WEEKLY

Malcomb

WilliamsIN in

THE RINK, FORT STREETSKATING

COME ENJOY YOURSELF

Afternoon.Evening. ....7 to 10 P. M.

P. C, R. S. N. G. ; ITmma Mc Keague, t ai l "with Ijewejs vahied at $."titjto Vancouver. D. C. where he willL. S. X. (I.; Aime V. S, G., was -- i nunutes later through cross to Japan. . T'R. S. V. G.; Alice' Samson. P. N. ('... a d;c rjntfon given by Mrs. IJaker.L. S. V. G.; Jean inside rguardian, and J. Williams. P. G., out-- ' Charles C. Witmar. an American av-si- de

guardian. j iator. notified Decatur,' 111.,o of hi to th Uusrsiaa air- -A daylight burglar who entered the ship. corps vith headquarters at Se-ho- me

'of -- Mayor Baker of Cleveland and bastopol. He is already on his waf

Odd

..10c

..25c

Bieknell. captured

relatives

One of the palaces atdamaged by the in 1308.owing to bad weather suddenly cot-laps- ed,

burying three families in theruins. Six persons are said to bostill under the ruins.

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And can phy it with such of technique as hasbeen excelled by no living pianist, and also with feeling and expressionthat is wonderful and masterful. The marvelous expression devices,found only on the genuine "Pianola," "enable a mere novice toproduce music that surpasses the of pianists who havespent years in study and practice. The ftenuine "Pianola gives youboth music and the fascination of it yourself. The purchaseof a genuine "Pianola" means immediate music in your home.

There is but 0JV,It is Standard of the

only by

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Schwar2lerg,

apimintitent

The

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Kxciusivc Agents Hawaii15

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"For :SiaJii'at-"Gr6ce:';tf-e

Page 8: A mm · 4-AProm San Francisco hurling Jan. 12. For From For Indefinite. Korea. Vancouver; San Vancouver: Francisco: Jan. 12. mm JJ 1J Edition Makura, Jan. 8. livening Bulletin. Kt.

EIGHT

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Phone. 1542

v- - Eyes ExaminedGlasses Supplied

Factory on the Premises.

A. N. SanfordOPTICIAN

Boston Building ; Fort Streel0?er May & Co;

Suggestions and designs forG and RE-MODE-

INQ OLD JEWELRY.

Gold and Platinum Settings

WALL A DOUGHERTY

MUTUAL TELEPHONE 'CO, LTD.

Horn. siccthu fanHONOLULU T.

P. W. BURNETTE .

Commissioner of Desds for Californiat nd v New Yerkf NOTARY PUBLIC;Crswa Mortgages, Deeds, Bills olCxtt, Leases, Wills, etc Attorney fotthe District Courts, 71 MERCHANTSTREET, HONOLULU, Phone 1841

IF YOU WISH TO ADVERTISE INNEWSPAPERS : ; f

jLxjTlere, at Ami Time, Call en e.. : Write--

C & DAKE'8 ADVERTISING'.. AGENCY

124 Caneome, Street . San Franelseo

ornate

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CRAND TWO WtlXr SALE NO

a Hotel Ct Ops, tljoii Theate

Flannel Trousers; y" at .'v..-

THE HUB .

Hotel, Ewa of Fort

You dont really love HawaiiV until you have dined, danced

and slept at the ::;;';,v.

SEASIDE HOTEL 7J. H. Herttthe, Manager"

Jordan's". -

- DRY GOODS"

Fort St. '

R. J. BLAKEN Manufacturers' Agent :

Orer Hill's Curio Store, Bishopand Kln Sts.

Phcne 2443.

S. & W. GRAPE JUICE

HENRY MAY CO, LTD.

Phone 127t :

VIENNA BAKERY

1129 Fort 8L Phone 2124

are always aggravatedduringdamp, changeable weatherand ordinary treatments areoften useless, v

Soeh conditions need the oO-fo- od

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Scott's EmattUtn, with careful dietfor one month, often relieres theline muscles ana stiffenedjoints and sabdoes the sharpyunbearable pains when otherremedies hare failed.

NO ALCOHOL IN SCOTT.Lit

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Careful selection- anduniform curing

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MildSweet

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U.S. Inspected and Passed.?

Swill & Company, us.a.

I

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THE ven HAMIh-YOU- N CO,'LTD, Honolulu.:

n English Finish "Gold Eagle"BLUE SERGE SU ITS $22.50.

IDEAL CLOTHING CO LTD.84 Hotel Street

emporium of oriental.

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'i ::v '

4 JAPANESE BAZAAR,Fort St, Opp. Catholic Church.

HONOLULU STAR-BULLETI- N, MONDAY, .TAXITARX 11, 1915.

DECLARING AFFIDAVITS FALSE:

(Continued from page one)

he cine up, her mother had gene down' to lunch, and I was there alone, andhe said to her. "Wouldn't jou like

( a strawberry Ice cream soda fromMaskey's?" She said she would, andhe said. "I will go right down and getit" He went out and I did not seehim again until evening. She did nottike her deesert, thinking he was go-

ing down in the machine and comingright back. I think he- - came in about4 o'clock and lud it down in thekitchen. I understand he told someonehe had forgotten the straws and wouldgo back and get them: About 4:30 I

went down and said, "Is it not strangethat this ice cream soda has notcome?" Somebody out in the kitchensaid they thought it was there and.we went out and saw about eightstraws and this ice cream soda in athermos bottle, but he had not said awcrd about them. He had probablycome in the kitchen door and leftthese things on te kitchen table. Nobody in the house knew that he hadreturned with them, and he did notappear until about dinner time. 1

rthlhk It was an excuse to get away.Says Smart Neglected Wife.

As regards his being In the roonall day Sunday, I think he was afraidthat Sunday. I believe he had consuited a doctor and thought he badheart trouble. He just sat in the corner and never, addressed a remark tohis wife nor she one to him. Sht,was very sick and we watched hetvery carefully and anticipated hexwishes. Everyone did that except Mr.Smart I never saw him put hlmsel.out

Mr. Smart never criticized me Inmy work, but ..the first time he sawme give a hypodermic he stood overme quite officiously and said something about the needle. The impression L got was that he was too offi-cious. He did not interfere but Juststood over me, and his manner watvery officious. I thought he was kindof to. see If I knew whatI was about In: regard to accountingfor his not helping whenhls wife andthe nurse both appealed to him andhis standing over me when administering the when his assistance was unsought and uncalledfor, I would say that he was not anormal man. He was very conceitedand affected knowledgeof medical matters. He said his broth-er was a physician. He tried todisplay his medical knowledge at thedinner table. As to his standing overme, he tried to show ; that he knewit all and how wise he was, but I donot think It was the result of any realanxiety about his wife.Gave "Furtive Looks," ' :

; On Sunday he came Into the roomafter breakfast . and stayed there allday except when he went down to hisluncheon. He would sit in the cornerof the. room, and hold his magazineand "look at it, but he would hardlyever turn the page.. His wife wouldnever turn around and look at him.This was after he had failed to helpher. Whenever I looked at him, hehad this magazine in his hands. Hewas the kind of man you caught watch-4n- g

and sizing things up, or givingfurtive glances. It was as If he waslooking at the magazine but at thesame time paying attention to whatwas going on, and just using the magazine as a shield. I used to noticehim giving furtive looks around as ifhe did not want to be observed.Mrs. Smart'e Death.

The night Mrs. Smart died, at about7 p. he went into his room as soonas the undertakers came and I didnot see him again until the afternoonof the funeral. He gave no directionsand did not seem to . have charge ofthings. I did not see him from thetime she died until 10 o'clock, whenI left I got the that heleft it to the family to make all the

for the undertakers'coming and the funeral. I got thesame impression as Miss Dozier whenshe. said that it seemed to her thatMa attitude was, "Weil, I have deliv-ered the goods here, now my

ceases. Now it is up to youfolks." .';''

He kissed her, when the end came,on the forehead. , We had lifted herinto a sitting position. When the endcame, Mrs. Knight's grief was so greatthat Mr. Knight had to take her outHer mother was holding her hand andehe was looking at her. She did notonce look at her husband. He wassimply standing there.

I had gone out to fill theafter calling the family and when Icame back the doctor said it was notnecessary and then I "held her untilher breathing ceasett. It was when Icame back that Mrs. Knight was beingled out " , :

Tells of -- Miss Hale."I know there was a Miss Hate who

had been a nurse there. I was, toldshe had been dismissed. I remembertalking to Elite, the basy's nurse, andElise told me that Miss Hale and Mr.Smart had laughed and joked and neg-lected Mrs. Smart She said it wasterrible for any man to act that waytowards his wife, and that people hadremarKea aoout it when they were ,coming back on the boat from Eu--1

rope. Elise said that Miss Hale woulddress for dinner and then leave Mrs.Smart for quite a while. She veryplainly hinted that there was an Inti-- !macy between the two that was improper, because he was a married manand because of his wife's condition.

I got an Impression that things werewrong right from the start ; The firstSunday morning that I was there, Iwent out to get some forMrs. Smart and when I came back itwas evident that he had come by thebed while I was out I understoodthat he had taken out his watch, totake her pulse and put his hand over

i her heart, which was altogether un--: 11 1 . ma . . -cuuea lor ana omcious. Me made noComment to his wife when hp wasthrough, nor she to him.

GAILLJD 5 IMSAYS BABY SON SHALL NOT BE TAKEN FROM HIM

supervising

hypodermic,

considerable

impression

arrangementa

respon-sibility

hypodermic

nourishment

Says Mrs.-Sma- rt Seemed to Have LostWill-Powe- r.

During the three days that I wasthere, I saw her looking at him attimes silently when she wanted some-thing. My impression of her mind to-

wards him was that the sensation wasoverpowering, as if he controlled her.This did not come from others butright from my own conscience. Herattitude towards hira was as if shehad lost her will power and was over-powered. The look on her face wasone of submission. It seemed like shehad lost her power of initiative. Sheslept more and was quieter when hewas away; she seemed to feel morerestless when he was there. It seem-ed as If the pressure were withdrawnand Ehe relaxed when he was away.I saw this for myself and if not asoul had ever said a word to me Iwould have left the house with thatconviction. Even on the first day whenI was at the house I felt that she wasunden subjection to him. It was in theatmosphere and in his manner towardsher and hers towards him.Thelma Parker's Rare Disposition.

Although she was under the influ-ence of the heroin in order to keep herfrom pain, she was clear minded tothe last. Even in the three days 1

was there her sweetness of characterand unselfishness impressed me. Thefirst morning I was there she put outher hand for me to hold and lookedat me kindly with a sort of appeal forhelp. She had beautiful eyes.

Mrs. Knight was a lovely motherand I have never seen such devotionas hers to :er daughter. She showedwonderful control, suppressed her ownfeelings, and did everything to keepthings pleasant Mrs. Knight showedin her face her displeasure when Mr.Smart was feeling his wife's heart,but did not say anything. . Her oneaim was to keep an atmosphere .ofquiet around her daughter. Mr. Smartwas the only one who did not con-

sider her. She was much disturbedwhen he refused to he'lp her the firstday. I could tell that she was wroughtup by the tone, of her voice. He of-

fered no excuse for his conduct eitherto Miss Dozier or me. '"He Paid No Attention to Child.",. t did not see Mr. Smart pay any

attention to his child.' Most fathers.would play with t their child, but I

never saw him notice him or pay any.attention to him. Elise would bringthe child in to breakfast, and the babywould say "Good morning" to his fath-er, who would also': say "Good morn-ing" but do nothing further. I 'neversa w him take the baby in his arms,though they were together at varioustimes. Mrs. Smart would look at thechild in a loving way, but would notsay anything to him. Her face didnot light up when, she saw the child,as it did when she' was looking ather mother. J was not there longenough, for me to" be able to tell verymuch about. how( she thought of thechild, but at th,e same time I left withthe impression that some cloud wason her. mind when she thought of thatchild. . V

I had a feeling with regard to Mr.Smart that he would be glad when itwas ail over and he would be free;that is the feeling I had, he was wait-ing for the end to come. '

Miss Dozier ,s,poke of Mr. Smart'sbuying an automobile without consult-ing his wife at all' and of his controll-ing the --money. ; She also spoke abouthis being out a t

great deal and neg-lecting his wife; He was out evenwhile I was there. He went to atheater Monday night, but I cannottell what time he came in.Wished Mother to Have ' Baby.

On Tuesday morning, the' day Mrs.Smart died. Dr. Willits said to me, "Ifyou have an opportunity, ask Mrs.Smart who she wants to have thebaby." That was at about 10 o'clock.Sh woke up at-1- 1, and after I hadgiven her some nourishment I askedher, "Who do you wish to have iPiHbaby?" and she said, "Mother." I hadto put it that way without 'any Intro-duction "oeciuse she was too sick totalk much, v I ;knew that the --doctorhad told her. she could not get well.The doctor simply told me to put thatone question to her. I think the doc-

tor asked me to do it instead of MissDozier, because I was on in the daytime when Mrs. Smart would be morelikely to be awake.

Mrs. Knight was with her daughteralmost all the time. They were silentmost of the time, but would exchangeloving glances.Disinheriting the Child.

There was no conversation with meabout her disinheriting the child. 1

think she did it because Mr. Smartdominated her. In regard to her notspeaking to the child when it camein, 1 can quite clearly get the im-

paction, which I have since heardexpressed, that she felt remorseful andthat the child had been wronged.

The doctor never in my presencedisplayed any impatience or hostilitytowards Smart Her asking me, how-ever, to ask Mrs. Smart who shouldhave the child indicated that shethought tire baby ought to be with themother. The doctor did not suggestthat 1 should ask if she wanted thebaby to go to the mother but simplywhere the baby was to go, leavingMrs. Smart clear to say to whom shewanted' it to go. There was no hesi-tation on her part In giving her an-

swer.The child was very seldom there,

being just brought to the door for amoment now and then. The look shegave to the child was not indifferentbut was a said, hopeless look.Strained Relations.

I don't remember any conversationbetween Mrs. Knight and Mr. Smartat all in my presence. Mr. Knightand Smart would talk together at thetable about general topics, the dis-

cussion being such as to avoid anyawkwardness.

Mrs. Smart seemed very fond ofElise.' After the funeral Elise talked

very freely and emphatically to me.She said that Mr. Smart bad beenpacing special attention to Miss Halebcth in Paris and on the way over,and neglecting his wife.

In regard to Mr. Smart's knowingwhat was going on, I remember thaton Tuesday morning DrWIUits madeout a prescription for more heroin forthe hypodermic and left Instructionsfor Smart to go and get it and bringit to me. When the prescription tsgiven to him, he asked if the heroii?was all out and I replied that it was.Then he objected to going and askedagain if it was all out. He said, "Doyou want me to go right away?" andshowed indifference about going. I toldhim to go right away and then whenhe brought it back he came In to thelittle dressing room Off Mrs. Smart'eroom and asked again if all the heroinwas out and he sort of looked aroundand then he gave me the prescription.The impression I got was that it wasas if he was keeping track of every-thing that was being done. , A normalperson would not do that at all. Inmy. opinion. It was just his natureto want to know everything that wasbeing done. For instance, on Mondayafternoon the. express wagon came tothe door and the man rang the belltwice, and Mr. Smart called down,"There is some one in, come back;there are three or four servants inthis house," which showed his

Says Smart Generally Disliked.I do not know any one in the house

who liked Mr. Smart He had a capa-city for getting on the wrong side ofeverybody in very quick order. .

Whenever he was in the room hehad a magazine in his hand, but wasnot always reading it . V

I saw . Mr.; Smart take his wife'spulse both on Sunday and on Tues-day afternoon. . He made no commenteither time. The first time he did itin a very abrupt brutal way, puttinghis hand on her heart and taking hiswatch out and the second time ho wassitting by her when he reached outand took her hand.Called from Dinner to Death-Be- d.

At about 6 p. m. on Tuesday, I couldsee a change in Mrs. Smart and I didnot leave her mother to go down todinner as I had done on Sunday andMonday. Se was having greater dif-ficulty in breathing: Mr. Smart cameinto the room and I suppose he sawthat change because he went downand telephoned to Dr. Willits. He cameup and said he was trying to get Dr.Willits, and then he went down to hisdinner while Mrs. Knight and I stay-ed there. He went down about quar-ter past six. He probably came inand out several times and was rest-less and moving around for about fiveminutes.1 This was before he wentdown to his dinner, and then he stay-ed at his dinner until I called everyone at about five minutes of,; seven.The doctor came at about quater ofseven and Mr. Smart was then at biHdinner. It was very noticeable thatas Mrs. Smart was dying she did notlook at her husband at all, but onlyat her mother. I remember the mo-

ther saying, "Thelma! Thelma!" andMrs. Smart's responsive glance show-ed wonderful love and devotion.

While I was there Mr. Smart atewell' and enjoyed his meals. He hada good appetite.

Dated, December 29, 1914.(Signed) Christina May Kirkpatrick.

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