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Telephone 2365 Star Office VOL. XIX. TWENTY PAGES. HONOLULU, SATURDAY, JUNE 17, 1911, TWENTY PAGES. No. AVIATOR TO FLY OVER HONOLULU THIS AFTERNOON Honolulans wero right on tlio spot was to have taken place this morning nt olcht o'clock this morning looklm.; was considered to be tho roof garden for Aviator Masson and his airship of tho Young Hotel, and thither pen- - to. fly over town on his way from plo flocked by the score. Lellehua. ' Offlccs and business houses were They wore for aftor vacated and for an hour or more a couple of attempts the wind cur- - business in town was pracucany ai rnnta nn tho nlateau wero found to standstill .i,a Rn unfavorable that Masson do- - The street corners were peoplo nnt to mako another attempt peopled with gossiping throngs, grow- - to fly to KapiolanI Park until three ing moro and more anxious, as timo p m at which time the wind usu- - went on, and tho whistle announcing ally dies away. the start of tho flight failed to blow, Quite a number of people autoed to find out just .what.tho matter was, out to Lellehua early this morning to some wild and most improbable see Masson make his start. Tho rumors were current. One was that wind, which had been calm at six a. Masson had been badly hurt by his m increased In velocity as the day biplane colliding with the smokc- - AVOre on. stack of a mill. Ano.ther report had At seven-thirt- the biplane was it that the flying machine had i,,.ni,t intn tW mien and nrepara- - rirnnned into a pond near Monnalua. tions made for a start. The Chinese and Japanese waited At nine o'clock Masson ascended for the appearance of the airship about 405 feet as a feeler, and on with the keenest interest. Wholo alighting said that he found It too families gathered outside tho doors hard to maintain his machine's equt- - 0f Oriental stores and houses and llhrium, even at the chattered away to their heart's con-lo- height to which he had gone. tent. They were the most patient Two hours later he ascended 0f the watchers, indeed some of them a short distance, but conditions wero wero gazing into the sky as ardently ' found to he unaltered, and Masson at noon as they had done four hours fctated that he would postpone any earlier. further attempt to make the flight Crowding the Heights, until three p. m. today. At all points of vantage along the it la confidently expected both by une 0f the expected flight peoplo Masson and tho Le;iehtia officers that gathered early in the morning, but tho wind will be favorable at three oahu College, seemed to be the most o'clock for the attempt, and it is favored heights. There was a large more than probable that the aviator crowd on Punchbowl's summit, but will "alight in KapiolanI Park about the watchers had a long and weary three-thirt- y p. m. time waiting boforo tho news reached Whether h comes from Leilehua there that tho flight was postponed, or not, Aviator Walker will make at will Land at "Ball Game, least. two ascents in his monoplane During tomorrow afternoon Avia- - t..ii.,i n.ii.ir nvnimhiv nt four fni- - TVTnoonTi. 1n his mononlane. will lit JVilJIIUlUill win, 1" j "i ......... ... and five o'clock. Tomorrow's program will bo car- ried out as arranged. Many People Watching. The best coign of vantage in Ho- nolulu to witness the flight which fly from KapiolanI Park ami mane a landing at Athletic Park. In order to give tho spectators at the ball games a chance of seeing him alight (rvntiTiiipa nn Paee Eleht.' FERN JOINS CLEANUP FORCES IE CIS IE Honolulu Chamber of Commerce. quickly accepted, and the "committee Honolulu, Hawaii, Juno 17, 1911. in charge of the day's work expressed jlr. Emil A. Berndt, President Oahu Its hearty appreciation of his public Central Improvement Committee, spirit In coining forward to help. "We Honolulu: nre much gratified at tho mayor's of- - Dear Sir It gives mo great pleasure fer to take chargo of this part of the to bo able to report that following the work," said Chairman Berndt Teceipt of your letter of June 16ih, I Meeting Tonight for Arangements. called personally upon each of tho At half-pas- t seven this evening a trustees of the Chamber as are in town mootjng for making final arrange-an- d found them practically unanimous ment will take place at the Young In favor of closing up the entire day Hotel, under the auspices of the June 24th. Tho banks, chants' Association. The meeting was though heartily in sympathy with tho cailed for an early hour, as many who movement, cannot, as you 'know, close desire to attend have other later en-o- n account of Its not being a legal hoi- - gagements. It Is hoped by the com- - iday. The Inter-Islan- d Steam Navlga- - nilttee that there will be a largo at- - tion Company will be compelled, on tendance, as it Is planned to mako ar- account of the movement of shipping, rangements for tho preliminary work to keep open during the morning, but to be dono next week. . Mr. Kennedy is heartily In favor of Dr currle's Views, the "clean-up- " proposition and win rjr. Currle of the federal quarantine willingly give such of his employes as station, who participated in the clean-wis- h to participate - actively In the lng up ot Now Orleans when yellow work a full day off. fever was rampant there, had some In- - With best wishes for the success of teresting remarks to mako this morn-th- e splendid work you havo in hand, lng tnat n,ight be useful In Honolulu's licllevo me, yours very truly, forthcoming campaign. JAMES F; MORGAN, He stated that it took nino weeks to President. clcan up Now Orleans. The health authorities went to work cleaning up, ' of Chamber of Commerce this Tlloy ngke,i that each house-mornin- together with many expres- - holder have burnt In his or her house sions from men, practically tl quantity of sulphur In order to the matter of making noxt gtroy tno mosqultocjs. Tho as clean-u- p day, a general te3 undertook to see that this was . holiday. It Is stated that local nior- - ,jono jn othor directions, as woll as chants generally havo agreed to let looking after Hushing of drains, employees off, if employees sIniCSi etc., with disinfectants, want to tako part In the work of tho Thero was an extraordinary lack of day. Dr. Currlo said, for tho The Mayor Takes Part. worked out at about ono houso Mayor Fom has volunteered to tako )u block being disinfected by job of chairman of district num. ti10 householders. This work, of b.or two, which includes tho territory COurse, then had to bo undertaken by from the Honolulu Iron Works to Wat- - (i,0 health officials thcmsolvos. An- - ' Vikl, mnkal of King street Kala- - kaua avenue. Tho mayor's offer was (Continued on I'pge Eight) NO NEED CUT TREES, 5IIIS SUGGESTIMGOTHEH WAYS FIGHTING THE FRUIT PESTS It's no use Dconlo cutting down Let everyono who has fruit trees trees to get rid of the Mediterranean look at the fallen fruit, and it it shows sign of having been affected by the Hi. ' ofiWl Tnrnmnlnn-iD- Khrnnrn tnlR ..J, ..v...v..0. - - . J I tUl.ll UVtllL lb 1 IlUt JO II .,T morning 10 a representauve 01 mo U) eraaicnt0 lho Star., "The best way," ho continued, Let school Children Work. "is to go In for a cleaning up process "it seems to me that a great deal f fruit. piece of fruit that can bo accomplished if all the schools is affected should bo burnt up, and would take up this subject in the line this is tho only way that It cun bo of their nature study and in stamped out. Of course, we do not struct tho ouplls about the great dam know yet what fruits It will affect. So uge dono by the pest. Have spec! far a correct account of the trouble nions on exhibit, so that every child has not yet appeared. can got acquainted with the insect in "The trouble is first noticed by, a all Its stages, and give them to under-- l omul, brown spot of decay on the stand that unless interest Is shown In Iruit. As soon as the owners of trees this matter there will be very little notice this, they should burn tho af- - fruit for the boys and girls to enjoy in fected fruit, and thus kill the larvae the near future. contained therein right avay. The fly "Incidentally, 1 might mention that itself lives for about a and if a Barbadoes, which has, systematic thorough attempt Is the Mediterranean fruit fly established, made by destroying all the affected has a system of inspection which conv fruit the pest would be materially re- pels all planters to destroy and pick duced. up not only fruit Infested with fruit Each piece of fruit would contain flics, but other pests as well. Through about fifty maggots. That, of course, this system they havo been able to re- would mean fifty flies to each fruit, sr duce the fruit fly ton minimum; in one can readily understand how rapid- - fact at times, I understan, that It is ly the pest would increase hero, when dilllcult to find Infested fruit, we consider that each fly deposits Cannot Eradicate. from 100 to 200 eggs, "We must never expect to eradicate during Its short life time, and what tho Mediterranean fruit fly entirely, necessity there Is for drastic action to 01 Its near cousin, the melon fly, but bo taken to stamp it out. But the idea by the practice of clcan-clutur- i. e., of cutting tho trees down is absurd, the picking up and destroying of all It Is not the tree at all: It's tho fruit wasto fruit and all fruit which is that must bo looked after. There affected and naturally worthless, much seems to be some confusion, for who- - can be accomplished in the reduction ever gave advice to cut down trees, of all these pests. I believe that tho seems to think that tho Mediterranean future success of tho homesteader and fly works in tho same way the the small farmer largely depends upon scale pest that visited California a few the inauguration of a thorough system years ago. of local Inspection." of the Star.) HILO, Juno 1C Hllo society is be- ing rent asunder by the conflict going on hero as the result of the aftermath cf the Hllo high school scandal. The "I', as are being flrst told of the purpose of the reception and then asked If they will caro to be present, while from an- other course, a kamaaiana of Hllo, tho edict has gone forth that only thoso who attend will havo their names board of education, in its published as- - printed In next Hilo Blue Book. A signmenfs, has left out the names of good deal of talk has started as tho Mrs. J. T. Lewis and Miss Sandry com- - result. pletely, while that of Miss Jennie Al- - The general sentiment of tho com-le- n appears as, among the teachers for" munlty Is that the action of tho board tho Hilo Union school, instead of in is one which might well have taken tho high school. As the result, the effect when tho trouble first came up. adherents of Richmond in this city, There has been considerable unpleas-whos- e number is small, at present are antness In the high for tho past up in arm& nna nre threatening to six weeks, and the bringing in of new have tho entire board of education re- - teachers throughout Is looked upon as moved and sundry other severe pun- - tho best way to clear tho atmosphere Ishmonts, among which is included the At least four of tho befit families in ostracization from "Hllo society" of all this city, however, leave for the Coast thoso who did not take the Richmond this summer to place their children In side. California schools, having had too A reception to one of the deposed much experience with tho local schools teachers is planned, and the greatest to care to keep up tho experiment, of care is being taken to separate the Tho heads of tho families remain hero from the goats. No men are In- - while their wives and children go to vited, but tho ladlos who are asked the, Coast. G000 SAIRIMS HARD LUCK There was a humorous Bide to n wagon wero collected and loaded on dual runaway this morning which ap- - the second wagon, the horse was hitched behind and both Japanese pealed, strangely enough, to one of tho . clambered in while Officer Wright fol- - victims', tho Good Samaritan who was )()wed boWnd nnd dIrectcd tho cortego assisting a in distress. A towards tho police station. Japaneso was driving a wagon a'ong At tho corner of Merchant and King street near Punchbowl thin morn- - Richards tho horso pulling tho wagon lng, when tho horso bolted, smashing Imitated tho tactics of tne othor horse The above letter from tho president an(j soelit of the peo- - the wagon, distributing its contents and bolted, and for tho second timo tho ple business the the nverago ovory tho and ne8t the Every and tho the along tho roadside and throwing out the goods wore scattered about and tho driver. Ofllcer Fred Wright came both Japaneso wero thrown out, tho to tho rescuo and stopped the run- - flrst Jap being rather badly shaken away, leaving it in chargo of tho Jap- - up. The horso was captured and the nnese whllo ho proceeded to have tho yoods again collected and taken to tho scattered goods collected and guard- - police station, whllo tho Injured man ed. Whilst so engaged Wright saw was taken to tho hospital. Jap. No. a, tho Japanese with a pioco of two-by- - when thrown from tho wagon, dropped four baton unmercifully belaboring fifty dollars, but succeeded In recover-th- o animal, nnd ho thoroupon placed lng forty of It. Ilowovor, ho was o Jnpanoso undor arrest for cruelty cllnod to tront tho wholo affair as a to tho animal. joko, though ho had Tost ton dollars, In the meantime anothor Japanoso had his wagon damaged and was In chnrgo of a wa'gon drovo up and of- - thrown out. "I like to holp this man," fered his services to his countryman In ho remarked. "Bimo-b- y too much an offor which was gladly ac- - Kin; my wagon nil broke." And he cepted. The contents of tho smashed laughed himself out of tho station. " s " 1 ASSOCIATION Business SECOND EDITION. HAWAII, disappointed, comparatively AN ID author!-Saturda- II OF unfortunately, approximately, (Correspondence DEMAND FOR AT A PREMIUM (Associated Press Cablegrams to The Star.) WASHINGTON, Juno 17. Tho Issuo of $50,000,000 of three per cent Panama Canal bonds has been subsc ribed thrice over at a maximum prlco of 103. REGISTERED MAIL ROBBED. DRAM I, Ore., June 17. The Shasta Limited train was robbed near hero of its registered mail by two men, who esenped. DETECTIVES ARE INDICTED. INDIANAPOLlS,Junu 17 Detectives Hums and Hossick have been In dicted for kidnapping J. J. McNamara, who has been Indicted for dyna- mite conspiracy. - TWO NEW DREADNAUGHTS. WASHINGTON, Juno 17. Tho new battleship Utah will go Into com mission August 1, the Florida on September 15. DIAZ ACCUSES MEXICANS. COfltTNNA, Juno 17. Former President Diaz has issued a statement justifying his admlnlstratlop and reproaching tho Mexicans for Ingratitude. NATIONAL TENNIS CHAMPIONSHIP. PHILADELPHIA, June 17. Hazel Hotchkiss retains the national tennis championship, defeating Florence Sutton. KING AND QUEEN ARRIVE HOME. LONDON, Juno 17. Tho king and queen have returned to Buckingham palace for tho beginning the coronation festivltios. MORNING CABLE ABSTRACT. WASHINGTON, June 17. In the wool tariff debate Iloprosentatlvo Weeks said there was no monopoly in wool. SAN FRANCISCO, June 17. In the- - consular Inquiry into tho wreck ot tho Asia, responsibility has been fixed upon Third Ofllcer Johnson. id E There was doing In tho Dr. Victor Clark ot tho.department Hilo opium mess this morning, U. S. 0f Immigration had following to Commissioner Geo. A. Davis cohtlnu- - say this morning with regard to the lng the preliminary examination of home-coinin- g of Agent Campbell: Policeman Kauai until two Monday afternoon. o'clock "There Camp- - Developments aro . probable which hen camo back some people seem will discount oven the sensational tuink ti,at tlle work 0f BecUring story given the other day by Joe should go right along all Barker, former chief engineer tho the tlm0 of his bribing Kauai Wilhelmlna. j ..Had Caln,)bel, renlalncd 1n to let him when caught with opium . . . , , ,, he brought ashoro from that Documentary evldenco including some telegraphic communications will be introduced, which may show a ring more conspicuous than Saturn's. HAN OF SENSATIONS RE PROBABLE GETS RID LOAFING IN Sotsuno Hnmada has been rid of her no good husband, Ichijl Hnmada, Jn a decree by Judge Robinson. Her libel for divorce thus made success- ful declared "that tho llbelleo not EPnlrlnir for work or means sup-- , but gambling to compelled to in caso for her own support." on alimony in Welsh divorce caso went over ono week in Judgo Robinson's Tho McQuald dlvorco trial, with with its wcarlsomo spinning out recrimlnntlons between and day. seoms iiKeiy urag aiong weoks, T. I DIES GO TAKESJALAI Negotiations been conclud'ed whereby tho Plantation Company, Ltd., will transferred on July the Honry Wiiterhouso Trust Co., Ltd., Davlos & Co., Ltd. 'plantation is hold by tho heirs tho lato Dr. Wight, tho prosident tho P. Wood. J. Atkins Is manager of tho A NO !rAU .o f.m 5997 again work, week, school sheep of I CAMPBELL LEFT EUROPE nothing the appears to bo considerable criticism of fact that Mr. and lo immigrants of of go had of of in of to do further work until August' or or until tho reports tho immigrants who arrived by tho S. S. Orterlc has been received and got into general circulation. Until these reports are mado known Immigration work among tho Spanish and Portugu-cs- o must perforco remain at stand- still. Deslde tho reports of tho themselves the oWcial re- ports of the consuls arc awaited. So It would have dono no good for Mr. Campbell to Jiavo waited even had his business not called him back." A member of tno Doard of immigra- tion said this morning, speaking along tho lines: "Wo aro pushing tho work of Im migration just ns energetically and IviiMK' no twiaelliln lirlnplnir lnhnrnrn port, devoting his timo to loanng ' ' ' "" - and failed support libel- - trom a foreign country with Govern-Ian- t seek "ent funds is any a dollcato and sho was , Hearing tho court. husband it 10 Halawa 1 Hnlnwa situated company Wright a above matter and cannot conducted Uko a commercial business. Negotiations havo to bo tho time on a lc basis." HOODLUM MAULS JAPANESE. Thero two or three bad gangs wife contained in tho rival libels, was of young natives and Portuguese In continued from yesterday to Wcdncs- - town, ono of which hangs about a road for & havo ngency ot tho bo from to Thco. II. of being II. tno Septeumer of im- migrants bo all nre that leadB to tho neighborhood ot tho Mochtzuki Club. A roportor of the Ha- waii Shlppo, named Sognwa, whllo go- ing that way recently, wns struck in tho faco by ono ot tho hoodlums and four of his teeth knocked out. Somo-tlm- o aftor Editor Slicba saved himself from a similar assault by tho display of a weapon. Sogawa had his man ar- rested and tho lattor was tried in tho police yostordny and lined $25. Tho Japanese community feels that tho thug got oft too oaslly. , MINORS GET MONEY. Throe hundred dollars will bo drawn from tho Anahu Partition suit proceeds Kohala and tho company's stock Is j In tho hands of Commissioner Simon- - plantation. ton, undor a stipulation glvon offoot by Judge Robinson for the flno Anahu minors and to be charged against their dhare.
Transcript
Page 1: AVIATOR II 5IIIS...omul, brown spot of decay on the stand that unless interest Is shown In Iruit. As soon as the owners of trees this matter there will be very little notice this,

Telephone 2365 Star Office

VOL. XIX. TWENTY PAGES. HONOLULU, SATURDAY, JUNE 17, 1911, TWENTY PAGES. No.

AVIATOR TO FLY

OVER HONOLULU

THIS AFTERNOON

Honolulans wero right on tlio spot was to have taken place this morning

nt olcht o'clock this morning looklm.; was considered to be tho roof garden

for Aviator Masson and his airship of tho Young Hotel, and thither pen- -

to. fly over town on his way from plo flocked by the score.

Lellehua. ' Offlccs and business houses were

They wore for aftor vacated and for an hour or more

a couple of attempts the wind cur- - business in town was pracucany airnnta nn tho nlateau wero found to standstill

.i,a Rn unfavorable that Masson do- - The street corners were peoplo

nnt to mako another attempt peopled with gossiping throngs, grow- -

to fly to KapiolanI Park until three ing moro and more anxious, as timo

p m at which time the wind usu- - went on, and tho whistle announcing

ally dies away. the start of tho flight failed to blow,

Quite a number of people autoed to find out just .what.tho matter was,

out to Lellehua early this morning to some wild and most improbable

see Masson make his start. Tho rumors were current. One was that

wind, which had been calm at six a. Masson had been badly hurt by his

m increased In velocity as the day biplane colliding with the smokc- -

AVOre on. stack of a mill. Ano.ther report had

At seven-thirt- the biplane was it that the flying machine had

i,,.ni,t intn tW mien and nrepara- - rirnnned into a pond near Monnalua.

tions made for a start. The Chinese and Japanese waited

At nine o'clock Masson ascended for the appearance of the airship

about 405 feet as a feeler, and on with the keenest interest. Wholo

alighting said that he found It too families gathered outside tho doors

hard to maintain his machine's equt- - 0f Oriental stores and houses and

llhrium, even at the chattered away to their heart's con-lo-

height to which he had gone. tent. They were the most patient

Two hours later he ascended 0f the watchers, indeed some of them

a short distance, but conditions wero wero gazing into the sky as ardently

' found to he unaltered, and Masson at noon as they had done four hours

fctated that he would postpone any earlier.further attempt to make the flight Crowding the Heights,

until three p. m. today. At all points of vantage along the

it la confidently expected both by une 0f the expected flight peoplo

Masson and tho Le;iehtia officers that gathered early in the morning, but

tho wind will be favorable at three oahu College, seemed to be the most

o'clock for the attempt, and it is favored heights. There was a large

more than probable that the aviator crowd on Punchbowl's summit, but

will "alight in KapiolanI Park about the watchers had a long and weary

three-thirt- y p. m. time waiting boforo tho news reached

Whether h comes from Leilehua there that tho flight was postponed,

or not, Aviator Walker will make at will Land at "Ball Game,

least. two ascents in his monoplane During tomorrow afternoon Avia- -

t..ii.,i n.ii.ir nvnimhiv nt four fni-- TVTnoonTi. 1n his mononlane. willlit JVilJIIUlUill win, 1" j "i ......... ...

and five o'clock.Tomorrow's program will bo car-

ried out as arranged.Many People Watching.

The best coign of vantage in Ho-

nolulu to witness the flight which

fly from KapiolanI Park ami manea landing at Athletic Park. In orderto give tho spectators at the ballgames a chance of seeing him alight

(rvntiTiiipa nn Paee Eleht.'

FERN JOINS CLEANUP FORCES

IE CIS IEHonolulu Chamber of Commerce. quickly accepted, and the "committee

Honolulu, Hawaii, Juno 17, 1911. in charge of the day's work expressed

jlr. Emil A. Berndt, President Oahu Its hearty appreciation of his public

Central Improvement Committee, spirit In coining forward to help. "We

Honolulu: nre much gratified at tho mayor's of- -

Dear Sir It gives mo great pleasure fer to take chargo of this part of the

to bo able to report that following the work," said Chairman BerndtTeceipt of your letter of June 16ih, I Meeting Tonight for Arangements.

called personally upon each of tho At half-pas- t seven this evening a

trustees of the Chamber as are in town mootjng for making final arrange-an- d

found them practically unanimous ment will take place at the Young

In favor of closing up the entire day Hotel, under the auspices of the

June 24th. Tho banks, chants' Association. The meeting was

though heartily in sympathy with tho cailed for an early hour, as many whomovement, cannot, as you 'know, close desire to attend have other later en-o- n

account of Its not being a legal hoi- - gagements. It Is hoped by the com- -

iday. The Inter-Islan- d Steam Navlga- - nilttee that there will be a largo at- -

tion Company will be compelled, on tendance, as it Is planned to mako ar-

account of the movement of shipping, rangements for tho preliminary work

to keep open during the morning, but to be dono next week. .

Mr. Kennedy is heartily In favor of Dr currle's Views,

the "clean-up- " proposition and win rjr. Currle of the federal quarantinewillingly give such of his employes as station, who participated in the clean-wis- h

to participate - actively In the lng up ot Now Orleans when yellowwork a full day off. fever was rampant there, had some In- -

With best wishes for the success of teresting remarks to mako this morn-th- e

splendid work you havo in hand, lng tnat n,ight be useful In Honolulu'slicllevo me, yours very truly, forthcoming campaign.

JAMES F; MORGAN, He stated that it took nino weeks toPresident. clcan up Now Orleans. The health

authorities went to work cleaning up,

' of Chamber of Commerce this Tlloy ngke,i that each house-mornin-

together with many expres- - holder have burnt In his or her housesions from men, practically tl quantity of sulphur In order to

the matter of making noxt gtroy tno mosqultocjs. Thoas clean-u- p day, a general te3 undertook to see that this was

. holiday. It Is stated that local nior- - ,jono jn othor directions, as woll aschants generally havo agreed to let looking after Hushing of drains,

employees off, if employees sIniCSi etc., with disinfectants,want to tako part In the work of tho Thero was an extraordinary lack of

day. Dr. Currlo said, for thoThe Mayor Takes Part. worked out at about ono houso

Mayor Fom has volunteered to tako )u block being disinfected by

job of chairman of district num. ti10 householders. This work, of

b.or two, which includes tho territory COurse, then had to bo undertaken by

from the Honolulu Iron Works to Wat- - (i,0 health officials thcmsolvos. An--

' Vikl, mnkal of King street Kala- -

kaua avenue. Tho mayor's offer was (Continued on I'pge Eight)

NO NEED CUT TREES, 5IIIS

SUGGESTIMGOTHEH WAYS

FIGHTING THE FRUIT PESTS

It's no use Dconlo cutting down Let everyono who has fruit trees

trees to get rid of the Mediterranean look at the fallen fruit, and it it showssign of having been affected by theHi. ' ofiWl Tnrnmnlnn-iD- Khrnnrn tnlR..J, ..v...v..0. - - .

J I tUl.ll UVtllL lb 1 IlUt JO II .,Tmorning 10 a representauve 01 mo U) eraaicnt0 lhoStar., "The best way," ho continued, Let school Children Work."is to go In for a cleaning up process "it seems to me that a great deal

f fruit. piece of fruit that can bo accomplished if all the schoolsis affected should bo burnt up, and would take up this subject in the linethis is tho only way that It cun bo of their nature study and instamped out. Of course, we do not struct tho ouplls about the great damknow yet what fruits It will affect. So uge dono by the pest. Have spec!far a correct account of the trouble nions on exhibit, so that every childhas not yet appeared. can got acquainted with the insect in

"The trouble is first noticed by, a all Its stages, and give them to under-- lomul, brown spot of decay on the stand that unless interest Is shown In

Iruit. As soon as the owners of trees this matter there will be very littlenotice this, they should burn tho af- - fruit for the boys and girls to enjoy in

fected fruit, and thus kill the larvae the near future.contained therein right avay. The fly "Incidentally, 1 might mention thatitself lives for about a and if a Barbadoes, which has,systematic thorough attempt Is the Mediterranean fruit fly established,made by destroying all the affected has a system of inspection which conv

fruit the pest would be materially re- pels all planters to destroy and pickduced. up not only fruit Infested with fruit

Each piece of fruit would contain flics, but other pests as well. Throughabout fifty maggots. That, of course, this system they havo been able to re-

would mean fifty flies to each fruit, sr duce the fruit fly ton minimum; in

one can readily understand how rapid- - fact at times, I understan, that It isly the pest would increase hero, when dilllcult to find Infested fruit,we consider that each fly deposits Cannot Eradicate.from 100 to 200 eggs, "We must never expect to eradicateduring Its short life time, and what tho Mediterranean fruit fly entirely,necessity there Is for drastic action to 01 Its near cousin, the melon fly, butbo taken to stamp it out. But the idea by the practice of clcan-clutur- i. e.,

of cutting tho trees down is absurd, the picking up and destroying of allIt Is not the tree at all: It's tho fruit wasto fruit and all fruit which isthat must bo looked after. There affected and naturally worthless, muchseems to be some confusion, for who- - can be accomplished in the reductionever gave advice to cut down trees, of all these pests. I believe that thoseems to think that tho Mediterranean future success of tho homesteader andfly works in tho same way the the small farmer largely depends uponscale pest that visited California a few the inauguration of a thorough systemyears ago. of local Inspection."

of the Star.)

HILO, Juno 1C Hllo society is be-

ing rent asunder by the conflict going

on hero as the result of the aftermathcf the Hllo high school scandal. The

"I',

as

are being flrst told of the purpose ofthe reception and then asked If theywill caro to be present, while from an-

other course, a kamaaiana of Hllo, thoedict has gone forth that only thosowho attend will havo their names

board of education, in its published as- - printed In next Hilo Blue Book. A

signmenfs, has left out the names of good deal of talk has started as thoMrs. J. T. Lewis and Miss Sandry com- - result.pletely, while that of Miss Jennie Al- - The general sentiment of tho com-le- n

appears as, among the teachers for" munlty Is that the action of tho boardtho Hilo Union school, instead of in is one which might well have takentho high school. As the result, the effect when tho trouble first came up.

adherents of Richmond in this city, There has been considerable unpleas-whos- e

number is small, at present are antness In the high for tho pastup in arm& nna nre threatening to six weeks, and the bringing in of newhave tho entire board of education re- - teachers throughout Is looked upon asmoved and sundry other severe pun- - tho best way to clear tho atmosphereIshmonts, among which is included the At least four of tho befit families inostracization from "Hllo society" of all this city, however, leave for the Coastthoso who did not take the Richmond this summer to place their children In

side. California schools, having had tooA reception to one of the deposed much experience with tho local schools

teachers is planned, and the greatest to care to keep up tho experiment,of care is being taken to separate the Tho heads of tho families remain hero

from the goats. No men are In- - while their wives and children go tovited, but tho ladlos who are asked the, Coast.

G000 SAIRIMS HARD LUCK

There was a humorous Bide to n wagon wero collected and loaded on

dual runaway this morning which ap- - the second wagon, the horse washitched behind and both Japanese

pealed, strangely enough, to one of tho .

clambered in while Officer Wright fol- -

victims', tho Good Samaritan who was )()wed boWnd nnd dIrectcd tho cortegoassisting a in distress. A towards tho police station.Japaneso was driving a wagon a'ong At tho corner of Merchant andKing street near Punchbowl thin morn- - Richards tho horso pulling tho wagonlng, when tho horso bolted, smashing Imitated tho tactics of tne othor horse

The above letter from tho president an(j soelit of the peo- - the wagon, distributing its contents and bolted, and for tho second timo

tho ple

business

thethe

nveragoovory

tho

and

ne8t

the Every

and

tho

thealong tho roadside and throwing out the goods wore scattered about andtho driver. Ofllcer Fred Wright came both Japaneso wero thrown out, thoto tho rescuo and stopped the run- - flrst Jap being rather badly shakenaway, leaving it in chargo of tho Jap- - up. The horso was captured and thennese whllo ho proceeded to have tho yoods again collected and taken to thoscattered goods collected and guard- - police station, whllo tho Injured maned. Whilst so engaged Wright saw was taken to tho hospital. Jap. No. a,

tho Japanese with a pioco of two-by- - when thrown from tho wagon, droppedfour baton unmercifully belaboring fifty dollars, but succeeded In recover-th- o

animal, nnd ho thoroupon placed lng forty of It. Ilowovor, ho was o

Jnpanoso undor arrest for cruelty cllnod to tront tho wholo affair as ato tho animal. joko, though ho had Tost ton dollars,

In the meantime anothor Japanoso had his wagon damaged and wasIn chnrgo of a wa'gon drovo up and of- - thrown out. "I like to holp this man,"fered his services to his countryman In ho remarked. "Bimo-b- y too much

an offor which was gladly ac- - Kin; my wagon nil broke." And hecepted. The contents of tho smashed laughed himself out of tho station.

" s " 1

ASSOCIATION

Business SECOND EDITION.

HAWAII,

disappointed,

comparatively

AN ID

author!-Saturda-

II

OF

unfortunately,

approximately,

(Correspondence

DEMAND FOR

AT A PREMIUM(Associated Press Cablegrams to The Star.)

WASHINGTON, Juno 17. Tho Issuo of $50,000,000 of three per centPanama Canal bonds has been subsc ribed thrice over at a maximum prlcoof 103.

REGISTERED MAIL ROBBED.DRAM I, Ore., June 17. The Shasta Limited train was robbed near hero

of its registered mail by two men, who esenped.

DETECTIVES ARE INDICTED.INDIANAPOLlS,Junu 17 Detectives Hums and Hossick have been In

dicted for kidnapping J. J. McNamara, who has been Indicted for dyna-mite conspiracy.

- TWO NEW DREADNAUGHTS.WASHINGTON, Juno 17. Tho new battleship Utah will go Into com

mission August 1, the Florida on September 15.

DIAZ ACCUSES MEXICANS.COfltTNNA, Juno 17. Former President Diaz has issued a statement

justifying his admlnlstratlop and reproaching tho Mexicans for Ingratitude.

NATIONAL TENNIS CHAMPIONSHIP.PHILADELPHIA, June 17. Hazel Hotchkiss retains the national tennis

championship, defeating Florence Sutton.KING AND QUEEN ARRIVE HOME.

LONDON, Juno 17. Tho king and queen have returned to Buckinghampalace for tho beginning the coronation festivltios.

MORNING CABLE ABSTRACT.WASHINGTON, June 17. In the wool tariff debate Iloprosentatlvo

Weeks said there was no monopoly in wool.SAN FRANCISCO, June 17. In the-- consular Inquiry into tho wreck ot

tho Asia, responsibility has been fixed upon Third Ofllcer Johnson.

id E

There was doing In tho Dr. Victor Clark ot tho.departmentHilo opium mess this morning, U. S. 0f Immigration had following toCommissioner Geo. A. Davis cohtlnu- - say this morning with regard to thelng the preliminary examination of home-coinin- g of Agent Campbell:Policeman Kauai until twoMonday afternoon.

o'clock "ThereCamp- -

Developments aro . probable which hen camo back some people seemwill discount oven the sensational tuink ti,at tlle work 0f BecUringstory given the other day by Joe should go right along allBarker, former chief engineer tho the tlm0

of his bribing KauaiWilhelmlna. j ..Had Caln,)bel, renlalncd 1nto let him when caught with opium . . . , , , ,

he brought ashoro from that

Documentary evldenco includingsome telegraphic communications willbe introduced, which may show aring more conspicuous than Saturn's.

HANOF

SENSATIONS

RE PROBABLE

GETS RID

LOAFING INSotsuno Hnmada has been rid of

her no good husband, Ichijl Hnmada,Jn a decree by Judge Robinson. Herlibel for divorce thus made success-

ful declared "that tho llbelleo notEPnlrlnir for work or means sup-- ,

butgambling to

compelled to in caso

for her own support."on alimony in Welsh

divorce caso went over ono week inJudgo Robinson's

Tho McQuald dlvorco trial, withwith its wcarlsomo spinning outrecrimlnntlons between and

day. seoms iiKeiy urag aiongweoks,

T. I DIES GO

TAKESJALAINegotiations been conclud'ed

whereby thoPlantation Company, Ltd., willtransferred on July the HonryWiiterhouso Trust Co., Ltd.,

Davlos & Co., Ltd.'plantation is

hold by tho heirs tho lato Dr.Wight, tho prosident tho

P. Wood. J. AtkinsIs manager of tho

A NO

!rAU .o f.m

5997

again

work,

week,

school

sheep

of

I CAMPBELL

LEFT EUROPE

nothingthe

appears to bo considerablecriticism of fact that Mr.

andloimmigrants

ofof

gohad

of

of

in

of

to do further work until August'or or until tho reportstho immigrants who arrived by thoS. S. Orterlc has been received and gotinto general circulation. Until thesereports are mado known Immigrationwork among tho Spanish and Portugu-cs- o

must perforco remain at stand-still. Deslde tho reports of tho

themselves the oWcial re-

ports of the consuls arc awaited. So

It would have dono no good for Mr.Campbell to Jiavo waited even had hisbusiness not called him back."

A member of tno Doard of immigra-

tion said this morning, speaking alongtho lines:

"Wo aro pushing tho work of Immigration just ns energetically and

IviiMK' no twiaelliln lirlnplnir lnhnrnrnport, devoting his timo to loanng ' ' ' " " -and failed support libel- - trom a foreign country with Govern-Ian- t

seek "ent funds is any a dollcatoand sho was ,

Hearing tho

court.

husband

it 10

Halawa

1

Hnlnwa situated

companyWright

a

above

matter and cannot conducted Uko acommercial business. Negotiationshavo to bo tho time on a lc

basis."

HOODLUM MAULS JAPANESE.Thero two or three bad gangs

wife contained in tho rival libels, was of young natives and Portuguese In

continued from yesterday to Wcdncs- - town, ono of which hangs about a road

for

&

havongency ot tho

bo

fromto Thco.

II.

ofbeing II.

tno

Septeumer of

im-

migrants

bo

all

nre

that leadB to tho neighborhood ot thoMochtzuki Club. A roportor of the Ha-

waii Shlppo, named Sognwa, whllo go-

ing that way recently, wns struck intho faco by ono ot tho hoodlums andfour of his teeth knocked out. Somo-tlm- o

aftor Editor Slicba saved himselffrom a similar assault by tho displayof a weapon. Sogawa had his man ar-

rested and tho lattor was tried in thopolice yostordny and lined $25. ThoJapanese community feels that thothug got oft too oaslly. ,

MINORS GET MONEY.Throe hundred dollars will bo drawn

from tho Anahu Partition suit proceeds

Kohala and tho company's stock Is j In tho hands of Commissioner Simon- -

plantation.

ton, undor a stipulation glvon offootby Judge Robinson for the flno Anahuminors and to be charged against theirdhare.

Page 2: AVIATOR II 5IIIS...omul, brown spot of decay on the stand that unless interest Is shown In Iruit. As soon as the owners of trees this matter there will be very little notice this,

p.

THE HAWAIIAN STARDAILY AND

Dally published overy afternoon

SEMI -

Newspaper Association, Ltd., McCandless Building, Botnoi Btreoi, ono

lulli, T. H.

" Entorpd at tho at Honolulu as second class mall matter.

SUBSCRIPTION RATES, PAYABLE IN ADVANCE.

Dally, anywhero In tho Islands, per. month I .75.

Dally, auywhoro In the Islands, thrco months 2.00.,,. Mm TalnmlR. six montliB 4.00.

Dally, anywhero in tho Islands, ouo

Dally, to foreign countries, ono yoarSemi-Weekl- y, anywhero in thoSemi-Week- ly to Foreign countries,

Advertising rates supplied upon

D. TIMMON8

Business office telephone,

nmmk Steamship Company

Sierra ScheduleHON. ARRIVE S. F.

LEAVE S. P. ARRIVE HON. LEAVE

JUNB 10 JWJE 16 JUNE 1 JUNE 27

JULY 1 JULY 7 JULY 12 '. JULY 18

JULY 22 JULY 28 AUG. 2 AUG. S

Aug. 12 AUG. 18 AUG. 23 .. AUG. 29

Sept o SEPT. 8 SEPT. 13 SEPT. 19

SEPT. 23 SEPT. 29 OCT. 4 OCT. Id

RATES rrom Honolulu to San Franpisco First Cl-- ss, $G5; Round

Tri.v H9. Family Room, extra. i

R'eservatlons will not be held later than Forty-eigh- t hours prior to theadvertised sailing time unless tickets aro paid for in full.

FOR PARTICULARS. APPLY TO

GENERAL

ft iinJ-ro-

Canadian- - ma

sailsJune

COOKE, LTD

WEEKLY.

postofflce

(oxcept Sunday) by tho Hawaiian Star

year 8.00.12.00.s

Islands, ono year .. 2.00.3.00.ono year

request.

.MANAGER.;"23G5; postoillco box, 3CG.

AGENTS.

a Steamsh in Coi

Agents

from Seattle for Honolulu direct

GENERAL AGENTS

Royal

Steamers of tho above line running In connection with the CANADIAI

PACIFIC RAILWAY COMPANY between Vancouver.. D. C, and Sydney,

N. 8. W., and calling at Victoria, B. C, Honolulu and Brisbane, Q.

FOR i FIJI AND AUSTRALIA FOR VANCOUVER.

S. S. MARAMA JUNE 23 MAKURA JUNE 20

S. MAKURA JULY 21 S. S. ZEALANDIA JULY 18

Calls at running Island.

CALLING AT SUVA, FIJI, ON BOTH UP AND DOWN VOYAGES.

Theo, E Davies & Co., Ltd., Ge'l Agents

Pacific Mail Steamship Co.Steamers of tho above company will call at Honolulu and leave this

port on or about tho dates mentioned below:FOR THE ORIENT: FOR SAN FRANCISCO .

S. S. PERSIA JULY 5 S. S. MANCHURIA JULY 15

S. S. KOREA JULY 11 S. S. KOREA JUNE 11

S. S. SIBERIA JULY 24 S. S. SIBERIA JUNE 30

S.' S.CHINA AUG 1 S.S.CHINA JULY 7

Will call at Manila.

For general Information apply to

H. Hackfeld & Co., - - - -

Matson Navigation Co.'s Schedule, 1911fc DIRECT SERVICE BETWEEN 8AN FRANCISCO AND HONOLULU.

Arrive from San Francisco. Sail for San Francisco.

S. S. HONOLULAN JuNE 3 S. S. HONOLULAN JUNE 13

S. 8. WTLHELMINA JUNE 13 S. S. WILHELMINA JUNE 21

S. S. WILHELMINA JUNE 27 S. S. LURLINE JULY 3

The S. S. Hyades of this linoon or about 10, 1911.

CASTLE &

American-Hawaiia- n Steamship Co.FROM NEW YORK TO HONOLULU, via Tehuantopecj every sixth

day. Freight received at all times at the Company's Wharf, 41st StreetSouth Brooklyn.

FROM SEATTLE OR TACOMA TO HONOLULU DIRECT:S. S. COLUMBIAN to sail about Juno 14

S. S. ALASKAN to sail about June 20

S. S. ARIONAN to sail about July 8

For further Information apply toH. HACKFELD & CO, LTD, Agents, Honolulu.

C. P. MORSE, General Freight Agent.

Toyo Kisen Kaisha.Steamers of tho iraove Company will call at and leave Honolulu on or

bout the dates mentioned below:FOR THE ORIENT. , FOR SAN FRANCISCO.

S. S. AMERICA MARU... JUNE 20TH s. S. NIPPON MARU JUNE 23

S. . TENYO MARU.... JUNE 27TH S. S. CHIYO MARU JULY 21STS. S. NIPPON MARU. . . .JULY 1STH S. S. AMERICA MARU. . .AUG 11TH

Castle & Cooke, Ltd., Agents

union pacific transfer co., ltdAcknowledged to bo tho best people to move Pianos and Furnlturo.King St., next Young Hotel., Telophone 1875

TILE HAWAIIAN STAR, SATURDAY, JUNE 17, 1911.

Shipping: And Waterfront NewsTHE MAILS.

From San Francisco, America Mam,Juno 20.

To San Francisco, Korea, Juno 17.

From tho Orient, ex Korea, Juno17.

To tho Orient per America Maru,Juno 20.

From Australia, ex Makura. June20.

To Australia per C.-- S. Mnrama,June 23.

SHIPPING IS POIIT.

(Government Vessels.)U. S. S. Thetis, from Laysan

Island, June 13.

U. S. L. E. tender Kukul, from acruise, Juno 1C.

(Merchant Vessels)Flauronce Ward, Am. schr., Plltz,

from Midway, May IS.Am. scr. Alice Cool-e- , from Port Lud

low, May 30.Repeat, Mackenzie, from Port Gam

ble, Juno 1.

Selrra, from San Francisco, June 1C.

PROJECTED ARRIVALS.From Manila.

Sheridan, July 5.Buford, August 4.

Sherman, September 4.

PROJECTED DEPARTURES.For San Francisco.

P. M. S. S. Korea. June 17.Sierra, June 21.

Wllhelmlnn, June 21.Nippon Maru, June 23.

Siberia, Juno 30.

mfor Vancouver.Makura, C.-- R. M. S., June 20.Zealandla, C.-- R. M. S., July IS.

For FIJI and Australia.Marama, C.-- R. M. S., Juno 23.

Makura C.-- R. M. S., July 21.

For China and Japan.T. K. K. S. America Maru, Juno 20.T. K. K. S. Tenyo Maru, June 27.P. M. S. Persia, July 5.

INTER-ISLAN- VESSELS.For Maul and Haw?ll Ports.

Mauna Kea, I.-- I. S, N. Co., everyTuesday.

Claudine, I.-- I. S. N. Co., every Friday.

For Molokal and Maul.Mikahala, every Tuesday.

Kauai Ports.W. G. Hall, I.-- I. S. N.' Co., every

Thursday.Kinau, I.-- I. S. N. Co., every Tues

day.Kona and Kau Ports.

Mauna Loa, I.-- I. S. N. Co.. alternateTuesdays and Fridays.

TRANSPORT SERVICE.U. S. A. T. Crook, laid up at San

Francisco.U. S. A. T. Thomas at San Fran-cisco.U. S. A. T. Warren, at Philippines.U. S. A. T. DIx, at Seattle, out of

commission until August 1.

U. S. A. T. Sheridan left .Manila forSan Francisco, via Honolulu, June 15.

U. S. N. T. Buffalo, en route toAlaska with equipment and supplies.

.U. S. A. T. Buford left Honolulufor Manila, via, Guam, June 14.U. S. A. T. Logan laid up at San

Francisco.U. S. A. T. Sherman en route to San

Francisco. Left Honolulu Juno 3.

To Manila.Shermah, July 12

Sheridan, August 12.

Vessels' Whereabouts.A. F. COATES, schr., from Everett

for Hilo, March C.

A. M. BAXTER, Am. schr., ar. Gray'rtHarbor from Port Allen, April 17.

ALASKAN, Am. S. S., ar. San Fran-cisco from San Diego, June 13.

ALEX. ISENBEitG, Gei. sp., fromLelth for Honolulu, Feb. 22.

ALDEN BESSE, Am. bk from SacPedro for Honolulu, March 18.

ALBERT, Am. bk. ar. Port Townsend,from Napoopoo, Juno 4.

ALICE COOKE, schr., from Port Lud- -

low ar. Honolulu, Ma-- 30.

AMERICA MARU, Jap. S. S., for Honolulu, from San Francisco, , Juno14.

ANDREW WELCH, Am, bk., leftHonolulu for San Francisco, June2.

ARIZONAN, Am. S. S., ar. Sallna Cru?from Hilo, Juno 1.

BENICIA, Am. bk., ar. Gray's Harborfrom Hilo Juno 2.

BERTHA, German bk., from Kahulular. Gray's Harbor, May 10.

BOREALIS, Am, schr., for Aberdeen,Wash., from Mahukona, May 28.

BUFORD, U. S. A. T., left Honolulufor Manila, via Guam, Juno 14.

BUYO MARU, Jap. str.. loft Honoluluon routo to South America, May 21.

CAMANO, schr, arrived at PortGamblo from Hilo, May 5.

C. F. CROCKER, Am. bk., from Ho-

nolulu for Tacoma, Juno 10.

CHEHALIS, Am. bk., from Hilo, ar.Grays Harbor. May 31. ,

CHINA, loft VjkoMma- 'or Kobe, May2!

CHIYO MARU, Am. S. S dromlulu ar. Yokohama, Juno 10.

BY W. H.(Additional Shipping on Page Five.)

COLUMBIAN, Am. S. S., from Seattlofor Honolulu, Juno 14.

CORONADO, Am. bk., from Hono-

lulu, nr. San Francisco, June 9.

CROOK, U. S. A. T, laid up at SanFrancisco.EDWARD SEWALL, Am. ship left

Kahulul for Philadelphia, May 9.

ELDORADO, Am. schr., from Hono-

lulu, ar. Hilo, 3 uno 10.

ENTERPRISE, Am. S. S.. from Hilofor San Francisco, Juno 8.

ERSKINE M. PHELPS, Am. ship, ar.Philadelphia from Honolulu, Juno14.

ETHEL ZANE, Am. dir., from. Eu-reka nr. Hilo, June 11.

FALLS OF CLYDE, Am. ship, leftHonolulu for Gavlota, May 22.

FLAURENCE WAP. 5, Am. schr., nr.Honolulu from Midway, May 17.

FOOIING SUEW Am. bk., from Hon- -

for N. Y. via Mahukona, April 17GAMBLE, scr., from Port Gamble for

Hilo, Juno 1C.

GEORGE E. BILLINGS, Am. scr.,from Newcastle, N. S. W., ar. SanFrancisco Juno 8.

HAWAII, Am. bktu., ar. Mahukonafrom Honolulu, June 5.

II. HACKFELD, German bk., fromHonolulu, arrived Portland, Ore.,May 21.

HELENE, Am. schr., from Gray'sHarbor for Honolulu, June 7.

HILONIAN, Am. S. S., for San Francisco from Port Allen, June 7.

HONOLULAN, Am. S. S left Honolulu for San Francisco, Juno 13.

HONGKONG MARU, Jap. S. S., fromHonolulu for Yokohama, April 2C.

HONOIPU, Am. schr., for Hana fromSan Francisco, Juno 13.

HYADES. Am. 5 5., for Honolulufrom Seattle, June 14.

TRMGARD, bktn., from San Franciscoar. Marukoin, June 15.

ISTHMIAN, arrived San Franciscofrom San Diego, May 27.

JAMES JOHNSON, Am. bktn., fromHonolulu ar. San Francisco, June10.

JETHOU, Nor. S. S., from Honolulu,arrived Newcastle, April 29.

JOHN ENA, Am. Ship for DelawareBreakwater, from Honolulu, May 14

KOAN MARU, Jap. S. S., from Hon-

olulu for Formosa, April 2G.

KONA, Am. schr., for Honolulu fromNewcastle, N. S. W., May 31.

KOREA, Am. S. S., from Yokohamafor Honolulu, June 17.

LOGAN, U. b. A. T., laid up at SanFrancisco.

LURLINE, Am. S. S., from Honolulu,ar. San Francisco June 5.

LYMAN D. FOSTER, Am. schr., fromNewcastle, N. S. V arrived Hono-ipu- ,

June 5.

MABEL RICKMERS. Ger. bk., fromHonolulu for Newcastle, March 30

MAKURA, Br. S. S., from Fiji for. Vancouver, via Honolulu, June 12.MANCHURIA, Am. S. S., left Hono-

lulu for Orient, May 22.MARION CHILCOTT, for Gavlota

from Honolulu, June 9.MARAMA, from Honolulu ar. Vancou-

ver, May 30.

MARY E. FOSTER, Am. schr., fromHonolulu, ar. Puget Sound May 21.

MARY E. W1NKELMAN, ar. PortLudlow from Honolulu, April 17.

MELROSE, Am. schr., from Eureka ar.Hilo, May 30.

MEXICAN, Am. S. S.. for SalinaCruz from Hilo, Juno 12.

MINDORU, Am. schr., for Honolulufrom Columbia River, June 13.

MISSOURIAN, Am. S. S., for SallnaCruz via Island ports, June 14.

MONGOLIA, Am. S. S., from San Fran-cisco for the Orient via Honolulu,June C.

MURIEL, Am. schr., from San Fran-cisco for llonoipu, June 10.

NIPPON MARU, Jap. S. S., left Yo-

kohama for Honolulu, Juno 13.

NUUANU, Am. bk., Jossolyn, fromKaanapall for New York, Feb. 7.

O. M KELLOGG, Am schr., from Ho-

nolulu, ar. Eureka June 1.

ORTERIC, Dr. S. S., from Honolulu ar.Tacoma, May 1.

PERSIA, Br. S. S., ar. San Franciscofrom Honolulu, June 15.

REPEAT, Am. schr., from Port Gamblear. Honolulu, Juno I- -

R. C. SLADE--,Am. schr., left Honolulu

for Aberdeen, Wash., April 29.R. P. R1THET, Am. bk., left San

Francisco for Honolulu, Juno 8.

ROBERT LEWERS, Am. schr.. fromHonolulu, nr. Port Ludlow, Juno 1.

ROBERT SEARLES, Am. schr., arPugct Sound from Honolulu. April 9

ROSECRANS, Am. S. S., Montereyfrom Honolulu, June 15.

SANTA RITA, Am. S. S., from PortSan Luis for Honolulu, Juno 8.

SANTA MARIA, stmr., for Port SanLuis, via Hilo, Juno G.

S. C. ALLEN, Am. bk., from GraysHarbor ar. Honolulu, May 15.

S. G. WILDER, bktn., for Port Town-sen- d

from Everett, June 3.

SHERIDAN, U. S. A. T left Honolulufor Manila, via Guam, May 14.

SIERRA, Am. S. S., from San Francisco ar. Honolulu, Juno 16.,

SOUTH BAT!, Am. 8, S., ar. SanJDjogg

CLARKE.

NEW WIRELESS ACT DOESN'T APPLY

TO INTER-ISLA- ND STEAMERS

By a cabled announcement already miles, must carry a wireless teleg-publlshc- d

in" tho Star, It will bo seen rai'hy instrument, and bo capable ofthat the Washington authorities have teriUllle messages one hundred miles.

ml., r ..j. .. . , ,,set the price of dlsobed enco to the seoknew act calling for the installation of niSo hag boon ,mbltsllod ln the star.wircloss telegraphy on certain vessels So far, no local applicants have ap-n- l

$5000. Tho new comes into peared for examination.forco on July 1. Under it all vessels

domestic or foreign carrying fiftypersons or more out of an American puuv are not brought within tho pro-po- -

a distance of over two hundred visions of the new act.

BAPThe Korea arrived this morning off

port within a few minutes of the timestated by Captain Saunders in his lastwireless message to the agents,namely, half-pas- t six.

The Korea brought IS cabin passengers to Honolulu, Including lay-

overs, while in tho second-clas- s therewere 10, with 90 in the steerage, com-

prising one Russian, 27 Filipinos, 30

Chinese and 32 Japanese. She alsohas a big through passenger list. The

iorwould

through cargo is a valuable one, anil down here a few weeks ago withIncluded ?95,000 worth of raw silk and full load of lumber,

goods, with 10,000 bags of copra,! Navajo Replaces Iroquois.25,000 boxes of green tea, S00 bags otj The San Francisco Call of June 7,green cocoanuts, 1900 bales of hemp, j contains the information that the tug2S00 bags of linseed and 1000 bags of Navajo was on that day ordered torico. For Honolulu there tons proceed to Honolulu in place of thoof general merchandise, wines and Iroquois, which is being repaired atspirits, beans, tea, cigars, and 03 bags Maro Island navy yard. Tho Navajoof nmiI- - is to report hero before July 15..

The story of tho accident to tho Is Purser Drew Married?Korea seems to have been oxaggerat-- j S. F. Chronicle, Juno 9. Whethered, for was stated on board that Charley Drew, purser of tho linerwas only about a half a mile off her Wilholmina, was a d bene-r.rop-er

course. This was duo to the dick when he sailed away yesterday' smokiness" of the atmosphere. Shewas near the head of the harbor, andthere was no danger at any time. She fellow workers in the Matson Navi-lemain- ed

on the for about six gation Company. Little Danieland during that time she was P"l went so far as to admit that the

never in a serious position. The pas- - Popular purser had taken out a mar-senge- rs

went ashore in order that they rlaBe license to wed Miss Hazelmight do their shopping and sight- -

seeing. There was no delay at all, for.000"1 " secured to show whether orthis was arriving day, and shewill sail at half-pas- t five this after-noon San Francisco. There wasnever any necessity to land the pas-sengers, say the officers.

Purser Allen stated that the tripover was an excellent one. On Thurs-day evening a masquerade dinner washeld, and it was a wonderful success.Tho costumes, he said, were excellent,and it was little short of marvelous toree the productions from the limitedstock available on board. Master Cur-tis, as a Chinese singing girl, was agreat success.

On the outward voyage the passen-gers had a little interesting excite-ment, for tho marriage of Miss Hen-rietta Ritchie fo Robert E. Burris wascelebrated at the United States con-sulate, Yokohama. This is said tohave been a runaway match, and, ofcoursa, that heightened the interest.Tfie lady member of the combine wentner on the Korea, and she made allthe arrangements. Elaborate invita-tion cards were prepared, and the cer-emony was carried out without ahitrh.

Makura Monday Morning.Once more the Makura is going to

revolutionize the running of the Canadian--

Australian boats by getting hereu full day ahead of time. On lasttrip she arrived a day and a halfin advance of her schedule date. Thistimo she will be in on Monday morn-ing at about nine o'clock. The usualtime Is Tuesday morning, or rather

from Honolulu, May 1G.

ST. ROGATIEN, from London for Ho- -

nolulu, April 27.SHERMAN, U. S. T., from Hono-

lulu, ar. San Francisco, Juno 10.SIBERIA, Am. S. S., from Honolulu

ar. Yokohama, May 21.TENYO MARU, from Honolulu, ar.

San Francisco, Juno 8.VIRGINIAN, Am. S. S., from IIllo ar.

Sallnt Crflz, June 13.WADDON, rr. s. S. from Honolulu

for Newcastle, via Ocoan Island,April 14.

WILIJAM P. FRVE, Am. ship, forDelawaro Breakwater, May 22.

WILHELMINA, for Hilo from Hono-lulu, Juno 14.

W. H. MARSTON, Am. schr., fromSan Francisco to Honolulu andPearl Hnrbor, water-logge- d andtowed back to San Francisco.

W. J. PATTERSON. Am. scr., fromHonolulu for Gray's Harb&r, Juno9.

ZEALANDIA. S. S loft Honolulufor Australia, May.

uo luiiii ui uAumiiiuiion tnose7,Willi nnsltlnns In thla flnlil

act

camejn

silk

arc 730

it sho

ground

her

for

Due

her

A.

Br.

The vessels of the Amerioan-Ila- -

waiian or that Inter-Islan- d S. S Coin- -

IS EXAGGERATED

this should be the usual time, but theschedule has been upset lately, by theMoana making it a day later, and theZealandla arriving at night owing ther crippled state.

Tho Makura will bo dispatched toVancouver at midnight on Monday,and will bo able to accommodate allwho have booked so far.

Repeat To Port Gamble.The schooner Repeat left this morn

ing for Port Gamble In ballast. She

for Honolulu was a question whichcaused much discussion among nisi

Keener of this city, but no testimony

not the nuptials had taken place un-

less It was Charley's beaming coun-tenance as he announced that hewould launch himself on the sea oCmatrimony when the Wilhelmlnaagain returns to San Francisco. Stillthere are some who think that thaevent occurred before tho Wilhelml-na took her departure.

Mr. J. B. Drew, of Castle & Cooke,brother of the popular purser, wascalled upon this morning, but ho waaunable to deny or affirm the. forego-ing, as ho said that he knew nothingabout it.

Miss Hazel Keener is a well-know- n

wealthy girl of San Francisco, andis a friend of Purser Drew's.

Iwalani from ttawall.The Iwalani came in this morning

from Hawaii with 2579 sacks of sugar,three empty gas drums and sevenpackages of sundries.

Nllhau from Kauai.The Nllhau brought in 5000 bags of

sugar this morning from Kauai.Sugar on Hawaii.

Purser Phillips of the Mauna Keareports that the following sugar wasawaiting shipment at Hilo yesterday:Olaa, 23,900 bags: Waiakea. 30.400;Hawaii Mill, 1700; Wainaku, G000;Onomea, 8781; Pepeekeo, 10,700;

3000; Hakalau, 11,000; Laupa-hoeho-

5000; Ookala, 3225; KukaiauD., 1G49; Kukaiau II., 1772; Paauhau,7100; Honoka'a, 19,000; Kukulhaele,20,400; Punaluu, 12,889; Honuapo,2C55.

PASSENGERS ARRIVED.Per S. S. Korea, from tho Orient,

June 17. Mr. and Mrs. TTios. E. Bech-te- l.

Miss Alice Macfarlane, Judge andMrs. A. A. Wilder, Miss J. O. Haight,Mr. and Mrs. S. R. Flynn, Mr. A. J.Mott, Honorable and Mrs. John FranK-ll- u

Fort, Miss Fort, Miss Osborne,Miss Julia West Stovens, Mr. and Mrs.John F. Tyler, Mr. S. Wile.

Per S. S. Mauna Kea, from Hawaiiand way ports, June 17. JaB. A. Ken-ned-

S. .Kennedy, W. Darcy, W. M.Giffard, H. D. Phelps, Miss Putney, C.Wlttman, C. D. Bradshaw, S. B. Bros-so-

Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Rapose, E.Ilussoy, K. Nakasawa and wife, Dr.V. Norgard, Mrs. H. Hayes and son,Mr. and Mrs. A. G. Smith, S. B. Fuji-yama and wlfo, Mrs. E. Madden, Mr.and Mrs. A. LIdgato, Miss M. Coloman,Miss E. Tumor. Mrs. B. D. Bond, MissC. Bond, Mrs. E. Tnylor, Mrs. J. T.Taylor, T. J. Fltzpatrlck, John Ovnohlos, Mrs. J. M. Souza, J. F. Sllva, thoMisses Nahakuale (2), Miss E. Aki, KNagayaraa', wifo and child, Mi's. G. w!

, (Contl'pued on Pago Five.)

Page 3: AVIATOR II 5IIIS...omul, brown spot of decay on the stand that unless interest Is shown In Iruit. As soon as the owners of trees this matter there will be very little notice this,

To keep her dateThe graduate

Steps forward with a bow;And she observes

With graceful curvesThe present time Is now.

lllu'i If'--

! in

And furthermore,tells

our surprise,poignant truth

That

Honolulu's S'ocial HappeningsIt often happens that tho social gamut is run from to finish with a

sood bluff at the start-off- , as an incentive to break fairly into the ranks.And when such a dramatic entree is followed in rapid succession by a

number of "coups" the nature of superficial elegances, the gentility areusually hoodwinked into the belief that through circumstances brought about

J by a kind turn of fate, an invaluable prize has fallen into their keeping.Theso social prizes come in the disguises ladles and gentlemen, neatly

and appropriately encased in apparent exterior refinement, or just that degreeIt which will ba essential for their acceptance, and labeled, in very many

instances, by no greater recommendation than their own affable self-estee-

Theso ignoble specimens are, forthwith upon their admittance, packed inobscure back rows of tho social ranks, and their names are scribbled hastilyat the foot of the emergency list as respectable adjuncts to those occasionalInvitational affairs and charitable enterprises where Imposing numbers aredesired.

Between times they languish in neglect and seclusion and become cob-webby in their social Inertia.

When occasion demands their presence, however, they are ever andeager play their part, relegating to the past tho cruel indifference theysuffered.

dress well, because they happen to be accommodating enough toundergo the expense of a new gown especially for each now invitation, coldbloodedly speculating beforehand as just what profits will be rcaned bv theexpenditure! j

They talk well enough to satisfy tho mild requirements of those diversi-fied groups who aro not permitted to indulgo in the more serious topics.

And, best of all, they are valuable captains when arduous assistance isrequired, their tactics proving more efficient than those of their, patronizinghostesses, whose experience at common every-da- y hard work undoubtedly hasbeen more limited.

In society, as elsewhere tho businoss or social world, nothing is givenfor nothing!

And return compliments over a table aro figured out as neatly as valuereceived as tho return change for merchandise passed over a counter.

Tho women who work for a hostess are returning in their only possiblewayfeome obligation.

Only In some cases the Indicator tips suspiciously a little to one side!So long as either party is oblivious to tho motives the other, nobody is

ever tho wiser, but it proves very embarrassing both when once their truecolors are shown!

Miss Bernico Dwlght, who is verywell known and popular In Honolulu,will leave in the Makura on Tuesdaynext for Vancouver, whence she willproceed 'to Milwaukee to be marriedto Mr. Ormand C. Miller of NowYork.

Quito a pretty romance will bo thusculminated, which began in an intri-cate fashion several years ago, whenMiss Dwlght and Mrs. P. L. Estes,then Miss Emma Rose, woro in Seat-tle. Hero the Island girl met Mrs.A. C. ZInn, a very wealthy matron nfMilwaukee, who entertained for themon an olaborato scale. Two yearsogo Airs. A. C. ZInn and a party oftwelve, en tour or tho world, stoppedover at tho Moana Hotel in this citv.when Miss Dwight and Miss Itonoshowed her tho value of trtio Hawa-Ila- n

hospitality.Responding to Mrs. Zlnn's invita-

tion, Miss Dwlght will bo her houseguest, and at her beautiful mnnslonin Milwaukee will bo married to Mr.Miller. Miss Dwight will be greatlymissed by her largo clrclo of friendswho, since tho news her engago-nien- t

was published, havo been Bond-

ing her many exquislto sots of silver,cut glass and other tokens of theirlove nnd esteem.

Tho young couple will mnko tholrhomo In Now York, whoro no doubttheir Island friends will bo warmlywelcomed.

1 M 1Tho local authors' and composorV

evening at tho Kllohana Art Leaguo

i

She beforeWe rouse from

Thenow, In sooth,

The world before us lies.

start

in

of

of

readyto havo

They

to

In

to

ofto

of

oil Thursday evening, which was thefinal meeting of the year, was themost attractive and interesting yoigiven, about two hundred nnd fiftyguests attending,

Tho large hall was packed to Its.capacity and standing room only wa3left shortly ueroro the opening num-ber.

The grey tints of tho walk loanedthemselves very artistically for thodraperies of vines and tho purplebougalnviella, which was used ingreat profusion to festoon about thoarch of tho small stage, and of whicha dainty frlozo was fashioned encirc-ling tho room.

At tho stage, nnd behind tho grandPiano, many potted palms werebanked, and tho lighting was delight-full- y

soft. On tho piano rested anelectrolier with a roso art shade,which was very handsome and effect-ive.

All tho numbors of the programworo so excellent It would bo unfairto accord to ono more credit thananother. They wero all varied Incharacter and inspired tho onthusi-as-

of whatover portion of tho audi-ence admired tholr particular stylo.

Mrs. Tucker's selections wero in-

troduced by a fow romarks explain-ing the reason of thel r being, andtheir simplicity, having beon com-pose- d

for tho public school children,whoso knowledge of English andmusic Is limited. ,

Mrs. Ingalls needed no Introduc-tion, and her interpretations of hor

;th'" TtiK Hawaiian stah? satuiiday. june 17. ion.

The world doth brimWith maidens slim,

With maidens gay, sedate;They play their parts

And win our heartsBut, oh, you graduate!

own themes were very highlypraised. .

A group of little poems or wordjilctures by such well Jcnown writersas Mrs. Walter Francis Frear, Mrs.Alfred Castle, Miss Anna Paris anaMrs. Anna B. Tucker, and Interpreterby Miss MacDougall, wore all verycharming and much appreciated,Miss Paris' "Old Times nnd New,"winning by Its quaint allusions, muchwell merited response from the audi-

ence.A group of songs, by Mrs. Frear,

as sung by Mrs. llannoy Scott, ac-

companied by Mrs. D Howard Hitch-cock, were very beautiful, and in con-

trast to their sentiment a humorous,original monologue by. Miss Francos

Miss ofIn East.

Dillingham, a number or

local hits, kept tho Ingood humor.

Tho performance was concludedby sovoral solo sex;tetto tho opera "Potty," or "ThoMaid which woronil gems.

Mrs. Mackall was In excellentvolco, Arthur Wall, always a

iir-i- i

Absolutely PureTho only baking powder

from Royal GrapoGveam of Tartar

No Alum, Ho Lime Phosphate

favorite, wns a genial wel-

come from his largo circle of friendspresent.

The program follows:I.

Music.Hawaii's Child.Words by Mr. Philip Dodge, music

by Mrs. Anna H. Tucker.(a) Lullaby.(b) Play Song.Words and music by Edith Eldrldgo

Pond.

(b)(O

(e)

Tho Mango Tree.Tho Taro.The Dragon Fly. ,

Papala. : "

Cocoanuts.Words music by Mrs. Anna D.

Tucker. ' ,Sung by students from Normal

School, accompanied by Miss Marg.v

ret Cooke.II.

Violin solo, by Mrs. Ar

thur Ingalls.(a)- - Air for G String.

(b)(c)

Tho

A Melody.III.

Word Pictures.In Hawaii. .

"T'A Valentine to 1

By Mary Dillingham Frear.(a) A Vision.(b) A Surf Rider.

.J ? '

By Ethellnda S. Castle.(a) old Tnnes New,(b) Twilight by tho Sea!

'(c) Tho Fleets.By Miss Anna M. Paris.(a) Love anil I.

(b) Sunset(c) Watklkl.(d) The Law ofBy Mrs. Anna 13. Tucker.Interpreted by Miss .MacD'ougall.

IV.Music.

Three songs by Marylingham Frear.

Ethel Spalding, tho daiifhter Mr and Mrs E. I. Spalding, who returnedyesterday after bolng greatly f nod by army clrcios tho

includingaudience con-

tinual

selections nnd afromand tho Mariner,"

oxqulslto

and Mr.

made

accorded

(a)

(d)

and

the

composedBurdetto

(b)

(a)Evolution.

and

My

from Halcakala.

Life.

composed Dll.

(a) Tho Land Shell.(b) 1 Saw tho Sunbeams Drinking.(c) Tlino.Sung by Mrs. Rnnnoy Scott, accom-

panied by Mrs. D, Howard Hitch-cock.

Original monologue by MissDillingham,

(Continued on pago six,)

All the latest models justreceived and carried by

Whitneyto

For AllEASY AND SAFE TO USE.

KILLS LICE. TICKS. FLEAS. MITES. CURES SCAB,RINGWORM. ETC DESTROYS

GERMS AND DRIVES AWAY FLIES.

the: ideal dip

CURTAINS

&

job sale

Benson, smith. & Co., Ltd.Fort and Hotel Streets.

A8K FOR FREE DOOKLCTS.

in

,

Irish and

with silk in all the art atless than

Cor. Fort & Horetanla Streets.

ur

MFrom $3.00 $10.00

(standardized)

Live Stock

cthhebi

MANGE.SCRATCHES, DISEASE

NON-IRRITATIN- G. EFFECTIVE. INEXPENSIVE.

CURTAINS

Extraordinary values

Lace Curtains at Sachs'THIS WEEK

Nottingham Weave, Point, Battcnberg RuffledSwiss.

Fringed Madras, stripe shades

regular prices,

SALE BEGINS MONDAY MORNING.

Sachs Dry Goods Co.,Opp. Flro Station

h

Page 4: AVIATOR II 5IIIS...omul, brown spot of decay on the stand that unless interest Is shown In Iruit. As soon as the owners of trees this matter there will be very little notice this,

roun

THE HAWAIIAN STARPublished every afternoon (except Sunday) by the Hawaiian Star

Newspaper Association, Ltd., McCandless Building, Bethol street, Honolulu.

EDITORWALTER G. SMITH,

Saturday; 7.7. june t, m,. THE FATE OE UNINCORPORATED AGRICULTURE.

It seems pretty difficult, even with. the Legislature's help, to get

n measure into law which, in any efficient way, protects and promotescommon agriculture.

Not one useful colonization plan lias had government 'initiativehere since the Dole project which settled the lauds of Wahiawa withAmerican farmers who have since hecome prosperous and have giventhe islands a great new industry.

ATcRrvde homestcadinsr is a private enterprise.The uuich-vaunte- d homestead policy sccins to have turned out

to be a sure vehicle for changing the status, of improved corporatelease-lan- d so that those who occupy it,may buy it cheaply from dummyhomesteaders.

Men of industry and means still come here, looking for farm landin the public domain, high up in the hills, and can find none with roadsto it or with roads in expectation. They regard themselves as unwel-

come and lake their money somewhere else.Meanwhile the islands have been filled with the pests of every

form of agriculture except that of growing sugar and pineapples. The

latter needs no protection ; the former gets all it wants.When the Legislature provided the money to bring parasites to

attack the pests of fruit and minor agriculture, the appropriation was

so juggled with that there is now, with the Legislature only latelyadjourned, no money for the purpose and this in the face of an em-

bargo on some of our most attractive products.Nothing of that sort could have possibly happened if the object

had been to protect sugar cane from dangerous pests.Under rule by commission here things would be different, for a

genuine effort would then be made to 'man the land with such people

as have changed Southern California from a Spanish cattle-rang- e toa rich American community ,of producers. Under local

politics and ''the interests" stand in the way.

London and New York

The census recently taken in England and Wales shows that the dopulation of London is 7,252,963, an increase of 10.20 per cent, in ten years. Inthe previous ten years ending In 1900 the percentage of Increase was 12.17per cent. A loss is shown of 1.97 per cent in tho decade ending with 1910as compared with the previous decade. An effort is made to account forthis loss on the ground of the falling birth rate and the Increase of emigra-tion, t

New York City is the only great center of population with which thogrowth of London can be satisfactorily compared. The population of NewYork is 4,7G6,SS5. This Is G5.72 per cent, of London's population. NowYork's rate of increase from U900 to 1910 was 38.7 per cent, showing a gainof 1.8 per cent on tho rate of increase from 1890 to 1900. Therefore, whileLondon shows an increase in the last ten years of 10.20 per cent, New Yorkshows an increase of 38.7 per cent, and a gain of l.C per cent on the pre-vious decade, against a loss of 1.97 per cent on a similar period on the partof London.

In actual figures, while New York in ten years added 1.329.G83 to itspopulation, London added about 750,000. If ths relative growth were main-tained by both cities, New York would pass London In about twenty-fiv- e

years. However, tho prophetic statisticians give to New York In 1930 apopulation of 9,800,000. This is due by taking into account tho progressiverate of Increase or the gain In rate which each successive decade shows onits immediate predecessor. Co'mputlng on the same "basis and making theloss In rate for each successive decade a factor, Loudon will fall behindNew York in population in about nineteen years, or, say, In 1930.

There is statistical Justification for this latter computation. The condi-tions of the two countries favor the theory of a progressive rate of increasein New York and a retrogressive rate in London. Emigration, in whichmust bo Included tho lure of the colonies, is a largo factor In the decreas-ing rate of London, while similar forces work for increase in New York.This city, which Is yet In an undeveloped stage, as any one who, has studieddeeply the subway question will appreciate, profits morG than any otherAmerican city from the contributions which immigration makes to popu-lation. Brooklyn Eagle. djaiiiia'

j ,

The Passing of the DumbImagine living in a world of eternal silence, where sound is something

as inconceivable and beyond understanding as sight to those born blind!Yet such is the fate of one child out of every fifteen hundred. That thesedeaf children need no longer be segregated In institutions and dnied thopleasure of home ties and associations has been thoroughly demonstratedby a remarkable public day-scho- system of oral work.

When the Board of Education of New York City opened this schooltwo years ago it was looked upon as an experiment. Now it is recognizedthroughout the United States as an unqualified success. Prom an enroll-ment of forty-eigh- t pupils in 1908 with ten classes it now has nearly twohundred pupils and nineteen classes, Including shop-wor- cooking, paint-ing, drawing, and mowing. Tho first class to be graduated will be that of1911. It is tho aim of the school ta qualify the pupils to enter the tradesand professions, and to be

Statistics of the last year show that there are 12,000 deaf pupils invarious schools in the United States alone. That tho majoxity of these aretaught by oral methods and read the lips perfectly, proves that they arenot "dumb" on account of lack of hearing, but lack of instruction.. Thochild usually designated as "deaf and dumb" has as perfect a vocal or-ganization as the speaking child. Louise E. Dew, in Harper's Weekly.

1

Trumpets for a CandidatePearson's Magazine prints a very nice picture of William Randolph

Hearst. Tho mouth is firm as the rock of Gibraltar, and the eyes pierceono through and through. Underneath Is a poem of Mr. Edwin DavlesSchoonmaker. It opens with the comforting assurance that "in tho Westshall our now Freedom rise." In fact

"Has risen. Hark! Tho waking land repliesTo trumpets, trumpets, trumpets, while the East.Upstarting from her Babylonian feast,

Reels sodden to her towers and hears the cries."' The trumpets heralded tho approach of Brother Hearst just as hesailed to help special Ambassador Hammond with his social duties in Lon-don. Nevertheless

"Son of the advnnclng West, though round thy swordFlashing in daily lightning through the States,Mammon makes head with all lier barking Hates,

Drive out tho spoilers."Then, after a while ,

"When tho land is free,Time, that knows neither spite nor flattery,Justly will mete thy servico with reward."

Tho hope, wo suBpect, Is that tho land will be freo by tho time theDemocrats meet in national convention. Meanwhile thert) is nothing fortho effete East to do but to keep on reeling sodden. Harper's Weekly.

(

Weapon to Fight Impure Milk

Some modern philosopher lias said that assurance of puro milk is thobest insurance of llfo to tho infant of the tenement. Scientists in all coun-tries havo worked for years to evolve systems of Insuring the purity of milk,sonio of which nro Successful whilo others have left thofluid opon to all sorts of germs. Tho latest dovlco that has bpon pr'osentedfor this purpogo appears to have many advantages In that it furnishes prac-tically a sealed recoptacl for tho use of tho milk dealor, permitting tho saloof any quantity, absolutely preserving the milk from contamination, and pro-viding cold storage.

This promliing devico consists of two vessols, ono of metal and tho

THE HAWAIIAN STAR, SATURDAY, JUNE 17, 1911.

Uncle WaitThe Poet Philosopher

The day is long aiul trying, and heavy is the heat; and often I am

sighing, while dragging weary feet. The sun is burning o'er me ; there

is no grateful shade; the rows stretch out bctore me, mat

REST AT I must hoc and spade. Hut when the sun has wended his

EVENING pathway to the west, my weary toil is ended, and evening

brings mc rest. Then comes the kind word spoken by

loved ones at the door; then conies the sleep unbroken, until the night

iTocr; then comes the tuneful passage of restful twilight hours ; then

conies the mystic message of winds among the Mowers. 1 he day may

treat ine meanly, and rob my life of zest; but evening comes serenely,

and evening brings mc rest. And life is but a longer and sadder snm- -

i. fi, .Mrv Iw is stronger, and rockier the way; the watch

word is "Endeavor," and till the day is done the laborer may never es-

cape the glaring sun. And thus the harsh world grinds him against its. . ... .....!.. n.wl Mfi.tiinrr Krmrrc him rosl

rugged breast, till starnt evening h - -- -

Copyright, 1910, Dy Geo. Matthew Adams. WALT MASON.

other of wood. The metal vessel, which Is the milk container, fits lnsldo the.i,.. ,nnin. ninntv nt mnm fnr inn between them. Tho covers of bOlll

vossnis nro screwed and damned on tightly. A pipe, led through tho outerwooden vessel, connects a sanitary measuring device and faucet combinedwith tho milk container, Into tho Hd of which It Is tightly screwed. A stand...i.ii .,!, m,o tntino- - nf tiin mill annaratus is furnished so that It mayi i.,i t !, inaf ,irm, Tho fniicnt and measuring device consist of alarge glass cylinder Into which the milk Is drawn in tho quantity desired.For this purpose the cylinder is graduated and provided with a piston, whichcan be set at any point of the cylinder by means of a threaded regulator,nn, nnt nf miiif wnntoii lms been drawn into the cylinder, a springcock is pressed and it Hows out Into the pitcher or glass of tho purchaser.Tho whole is so mado that all the parts can be easily cleaned. PopularMechanics.

. f

LITTLE INTERVIEWSr-- virTnn nr. ark Yea. I've laborers were liaid off $14 a' week1J I V. iu a v u r - - -

just returned from a visit to Kahuk'i each they made under our arrange

and Ewa. I went to those places, toget statisticSj however, and for no

other purpose."TToVERNOR FREAR While I have

not given the matter any specialstudy, I am pleased with the decisionIn the Cummins case, from a legal aswell as a moral. standpoint.

PRESIDENT MOTT-SMIT- Sani-

tation, not dollars, is the slogan forClean-u- p Day.' The people of thecommunity should be whole-hearte- d

about it and see to It that on thatday no half-da- y or half-wa- y measuresprevail.

RALPH KEARNS I am a Kainfulti

convert and am in the market for a

lot with or without a house on .t

If I can get a suitable lot near Sixthavenue, and not too far frontf the oarline, I will erect a bungalow on itand go out there to live.

ATTORNEY MIDDLEDITCH I'mgoing to the Coast for a vacation bv

the S. S. Sierra next Wednesday. Itwill be a real vacation none of yourhalf-fledge- d vacations. It will be afull six months' vacation and J

need It.CAPTAIN BRAY I wefit Into the

fishing business here jmce. At theend of the first weak mv Hawaiian

Under The Cocoanut. Tree"M.

A local paper observes editorially."In cleaning up the town bo sure andget behind the bill-boar- with a bar-row and a rake."

What's the matter with getting un-

derneath them with a crowbar?ooo

There'll be almost as many British-ers In Honolulu on Coronation Davas there are Germans at the annualKalserhoch over at Hackfeldt's.

OOOWe gather from tho news dis-

patches that General Pryco, formerlyof tho Mexican rebel army, has beenarrested for violation of tho neu-

trality laws In connection with therecruiting of men to flght the fed-

erals.The Individual in question Is evi-

dently not tho well-know- n Price ofFreedom!

booThe literary compositions of Messrs.

Kid George and Patsy McKenna, aspublished in tho local papers, surelyentitle them to membership in thoKllhona Art League, with a chanco atthe "local authors' and composers'evening.

OOODid you notice what an extraordin-

ary number of office employes nndothers had buslnpss at tho postofficoalong about eight o'clock this morning

OOOA great many peoplo aro wondering-jus- t

how near beer that near-beo- r

will bo tomorrow.OOO

It seems safe to' predict that agoodly number of Individuals will bonear beor tomorrow.

OOOA whole lot of tho boor sold around

town on other days than Sundny isnear-bee- r, anyway.

ment. It spoiled the business till tnemiddle of next week. If they had onlymade $5 I might have been going yet.

"

HON. ED TOWSE I am afraidthat there isn't as much enthusiasmnvnr the narasito aimropriation in

official circles as there might be.

Somehow or other the thing seemsto hang fire. Van Valkenberg, of Dill

lingham & Co,, is one of the keenestenthusiasts alone the anti-pes- t linothat I know of in tho Territory.

JUDGE A. A. WILDER Yes, I amglad to get back. I have had an ex

cellont holiday, t learnt by wirelessof the appointment of Judge demonsa few days after he was put on th'bench. I seemed to have learnt alltfio news, with tne exception that I

did not know that Judge Monsarrathad been appointed district magis-trate.

W. L. BENTON One thing I no-

tice about Honolulu that I don't.ltkeIs the careless, y way Inwhich the Oriental roustabouts sweeptho dust out of tho stores and ontothe sidewalk ' in the early morning.They don't stop," even when they seayou coming, and seem to think it afine joke to swish a cloud of dustover your white duck pants or newlypolished shoes.

By H. Ayres.

SaturdayBeer, beer,

A man in the airBooze at the race-trac- k

Privilege rare!

SundayNear-bee- r

Flavor so queer "

Thirsty work watchingA man In the air;

Is It ginger or root?Say If you dare!

Better ask Billy FennellHe's always near beer.

OOOWhat with the nviatlon meet and

the coming Eagles' big show, it wouldseem that our amusements are onsomewhat of a higher plane thanheretofore.

OOOA fellow salu to mo the other dav

that he started out to grow flowerIn Honolulu, but so numerous andpersistent were tho bugs that at theend of six months, Instead of bolncnn amateur horticulturist, ho foundmat ne nau developed into a veryefficient entomologist. Ho Is nowthinking of applying for a job withthe local bug bureau.

OOOParasites or no parasites, tho fact

natheless remains that It is a harderJob to raise garden-truc- k or a button-hol- o

bouquet In Honolulu than over,and If it ain't, I'm a Japaneso beetlewhittling a section out of a varie-gated taro leaf with my teeth!

OOOIt takes two to mnko a marriage,

or any other form of disagreement.OOO

A woman enn't catch a ball. Shefinds a man much easier.

O J OIt was a prime Joko this morning

to" ring up tho pilot houso or Dia-

mond Head and Inquire If any airshipwas In Bight.

O O O

Old Bill tells mo:That W. G. Motley, the mining pro-

moter, has been arrested In NewYork.

That tho charge was fraudulent useof tho mails.

That ho had to close up his offlconntl trn niif nf hndlnnan "

That ho is w.ell-know- n locally.Tlint ho was tho promoter of the

Cold Springs Quartz & Channel Company.

That ho also exploited the Victory- -

Wonder mine.That, he was mixed up In tho May

flower deal.That thousands of dollnrs of local

money wont into theso concerns.That none of It will over come out

again.That Urot Harto wrote a poem

called "Dow's Flat."That a number of people In Hawaii

might fittingly be called Ivan Dow'sflats.

That the featuro of the week outside of tho aviation stunts was theappearance of Doonlo Hartmnn at thoCentral Union Sunday school picnicat Moannlua last Monday.

That Donnio was there with bellson.

Thnt ho also wore a pretty blueand gold badge with appropriate leterlng on It on his coat.

That he was engaged to entertainone of tho junior classea for the day

That ho and his automobile wore agreat success and were .appreciatedto the limit by the kiddles.

That there was" a funny angle o

the auto-ridin- g jackass story.That Ralph Johnstone was expecteiT

homo early.That when the auto drew up. at tho

door of Ills residence his wife cameout to meet him.

Then she opened the door of thecar ant exclaimed, "You've copiohome in good time, dear!"

Then her surprise on seeing a

jackass in the auto can better ! eimagined than described.

OOO,The poor people who had taken all

the trouble to go up to the roof gar-

den of the Young Hotel, descendedindignantly about 9:30 o'clock. Some

You Knowhow you want your Estate dis-

tributed.Then why don't you provide

for this by making your

wThe details can be left to us.

E9X9!

A

ILLHawaiianTrustC o m p a n y ,Limited &

923 Fort Strett.

of them said that It was notningshort ot an outrago to put them to bo

much Iroublo for nothing, and onowell-know- n man who had subscribed$2 toward tho aviation fund wentright away to tho manager and de-

manded his money back.O O O

Thcro was a good deal of wettingtho whlstlo whllo waiting for thowhlstlo this morning.

Ttie Land of Poupueo

MANOA VALLEY.

Mr. Henry E. Cooper, tho owner oftho land of Puupueo, has placed inour hands for salo a number of lo

houso lots which wo nro nowprepared to offer to Intending

If you want to build where you cauhavo a perpetual view ot both moun-tain and ocean wo have seven lotafrom which you may select rangingIn prico from ?1300 to $1G50.

If you prefer to be whero you canstep directly from your lot to thoRapid Transit cars and still havo anuninterrupted view of tho valley andmountain wo have sixteen lots rang-ing from $1200 to $1750 from whichyou may' take your choice.

If you would llko a less expensivelot and still have all tho advantagesof this location wo havo four from$850 to $1050.

If you would like to erect a man-sion and desire a large Jot we hav6two at $7500 each.

If you want to havo an opportunityto plant an orchard and otherwise in-dulge In the luxury of a small farmerwo havo several acre lots that pos-sess all tho advantagesjit a moderateprice.

Remember that this land is servedby tho Rapid Transit, telephone andelectric lines and water, from tho Ma-kl- ki

springs is piped directly to alltho lots and the mains of the GasCompany have been recently extend-ed to the property.

Tho title is perfect and warrantydeeds will bo given In all cases. Thouse of tho property Is however re-stricted to residential purposes.

Terms of payment tho most favor-able.

Henry waiernouse Trust Cq.

The Office of tho

WIRELESS .Is open on week days from 7 a. m. to5:30 p m. and on Sunday morningsfrom eight until ten.

THE

Trent Trust Co., ltd.HOUSES FOR RENT.

Furnished.Walkane, 3, B. R $ 30.00Peninsula, 4, 3. R 100.00Cor. Wilder and Maklki

Sts. 2, B. R 25.00Palolo Rd, 2 B. R 25.00Nuuanu Street 6 B. R. . 75.00Hassinger St. 3 B. R 75.00Young St 2 IJ, R 50.00Young St. 3 B. R 35.00

Unfurnished;Aiea, 3 B. R 50.00Kam. IV Rd. 3 B. R 25.00Waipio, 3 B. R 12.00Wahiawa, 2 B. R 30.00Fae. Heights Rd. 2 B. R 22.00- -

Lunalilo St. 2 B. R 18.00Lunalilo St. 2 B. R 30.00Wilder Ave. 4 B. R 35.00Beretania St. 3 B. R 0.00Thurston Ave. 2 R. B 37.50Liliha St. 2 B. R 18.0.0Karatti Lane, 4 B. R. . 35.00Palolo Rd. 2 B. R 18.00

Hundreds -- of Remnants left overfrom our Flood Sale have been meas-ured up and will go at clearing pricesto make room for grand opening ofNew Merchandise.

Page 5: AVIATOR II 5IIIS...omul, brown spot of decay on the stand that unless interest Is shown In Iruit. As soon as the owners of trees this matter there will be very little notice this,

FIVE

Financial GommercialSUGAR 96 Degree Test Centrlfuoals, 3.905o. Per ton, $78.10. By DANIEL LOGAN.

88 Analysis Beets, 10s. 7d. Per ton, $85.35.

L

By J. A. BRECKONS.

(Special Corrcsiondonco of the Stnr.)WASHINGTON, Juno 2. Soino

idea of tho world-wid- e scope of theinvestigation undertaken by tho Na-

tional Monetary Commission, Is givenin tho published report of the com-

mission laid before Congress by thoSecretary of the Treasury. The re-

port covers In detail all tho expendi-tures from Juno 5, 1908, to March 31,1911, and indicates that tho monetaryand banking systems of every nationhave been exhaustively studied.

The total amount expended by thecommission is given at $207,130.4.Of this sum $43,750 went for salariesof members, two Colorado members

H. M. Teller and II. W. Bonyngereceiving $15,502.50 each, J. Over-stre-

$9,250 and tho other memberseach $5G2.50. Over $30,000 was ex-

pended for monographs, $8,795.7D for:'a library, $29,791.82 for clerical ex-

pense, and $35,412.34 for traveling' expenses.

A most Important part of the workof this commission has been tho col-

lection and publication of reports onthe banking systems of the countriesof the" world. These publications maybe had by addressing Senators, andrequests for them have been verylarge. Among tho more important ofthese reports are:

Interviews on the banking and .cur-

rency system of England, Prance,Germany, Switzerland and Italy, 541pages; statistics for Great Britain,Germany and France; "The Credit ot

. Nations and the Trado Balance of theUnited States," by Francis W. Hurst,mUtnr nf thn TiVnnnmlst. 213 rmtrea.

NAVY

MONETARY

The Bureau of Commerce and Laborhas been considering seriously theI,1aii nP o r Mr, rt nvnr

.keeners after. July 1. 1911, as the navalofficers now engaged in this work are

i. needed to help man the new battle- -

rBlOIl.It was rumored that this would

Hawaii by tho appointment of

Lieutenant Sahm, now In charge ofthis lighthouse district, to the positionof captain of the yard here from July1. This change, however, will not bemade until July 1, 1912. '

(Continued from page two.)

Wallace, u. torues, is,, u Auams. a,Gartley, E. Koplce, Miss Broderick, T.Kelly, H. Akona, wife and child, MissAkona, the Misses Balcom (2), MissBabcock, Mrs. J. N. Williams, Mrs. D.II. Case, Miss Case, Mrs. W. F. Dale,Mrs. W. L. West and child, E. E. Bat-tel- e,

H. A. Baldwin, J. J. Walsh anddaughter, A. Martinsen, W. 'G. Scott,Yee Chun Sing, wife and two children,Nakawa, Mrs. Slta and two children,E. Deinert, Wm. Green, L. Y, Alona,Man Sing, Mrs. Buchanan and child,Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Glbb, W. Holaka-liik- i

and son. '

Passengers Booked.Per steamer Klnau, for Kauai ports

June 2D D. Baldwin, J. B. Douglas,C. Kuhlman, A. Kuhlman, I. Fernan-dez, M. Fernandez, Sarah Hano, J.Perrelra, Manuel Perrelra, AntonoPerrelra, Miss S. Punlkea, Miss R.Punlk'ea.

Per steamer Mlkahala, for Mauland Molokai ports, Juno 20. J. F.Brown, Mrs. Brown, Ernest Meyers,W. M. Cathcart.

Per S. S. Wilhelmlna for SanFrancisco, Juno 21 Miss RomonaMarks, Mrs. L. Marks, Miss DorrlsMarks, F. Moulton, Mrs. G. F. Moul-to-

C. F. Schmutzler, James Lycelt,the Misses Hess (2). Mrs. J. Fernan-dez and child, Clara B. Townsend,Miss J. Tanner, Miss M. G. Borden,Miss Lillian Sparks, Miss Pearl Dam,Miss , L. Grace, Miss Grace, Mrs.

Grace, Miss El Braverman, Mrs. S.

L. Braverman, Rev. and Mrs. J. W.

Wadman, Miss M. Wndman, W. P.

Dane, Lestor Marks, J. A. Buck, MissII, S. Carlson, Mrs. Alice. Landl3,.Miss L. Johnson, Miss A. Atkinson,

lilies Mary 12. Sunter, Miss' Emily KWells, Mrs. R. W. Foster, Miss E. F.Harvey, Miss M. Dowd, Miss E.Vroom, Miss Ella L. Tannor, Mr. andMrs. J. Limkonlielmor, Mrs. M. L.

Irarjd nephew,, Mrs, , T. S. Zonvo,

and daughter, MissSimpson, Mrs. Wertheimur, Miss S.

COMMISSION

fiscal systems of Englaud, France,Germany and tho United States, RG

pages; Notes on postal savings bank?of the leading countries, 123 pages;special roDOVt from tlin linnl.--a nf Mm

United States for 1909, 90 pages;Laws of tho United States concern-ing money, banking and loans from1778 to 1009, 812 pages; digest itstale banking laws, 740 pages; "Firstand Second Banks of tho UnitedStates," 311 pages; "Stato BankingBefore tho Civil War," 338 pages;"Stato Banks and Trust CompaniesSince the Passage of tho NationalBank Act," 2G0 pages; "Origin- - orthe National Banking System," 213pages; "History of Crises Under theNational Banking System," 481pages; "Uses of Credit InstrumentsIn Payments in the United States,'229 pages; "The Independent Treas-ury System of the United States andIts Relation to tho Banks of thoCountry," 399- - pages; suggestedchanges in the administrative fea-

tures of tho national banking laws,374 pages; history of tho nationalbank currency, 20 pages; history otbanking in Canada, 310 pages; "ThoCana'dlan Banking System," 191

pages; "Tho English Banking Sys-

tem," 294 pages; "Evolution of Creditand Banks of France," 2G7 pages; his-

tory and methods of the ParisBourse, 275 pages; "The Relchbank,'.'3G2 pages; "German Imperial Bank-ing Laws," 330 pages ; Swiss bankinglaws, 2G9 pages; Italian Banks ofIssue, 350 pages; "Swedish BankingSystem," 248 pages; "National Bankof Belgium," 238 pages; "Banking inRussia," 200 pages; "The GermanBank Inquiry ot 1908," 1,162 pages.

Shipping NewsWEEDS ALL ITS OFFICERS

(jMrsTVMcPhail

N. Sheldon, Miss Ruth Smith, MlsaG. A. Levey, Miss E. Meyer, Mrs. A.W. Meyer. Miss May 'E. Kellner,Miss Etevens, Miss Arthur, A. W.Meyer ana two sons, Miss ClarlbelL. Bickford, Miss S. 'M. Sheldon, MissM. Graham, Mrs. A. C. Phelps, Chas.A. Wright, Fred H. Kahn, II. D.

Phelps, A. C. Phelps, Miss H. Simp-

son, Dr. L. Patterson, R. W. Kinneyand sou, Miss V. .Green, Mls3 M.

Dowdell, W. Green, Mrs. Kinney andchild, Mrs. Wright, Mrs. E.,M. Sco-vlll-

Mrs. T. M. Barrere and infant,Stanley Waldron, Mrs. F. L. Wal-dro-

Mr. Redvers Waldron, Mrs. A.G. Hicks, Mrs. L. M. Booth, JamesGibb, J. A. Gibb, Mr, and Mrs. J. C.

Johnston, Mrs. C. D. Marshall, MissG. Humphrey, Kenneth Abies. L. O.

Abies, Wm. Rathman, J. R. Daggett,E. Pollltz, Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Green.

Telegraphic Advices.(Per Merchants' Exchange.)

Seattle Sailed, June 14, S. S. Col-

umbian, for Honolulu.Seattle Sailed, June 14, S. S. Hy-ade- s,

for Honolulu (not as reportedbeforo).

Mahukona Arrived, Juno 15, bkt.Irmgard, from San Francisco.

Yokohama Arrived, Juno 19, S. S.Chlyo Maru, hence May 30.

FRENCH KINGS AS EATERS.PARIS. JUno 1. Although furnish-

ed as an ridie'tisement, a beet hasjust appeared from an authoritativepen which contains a lot of interest-ing Information on tho menus of thoginks of Franco and how they dis-

patched them.Tho great Napoleon, we are told,

did not wasto much time at tho ta- -

ble. His schedule was three minutesfor coffee, ton for luncheoon and half j

an hour for dinner, without convcrsa-- 1

tlon. In other words, tho authorsays: "He bolted his food, to whichho owed tho disease which took himto an early grave."

Francois I and Henrill nro describ-ed as having beon only poor eaters,but Cathorjno Do Medici seems tohave- been, on tho contrary, a tro- -

mendous gourmand. Sho was es-

pecially partial to kidneys and to alight poultry dish, to which, on onooccasion, as a contemporary clironl-- 'clor records, sho did such amplo jus-tic- o

that sho nearly succumbed.Louis XVI, like Louis XIV, who

would ofton havo a substantial mealsorved up In tho middle of tho night,was a big feeder. Ho had What wascalled "tho appetlto of tho Bour-bons." He, llko Napoleon, did noteat, he bolted his food. '

THE HAWAIIAN STAR, SATURDAY, JUNE 17, 1911.

TRENT TRUST GO. STOCK REVIEW

MARKET LETTER OF THIS

Considering tho great agitation go-- !

lug on regarding the tariff on sugar,nnJ tho wldo publicity the newspapersare giving the subject, It would not besurprising to'see a little weakness de-- (

velop in tho market. So far, this hasnot become apparent. Any tendencyIn that direction has probably beencounteracted by tho Improvement Inraw sugar.

Tho possibility of any radical tariff revision during tho present extrasession of Congress is remote, not-

withstanding the Investigation of thosugar trust now under way.

Tho investing public have becomesomewhat hardened to adverse agita-

tion which is of periodical occurrence;other favorite subjects along this linobeing shortage of labor, lowv sugarprices and decreasing water supply.

The raw sugar market showed considerable improvement during theweek. Today centrifugals are quotedat 3.905, while" a week ago tho quotation was 3.SG. Tho Cuban crop Isnearly all harvested. Final figureswill range around l.GuO.OOO tons forthis crop.

Reports from all the local plantations are encouraging, showlng.returnsconsiderably in excess of recent eatlmates, with harvesting progressingsatisfactorily.

The local stock market is ratherquiet, with fluctuations small, andtransactions of lighter volume thanusual.

Hawaiian Commercial declared anextra dividend of 25 cents per share,payable Juno 2G, 1911. It isexpectedother plantations will take Similar ac-

tion as soon as returns are receivedfrom sugar.

The market closed today as follows:Bid. Asked.

Ewa 31 31

Oahu 31 31

H. C. & S 39 39Hawn. Sugar 41 42

Pioneer 205 no offeringWalalua . 113' 114

Olaa 4 4

McBrydo 0 G

TRENT TRUST CO., LTD.June 1G, 1911. -

FILED FOR RE CORO

June 15, 1911.Bishop of Zeugma to John F. Col-

burn Tr, D.Von Hamm-Youn- g Co. Ltd. to D.

Nngatanl, Rel. .

M. E. Sllva to von Hamm-Yount- r

Co. Ltd., C. M.Wm. Naihe to L. L. McCandless, U.

Mukini H. Kolii to Samuel An-

drews, D.Solomon Mahelona to L. L. Mc-

Candless', D. .-

Kalmukl Land Co. Ltd. to F. L.

Ferguson, D.Carlos A Long to Kyuzo Terada,

D.D. W. Kawahamao and wf. et al "to

Wong Nin Chong et al, D.

Juno 10, 1911.Trent Trust Co. Ltd. Tr. to Henry

Waterhouse Tr. Co. Ltd. Tr D.Alfreda Rocha and wf. to Henry II.

Parker, M.Recorded May 25, 1911.

Cecil Brown Tr to Antonio Teix-- 'elra, D; Int in Lot 24, blk 7, Kaplo-lan- l

Tract, Honolulu, Oahu, $175; b345, p 246. Dated May 25, 1911.

Bathsheba M Allen (widow )et alto Hiram Kolomoku, D; int ,ln Lot'293 of Gr 3327, Klnau St, Honolulu,Oahu, $2000; b 355, p G. Dated May23, 1911.

Henry Waterhouso Trust Co LtdTr to Fredk C Miller, Rel; 7590 aq

ft of Gr 3589, Wilder Ave, Honolulu,Oahu, $1400; b 339, p 500. Dated May25, 1911.

Henry Waterhouso Trust Co Ltd toJohn Mattos Jr, Rel; 7590 sq ft of Gr3589, Wilder Ave, Honolulu, Oahu,$1100; b 344, p 2S2. Dated May 25,1911.

John Mattos Jr & wf to Sing Kam,D; 7590 sq ft of Gr 3589, Wilder Ave,Honolulu, Oahu, $2500; b 345, p 217.

Dated May 23, 1911.F C Lo Blond & wf to Thomas T

Ryan, D; por Lots 14 & 15 L P 4105,Puna, Hawaii, $5000; b 345, p 24S.

Dated Apr 5, 1911.Thomas J Rynn to Elizaboth J

M; por Lots 14 ic 15. L P4405, Puna, Hawaii. $4030; h 344, p283. Dated May 2, 1911.

Patrick J Cockott & wf to LnhainaAgrctl Co Ltd, D; G ft R W throughAp - R P 1179 Kul 312, Aid, Lahnina,Maul, $50; b 355, p 3. Dated Apr29, 1911.

S P Correa & wf to F Klamp, D;

Less business was done on thestock exchanges this week than last.Following Is n summary of the trans-actions of tho Honolulu exchange:

Ewn Plantation Company, 235

shnres at $31.75 $7,4G1.25.

Hawaiian Commercial & SugarCompany, 200 shares at $39.23$7,849.

Hawaiian Irrigation Company, fortyshares at $9.25. ten at $9.50, five at$9.G25 $513.12.

Hawaiian Sugar Company, thirtyshares at $41.50 $1,245.

Hawaiian Pineapple Company.thlrtyshares at $37 $1,110.

Honokaa flfty-flv- o shares at $11.75,ten at $11.87 $765.

McBrydo Sugar Company, tenshares at $G.G2 $06.25.

Oahu Sugar Company, 125 sharesat $31.50, 200 at $31.25 $10,187.50.

Olaa, 1G0 shares at $4.87, 220 at$4.62, 215 at $4.50 $2,665.

Onomea Sugar Company, fiveshares at $43.62 $218.12.

Pioneer Sugar Company, ten sharesat $205 $2,050.

Walalua, seventy shares at $116$7,980

in lb.

425.00

Hawn

Honokaa Co

Co

Pacific 125.00Total of Total pro- - Paia Co 150i00 '1g0.00'

ceeds, $42,110.25. Pepeckeo Co.... 147.50Mill Co 205.05"'

McBryde Gs at 95.25; $1,000 R. Co... 112.00R. Gs at Pacific Sugar Mill tWailuku 1G5.00

102.50; 500 Honolulu Gas 6s at Walmanalo S10). par Wnimea M Co.. 125.00

Following wore of M Steam Co 127.50tho Hawaiian exchange:

Ewa, forty shares at $31.50; Hono-

lulu Con. Oil, 100 at $1.75; Oahu,thirty $31.62, fifty at $31.75;Olaa, fifty, $4.75; Engcls Copper,100 at $2.75; Jewel Oil, 103 at 6c;Purissinia Oil, 500 at 25c; 300 at

Templor Ranch Oil, 500 at 9c.Total shares, 1,770; total proceeds,$5,1G7.75.

WAHBORTON

WOO NO

WEEK

SCAR

WASHINGTON, 9. Represen-tativ- o

Warburton of Washington, anewly elected Republican Insurgent,charged Congress today with lettingmillions of dollars go to that itmight collect in internal revenue taxeson tobacco. He attacked the pendingwool revision offered by theDemocrats, saying their plea of need-

ing revenue was not a serious argu-ment for keeping high duties onwoolen goods.

Warburton said tho Democrats hadbeen afraid to reduce the duties onwool any further for fear of tho con-

sequence at tho next if thoindustry was

oy mo removal oi protection. He saiathe Democrats had been compelled toadopt the Republican doctrine of pro

AM HOLT COFFEE POSI

fromHop must

EXCHANGE.Juno 1911.

Bond sales

Total

Juno

waste

tariff

CoCo

Co

Co

CoOlaa Co

Co

HAWAIIANJune 1911.

Co

Co

CoCo

Co

prostrated Co

jection themselvssof needing

"And tho Tel Co

.burton, people are Co

tax to com

sugar they are B&M

"clears: much 1110 Lo J7.00.as on cigars; thirty times'much on sugar on 25-ce- cigars,and much sugar asiTanJnB

cigars."Ronresentativo Massachu-!'ahan-

a Democratic of thoways and means committee, wool

and woolen goods would have beenmade but for tho necessity ofrevenues. Ho tho duties beenplaced low as consistent with se-

curing rovonuo to run tho

All remnants lines overfiom Jordan's Sale be of-

fered desperately cheap for thefew days.

P's 1G75, 3039, Gr IntIn Gr 2540, rents, Kipahulu, Maul,$1300; b p 4. Dated 25, 19U.

Court of Land Registration.A W Eaiiios et als Trs als to

Llghtfoot, D; Lot 30, Wnhl-aw- a

Townslto, Walalua, Oahu, $S72:b R, Dated Mav1911.

Mabol Llghtfoot toSmith, M; Lot 30, Wahlawa Town-site- ,

Walalua, Oahu. b R.Datod May 10. 1911.

Trout Trust Co to Oahu Rail-

way Land D; Int in por of Lot20, Wahlawa Townslto, Walaluu.Oahu, $1; b R, Dated

1911.

Fine Job Printing, Star Office.

ES H.

James L. Holt, former tax assessor,bought from John F. Colburn, a

largo of at King Mnu-nako- a

streets for fifty thousand dol- -

Liars. This purchase is large as anordinary city block. Its frontage onKing street extends Maunakeato C. stores takes retailor average about

McTlghe Osaki stores. above prices:

R

HONOLULU STOCK

C. Brewer Co...Ewa Plan Co 31.62 31.S7Hawn Agr 255.00

& S Co... 39.00 39.25Sugar .. 42.50(

Honomu Sugar 125.00S 11.50

Haiku Sugar Co.. . 150.00Kahuku Plan Co... 1G.50

S C.50Oahu Sugar Co.... 31.25Onomea Sugar . 43.50Olaa Sug Co 4.02 4.02

Sugarshares', 1,030. Plan

S

as follows: $1,300 PioneerHilo j Walalua Agr

$3,000 Sugar6s at j Co... 225.00

value, $8,500. S

transactions

atat

26c;

election

S

S O

C

Hawn Elec 170.00Mutual Co 1G.00Oahu R & L 138.00Hilo R Com 9.00

B & Co Ltd.. 21.00Hawn. Co Ltd.. 9.25Hawn Pino 3G.75Tanjong Olok R CoPahang R pd.. 22.00C B S R Co 100.00Hono G Co 99.50H D Co(up dltclOOs 102.00

R R Co Gs

H R C R EHonokaa Sug 6s 102.00O R & L Cs 100.50

Sugar 6s

Pioneer M Co . .

Agr Co Gs

STOCK EXCHANGE

Haw C & SHawn Sugar Co 41.50Honokaa Sugar 12.00Haiku Sugar CoKahuku Plan .

Kekaha Sug .

McBrydo Sug .

Oahu Sug Co ...Co...

Olaa Sug

G.50

4.50I'aauhau S PPala Plan 150.00

whole woolen Pioneer

17.00

43.00

Agric Co..Sugar Co

Walmanalo S Co..on E O

ground revenue. Hawn Elec Co 170.00j In meantime," said Wnr- - Muturl 1G.O0

"American paying O II & L 139.00

times as much govern- - R Co.,I 'ono 21.00'ment on as on

twelve tlmna ns on slicar I ....as

as

as

Co 20.00II Coml Co

sixty times as on Co..on 50-ce- ran- - R Cofpald

I Peters of Assd.setts,

freesaid had

asenough

and addFlood will

noxt

It 2259 &

&c,355, May

etMabel

C L Doc 295. S.

William

$100; L

Doc 290.

Ltd(c

C L Doc 290.

Jan 6,

haspiece land and

&

Hawn C

41.50

N

H M

&

IIR &

Walalua

Onomea

WalaluaWailuku

excused

Ca.Ltd

member

Hawn P PP &

Hawn Amer Rubber

31.00

205.00

39.0022.5020.5017.50

La ZacualpaC B S & R Co 100.00Hawn Cs

HRRCR&ECOs 90.00Honokaa S Co G 101.50Mutual Ga

Pioneer M CoCreme P CoHono ....

TETJS ICMET

B3itflbS

.

.

.

and CHASM

ltd,T trti.lMIt.lrtod.r.

11.75100.0017.50

31.50

210.00CO

141.00

21.25

41.0023.00

98.5094.50

90.00Pacific 102.00

100.75100.00

150.00

200.00

112.00165.00230.00

103.00100.75

100.00

39.5042.00.

18.0)230.00

31.7543.50

23.00

205.25

250.0075.00

1G.50150.00'

21.7537.1221.00

385.0040.1223.00

200.00

101.501)0

Wll'OSlTITtLIoin note

AM

!n4 . r .U.. UIURA.MIIIMAIWl. ,IBf DI.U ,W.,

iu. mi'. M i! c r.l IO, Mall.

OrdM fth.nIII, 13 BA4 I UMI,

tol&VJ Hi MAP

,Nt Wk.lit

nil

(Reg. U. S. Off.)

EVERY RETAIL GROCERYSTORE SODA FOUNTAIN.

THAT GET WHAT YOUASK FOR.

(Note Labol.)

Plncctar SuIch Co., Ltd.

TON

BUYS CITY BLOCK VERY FAVORABLE

STOCK EXG ICE

JeWatchCa.,Uic.:il,CUcita,

PINECTAR

Francisco Chronicle, Juue 8.

Coffeo of all descriptions Is higherdemand Is good.

Current quotations are lowestfigures at which manufacturer

from tho Importer In largoouantltle. jobbing prices which

tho Q. Yeo and the paytho por the following

17,

Co

Co.Co.

Mc Ltd

Co.

wore

98; Co.

thoCo

Tel

Irr

Gs..Ltd 6s".

CGs

Hall&Son,

113'.

9.50

6s.Gs. ......

17,

Co

Co.

Co.

Sug

Mill

and the Ltd

Fix the

Haw

Rubup)

Rub

said

left

Co,

Mill

Rub6s.

Irr

TelG.

OilCon Oil

fc? XJ

0.75

Mill

Hilo

1.75

7.00

4.G2

9.25

94.

.351.90

AW.OklDIT

VAU

Pat.

ATAND

SEE YOU

tho

San

and thothe

thecan buy

Tho

andHawaiian Fancy, ll15c;

i pi line, 1414c;fnir to good, 1214c; Peabcrry, 1414; lower

grades, 1112c.NEW YORK, Juno 7. Coffee clos

ed Bteady at a net advance of 8 to 15points. Sales wore reported at 32,750bags. Closing bids; June, 10.77c;July, 10.86c; August, 19.7Sc; Septem-ber, 10.68c; October, 10.53c; Novem-ber, 10.50c; December, January amiFebruary, 10.45c; March, 10.4Sc;April and Mny, 10.48c. Spot Coffee,steady; Rio No. 7, Santos No.I, 13c; mild Coffee, quiet; Cordova,1315c nominal.

STOCK Sft 5

Honolulu Stock Exchange: Salesbetween boards: 125 Oahu Sugar Co.,$3i.25; 15 Oahu Sugar Co., $31.25; 00

Oahu Sugar Co., $31.25. .

Session Sales: 5 Ewa, $31.75; 10

Ewa, $31.75; 25 Ewa, $31.75; 5 Ewa,$31.75;. 50 Olaa, $1.62; 50 Olaa,$1.02.

Sugar quotation, June 17, 1011: SS

per cent beets, 10s. 7d.Hawaiian Stock Exchange: Sales

between hoards: 300 Purfsslnift Oil,20c; 100 Jewel O'l Gc.

Appeal on Rent.In tho caso of J. II. Schnack against

John Katschner, an action for rent ofa dwelling, plaintiff has appealed fromDistrict Magistrate Monsarrat's judg-ment for defendant.

Humauma Oil Co .

Templor R Oil....Ventura Oil Co ..Purissima Oil ....Jewel OilPyramid OilAessoclatcd Oil . .

Sierra N T & D.,Mt King M & M . ,

King Sol T & D..Engels Copper . . .

.10 .40

.08 .10

.04 .07

.24 .27.00

.60 .7051.50 53.0011.00 12.00

.75 1.00

.20 .302.50 3.00

Fine Job Printing, Star Office

Jas. W. Pratt.tteal Estate, Insurance, Loans Ne-

gotiated!

"PRATT," 125 Merchant St.

James F. HorganStock andBond Broker

Member ox Honolulu Stock ndBond Exchange.

Stock and Bond Orders recalvsprompt attention.

Information furnished relative toall STOCKS AND BONDS.

LOANS NEGOTIATED.Phono 1572 P. O. Box 694

DrucRCcn vvriyni Jr.STOCK AND BOND BROKER

35 Merchant Street, HonoluluTelephone 2428. P. O. Box 653

Sugar 3.905cBeetSj ios, 7 d

Henry Waterhouse Trust Co,

Members Honolulu Stock and BonaExchange

FUT AND MERCHANT STS.

Page 6: AVIATOR II 5IIIS...omul, brown spot of decay on the stand that unless interest Is shown In Iruit. As soon as the owners of trees this matter there will be very little notice this,

Do

Yon

Warat

Long, Heavy Blair?Then treat your hair well. Seethat it is properly fed.s Growthof every kind demands' properfood. Starved hair splits at theends, turns prematurely gray,keeps short and dry. Then feedyour hair. Feed it with properfood, a regular hair-foo- d. Feedit with Ayer's Hair Vigor. Thushelp nature all you possibly cantoward giving you rich, heavy,luxuriant hair. Ask your doctorabout your hair and about Ayer'sHair Vigor. Follow liis advice.

J Manager chanceA, rUlT lOAP ,astholding anxious;

DOES NOT COLOR THE HAIR

Prpff ly Df. C. Ayer Co., lowelt if.tts.. U. S. A.

M'uloniAl Medlines

HONOLULU LODGE NO. C10,

O. P. O. ELKS.

consideration

atteaa.PAUL ISENDERG, E. ft.

Sec'y.

for

IN NEWSPAPERSANYWHliltR AT AHYTIMU

tall oa orSflVEBTlSINfr

i'j4 Sai.sonio Street

SILVA'8 X

The Store Clothes.

Catton Neill & Co.Limited

FURNITURERUGS

Co. Ltd

MiIre You Salisfied

PACHECO'S DANDRUFF KILLER

not fallinggermicide it the

. causes

and at

BARBER SHOP.

nirrrimrTT

; G

WILL

'I Dainty WomenLIKE

E lVCgttl v

ASEBALLERS SAY THE CHINESE

TEAM IS TOO MERCEKARY

D- - "ownrdnitcheock.The sum of $200 play Kelo the of tho honorSCXtcttO Act II.llm ,a nn.l lie 1 1 w tlln Minn llllt

ego of taking the placo of tho Stars taken by Kul Yin Kan and YetIn tho Kelo series, hut tho reprcscn- - places an entirely different complex-- t

of tho Chinese team, thougn Ion on tho matter. Chlnesodeclaring that tho Chinese merchants declared to bo after tho monoy. pro-wer- o

of tho proposition to get ferring to of the scheduletho Chlneso into the series, rather than mako only $100 by

tho offer, and will now to ing, but naturally teams, alreadystand down. Of course, If not In tho series aro not going to accom-al- l

tho Chlneso who composed modato the Chinese. When wasChlneso team aro playors In tho danger of tho Oahu Lcaguo beingleague, being scattered among the smashed through lack of players Itothe.r teams, but as separate orgati- - was not tho camo to thoizatlon thoy practically down nnJ assistance of tho league, but nov

t out Marcallino of the that Is a of theirH V stnrs mml tll0m hIs o!ro1" night, Ing a few dollars and at no risk what- -

V i that It was worth to tho over, tho Chlneso nro or

J. &

GEO.

Good

J

that

j

THE

l.ntM-nnt- .

The

Stars to drop out of a the managers declare, to get the'month, hut Kul Yin and game. The Stars and Native

who looking after the Chi- - Joined In with the Japanese and thesee tho Portuguese and ongomui

m uiu snuio iignt appealed 10 iney are uici Manager T. Troadway of tho Athletic benefits. The proposition made by

to got them out of their dllTl- - Marcallino that welli Hut Treadwny could do noth- - havo accepted the Chinese.

Ing further ho hah already It was a fair offer In conscience,in their hall oh has been enough in but tho monetary rath-nea- r

Friday o Visit- - in addition to advising tho er took tho wind out of sails of

ai' Ins Drothors cordially Invited to Stars that their guaranteo of $3u0 tho Chinese.to

R.T.

&

tho

w

play-dow- n

the

tlw

tho

be over whether Tho Portuguese and the Native ;

seeing

Keios, permitting

Ornheum

Espinda against

'

(Continued

"Hetty,"

acts Allan

f.

thatI frl

Into

Arthur

direction Arthur

WadmanDonald

delightfulIloogs

entertained evening.grounds

yellow lanterns,

residence.Fringing

dainty swaying yellowbackground

trailingteam, matter kept leaguofetcnmB

reaping

Park, mightculty.

dono.Meets King street liberal

Fort, every enlng. truth,

arrival, wero

strains Hawa-iian Quintette,

branches"

golden

played or not, ho Chinese. firm andand onn .., T.,n- -

dancedpaying same number of Chinese ni matches as . ..

?300- - Tho CTInea0 ropresentn- - Chlneso played two mid-wee- k" 1U euv

YOU WISH who aro vehement In declaring with frm.Cd

Write

that tho were do- - If this theof will up to tho. . .. . . . . . nir... .1 t in rh in r nv "

R HARIvS " "

i

TOGGERY

only being

trouble.

Druggists

wilTTWTTiiTrlf1IT1"7'r,y------

turned,

Chinese

would paid thov

not of to

Solo.

stood

their

stood would hall,

$600 give theirother teams played game with Kelo,

TO Kelo afterChinese merchants game. comes about Stars

slrous Saturday Sund"- - Sunday game

tg part game, thus ,the Chineseplay game Sunday.

SelectionsMnrlnor."

Newcotnb.

npproach

provided

dainty symmetry,entrances

Sr,T!lir7S festooned

guaranteeaFBAKCIOOO. -- InnB11 thoro ...!. programs,

e10C'e&0(ftissi , , 0 ., .,'.,. , confections, hand- -

w

on

10

they

'flnnrtvn tn tr no

itI Coelia Gllman,

thelr ring -'First ' win, ,

Ruth.. Polio

AND

Hopp. ,

i

agerm

'(. Sold

&

i

Bakelirlvlt. n n

back

have

a

$205

SonsYet,

kouik,

than

tin,.

give

$200

park

gained accept Marcalllno's yU!1Kground Chinese apparently, marguerites,

LOOKS LIKE A HER! LIVELY

na.

any

Poo(n)

Mr.

and

the

red and

noso tho

to

'ami of

upnot illto

th afor to thetho the

"g and were the

auiuuus anuiiorwnnn nnen niiimr.n ninnn

7tI()n

:muu man.BAK 0KePi Rpf,ms wn vcry

t 4I,.,

all

all

tne byTTn

,ol1The Idea and this

that the will of tiedu"1" me

polnsetta

Delicious

chocolate

Ing the Marguer- -

it0 Wadman, Madeline(lin f.nlls tho Onnat ho fldit.'"an'Englneers, Machinists, Blacksmiths llIm nro intending ins for draw you

and Boilermakers. your I am in I ;any "utnreasonable will be to m soon Anderson.tonight's be- - Schumann.

DRAPERIES.

hair but

by

PACHECO'S

DO IT.

g

,'

forfllr,

En

out

whoaro

forKan En

aro

ana ami now

oneby

allall

forare

for

nro

' t ' , . .George ' 31 ' wcunesny- -jIcIccna up that

but done handed out by nothing him when it comes

17,

nllln

the

Mr

red

not

Ho

waswas

01,0

one

irniiina untim'"""-D- "

tnetllB

thedo.

Ice

K'1,1 willme,

the,UB

tho Mc- -

hit- -

HoWatt. Bucklaild!.l.lm tlnr nr ,! fc, )l,tssrB- - Jackperfect condition McKcnna likes his own

tho other man best ho Knows ho" does George's.how from the Mike looks tho fans Is' """"

the bout going until samo this: Two now men are making a firstMtlrr, ilpp.lnros t mi nnil. tiprf linth irnnii

George to win. Ho records, both weighing tho 'to the yesterday that he could same, and both clean fighters.not loso light for a Sullivan Mike

he still on rungs of will bo the third in theleading to pugilistic and Sullivan and aro well

Frjendsmoroeasy the. "Qim-u- n

too game consider that George, the thollkn will nut Tlml uluu

marked, nothing what fansbeen nut un connection Tho

by

uon

can

E.up

he of up "I aro Inatam to to

nnv ho ",st ineto bo

to me In bothis consider can tho lno

the McKenna 7:45I can beat him 1 The fans

do understand that In Sullivan "lrs- - ouo1,10

j tho winner o thisand I to that ises first will

'also. I against at S:.10 o'clock, an eight-roun- d con- -

your hair without making an McKonna, though I see how he and probablyCan me, I expect I on 9:1C

OAHU

EIGHT AT ORPHEUM TONIGHT

PITCHER S

The following showing

by tho pitchers

the League to will

no bo to base-

ball bo

In striking out, he

walked of regular

pitchers. Espinda

in regard to number

but ho four pitches

two upfigures

MUlkaahas two

GOftflPAHISO

SATUhblY, JUNE 131 U

AverageEspinda averages .44 hit per in-

nings, four hits peraverages .CO hit per in-

nings, almost a half

Inning, and hitsper Inning; averages ,G7

Innings, hits perAverage Strike-Outs- ,

averages slightlystrike-out- s six andthree-quarter- aand Hayes

InningsH. ft. H.B

45 20 13 34 11 4

42 2fi 2558. 37 DO 2158 1.3 39 18 27 71G ' 4 13 1014 9 5

2-- 3 7'

9.2 2 ,'. 8' . ,

STAIl,

Societythree.)

orthe

in by Edgar

The ActMnckall.

(b) Act II.accompanied by

la

so

is

Edith Iloslln Mrj.Charles Weight, Chester .f.

Hunn, Wall, Mr. GeorgoBrown, Chester

tho of Mr.Ingalls.

vMr.

tho Inspirations ofn very dancing party, at

lastTho wore festooned

Japanesecreating a pretty tobrilliantly lighted

tho all round

against a ofpalms vines,

On the guests, onreceived gra-

cious notnine the dancing lit

of ascreened

by a trellis ofluxuriant shower.

IarKa

m3tSofferedT.

Tho hadtho

oi,..,

llC gamesADVHRTiSfc even T

AS

wouldone

In thelior,.i a similar comblna- -

CALIP. wantlnr to nu,S were

mako $300. offer, S,! h?a GSS'

to not yellowmmmmmmmm

cam, uus, mm dojs camsin the design of

tied, red satin.pineapple punch

dances, andeleven

wero served.Among present at this charm.

ntlvUna nlrk ItOSS. Mar- -

as a wlnnor a tell Laura

readers. While10 of on "lceuz'- -at rates. there winoutcome of battle -- nnc.h,,i Soper, Myrtle

tween Kid McKcn- - Hgures Georgesimilar Is on to nn.vuiiuj'l nestaricK,

M""Cl HazelMnTfmmn- llnlh mn tn lln In

and promise to mako Guard,

hustle as bettermoment Paton

startsnt niinnnrmipr, linldlnn- -

afford draw, stands sponsorlower Paton party

ladder fame, ring. Paton

opened

Richard Catton. Ar--HI,,.

tho to rra,n.tho uavo Uear,

Alexander Anderson, Reynold M't- -

VincentKid out put it w""?m Ouderklrk,

to or andas is tho the

GIgnoux, McCorrlston,Ronton, Nottage, Francis

and Lymer.

ho climbing tho fans, and because of Thompson

picking they game, the will e'uoIon(1 to matrimonyfalltho McKenna and

nrnncMltlnn that." sPAina muim"though of tho want.

has will toniehtbout. anair Dcgan

lastedbetter game,rounds, sooner here. have been stung quite

often past, "lromthat

from Coast light time. prom-- I

bout, want match well. bout bodown dafoat

eventeffort arrest fall? beat Jump bacic

stopskills

MrSl

stives

most,there

thero

game

with

table re-

sults during

Oahu date,

doubtfans. that Pedro

excels buUthan

beon least

hits, wild

balks against him.are

Name

Apau

Pitched

balks him,

Han

Runs

undorgamo;

game.

Pedro ninegamo;Lota half,

game.

S.O. B.B. W.P.1

from

from "TheAlnld

Opera three

North Star II

Mrs. Druco MoV.Solo.

Arthur Wall,

Miss Collais,Mrs.

UnderBurdotto

vMiss

floss

which Miss Fanny CyrilIloogs

with

lanalslan-

terns, hugomany

could

lanal young

hostess, longafter when

swingfrom view

vines

rooms beenoffered Sons gh'o

hereuntflteam

lives,

snoweroiuuuiiH,tiin flirt

with

danco whichIn nn lalnt'..,

wanted 2 ftbeingsprays,

served between atcream, layer

thoseparty Misses

they,nvegt

class

Patsy MartIla

1rn. Ross,reason

writer Dick

cake

with

work

than

luuiHurei

Donaldchance, 1. T T ! ,7 ..1 if l- -

Harold

aboutAlan

is intent on known to local Frankis money. fans u""-uiUil- " on

Univer- -young tore-- nn n. strntelit fro. 61l

justnacked

Game.

Robert

parson,

PercyFames Judge

oenmg.was admirable ono everyoneof fourteen present made a llttlu

with I I get and on showing of boys l"easant atof six will depend the future of the o'clock and Indefinitely.

but ifwill so. I Dick enough the wemeu, ul u.u

livan bring another man declares they will miss exporl- -, mosl l)opumr yuneor Bocieiy

to the once The preliminarythis get The put

If go onto loso don't test, tho main

to no at thereaboutf..

the

attainedseason

Interesting tho

It will seenhas

morehas the

.expensive of

has and

chalkedThe appended:

Per

or JustLotaor five and hits

five three-quarte- r

and Hayes hitsix

overEspindafive and

five per

pago

ntid

Mr.

ctnllll

stay

been

Livingston.

Margueritewero

and

and

wore

nnd

and

full tho

and

tho

and

were

redwith

was

and

were

Thnrn

caghand

and has

Catton.

How bout

Robert

than

that kind andtho

the two sl)eecU- -

Ave

Sul. butwill over

willthe will

tho

tho

Lota

per

per

tho

oogs,

matrons who, for tho past season,has been residing at the Hotel'Pleasanton, accompanied by heryoung son Donald, will leave in the'Alakura on Tuesday for Vancouverand Victoria where visits will be- -

made with friends.

retura tne eariy tan.

'"l l""or

or

8 5 22

8

1 3

9 3 1 5 20 .7 1 9 2 2

30 5 4

it

..li'

is

an

in or

OI

in

or

1if

UL LUU JUM 1UU IIOIUIU.

decorations of tho table bo evolvIn and tho class col-

ors, and covers bo arrangedthirty.

a 4

Paris Konn, Air. John Almoku

eastern states.

stater, Mrs, Manuel U. Garrett, tho?wife of Lloutonant Gnrrett of FortBenjamin Harrison, upon hor returnto tho military post nftor tho weddingof hor slstor, Mrs. George ClovolandBowon, of Fort Shatter.

Miss Spalding has bcon.groatly ad-

mired entertained during hervisit, part of tho tlmo having beenspent In the old aristocratic city orPhiladelphia, na tho houso guest ofAirs. Purvis-Savory- ,. one of the lenders of society in tho Quaker City.Miss Spalding' Is being warmly wolcoined homo by her many friends, Corshe Is ono of tho most beautiful andpopular girls in tho younger set.

By tho Slorra yesterday news wasreceived of tho engagement of MissBella Mutch, tho daughter of Mr. andMrs. William Mutch of this city, nnd

o of Kaunakakal, Molokal,which has been kept n secret forsome time.

Miss Mutch nccompanled Mrs. E. S.Cunhn on her departure In tho lastWllholmlna for San Franelscoj andMr. Munroo traveled up in the samosteamer.

date of the wedding has notyet been definitely stated but ItIn nil probability be solemnized some-time month in San Franciscoi

Honorable and Airs. A. A. Wildernnd Aliss Allco Jlacfarlano, who havebeen touring the Orient for tho pastthree months arrived home In theKorea this morning.

- W 'lAirs. F. R. Day entertained tho

members, of tho College Club at theresidence of Air. and Airs. Joseph A.Oilman in Old Walkikl on Wednesdayevening, when after a preliminarybusiness meeting, a of chow-do- r,

coffee, ice cream and cake w'asserved on the makai lauai, overlook-ing tho sea. The forty regular mem-bers of the club woro prespnt and avery delightful social evening wasspent;.

THE 3PORTINO CALENDAR.

Flights at Kaplo- -

lani Park." 17 Boxing: Kid George vs.

Patsy IVteKenna at OrpheumTheater.

" 17 Golf: President's Cup, atNuuanu.

" 17 Cricket practice at Ma-klk- i.

" 17 Rugby football at Kameha- -

(

BY AUTHORITYSEALED PROPOSALS will he re-

ceived at the oince of tho City andCounty. Clerk until 12 o'clock noon.Wednesday, June 28, 1911, fur-nishing City and County Jail with thefollowing supplies for the six monthsending December 31, 1911,

Supplies aro to. bo furnished inquantities upon the requisition of thoCity and" County Jailer.

All tenders must bo distinctlymarker "Tenders for Supplies, Hono-lulu Jair."

The Board of Supervisors reservetho right to reject any or all tenders..

AlediumBread, per lb.Aloat.'per lb. '

Spuds, per lb.Salt Pork, per lb.Salt Salmon, per lb.White Beans, per lb.Rice, per lb.Brown Sugar, per lb.Fresh Bread, per Mb. loaf.Onions, per lb.Tea, per lb.Roasted Coffee, per lb.Pai-al- , per lb.Flour, per lb.Soap, per lb.Picked coal, per 2240-l- b ton.June 17, 1911. t

D. KALAUOKALANI, JR.,City and County Clerk.

.Its Juno 17, 19, 20.

After traveling along tho coast as TENDERS for furnishing the Cityfar as Portland and Seattle, Mrs. and County of Honolulu with mate- -

Hazelden will return to Montreur, Her rlis and suples for tho slx monthsformer home, where-- tho summer will ending December 31. 1911. will bo re-b- e

spent and she and her swn will , ceivca at tho offlce of tho Clty an,,m County until 12 o'clock noon

of Wednesday, Juno 1911.A banquet will bo given this even- - Tenders may bo obtained upon

In tho private dining hall of tho plication at the office of tho City nndrnnn tTfiftl nlnnrt "I 1... r t i. n r T

per Pedro averages .04 hit per!4"" " """ . wciniym uuuu.ng, no- -

24

.

i.

iUUJVJIUUJ' PCUUUliwill

ed white green,will for

i

and

Thewill'

tills

for

Clerk28,

(THmliinMrifgamo;

Juno 17,, 1911.

D. KALAUOKALANI, JR.,City Comity

It Juno 17.

Airs. Carrie Robinson is entertain-- ' SEALED PROPOSALS will bo re--

Ing at luncheon this afternoon at hor ceived at tho office of tho City andbeautiful home at tho peninsula. County until 12 o'clock noon,Thoso bidden to this dolightful affair Wednesday, Juno 28, 1911, foraro Her Alajesty, Queen Lilluokalani, burial of Indigent dead of the Cltv

,AIrs. Curtis P. Iaukea, Airs. Ebon and County of Honolulu for tho- six3

j Low, Airs,. C. S. Holloway, Airs. John months ending December 31, 1911.of and

Domlnls.

and

the

Proposals must bo on forms to boobtained from the City and County

.Clork.Aliss Ethel Spalding, tho daughter Tho Board of Supervisors rosorves

of Air. nnd Airs. Edward Irwin Spald- - tho right to reject any or all tendors.Ing, returned home In tho Sierra yes-- 1

'Juno 17, 1911.

terday after u very dolightful winter D. KALAUOKALANI, JR.,spout In tho Aliss

supper

Clerk.

Clerk,

Spalding loft In company with her it Juno 17.

...v. ,

City and County Clork.

mefta.18 Aviation: flight at Paplov

nl Park.18 Baseball: Oahu League

1:30, J. A. C, vs. P. A. C.J

3:30, Stars vs. Native Sons.18 Baseball: Oahu Juniors at

Athletic Park, 9:15 a. m.18 Baseball: Evsa vs. Walpahu,

"at Ewa; Alea vs. Walnae, atAtea.

18 Golf: President's Cup, atNuuanu.

22 Cricket, at Alexander Field.24 Yachting: Hawaii Yacht

Club race for Wrens. How-

ard Cup,25 Yachting: Hawaii Yacht

Club's race for the Robin-son cup,

25 Baseball: Oahu League1:30, Native Sons vs. Japan-ese; 3:30, Portuguese vs.Stars.

25 Baseball: Ewa vs. Alea, atEwa; Walpahu vs. Walanaeat Walpahu.

Orpheum TheaterSATURDAY, JUNE 17.

Tho Alanly Art of Self-Defens-o by,Two Allddlowoights.

GEORGE VS. McKENNA.ofSan Francisco of Boston

Fifteen Rounds FifteenEvenly Alatched and on tho Square.

PRELIMINARY

(Eight Rounds, 135 pounds.)KRADALAK Batter F, First Field Ar-

tillery, Schofleld Barracks)vs, .

- '

WILLIAMS, (Company A, Camp'. .Very).

Seats at M. A. Gunst & Co.

Ringside Seats $3.00Orchestra Seats . . . . , ;$1.50 and $2.00General Admission $1.00

yi PorcelainInside and Outside

Here is absolutely the finest endbest refrigerator ever made. Not be-

cause we tell it, but because'it is per-

fectly built of 'g nuinc porcelain coated

steel plates inside and out. Not apiece of wood exposed to the interior

to absorb moisture.

LeonardAO PorcelainRefrigerators

Have a dry, cold air circulation, andis sanitary in the extreme.

You can't buy a better refrigerator

for the simple reason there's ncne

better made. Interior fittings remov-

able for cleaning. All trimmings

nickel plated. It is a beautiful refrig-

erator and just as serviceable as it is

beautiful.

Let us show you this better refrig-

erator. Stop in tomorrow.

H. Hackfeld &Co., Ltd.

AMERICAN BEAUTYCORSETS

When you pur-chase a corset youwant one that has

STYLEIt is equally important that thesame corset beCOMFORTABLE

and if you can al-so have one that

WEARS WELLand that corset canbe bought at a

REASONABLE PRICE

ONE DOLLAR UPyou have all therequisites of asplendid corset.AMERICAN BBADTY CORSETShave every one of these excel-lent features and many more.Every imnrovement aby fashion is combined in thesedainty garments

E. W. JORDAN & CO.Agents, Honolulu.

i'i'ififtii o Tilni--i if n.

V

Page 7: AVIATOR II 5IIIS...omul, brown spot of decay on the stand that unless interest Is shown In Iruit. As soon as the owners of trees this matter there will be very little notice this,

THE HAWAIIAN STAR, SATURDAY, JUNE 17, 1911. SEVEN

Business Firms in the Alexander Young BuildingHigh-Clas- s

StationaryHurd'8 Writing Paper and

Envelopes.

The

Latest Periodicals

HawaiianNewsCo., Ltd.

ALEX. YOUNG BUILDING

Alexander 'YoungCafe

Best Cuisine and .

Service inthe City

ICE CREAM, PASTRY, ETC.

MUSIC EVERY EVENING

HATSMANILA-BALAWA- MEXICANS.

LARGE ASSORTMENT.

Hawaii and South Seas Curio Co.

Tl IVAPASSABLE

ACCOUNT FOR

HILO, June 13. Deputy Attorney-Genera- l

Smith came to HIlo last week,

and Is now busy gathering data with

regard to the Kaiwiki Third and theOpea-Polea- u homesteads, which arelocated in the neighborhood of Haka-lau- ,

and are at present much In' thepublic eye, as they, as well as theKaunamano settlement in Kau, which

was tho fort of the famous Thompson

settlement association, form a basis

for tTie now attitude which the gov-

ernor, has taken in regard to cane

lands.In tho case of the Hakalau lands a

petition was sent to the legislatureasking that patents bo Issued to thehomesteaders, who claimed that they

had fulfilled all the conditions and thattheir time for securing patents had

long since passed. As a result a res-

olution was passed by tho legislaturedirecting tho authorities to issue thopatents forfliwlth.

Mr. Smith explains that the matterhad been submitted to tho attorney-general'- s

department some time before

tho legislative Besslon began, and theattorney-genera-l in person had takenup tho examination of tho various pat-

ents, as ho was familiar with thelands. The idea was to ascertainwhether tho settlers had fulfilled all

tho conditions which must be fulfilled

before they could become entitled to

patents, and this tooktime, as there wero many dotails to

be looked into. Deforo tho work had

been the legislature went

into session, and while this was on,

tho attorney-general'- s department wastoo'bfisy assisting tho legislators to

handlo tho homestead mattor. Thopassago of tho resolution, said Mr.

Smith, did not affect the attltudo ol

tho department Tho work would

have been taken up at this time in

every case.

Tho investigation of tho KaunamanohomoBteadB was finished by Mr.

' Smith a week or two ago, and ho hasjust submitted his report tlloreon to

tho department. In taking up the Kai-

wiki and homesteadmatter, said Mrt SmMH- - o.w.as solely

The By

A comprehensive nnd readable account of tlio World's history, emphasising the more importnnt events and presenting theso as complete storiesIn the master words ot tho most celebrated historians.

ROSSITER JOHNSON, LL. D., EDITOR IN CHIEF.Tho Great Events by Famous Historians, published by tho National Alumni under tho editorial supervision of Rosslter Johnson, LL. D., and n

corps of distinguished scholars, conipleto in twenty handsome volumes, Is tho FIRST and ONLY history ever printed In the English language hav-

ing an Irrefutable claim to tho epithet "Universal." It Is tho story of ALL human history, not a moro frarmont of It. Superseding nil otherhistories In giving first hand information, it gives a continuous narratlvo covering nil topics, from ancient Egypt to niodom Japan.

mmmBSSX! WRITE FOR FREE SAMPLE PAGES.

OUTINGAND COARSE

A.

1113

considerable

completed,

ROADS MAY

HQNIESTEftfl

trying to securo the facts of the caseon first hand. It was not his inten-

tion to try to make a case one way otanother, but merely to secure all thedata possible. With this end in view,he had gone all over the homesteadtiacts and had interviewed all thehomesteaders who wero still on tholand. It was also his intention to havean interview with Manager Ross of

tho Hakalau plantation. Whether theKaunamano or tho Hakalau homesteadmatters would finally find their wayinto the courts, ho could not say. HisIntention at present was merely togather data.

Mr. Smith has found that aboutfour-fifth- s of the settlers had alreadyleft their holdings. In every casewhero the settlers had left tho cultiva-

tion of the houso lots had ceased, andmany of the trees which had to beplanted according to law were now be-

ing choked out ry wceds, indicatingthat tho tree-plantin-g phase ot theagreements had in such cases been afailure. The houses were in nearly allcase,8 small, apparently In most casesno larger than was absolutely neces-sary to provide a shelter during thoyears in whii-- residence was compul-

sory. On the other hand, there wasnothing in tho law to compel settlersto build larger houses, and tho factthat tho settlers had moved awaymight or might not have legal bearingon tho matter. On the whole, bald Mr.Smith, it might well bo said that thorowero two .sides to the question, andthe homesteaders cortainly hnd a goodargument in their favor In tho state ot

the road, which was almost Impassa-

ble.

Judgment for Garage.Judge Whitney has given judgment

in favor of Associated Garage, Ltd,,against Charles H. Bradley for $95,40,intorest of $14.3lf costs nnd commis-sions.

Walmea District Court.Joseph A. Akina has been roap1

pointed as second district mngistrato(of Waitnea, Kauai, by Chief Justice.Robertson.

Great Events

TRIBE OF

FIRE

Editor Star: It is the purpose an 1

intent of Hawaiian Tribe, No. 1,

Improved Order of Red Men, to notothe passing of the one hundred andthirty-fift- h anniversary of the sign-

ing of the Declaration of Independ-

ence, by holding appropriate exercisesin the Hawaiian Opera House o.n theltn uay oi jury, a. u. ium,ing at the hour oi 10 o'clock a. in., or,

as we have it, the 4th Sun of BuckMoon, G. S. D. 419, at tho 10th run,rising of tho sun, to which the generalpublic Is cordially Invited.

Tho hour stated was determinedupon for tho reason that baseball andother field sports aro scheduled for

presentation by tho A. A. U. duringthe afternoon of that day, with a pos-

sible pyrotechnic display In tho even-

ing.Through tho courtesy ot Hon. J. J.

Fern, mayor of the City and County of

Honolulu, the occasion being a publicone, Hawaiian Tribo will have thobenefit of tho services of tho HawaiianBand on tho occasion In question, andtho order of exercises, as elaboratedthus far, consists ot the followingnumbers:

1. Chorus and Flag Drill, "Colum-

bia, tho Gom of tho Ocean." Uy classot' forty-si- x young ladles, pupils of

Kaahumanu school, representing thostatos of the Union, under direction ofMiss Phllomona Perry.

1!. Reading, Tho Declaration of In-

dependence, Bro. A. 13. Murphy, PastSachem."

3. Mozzo-sopran- o solo, "Tho BattleHymn of tho Republic," Mrs. BrucoMcV. Macknll.

4. Remarks, "Tho Day Wo Colo-brat- e,

and Why," Bro. W. J. Robinson,Past Sachem'.

5. Violin solo, Patriotic Airs, Bro.(i P Tlrnwn '

Famous Historians

BROWN LYON COMPANY, LTD.

Honolulu Most Attractive Building

FAILURE

HAWAIIAN

ARRANGE

unbeamLamp

Let us increase your illumination and decrease your monthly bills.

The von Hamm-Youn- g Co., Ltd.Honolulu, T. H.

RED MEN

PATRIOTIC PROGRAM

Spangled Banner," Mrs. Bruco McV.

Mackall.7. Recitation, "Drake's Address to

the American Flag," Miss Ray Bell.

S. Male quartette, "America," St.

Louis College Alumni quartette.Tho young ladles representing: tho

stalca of the Union will b0 dressed in

appropriate colors, each wearing ablue sash upon which will bo printedtho name ot a state ot tho UnitedStates. In tho event that Arizona aimNew .Moxico aro admitted to state-hood prior to tho date of the exercises,arrangements have been made to in-

crease tho number of young ladles intho class from forty-si- x to forty-eigh- t,

eo as to have all of tho states repre-sented. In order to arouse a spirit oipatriotism and of personal interest inthose In attendance, tho nudienco willbo iequested to Join In tho chorus asto numbers 3, C and 8, on tho order ofexercises, and for the Information tthose who aro unfamiliar with thewords of tho songs composing thosenumbers, tho words will bo printed infull on tho program.

As tho occasion Is one ot more thanpassing Importance to tho people otthis territory, and tho proposed exer-cises should, In purposo nnd intont, ap-

peal to all patriotic citizens and resi-

dents of Honolulu, I take tho libertyof thus calling nttcutlon to tho mat-

ter, trusting that you may, throughyour columns, glvo It such publicityas it is ontltled to recoivo. Vory

yours,W. J. ROBI.NSON,

Past Snchoni, Hawaiian Tribe, No. 1,

Improvod O. R, M., Chnirman Com-niltte- o

on Celebration of Inde-

pendence Day, 1911, i

Mazda

CHINESEi

FO CLEAN T1Today's issue of tho Liberty News,

a Chinese paper, contains two arti-cles advocating and explaining Clean-up Day. Editor Woon Hong Fee hastakon tho matter up enthusiastically.

At a meeting of tho districtingcommitteo for Clean-u- p Day, nt thoAiei chants' Association rooms, EdTowso presiding, tho following listof leaders was prepared, somo namesbeing tentntivo ponding acceptance:

District No. 1 Waialao, Kalmukiand Palolo Improvement Club; Dr.

W. G. Rogers, chairman special com-

mittee.District No. 2 E. S. Cunha, J. B.

Castlo, Doctor Murray, J. A. Gilman,J. J. Fern.

District No. 3 Manoa Improve-ment Club; G. G. Guild, chnirmanspecial committee.

District No. 4A Prospect Improve-ment Club; Kaahumanua Improvement Club; J. L. McLean, D. L.Wlthington, William Woltors, Lusitana Society; C. G. Owen, C. J. McCartliy. ,

District No. 4B A. W. Soabury,Fred Whitney. Mr. Paty, William Lar-

son, St. C. Sayres.District No. 5 F. B. McStockor,

chairman; United Chlneso Society,Japanese Merchants' Association,Kalmuki Club, Manoa Club, WilliamHenry, R. II. Trent, F. E. Steore, G.

II. Beadle, San Antonio Socloty, G

R. Carter, A. W. Carter.District 6A Auwaiolimu Club;

John Marcallino, chairman of com-

mittee.District No. 0B J. W. Jones, H. I

Korr.District No. 7A A. F. Judd, W. W.

Thayor, William Mclnorny, AlewnImprovement Club, Wflllam Coolho,F. T. P. Waterhouse, A. L. Custlo,Richard Cooko, Dr. C. B. Cooper.

District No. 7B P. F. Ryan. M. PiHotor. - - J J

TO THE GRADUATING

CLASSES OF THIS, CITY AND

ISLANDS IN GENERAL.

Mrs. Taylor, llorlst, Is" takingordors for baskets and boquelsof Lllllos of thu Valloy, Or-

chids, ltoses, Carnations, Shag'tag or any other (lowers

Mnko your arrangementswith her early.

TEL. 2333 YOUNG DLDG

BUY A GUNN

the Tirst Bookcasrs made. Willnot stick nor bind. In weatheredfumed or golden onk.

LARGE STOCK ON HAND

Coyne Furniture Co.,Limited.

Price Complcto f. o. b. Hono-

lulu $2050.00.

THE CRITERION BY WHICH

MOTOR CARS ARE JUDGED.

The von Hamm-Youn-g

Co., Ltd.HonoluluT. II., Local

Distributors.

Ell Crawford, P. L. Horno, S. II. a,

Spencer Bowen.

MILD LIQUID CURES ECZEMA.

Skin SufferersI Drop Greasy Salvesand Nasty Medicines.

That mild, soothing liquid, D. i).

D. Prescription, stops the awful itch

with tho first drops. A prescription

of acknowledged value.Got a bottle at $1.00. It will take

away tho Itch right away and youwill sleep soundly. Wo assure you

personally of tho merits of this remedy; for wo KNOW. 'Benson, Smith& Co.

Fine Job Printing at Star Office.

BYAUTBOK1TYTENDERS WANTED.

Scaled tenders endorsed "Tendersfor Supplies, Oahu Prison," for fur-

nishing Oahu Prison at Honolulu Withsupplies for the period of Ono Yoarfrom July 1, 1911, to Juno 30, 1912,will bo received at the Attorney Gen-

eral's olllco at tho Executive Building,Honolulu, until 12 o'clock noon, Juno27, 1911.

Specifications and a Kst of tho kindand approximate quantity 8f supplies'required and other information may bohad upon application nt tho AttorneyGeneral's olllco, tenders to bo basedupon tho quantity stated, but tho At-

torney General's Dojiartment does notbind Itself to purchnso tho whole orany particular part of the quantities

"stated, such quantltloB beliif; statednioi for tho convenience ot biddersin sulnnlttliiK their bids.

Tenders must be accompanied by acertified check equal In amount to 11 vopor cent of tlio tender. All Irfds mustbo made on forms furnished Jy thoAiuuniy General's Department nndmust be submitted In accordance withnnd bo subject to the provisions andrequirements of Act 02, Session Laws

! 1909.Dated, IIouo'ulu, June 13th, 1911.

ALEXANDER LINDSAY, JR

Page 8: AVIATOR II 5IIIS...omul, brown spot of decay on the stand that unless interest Is shown In Iruit. As soon as the owners of trees this matter there will be very little notice this,

mII HI I IW HI Ulil IIMIIMMM will l -

EIGHT THE HAWAIIAN STAR, SATURDAY, JUNE 17, 1011,

Classified Ads

AT AUCTION.

At the resilience of the late J. MortOat 1326 Pllkol St., comer or Matlockavenue, Thursday, Juno 22, at 10

o'clock. The entire housohold furni-

ture,N.

plants, ami some rare old books. I

Jas. W. l'ratt, Auctioneer. JS.

FOR SALE.

Maxwell runabout for $225.00. In-

quire

H.

at Hon. Motor Supply Co, Alakeaand Beretanln.

FOR SALE.

One safe and latest model cash rog-tite- r

in tho best condition. Will sellcheap. I'artlcuars at Star offlce.

FOR SALE. 15.

Bargains in Reil Estate, on sea-

shore, plains and hllla. Tclephono1C02. "Pratt" 101 Stangenwald Build-

ing.

FOR SALE.

WHITE LEGHORN FOWLS, WireFonolng and Coops at Kalmiiki, abargain. Enquire W. C. Wccdon, Box

a.G5S.

FOR RENT.

cottago; every conventonco; No. 1325 Pllkol street, corner ofMadlock avenue; posresslon givenafter Juno 23d. For particulars see"Pratt," No. 125 Merchant street.

FOR RENT.

Furnished House, for the summer;all conveniences; fine view over city;very reasonable rent for a desirabletenant. Telephone "Pratt" 101 Stangenwald Building.

FOR RENT.

Five-roo- furnished cottage. InquireNo. 8. Cottago Grovo or PhonelOST.

JAPANESE MATTING IMPORTER.

U. Koneko, 108 Hotel street, cornerof River. Importer and dealer in allkinds of Japanese matting.

sLOST.

$5.00 reward for tho return of awhite cameo breastpin, valued for Itsassociations. Return to this office.

OPTICIANS.

Alfred D. Fairweather. Manufactureing Optician. Harrison Block. Fortstreet.

FLORIST.

Violets, carnations, roses and deeoratlve plants. Harada. Fort St. andMiller Lane.

FURNISHED ROOMS.Furnished Ro3ms. No. 73 Beretanln

street. Running water and electriclight In each room. Rent reasonable.J. H. Townsend, proprietor.

MEN'S CLOTHING.

Men's Clothing on credit $1.00 aweek. Suit given at once. FrancisLevy, Outfitting Co., Sachs Bldg., FortStreet

BUY AND SELL.

Diamonds and Jewelry bought, soldand exchanged. Bargain in musicalInstruments. J. Carlo. Fort SL

.BOYS CLOTHING.

Tho best and most moderatelypriced line of clothing for Boys inHonolulu. Trunks, suit cases, Gents'Furnishings, efc Kam Chong Co.

Fort and Beretania.

TROUSSEAUX.Special orders taken for Boudoir

Caps and wedding trousseaux inFrench and Madeira embroidery. Per-

fect satisfaction guaranteed in dress-making department. Miss Woodard1141 Fort street.

CLEANING AND PRESSING.

Ohio Clothes Cleaning Company,Phone 149G, Harrison Block BeretaniaStreet.

CONTRACTOR.

Georgo W. Yamada, general con-

tractor. Office 208 McCandloss BlQg

Phone 2157.

FOUND.

A. Dog. Owner can have same bycalling at 1131 Union street, provingproperty and paying expenses.

CARD OF THANKS.Mr. Kua and family wish to express

their heartfelt thanks to tho kindfrlonds ,for flowers and sympathies bostowed during their recent bereavo-ment.

POSITION WANTED.

Competent Hady stenographer . andgoneral office assistant, thoroughlyoxperlencod in commercial work,wlshos position; would bo willing to

substitute; oxcollont roforoncos. Ad-dro-

B. G., this offlco.

NF.W ADVERTISEMENTS.Paso

Tenders for supplies 0

Tenders for burial Indigent dead.. C

Tenders for county Jail (i

Ureal Shoo Store 11

Metropolitan Moat Market 8

Donson, Smith & Co 3

W. C. Weodon 3

S. Sachs Dry Goods Co 3

CRClInfhn tcuTW Gcmfwyp p J pjW. Jordan & Co 4

Trent Trust Co 4

Schmnan Car Co 10

Hackfeld & Co 14

Whitney & Marsh 3"

Honolulu Gas Co 13

Yce Hop & Co .10

Von Hamm-Youn- g Co 12

Sanitary Steam Laundry 13

Kam Chong 15 as

Aviation Meet 1G

llro. Benjamin 11InW. Jordan (Corsets) 0

Position Wanted 8

For Kent 8toFree Shoes 11

THE WEATHER. so

Local Olllce, U. S. Weather Bureau,Honolulu, T. II., Juno 17, 1911.

Temperature, ti o. m.; S a. in.; 10

m.; ana morning minimum:73; 77; SO; SO: 70.

Barometer toaerrns. Absolute humidity (grains per cubic foot); rela-tive humidity and dew point at 8 a. m.:

30.05; 5.077; G0; 'G2.

Wimi velocity ana direction nt G a,m.; 8 a. in.; 10 a. in.; and noon;

3N15; GNE; SNE; SE.Ralntan aunns 24 hours ending 8

a. m. traco.Total wino movement during 24

hour ended nt noon 171 miles.WM. C. STOCKMAN,

Section Director.

NEWS IN A NUTSHELLParagraphs That Give Condensed

News of the Day.

For fire-wor- and flags go to WallNichols Co., Ltd.

Pratt has an up to date cottago orPiikol street for rent.

Mr. Nua and family extend theirthanks for sympathies bestowed dur-

ing their recent bereavement.A competent lady stenographer and

general office assistant seeks a posi-

tion. See classified ads.Watches prompwy ana properly re-

paired by Redhouse, Masonic build'ing, Alakea and Hotel streets.

Expert Piano tuning, satisfactionguaranteed. Honolulu Music Co., SS

King Street.'v. u. weeaon is ottering white

leghorn fowls, at very low prices. Alsowire fencing and coops at Kalmukl.

For style, good wearing qualitiesand comfort no shoo equals tho RegalSee these shoes in quarter sizes atthe Regal Shoo Store, King and Bethel.

The fish at the Mctrolopltan Marketreceived from the coast is of a superiorquality. Planked shad is a delicacyin full swing on the Atlantic coastcities where tho first run of this delici-o- u

fish is set for June 10.

AVIATOR TO FLY

(Continued from page one.)

on the ground and rise up again. Thearrangement was made by E. J. Lovethis morning on tho suggestion of A.Q. Marcalllno, who brought tho mat-ter up at a meeting of tho Oafiu managers last night.

Waiting at the Park.Out at Kapiolani Park an interested

crowd nssomblcd about eight o'clockin anticipation of tho flight beingmade, Its numbers added to up till teno'clock when a telephone message wasecelved from Tho Star Offlco stating

that tho flight had been postponed.Like wildfire the news spread and thedisappointed peoplo turned back totown. Whilst waiting for the appear-ance of the aviator anxious eyes scan-

ned tho sky, most of thoso assembledat the edge of tho park focussing theirgaze on tho sky immediately behindand above tho Moana Hotel, expectingto get the first, glimpse of tho mono-pian-

in that direction.There wcro very few peoplo in the

park Itself but thoso who were waitingby the roadsldo were ready to makea quick dash to the polo field the moment tho monoplano was sighted. Therowas quite a string of automobiles linedaiong tno roausiue, ana tnoro woroalso a number of turn-out- while oc-

casionally an equostrlan or equostrlonne passed by.

Tho greatest Interest was manifestedin tho expected flight and tho murinurs of disappointment which follow-

ed tho announcement of tho postponement Indicated how keen was tho interest. There was llttlo to detract attention, at the park, but Just as thoautomobiles started to roturn to townthere was a slight diversion owing toa car driven by a young lady bumpingInto tho roar of a car driven by FrankWoods. Beyond two crumpled wheel

ifondors no damago was dona, howeveras tho roarward car was barely mov- -

,nK at lh llmo ot th .lmj,aot- -

Tho police were out In force to keepthe crowd from Interfering with tholanding of tho aviator, out their sorv- -

"u,u "ul

SAY HAQLE WAS

HELPEBOFLUHHenry Haole, who worked on tho

Hclcno under tho name of Lazaro, Isunder arrest in Hllo, whither SheriffJnrrctt Is proceeding to bring himbnck to Honolulu. Haole Is wanted

tho accomplice of John Lua, tnolatter having confessed to Chief o

McDufflo that ho was helpedtho two Tantalus robberies and

tho burglary of tho Grossman residence by Hnole. Haolo was afraid

go into the Grossman house because) of an under-sho- t bulldog there,

John went in and Haole keptguard. McDufflo got on" tbi track ofHaolo and traced him to tho Hclene,which ship ho left at IHlo, then join-

ing tho steamer Kauai. A wirelessto Hilo brought about Hnole's arrest and gave Sheriff Jarrett a tripdown to the big island. Haolo andLua were preparing for a getaway toSan Francisco, having their planspractically completed when the policeran Lua to earth.

FLY PAPER FOR

THE HIT PEST

Editor Star: Tho Mediterraneanfruit fly seems to be the last import-ed pest and, if all Is true that Ischarged against it, it is tho worst yet.

Of my last crop of oranges aboutone-thir- d were maggot-Infecte- d bythis fly, while of my peaches hardlyone escaped.

Thore are two ways of proceedingagainst this pest that aro within thereach of all and the general practiceof which would bring a certainamount of relief. ,

First. Burn or boll all tho Infectedfruit.

Second. Hang "tangle-foot" in tho trees. I am using boththese methods.

On the first sheet of "tangle-foot- "

I hung up in one of my orango treesI counted seven fruit flies withintwenty-fou- r hours. On a second sheetwhich I hung up in a neighboring treethere was a smaller number stuckfast on tho sticky sheet, but therowcro some and this in spite" of thefact that it is not yet tho season forrlpo oranges. They are but one-thir- d

grown.Every llttlo helps In such u work

as this, and I am convinced that Ifevery ono who has fruit trees wouldput into practise the two methodsabove mentioned, tho pest would bochecked to a considerable extent.

By experiment I havo satisfied myself that tho maggot requires fifteendays from its planting in tho groundtill it evolves Into a gray-gree- n fruit- -

fly.Yours truly,N. B. EMERSON.

P. S. To guard thogainst rain, I hung it under a sort

of inverted gutter, or roof, two smallboards of sufficient length, tacked to-

gether at ono edge.

CLEANUP r(Contni-se- d from pago ono.)

other point that they made was clean-ing up back yards. Authority was obtained making It an offense not tosweep up tho tin cans, etc., and depositthem In tho front of tho house readyfor removal by the special gang, which

PERSONS IN

.E. KAESER, Cook's representativein Yokohama, is on his way to Eng-

land by tho Korea, which arrivedthis morning from tho Orient.

JAMES JOICEY, a promlnont .English manufacturer, is making a tourof tho world, and arrived in Hono-lulu this morning on his way toLondon.

JUDGE and MRS. A. A. WILDER returned from tho Orient this morn-ing by tho Korea from a pleasuretrip. They both report having hadan enjoyable holiday.

MAJOR GENERAL RAFALSKI, for-

merly of tho Gorman army, is athrough passengor to the mainlandby tho Korea thle morning 6n atour of .tho world.

CAPTAIN J. L. JAYNE, U. S. N., Is apassengor by the Korea, which ar

A CHOiR LEADERTells How Pcnt-n- a Hid Nim of All

Catarrhal Troubles., a jlvi V o vjvsii trilling jivv m

I Specially designed for use In these Islands. I''jpBPa I '

AN ELECTRIC 1

jKt I Buhach Burner Ililf M, I SIMPLE, EFFICIENT, SAFE B

ATTACHABLE TO ANY LIGHT SOCKET. Bl

tw 'jmm i

PE-RU-- SCORES

Another Triumph in Canada

"A Relief'to Breathe Freely Once

More."

K 7TR. G. W. A ARTIN, Hartford,IVJ. Ont.. choir loader at St. Paul'iEpiscopal church, wrltoa :

"Peruna is a wonderful remedy foicatarrhal troubles.

"I havo beon troubled with catarrhfor a great many years, and always trying something for it, but was able onlyto secure temporary reliof until I usedPeruna.

"Only Ave bottles rid my system otnil traces of catarrh, and I havo not.lnoticed tho slightest trouble for severalmonths.

"Mv head was stopped up, my breathoffensive, and it is a reliof to bo atlo Ubreathe freely onco nora."

numbered lEOo men. It was found inthe end that tho best plan was to go inand have tho work done by their ownmen, instead of asking the citizens todo the work, and then prosecutingthem in the police court when theyfailed to do so.

"What is wanted," said Dr. Currie,"is something that will arouse the In- -

terest of tho citizens to such an ex- -

tent that they will see tho value ofthe work, and do it thoroughly. Inthat way a city can be cleaned up welland quickly. Now there was a smalltown just near New Orleans whereeach day a week some of the citizensbecame soldiers .to watch that tho people carried out the work of cleaningup.

"Of course, some back yards willtake longer to clean up than others.Take that over the road" (pointing tothe rear of the soda water premiseson tho corner of Fort and Allenstreets, just opposite tho quarantineoffices) "that would take somo timeto clean up."

It certainly looked that way, forthero were straw, empty barrels, andother pieces of useless looking articles that seemed to be excellent breeding grounds for rats, etc.

Tlie transportation committee re-

quests those who can furnish auto- -

mobiles or other vehicles for carrying workers on Clean-u- p Day to notify tho chairman, Dr. W. G. Rogers,as soon as possible.

THE JULYThoso who liko tho

Magazine and who does not? willlike it all tho better for its Julynumber, Tho contents are varied,but have to do with the lands aboifttho great ocean, both the text andpictures being fresh and original.There aro never any pictorial has- -

beens in the Mld-Pacifl- c Magazine,a fact which gives tho reader greatcomfort.

THE NEWS

rived this morning from the Orient.Captain Jayne was formerly on tneU. S. S. Saratoga, and he goes homo

for promotion.

POLICE OFFICER BERGAU loft forKauai yesterday taking with hima Japanese woman who is wantedat Walmea. Sho was arrested inaccoruanco with a wireless mes-

sage received from Deputy SheriffCrowoll, but tho charge againsther was not stated.

HONORABLE JOHN FRANKLINFORT arrived in Honolulu by theKorea this morning on a triparound tho world. Fort is an

of Now Jersey, and is ac-

companied by his wlfo and daughter and Miss Osborne. They willremain in Honolulu for n while bo- -

toro proceouing to tnoir nomo ontho mainland.

Holiday SaleBeginning June 3rd

ALL HATS AT LOWEST PRICES

K. UYEDA HAT STORE1028 Nuuanu Street

Pongee and Flannel ClothesCLEANED UNDER THE EXPERT SUPERVISION OF

MR .ABADIE.FRENCH LAUNDRY, J. Abadie, Prop. 777 KING ST.

Telephone 1491 No Branches.

IF?V OUCAREFOR

ORDER A SHAD, HALIBUT, FRESH MACKAREL SOLE OR SOME

SHRIMPS THIS MORNING. THESE ARE DELICIOUS AND AS

WELL FLAVORED AS IF THEY JUST CAME FROM THE WATER.

MetropolitanW. F. HEILBRON and A. LOUIS, Propr's.

Telephone 1814.

White Waianae SandExcellent for many purposes. Has uses in the garden or the chickenyard as well as in4buildlng. We deliver promptly the finest quality.

Yours to command.

Honolulu Construction & Draying Co., Ltd.Robinson Block, Queen Street

territorial--

PARCEL. DELIVERY

leaves town 10:30 a. m. Daily for Walkiki andKaimuki; also calls for Laundry. Phone 1862.

JuDu-tl- eHh

OF

Brians anil RosesNo doubt among tho prospec-

tive brides of merry Juno aro Isomo of your young friends.Perhaps you already havo the

invitations to tho wedding.

H LOOKi clUoDei on

W. W. Dimond

H

SH

Meat Market

LOOK ;l,,'NtAVD B, r JUp&Gl ON I

Perhaps the question of suit-able gifts is giving you occa-

sional serious moments.Why not settle it at once?

Wo can help you o'er tho diffi-culty with suggestions by thoscore we're primed for suchcontingencies.

No finer display of Cut GlassRich deep cuttings was ever

shown horo, nnd tho other de-

partments aro llkewiso teemingwith gift suggestions.

Don't worry como in today.

& Company, Ltd.

o

o

53-5- 7 KING STREET. ,j

1

Page 9: AVIATOR II 5IIIS...omul, brown spot of decay on the stand that unless interest Is shown In Iruit. As soon as the owners of trees this matter there will be very little notice this,

A.-'-- i

HAWAIIANSECOND SECTION

PAGES NINE TO SIXTEEN. HONOLULU, HAWAII, SATURDAY, JUNE 17, 1911, PAGES NINE TO SIXTEEN.

EXPERTS SftY THAT PARASITES

ARE

ooooooooooooooo

oooo

o

MOWN WHIGH HILL II '

DESTRUCTIVE MEDITERRANEAN FLY

ooooooooo

The fourth Insert Is closely allied the Melon fly and the Medl O

terranean fruit fly (Ceratatls capltata), a recent Introduction and apest which should be checked at once, so to prevent Its spread tothe other Islands, where it does not now exist. It Is claimed that O

there exists a Daraslte In East India, fact, one has been Intro- - O

duced from there Western Australia. There Is also a chance of

O getting parasites from Mexico whljh reduces the Orange fly in that . O

O countrv. The Alligator Pear Mealy Bug (Pseudococcus nl- - O

ooo

oo

to isO

as O

In

to

pae). This pest today Is doing a lot of damage to many of our fruitsand ornamental plants, and althoujh we have some natural enemiesattacking it, there yet remains the true parasites to be Introduced todo the proper work of checking tRe pest. The pest Is well known in

the Philippine Islands, where It Is kept In check by a parasite.From a report by Entomologist Ehrhorn to Ed Towse, chairman of O

the House committee on agriculture.A parasite of the boll worm is already known to exist In India,

but no work has been done in propagating It. It would seembest for the entomologist to make his headquarters in India, with

O possible side trips to Java, New Guinea and Borneo. Dr. E. V. Wll- -

O cox, In letter to Towse.0ooooooooooopoooooooooooooooooooooo"The last legislature made provls- - best way to fight it was by stopping

Ion for largo appropriations for meet- - It from breeding. A request wasJng, or, rather, anticipating such an growers ghould p,c,emergency as the one that has developed by reason of the presence of the "P luu ",8U

ilediterranean fly here," said Ed any off the treo that they saw to be

Towse, who was chairman of the affected. This scheme was not aand House committee having to cesSl and finally a law was passed

lo with agriculture, lands, etc., this an(j inspectors appointed to see thatmorning. the picking up was done.

The records show the enactment or "These men each had a districti measure providing that the sum of and spent their time going from ono$15,000 be "specifically segregated and orchard to another. When they foundset aside" out of funds received by the. that a man would' not take any noticeboard of agriculture and forestry, "for Gf them they warned him, and thenthe purpose of searching for and in- - if he still refused, had the work donetroducing into this Territory parasite and charged against him. All oldenemies" to the bo'l worm, the melon orchards that were not bolng workedfly, alligator pear mealy bug, Medl- - were rooted out and burnt 'and zterranean fly, corn leaf hopper and' strong plea was put in for cleanerJapanese beetle. work among the Jrees.

The funds of the board have been "Gradually the farmers came to re-

apportioned by budget for many alize that the modern methods paid

months ahead, without' any. provision them ,and they kept on eye on eachfor the parasite proposition, but in' other to see that all Vere carryingview of the emergency It Is thought out the provisions as laid down. A

that a change in the budget may bo further step was made by the e.

polntment of inspectors for the var!- -

Australlan Experience. ous fruit markets. These examinedSomo interesting facts were given the cases as they were brought in,

this morning by John M. Giles in and if they found ono fruit with theconnection with the methods of deal- - traces of the fly in it they condemned

lng with the fVuit fly question In Aus- - the whole case, which was kerosened

tralla. The fruit growers there have and burnt. . The effect has boon thatspent thousands of dollars in an at- - the ravages of the fly are not so

to check Its ravages and have vere now as they were a couple of

now succeeded in partially checking years ago. Prom my personal expe-i- t

Mr. Giles is a graduate of the rlence, while I was managing a llf- -

Hawkesbury Agricultural College in teen-acr- e block of mixed fruit of mv

Australia and besides has had three own, I know what beneficial resultsYears' exnerlence in fighting it on his the inspection has had. Being

own orchard. graduate of nn agricultural college 1

"It Is certainly one of the worst naturally fell In with the movement

pests that our homo fruit growers straight away and I started a stre'i- -

have had to contend with," he sai.l, uous campaign against tne nies."h,,t hv constant fighting they have "By careful supervision I had mv

nt last succeeded in keeping it somo- - place practically clean at the en.l

what In check. It started up In of the third season, although thereQueensland, where the climate Is were orchards adjoining mo where

very similar to Hawaii, and at first it was still bad. I believe that the

it was thought that It would not picking up and burning or boiling notspread to the cooler southern states, only keeps them In check hut also

This Idea nroved erroneous, however, stons any spreading. Small flat cans

and now it Is general throughout. of keroseno hung about thetrees alsou.u if uac Fniinht. nrnvpd a good tran for them and

"When It was first recognized as should work well here,

being serious men were sent out to "Now that the pest has come herelook for parasites and the Federal the most stringent steps should bo

government sent one of the leaJlng taken against it or the fruit growing

ontomolglsts around tho world. His industry will be killed out entirely,

trip was a failure, however, and otlvsr Mr. Ehrhorn has several goo:l

means had to bo resorted to. From schemes for covering the work and

what had been worked out of the lire n0 doubt he will get to work vorv

history of tho fly it was seen that the soon with them."

INTBB-ISLAW- D HAPPENINGS

HILO, Juno 1C. Eddlo Fernandez tho hearty of Colonol

of Honolulu has blossomed out as a ; Sam Johnson, tho manager ot the

theatrical magnate In this section, Pahoa Mill Company, and also has

and If tho rumors which are heardprove true, Is going to take a prettybig hand in tho theatrical game. Yes-

terday he was tho only bidder for thoGaiety Theater, which was knockeddown to him for tho upset price of

$2,003, which finally settles the fore-

closure proceedings brought agalnmBailey and Lawson by Mrs. Eckborr,who lost heavily upon the mortgage

other plans on foot for tho sendingof a moving picture outfit throughoutthe Hllo and Hamakua districts, so

glvo shows at all tho plantations, nisplan Is to havo a big automobilewhich will carry his comploto outfitand to make arraugoments with thovarious managers by which ho canuso tho storehouses fo theaters. He

proposes to advertise by Bonding up

which sho took from tho theatrical big kites with signs tolling of hispioneers in this city. show, printed In Japanoso, English,

In addition to this Fernandez has Hawaiian and Russian. Small ndnils- -

made arrangements for tho running sion fees will 1)0 charged, but it is

of a show cvory Saturday night ntPahoa, In which ho has been glvon (Continued on Pago Sixteen.)

unm luiwniiuiiiiiiiiim

The Onlookeray man& at the

T ailorShoplinuiinirniiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiriliittininiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiriiniiiiiiiiiiitiitiitiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiitiiii iitirr?

Hie reported appearance o tile sea-serpe- nt last week off the Koo- -

lau coast interested me deeply. I had felt for a lone while that it wasonly a question of time before the great sea-sna- would be recordedoit tucse islands. It is true I almost lost hope after the annihilation ofcompounds by the liquor commissioners, btit the announcement of theEagles annual merrymaking brought the matter to mind again.

. The sea-serpe- nt was simply bound to come to us. These islandsarc outside the They growno gooseberries, cither giant or dwarf, and it is a geological impossi-bility for a toad to be found alive in a mass of rock where it had probably been imbedded for thousand years. Therefore it had to bethe sea-serpe- nt or nothing.

I have taken pains to enquire, further into the muu-kai- 's appearance in Kaluanui harbor and find that several weremade in the article in an afternoon paper which heralded its discovcrvFor instance the article said that the creature "was as thick as a man'sleg in its thickest part." I gather on indisputable authority that itsgirlli aniKisliips was as great as that or an adult dray-hors- e.

1 hen again its eyes its awful eyes. 1 heir baleful glare was seenfar wireless station where the operater wire- - do hereby saloons crowds there-lcssc- d

Honolulu that coming way the granting further to by created are menaceand showing a blinding search-lig- ht

the

five

The scaly terror with the bristling man does not seem to have con-fined its appetite to fish as stated in the paper. My informant, in whoseveracity have the greatest confidence, tells me that the muu-ka- i' hasa decided pork-toot- h and that it has worked much havoc among thenogs which teed along tne snore near liauuia at the time of ebb-tid- e

notice

away there, boozyfrom

business

entire population of were last Stindav healthy, order.to do Pacific'by frantic They rushed out of their grass-hous- es think-- stop issuance of further licenses, "We protest

posse of from Honolulu were raiding the pai-ka- u and respectfully ask your sellgame ai xiuji nail; aim Luiuuiiig uic vnnuun;ui iur evidence.

Nothing of the kind. The squeals seemed to sound further and fur-ther seawards. What could it be? No one knew. No one daredhazard suggestion, except Sam Hanahula who stoutly declared thatthe'dcvil had come for one, Mrs. Huhunuiloa, and was taking her homewith him. The crowd decided unanimously that this was too goodto be true.

Suddenly dreadful greenish light flared near the outer reef andthe fearsome Muu-k- ai was for moment revealed. It was swimmintrwith its of the and in Jr-- . W.

from which bloody saliva dripped, it held hog whose squeals grewever fainter and fainter. The light, which was simply the glare of themuu-kai- 's cyes, shone as the creature winked whenroller sent the salt spray up. All at once the light wasThe serpent had dive'd to its cave underneath the reef, there tofeast in peace on the swine.

There was weeping and lamentation in Ilauulu next day for itwas found that the pig filched from the shore by the muu-ka- i was theblack and white kahuna pig of the to lose which indicatesdisaster.

At present, learn that' the village of Ilauulu still in state ofterror. The natives refuse to go to the and not foot-fall printed along the beach after sunset. Even the Japanese okole-ha- o

distillers from Punaluu Valley have refused to place the usualweekly order' of ot extract in the lantana thicket by WilliePeterson's beach house, thimr which have not failed do foryears, in fact since became Macao, villagers saloonare sullermg greatly consequence.

There possibility that the muu-k- ai has been attracted to thesewaters by the of the aviators, but this is of course matter

the merest conjecture. Let devoutly hope that if tiiis thethe t's activity will be of life-savin- g nature.

T. McCants Stewart's letter in the Star was interesting to degree,but it serves show that his private news wire from Honolulu musthave long since got crossed with bucket-sho- p line. Apparently hethinks that Honolulu is about played out. He seems to have heard-tha- t

some gigantic earthquake has destroyed the town and thatthe plague has attacked the survivors. McCants mourns forold friends, but he might as well cheer up. We're here, alive andkicking in the same old way. John Lang still running forStewart's fellow Scots are still celebrating Burns' birthday andhearing Breckons reply to the toast to "The President." There

new coon in town. The same old crowd is enjoying the advantagesof city and county government at only $500,000 more cost to the tax-payers. Maunalei still on the map, doziifg over memories of itsreceivership. George McClellan able be about but has gothis black eye. Yardley has left but he could come back if McCantscouldn't get along,-withou- t him. George Davis doing well, thankyou, and can still be heard from peak to peak. Jack Lucas' cusswordsspring to life as naturally as ever. Some white mail jias McCantsold place at church suppers but might be willing to make room if therest were. The editorship of the Advertiser lias changed andcullud brother could up stairs now having his finer sensi-bilities when he offered the manuscript of his latest speech.Alabama Mitchell still immersed in affairs. The Cunha art galleryhas been enriched, since McCants left, with some of Yardley 's bestsketches, but the place looks Kalihi property Onthe whole His Honor, Mr. Justice Stewart, of Liberia, would not findthe old place so changed after all. P. S. Colonel Knox wishes to beremembered.

or Myers is man of sense, and being out of office he.can talk about the ways of government with candor. Hear him; or,at least, hear somebody else reports his views in. my tailor shop.

"One of these efficiency men we know about could take hold ofmanagement here and put it on basis that would save

lot of money to the taxpayers. Counting in the long vacations, therecesses, fifty-tw- o Saturdays and the better part of the afternoon ofeach working day, the1 schools are closcd'half the time. And yet wehear that schools in the city ar.c overcrowded and that others must bebuilt to relieve the pressure.

"An efficiency man would keep the schools open eight hours dayand work two shifts of pupils, some coming in morning and somein the afternoon. Then all would be accommodated and there would

ample room in the schools we have for the whole school-goin- g pointlation. In case the teachers objected to the eight-ho- ur day with whichalmost everyone else has to be satisfied, then lengthen the terms at theexpense of the long vacation and shorten the daily stunt little. Threemonth arc absurd. Nobody else gets them.

agfee with Mr. Myers as most men do with anybody who makescommon-sens- e suggestion. In America, an immense amount of time

is wasted in getting an education, and foreign boys are ready for college at fourteen fifteen, when our average is eighteen. The European lads have no short hours and long vacations. They are "kept akit, as Macaulay was, who could write verse m Greek when he waslad in Here wc let children out of school early in the

RIO AND HAMAKUA T

HOT PROTESTS

AGAINST

HILO, Juno 13. That Hllo has all on last June, that no new licensestho liquor licenses it needs, and that be granted in this county."

will! to tho cleanliness of submitted,FREDERICK S. LYMAN,

tho town If no now liconscs are grant- -Tho text of Judge Lyman s second

ed at tho coming annual meeting of tho ,)rotcst ag foIowg.board of liquor license "Vo have seen your notices of thois the opinion of a number of llilo peo- - sovoral applications ror licenses to sellpie, many whom have signed a Intoxicating liquors In the county oftest on th6 subject which was clrculat- - Hawaii; tho number is nppalllng.ed last week by Mr. SIsson. The toxt "We would call to the of thoof this document is as follows: board, tho centralization of siloonson

"We, tho citizens and Front street near the foot of Churchtaxpayers of tho City of Hllo. County Rlreot. thnrn linlnir nn less thnri fnltn

as as the at Kuliuku j of Hawaii, protest against thoto a war-shi- p was up Kahana j of any licenses at times a to

1

thev

case

our

shall

pro- -

sull intoxicating liquors, of whatever passers by on the streets.class, for tho reason that have at "The great number of liquor saloonspresent a sufficient number places now In existenco and doingwhere- liquor is dispensed, throughout tho Hawaii arohouses, saloons and hotels. blot disgrace to the fair namo

"Our aim Is to keep Hllo clean and 0f our territory! 'The Paradise of thoThe Mauulu awakened ' and in so must !M

night squeals. j the earnestly against hav-ing that a police Honorable ing any new licenses granted to

-- a . t r ' ..1 l .. t. .. i . : r . . is

a

aa

luckless

village,

is

is

presenceis

purely

nearlybubonic

is mayor.Bobby

Bobbyis

is

is

withoutshocked

is

natural. -- rising.

school business

vacations

or

contribute

of

weofwholesale territory ot

we

Hoard to cooperate with us in this nnt-- intoxicating liquors; and ask tho boardtor" to continue the good rule adopted somo

Among those who had signed tho two years ago, and acted on last June,protest when seen were tho following: that no new-licen- be granted in thoE. H. Moses, .E. N. Ueyo, Par-- county of Hawaii; also ask that anysons, N. C. Wl'llfong, H. H. Morehead, the present licensees found by yourJ. H. Borron, Adam Lindsay, Geo. H. inspector others to have been

E. E. Richards, H. C. Cress- - ting the laws, tho of your hon-ma- n,

W. K. Kagsdalo, W. H. Beers, .orablo board, shall have their licenseshead far out water its dagger-toothe-d maw, is L- - Desha C. E. Brown, G. revoked

a

intermittently aextinguished.

coral

I afishing-groun- ds a

closea to

in v

is aa

usa

ato

a

all

a

isto over

I

go

is

a

as

aa

a

a

Ia

aknickerbockers.

OF

itUespectfully

,g

commissioners,

undersigned,

a ! a !

S. D. woof

or viola-William- s,

or

Kaihenui, Chas. H. Swain, J. K. Kai, "You are men, and wo ask, and be- -

W. K. Kalaiwaa, J. C. Mocine, D. S. Hevo that you will do all that is in yourBowman, J. S. Cacercs, A. M. Cabrin- - power to lessen or to remove thisha, C. H. Kluegel, A. S. LeBaron Gur- - dlsgTace to our country, is tho earn-ne-

M. M. Springer, Geo. L. Desha, est request of yours sincerely." '

Sr., S. L. Desha, Sr., C. M. Hudson, FREDERICK S. LYMAN.E. G. da Sllva and others. Manager Smith of the Paauhau Sirar

Two protests have been sent to tho P'antation Co. has sent the followingboard by Judge F. S. Lyman. Their protest to tho board:text is as follows: , R. A. LYMAN,

Hllo, Hawaii, Juno 3, 1911. Secretary, Board of LiCinso.rTo tho Honorable Board of License ' Commissioner, Hllo,

Commissioners for the County of Ha- - L'iar fir:wail, T. H. "On behalf of tho Paauhau Sugar

Gentlemen: Company I have to protestWc have seen your notice of an ap- - against a license being granted to

Dr. Carter lord of and the 1'"cation t0 establish n second class Jose Andrade "oi a op

of

him

the

lie

rules

saloon to sell intoxicating liquors at 1'aau'uu.tho junction of Richardson, Bridge and ".nitre is already one saloon oaVolcano streets, in tho town of Hllo.. Paauhau viz. Wm. Heeb. Kalopa. and

"We strongly protest against having then there is the saloon at Honokaa.any saloon at that central point. Andrade Intends to have his saloon

"Thero are now too many saloons In about half way between the two whichHilo for the good ot tho community; means that there would be three sal- -

an ynew license would bo a 'black eye' onus licensed within a distance otto our town, and especially at such a about three miles.central point. "I think tho population of tho dls- -

"Our town Is not a mouutain mining trict scarcely wnrrjints so many salooncamp that needs to "bo warmed up by licenses. especially as thero is now amany saloons ! ! ! wo have far too good supply of cold mountain water Inmany saloons now for our warm cllm- - tho Hamakua Ditch."ate. Yours truly.

"Wo earnestly ask the board of com- - ALEX. SMITH,missloners to continue the good rulo Manager, Paauhau Sugar Plantationadopted somo two years ago and acted Co.

day and give all hands an idle summer. It simply shows how we clingto old customs when the occasion or them lias gone. In old New Eng-land days, when the American school system originated, the boys andgirls had to be home early to do the chores on the farm and help motherabout the house. So school "let out" to accommodate. During sum-mer, with its planting, hoeing and cropping, work on the farm redou-bled and the whole family had to turn in, the boys to rake aand gleanand do errands and the girls to help prepare the meals or take care ofbaby, look after the hens and milk. There was "plenty doing" fromearly June until and the schoolmaster himself got achance to cam wages in tiic hayfield. That was the sole cause of thelong vacalioji; but in all the cities and big towns the short day andlong vacation custom seems as fixed as it is in the rural districts andnobody stops to think how absurd it has become. Look at it here,where the whole thing is a farce, yet custom has made it so sacredthat I suppose, if the efficiency man came to Honolulu to suggest thereform the teachers would go on a strike.

PUBLIC SERVICE

OFFICERS NAMED

An election of officers of tho Public Service Association was holdyesterday, Governor Walter F. Frearwas olected houorablo chairman, W.A. Bryan of tho Collego of Hawaii,secretary and director, and W. IL I

and any organiza-tion for any

but thoof tho association

COS PALL

LINE WITH

NGREASE SALOONS

In tho hands of thoso organizationssubscribing to tho maintenance oftho rooms. Tho directors yesterday

) formally W. A. thoof manager of tho Associa-

tion affairs and requested him todraw up a general plan for approval.It Is understood that tho of

will to ProfessorBryan publicwork during tho tlmo not occupiedby his collego

Castlo Tho sevorai organ-- ' Firo Firo Firo Works,lzatlons that compose tho Public Sor-- !

Millly "ovoltlos. Paper Balloons. Manyvice Association oach elect ono of j

slzos- - A- - n- - Arloigh & Co. Ltd., Hotelboard of directors. Tho rooms j ncnr

of tho association nro for tho froo. Graduation oxorelsos ninrnuso of tho public

formed kind of publicsorvico, direction of af-

fairs will romaln

tendered Bryanposition

CollegoHawaii consont

entering tho sorvico

duties.

treasuror. Works. Works,

thowlU'tnko

tho

at St. Louis College at S o'clock thisfvonlng, for which Invitation cardsliavo boeu Issued by tho faculty andgraduating class.

Page 10: AVIATOR II 5IIIS...omul, brown spot of decay on the stand that unless interest Is shown In Iruit. As soon as the owners of trees this matter there will be very little notice this,

TEN THE HAWAIIAN STAR, SATURDAY, JUND 17, 1911.

8fe 30"W8mshSix Cylinder for FourQdinder

4800.! Fourteenth Annual Announcement 3500.

"48" Six Car, $4800.

LONDON, Juno 3. Complete po-

lice regulations for the traffic on Cor-- 1

onation Day and for tho royal pro-

cession on June 23 were Issued thisweek and Indicate tho enormous dlf;

the authorities have in deal-

ing with tho crowds which will beout to witness the pageantry. Theyalso show that the bulk of the spec-

tators will have no very pleasanttime waiting several hours for a sightof the procession.

Tho troopers of whom 00,000 willbo gathered in Lond6n on CoronationJJay, under tho command of LordKitchener, will take up positions at7:15 a. m. The strongly rec-

ommend that even tlcketholders forseats along tho lino of tho routereach their seats before that hour, asif they arrive later tho denso crowdson tho sidewalks may prevent themfrom reaching the places they havepaid for.

Vehicular traffic, except 'in certainspecified cases, is prohibited after4 a. m.

In consequence of tho expresseddesire of King George, two represen-tatives of the trade unions have beenofficially invited to attend tho coro-

nation in Westminster Abbey. ThoParliamentary Committee of thoTrades Union Congress has decidedto accept tho Invitation, despitestrong protests from extremo Social-ists. This decision, coupled with thenppcaranco of labor leaders at var-

ious social functions lately, is takenas an indication that tho labor move-ment, under tho inlluenco of RamsayMncdonald, Is rapidly separating It-

self from tho Socialist extremists.Royal Ball Without King.

Undor tho now regimo tho list ofundesirables Is a long one wheneveru party Is given to meet tho King and

dancing began.

iocomoDiie stanaara oi

the resulted continued efforts the

Slaving attained presentthe Locomobile the most American Car Quiet, Comfortable, Perfectdetail.

The Six Locomobile, by virtue of its excellent performances 1911, hasa new standard Six construction. Realizing the demand on

the part of the present day motorist for comfort automobiling, havecareful study and investigation for the purpose of this Car the last

word Luxury.

The improvements that we have this direction produce Ease and Comforthitherto unknown motoring. As an the rear seat cushions and

Cylinder Touring Car are each provided with upholstering leninches deep as soft and restful as the easiest library Passengers seatedlow the car, which produces a feeling of security.

Our Five Passenger Six is the most perfect combination ofLuxury and Style yet offered this popular type of body. The passengerscarried on the rear seat, which has upholstering inches lhic, cushion and back.We also make Four Passenger Torpedo upholstered in the same luxurious manner.The combination of advantages offered only in the Locomobile Shaft Drive Sixmakes-i- t

Perfect Machine a Perfect Vehicle.

The Six Cylinder Type its highest development.

The "30" Locomobile, Four Cylinders. This reliable and convenient five passenger shaft-driv-

car will be marketed 1912 without excepting increased attention to details of finish andequipment. Price $3500.

1912 Locomobile Models are equipped with High Tension Ignition, Demountable Rims,and Top. The customer is given his choice of color. More complete information on application.

J3--

The Cylinder Touring Interchangeable Tires,

PREPARING FOR CORONATION

Sixty Thousand Troops on Duty LordKitchener Will Command Some

Police Warnings BritishCrowns on View

Acuities

police

Queen, and tho ball arranged In hon-or of their Majesties at DevonshireHouse on Wednesday (Derby) nightwas for those leftout than for those invited.

As it happened tho King and Queenkept away from tho dance by

tho death of the King's great-uncl-

Prince John of Glucksberg.Queen carried out her original intention of dining at DevonshireHouse, but went away before tho

As the Invitations were "to meettho King and Queen," tho most ap-peared In court dress and decorationswero general. At midnight thowas a brilliant and tho Jewelsworn gorgeous, but tho wholeaffair was liko tho play of "Hamlet"without tho noble Dane.

In no circle was the censorshln sostrictly exercised as In the Americancircle. embassy peoplo In-

vited, but few others, and therowas much weeping and gnashing ofteeth among those left as thoomissions give a foretaste of what isin store for of thoso held Inhonor In former days.

Lady Granard (Beatrico Mills) wastho only woman of American birthnt tho dinner. Sho was wearing anImmense number of magnificent jew-els, with a lovely china toilet.

American Ambassador and Mrs.Whitelaw Roid and other members oftho embassy In for tho ball.Mrs. Whitelaw Reld had a dlamoirlstomachor with a whito dress em-broidered In closely sot black and

diamante, a form of decorationombelllshes all her gowns

season. Sho many fine dia-monds and a tlarra and dlvioro.

Duchess of Roxburgho waswearing Immense diamonds and

L i

r? into TL. i i m mi . -- i 'J i t k : i ..z. i ne will set a new i.uxury m inuiui

cars.

Our success past from our to makeLocomobile the best built car in America.

this mechanical superiority, our aim is to makeluxurious in

Cylinder inestablished in Cylinder

increased wemade making

in

made inin instance, high

backs in our Sixchair. are

in

Cylinder Torpedoin are

tena

-

A -

' v

for change,

All

:

noteworthy moro

were

The

sceneone,

were

The werovery

out,

some

bluoTho

camo

graythat this

wore

Tho

.

i 1

in

in

in

pearls of fabulous value, with apeach satin dress embroidered Innovel fashion.

Mrs. Waldorf Astor was at tho

centre frontpiece

The value crown

dance with her husliand and was a' estimatcd at

little figure white, with Its Is one and a half pounds,rows of matchless

Abbey Seat for Taft.Mr. and Mrs. Taft, and

of tho President, were attho Duchess of Devonshire's ball, ar-riving with the Whitelaw fteids, nnd

The LCC0M0BILE Co;

America

Seta Carriage Co., Ltiflieots, Hawaiian Man's

tho of the immediatelyanother of the Cullinan

of this Is750,000 ($3,750,000).

dainty in weightpearls.

C. P.brother

while the weight of tho King's crownis three and a

SIKH CHIEF IN LONDON.May 24.

visitors from the British oversea do- -

came under the special notice of the minions have already begun toguests, who, by the way, wero j rlvo in Among ihose a most

tho Duke and Duchess of picturesque personality Is. the Maha-an- d

their very lively- - and pretty j rajah of Patiala, the SikhPrincess Patricia, who has cn'ef of Northern India,

refused two Kings In His Highness is a man of finePrinco Arthur, of Connaught, Prln-- ' physique and commanding presence,cess Christian and her daughter, and Ho is a powerful ruler and of suffl-Princ- o

Alexander of Teck and his cient Importance to be entitled to apretty wife, with a few, other minor salute of seventeen guns,semi-roya- l folk. i He was gorgeously arrayed In rich

Mr. Taft will seo tho coronation, flowored silk of bright hue, and at--

arrangoments having been made for traded a great deal of attention asa seat for him among the royal per-'h- e strode down tho railway stationsonages representing foreign coun- - platform to his motor car wearingtrlcs- - about his neck nnd uppu his chest n

The staircase at Devonshire House garland of real roses. Members ofis a feature and women in exquisite his distinguished-lookin- g suite alsotoilets it with their attend- - attracted much notice,ant escorts gave the final touch to RECALL COURTESY TO SULTAN,tho white winding with its j Juno 3. The Britishormolu balustrado and crystal rail, government's Invitation to Moroccothe only floral of which to send a special Ambassador to thowero climbing pink roses around tho coronation of King George has beenwindows. withdrawn, and the Foreign Offlco

BRITISH ON VIEW. 'has notified El MokrI, who had been'

Juno 3. King George's to represent Sultan MulalImperial crown and tho new crown Hafld, that he will not be received,which has been designed for Queen I This action wasjbrought about byMary for tho coronation wero exhibit- - tho cruelty with which tho Sultan'sed this week by Barrards, tho crown ' troops treated women and childrenjewelers. recent

King's crown, so far as tho soldiers captured many womenprecious stones, framework, girls In tho neighboring villages

summit aro Is exactly '

thorn on streets ofas it was nt tho coronntlon, but! CORONATIONit lengthened, as King 27. CommissionerGeorge's is narrower long- - of Police Issued a notlco

his father's. to Londoners visitors"estimated value of tho

Is 1,500,000 ($7,500,000). It contahiBa sapphire of Edwardtho Confessor, uncut ruby whichtho Black Princo received thoKing of Prance, a piece of thoCullinan diamond.

Queen Mary's Is entirelynow Is composed of platinumdiamonds. Tho Kohlnoor figures i in

j:. I

of

diamond.

pounds.

LONDON, Coronation

London.Connaught

'leadingdaughter,

marriago;

mounting

stairway, LONDON,

adornments

CROWNS,LONDON, designated

.during tho rnld from Fez.Tho and

tho and andthe concerned, sold tho Fez

last DANGERS,has been LONDON, May

head and has "of ad-e- r

than vice and apro- -

Tho crown

from the ringtho

fromaud

crownand and

over

half

Tho

pos of tho coming coronation festiv-ities.

Holders of tickets for seats athouses or stands on tho routo of thoprocession nro strongly urged to dls-char-

their vohlcles at some pointwell outsldo tho routo, nnd to walkto their seats, as considerable con-

fusion and difficulty Is likely to beexperienced If largo numbers of ve- -

Victoria.

Features of the SixCylinder

Motor DpsIrii Tho motor Is so designed nnd built that withn cylinder boro of 4 inches 70 horsepower Is obtained on test.This represents tho utmost power obtainable from this size ofcylinder without nffectlng reliability. Cylinders are designedspecially for the Six and have largo valves and quiet valvolifters.

Quietness Detail changes in tho motor and rear axlo makefor greatly increased quietness In tho Loconiobilb Six.

.Moderate Weight Tho Locomobllo Six, with possibly oneexception, Is the lightest seven-passenge- r, car. Wohave attained this progress nnd refinement by seven years'study and development of the finest alloy steels. Ono brakehorsepower Is provided for every fifty-seve- n pounds of weight.

Fuel Economy The Locomobile Six las frequently beendriven twelve miles on a gallon of fuel. This Is well In advanceof ordinary er performance. A customer writes thathe drove his Locomobile Six over the mountains from LosAngeles to Santa Barbara with seven passengers, averagingeleven miles to a gallon of fuel. Another customer writes thatho drove his Six Torpedo over fourteen miles on a gallon offuel. Such economy Is due to our special carburetor designand to moderate weight.

Tire Economy Ordlnnrlly n powerful sl.v Is n burden throughtire expense Involved. The Locomobile Six, however, is eco-nomical In tire wear. "The Speedometer shows four thousandmiles. The original tires arc still on tho car nnd from appear-ances you would not think they had been driven 1000 miles."The foregoing report Is on one of the first Sixes delivered.Locomobile tire economy Is due to moderate weight and scien-tific balance of weight; also to the free action of the differen-tial when turning a corner, thus preventing any grinding actionon the rubber. Tho Locomobile differential never binds underany conditions of road operation.

Strength of Construction Bronze Instead of aluminum Isused for the motor base and gear box. It Is three times asstrong as tho aluminum ordinarily used for the purpose onother cars. The axles and steering gear are very .strong andsafe. The car throughout is built from carefully designedparts made In the Locomobile factory from material speciallyselected for each part. The Locomobile has always been knownfor Us safety and strength.

Riding Qualities The Locomobile Six has wondeiful ridingqualities perfect comfort and steadiness. No' swerving fromside to side when traveling at speed. The superb riding quali-ties of our Six aro due largely to the fact that power does notpass through the springs. Thus Ihey aro free to act. Rearsprings cannot give maximum comfort when they act as dis-

tance rods. Tho three-quart- elliptic rear springs are shackledat both ends so that they have full play. All springs are madoof tho finest spring steel.

Rear Axle Construction Tho rear housing Is provided witha hand hole, affording ease of Inspection of tho driving gears.Rear axle tubes are alloy steel, without brazing a superiorconstruction peculiar to tho Locomobile.

Other Special Features The Multiple Disc Clutch Is verysimple and may bo removed as a unit without disturbing any-thing else. A tilling System provides perfect,motor lubrication. Grease Cups at all wearing parts on tho1chassis eliminate dirty oil cups and insure perfect lubrication.The Transmission provides four speeds and reverse and thoconstruction is so durable that gear trouble Is absolutely elimi-nated. Universal Joints run over 5000 miles without attentionto lubrication. The lionnet is very short, saving room andobviating the clumsy appearance of other Sixes. Extra Tiresare carried at the rear. Running Hoards are clear on both sides.

hides aro used, as "ranking" whenempty can not be guaranteed.

With remarkable minuteness thenotice also calls the attention of thepublic to the dangers arising from:

(a) Unsafe balconies, copings",area railings and gratings on foot-ways.

(b) Decorations being fastened tochimney stacks and copings withoutduo examination to render them safe.

to sister,on omnl-:PatrIci-

inprincess,

(u) Deposit of glass bottles inthoroughfares.

(e) Matches, cigar and cigarettethrown down on stands or

among the crowd.(f) Hatpins projecting from head-

dresses.(g) Young children and per-

sons In crowds, especiallyduring tho illuminations.'

(h) Crowds at openingsto and corners of streets along the

of the processions. pub-

lic aro urged to avoid this,and to distribute alongtho footways.

me ponce in tneir neavyit isyounger members of her house.

PLIGHT OF KING'S COUSIN.

is where Princo bo at

The Duke of Connaught, Kinguncle, has always earned his living asa keen and capable soldier, andPrince Arthur, his son, is earning hisliving in the way. But as faras the coronation .concerned, he Isas much out of It a,s any other heir to:i peerage, for that Is all he is.

What makes Prince Arthur feel hisposition more keenly ish is a nobodv as far as thn

(c) Decorations so fixed as bo,tlon , concerned, his Princessdangerous to persons riding will take part it as a royal' ' ranking as a member of

ends

feeblegetting

collecting

routes Thoespecially

themselves

assist tasK,suggested.

oijly grandson

came

thatenrnnn.

King immediate family. Herstatus was established by a specialorder Issued by King placing-th- e

ladies of branches of thoroyal house in this enviable

Prince might bo made aduke, but that would causo all sorts ofheartburnings. He would be a royalduke, of course, equal in rank with hisfather, and with no Income to keepup the dignity.

It looks that Princo Ar-thur will have to be left out of thecoronation, but perhaps King Georgewill find a way out.

tneso ana otner matters win greatly Busy ,0Iors r) the sea

royal

Day and year nnd nnnVnrvBuilding In tho joyous light,Building through the dreary night.P ant and tree and and lear.Pillar, rock, and rosy rooft -

T.nNinnM. Jimo 3. Otm nf tho tutor. ' Rusy tollers In tho sea." JJay ' year ami century,cstlng side Issues of tho coronation Is Uncomplaining of your task

the podtion of Princo Arthur of Con-- , fflyB Ziy tSJim aSk'

naught, the first cousin of the king,. Nature's ordered law and will!and, with tho exception of King' Busy tollers in tho sea.ueorgo nimssir, nnu

surviving

branch

the kalsor, the 5ny j11"! year and century,I'n: from reach of human trazeof Qucfcn Without thought of blame orwalse..humble, but each ono

Tho question that is being discussedArthur will

George's

is

although

George's

Edward,junior

position.Arthur

probabls

Working till his llfo Is done!

Busy tollers in tho sen.i..r)ay all(l yenr arid centurypnrnnntlnn nfitMv hnr hop nr tint in will -- 111 llliull tn niitnn ulm.i nit.ttake any part, In it. Prince Arthur Till some day with nwo wo standhimself does not know, and ho feels a," " " l""'"ie mni!rlittle hurt that tho situation has not! -

been cleared up before now. No one SAYS WOMAN NEEDS

I

Zltolla Cocko.

j knows but King George, and to fa'ri $12 A WEEK TO LIVE,h? has not told. BOSTON, Juno 12. "No working

Although ho Is a princo of tho blood woman can possibly live In slmplolioyal and, with tho exception of his comfort on less than tl2 a wpnir" infather, tho only adult princo of the clored Mrs. Itaymond of Chi-bloo- d

In England, Princo Arthur has cago today. Mrs. Itolnm s jn Boston!no ofllcialM'osltlon. England is moro to attend tho national conference of

democratic than most European women's trade union ieigued of whichstates and does not do much for thsshe Is president.

Page 11: AVIATOR II 5IIIS...omul, brown spot of decay on the stand that unless interest Is shown In Iruit. As soon as the owners of trees this matter there will be very little notice this,

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Tl Geo. R. Carter DirectorC. H, Cooke Dlreotoift. A. Cooke Director

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TELEPHONE 2171.

An AdventureAmong Cannibals

By Captain R. W. Nye.Off Lunble Island, October 28, 18D8,

at 3 a. m., as tho bluff-bowe- d

whaler Governor Carver canio instays the littlo form of a boy slippeddown tho outer bobstny, took to thewater and struck out for shore, dis-

tant about a mil and a half. Thonight was pitch dark, but the surf on

tho beach cotfld bo heard as the windwas light, and the boy judged his dis-

tance to be loss than it really was.He had been Hogged most unmerci-fully by the captain a few days beforewith tho end of the main topgallantsheet whip and had beon kicked andcuffed from one end of the ship to theother. He was only a littlo under 13

years of ago and did not care whetherho lived or died, for the ship was aHvlng hell to him.

As he dropped into tho water andHie ship filled away on tho off Bhoro

tack he breathed a prayer to heaventhat God might glvo him the strength,wind and endurance to reach shore.He struck out with long, steadystrokes; the water was nice and warmand he was a fine swimmer, for at theplace where he was brought up theboys were in the water half tho timeIn the summer.

The Ship Had Vanished.Stroke after stroke ho gave and

looked over his should into the dark-

ness; tho ship had vanished. Ho

breathed a sigh of relief and mur-

mured, "Thank God. they did not missme and lower a boat. I guess I amnow. clear of that floating hell."

Ho had heard trom tho captain andofficers when conversing at the tablewhen he was cabin boy about tho can-

nibals on some of the island's. In theMalay Archipelago, and had listenedwith wonder and fear. All this camehome to .him as he swam silentlyalong. "Better take my chances withthose people than live the life of adog among my own," thought he.

Swimming steadily with a long,

easy Btroke, at times he saw thebright streak of phosphorus as a fish

of some kind shot through the water.He was getting somewhat tired, so hestripped off his clothes, which wereonly dungarees, and being relieved ottheir weight, he gained fresh vigor.His hands shot out ahead and sit.

every stroke his body stretched to Itsfull length. Ashe slipped through Uewater ho heard tho surf plainly on thereef as it rolled gently In toward theshore.

"If I can only strike a passage be-

tween tho coral so it will not scratchmo up- it will bo fine. I wish it wouldbreak daylight so I could see how faroff I am, but it must lack an hour ormore yet."

Louder and louder roared tho surfon the reef, and ho could see tne whiteline of breakers.

"Almost there," he said, and an-

other prayer was breathed as ho tookthe outside breaker. "God help me!"and ho gritted his teeth as the

breaker carrted him along at a tre-

mendous speed and broke over his

head. "Now for tho next," ho mut-

tered, as he regained some of his lo'st

wind. Everything was now a white,seething foam, his strength was fail-

ing, his breath getting short. "Oh,

God!" and consciousness left him as

a tremendous roller came along,

picked him up and heaved him inclean over the reef.

Found by Two Girls.Just after sunrise two young native

girls were passing along the beach to

take their morning plunge. They

were the king's daughters."What Is that," said tho younger

one, "lying out on the sand pit? Itlooks like a body, but it is white."They had never seen a white man, buthad heard tho old men of the tribe say

there was such a race of people.They soon reached the spot whero

lay the object of their curiosity.They put their hands on him and drewtheir fingers over his skm to see if itwas painted.

" 'Tis a white boy," said Tikat thoyounger.

"Yes, it is one of the race we haveheard about," said Lua. "Ho Is alive.Let's roll him over and look at hisface."

As they rolled him over a groancame from tho boy and, relloved of thesalt water, ho soon opened his eyes,stared in wonder Into the two faces oftho young girls, murmured In English,

Whore am 1?" and dropped off Into a

dead faint again. Ono of tho girls ranto tho vlllngo, told the king ot .theirfind and asked for a couple of men tobring him in.

Lua, tho elder, remained with thoboy, rolled the water out of him, holdhis head and now and then rubbed hernose against his, tho manner of atrienuiy greeting uiuuuk inu buvububIn thoso days. .

It was not long beforo a lot of na

THH HAWAIIAN BTAft, SATURDAY, JUNE 17, 1911.

tives came and took him up and carrled him to the village, the two girlswalking one on each side. All tho natlves drow their fingers over his bodyand looked at their tips and chntteredamong themselves. Both girls lookedon tho boy as he lay on tho rudestretcher and at times, cast glances ateach other as if to say, "ho is mine."

Asked for His Life.As the party approached tho village

tho old king looked out from thobungalow that was stuck up on stiltsand gave the command to bring himinside. Tho Princesses Tlka and Luabegged that his life bo spared nnd hobo given to them. Tho old king lovedhis two daughters and it was littlothey asked for that they did not get.

Tho boy regained his senses afteran hour or so and was rubbed downwith cocoanut oil and a fancy grasstappa encircled his loins, all the cloth-ing any one'woro on tho Island.

Tho best of food to bo had was givento tho boy and no young prince of Uoroyal blood of a civilized country wastreated with more respect. He was thoIdol of the Island, "tho White God," ashe was called, and the toy of thePrincesses Lua and Tlka, who lovedhim in their wild way. The nativesbent the knee and put their hand totheir forehead with bowed head as thewhite God passed, always in companywith otio or both of tho princesses. Itwas like coming out of Hades for theboy and all his fears had vanishedlike a bad dream.

The tom-tom- s were beating and thowild, weird war chant was ringingover the water. The largo war canoeswe're returning from a battle with v

neighboring island tribe, lnd were re-

turning home victorious. They hadbeen away over two weeks and tho oldmen and women feared 'that they hadbeen taken and killed.

As wis the cusjom in those days, allcaptives were to be put to death anda great festhal held among the victor-ious combatants. Spears, bows and ar-

rows, also that terrible Malay krecsc,were the weapons used.

The whole ot the remaining part ofthe tribe congregated on the beach, thewhite God and the two princesses citheir head. Ding-dong-, tom-to- ana"Lua Noua Jaja" rasa si ang il, rosetho wild chant plalne rand plainer asthe canoes drew nearer. The boy hadbeen a captive among them now fortlx months and could speak tho laukuago quite fluently. He was litllaless than a captive, for he was alwaysunder surveillance of one or both thoprincesses.

"What it is, Lua?" asked the boy."What?" asked Tika."Why, the meaning of this music

and chanting?"'Why, don't you know? It is the

song of victory. They have a lot ofprisoners and there will be a greatfeast."

A Cannibal Feast.The boy shuddered as ho thought of

what he had heard at the cabin tablefrom the cruel captain and his officers.He almost wished himself back thereagain.

The large canoes landed on thebeach, out leaped the warriors, the oldking at their head. He approachedhis daughters and the native nose rubwas given; tho white God receivedone, which was unpleasant to him, buthe had to stand for it.

Sixteen captives were brought onshore, bound hand and foot. Fourwere young girls not over 1G years ofage, and not bad looking, their hairhanging burning brightly. Sixteenhardwood stakes sharpened at the up-

per end were stuck In tho ground. Thowild, weird death chant with tho muf-

fled tom-tom- s sounded on the tropicalnight air. A boy of a color differentfrom any of the rest, on his kneespleadlng.beggingattheold king's feetto spare those young girls' lives; aprincess kneels at each side of theboy interceding and begging that hisboon be granted.

Tho savage king's face relented, anda smllo passed over it. "Well, woll,children, since you grieve and beg somuch for .their lives, they shall bospared, but on ono considerationthey shall be your slaves."

Four stakes wore taken up and thoremaining twelve wore divided at anequal distance to form, tho circlo. Thogirls wero released and turned over totho princesses, who took chargeof them,

Tho rest of tho captives wero ontheir knees, bound, nnd heads bowedin front of each stake. Tho king d

tho circlo, tho boy nnd his twoguards stood on tho outside. Tho oldking gavo somo command tho heads-man swings that terrible, long, hoavykreeso but let us close our oyos onthe scene and forget It, as tho boy Isstill tryjng to do nftor a lapso of fiftyyears.

i Bro. Benjamin says:havo been literally dragged from death's door nnd cured; others have beon nlllng for years and hadgiven tip hopo until cured by my medicines. I havo cured thousands on tho but I novortheir names hero. I profer to glvo tho names prominent people wo have cured who llvo hero,

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ESC E FROM

GULF SHARKS

Ever since Arlstotlo's time, whentwo men descended into "deep water"if a "kettle," diving has been a dan-gerous affair. Tho divers' dangers arcthreefold: lib is in danger descending,for then he may bo literally "swal-lowed" by the pressure of tho internalair; and ho is In danger ascending,for then ho is subject to tho "bends,"which, if the exact opposite, is exactlyas bad; and, If neither "swallowed''nor "bent" by tho atmospheric pres-sure, he is frequently In danger ofboth from somo passing whale or man-eatin- g

shark. The modern diver isrigged up with a telephonic apparatus,which serves him in good stead, butup to a few years ago the diver hadbeen forced to depend wholly upontugs at the lif line to communicatewith those above. This was true inthe case of George . Means, whosostory is told in Tho Scientific Ameri-can. Ho recounts:

It was In tho Gulf of Mexico, and Ihad to go down to look up tho condi-

tion of tho Bella Marta, sunk twoyears before, and supposed to containa good deal of coin. The water wasonly nine fathoms, wind I did not ex-

pect much trouble, but I got it. I hada good man on the line, and thoughtmy pump was all right, yet from thofirst 1 experienced difficulty in gettingair. It was found out afterward thatthere was a leaky valve. I pulled formore, and for a whilo it came better;then I got to work 'n earnest. Thewater wa.s as clear as a boll, and 1

didn't have any difficulty at all in finding tho hull, although she was halfcovered with sand. But I had allthoughts of scared out of me inshort order. I had crajvled throughsome of her rigging and wreckage togc down In the hold dangerous thingtc do, but I couldn't help it. 1 wasgetting along nicely, and thehatch almost broken through, when Isaw a shadow about fifteen feet longabove mo. I know it was a shark, andI was a badly scared man. Of course,I commenced working my way back assoon as possible, but I wasn't quickenough. Tho brute saw mo and cameat mo slowly, jaws open wide andwicked eyes gleaming like sin. And 1

couldn't got out, because tho way 1

had como was tho way to his jawshe, was on the wrong side for me. 1

was in mortal terror lest ho go attube, but ho had eyes for bigger game.There was but ono thing to do, so 1

drew my knife luckily It was a goodten-Inc- h blado and waited. It wasmy first experience with' sharks, and I

was nervous, but tho thought that myUfe'depended on no ono but mo keptmy head clear. He canio at me sud-

denly, with a rush, and turned almoston his back, so as to give his scissorjaw a chance. That was my chance,and I gavo It to him twice in thethroat, slashing as much as I could.

Tho water was red In a minute, andas I throw myself on my face I justprayed he would swim off to clearwatfr. Ho did, I guess, because thingswere quiet for a whilo, and ns soon as

heaTt stopped pounding longenough for nio to get my breath, I

commenced to feel my way back againthrough tho mazo of woodwork, spars,wreckage, and old cordago throughwhich I had crept to get at tho Interiorof tho hull. It was "slow work, andhazy red as the water was, I wasafraid of cutting my own line. Abouttills tlmo tho air got scarco again, andI was In a desperate hurry, I tell you.I did finally nfanago to got clear, and,all unnerved, I gavo tho signal to haulup, when sco this horo slump of nleg? Hither that shark or anotherono enmo along just thou got thorost of It. I hauled with all my might;and tho man at Abo lino, "feeling''fconiethlng wrong, (hauled, too. I camo

"If you uso my medicines right thoy will euro you.All published testimonials of tho wonderful curesmade by my marvelous romodlos are of pcoplo whourn llvlnn" rlfllt 111 llnnnltllll ntwl vlnlnlfv flntnn

mainland, usoyou of

moot ilnv

her

had

my

my

and

up with a rush, my helmet full ofwater and nearly choked to death. Thoblood was coming out of ears andmouth as well as my stump, and theygavo mo up for dead, but I pulledaround. No, never dived any more;didn't want to, either. The companygavo mo a pension, and now I justenjoy it."

MILK TROUBLES fiNDED.

A boon to Infants, a milk easilyeasily digested; a safomilk; sick babies thrive on It; a neces-sity for bottle; babies, a milk; Improved in keeping aualitles; bottledand capped by sanitary machinery;electric purified. Honolulu Dairy-men's Association, Limited,

ELEVEN

Tho words Bro. Benjamin and thispicture must be on every package.

Trade Mark of the Bro. BenjaminRemedy Co., Registered In UnitedStates Patent Office.

exact

I.O.&)O.F.All Odd Fellows, BebekaliB and

friends are hereby fraternally In-

vited to bo present at our MemorialServices to be hold at the Odd Fel-

lows Hall Sunday afternoon, Juno18, at two-thirt-

COMMITTEE.Donation of flowers will bo re-

ceived at tho hall after eight a. m.

Special cars to cemetery.

Tho Colonial, Emma above Vineyardstreet, is becoming ono ot the leadingprivate hotels in Honolulu for swellsociety functions. Thocusino and service are of a high ordernnd appeal to persons of refined tasto.

HAVEFree LunchesFree AutomobilesFree StampsFree LibrariesFree SilverFree WatchesFree Fights .

Free ThoughtFree Trips ;

Free TradeFree LancesFree WheelsNow whats wrong with

Cool

X

Coolness and comfort arejust as features ofyour summer shoes as correct

style. You can get all these features in the new RegalOxfords we are showing and take our word for it, they are

the smartest low-cu- ts this season.

i REGAL OXFORDSare built on special Oxford lasts no! ordinary high-sho- elasts, like other ready-to-we- ar oxfords. They never sibai me ncei or gape at the ankle, but ht smoothly and

evenly at every point. Regal quarlcr-slze- s

make it easy to get your lit.

$.3.50, $4.00$4.50, $5.00.

furnishings,

important

produced

REGAL SHOE STOREKING AND BETHEL STREET.

Page 12: AVIATOR II 5IIIS...omul, brown spot of decay on the stand that unless interest Is shown In Iruit. As soon as the owners of trees this matter there will be very little notice this,

TWELVH

Business , Lively With

Yon Hamm-Youn- g Co.

Business still continues to be very dnsh effect on the dcml-tonnca- u

lively nt tho von Humm-Youn- g Com- - Cara makes It an exceptionally lino'party's big establishment In nil de- - appearing car. The 1911 models arepftrtmonls, nnd particularly so In tho tOl per cent easier than previousautoinobllo sales department, there models havo been, and tho fact thatappearing sovon names on the Honor tho transmission Is composed of fourRoll this week. vnrlablo speeds enables an amateur

Tho arrival of now machines aro to operate this car with very Uttloas follows: Thrco- - Hupmoblles by instruction.tho stonmor Wllhelmlnn, of which jjr p, pt Johnson of Horoullulltwo arc the now stylo runabouts with purchased a Uttlo Maxwell runabouttloublo doors, and one a fore-doo- r fronl t)l0 von Hnmm-Youn- g Company,touring car. Ono of tho runabouts whIch wl oimUo hlm tQ get q H(jwas dollvored Immediately to Dr. lloIu!(I a ,IU,0 moro f,:C(luontlyjutamura, nnu tne touring car i"Mr. M. E. Sllva. Mr. SIlvais to uao

.this car in his business as a "firstcall wagon," and will find it a veryhandy and quick car as well as thsmost suitable machine for this pur- -

Mr. C. S. Holloway hasono much-heralde- PacknrJ"Sixes," which Is to ,bo to

In Iloston, Mass. This isPackard which Mr.

has owned, which rnrtnlnlvpose. Later on Mr. Sllva expects to n Wondcrfui reputation for tho Pack-us- e

automobllo hearses exclusively i!i ar,, tQ benr In tho ncw Pncknnltho funeral business nnd additions or ,.ax1 thoro Js cmbo(1o(1 all tho ei.Hupmobllo for funeral proces- - mentg h,ch oyen tho mos(. fnst)dsIon- - Ions tho public may

Tho steamer Sierra brought tw roqiro. Ti10 now six has an nbund- -

Ovcrlands and ono Everett. One of ance of pftwer, m fact, plenty re- -

tho Overlands Is a thirty servo power. It has a finish whichfore-doo- straight lino 1912 typo five-- is accepted amongst public aspassenger touring car, and is to bo tno highest quality ever attained an- -

delivered to Dr. G. Tucker Smith. s considered by everybody as theTho other Is a twenty-fiv- e horsepower easiest-ridin- g car built,car of tho same type, which Is be Mr, Jolln F, Sopor bought a Stod- -

ttsod as n demonstrating car. Tho dar(1 20" touring car. which Is aEverett Is tho very latest production twenty horsepower,which Uio factory has made In car 0f n vcry ne!,t model. The StoJ- -

form of a fore-doo- r, dnrd tllls year ln tno snlall js

all

ca'

car has installing the typo of are Bold. Heimprovements, tno which Is becoming so popu- - Says that tho Hudson boom

1912 Bosch system, which is a ar, Tne improvements in inK Hp, nil of cars arevast improvement over l'.ni mo - ,arjs this year over previousels. Tho Rosch system has veen very mocjejg aro vcry numerous and rndl- -

much simplified, as barrel of cal The transmission and differen- -

much smaller and iliero .. . -coll Is very entreiy different construearo not many wires attached to !t t,on ar0 Ti,e piaclng of the Cadillac m

The system was tho transmission on rear the recent twenty-four-hou- r race atmuch more complicated than the axj lg a yery raUcai change In itselfnow, which a boon to the a)1( ,s ,,atterned after tho Packard,

This car is the who hay0 ha(1 glch Buccesg withsnappiest looking car of Its class that diminution of its units. The gearshas Imported tne ... of in- - an American car Inislands attracting a torlal very tough four hours of continuous running

of It has tyne The Q a gpecai pitch and Tne car covered, 1.44S

of a foreign having tno thickness They are great deal j between New--

cylinders and crank case' cast ln ono Bhorer and thicker than ln thepiece which obviates vibratio.t ln.olute The shafts in theand much less liable accident transmission unusually shortsuch as other cars are exposed to, bv Qf nrgo (lmme'ter, Tho rearthe fact that there are no bolts at- -

axleg lft thm usual and thetachlng the cylinders to tho crank dlfferentlal ,s changed In Itscase. great many of constructi0n. With this constructionwhich are being manufactured in

Europe are patterned after this style.

Another of the great aJlvantages of

this tvno of motor Is the small num

ber of parts and ease with which

the motor may be disassembled from

troubles.

Jim"car. water manifold. Intake an order wUn

and exhaust manifold aiso Hamm.Young company for a

in one person um.imw- -Cadilac touring be delivered

iar with this type of motor wouldpect that one cylinder were

would Koreai andsame, t6

truth of matter Is that crack?

far less liable to occur and

cost of a Is de- -

little more than the cost ono

cylinder of other type. Or

course, these bloc type motors havo

only been found practicable in cars

of thirty horsepower or less. Tho

is an exceptionally fast and

and one of

.and quietest of its type

manufactured.

purchasedof the

deliveredhint thefifth Holloway'dfamily l!

tho

of nutomobllo

ofhorsepower

the

to

thecars

0f

the the

the of

nutomo- -

'entirelythe

practically impossible for theStoddard-Dayto- n to havo reartransmission Tho motorthis year is built with Its valves illon one side nnd is exceptionally quief.

McCandless, with hih'

the Tho nfice(Jare o.

the A car to

Ifto him on his return mainland In October. Mr. McCandless

cracked It entail an enormous galing QU the has ,,iacedoxpenso to replace the but the

insure Its delivery on histhe tho

thearc

ottho

thevC.est

itor

thon

return. This shows the great popu

larity of tho car, as theynew casting very

arrive, and for futurebue-arat-

o

Everlttsmoothnowerful car

Cadillac are

livery Mr. McCandless rormerly hada Palmer-Singe- r machine, but con-

siders tho Cadillac the most suitablecar for him.

Mr. H. Holmes has placed his or-

der for one of the famous Cadillacsto bo delivered out of the next ship- -

Mr. W. D. Elsworth purchased-thi- s

Honor Roll of the von Hamm- -ak from f . von Hamm-Youn- g

Young Company this week consists Company a Model H Stoddard-Day-o- f

the following: - , ton double rumble roadster, Mr.

Mr. Theodore Cook. Elsworth is at present very busyMr. F. P. Jqhnson. building roads in Kaimukl for Mr.Mr. C. S. Holloway. P M. Pond and considers his timeMr. John F. Sopor, to'0 valuable to waste tiding behindMr. J. S. McCandless. a horse. In purchasing a car Mr.

, Mr. H. Holmes. Elsworth picked out a machine which' '

Mr. W. D. Elsworth. will lie of creat commercial value ioThe magnificent showing the hImi ,g very reliajlo and a very easy

Pope-Hartfo- has made all over tho rIdwUnited States, and particularly ln The automoblle dealers feel verythe East, tempted Mr. Theodore much l0nored thIs week by a vlg)tCooke to purchase a handsome deml- -

rom Mj. v Q Nelson of LosPone-Hartfor- d car which- the geleg Mr Nolson the man-vo- n

Hamm-Youn- g Company had in ager o the rlamond nubber Corn-stoc-

This Is tho third Pope-Hart- - pany at X qs Angeles,ford which tho von Hamm-Youn- g

Ml. j M Wegt ,jag returned toCompany has sold in tho last month Kallnl Jn the lnterests ot th-- auto.and Is tho- last of tho shipment. Tho department of the von Hamm-wonderf-

demonstrations which the young Company.1911 Pope .has made has built for c j Schoening, formerly sales-the-

ono of the greatest following man for Hamm-Yount- r Com- -

whlch any of tho cars on the main- -J)any hag ,eft th(g flm o gQ ,ntQ

land has. Tho Portola races ln Sat business himself on Maul. HFrancisco of tho past two years havo wllI re,,regent the von Hamm-Youn- g

shown tho public what miraculom Company as their sub-age- onspeed the stock cara havo, nnd the Maul.

tho Popos have had in tho gan Francisco, Cal., Juno 4.long tours nil over tho country pya? Cadillac Motor Car Company, Detroit,tho rough roads and hilly countries Mich.without giving any trouble whatever Cadillacs again demonstrated theirshow tho grentor reliability over a supremacy America's championgroat many other machines, nnd the . rond by nnnoxlng two morafact that ono nover sees an old Popo coveted California road recoras slm- -

dlscnrded shows the very extensive uttnncously; one Cadillac startlnc:Hfo of snmo. They are ono of the from Snn Francisco nd another Cad- -

makes of cars nnd are jjac starting from Los Angeles ftsuporbly finished, nnd tho straight twelvo o'clock Snturdny night, Junolino ofTect which they aro drawing 3, annexed tho two following well- -

tills year, combined with tho hooiad inowii const records. One Cadillac

THE HAWAIIAN STAR, SATURDAY, JUNK 17, 1011.

beat all existing records from SanFrancisco to Dolmonto nnd return,distance, two hundred nnd sixty- - tvJmiles; time, six hours thirty mlnutC3,averaging forty miles per hour andlowering nil previous records by onehour and four minutes. Tho hostprevious records wore made bv theSimplex nnd White gnaollno can!,whoso records woro only a few mill- -

utes apart. This Is tho most soughtafter and Dost record in

Northern California, and tho lower-

ing of tho record by ono hour andfour minutes Is the sensation of thoseason.

Another Cadillac starting for LosAngeles on tho pathJlndlng trip forLos Angeles to Phoenix road race

broke previous recordsfrom Los Angeles to San Diego lw

one hour and nine minutes, distancetwo hundred fifty-eigh- t miles; tiimfour hours ton minutes, averagingthirty-seve- n three-quarte- r miles p-'-

hour. By lowering this record tit"Cadillac now holds all Southern Cal

Ifornla road records but one,Is from Los Angeles" to San Diego

and return, which wo will obtain at

earliest convenience, as tho Cadillachas demonstrated Its nblllty to bearany road record mndo by anyregardless of price or power. Thesetwo victories again demonstrate thofact that what ono Cadillac does any

Cadillac will do. Again, I wish tocongratulate tho Cadillac factory an

making America's long distance roaland trnck champion.

. DON LEE,

Hudsons on Sierra.Frank Howes has had a busv time

this week, ho says, In every depart

ment. Yesterday three Hudson road

sters came to hand liy tho Sierra, ailtouring car. This all tho famous bloc which, ho stated,1912 Including niotor( Is keep

dual the Stod-- ! and makes

the the

Is

bile the.

are

off as rapidly as can be ex

pected at this time of the year,Cadillac Beats

A Detroit geninus at figures, takingas and integral, performance

as previously. old back the

repairmen.

Mf

for

oaslost-rldln-g

Los Angeles as a has produced

some that are interesting,

In this race Cadillac achieved a

greater mileage than was everever been to made a ma-- , mmi twent

and is great deal which is andattention. a bloc teetn are distance tho

motor design, a is enual to thatusual

all lt)yP0.is to

anfl

A motors

tho

ex- -

cars

is

Sunny

piece.from

whole

The

,g genai

mobiIo

success

ascars

known

which

going

Train.

basis,results

thebefore

sneclalstrong.

miles,

which

York city and Omaha, Neb. To travel

from New York to the Nebraska mo

tronolls requires forty-thre- e hour

even on tho fastest trains, or iou--fift- hs

moro time than was requlrpd

by the Cadlllnc.While pulling un Its record m'l".

age. the enclne ln the Catiline rani"more than two million rovol"toni

Each piston, in Us movmnts Hh-l-

the cvlln-'er- . travelwhich is oouivalent to ho nn"c-betwpe- n

Cliinco pnd rinc!nn"ti.There wro more hnn fo"f

lion ornlos!or In te r

thnn foi'r million uprfppf"and comnlpted vor," of "t'to"

m trnvpllns th" 1 S m,'ro ""'''n n'

wbPPl -d mo-- o

tWa fOtnJ f n,rr. tVn" 'revolutions for tho four "

--

tho cm." Marmon Wn-- -. Pitt

Manacer O. Wells., of

Hawaiian Gnra?o. rpporsbeen kent busv n" ftopairs, etc., nnd judclng hv tlio iw-pects- ,

ho thinks thnt. th

be maintained for some time to -

He has .lust reeelvp-- wm-- thnt --

Marmon roadster will arrive on tho

Lurllne on the 27th lntnnt. V

Marmon roadster that won tn -

fiDO miles road-rac- nt Indian"on May 30. The Lo7ier poonln pv

pected that-thi- s classic, event wnuH, .. f Violr pnrs

DO won u.v

tipped Rnlph Mulford or Teddy fp'--la- ff

to steer ono to victory. Well"

states that the Marmon has a grnfreputation on tho mainland, an

-- tnrts hlch there, for It nas eo.- -

big wins and achiovomemnts to its

credit. Tho Marmon car that is cow-

ing is equipped with electric light

and Is capable of developing a spcs-- '

of seventy miles an hour. It will

pprtninlv bo ono of the speediest

machines in Hawaii. This machine

has been sold.On the Lurllne there will also ho

u Carter car coming to the Roval

Hawaiian Garage, whllo tho engine

for tho flying machine that Is being

constructed In tho shop of tho Ha

waiian, will como by. tho same boirThe trials, therefore, will bo delayed.

Racing Drivers Favor Llrnnses."Whllo on tho subject of drivers.

I want to say that tho Racing Driv-er- s'

Association is going to take Im-

mediate steps to prevent inexpe-once- d

pilots handling hlgh-'iower-

cars ln,blg events llko tho Indlnnnu-oll- s

race,'' said Ralph Mulford.

"Most of tho accidents which occurredworo directly due to tho lnexpp-enc- o

of some of the drivers nnd hadIt not been for tho wonderful skillshown by some of tho old veterans intight places a fearful loss of Hfo

would havo resulted."Tho Racing Drivers Association

Is working with tho A. A. A. on a

plan whereby Instead of merely Issu-

ing registration cards, licenses willbo granted tp drivers after most rigidtests, examinations And demonstrrt-tlon- s

hnvo been given. Drivers willprobably bo licensed In three ciussosand only' drivers holding first-clas- s tlfully finished nnd luxurious modellicenses will bo permitted to dnvo intho blgn ntlonal events.

"Another recommcndntlon whichtho drivers will make to the Manufne-Hirer- s'

Contest Association nnd Us

Committee on Itules is, ono that willlimit the field of starters in speedwayaces. In a rnce between cars ca,v i

ablo of running" at speeds rangingfrom spventy-flv- e to one hundredmll"s per hour, It Is my opinion thattho entries should bo limited to sucha number that If evenly spncod abo'itthe track, tho cars should be not lessthan five hundred feet apart.

Thinks Speedway Safe Course.'I consider tho Indlnnnpolls Speed

way tho safest course on which T

have ever driven, with a possible ex-

ception of the Atlanta Speedwny.nndwith slight changes on the Inside oftho track, which I understand are lobe made, I bollovo thai, races like

that of. Decoration Day can bo runwith a reduced of duclng aers witn very nine possiuimj- 'ifatal accidents.

I will probably not race again un

til tho National Stock Chassis Cham-

pionship at Elgin In August. I won

tho championship trophy with a four--

cylinder model last year, but willdefend it this year with n 1912

Lozler stock car."

LOCOMOBILE

GARS 1

For years our slogan has Won,

Tho bes? built car in America," andour organization will always maintain the high mechanical standardfor which tho Locomobile is so wellknown.

In our aim is to make the Lo

comobile the most comfortable andthe best finished car in America, andto this end we nre putting forth everyeffort to make our cars as luxuriousand as perfect ln detail as possible.

The 1912 touring cawo firmly believe to b'e the bor,tseven-passeng- touring car on. themarket. When you consider that it

use it.

That

That

That

That

That

That

That

That

FOR

ThattheAnswer

the

has tho staying .qunlltlcs and greatstrength of construction which Is

characteristic of tho Locomobile, andyet weighs, ready for. tho road, lessthan, 4,000 pounds; when you appre-

ciate that It will bo tho most bean- -

that wo havo over turned out, youwill realize that it will have n wideand rendy sale in 1912.

Soven-pnssenge- r touting car bod v.

front scat panel Is flush with thesldo of tho body, which docs awuvwith tho wheel house effect In tho1911 body. This makcB the bodysmooth from end to end nnd In-

creases tho capacity of the gasolenetank from twenty-on- e to twenty-thre- e

gallons. As In tho 1911 body thesjdes curve ln toward tho front nn.lmeet tho dash, obviating any bluntor clumsy nppenrnnce nt this pointnnd producing the stylish torpedo ef-

fect. The 1912 body has higher sides.Extornnl hinges and door hnndleshnvo been roplnccd with concealedhinges and door handles.

Upholstering on tho seven-passeng-

touring car body. Seats aro soarranged that passengers sit low Intho car, tho high sides flllil hnnlr urn.

slightly field start, feeling of security, together

1912

Tho

witn comfort nnd' luxury, Tho uphol-stering of the 1912 body for tho

touring car makes It thomost comfortable standard body pro-duced by any manufacturer in thiscountry.

Tho deep luxurious rear seat cushions nnd backs are each ten Inchesthick, as restful and soft as tho eas-iest library chair.

Another feature of tho unholster- -

Ing of this body aro tho extra-seat- sin tho tonnoau, These occupy nomoro room than the seats used in1911, folding against the sides whennot in use, but are very much morocomfortable. We believe that theywill be exceedingly well liked byeveivy one.

Another detail to which we wishto call attention is the upholsteringof the tonneatt doors im tufted leath-er, giving an appearance of luxury.Tho woodwork near the bottom ofthe is covered with carpet,which prevents any scratching ormarring of the wood. A removablecocoa mat for the floor Is

another new feature. The foot restIs of the brass tubular type lightlyknurled to prevent the feet fromslipping.

torpedo bodies. "We

will supply for 1912 two different tor-

pedo bodies for tho chas-sis, ono sentlng four passongors nndtho other five passengers. Thoro Isn considerable demand for a torpedobody that will accommodato thropassengers on tho tonneau, conse-

quently wo nro adding this typo of,

body to our lino ln addition to thetorpedo of 1911.

Tho upholstering of tho rear cush-

ions nnd hacks of both stylos of tor-

pedo bodies will be ten Incites thicksFinish of cars. Tho

radiators are enameled to niatcli-th-

tonneau; motor bonnets are en-

ameled by n now process Intended toprosorvo the high luster and finish.Hand levers aro enameled black be-

low tho grips, together with' thoquadrant for these levers. Standardlamp equipment will bo blnck nndbrnss combination finish.

Every attention- will be paid .to

the details and finish. Tho final in-- ,

spection of completed cars beforethey arc shipped is being handledmore carefully than ever boforo In

order to satisfy tho mostowner.

motor changes. A

number of nlterntlons havo been

made ln tho motor for tho purpose

of Increasing tho quiet operation ofthe' timing gears. The crank caso isnew In design, and extends fartherforward to permit of a now methodof carrying the timing gears. The

torsional strength of tho cam shafts1ll.nT..lr. thrtklias ueen liiureiiBuu, iinsiov7

number of cam shaft bearings.

Shirr

Ruffle rfejBust P

PATENTED

is a combined corset cover andbust form and can be taken apartto launder.Sizes 32 to 44.

Price, $1.25 each

EHLERS

Will help you select the right automobile. Now that alleged "factories" aro springing up over night,and "dealers" on every block, all of them with the "only" car, tho buyer WHO HAS SENSE should

Common Sense Will Tell Yousi

a company who were building FINE MACHINERY 25 years before the day of automo-biles should build a better automobile than any plow or farm wagon factory who haveJust plunged into the auto business.

a company who built (not assembled) 2000 .automobiles in 1903 (and every one of themstill doing good service) who have built an Increasing number each year,' reaching10,000 In 1910 would seem to be on a better basis than a concern who started in 1909,and claim they will, turn out 15,000 or 25,000 in 1910, or than any concern who has juststarted.

a company offering their FIFTH MODEL car, brought out ln five consecutiveyears, building several thousand of each model, each improved by the experience withthe preceding, should be moro likely to have a car free of faults than any companyproducing their first or second car.

the company who could win the "Dewar" trophy on a standardization test must have awonderfully perfect organization. (If you don't understand what this means let us ex-

plain it.) ...

Is . .

,

tonneau

tonneau

.

,

x

critical

. , 1

HARDENED steel gears and shaft3 will last longer than SOFT steel.

standardization carried out to half the thickness of a hair INSURES perfection In work-manship. ' ' rl

It is tremendously Important to be backed by a DEALER who has had experience, andknows How to take care of your car. .

only the established dealer selling a large number of each model CAN keep a full stockof parts.

The von Hamm-Youn- g Company, Ltd., Honolulu, T. H.Local Distributors

Page 13: AVIATOR II 5IIIS...omul, brown spot of decay on the stand that unless interest Is shown In Iruit. As soon as the owners of trees this matter there will be very little notice this,

r

IT PAYTO BE CAREFUL

Not only as to what you Eat,but also what you Wear

f

Your Personal Effectsshould not only look clean

BUT SHOULD BE CLEANWe Sterilize them

The

Phone 1973 for our Wagon

PciuHOUSEHOLD HELPS

HELPS HOUSEHOLD

Your Grocer Will Sell It To You.

Fred L. Waldron, Distributor

SOMETHING NEW!

Call and see them at the

Gas Company's OfficeBeretania & Alakea Sts.

YOU are planningto have a Booklet,Circular, Announ

cement or ANY WORKdesigned for promotingyour business let us showyou what we can produce

you

Wc make a Specialtyof

PRINTING

THE HAWAIIAN STARPRINTERS AND PUBLISHERS

TELEPHONE 2)65

THE HAWAIIAN STAR, SATURDAY, JUNE 17, 1911. THIRTEEN M

S Hetty Green Will SHS3ZZ ttttttzth' 1

NEW YORK, Juno 5. "When thetime comes, I nm sure my motherwill bo found In tho foro ranks ofthose endeavoring to better economicconditions In our count'ry," said Col-

onel E. H, R. Grcon, who has prac-tically succeeded his mqthor, Mrs.Hetty Green, In tho management ofher estate, valued at $100,000,000.Colonel Green has been tnlklngabout economic conditions and, abouthis belief In the sincerity of Mr.Rockefeller and Mr. Carnegie to tistjtheir wealth for tho permanent goodof tho country in which they made it

In a sulto In tho Waldorf, ColonelGrcpn, with secretaries and stenog-raphers, has been gathering thomany details of the vast Green estateand bringing them together, prepnra- -

tory to the incorporation of a privatebank Hero with brandies tnrougn meountry to handle this business,.

It Is his hopo that on May 1 thoold offices whoro his grandfatherRobinson Inld the foundation of thoGreen millions as a ship owner, willbecome vacant. If they nre, thoywill be taken over for his business.If the tenants elect to stay, however,this bit of sentiment will havo to be

sacrificed and quarters perhaps morecommodious, but about which therecling no remembrances, will bo se-

lected.Tells of the Ruls of Investment.

Tho richest woman in the world Is

now at the Waldorf. She has a roomopposlto tho suite used by her son.She still retains her flat and runsover and spends a few days there.That ralt In her character tnatcauses her to cling to tho place whoroshe has known great peace of mind,and whore she lived with her daugh-

ter so many years, is reflected In thoson, who hopes to begin tho manage-

ment of the funds of tho House of

Green in the ofllces that were heldby his grandfather.

A son loyal to his mother, filled

with admiration for her genius as a

business woman, Colonel Green bit-

terly resents any suggestion that sheIs a hard person with whom to trans-ac- t

business. He asserts she hnabeen grossly misrepresented In tTio

past. Ho contends that sho conductsher business upon standards that arc

ideal. He said:Her Bank Balapces High.

"Her argument has always boon

that every community should bo en-

titled to the benefit of its jwn pros- -

perity. asis allowed

bomaking

ustavo aoero views

forced fight live. tnis issays Madero, of "our Mexico" as

well tho rest. Edward Marshall,after first obtaining an Interview withGeneral Carter, tho com-

mander, crossed "quickly" the

Francisco Madero, rebel chief. Butshowed little Inclination

bo observed interviewed,leaving such unsoldlery "details"his brother, Gustavo, the "financier '

tho present rising. Gustavo is abig man, physicnl antithesis ofhis brother, nnd only his

hatred ot thoTho following account is

to which Mr. Is contributinga of things

was"You do not know Diaz," ho

"Ho really is wonderful-Di- az!

ho continued,said things tho prcsldont

gages on Manhattan herewo loan upon real estate along Fifthavenue and Broadway are heldocal banks until thb opportunity

for their placement uponproperty hero.

"Our cn3h In downtownbanks becauso of this rule arc novvery high for the thatmy mother Insists thnt New Yorkcity realty development must ho thosolo beneficiary of that of her

acquired In this locality."In a iMimber of Instances my

mother has been wonderfully suc-

cessful from her I haveIn mind ono case whore sho boughtin a of in Toledo for

A stationnear her holdings havo given thema valuo of nearly $500,000.

Abominates"Since my mother began her career

as a she has ncvorasked more than six per for hermoney. This Is almost awith her. I havo looked overbooks for many years past and 1

have not como across a single in- -

ptanco whore sho has morethan the legal rate. The bulk of herloans havo been made nt rates con-siderably under six per cent.

"Because of his fact and her widelyknown liberal attitude ,'toward hercustomers in panic times, my mother

always been a position to skimtho cream of tho borrowers In thofinancial world.

point which adds to rayIn tho business name which

my mother has made is her intfsnseto tho land of her Sho

abominates William Waldorf Astor,tho American above allothor persons the world. I want

say that I am full accordwith her this Sho wouldnot invest in a foreign enterprise ifthere wero guaranteed a certainthirty-da- y profit of 500 per cent. Herpatriotism has cost her a good manydollars, I sure sho lias no

upon that score.Will Follow Mother's Methods."Relow Canal street tho modem

financial looks upon my anbehind tho times in her way of do-

ing business. Some havo volunteeredbring mo up date. Others havo

suggested that I from thobusiness methods sho used.

I. am slow in catching on,I intend follow along her lines. Ifby so doing, I am one-hal- f as fortun- -

Not a penny of BoavOn money ,ate sho has been In her opinionsto como to Now York, and judgments, I will bo doing o

earnings must Mnvesto-- i ter than any financier I havo mptin Toledo. Our from mort- - slnco my headquarters here."

sContrary to the ideas or many wno that means 'the crocodile.' Tears

do not know, Latin Americans not come his eyes at hearing of a talolive to fight, but rather are most times about some cruelty tears come to his

to to Andtrue,

as

AmericanRio

thoFrancisco to

eftherto

ofthe

incommon Diaz

culled

series onand otherwise.

went on

after ho

about

in

arises

reason

weath

piece

woman

her

has in

pride

birth.

Into in

In

but am

to to

hasbut

to

do to

eyes, and with one hand ho raises upa handkerchief to wipo those tearsaway, but with tho , other hand he!holds a pen to sign his luma upon'

document which perpotiatoa hundred a hundred times

Grande and stood face to with as cruel as tho cruelty which has just

or

like him

hadsome

cent

some will

facemade him weep. ... Up in thoUnited States it may bo thatthero aro who merely shrugtheir when thoy readof it, nnd exclaim: 'Ah, another Latin-America- n

revolution! Well,, what ofIt!' Then they turn to read aboutwhat happened, possibly, tho night bo-for- e

at tho Grand Opera.It is not exactly that. Tho

from the Philadelphia Public Ledger, hnvo not been victims of thoMarshall

articles Mexican

Gustavo talking:

slowly.

"Diaz,"

property

balaucos

simple

portion

ventures.

property$40,ino. railroad erected

business

religion

charged

"Another

loyalty

respect.

regrets

mother

depart

Mnybo

earnings

cruelties

peopleshoulder

"Well,Mexicans'rovolutlon habit,' as I have heaTdAmericans, with some truth, descrlbosomo people of tho Latin-America- n

states. Wo havo been peaceful, g

people scarcely citizens,most of us, for wo havo not had thorights of citizenship as they aro knownclsowhero in tho world.

"Liberty! Now listen. I was sentof Mexico which I do not print, "Is a to Jail when thoy had not a charge tovery great comedian. make against mo savo that I had

"He is truly a great comedian. . . . talked with a federal general whomHis stago has been Mexico, and from It they suspected. It happened that Inhe has fooled tho world." putting mo Into prison they wore right

In what way? Gustavo was asked, from their own points of vlow, ho-

llo shrugged his shoulders. "In ten cause, really, I was certainly opposedthousand ways." Ho smoked a mo- - t0 them. But that they wore not suremont, now, in silence "But prlncl- - 0f at the tlmo. Thoy only know thatpally in tho way that ho 1ms mado the i lai talked with tho suspected man."world outsido think him humane Madero Is a very handsomo man.think him a man who, risen from tho Tjmt seems to bo a peculiarity of

loves' tho peoplo tenderly. It cossful revolutionists, ami whotheris not quite true. He loves ho Is thoy win In tho end or not, tho Ma-quit- e

capable of a great lovo; but only deros havo suroly been successful Infor ono object, and that object Is creating rovolutlon. Now ho throwhimself. back that particularly handsome head

"You know," he said, a momont and chuckled,lator, "we call him R1 crocodllo; and t you wero put in Jail upon susple

ho said Jovially. "I treated allthe charges which wero ' broughtagainst me as quite too absurd to botiiken seriously. Thoy finally becameconvinced that thlif vlow was tholight one, nnd rolonscd mo."

Now his volco rolled out In a veryhearty peal of merriment.

"Thnt was six months slnco, anilthoy are sorry now that J pot out."

Mndero had been In the Ilolen Jill,and maintains that at time two percent of tho entire population ofMe-ic- o

were in ono Jail or another. IIocontinues: s

"If In Now York the same percent-age was locked up,tha city would havo80,000 of Its citizens behind tho bars,it is not reasonable to think, Is it, tin.,so many citizens .are mnlefnetor-.- '

Mexicans, In general, arc asns tho citizens of any other oo:u

try. They aro not hnlquely vlcl mThoroforo It must bo that quite a num-

ber of that vast horde of confined menwero innocent. Well, where innocenceis cast into prison, there, friend, tyr-

anny is found. It is not so? It isagainst that tyranny that wo revoltin Mexico. ...

"Of tho fifty men In the cell In whicliI was confined," Mndero wont on, pres-ently, "forty had been sentenced to boBhot by Telcsforo Ocampo. Thatgroup of men condemned to dlo wasinteresting as a sample of tho Justicedealt out there In Mexico. This man,Ocampo, appeared to take real pleasure in condemning men to death. Heit was who bet a dinner with somefriends that, tho very night tho betwas made, ho would condemn a mnnto death. He won the bet, of course.It rested with him purly and simply.Ho could always send a man to death!Wait; let mo give you this mansphotograph." Ho fumbled among hispapers and found a postcard with tileportrait of this judge nnd a brief storyof the episode, printed both In Spanishand In English, underneath the portrait. "It has been very popular inthis country among Mexicans," hosnld. "Thousands of them have beenused." He laughed. "Of course, wedo not put so many of them In themalls In Mexico. The man who mailedono or received one there might be thesubject of another dinner bet."

But such things havo not caused thewar they aro merely the Incidents.Says Madero:

"As long as we could live, no matterwith what great discomforts, withwhat terrible accompaniment of trag'edy, wo patiently or stupidly enduredWo havo sprung into revolution onlywhen conditions havo become so torrlblo that the great mass of tho peopie cannot provide themsolves, unmolested, with tho plain necessities oflife; when they see thlor wives nndchildren suffer becauso thoy are notpermitted to in peace and safety andwithout oppression by their laborprovide for then sufficient means otsustenance.

"Injustices of taxation liave donemore, perhaps, to drive us to plaindesperation than any other ono thinghas. Tho system has been such thatonly the small favored few have beenenabled to progress. Tho ordinary cltlzen can make no headway towardprosperity, no matter how eternallyand how efficiently ho may strive forit. Human effort has demanded itreward; In Mexico it has not had Itthere, as elsewhere, when it dops notF,rt at least a small proportion of It,v! 1 rlso and smito nnd take for Its

own self its own."

SOCIAL WASHINGTON.Tho feature of Washington that

most Impresses me, when I look backon my fifteen years of acquaintancewith It, is tho growing stringency ofthe codo of etiquette. Thus, tho nunvber of stato dinners and receptionsthnt tho President has to give Is nowdefinitely fixed. Tho President nowadays, I understand, never dines outoxcept nt a relativo's or a Cabinet.Minister's house. So much has beensettled; but thero remains a wholewilderness of social forms still to bosubdued. Should Senators, for Instance bo given tho pas over Cablnet Ministers? Should tho Admiralof tho Navy rank abovo the Secrctarof tho Navy? What is tho relativposition of tho Speaker and tho Socrotary of Stato? Tho Vico-Prcsido-

being a sort of t, oughtambassadors to follow or precedohim? What Is tho exact placo of theJustices of tha Supreme Court? Intho scalo of prcoedonce? If two Sen-tor- s

wero elected on tho same da v.

which ot thorn should make tho firstndvanco? And what about tV st s

of tho unmarried daughter c'Cabinet Mlnlstors? Those and ahundred similar conundrums aro

In Washington with a mo;othan mnnarchlal forvor. The merefnct that thoy can bo propoundedshows that tho Amorlcan capital g

still somowhat In tho chrysalis stageof social development. An EnglishVisitor, In Harpor's Weokly.

Fino Job Printing, Star Office.

i n use m e n c i :mm

Company, Ltd J H

EMPIRE 1"FOR A COZY EVENING" 4jH

MATINfc.ES DPRMonday, Wednesday and Friday. ?JE2B

TONIGHT! jI'JA Now Team

j

Ryan and Ryan 4 1Buck and Wing Dancers

Upto-Dat- e Terpslchoreans.

Majorie LynbrookeExceptional Vocalist.

Accompanying Stage Settings

Gilson :andTolanSinging, Dancing nnd Sketch Team lu

Newest Novelties.

Splendid Bill All New Films

SAME POPULAR PRICES

THE 5AV0Y"THE HOUSE OF GOOD FILMS"

TONIGHT!

Grant! Vaudeville ncopenlng.

Ragtime TrioDEAN, McHENRY and GREEN

A New Doric Trio.Somo Boys,Somo Act,Somo Singing.

Pastor and IMerlelAcrobatic nnd Singing Funmakers

Thoir Last Week. rMISS MERLE Has New Songs. '

Don't Miss Them.

NEW MOTION PICTURESUsual Prices. Cunha's Orchestra

THE B3JOU"THE BIG THEATER"

TONIGHT.Real Orpheum Circuit Artists.

Melnotte Twinsand

Clay Smithin

"ARTISTIC NONSENSE"An Immense Hltl

SkatellsRoller Skate Clog Dancers

Full Stage Fancy Skating

Alfreda Van NessOperatic Singer

NEWEST MOTION PICTURESAMATEURS ON FRIDAY.

POPULAR PRICES

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THEFIRST JUDICIAL CIRCUIT, TER-RITOR-

OF HAWAII. At Cham-ber- s

In Probate. Number 4398.

IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATEOF M. S. GRINBAUM, Deceased.

ON READING AND FILING tho Po- -

tltlon of Albert Meyer, ot tho City andCounty of San Francisco, Stato of Cal-

ifornia, alleging that M. S. Grlnbaum,a resident ot and domiciled at SanFrancisco aforesaid, died testate atMeran.'in tho Empiro of Austria, leav-ing proporty in tho Territory ot Ha-

waii necessary to ho administeredupon, and praying that Letters of An-

cillary Administration with tho Will'nnnoxed Issuo to W. G. SInglohurst, of-th-

City and County of Honolulu, RaidTerritory of Hawaii:

IT IS ORDERED that MONDAY tho.10th day of JULY, 1911, .at ton o'clockA. M. bo and hereby Is appointed forhearing said petition In tho CourtRoom of this Court at Honolulu aforesaid, at which time and placo all persons concerned may appear and ahoyreuse, If any thoy havo, why said petit-ion should not bo granted.

Dated Honolulu, June 3, 1011. ;

By tho Court: ' ' -J. A. THOMPSON,

Clerk.HOLMi:s. STANLEY & OLSON,

for Petitioner.U luno a, 10, 17, 21.

If you koep live stock or chickensgive thorn n chance at the Kreso Dipsold by BoiiBon. Smith and Co,, Ltd.,at the Roxall Store, Fort and Hotel..strcetBt

.1

. . i.t ....... .. .. 4y . Vfc

Page 14: AVIATOR II 5IIIS...omul, brown spot of decay on the stand that unless interest Is shown In Iruit. As soon as the owners of trees this matter there will be very little notice this,

FOURTEEN

Current Talk of Europe

The War on Tuberculosis Curing American Accent rope s Ban on

D'Anmmzio England'sState Telephone

LONDON, Juno 0 Great Interestmnu aroused In the medical

world an London by report, from

Pdtls of euros turn improvements oi- -

footed In a groat number of caics ot

pulmonary and other forma of tubor- -

culosla by administrations of prep-

arations of radioactive monthol- -

Iodine.This specific was

duo to tho researches aud thora- -

politic cpcpcrlonco of Dr. do Szen- -

doffy, of Budapest, ' and for tho lastthroe years It has been practicallytested by Dr. Kertez Aba, ot Budt- - cither growing very slowly or station-post- ,

and by a number of entirely nry or actually diminishing.Indopondont specialists, Including, In 'fUG itleh returns arc especially

Dr. Horvo, chief physician jf tcresting. They show the decreasotho Santorlum des Pins; Dr. Knmln- - 0f population in the sister island sincesky and Dr. Mickalovlcl, of Paris: igni to be only 1.7 per cent by farDr. DIamant Bergor, assistant pnyst-- tho smallest percentage for 70 years,clan at tho Rothschild Hospital, and tuo decreaso in males was only 0.0G

Dr. Carle, chief physician of tho San- - por CCI1t since 1001, but in females itntorlum of Tasll.

Tho composition of tho propara- -

tlon Is as follows: Peptonizedlodlno, 75 centigrammes; menthol,CO centigrammes; radium and ra- -

dlum chloride, 'the tenth or a drop

ln a solution of other.Dr. Samuol Bernhclm, prosldent or

tho "Oeuvre Dodola Tuberculoso H--

mane," and Mr. Louis Dloupart, chief

physician of theDispensary oi at. uemv.this week, boforo medical societies,

Blvlng Information concerning tho

treatment.Dr. Szendoffy had long boon w

pcrlmentiug with injections o lodlnoIn treatment of tuberculosis and

whon ho communicated his rcsul a

to Paris colleagues they wore keenly

Interested, but not surprised as

they themselves had obtained inter- -

csting results on tho same lines.Tho healing power of odine is

well known and has manifested

Itself in tho treatment of ti.bcrcu- -

losls. There were concomitant, ei- -

fects, however, which ronaerou uiuemployment of this agent almost im-

practicable, such as the nearly intol

erable nain which toiioweu injulions and spccltlc symptoms ot

"iodism" In tho patient.npw of radioact

ive mentholiodlno is open to some--

ot these drawbacks and its thcra-noi- l

tin action is cxtromoly remark

able if not as yet completely ex- -

u.,.i Rvnorlmpnfs on animals,-particularly guinea pigs, gave a re

suit of complete immunization. After

an injection of tuberculosis bacilli,

which otherwise proved fatal, tho

results wero surprisingly successful.Ono cubic centimeter of tho prep-

aration was injected dally, thirtyfimoa in and in no case

did thd system manifest any Intoler- -

nnco of tho injection, such as wasconstantly tho casc In the treatmentby iodine. In pulmonary tuberculo- -

sls there was distinct improvement

after ten injections. Blood spittingceased, as did all other distressingaccompaniments of phthsis, such as

night sweats, emaciation, absence of

appetite and weakness.The patient increased In weight

nnd In strength, and physical Im- -

provoment was attended by tho mo3t

important results in physiologicalconditions, such as the return ofconfidence and courage, which arehalf tho battlo 'In dealing with thisterrible disease.

Dr. Bernheim concluded his paperas follows:

"We havo studied, observedpartisans

delegates

certainty

before definite conclu- -

slon. Th0 physician ono

of tho principal chest hospitalsfrankly skoptical, leading

chemist declared that peptonizediodine was quite impossible. IodineIn combination with an albuminousliaso in uso at present,It Is concolvable that this might boprodigested peptonized, thisn combination of lodlno with a

produced, but this is not pep-

tonized iodine. .,

Radium and barium Is un-

known, Is a bariumseparating' radium

from orog, possibly thoradium salt so oxtracted cantalned at a nrice in

but anything which can ro- -

(illy be relied upon would cost quite20 per milligrammeALARMED BY CENSUS RETURNS.

June provlslonalcenBUS ro,urns for Englandwales, issu?d this wcro nt firstregarded ns highly satisfactory fromthe sociological point or tuoydid not indicate any appreciable falltug off In tho rato,

x closer examination, however,showed that It was thoi?ast portion of tho population that

growing most rapidly, while thobetter part of tho population, the mostefficient and the most Intelligent was

was 2.8 per cent. This is probablyduo to young men remaining in thocouutry under the new land condl- -

tJonS( vvliilo girls still emigrate to be- -

como domestic servants. Tho result!s tlint ti10 maies in Ireland total 2,--

1SC.S01 the females 2,105,147, so

that tho sexes are nearly equal,Women nro greatly In excess in

oihel. parts of ho Uniteil Kingdom,

EGYPT'S AFFAIRS IMPROVE.LONDON. June 3. What may bo

Sir Eldon Gorst's last report on tho"Finances, Administration and Condi-

tion of Egypt" has just been publishedby the British Office. A pe

ot u at onco Btttmpg thft tempera- -

dlftoronccs of Sh. Eldon)Ug prcdecessor ag BrlUsh dlp,omaUc

Cromerm

ag thmlgh hc actua,q U( For

toclmnceorles wWch m mt wUh

hMrlnn tnlrna Ilia d rnntlrtnc frnmBritish Office, and does noth-ing on his own initiative.

On tho whole, tho London pressseems pleased with the report. Thonumber ot crimes reported to tho police fell from 3054 in 1008 to 3328 in1010, and there is a perceptible fall- -

ing off in tho graver category ofcrimes. Moreover, tho legislativecouncil and tho assembly havedisplayed less enthusiasm for Nation- -

allst agitation for autonomy andagainst tho British occupation,

On the other hand, the Copts, ofwhom there aro only 700,000, asagainst 10,000,000 Mussulmans, havocreated good deal of unrest by theirambition for governmental positions,first, on tho ground that they aroChristians, and, second, theyaro wealthy property owners, whosogreat business abilities have been al- -

lowed full rein under British occupa- -

tlon.Tho course of the future Sir Elden

Gorst declares to be "fairly simpleand obvious." The British governmentmust show that it will not bo coerced,

ENGLISH STATE TELEPHONE.LONDON, Juno 3. A large

tlon from the Liverpool Cotton Asso- -

elation waited on Herbert Samuel, thoBritish postmaster-general- , this weekin order to learn something about thoadministration of tho service of the

Telephono Company's system, which Is to be taken over by thegovernment at the of the year.

Tho delegation criticised theect from two points of view from

borrowed by the government for thoienterprise only paid 3 por cent, whiloan Independent company would haveto borrow It at a higher rate,

"In regard to the lack of efficient;service noted in government systems1abroad," the postmaster-genera- l con-- j

tinued, "that was a fault of tho ser- -j

vice and not of the principle, as mustbo admitted If compared with thoBritish postal telegraph servicewith which no fault could bo found."

Exactly 255 women wero measured,kopt under observation, and wcrofound to havo grown exactly thrcocontlmetros, or nearly an inch and nhalf in ono gonoration. Tho wom-- n

wero drawn from all classes of so- -

clety. 50 agricultural laborors, 50'workwomen, GO patients at a Paris

noted, and aro resolute of, the cost to the country and the useful-radioactiv- e

mentholiodlne, because ness of official service,this thorapeutic agent has given us Tho pointed out that

results and unhoped for porlence In other countries had showncures. Dr. Szendoffy and his collab- - that a private company could run aorators have tho great merit of pro- - telephone system much cheaper, withduclng this remedy only after they more profit, and with greater advant-ha- d

acquired as to its etu- - ago to clients than a governmentcacy and real action." could.

In London hospitals there is a dis- - Mr. Samuel said ho failed to see thoposition to await further information point of these criticisms, as tho money

forming anysenior at

was and n

13 known and

or andpep-

tone

chloridebut thoro chlor--

Ide method ofuranium and

be ob- -

of shillings nergramme,

pounds

andweek,

viow,

birth

poorest andfit

was

and

Foreign

and

y

fhnForeign

general

a

because

deputa- -

National

end

and

THE HAWAIIAN STAR, SATURDAY, JUNE 17, loll.

hoipltal, CO women of tho mlddloclassos having no profession, and 55women of all classos unemployed. Tholust category included ladles of thoaristocracy, women doctors and law-yers and capitalists.

Naturally the enemies of race sui-

cide were ns much annoyed by the sta-

tistics as th? advocates of feminismwero exalted. Both emotions, how-ove- r,

wcro shown to bo premature byDr. Drouot, who offered an explanationef tli3 figures.

lie said that formerly tho corro-spoiullu- g

statistics wcro drawn uponly from measurements upon corpsesIn hospital dissecting rooms. Thustho women measured hitherto were"for tho most part in a condition oforganic Inferiority" that is to say,they wcro drawn from tho poor and

d classes henco tho measure-ments upon a moro representative collection of specimens yielded a higheraverage figure. It seems, however,that It was a mistake to say that theParisian woman was growing tallerthan the Parisian man. Tho averagofor the latter Is 1.C5 metres, or nbouth feet 4 3 Inches, whereas for theformer, although rising, Jt is still at1.57 meters, or about 5 feet VA

inches.PARIS WOMEN TALLER.

PAItIS, June 3. Some excitementwas produced in the Academy of Sci-

ences the other day, during a debateon race suicide, when statistics werointroduced to show that Parisianwomen wero gaining in height to suchan extent that they would soon sur-

pass the Parisian men.CLARA WARD SEEKS DIVORCE.PAItIS, Juno 8. An application for

divorce from her husband, Riccardi,nn Italian station master, whom shemarried two years ago, will soon befiled In the Paris courts by PrincessChimay (Clara Ward). It is rumoredhere that the princess has now transferred her affections to another Ital-

ian, whose name is not given, butwho is described as an aTtist painter,and whom sho intends to marry assoon as sho is divorced.

It is also said that in order tosmooth over nil difficulties for herpresent husband, the princess has offered to settle on him a yearly In-

come of $0000, In the same way as shedid when she divorced her secondhusband, the violin virtuoso, RIgo.

PAPAL BAN ON D'ANNUNZIO.PARIS, Juno 3. Gabrlole d'Annun- -

zlo, whose play, "The Martyrdom ofSt. Sebastian," was produced, exquisitely mounted, at the Chatelet Theater, on May 22, has been receiving

Not only did the Archbishop of.Paris write a public letter to his flock .

the week before tho production thisplay, reminding them that must

attend plays "offensive to Chris- -

consciences," and adding that this"certainly applies to the new play,"

LMI HVJJIU 'MJKAU

He

but only a fow days boforo the letterappeared d"Annunzlo's principal workswere placed on tbp Index Expurga-tortus- .

All his works havo not been banned;his poems, of which many volumeshave been published, may still bo readby tho faithful.

This enactment has reawakenedsoino public interest In tho modusoperandi of that romnrkablo censor-

ship, tho Index Expurgatorlus, aboutwhich tho vaguest notions arc current.Many persons seem to think that thoCongregation of tho takes uponitself tho tnsk of reading all the bookspublished throughout tho world whichin nny way upon religious mat- -

tors.If this were so, not only the Congre-

gation of Cardinals, but tho wholobody of clergy would havo probablybe Inadequato to tho stupendous task.In tho opinion of tho heads of theChurch, It Is not necessary to proscribe books openly s orImmoral "perverse," as they arocalled; the good sense tho laity, itis thought, will enable them to avoidreading these without needing specialwarning from their pastors.

It only intervenes when a work Is

published likely to instill doubt anuerror Insidiously, by tho subject treat-

ed, or by the tone of the book, or ovenby tho title alone.

Thus, whenever a work claiming toLe Impartial or orthodox deals with!religious questions, or philosophical orreligious issues affecting such que3-- !

tlons; whenever a prominent writerintroduces saints or biblical charactersinto a work of Action, then It becomesthe duty of the Congregation to ex-

amine it and make report as to Itsorthodoxy, and often, as in d'Annun-zlo'- s

case, their inquiry extends to allhis previous writings.

Especially does it concern itself withall works written by ecclesiastics, orby writers who havo the reputationof being Catholics, since their positionin 'tho Church world will make anyheretical or Impious matter in theirwritings the more dangerous.

CURING AMERICAN ACCENT.LONDON, Juno 3. Despite the ridi-

cule they invite at homo, it is undoubt-edly the case that there are thousandsof Americans who would gladly ac-

quire what Is known as the "Englishaccent." These persons will be gladlo learn that there are now plenty ofspecialists in London who are readyto supply the desired article for a con-

sideration.One of them has been talking to a

reporter of the Daily Mirror. Accord- -

tlon aro finding, to their chagrin, thattheir popularity in some quarters is

diminished by tho uso of forms ofspeech and methods of accentuationwhich are commonplace in New York,Bloemfontein and Ballarat. They are,of .course, not the less hospitably wol-

some hard blows at tho hands of tho ing to that paper American and Colon-Churc- h

lately. ial visitors to London for the corona- -

ofthoy

nottian

Index

touch

of

OF 100

corned as guests bocauso thoy havolearned to speak an English of theirown, though London pooplo aro dis-

posed to regard lapses from tho met-topollt-

standard of speech withsome disfavor.

Teachers of volco production andvocal deportment, It Is added, aro verybusy just now "teaching Americansand Colonials English." Tho lnstructlon Is nhvays private, and fees aregraduated according to tho requirements ot tho client, or perhaps ac-

cording to another standard.Tho Informant of tha Mirror assorts

that It Is almost lmposslblo "to eurotho American nasal twan& completelyalter it has become thoroughly habit-ual." Ho (or sho) adds:

"That curious rising reflection tonearly overy word which Is character-istic of Americans from the Northernstates, and Is of Indian origin, can borapidly modllled. But tho greatestpart of my task with American womenIs to teach them to speak moro softly.Their high-pitche- d voices nro not al-

ways welcomed in European drawing-rooms- ,

and I And tho best method Is tokeep them whispering for ten minutestogether.

"Verbal tricks of speech and down-

right errors of can becured If the patient is industrious anddetermined. Middle-age- d men, how-ove-r,

aro tho worst pupils, and aro aptto give up in despair."

ffiCoia'i, Asthma, Droichltli indiv --

m toot trooblei quickly cured br

I IOI? Ill

12& Of all Chemists J

and Stores. JflS

atural Sparklin

NEUELTER

$10

TABLE WATER

Anti-Go- ut

BOTTLES

&DISTRIBUTORS

Hackfeld

pronunciation

Co

yPOWELCSlMMUM

4MSSESB J

Anti-Rheumat- ic

PER CHSE

Ltd

WhoJIs King? I

Almost every man servesono of two Kings, King"Poverty" or King "Welt-to-Do.- "

To which kingdom doyou owo allegiance?Thoro Is a system which,if practiced, will helpyou to always servo King"Well-To-Do.- "

This system Is a SavingsAccount In our Bank.

BANK DFIfll LiCapital and surplus $1,000,000

Judd Building, Fort and Mer-chant Sta.

B8TABLI8HKD IN lgJI.

BISHOP t CO.

BANKERS

Commercial and TraYOllerrLottori of Cradlt issued on theBank of California and The Ion-oo- a

Joint Btock Bank, Limited,London.

Correspondents for the Amor-lea- n

Hxpress Company, andTiiOd. Cook ft Soa.

Iaterut allowed on term andSsTlnga Bank Depoalta.

A TRUE BARGAIN IN REALTY 13OFFERED NEAR CORNER LILIHAAND WYLLIE STS. SOMEONEWILL SNAP UP THIS PROPERTYFOR INVESTMENT; IF NOT, FORA HOME. DO NOT SLEEP ON THISTILL YOU HAVE SEEN

islaon lnvesimeni Co.,

Limited.Member of Hawaiian Stock Ex-

change, Room 103, Stangenwald build-ing. Telephone 1884. Postofllco box60G. Cable address: "Bulldog."

Bank ofHonolulu

Issue K. N. & ICLetters o f Creditand Traveler'sChecks availablethroughout theworld, cf-- Cabletransfers at lowestrates & &

THIS YofcoHaua Specie BatLIMITED.

HEAD OFFICE, YOKOHAMA.

Capital (Paid Up) Yen 24.000,000leservo Fund Yon 16,600,000

General banking business transactcd. Savings account for $1 and up.wards.

Fire and burglar proor vaults, wluiBate Deposit Boxes for rent at f 2 peryear and upwards.

Trunks and cases to be kept on cue.tody at moderate rates.

Particulars to bo applied for.YU AKA1, Manager.

' Honolulu Office, Bethel and Merchant Sts. Tel. 2421 and 1594. P. O.Box 168.

FOR AJCyEBridge and Beach Stoves for Coal or

Wood.Quick Meal Bluo Flame Oil Stoves.Porfection Oil Stoves.Giant Burner Gasoline Stoves.

EMMELUTH CO., LTD.Phono 1611 No. 145 King St

FIRE INSURANCEATLAS ASSURANCE COMPANY OF

LONDON.'NTW YORK UNDERWRITERS

AHENOY.

PROVIDENOSi WASHINGTON IN--ISURANCE COMPANY.

The B. F, Dillingham Co., Ltd,

General Agents for Hawaii.Fourth Floor. Stangenwald Building.

Page 15: AVIATOR II 5IIIS...omul, brown spot of decay on the stand that unless interest Is shown In Iruit. As soon as the owners of trees this matter there will be very little notice this,

JAPAN TURNS, TO RELIGION.TOKIO, Juno 1. Tho recent st

disloyalty, which resulted In

tho putting to death of twenty-thre- o

persons, has heen followed by amovement to Identify morality withpatriotism, bo that henceforth dis-

loyalty may ho regarded as a markof Immorality.

Recently Baron Oura, tho Ministerfor Homo Affairs, summoned a con-foron-

In Toklo of all tho provin-cial Governors of tho empire, dur-

ing which ho took occasion - to warntheso officials against tho dangers

Scrccnt

of allowing porlclous Ideas fromabroad to corrupt Japanese ideals ofpatriotism.

Doth tho Minister for Homo Affairsand tho Minister of Education haveInstructed all officials under them tourgo greater rovoronco for tho tem-

ples and shrines, and to do what thoycan toward strengthening faith notonly in tho native religions but In allrollglons obtaining among tho peo-

ple.Government officials, in short, have

como to a realization of their utterpoworlessness by tho ordinary ma

There're lot of things need fixingSays the Little Taint Man.

a to

a ifa

a a

Porch Chain Cupboards

your chairs In bright colors withS-- and Lawn Enamel orS-- W Plnt. (S-- W means

the name stands for goodIn and

The screen doors and screenslook bright and new after a coat of S-- Screen

them wear thescreen from

Inside and out made fresh andwjth 21

mm m

TUB JUNE 17, 1911.

chinery to guldo and control tho Ideasof tho nation religionsomo kind,

Till: OI'AI,.lly HcnrlrHii I.oc

Jove snatched tho roaeato colors from(lie sides;

Caught the puro gladness In a lovor'soyos;

Tho veiled, radiance of thodawn ;

Tho mothor's tear of Joy at her first-born ;

Added to this tho sunset's dvliiK flame:Mulled, and fused, and gave tho wholo

a name;Opal, Inscrutablo and wistful RemDew. fire, Joy, pain to crown Lovo's

dtademtHenrietta Leo Coiilllng.

a

Tilings around the place will suffer from wear and tear.And after while they get so shabby that we feel obligedchuck 'em away and get something new in their place. it's

mistake and we only all had the "Brighten up" habit we'dkeep things spick and span all the time by having pot of paint,

tin of varnish and brush handy. Just read this and do some"Brightening Up" right away.

jjiifi

Paint porchPorch FurnitureBuggy Sherwin-Willia-

thatquality Paints Varnishes.)

window will

Enamel. Makes longer, keepsrusting.

Cupboardssanitary S-- Family Paint attractive

without

CoiiIIIiir.

Floors Doors

colors. Fine for touching upOld, worn floors made clean and attractive

with a coat of S-- Inside Floor Paint. Or astained and varnished finish at onewith S-- Floorlac.

Revarnish the front door with S-- Kopal.It stands the weather. Repaint the doors in-

side with S-- Family Paint.No matter what you have to fix up, we have

a Finish that will do the jobwell. XY7

There're a hundred other things touching up. a listof the dingy things and come to us and we'll tell you what to do.

E. O. Hall & Son, Ltd.

ill iitflEHftMiaMSSrMit

OF

of

SPECIAL PRICESCOMiVlEINCIINa

Saturday, June 17th

Regular $1.00, $1.25, $1.50,$1.75 and $2.00.

Your choice for 7 days

STAR,

mysterious

But

woodwork.

operation

Sherwin-Willia-

that need Make

HAWAIIAN SATURDAY,

COME EARLY-FIR- ST COME FIRST SERVED

During this sale a liberal discount will be made on ourentire line. We must have room for new shipments.

7 Days Only 7

AM HONQFort Street and Beretania

CO

to "B iff I

privfliarro? m inn k ntrH UVIIUgUd UB B IBu DlBI.Bg

There nro many curious matters oflaw, or ntlo and regulation and ofetiquette, which constitute tho divin-ity which "doth hedge a king." Forsome there are historical reasons intheir origin, for others such reasonsstill exist, others nro mere matters ofadmitted propriety, others simply thecrystallization of long custom and ob-

servance.In somo matters the King of Eng-

land Is governed by statute, In othersho and his more wishes are supreme,but even In tho lntter category theroaro matters In which that pleasuremust be conveyed In writing.

Tho limit of tho power of the sov-

ereign was perhaps best Illustrated bytho old operation of tho law of attainder, though that law has for longbeen obsolete In practice, and is nowmodified by Statute (1S70). A personaccused of treason is tried by a courtof law tho court of tho Lord HighSteward, 'In which tho peers are judgesand Jury if tho accused bo peer orpeeress tho ordinary law courts Ifthat bo not tho case. Following upontho verdict, and before or after thoexecution of Judgment tho man was attalned by tho passing of an Act of At'talnder.

Assuming that act to have beenpassed, the King could, if ho choose,grnnt tho convicted person a full andfree pardon. That relieved him fromthe execution of the judgment, butnothing more; tho King could restorehim to all his forfeited property, buttho King could not replace tho man

former position, by monthsto inherit. during

lie thatand titles of honor, but, unless anotheract of Parliament reversed tho ofAttainder, the action of the sovereigndid no more than create now peerages.The king could grant a patent of prec- -

precedence femmcThe constitutional position solo

soverign accounts for one and tomany of us groaning under tho budget

most Important difference. The sov-

ereign pays no rates taxes. The

I

It

hadand -

were

real

n

tlce. lng

a

she has

had . andla or

Is and she as atile

aor

reason lngtaxes namo followed tho

on messages. "Toit

before tho days and "Tocivil list India,"

tho republicwas simply

ing to( The Kin surname,put It into Is a

this .

to that exemption from taxation ex- -

no tho person of thesovereign, all other members ofthe royal family aro subject to thosamo as tho of Thomatter tested by the lato Prince

In connection with hisexperiments at Windsor.

But the King does evade the pay.ment of his debts, and.to Is often supposed and fre-- 1

quently the King pays from his1I11YJ UULll IUI Iliaand theater If tho King pro-pose- s

to visit a notice is sentbeforehand, and the royal box, In

theaters which possess soldsubject to the it mustbo given if 'is receivedthat uso required for

is the etiquette thatKing never writes a leitor. loose who

need to w'.th His Majestywho aware of tho proceuuio

to tho King's secretarya of tho housunold,

that tho in should ho

placed before tho King, but petitionsin

any form matters of state re-

quired to submitted through theHomo omce.Tho King does accept invitations,

royai.

invites and

cNtenus ot tnefamily. Tho

husband thoof a bachelor.

If tho King proposes tohouse, a list ot tho proposed gueststo to heforohand,nnd this list the King rovises, striking

and adding names at pleasure.Thero uro a number details

claimant to tho throne beingtoasts "tho woro convertedinto treason by tho passing thoglass tho water."

King a present

exploitation of this dedication for com.niorclal purposes. rule, however,time coomes, am suro my motherIs relaxed to tho extent of frequentacceptanco of of books fromtho authors, but In such cases thebook Is required to bound accord-ing to a specilled pattern.

Whether It was established etiquettoor only Inclination, Is diffi-

cult dellnltely to state, nt tho timoof his accession King resignedhis membership of all the clubs towhich ho belonged, and was a mem-be- r

of a number. IIo still, howovor,his veto with regard to the

Marlborough Club, which hoby virtue of which

veto whllo any j which Captain Coucolro could outer- -

by him a, tain.member without election. He to provls- -

The to King ho was dlssatls- -

the United Service audtho Marlborough. King Edward resign-ed all his offices as a Freemasonhis accession, King Gcorgo has

been Initiated. Tho long-continu-

association of the royalFreemasonry began as a safe-

guard against a very danger oftho capture ot tho by thoJacobite party.

No one proposes for the hand otloyal princess In marriage. sov-ereign lntlmato first that such amatch would bo permitted, nomember of tho English royal familycan marry without tho consent of thoKing. If the ago or twenty-live- ,

they marry without the royalin his for he remained sanction giving twelve

to the Privy unlesscould restore forfeited peerages timo tho two Houses of Par

Actliament havo expressed disapproval.

The Queen Consort, although sub-ject, always had' a unique position

tho eyes of tho law, asregarded as tho

edence, that would no disabilities of a married woman,effect In the House of Lords, whero all matters contract

governed by statute. procedure ranksof

us.

of

on

In

use of royal "we,"still preserved in documents of

kind, like old-tim- e "touchingfor tho evil," is gradually laps- -

for this Is that theoretically all into disuse, King Edward havingaro levied in tho King's example ot Queen

for purpose of carrying tho torla in his threeas In lleyond plaining

vould havo of Seas" Princestho to tax income of tho of dated February 4, 1001.

for of in thoKing's expenditures, talc-- ' singular.

money from one of his pockets jioanother. though undoubtedly ho peer tho

So stringently is theory adhered first among his peeis as sovereign hothe

tends further thanand

taxationwas

Consort farming

not

whatstated,

Di.wiutickets.

theater,those

ono, iscondition that

up Intimationits Is His

It the

correspondare ntj"t

usually wntxjor member asking

matter question

for the exerclso theon aroho

not

Queento

visit

him

out idsIlttlo

to

Tho

tho

personalbut

founded,any

became

neverfamily

lodges

and

Council,

hasal-

ways been frombut have

tho thoughformal

any the

Vlc- -

the Myand

been the andthe

and

lust

1JU1DU

but

over

has

never now sits In tho House of Peers,but tho cap of maintenance is stillcarried before In his Palace ofWestminster and nowhere else as asign of his right of peerage.

The King's motor cars nonumber and his chauffeurs notamenable for ' tho- - speedlimit.

Tho King cannot bind his success-ors in tho exerclso tho royal pre-

rogative, for tho simple reason thatthero Is no way of enforcing tho obli-

gation, tho King cannotsued in his own courts.

HE LEADER OF

THE PORTUGUESE

If tjecomes no progressiveto adopt tho "recall," and should

recall President Brnga to privato lifeand Manuel to tho throne, ns somopredict, no honor in Manuel's gift will

too high for Captain Palvo Cou-

ceiro. to tempted by thomost nattering offers from tho Repub-lican government, prefers to Hvo

an exllo In Spain, working for tho res-

toration lils vountr klnir. thoform Is not precededa visit of of tho PorttIBUeSo

thereby ( but by his Intimation that ,st(J uo ,g tho por80n,flcaUon of trust,v. ill pay :lt. It other words, always tradition, and and. tho corrc

himself, In matters ot BI10ndent ot tho London Outlook,social lntercourso tho samo etiquetto awe,nnK u,,on tho wnvo of enthusiasm

to otner meniuers royai

her establishment

anyhas

bo

of

cf

accepts

bo

ho

with

may

are

asbo

as

bobo

ho

To

hoho

that Couceiro's most recenthas aroused, thinks that tholr Imag-

ination may not ho far astray.recollects, also, how on t hat disas-trous, day of October 1010, whentho storm of rebellion b'roko loose, howas ono of tho few royalist soldierswho did his duty, and did It well.

Ho was on fighting throughoutall thoso thirty-si- x hours, thus hohav- -

of which aro observed, tho lng j a vory different manner frommost notlceuble of which is that flngor niany others on whom the mon- -

in FrancoKing"

"ovor

copies

king's

of

of

so

5,

E0

heroic figure When came,Palvo Coucolro accepted with

from a privato person, except prido and dignity a Roman, andhis own rolatlvos, and permits into retirement. He

a himself It his resignation as officer of thethero the smallest likelihood of tho army, hut the now rofused

FIFTEEN

to accept It. IIo persisted, howovor, Inhis determination to resign, desplto alltho blandishments of tho now regime,which was exceedingly anxious to havo

support of his prestige, andshowed that ho could not ho bribed,even by bribes which few ambitioussoldiers could resist, Into embracing acause which he detested. For monthstho strongest possible pressure wasbrought to bear on him. He Is tooproud to tell how great are the prizeswhich offered to him, and thopublic knows nothing of the tempta-tions to which ho was exposed. Hoonly saw tho new rcglmo marchingtoward Inevitable civil war, and tramp-ling down, on the way, tho rights ottho great majority of tho nation."

In America this attitude is a hardono understand, hut tho mind of tholoyal grasps it readily, itwas tho only posalblo point of

could election,person nominated

frankly declared thoonly clubs which George tonal government that

belonged

property,

carry

Portugal

temerity,

submitted

foot,

etiquetto

the dedication hook

view

fied with tho situation and he de-

sired to bo freed from his duty, as acoldlor, to obey the constituted author-ities. Ho declared his conviction,founded on many facts, that tlio re-

public not only meant immediate dan-ger for the independence ot tho

but did not correspond to thowishes of the majority. Ho askedthat for tho actual government theroshould bo substituted nnother, an Im-

partial government, which should takoo referendum of tho pcoplo ns to thoform of tho rcglmo which they pre-

ferred. Whatever the result ot thatplobisclto might provo to be, ho under-took to regard it as tho supreme ex-

pression of tho national will. It Isto say this proposal, a

proposal worthy of tho noblo spiritwith It originated, found nosupport from the president, who knowsbetter than any man in Portugal whatwould bo the result such a plebis-cite. On learning ot tho rejection ofhis proposal, Palvo Couceiro declaredthat ho would stay In Lisbon fortwenty-fou- r hours, nnd would ifnot arrested, tako whatever stepsseemed good to him. Tho twenty-fou- r

hours having passed without tho gov-

ernment deciding to apprehend him,Couceiro left for Spain, where lieonce began an active propaganda fortho restoration of the monarchy.

His first act, upon crossing tho fron-

tier, was to publish a manifesto ex- -

Government, that, fact People," "To My People tho his attitudoPeople

rest

?ra

free

ills

IIo

He said that Spain, beingthat she would in tho

King purpose defraying the' which wero written first person an impossible neighbor, was.

contrary

accepted

prerogative

Edward

re-

tained

Refusing

and any ImagInatIon

never accompan-

ies

never

exceeding

inasmuch

manifesto

the

wero

that

that

convincedPortuguese

In conjunction with England, preparingto intervene. This being the case, amonarchinl restoration seemed to himto be the solo means safeguardingthe national independence. Ho em-

phasized tho advisability of sparingtho country the horrors of a civil war,by taking a poll of the peoplo on thoquestion of the regime which the coun-try preferred. Ho approved of thoprovisional government's social legis-lation, but disapproved of all its otherdictatorial proceedings. Ho gave in-

stances to provo that tho republicanregime was only increasing the lackof discipline and the spirit of anarchywhich is ono of tho Portuguese pco-plo- 's

greatest defects. Ho expressedhis conviction that tho only sort ofgovernment which could solve in afew months all the difficulties of thosituation was a resolute military gov-me- nt

of an impartial character.This manifesto was at once seized

by order of tho government, which attho same timo intimated to tho fewnewspapers left lh tho countrythnt they wore not to, mako tho faint-est reference to it. Despite this pro-

hibition, tho document in question en-

joys a largo circulation, as did thoBishops' Pastoral and the Jesuit mani-

festo, both of which tho provisionalgovernment had likewise placed upontheir Index.

Palvo Couceiro is nt present in Vigoon tho northern frontier, whoro theroarc also concentrated hundreds ofPortuguese exiles.

The Portuguese governmont has sev-

eral times requested tho Spanishauthorities to break up '11118' nest offugitives, but, so far, Its representa-tions havo not beon vory woll attend-ed to, and It ban evory reason to o

that Spain is In favor of thismovement. This bo-ln- g

tho case, tho provisional govern-ment decided to take stops to safe-guard Itself, so far as lay In Its power,against a royalist Insurrection In thonorth nn armed Incursion of PalvoCoucolro from across tho frontier.With that object in view, it' Oporto a war vessel manned entirely by the olilcors and sailors who-

glasses aro never placed upon tho nrchy had hostowed high nrW. but 'proved their jllsloyalty on October C.

tanio u a niemucr or mo royai iumnyWho, wjlcn tho moment of trial cann.jlt has also reinforced its garrisons Inis present. Tho reason for this goes manifested the most extreme coward; tho north with southern troops, whomback to dacoblto days, when, tho rival '

co. Those who still remained faith- - it as trustworthy. Wo may

Tho

Tho

Tho

ful to tho causo which roprosentod foou see If its rollanco on thom Is Jus-eig-

conturlos of glorious traditions tifitd.concentrated all their hopes in that . . ...

dofeatit the

ofnever wont at once sent

of to In anIs ' governmont

toPortuguese

na-

tion,

which

of

then,

at

have

of

still

or

dispatched

FIREWCRK8, FIREWORKS.Brand wt. Ide.'i In Khoworks in

!ii nianv l o 1th ,.i A. M. Arleigh& Co., Ltd.. :ot"l nt u' Kort. Setafrom $1.20 up Paper balloons inmany bIzoh.

Page 16: AVIATOR II 5IIIS...omul, brown spot of decay on the stand that unless interest Is shown In Iruit. As soon as the owners of trees this matter there will be very little notice this,

SlXTISKN THE HAWAIIAN STAR,' SATURDAY, JUNE 17, 1911.

GET HIEDGET II JO

BY J. A. BRECKONS.

(Special Conespondi'iipe of the Stir.)WASHINGTON. D. C, May 23. The

Insular Bureau in charge of affairs In

tho Philippines, through the mediumof tho United SLntos Civil ServiceCommission, Is conducting what mightbo termed a matrimonial btiicau.

The Civil Service Commission hasrecently announced an examinationwhich is to bo hold on August 30 and01, 1011, at various places in thoUnited States, to fill vacancies as theymay occur lit the positions of

industrial toncher, and clerk in thePhilippine service. Trio positions tobo filled pay salaries of from ?1000to $3000 per annum.

Tho matrimonial foaturo of tho sub-

ject comes in by restricting the teach-er examination to inpii, unless thewomen desiring to take it aro thovivos, immediate relatives, or fianceesof men examined for teacher or as-

sistant or appointed to or already em-

ployed in the Philippine service asAeackor. Theraforo, If a woman wish-es to obtain a place in tho Philippineservice, if she is not nlready marriedor engaged to a teacher, or ono wholias been examined for that 'position,it is up to her to got busy, and qualify.

At tho present time the InsularBureau employs and pays tho salariesof 753 American teachers, and in ad-dition thero aro employed In the Fili-pino schools 8275 Flllpno teacher.Tho schools consist of ono university,VJb intermediate schools, and 4295l.rimary schools. Thero aro 30S3 highschool students, 21,304 intermediateschool students, and 502,930 primaryschool students. In addition to theseschools there are, one normal school,one trade school, one commercialschool, ono school for deaf and blind,thirty-flv- o manual training schoolsand thirty-eig- ht high schools.

THE GmLGHURCHES

CENTRAL UNION CHURCH.Bible school at 9:50 a. m. Mr. y.

Bowen, superintendent. Classes allages In a graded course of study.

Morning worship at 11 o'clock.Sermon by the minister, "What isGod?" (1 John, 4:1G.)

Christian Endeavor at Ixsahi Homoat 3 o'clock. Not only members ofthe society, but all who enjoy doinggood aro invited to this service

Christian Endeavor at 0:30. Topic."Grace for Common Duties." Meer-In- g

led by the Whatsoever Commit-tee. All youngl people invited.

Evening son-ice at 7:30.' Com-mencement service of Oahu College

Program.Organ prelude Mr. Ingalls.Anthem. "Praiso Yo Jehovah"

(Gounod), Oahu College Glee Club.Invocation Principal Charles T.

Fitts.Response.Scripture lesson, Proverbs vlii.

President A. F. Grimths.Offertory Violin solo, Op. 179

(Bohm) Doris Ronton Taylor.Hymn No. .

Sermon "The Demand of n NowTypo of Manhood," Rev. D. C.Peters.

Hymn No. .

Benediction Dr. Doremus Scud-der- .

Postludo Mr. Ingalls.CHURCH NOTICES.

Latter Day Saints. Reorganized.Church on King Street, near Thomas

Square.9:45 a. m. Sunday school. Classes

In both Hawaiian and English. Les-son topic, "Paul In Rome."

11 a. ra. Morning worship. Preach-ing in both Hawaiian and English.

C p. m. Zion's Roligio-Literar- y So-c- l

ty. Lesson topic, "What Man MustDo Repent." Also musical and liter-ary program.

7:30. p.Rm. Evening worship.' Gos-pe- l

sermon in English. Specialmusic by the choir.

Wo aro teaching tho Old JerusalemGospel, and all aro Invited to comeand hear it.

Athletic ParkBaseball For Sunday

JUNE 18.

OAHU LEAGUE.

J. A. C v3 P. A. C.STARS- - - 6 HAWAII.

Reserved Seats for center and wingsof grandstand can be booked at E. O.Hull & Son's Sporting Department.Entrance, King Street.

Tickots on salo at M, A. Gunst'sCigar Storo from 1 p. m. Saturday to11 a. m. Sunday.

Prices grandstand, 35c and 25c;general 15c.

FRANKLIN MATTHEWS

IDI EL

Tho following Is Promotion Secre-tary Wood's report for the cufrontweek :

Chairman and Member of tho HawaiiPromotion Committee: aDear Sirs By the steamer "Korea"

wo nro sending a full line of Informa-tion concerning Hawaii to tho editorsof all of the dally papers published In

'Rochester, N. Y., imparting tho In-- I

formation as we'll that Hawaii will bowell represented at tho Shrlnors' Con-

clave. Wo have also sent n numberof folders to tho leading hotels of thocity, besides ordorlng a largo supplyto go forward to Mr. James S.

from San Francisco,Rev. Dr. Wadman, who leaves on

an extended trip by tho next "Wllliel-mina,- "

taking with him 125 of our bestlantern slides, states that ho is al-

ready in receipt of word from thomainland to tho effect that arrange-ments for his lecture on Hawaii havebeon mado at Portland, Everett, Seat-tle, Vancouver and Victoria.

As tlie tinio for tho opening of tho ofPanama Canal gets nearer, interest intho Pacific Increases correspondingly.Tho latest Information as to new linesof steamships Is contained In tho fol-

lowing lettor, from the manager of theNow Orleans Progressive Union:

"I was very glad to know that theNew Orjcans Directory reached you I

safely and I assure you it was a greatpleasure to comply with your request.I remember our acquaintance here I

very pleasantly, and hope that thotime will come when I may returnyour visit. to

"I have received a copy of your'Crossroads' Map and have studied itwith a great deal of interest. Whenthe Panama Canal is opened, you willhave to make a new map showingNow Orleans, the steamship lines run-ning from this city through tho capalto Hawaii and the Asiatic countries.This is the Mississippi Valley, SouthAmerica & Orient Steamship Line,promoted by tho Progressive Union,und chartered under the laws of thostate of Louisiana. A special law wasenacted and ratified by the constitu-tional vole of all tho people of thostate, exempting all American steam-ship

Ilines operating out of Louisiana

from taxation for a period of fifteenyears. This is the first practical steptaken by any state in tho Union forthe rehabilitation of tho Americanmerchant marine."

By Japan,railway

the

numberlicenses

rails nowployed

thebetween con;

Ichang the thewa'8

special

than ballast cars are now Intho excep-

tion the belaid miles. Ichang

building finished up theroofing, andwlll beThe store-room- s already

tho locomotive sheds built, ofthe head started.

stationwater towpr will soon

The coal underFour

sunk atIchang. Tho presence

renders tho difficult. Two1000-foo- t tunnels aro way

o from Ichang, one 70o

icet auout milescompleted.

for thoshop, ordered from Germanhas arrived and shortly in- -

stalled In tho newly workshop.moro

from Hankow Ichang,another 500 tug and two200-to- lighters orderedirom bhanghni engineering company;

tho Bridge Companyof New 100-fo-

been ordered, willmado in Two million

feet of Oregon logsplanks also been contractedEarthwork tenderscontractors only) for tho fourth,sixth, seventh, sec-

tions wore opened in March."General Thomas

AND

ECTUHES

By last mail wo received withtho compliments of tho London Cham

of Commorco a copy ofTelegraphic Addresses,

volumo of 2300 pages, containing analphabetical of leading London and provincial business houses.

Among letters to hand by lastmall was following from FrankClark, tho well known tourist

"1 beg to own receipt your verycordial letter tho 11th Inst., andadvise you that the 'printed matter sentunder scparato cover has also reachedus. am putting tho folders nndguides on our shelves and will gladlyglvo these such distribution as we areable, and it will result In yourefforts being rewarded.

"Thoro arc no now developments re-

garding our Around the WorldCruises, but we hope is be-

fore tho and that when writeyou again It will bo with realizationthat wo visit your delightfulislands on masse during the early part

Our friend, Mr. Franklin Matthows,the well known correspondent,under date of 20th, in part fol-

lows:"I am now putting In all

my timo lecturing country,Hawaii my hardest and

find that Hawaii, the real bewitchingHawaii, is getting to bettor known

day. Every visitor to islandshave met ba a d

boomer of the place, and canthat has been a real

mo expound with all tfio fervorpossess my of tho beauties andjoys Islands. I find my audi-ence- s

hang on tosay about Hawaii. using, witiigood effect, last lot of slides yousent me. today for Cincinnati,where lecture all summer in the Co-

lumbia Theater. To glvo someidea tho of my

may thatForaker present his fellow-townsme-

will soon have the peo-

ple of Cincinnati enthused Ha-

waii."To Mr. Matthews' work,am arranging for a special distribu-

tion of our folders throughout Cincin-nati and will see that the librariesthe different papers arc well suppliedwith photographs data.

Respectfully submitted,A. WOOD, Secretary.

A CHINESE III!

granted $21,000,000, according to thopress of Tokyo. In addition, a con-

siderable number of locomotivescars are required for tho

already and orrders for the same are being placedthough tho representatives Japan

foreign manufacturers andagents. In case tho railways In Japanaro broadened the standard gauge,there will extensive demands forrailway equipment of various kinds.

"In a general sense, orders for railway aro sought by

agents of foreignmanufacturers now located Japan.Manufacturers not having such con

jnectlons Ja'pan either desiremveaiiBuiu mo pussiumues oi mis

FfFTY THOUSAND COOLIES ARE

flfill

J. A. BRECKONS. of Yokohama, In report on(Special Correspondence of the Star.) building in Japan, says:

"In connection with the toWASHINGTON, D. C, May 20. Aunlfv tUe government railways and toreport from United States Consul Al- -

establish network otbcrt W. Pontius, Chungking, China, lines,' 101 applicationssays 50,000 coolies are al work build- - have been made to build narrow-gaug-e

Ing the main line of the Szechwan- - railroads in Japan. The ofHupeh Railway. issued under tho above appll- -

"Elghty-fiv- o pound are em-- . cations has reached forty-seve-

for the main line, using thir-- d. additional applications arc contin-tee- n

sleepers to rail. Construction jually being received,

trains aro running twice dally "Tho cost for thewharf and track end, a struction of narrow gauge rail-distan-

of about six miles. Moro fr which licenses have

field through a representativemachine'01- - hy communicating with the Railway

forty usejcarrying materials. With

of two cuts, track comdsome twenty Tho

station is tocompleted In May.

three are oc-

cupied, andoffice building fairly

Near the are two 22-fo- walls,while tho bocompleted. yard isconstruction. shafts have been

the G200-foo- t tunnel, fiftymiles from ofwater work

under twenmiles and

long, uiteen irom.lthat city, is

The equipmenta firm,

will bobuilt

In order to secure satisfactorytransportation to

horsepowerhave been

aFrom American

York cloven spanshave and deliverybe May. super - j

flcial pino andhavo for.

and tunnel ( nativefifth,

ninth and tenth

Coiisul Sammons

tho

berSell's

list the

othorthe

agent:of

of to

I

I hope

it tho calmstorm 1

asball

1913."

writes)May as

practicallyaround tho

boosting best.

boevery the

I find toI

assuro you it joyto 1

ideasof tho

every word I haveI am

theI leave

I

youof character work

there, I tell youis to me to

Iover

supplement

of

and

P. .

is

andgovernment

railways constructed,

Insales

tobo

equipment activelyrepresentatives or

in

In may

a

plan

at transportation

estimated

been

i

Bureau, Department of Communlca-tions, Tokyo,

WEARING AWAYOF MOTHER EAUTH

Investigations by the United Statesgeological survey of the erosion ofnumerous dralnago basins of tho-

United States show that tho surfaco oftho country is being romoved at thoavorago rate of about an inch in 700years. Though this amount seemstrivial. when spread over tho surfaceof tho country, it becomes stupendouswhen considered as a total, or oven Insoparato drainage basins. Missis-sippi river, for instance, carries y

to the sea 130,100,000 tqns ofdissolved matter and 340,500,000 tons

ODD FELLOWS TO HOLDMEMORIAL SERVICES.

Tho memorial sorvicos of tho I. O.

O. F. will bo held tomorrow nttornoonat Odd Follows' hall und6r tho aus-

pices of Oahu Canton No. 1, PolynesiaEncampment No. 1, Excolsior Lodgo

No. 1, Harmony Lodgo No. 3, PacificRebckah Lodge No. 1, and Ollvo

Branch Rebokah Lodgo No. 2, L. Pot- -

rle, D. D. G. S.( bolng tho officiatingolflcor. Tho prograjn will bo as fol

lows:Reading of tho Proclamation, Bro.

L. Petrlc, D. D. G. S.Prayer, Bro. R. E. Smith, pastor F.

M. C.

Ritual, Bro. L. Petrle, D. D. S. G.Roll call of tho dead, tro. L. La

Pierre, P. D. D. G. S.Piano solo (selection), "Last Hope,"

Sister M. W. Tschudl.Violin solo, "Sceno do Ballet,'' C.

Mlltner,' musical director Orphcumand Bijou theaters.

Vocal solo, "Oh, Dry Those Tears"soprano, Sister F. O. Boyer; violin,Clyde Baldwin; plnno, Sister M. W.

Tschudl.Eulogy of our lato brother, J. M.

Oat, P. G., Bro. W. C. Parke, P. G.

Piano solo, Mozart's Twelfth Mass,Sister Alice Nicholson, P. N. G.

Vocal solo, "Cavalry," SIstor HazelJ. Crane, P. N. G.; piano, Miss PearlLlttlojohn.

Address, "Our Living Dead," Pro.R. E. Smith, pastor F. M. C.

Vocal solo, Arthur Wall; piano, Sister M. W. Tschudl.

Violin solo, Schubert's "Serenade,"C. Mlltner, musical director Orpheumand Bijou theaters.

Hymn, "We Sing Our HonoredDead" (air, "America").

Prayer, Bro. R. E. Smith, pastor F.M. C.

INTER-ISLA- ND

(Continued from page nine.)

expected that the novelty will takevery well.

Kau Good Times.HILO, June 15. Everything look3

bright for the present season in Kau,according to Julian Monsarratt, whocame in last Saturday morning totake in the aeroplane exhibition. Hostates that there have been goodrains throughout the spring monthsand that the feed for the cattle Is in

better shape than it has been for several years past. Even up to thelast days there have been frequentrains and from the present Indica-

tions there should bo plenty of waterIn tho ground to provide for gooafeed throughout the dry months of

tho summer.A Holiday Missed.

HILO, June 15. As a result of' thofailure of Superintendent of PublicInstruction Pope to notify the supervising principal of this district thatMonday had been declared a holiday,tho schools of Hilo and the surrounding towns went on as usual, though a

great deal of criticism was heard on

all sides. In some cases the teachers, who had read in the Honolulupapers that arrived Sunday that thofollowing day had been declared alegal holiday by Governor Frear,failed to show up and tho same Istrue of many of the pupils. Therewas plenty of time to have sent noti-

fications to this Island as the paperswhich arrived on Sunday stated thatSuperintendent Pope-ha- d notified theHonolulu schools that there would beno session on Monday, sun tnoIsland of Hawaii was left without anyofficial notification

of suspended matter, and of this totalOhio river carries 83,350,000 tons andMissouri river contributes more thantwice as much. Colorado river, whichhas built up for ltlself a vast delta,brings down more suspended matterthan any other river in the UnitedStates, delivering annually 387 tonsfor each square milo of its drainagebasin, or a total of 100,740,000 tons.

The rivers of tho United States carry to tidewater every year 270,000,000tons of dissolved matter and 513,000,-00- 0

tons of suspended matter. Thistotal of 783,000,000 tons representsmore than 350,000,000 cubic yards ofrock, or CIO.000,000 cubic yards of sur-

faco soil. If this eroslvo action hadbeen concentrated on tho Isthmus otPanama at tho timo of American occu-

pation it would have excavated theprism for an eighty-fiv- e foot levelcanal In about seventy-thre- e days.

JUST WHAT ITS NAME IMPLIES.Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and

Diarrhoea Remedy Is all that its namoImplies. Thero has never been a casoreported of cramp colic, cholera mor-

bus or dysentery where this romedywas used that it did not give promptlellef. It Is as good for tho child asfor tho adult and all danger from chol-

era Infantum will be avoided If thismedicine is promptly administered.Tor salo by all dealers, Benson, Smithfc Co., agents for Hawaii.

Flno Job Pr In tint, star Office.

From 1 0 a.

NO ADMISSION

m. to 4 p. m.

NO ADMISSION

E

OF FLYING. BY THEWORLD RENOWNEDAVIATORS

AND

with the latest types of

Owing to the High winds at Lei- - '

lehua the flight from Kapiolani Parkwill take place at

3 O'CLOCK TUBS AFTERNOON

Page 17: AVIATOR II 5IIIS...omul, brown spot of decay on the stand that unless interest Is shown In Iruit. As soon as the owners of trees this matter there will be very little notice this,

4

V

TH

PAGES 17 TO 20 JUNE 17, 1911, PAQE8 17 TO 20

remained

tUo ccan' for " a"d in the ncrease as the sound waves continue Vnoblivious footsteps carried her stout "Ch tho Z.flUonc0 country from endcountry I shall on- - one toointo.and rotund figure down into Oliver of the Punjab. In Asia, a o come. Tho main reason why, J

street. She happened .to notice the 1. ." T1

THE STRIKE OF JOHN KELLYLOCAL.

(Dy James Gardner Sanderson.)Annio raised her hand menacingly,

"but the quick duck and upward, fend- -

lng swing of Johnny arm failed tofollow. Instead of this usual manouver, hr son caught the hand and heldit, looking angrily and fearlesslyhereyes Annie gasped in bewilder,

niflcanco of the resistance becamesuddenly clear, and sho casfc herselfInto tho low chair besido tho window.

"Wurra!" she sobbed. "Wurrat Oh,Johnny! Oh, Johnny boy!"

She rocked her body to and fro, andthe wai)s lost nothing in volume byreason of the apron over her head.Her son eyed her in disfavor.

"Aw cut it out." ho muttered un--

eas " 'm thrZb mo own b guess!""Kapln' company wid a cross-eye- d

girl In Oliver street!" interjected An--

nlo sharply."She ain't cross-eyed'- "

You'd ought to bo glad of th goodhome I've give ye since your fatherdied, nod have mercy on his sowl! It'sw. nftor hh. i,oM i .

in', neither," walled Annie."She ain't cross-eyed!- " snarled

Johnny, stung by the repetition. "IfI likes a girl I likes her, and It's noteven me mother's business, under.stand?"

"Me wid myMany's th' time I've stood In" th' snowearnin' a living to support you! If Iwas many th' mother, I'd bat youacrost th' face for talking back f

reproached Annie. iu- -t , uu, iu- -

torted Jonnny stoutly.Mrs. Kelly s forth

afresh. Her her sul- -

lenly and his hat."I'm rrntrt r...f " T. a. . nmnlm.lA 1U UUlj 11 V, 11111.1 1LVV1

.Mrs. Kelly gave no sign of having

cusslon.

kitchen

wurrklti'grating

nswhpaper

t3L 3C3C' XJLJE'x-JlI- .

THIRD SECTION

HONOLULU, HAWAII, SATURDAY,

STAR'S RAPID

FIRE SHORT STORY

Johnny obdurate, atid

fountains

rheumatismatlcs!

surveyorhector

tenement on Hillgathered threeMrs. Kelly desolate breasts

Lowed insistent impulse

inwho Johnny.

Shortly returned home,and which opened

as plainly assubsequent

disappointment. roomEtili empty.

the which sho

T, Thtintnoaa wna

VTowards nffornnnnV or

fh"ted bUnd,e f,Unrld )T?U known IndIans as

"8hton h?Tn til llsl0M and wor8hU'edpresent

miles

. heard. gumpse, on nis way, ot uis Sand long and were habitable. There is no trace lowers with which whole class: stupid pupil in geograpny"I'm goin' down Oliver street," mother's back as shs stocid in reg- - bag tucked to bacit water many places, which country abounds, ror somo the may himself brilliant

added tauntingly. ular There without hurting It Is formerly densely nowIy imnortcd bees maintained signer, and girl whoMrs Kelly removed somethIng about lines of to or three Popnlafed; when, of course, that reputation for industry, storing defeat In arithmetic may

go to Oliver and flgure wbich Johnny uncomfort- - and keep ready for "mid must been prime t00' th0 comfortable charm by taste skill In

can stay there," sho tremb- - ducked behind near- - sity and easily procurable. Young Proidod for broldory. There would, bo greatlingi by Franklin statiio and commencen , Americans' who of traveling to colonists with honey far superior Bain in by throwing

right," replied Johnny. "I'll business. Ono ,oUeat regions Nineveh, Babylon, Egypt and that collected by Indigenous honny-- some textbooks and instay there! And time peeped around earth is along Persian where Eastern regions with Producers, the "molllpones." Proa- - places putting carving tools, neediersome else to sell your Ben Franklin. He noticed tactics or no rain At Barnhln ancient empires, would do well to cntly, however, were drawing ni(iterajs.papers,' ho nHrtori "T wrin't

The slam of the door closed the dis- -

and Mrs. Kelly sat bywindow alone. Tha fountain of tearsevaporated swiftly heat of hergathering wrath.

"Shtruck, has she mutteredtho room. "Readin'

thlm coal mine stories, it's like. Andhe'd lavln' f'r a d

hussy th sind her Joy to him!right, let 'em! I'll not take 'm

back, f'r the presldont and th'crowd of know me busi- -

liess!"final sentence Mrs. Kelly

and set evening'swork. The vigor which shobanged tho iron frying-pa- n upontable beside sink spokevolumes for earnestness of re- -

solve."Me mo hands to

an' him littln''me! It's on ahe sleep this night," sho saidsavagely, at of hours ofunassisted toll.

As shs flounced from kitchen,

might bo cold.all following day Annio

stood at post In ot ono ofbuildings on

Row. Annie been selling papers.at this particular for more than

nowadays." ho

Mwnnrnrn n i trouey

Sin

tho Cherry dustfor days upon bed.

ate anddid all At dusk on the thirdday she anand went for a little walk Totally

,a closo unabashed conversewith a boy was

afterwards sheho hasto with she

door hopethe look in her old eyesmeant The was

At moment In plod', 7, 7 , x, .

fmr B'n i n 'inirrv-iiraT- .

strect nd denounced "DerT, ... TI ..uu, m, uuu- -

r nTlf1 Unr7

fnur In iho ho.,,7 ,7 7 V, root a woman boy.

to the arCk' K.

that was rat-- . .Nono of tlle ,

a holds the heat a time, lon r the afo her can be up the of In of tho time show a de-

lveplaco and crlcd her wares. the invalid. a must have been their the little finds

Then the apron. was the her good plan make two ff up only

"You down street made tho bags them have a neces-- , tho,r 1" hives her andsaid, able' but ho the them supplying tlu a

.. think to schools out

"All of the of tho other of. the theiri

you can bo getting From to time he tho gulf, filled ofone help the little falls. tho hives dls- - and

aTiriiiv

in the

he?"aloud to silent

bo medevil

Allwhol

arbltraries. I

With thorose about her

with,the

thotho her

-

th' bono

can- tho end two

the

During theher front

Park

stand

f

his

not

the

,

wasthoy

andmany

i"fn 7, h!,lf Ba te,r,y- - A

" y hls heartfsuddenly he ran acrossfrowAt th ta",he rk'n111?tIonV '

sprang with a3oyOU! ooPaPon the back of an ac(l,laintanfco 7. ln company with a

f0". ?ew-b- y. was beguil- -

th af,Umf ernoofBlack Pnn,,e8' Th;ac(lualntance leaped tom,xed thln6'8 unt11 a po,,cemai1 scat,tered the ring.

Qn inalnld- -

lty of upper Broadway fel1 rapldlylnto tbe d,m recesses of memory andJhnny hoaved a sigb o rellof- -

By 6 o'clock ho had dodged guiltilylnt0 Park Row to get the extras,

or tlio piratical outsiders as theyboarded Annie's customers, hisblood boiled over. When restraintceased to bo a possibility, and whilehis mother's attention was engaged,hs crept up tho intruders andcuffed ono of them- - soundly. Theothers fled, and it was noised swiftlyabroad that Johnny had returned tohis own.

Mrs. Kelly got the news at last, and'an absurd wave of something shotfrom her ankles to the top of her head,leaving her trembling and weak, buthappier than she had been for three

A wisp of iron-gre- y hair fall- -

ing overjier eyes caught a drop thattrickled down the side of her weather- -

beaten nose, and two customers each'

bore away a cent too much in changebefore she discovered its blinding in- -

fiuence. I

When greater came,sho hastened asthmatically to a spot.from which she might catch an occa -

sional glimpse of Johnny. Becauseho looked dejected, her heart smotoher, and sho sent out newsglrl scouts

competitors, went back to tho Frank- -

lin statue and tried to shout "Ex- -

tra!-" In an overwhelming rush of

omotlon his voice choked. Ho count- -t

ed up his days receipts, and drew hiscoat sleeve across his noso ns ho

on strike, inax him. Ho flight

outraged motherhood caused her to to see how many papers he was get-loc- k

the door viclbusly, and to Indulge ting rid of.in the hope that tho autumn night Johnny, after cuffing his mother's

thehad

and

and

out a cheery word or a hurried him every night roso swimmingly bo-- .

chase as thoy passed beforq her. And his eyes when he gazed misor-usuall-y

cheery a word had ably into space and thought of suppertossed back them. On ono oc-- time.

--casion Johnny, as a lay "Hey, kid," ho to anothervery 111 with diphtheria could in wistful bravado, "ask mo

customers recall such mother if she's t' me outerIt chanced one of oldest, house tonight."

who and who now no- - "I want to ax hor," theJohnny's absence, inquir- - boy. "She might mo. Doro's mo

les. talkln' to cloy breaktold woe

.voltfbly. Tho away I'll ax to ax h?r."

'man shook his head? Moanwhllo wns grimly re- -

, "Better arbitrate lt;" ho salcl grave- - questing nowsgirl to ask"Sebmtiie only way to do busi- - Xohnny hpw lpng.hp to

Thenior,

days.

THINGS WORTH KNOWIN

Pears nro sometimes expressedthat tho resources o nature will in

bo exhausted. Scientific men,iavo "BUrcd out tho duration of the

DU""J' "l "B"'u. incy-nav- o

a,so told us how 80011 our American'"est. e to furnish timber,

ut however " ".ny be with other"aturo seems to have stored

1 uuimuuiicu ui snu. mero is

enough to supply mankind for mil- -

Hons of years.

Near the mouth of the Little Chey- -

enno river, in Dakotn, Is a rock withcurious Indentations. It is twelvefeet long by seven or eight feet wide,and rises above tho surfneo of tlmground about eighteen 'inches. Itsedges are nngular. Its surface Hat and

Jt aears to be a magnesian lime... ...on. ana us wmtenes makes It a"""'""s oujeci. un tno surracj

nro severaI de foot..

' Prints, as tnougli made by the loft. ... .moccasined of

aaything of the origin of the foot- -

Prints.,

A BndbaB Is one of the most serv- -

lccabIe artIcles to uge ,n the iBlcltroom. Get Bome cIeMi fln sand flrylt thoroughly ln a ketUe on th B

make a bag about e, ,ncneg oof flannel, fill it with the dry sand,

the opening carefully and covertho bn wlth tt orThis will prevent the sand from sift:

. Lln 0i nn. wlni. 7 V"" " " T . .7 ""7 ' . 7"i ug yuicKiy Dy placing it inthe oven, or even on the top of thestove. After onco using this, you

never again attempt tbefeet or hands of a sick nersm, wii.na bottle or hot water or a brick. The--

the arid shore ban nn fresh vntnryet a comparatively numerous popula- -

tion contrives to exist there, thanksto copious springs which burst forthfrom, tho bottom of the sea. Thofresh water is got by diving. Thsdiver, sitting in his boat, winds hgreat goatskin around1 his lcitarm, tho hand grasping its mouth,Then he takes ln his right aheavy stone, to which Is attached astrong line, and thus equipped, thoplunges in and quickly reaches tlv,bottom. Instantly opening the bat?over tho strong Jbt of fresh water,he springs up In tho ascending cur- -

rent, at the same time closing thotag, and Is helped aboard. The stonois then hauled up, and the diver,aft,er taking breath, plunges again,Tho source ot theso copious subma- -

rino springs Is thought to be In tho"

swat me. I'll ax me brudder to axm," said the girl.

Tho two negotiators mot and, lean- -

ing on tho subway fonco, talked for amoment or two In whispers, while two

Jpalrs of eyes, old arid young, watchedin anxious suspense.

Sure!" said tho little boy. inbring up him an you get Annie, au

we'll mako 'em shake. Wo'll bo thoargitators commissariat, what settlesstrikes."

"Sure," echoed the little girl.. .... f..,l.Pnl iitlnail Oll'flV !! 1 0 .1 T .

JilllUU IUIU1U) "'I'vu

You fool, you!" said Annie."As much aa that?" asked Johnny,

ducking and fending, as a matter of

course, tho swing of Annie's palm

which followed.Then they backed up to Annie's

placo bosldo the wall and throw their

slock together.need any Wall Street

Nowses?" asked Johnny. ,

"D'ye want yer supper money

asked Annie."Yeh," they answered In chorus;

the hurrying crowd paused, lookedbackward and smiled.

green hills- - of Oman, soomo BOO

CDO distant

catcning

em-yo- u

ruins

behind

-Bands of music are forbidden to

ui inc lurgo unuges 01tho world. A constant succession otsound waves, especially such as comefrom a band, will excite the

res to vibration At first the vlb- -

" iu uij sut,'"i, uuc tney win

"ton bridge at Niagara, for Instance -is that, followed by processions otany kind, they will keep step with

'the music, and this regular stepwould cause the wires to vibrato. Atthe suspension brldgo military com- -

Panics are not allowed to marchacross in regular sten. but breakranks. Tho regular trotting cult ofa larce dog across a suspension

"Ro more dangerous to thobridge than a heavily loaded wagon.1 .vn uy a team ormrge norses.

Members of the geological survey ,

"ilvc discovered tno sites or severalancient cities in tlio San Juan region,,Mz0na' whlch probab,y have bce

'

deserted since long before the Chris -

tlnn cra. Tho remaIns belonwhat is callfed the stone age, whlcnwas long before metals were used Intho construction of woapons for waor utensils for domestic purpose,,Many stone axes and mauls werefound( but ,ron wa evldently nn.1nown to the dwelIcrs ot theso an.clcnt cltIcg of tho Wcst The houg(J3are peculiar. The apartments were'lug down into rocks, and theoniy entrance was from tho top.,Evidently cities were IntendMas places of refu.o .n tim nf mti," . 7

" I" ' "7"luij .wuuiiiiuua oi misWnd in Arizona. Mexico andstill further to tho southwest. The

antiquity Is shown by the factthat the, geology of these reclons hasgreatly changed since theso cities

look for remains enuallv remarkable .

in their own country

Tho true mechanical efforts or"roots are exerted In struggle i

for progress through the soil, andexamples for illustration aro many,To understand tho magnitude oftheir work, we bear In mindthat each root displaces an amount

(

of soil equal to Its own bulk. Take,for instance, a crop of mangel-wurz- -

,

ols. and imagine what an upheaval ,

must havo been produced in tho soil (

by the growth of its enormous mass, j

Tho whole surface of tho field Israised and its particles loosened, j

Tho most striking results of the me- -

chanical power of roots nrn seen '

when they como in contact with themost resisting obstacles. They havobeen unearthed from compact grav--

eliy soil whero the struggle for roomba(j bcen 80 nerce that they becamedistorted out of all natural shape. Itjs not umisual to find trees growingjn tho clefts of ledges, showing un-- 1

that the expansion of thornots bas forcf)a tb0 roc npart. Aeaso Is cited on good authority, ottno root of a sugnr maple that badpushed its way under a lock weigh- -

Jng noary two tons, and by its on-- ,

iarBOment lifted it cntlr'oly from ltabed. Trees havo boon observed i

growing on tho bare rock, resting. 1 ...t.t.l. i iU1IUU Lllfll TUUIM, WHICH TUIl UUL UUU

new growth on their under side, anaHftetl the Iron by tho sparo of Its '

thickness, until inches of woodi,n,i jj00n formed under tlio severe

t

pressure

Some curious tho worldof nature crop un occasionally whicharo well worthy of consideration,For Instance, it has boon proved thattho bee may, under certain nlrcum-- 1

stances, turn out to bo anything but,tbP pattern of Industry jt is prover- -

taken out .swarms of bqos to theiradopted land, in the hope of deriv.'

and at tn? cuoemm uuiu in wvn u. supnoscu 10 unman. rtiiuiiM-o- f

"Extra!" a bore and thoro colonists havo tlmo to

THE INFLUENCE OF

TOLSTOY ON JAPAN

ZTZuSt

By NEMIROVICH DANTCHENKO.Tolstoy's Influence on the llter.v

a. . ,, . . . .' '

pIaln 1 lat 0 0nofla Z?a h112 1 J, -

1 In tho country of tho Rising SunLeo Tolstoy has playod almost thoBamo nnrt 08 our society In the

t beginning of tho OO's. Our "ThreoMusketeers," tho heroes of MarllnsTd

,

jand Sionklowlcs, nro pygmies com- -

narcd to tho powerful heroes of thohJapaneso legends. It Is in that coun- -

try wo must seek the Samsons whohavo driven back whole armies withthe Jawbone ot an ass. Even in thohooks, which until recently wereused as textbooks in tho schools andfrom which the young people studiedhistory, wo find tho most terriblevaubbuhuuub uhh nuprouauiiiues in

,t j i..i'' '"usirauons.Wc 8ee on of these heroes pone--

tratlng into the center of the hostiledostrovln thoun win,

fan. Another standing fireproof Inthe midst of a mass of flames makesthe hcad8 of flv off bythe hundred. Still another Is fight- -

lng three fabulous monsters that godown before hlm , ,fe o thephundreds ot armg and ,

Intelligent butLBtm thCSe stor aswe'roIf they gospe,' tr tl

. , , , ,Tt ".""5 tbe JaPanese. They"avo beaten us on th6 yellow fields of

2L T,TVT literature. TTT fore- -

ing pract'cnl benefit from tho prof us- -

unsiocnea at we end Of UiQ

autumn, notwithstanding the lotmummors ln the northern part of Aus- -

trails, and II was found that the beesontiroly neglected to lay by a stock

r fod, as was their wont. Thoughthe Increased andworo always regularly tenanted, nohoney was brought home. It soonbecame ovldeni; that, finding tho per- -

cnnial summer of the tropical partsof Australia afforded them an abund- -

ance of font!, without interventloon orIonc winters, the bees forsook theiroId habits, gavo themselves up to,lr3 ot happy Indolence, and no Ion- -

Ser took the trouble to convoy theirsuperabundant supplies to tho hivesPrepared for them. In short, titer--being no winters to provide for, thbees gave up tho practice of storlnjrhoney.

One lesson a in carving, do- -

signing or embroidery, given to thescholars of nubile schools duringstudy hours, would go fnr ln trainingtho oyo and. As a source ofhappiness to tho child, ability 'oreproduce what ho sees Is ot lncom- -

parable value, to say nothing of itspossiblo value as a factor in self- -

support. Tho children of variousEuropean and Oriental nations arotaught to becomo skillful In many ofthe arts yiat In this country aro ac- -

quired, at all, only by adults In. l.mm n n .1 ! -- 1 - t 1vj.m a sum K "I ol A lU 111 HBVUIl

In Switzerland exquisite carvingsaro mado iby children, learn towhittle out almost beforo thoycan'talk plainly. Given tho same op- -

portunlties, American children wouldbecomo equally skilled. That thereIs abundant tlmo for teaching tho fc"minor arts" modeling. drawing,carving, china decora- -

tlon. oxporfonced andtnougutrui teacnors Know run woll, as,when properly tnught, thoy do, not dls- -

piaco tno sot routino of tne sciiooi- -

room, but simply vary nnd rolievo it.and nfford for each childto reveal his or hor special gift.

most loader of this literature was itscreator, Tolstoy.

t i itm..u ..

the

uso,

tho

pur- -

tho

Pfllun

cul1

ls ofis nZZJolrZZ doubtful

We of todat wt. . . ,

" no"8 of Tolstoy. I soon

'"un writers or Mppon saidfn mo' how Tolstoy's books all

1 waB 'also and '"S In our lit--eraturo- - Afcr reading his novels itW0UId bavo bcon Impoosslblo for ust0 rct"rn to our old fantastic tales,J

0,,r ,mPBSIWe exaggerated heroes,0 .'las tau8ht"T""" us to lovo tho truth,,, , 'e ho 1'cace and happiness ot

" 8 drGa of ourJeV :' h,cto bo his heroines.

, uolonBs to us as much as he bo- -" to you' ,

uu iieum oi ine. writer lalike tho setting of a sun Into tho?, "w

-- V. t IZ-.f- , Jp ,2 ' l",,0,ho rays SonluB.

thoUBhTii. W.

Z thUSands,of"?n"

,rays'of

JSSn r? ?'J fi"" f or Cr?ed' And tho

we progress time the? " f, "

lr I th, wU1 totZl.Ll f1 1

Ur

TrAc,ross many ccntries Tolstoy

' h"mn,nlt' f the ,UtUro andfuture send theirchildren to kneel at tho humblo

Ytt8Un,a Po,lana of thof 11,0 Pbrlod when

Russian freedom was

may redeem himself in the drawing

" 'fPOUR NEW GRADUATES wOF ST. PRIORY

Four students graduated FridayIr01n the St. Andrews Priory In thoDavles Memomorial Hall. The hallwas filled to overflowing. Tho names' li'os6 Who received the honors aro

Maud Niauplo Pllanaia, Jdlia Kahao- -Pulanl- - Spencer, Florence IsabelTewksbury and Mary Shui-Leon- g Woo.

During tho evening tho followingprogram was carried out:

Prayer The Rt. Rev. H. B. Resta- -

D. D.

Salutatory Maud Pllanaia.Trio, "Dutch Dolls" Ostlero)

Roso Cummings, Ircno Davison, ElizaEnlas, Agnes Frendo, Gaelic Richard- -son, Flora

Efsay, "Tho Oriental Nations inMary Woo.

Songs (a) "Juno Days" (Chas. P.Scott), (b) "Lullaby" (Emerson)Class of 1911.

Music, "Impromptu No. 2" (Schu- -

bert) FloraEssay, "Legendary Lore of Haw--

alians" Sponcor.Address Tho Rt. Rev. H. B. Resta- -

rck, D. D.Presentation of diplomas.Benediction.

JUST WHAT ITS NAME IMPLIES.Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and

1l 1 . .I llUUil IICJIICUY IS all tllat ltH nniTIA

was used that it did not clvnicllof.. It is as good for tho child asfor the adult and nil danger from chol- -era Infantum will bo avoided if thisinodicino Is promptly administered.Tor salo by all dealers, Benson, Smith

Co.. agents for Hawaii,

rice mil i

ten years, and in the crowds there found that hls profits amounted to but upon her apron. Johnny surrepuuoiisiy lbo 80u on nther side: and yet,j J'oars do tho most beautiful dccor.- - Implies. There has never been a case

wero dozens whose days would not 27 cents. The imago of the half dol- - fell . back upon his sleeve. Then tjleso r0ots, supporting the enormous tlvo art work, creating the design 'ib reported of cramp colic, cholera mor-hav- e

been fully begun or ended with- - lar which his mother had presented to mother and son shook hands. weight of the tree, formed each year it Is wrought out by their fingers, bus or dysentery whero this remedy

foreas boon

to butwhen baby, called

h?r newsboy,depression. goin lock

that tho thoremembered, don't replied

tlced made soaksister hor; w'en

Annio her horAnnio

tho little herJfly. Jntandecl stay

njss dashedrnrnnr

meant

time

aud01.foct

warm

bag

hand

them

"D'yo

or

good

the

these

New

their

must

migtaknbly

sovon

racts from

manycustomer uan from tlmo

hlsnemIeg

.oerou

beo3 hlvos

week

hand.this

if

whotoys

dosighlng,embroidery

opportunity

grow

killed

great

will

will

born.

ANDREWS'

rick,

(May

Tewksbury.

Hawaii"

Tewksbury.

Julia

nrnmnt

NEWTho K. Yamnmoto Rico Mill is tho'.'?

largest as well as tho flnost in HmIslands. All machinery is of tho vnrv ?

lato'st pattern. Tho famous TonmiRico Is cleaned at this mill. With tholargo cloanlng cnpaclty thoy aro abloto handle considorablo outside partic- -

A dull child in the grammar clausular work which thoy guarantee

if

'It

4

3

Page 18: AVIATOR II 5IIIS...omul, brown spot of decay on the stand that unless interest Is shown In Iruit. As soon as the owners of trees this matter there will be very little notice this,

I SapolinBath TubEnamelgives a Puro White, Ivory, Rosoor Nllo Qrccn finish that willBtnnd hot or cold water nnd you

enn apply It with llttlo troubleand small cost.

Then thero's "Sapolin" FloorStains, Varnish Stains, StovePipe Enamel and many othors

that wo will gladly tell you

about.

L

Limited

177 S. King St.

G. Brewer & Ge.Ltti.

Fire and Marineinsurance Agencies

Royal Insurance Co. of Liver,pool.

London Assurance Corpora-tion.

Com mercialUnion AssuranceCo. of London.

Icottiah Union and NationalInsurance Co. of Edinburgh.dedonian Insurance Co. ofEdinburgh.

American and Foreign-jMar-in-

Insurance Co.

DO YOU USE

Pau ka HanaIN THE KITCHEN?

Cable Address "Dulsenberg" Honolulu

E. G. Duisenberg8TOCK AND BOND BROKER

member Hawaiian Stock Exchange

First Foor, Stangenwald Building

Merchant Street. Honolulu.

Telephone J013. F. O. Box 322.

OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOo o

Absolutely Pureq qO ICE CREAM Oo oq Delivered to all parts of city. 0O PALM CAFE. OO Oo o o OO oooooooooooo

Pacific Electric Co.W. H. STUART, Prop.

Electrical repairing and con-

tracting of all description.1152 FORT ST., opp. Convent.

TEL. 3132.

STEAMER AND CANVASTRUNKS.

Sizes 26 to 40 at a big reduction

Chan Kee27 S. Hotel St.

AUTO STA IN DTwo Six-Se- at Cadillac Cars

PHONE 3196.

Beretanla St near Nuuann.

PUBLIC STENOGRAPHER.

NOTARY PUBLIC.

Arent to grant marriage licensesLoans Negotiated. Real Estato.

Court, Legal and Commercial Work.

O. P. SoaresRoom 7, Magoon Building.

Cor. Merchant and Alakea.

STANDARD GAS ENGINESFor All Purposes.

MARINE, STATIONARY, PUMPINGHOISTING, ETC.

HONOLULU IRON WORKS" CO.Ago&tB for Hawaii.

Fins Job Prtafeag at Stn Office

SALE OF FRIENDLESS

DEAD MEN'

Tho most grucsomo auction sale ;

that was over held took placo InWashington city. It was held by theTreasury Department under a recentlaw of Congress.

Tho Biibject matter of this salo con.slsted of tho property and effects ofAmerican citizens who had died Inforeign lands and which had been unclaimed by relatives or heirs of thodeceased porsons. For tho last halfcentury this property has been col- -

lected from all quarters o'f the globefrom all manner of sources, chleliy ,

through tho agency of United StatesConsuls, Ministers and Ambassadorsabroad.

There finally accumulates such amass of this unclaimed property thatthe Treasury Departmmont recentlycalled upon Congress to authorizo asalo of it, which was accordinglydone. Tiiero were nearly a hundreddead men represented at the saleand by every kind of personal effect.

It was a collection of "ships andshoes and sealing wax and cabbagesand kings." Old heirlooms, trinkets,jewelry, strange money of strangecountries, guns, watches, prayerbooks, diamonds, and forged bills ofexchange were a few of the Itemsput on the block to bo "knockeddown" to the bargain hunter. The

, , A. .. . ,, , .u, au u.u m , 8

in many cases ridiculously highprices.

A lot of Guatemalan money of theface value of $98, for instance (leftby one Elmer Porter, who died an

njinknown number of years ago in thatcountry), and which is practicallyt Ui UJIt-U- IU (111 lilll, HO, UUCIspirited bidding, sold for $24. Thepurchaser did not- - state what ho ex-

pected to do with it. Tho most val- -

nnablo thing sold was a pair of dia.

mond earrings, left by Mrs. Hartsuff,whoso place of death Is not recorded.The pair brought $87.

I

IPocket-book- s predominated, mostly

rtTrmtv nf onntnnts Thnn nnmn rfntrR

rings of every description from thediamond to the plain gold band, and,In one case, twenty-fou- r rings thatwere merely marked "cheap." t

Watches, mostly of cheap make,were also much In evidence; theywere for the most part of the gold-fille- d

or silver type, but sold farabove their value In many cases, illus-

trating the Great American passionfor being "done" in a bargain. Alsorevolvers were frequent; these, too,sold at a good price. Of coursebibles, even a polyglot bible, were

and there was an occasionalprayer book; but the revolvers out-

numbered both these and the biblesonly brought twenty-fiv- e cents apiece!

One American citizen who died Infar-of- f Cathay, left only a box of cart-ridges. There was no name attachedto his "chest," and he was merelydesignated as number 112. One wouldlike to know more of a man who hadseen fit to "cash In" that far fromhome and leavo an estate so essen-tially belligerent.

While these articles were the prop-

erty of those who had died in strangelands and without friends either theraor at home a fact that should haveinvested the proceedings with somosolemnity and sentiment there waslittle of either present during thesale. It was strictly a business affair,as though it had been a clearing-ou- t

sale after a fire loss.Not even did the auctioneer at-

tempt to dwell upon the romance thatmust surround tho belongings of awanderor who had died In Tibet, ortho snows of the Andes; he sung his

sing-son- "Going, going, going."with tho same placid monotony thathe had half an hour' before auctionedoff a second-han- d set of bedroom fur-

niture.Altogether the government cleaned

up nearly $G00 on tho sale which Is

small reward for tho trouble It hasbeen put to In collecting from allparts of the earth and conserving thoheterogeneous collection. Yet eventhat money it will not get.

"Tho cash brought at the salo,"said Charles H. Butler, chief of theDiplomatic and Consular Division ofthe Auditor of State, which Is abranch of the Treasury, "will no

turned Into tho Treasury to thocredit of each dead man's estate. Ifhis heirs should over turn up, It will

be paid to thorn."Such an event Is hardlv likely,

however, since most of the men havebeen dead for years, and when thefact of their deaths wore made knownto tho govornmenL every stop possible wag taken to locato tho personsontltled to tho dead man's property

"Slnco notlco of this salo wnsgiven", however," continued Mr. But-lo- r,

"wq havo been deluged with let-tor- s

from all parts of tho countrymaking Inquiry about relatives of thewrltora who years ago departed for

THE HAWAIIAN STAR, SATURDAY, JUNE 17, 1911.

CHESTS

distant countries and have nover beenheard from. Many of theso lettersaro from wives begging for Informa-tion about missing husbands and de-

siring to know if their names arc onour dead men's list. They would allmake a volumo of most pathetic read-- ,

Ing."Wo have not been able to locate u n

single person who has been inquiredabout. All our dead men appear tob0 without friends or relatives."

Deforo tho sale Mr. Dutler showedn safe full of stuff, part of the "deadmen's cheats," as he called tho pllo.Each "estate" was neatly dono up ina package and labeled with tho nameoof the dead man, if known, and thetime and place of his decease.

"Ono gifted with the genius ofSh'orlock Hoolmes," he said, "mightbe able to tell a great deal about thehistory and personality of many ofthese poor fellows. Now, here is aman, J. D. Garner by name.

"It Is odds that h0 fought undertho Confederate flag in the civil warand left for the tropics in disgustnfter Lee's surrender, taking hishousehold goods with him in thoshape of tho family silver. This Ishow the conclusion Is reached."

Ho showed a bundle that containeda lnf nf nllvtrwnrn UtiIvo f.lrtsuch other table stuff, a Confederate

for $1,000, two Confederate billsfor $100, and one for --10.

"Small doubt," ho continued, "buthat Garner, who died in Panamathree years ago, treasured thesethings as souvenirs of tho lost cause,and evidently treasured these thingsaboV(J a fQr ho butother property."

One of tho most Interesting of th""chests" shown by Mr. Butler wasthat of Patrick Dowd, who years agodied in the heart of the Andes, farabove La Paz, Bolivia, which Is Itselffar up in the Andes.

"This dead man," said Mr. Butler,in the role of Sherlock Holmes, "wasn" Roman Cath- -folic, ho was a wandering trader, andaccustomed to daring all kinds ofdangerous places and situations. Theproof? Just see these articles tliatmake up Ills chest."

And this Is what Patrick Dowd left

fraaBaBSBMSMKH

Ip

fin '"" '' '' '"i ... lull H1U

in tho way of worldly goodB when hoshuffled off tffhis mortal coll In thosnows of tho Andes!

A Winchester rifle, 649 cartridges,a silver watch nnd chain, thirteen raz-oor-

a pair of scissors, a gold rlnir,twenty-fou- r cheap rings, a bible, aKey to Heaven (a Catholic prayerbook), and a folding cot or camp bed.

From all which ho who runs mayread as plainly as did Mr. Butler Justwhat manno rof man was PatrickDowd.

Without doubt tho most remarkableestate In this collection of dead mon'a"chests" Is that of Hermann Schneider. He died some years ngo on board

steamship while on his way to 7Zr.'""lucky day for city propertyrope. His "chest," outside somo fewpersonal effects, consisted of a number of bills of exchango drawn by--

American bankers on their Europeancorrespondents, together with a num.ber of blank forms of such bills.

"When w0 received tho property,"said Mr. Butler, "wo sent tho signedhills of exchange to tho banks whichhad Issued them, asking payment toho made to us. In reply wo wer6 In-

formed by all of them that the billswere forgeries! Evidently HermannSchneider wbb planning to reap a har-vest in Europe with his forged billswhen death, himself a reaper, cut himdown."

Coins and money of the followingnations were among the effects sold:Guatemalan, Bolivian, Hindustan andother parts of India, Chinese, French.Portugal, Spanish, Turkish and Ger-

man.No such collection of dead men's

plunder will hereafter ho allowed tocollect on tho 'hands of the Treasuryofficials. Every two years tho un-

claimed property of those dyingabroad will be sold and the proceedsheld for those who may therafterprove a title to tho money.

And among all this heterogeneouscollection there was only one articlethat had a namo upon It. It' was apipe case , bearlnc the name "FrankC. Wllmeroth." Washington Star.

GLORIOUS NIGHTS AND DAYS.These nights are beautiful down at

Halclwa. The moon adds much tothe splenor of the scenery and theweather Is all that could be wishedfor. Those who were at tho hotel lastSaturday night when tho moon wasfull report a delightful time. Themanagement assured the public thatevery day brings something new to theguests at Halelwa and for the reasonIt is tho popular place for tourists andlocal people at all times.

m sii

SHOCK

TOit

G0N5C GE?1!

What Is tho pcrcentago of deprecia-tion which should "shock tho

In a property sale? Thisquestion ought to bo determined bytho courts, according to what has hap-

pened to tho Roe estate.A few weeks ago two resldenco prop-

erties In that estate wero sold byJames P. "Morgan at auction under an

prices at which tho lots wero soldwero so low that William Savidgo, administrator, requested tho court not toconfirm the sales. A certified checkwas offered In evidence of a tender,after tho sale, of $800 more than thoauction price for ono of tho properties

this being tho former residence oftho lato William C. Boe which pricewas $1010.

Judge Robinson held, under judicialdecisions of Hawaii, that where thosale was well advertised and therdiwns nothing irregular about its con-

duct, the highest bidder was entitledto tho property unless tho price wflsso inadequate as to "shock tho con-

science."Mr. Morgan has just resold tho prop

erty at private sale to Martin Moserfor $2000, or $990 more than the grossamount received for It at the judicialsalo. Whether the "conscience" Isshocked or not, tho Roo estato sustains a jolt of nearly a thousand do!lars voltage.

DOES SEEM ODD.A man at a play is a funny aHalr,

as every observer agrees; goes out be-

tween acts to get somo fresh air, andcomes back smelling of cheese.

DIVIDEND NOTICE.HAWAIIAN COMMERCIAL &

SUGAR COMPANY.Notlco Is hereby given that an ex

tra, dividend of tventy-flv- e cents(25b) per share will be paid to stock'holders in the Hawaiian Commercial& Sugar Company of record June 22

1911.Tho stoqk books of the company

will be closed for transfers fromThursday, Juno 22, until Monday,

June 25, 1911.ALEXANDER & BALDWIN, LTD.,

Honolulu Transfer Agents

Finn Job Printing at Star Office.

i minimi' n iiiiMfiiwiiiiiiiiiiwiiiiiiiiii f

Hi

is m mm?mmwMmmm&xm&mi mm

ty am .zk: k ; im n .im-.;.-- u m: ii m a our

R GOOD TASTE AND JUDGMENT SI Iam are moj--

c essential to having a beautifully appointed table, ufi jjBfl than large expenditure. Hi M fa51 Let us show you unusual patterns in wl RfJ 7S

Ii Community Silver 11 i91 It lias a distinct richness of appearance and charm of Hi ElHm design which rival sterling. ii l--

i

In It s tnore than triple plate it costs hut a trifle more Wj

1 than ordinary plated ware it lasts a life time. B9 FJ H

II W. W. Dimond & Co., Ltd. P l

U ffnim j rgSSSS'j Mill

mil hum

A GOOD FRIEND,No ono can have a bettor frlondt

whon troubled with colic or diarrhoea,than Chamborlaln's Colic, Cholera andDiarrhoea Bomedy. Ever slnco

aged man of today was a childit bus boon going about doing gooduntil Its fame has spread to nearly allparts of the civilized world and stands-unrivalle-

for Its prompt cures. Itnover falls to clve relief. For salo byall doalens, Benson, Smith & Oo.,agonts for Hawnli.

Caslle,LIMITED.Honolulu, T. H.

SHIPPING AND COMMISSION'MER.CHANT8.

SUGAR FACTORS and GENERAL IN.

8URANCE AGENTS.Representing

Cwa Plantation Co..Walalua Agricultural .Co., Ltd.Kohala Sugar Co,Apokaa 8ugar Mill Co.Fulton Iron Works of St. Louis.Westons CentrifugalsBabcock & Wilcox Boilers.Green's Fuel Economizer.Mateon Navigation Co.New England Mutual Life Insur

ance Company of Boston.Aetna Insurance Co.National Fire Insurance Co.Citizen's Insurance Co. (Hartford

Fire Insurance Co.)The London Assurance Corpora,

tl- - .

Woodlawn.MANOA VALLEY.

See CHAS. 8. DE8KY.

8TEINWAY & 80N8Awn nTWiivn PTANnflTHAYER PIANO CO. tf'

1C6 Hotel Street Phone 2313. &TUNING GUARANTEED rt

THE CAPITOL CAFEKing St., opp. Young Hotel

Everything New and Clean.POPULAR PRICE8.

DrinkMAY'S OLD KONA COFFEE.

Best In the Market-HENR- Y

MAY & CO.Phone 1271.

Dress GoodsMen's Furnishings

YAT HING, - 127 Hotel St.

THE GREAT BENJAMIN COMPOUND IHERBALOCures Constipation.Makes New, Rich

StomachBlood.

and LiverRegulator nsMsjBBMsj

cs tho Kidneys.

611 ill BO LTD

CHINKSB N13W3PAPH11PUBLISHING ANDJOb PRINTING.

e. 41 Cor. of Smith tuirf Hlotal lite.

Empire Chop Bouse(Lately Palac Grill.)

Bthol St Opp. Empire TheatreOpen Day and Night, Cuisine Unsur

passed.BEST MEALS AT ALL HOURS.

BEFOREbaking a poEoy of lifeiaaurance in any otheroscapany ask to see the

CONTRACT- IN TUK -

Now England MutualLifo Insurance Com-

pear Of Boston, Mas,

and compare the manybdv&ntagaa it offerswtib those oi other

companies

U i bd Lid.

R4 m f a

nil

Page 19: AVIATOR II 5IIIS...omul, brown spot of decay on the stand that unless interest Is shown In Iruit. As soon as the owners of trees this matter there will be very little notice this,

THE HAWAIIAN STAR, SATURDAY, JUNE 17, 1911. NINETEEN

TheStar's Cook BookMeringue Rice Pudding. Tako ton- -

cupful rice to 1 pint water; when rlcois boiled dry add 1 pint milk, a plccobutter size of an egg, and C eggs. Beatyolks and grated rind of lemon, andmix with rlco. Butter dish, pour Inmixture, bako lightly. Beat whites tostiff froth; add cup of sugar and Julco

.of a lemon. When pudding is nearlydone, spread on frosting, bako in slowovon till top Is light brown.

Orange Pudding. 1 cupfulB staloy, unfermented bread, 1 cupful finely

chopped suet, 1 cupful sugar, 2 eggs,julco of 1 orango, 1 tablespoonful'ox- -

tract orango, cupful milk. Mix allthoroughly together, fill 6 cups wellgreased, boll 30 minutes. Turn out ondish, servo with Hard Sauce, flavoredwith 1 teaqpoonful extract orango.

Plum Pudding, No. 1 (Royal Christ- -

mas), 2 cupfuls raisins, 2 cupfuls cur- -

rants, 2 cupfuls suet, Ms cupful al- -

monds, blanched, 2 cupfuls flour, 2cupfuls grated sugar muffins or bread,

cupful each, citron, orange, andlemon peel, 8 eggs, 1 cupful sugar, V,

sugar,

flour,

tered.

Sauce.

sugar, pint milk, 1

toaspoonful each cloves, allsplcotcaapoonfuls salt; water

mako batter; two or threetimes whllo bako slowly for

hours.Rice 1 cupful 1

quart milk, eggs, tablespoonfulcupful sugar, pinch salt. Boll

pint until tender, then rc- -

move fire; add eggs,and milk, beaten together, pour

pudding dish, break butter smallpieces surface, bake In steady30 with Sauce,

smallsoaked quart cold water

1 cupful sugar. 1U Dints

S S1 atfDi-- v

&y Barbcc

oman

CUPID'SDOES THE HAMPER?

"What a handicap domesticity a hamper? are itsand the

cupful cream, 1 gill each and before It Is wanted, eaten cold respondent. "I am' to more worthbrandy, large pinch salt, 1 tablespoon- - with cream or milk and sugar. Somo with Shaw thit ranrrIase ought whiiu, jei net-ful extract nutmeg, 1 teaspoonful bak- - prefer the pudding made with 3 pints ,

ertholess, many man and many npowder. Put in large bowl raisins, milk water. i

10 uo auollsneu. woman as they say this, think baotseeded, currants, washed picked, Tapioca and Cocoanut Pudding. 1

' T1,Ia conclusion is reached by my a bit regretfully to their youthfulsuet, chopped very fine, almonds cut cup tapioca, soaked night, yelks correspondent becaus0 her brother, Thov oir-- i, ,fine, citron, and lemon 4 whites 1 2 Yorange, peels, eggs, 2, cupful sugar, man mucn nterested in the natural recall1chopped, lemon, sugar, wine, brandy, tablespoonfuls grated cocoanut; bako cherished projects nowand cream, lastly; add flour, sifted Vs hour. Make frosting of whites 2 when with her and inter- - thrown overboard to marry, and ofwith powder, mix all well together; eggs, 3 tablespoonfuls sugar, 2 table- - ested friends discourses by the hour how their life Is from whitput in large, well mould; set spoonfuls grated cocoanut; spread on biology and kindred subjects a they hadin saucepan with boiling water to over pudding when baked. Set in ,'"anncu- - Sometimes, theyreach half up sides of mould, steam oven until a light brown. "!09t entertaining and Inspiring fash- - think little bitterly that it wouldthus five hours; turn out on dish care- - PIES. ,on- - He up all Is bo some compensation . if they couldfully; serve with Wine Sauce. - Paste for Pies, No. 1. 3 oupfuls man from one of his discuss these ambitions in theirPlum Pudding No. 2. 1 sifted flour, teaspoonful baking 0wn household For whpn with hU nn,i nn iiach grated lunch rolls or very powder, largo pinch salt, 1 cupful T ,n.tellBent sympathy.finely chopped wifo mtniIy he seldom mentions r, as in the case" ofsuet, raisins, seeded, cream, cupful butter. Sift flour, my correspondcurrants, washed and picked, and cof- - salt, powder add the theso matters, since no one Is ent's brother, those of the familyfee sugar, cupful each milk cream; mix into smooth, rather firm ested in them. Ho is, as the writer clrclo do not nnnreclatn thoaoJ!''.60 marmalade, 4 eggs, two paste; flour board, roll it out thin; Bays ..Just a domesticated animal, ments or Interests SIand If1 teaspoonful baking spread tho butter on it evenly, fold theypowder, 1 teaspoonful each extract in three; roll out thin, and fold in UKe most middle-clas- s married males, appreciation, they must seek It

cloves Mix all threo; repeat twice more, and use. Away from his family, he is more, side of the homo circle. .all these ingredients well together in Paste No. 2-.-3 cupfuls flour, tea- - Interesting, a more worth-whlI- e man. ' But surely,large bowl, put well buttered spoonful baking powder, pound So sno concUlde(i domesticity Is i ship In iNoiV ,11 remtlon;mould; set in saucepan with boiling beef suet, freed of skin, chopped blame for allwater to reach half its sides; very fine, 1 cupful water. Place tho and marriage is holding this. But rather the conditions

thus 3 turn ou caro-- flour, sifted with tho powder, bowl, .down many a genius Into a humdrum der which married life is today livedfully on dish, serve with Wino Buet water; mix into smooth, commonplace existence. Marriage tn tho ,,,'SailPP rnt Tirr firm rlnncrti i until

"Poor Man's cupful Pa Those who matter of supporting thesuet, chopped, cupful seeded rai- - lk cupful lard, cupfuls butter, haye read Wells Love nnd Mr. Low- - family as if did In Lowisham'ssins, y2 cupful currants, washed and teaspoonful baking powder, 1 cupful Isham," may recall Mr. Lewlsham's case. And overythlnc ho

cieun, wet towui, unu uour u. itou to be, by his genius; and How, at tno ng and mendintr and tniritrr mm fout dough well flouredon board, place en1 ot a year of married ltlfe ho toro the children. Their conversation Isbutter on It, dough it, com- -

pletely covering butter: roll it out. n's "Schema" bits and threw it mor0 concerned with shoes fnr ti.o

j,iv.vCu, tuijiuia b"vuu corn mui- -fins or bread, 1 cupful flour, 1 tea- -spoonful baking powder, cupfulbrown 1 pint milk. Mix all welltogether, put into well greased mould,oct .u wm,Biiu wiiu uouiug water xoreach half up sides of mould; steamtwo hours, turn out on dish, carefully;serve with butter and sugar.

Plum Pudding (French). poundbeef kidney suet. pound raisins,(Smyrna and Malaga mixed), Ms

pound fresh bread crumbs, 1 table- -

spoonful flour, 6 ounces brown sugar,'4 ounces orange peel ana citron mixed,a little salt, of a grated nutmeg, apinch of pulverized ginger and a littlelemon nool ohnnnod flno. nhnut fi oirirs.about 2 tablespoonfuls good brandy or

brandy, salt,

adding

little may applyto nuddinc when it

amay bo cook- -

in o. . , . i ...

inalso Boil hours,

Princess 2-- 3

ter,teaspoonful

powder, glasscream

at a beating minutessifted

but- -In. . I. ., 1 r ! nMnh

hours; turn onulsn Wltn

ta--

brown egg, 1"

ginger, toa soft Btlr

2Pudding. rlco,

1

buttor, 1

rlco Insugar, salt,mix;

In Inon oven

BrandyTapioca Pudding. 1

tapioca, In 1

over night,

wlno and rewardsneree a

ing and noand

over a .,of

ina

wakes over and a

cupfulsand

and Inter- -

citron,

and a

inand to

hours! inand add and

largely a1 Mr.

elso miiQt

fold overinto

milk, 4 eggs. Proceed as directed forIUco Pudding.

Tapioca Pudding. 1 small cupful !

tapioca, 1 quart milk, 1 teaspoonfultablespoonfuls sugar. Soak',

tapioca in water 4 or thenadd milk; flavor with extractlemon, or anything elso prefer.Bake slowly 1 hour. To bo mado day

wuior. out iiira mio Biueu wunpowder; mix into firm pastewith the water; it to cool for15 minutes; meanwhile, press

salt from butter, by pressing in

lightly, V-- inch in thickness, turn itover, fold each end to middle, flour

out again; fold ends to middle,turn It; repeat this 3 times more

and use. If this paste is made In sum- -

tor, teaspoonful powder,

cupful sugar, 3 cup water, 1

very thin; wash milk, bakoin steady, moderate oven 25

i ior uuuhbu,Apple Pot Piie. 14 apples, peeled,

cored and sliced pints flour, tea- -r..i t, .. .t , . ...bijuuuiui uuiuug iiuwuer, j. uupiui bu--

gar, cupful' butter, cupful milk,largo pinch salt. Sift flour with pow -

dor and salt, in butter cold, addmilk, mix into dough as for bis -

cults; with it lino shallow 'awithin two inches of pour in1M: apples, and sugar; jwet edges and cover with rest of 1

dough; put cover on, sot it to boll 20minutes, then placo in ovenuntil nnnloa nvn nAAlrnil. Vinn mmm'r. '

from cut top crust in four equalpieces!units, uiau uuiuus, my on

of side crust cut in diamondspieces of top crust on plato; serve

1W

DOMESTICintelligent

re-thought action,

beginning

lZn

different

together;

Handicap,

Pudding.- "-

omeTalks

mnv

for it

cooklne

it these

to

water

know

Pie.

when

pinch

cun

should notnot

nioinNo

sugarin nino

off It InRtntvnnn

on eacn opera- - wife upon the sciences ne given sweetness and inspiration comtlon of folding and rolling. 8 to mnater because the first radeshlp.No. 4. 5 cupfuls flour,

ful butter. 1 lnril. w.i- - llnce hls wlf0 ouidnt liae unuo.- - The great married noo- -

rum, and sweet Sift flour, with powder; rub in lard and In the second place Hfe at to witheTpuddg18 fvasnletnhV0rrai,nEs00,dn l&?&iAZ 7" Cb",Bg1T 71 tt

lukewarm place them basin Paste No. 6.--3 cupfuls sifted flour, trying find ne of because Indus-o- r

wooden with the peel already 1 large cupful butter teaspoonful was too to talk. Domestic- - conditions. Remove this bread-cu- tinto square and steep in a baking tablespoonfuls su- - had clipned his wings. he and-butte- r anxiety

the beef gar, cupful Siftney fat and chop it fine, with one and sugar, in butter, add tha hav,nsua ,son .VElg worth llfo would upspoonful flour, mix it well with the milk; mix a smooth dough while than having a career. flowers when the icy hand wintercrumbs bread, brown and the i is the saner conclusion? Is ig removed. BOYD,

then add raisins, the peel, Apple 1. or G apples, 1the. rest

No. fresh,the in tho

largo washnapkin, removo; extract

paste;tho wet edges, cover with plate the paste, finally

edges,pack in

No. Apple plato wetin cupful

as level, core, sav- -25butter,

not disturb paste; littloedges must

sauce, you

tho little rum sauceBeparate. This

tho mould wolltereu, anu tne puuuing akin, buttered.

cupful but- -

cupful largobaking

brandy.butter and

1 fewbetween, powder,

brandy; mould, wellSet saucepan with

,1n

steam 1

carelUliy; iinou

baking;

milkfrom

servecupful

hours,the

you

nour,smooth,

placemilk

it,roll

with

till apples are

1

rubtea

stowpanbottom;

water,

moderate

oven,

Yet

pie

boiled in milk cream.till soft;, sot kettle wa- - A and Rich Dessert

let sago swell Cream and Cutup eggs, stir cooked milk in thin Bprlnkle

sago; sugar over them; let stand forThen In and or hours; sorvo on ordinary,

Sauce for 2-- 3 cupful but- - plates. Tho pio hot-

ter beaten to cream, stir sugar till crust that not thick,quite water, but and flaky. 1 coffeecup-ad- d

starch mixed cold of thick, cream, cupful ofter, till tho whole is of consistency of sugar, 1 flour,th'ln 6Ugar 1 extract bakobutter, pour over you aro crust

half beforo and hard, so absorbing, after teaspoonful extract

or to Blackberry No. 4,

rich flavor. cul' and three berriesTouffle of Fruits. With to pio plato paste,

fruits of naturo, such in borrlesas bananas, edges, covor and milk;etc., proceed in Removo quick, steady

press tes.a slevo; what thus ob- - Cocoanut for Cus-taino- d

In a bowl, adding Vj pound of tard plain, nddlng cupfulswhites of grated out

eggs; beat well with egg- - pint milk,for or Custard Pie (Plain). No. C,

tho whites eggs Pints milk, 1 1

Into well tec teaspoonful extract lomon.Put a in woll- - greased plato 4, Inch thick, tako

heated or of pasto, it well, andpalm of hand,

top. fruits, such as edgo, to pasto frompears, cook first and thick,press through a sieve. of plato. Fill su-i- s

exactly same for tho othors. gar, eggs, milk, beaten cx- -

Potato tract, In moderategrated raw; 1 20 minutes,

1 tablespoonful of Custard Pie Procoed aspint tablespoonfuls for Pio, plain, laying in

n

IN REALM.LIFE

to Orthe average mar-- wards better?

differentbuttered

the

bread,

the

up

become

cupful

riaBo relationship writes a cor- -

wonderful "Scliema," written wnen a

st"l,fnt. by nhlch lie was lorevolutionize the jinlverso makoeverything straight and as It ougit

Into the waste-pape- r basket,went to to hisn baby and a ue

spent hours discoursing to nls

him, sho had never stuuW

erned somewhat by the acidity thoapples. Bake a bottom crust;

. .. . . ... . fpnoMnix,. 1 1 ii i. tvinlrn nwiiue u ui"tof white of 1 egg; .when aredone spread" frosting evenly over the

i. 1 i v.rt nrnn nnil hrownlop; sut uguui m m v.v..slightly. ,

Lovers of Chocolate, in anyevery form, can mako toa common pie. Beat 1 to

stiff froth, then add pulverized su- -

and grated chocolate M- - tea- -

extract vanilla; thistop the pio let it harden

a in tho oven. Ormay prepare it in still way.T,.f tliA .honolnto 1n !l 1 !1 Rl II 1 11 G

jback of the stove, and let Itnot a drop water It); whenmelted beat 1 egg and somo sugar Inwith it- - in latter case it a

chocolate brown in color, andin tho other a sort

1. 7 pounds cur- -

rants, 3M- - lbs. peeled3 lbs. beef. 3 Buet,

each citron, lemon and orango2Vj coffee lbs. raisins, 4

nutmegs, 1 oz. .cinnamon, oz. eachcloves and maco, 1 brandy, and 1

wine. Wash, currants, dry,a l . tlin Knlcilnaluuiu, Biuuu i"u i ,

avin Rinows beef and suet,each ingredient separately very

thovlargo us uiofinished, finally adding spices,and wino; thoroughly together;pack in Jars; In dry place.oTZl7.floured In making mlnco meat.

No. 2. 2 currants.5 lbs. pooled and cored 2 lbs.lean, boiled beef. 1 lb. beet suet,

I Wit,

Sontiraentallv wo v.tni, w

dropped order wnro thta wnrfaro a living. With the be- -

comes a matter of making ends meer,of sweeping and rlonn.

children sclenro Thncnthings that not marriacoitself, is hampering

that should abolished, not

pl0 are to live lowor

ready put In tho crust nrennrntho raisins and put them a inai,,t )i . , ...... .Diuvo wun enough tocovor them. Cook until tender- -

fill.

you can put raislnrt111 an lio 1"!. same number willcme in each piece. Then, iftho edges of tho cru-- t no juicecan escape, you will never bvthe taste that tho worecooked with thoPumpkin Tako largo sizedpumpkin, of color, wash andjust as would withskin on; cookedcarefully sieve, clearing it of1 11 1)9 . . .

urown sugar, 1 cup molasses, mix welltogether. Beat tho whites volknof 4 eggs well together and mix withthe pumpkin thornm-hiv- . !..molasses and sugar, of 1teaspoonfuls best ginger, l teasnoon- -ful ground cinnnmon; tako 1 milkmix woll altogether.. This is intendedmako G pies; pumpkina largo ono, add less milk so asto get too thin. Bako in platelined with pastry.mado tho juamo way.

Rhubarb Pastei .u.Dlinnhna t1 cupntisCut fruit Htnnli

Ping cook very iastlOW

mer, put ice uetween nau the ofin

Paste 1 cup- - .cunfnl 1 nnnfiil majority of

tablespoonful science, ho bo consumed

water, in night ofbowl, dog-tire- d trial

pieces, powder, 3 jty felt and tho montiilittlo brandy. Now trim kid- - milk. flour with more aml ,,.....,very rub spring liko

Into of ofof sugar stiffness. Which BARBARA

eggs; the Pie No. 5of the nutmeg,

support

for

of

tiioy

egg

ofyou

moltof

the

ot

np- -

lb.

picknnd

wiuy

Mincemeat lbs.

9

sciences,

nutmeg.

and

be

tho

be

you

you wot

uoli you

present,

ginger, and, of all, and after it is ful extract lemon, Paste 4. Peel, of pie some or peels of lemons very thin, 1 tea-al- lwell mixed, cream. Spread all quarter and put stew- - canned peaches, cus- - spoonful cinnamon, cloves and

this in a napkin, well buttered, with sugar and water; when ten- - tard. nutmeg; currants, stono the rai-fol- d

up the corners of der, when cold, Cherry Pie. Paste No. 3, 3 sins, free suet of skin; chop each d

tie to level of the pudding, so and fill plate, lined with cherries, 1 cupful sugar, gredient separately, very flne putas to make It round; then plungo the paste rolled Lino pio with wet soon as done in pan, n'ddinrfpudding Into a saucepan of boiling wa- - out thin, and wash with milk; bake In add cherries, cover, bako in spices and wines; mix thoroughlyter, and let it boil at least 4 hours steady, moderate oven 20 minutes. steady, quick 25 minutes. jar; store cold placeconstant Take out and let Apple Pie 2.--3 tart apples,

'

Dried Pie apples until pio with paste; 'edges-drai-

a sieve; cut it from tho top sugar, lemon rind grated, quite soft, rub through a colander, put in mince-meat- ; cover, wash overso to keep on a then turn It Paste No. 4. and ap- - have them juicy. Beat two eggs, with egg, in quick oven min-ou- t

on a dish, removing tho napkin pies very thin; lino pio with ing the white of one; cup h utes.carefully, so to tho flno put In apples, sugar, and cup sugar to every pio; season to How to Raisins In a

of the pudding. Sprinkle a water; wet tho with rolled taste. Quantity of sugar be gov- - Mince Pie. When the mince-mei- t isrum a

match the is ontable. Servo

pudding.i mould hut.

ueu nap- -

well 4Pudding.

1 sugar, 1 cupfulflour, 3 eggs,

small Rub tosmooth sugar, add

time,add with

and put Intoboiling

1.

thusservo

Puddlna. 1 nuart milk. 4

and2

4

minutes;

butter, 35

and

to

and

baking

teaspoon- -

outminutes

1 1

to

cupfuls

mem3, and

a

existence

medium

2

blespoonfuls sago the withdish in of hot Is of

ter, and gradually. Beat Pie Oranges. tho3 and into oranges slices and su-an- d

salt and to tasto. gar them 2put oven bake very 3 fruit

lightly. this: is mado with ain torn only, and

thick. To boiling light Takocorn with wa- - ful swoot

pulverized tablespoonfulstarch; mix this with and egg; flavor with lemon;

V pudding whllo until suro tho is brownwarm, and other just serv-- that it will not

adding 1 the custard.vanilla, lemon, nutmeg glvo a Pie. Pasto &

suear, cupfulsDifferent each pie. Lino with

a soft and put and sugar, wot thopeaches, plums, apricots, wash with

this manner: bako in 20and tho fruit through

put you have Pie. Procoed asPie. V

powdered sugar and the cocoanut, and leavingthreo an

jbeater 5 6 minutes. Then tako Pastoof 0 or 7 and beat 14 4 eggs, cup sugar,

them a stiff froth; mix Lino wellgethor. this on dish a pio

oven C C minutes before ball flourSprinkle powdered sugar on ceed with loft prossed

For hard apples, against push thootc, them then center into a high rim on edgo

The troatmont whilo in ovon withtho and with

Sweet Pudding. Six good and strained; bakosized potatoes, table--spoonful of butter, (Peach).lard, 1 molasses, 3 Custard bot- -

is,"

goingand

andgrubbing wife,

mother-in-law- .

never

stood

withui

tho

this additioncustard

withgarspoonful spreadon the and

.for momentanother

On(uo

put with

will beregular

gray.Mince-mea- t No.

and coredpies, lbs.

peel,lbs. sugar, 2

pintpint white

fromchoptine, put into pan

brandy,mix

store cold,

apples,

in towife,

than runhamper; tn

condl- -

tions

compelled

inon

aftortho crust.mum

so that

raisins notmince-meat- ,

firm, deeppotatoes

thoroughly passthrough

all III annrlo m-- i.

and

topo

deepplain Squash

Pie. 4(lnitm.1.

skin, shaV

powder

last torn cooked,core apples, then each

pan,the add cupfuls

the tho stemmed,

oven in Linoboiling. Stew the

Peel, sllco bakeplate

as Distributepart with paste

eggs,

out

sano

Delicate

juicy

ovon

as

ovon

pies

and

wltn i i three-quarter- s

rhubarb, 3 across aJtenlng 3 In

in ritWSrw.TC NT"i" "juiun oven lu minutes. j

nucsicDcrry Hie. Pasto No. 3 3 ,cupfuls huckloborries, 1 cupful' sucarL no pie tho pasto, wet tho

t . i'Mi

in. citron, zvfc ius. coueo sugar, - iu. uu uurnos, washed nnd pickedraisins, 1 lb. seodless raisins, 2 table- - over, and sugar; covor, wash withspoonfuls cinnamon, 1 nutmeg; 1 tn- - milk, bako in quick oven 20 minutesblespoonful each maco, cloves and all- -

spice, 1 pint each Mndoria wine and ALLIGATOR PEARbrandy. Wash currants, dry, pick s ...them, stono tho raisins, skin mt cac" I)car in half lengthwise,and from tho beef, each tako out kernel, and placo tho fruitIngredient up separately, vory fino; In th0 ico box till qulto thenS T'dU8 sSs, V-i'- S --

"vvlt" v1--- " of

brandy; mix pack In Jars; nnd Just enough p

in cold placo. chovies to flavor. Season with salt,Mlnce-mea- t No. 3.--2 lbs. currants, popper and vinegar, and put' a gonor--

SSJiuf-SSSS- olaligo blespoonful of tho dressing inred and whlto wlno oach "4 pint, each of the pcara.

Is BeautyAsked what sho desires most in

life, tho truthful girl invariably an- -

swers, benuty. It is considered thohost dower a woman can ButIs it really tjio best? Wo the beautifulwomen have the happiest lives? Forthat, after all, is the true tost.

Looked at from this standpoint, onois astonished to see often benu'vfalls to win out. Investigate tho sub- -

Ject and you will find good rensor.3for its frequent failure.

To begin with, the girl who poi- -

Besses beauty must possess also astrong character or her head will beturned early. From babyhood sho isfawned upon nnd flattered; hqr overywhim Is indulged by those sttr- -

round her; her beauty makes slaves ofall who come .within her circle.

She Is led to believe that she mustbe considered first in everything.From the nursery to tho schoolroomand from the schoolroom to societyher path is ono or royal progress. Is Itany wonder that her viewpoint of liteis warped, that an idea of her own im- -

portanco Is exaggerated out of all pro- -

portiou to the truth; that her natureInevitably becomes d andexneting? A naturo of this sort,clothed oven In the most perfectbeauty, palls after a short Intimacyand seldom commands a lasting do-

votion.It Is strange, but a man rarely gets

satisfaction out ot a friendship witha beautiful woman. Unless ono Is

knees one cannot hope to hold I.e.- -

interest, for beauty is exacting andinsatiable in its thirst for flattery.Let it stop for a moment its liquidflow and beauty's attention wanders.

Aa ,, Kinr rate other charms. Unaccustomed to

being considered first In nvorvthln?Sher interest in othors is genuine, bne

ARRANGING DINING TABLE.There are fashions in table decora-

tions as In everything elso; just nowgrouped vases aro in favor. Whilethese were introduced last season,there are interesting changes.

Instead of the smaller vases for the,,. ...... ...i.i.ui iUU tuulu muuutiuu wuh;

the larce central one hv lone chains, i-it is newer to have the set more j

closely grouped, so as to stand on thocenterpiece or glass plaque.

One handsome set has a tall centralvase of cut with four small;matching vases joined to it by curved ;

openwork guards.Another new set has a larger glass ;

basket overlaid with silver with four ,

small b'askets held to the central onojby short silver links fastened to thehandles.

For cheaper effects two sizes ofwicker baskets can bg gilded andjoined by raphia rings, also gilded.

Watch sales, and got four smallvases to match and a larger one in andtho same design. In this way a styl-jar- o

lib table decoration can bo had nt bosmall cost. If you want tho vases tholinked, fine nlcklcd chains can be

sugar

oiutvimii, Linn nlolr. .Plato ' rtho pasto; wet rim I

lay of a with nar--

moro row 8lIvcr holds tho

nn,0r ' T '

wltli n wlrn

plato with

jdcsfduremovo

sinews chopchilled

thoroughly;

peel, half

have.

how

who

silver

now artistic, withsponding oval nr--J

rangemont for center tho table,

-Keopmg erect. .

At eacn enu or tno mirror aro semi- -

circular sections to short- -

a tall, slendervase each Atsides, filling In t)io Intervening

two other low sectionslar Wonderful com- -

liinatloiiB can nrranged' '.

Scouts: Boys

nt th0 and aBk tho every- -

thing Green Stamps,Boretanla stroots.

Job Printing Office.

.'n'..'J....ij'Wi-- , 'S '1u rfri-UT- i - Mr

S SSuccessful?

nleascd with ovorv emnii oUnn'tin,,and shows it Sho has learnedtho of being plcnsed, while herlovely sister knows to 1)0exacting.

And for this simple reason many ttpifti Biri )s well married Vhllo fiermoro beautiful sistor takes hor lastand attractive chance,

It is a fact that beautiful girlsdom mako satisfactory wivos. Alltheir training ngainst They 'bring inio tho contract, which morothan any other .needs tho oil ofand take, an exacting nature which has

cultivated from nursery days,It is not an exaggeration to say tfiat

most beautiful women think that aman's principal object In lifo shoulle to make money for them to spend.Aml most men who have beautifulwlvcs soem to mako this their mainendeavor. But let them struggle everso earnestly to accomplish this ob- -

cct' tnoy wiI1 fln1 that a beautifulwoman can always spend more thanthoy can earn. For beautiful womenaro spendthrifts by nature, nnd hav- -lnB Iln(l every whim gratified fromcnlI'"'nd, they know nothing of soir- -rcstrint.

D,lt tho ',laln Sir, who has grown,lp ,n sllndow, who is unaccustomedlo 1,10 '".diligence that beauty com- -mands, learns to mako much of little.fn,t .""J" Wh !8 fort,lnate enough

w,th a nIa,n Sirl undoubtJf, hapi,Incss olt of lifo

uian no married a beauty, for it Isa de,)rfSBnS fact that lovely women

3 lmau,e wo,ncn- - W"1"!' b "hon n" the worItl aaCrel(1 ,nnko them tho ooslte?

,P who cnvlcs hor beaurtsi'Srssvivacity T '

humor. '' sweetness and"""'siiness, lastlnc andmore to desired.

SERVING STRAWBERRIES.The expert hostess, especially if

sh0 likes strawberries better thanrest of her family, rarely

serves them twice in the same way.breakfast sho uses them on

io nun, massed nn n mnu.,.i. Ul 811- -gar a border leaves Tha. ........ninii't,...., rU(;IJ. is annmf nin.

but epicures prefer eating them fromtho hull. .

For a first re .serve tho berries In'

'with a marnsnhino .bincd nlneannlo .,

"banana. rr,t ,

pared at least an hour i,f.meal.- - sugared and well chilled

Newer tho compote as a firstcourse aro timbalo cares filled withblc berries iimnn,i ...m. ......sugar.

Strawberry shortcako is goodConstant la w.,i i.n.Jshortcako made from hUcnlt ,io,,v

that from cakol batter Bothpalatable, but tho former shouldreally short and tho cake notplain variety too often

Chooso a nice cottage pudding hatter

NEW FRENCH SALAD,Salad Diana Is ono of the no..v

dishes, it Is'

easily propared and most tasty nnddelicious. It is mado of pears, grapes ,

and a sauce of mayonnaise,

H mA iSo ..i ,. . iinrao uui uo ni hid mbui

end, and about half the pulprcoopod out with a sunll friHt spoon,loaving a hollow which Is stuffed withwhit0 grapes from which tho needsimvo bcoit romoved with n notdla,snrli r- - ii used In removing tho sd3from In making tho famquabare de duo Jolly. Each poar is then- -

phred n crisp whlto lettuce laaf.nnd over it Is poured a drosslng mado

mayonn-'s- a in which whlupod'nnd currant Jellv Imvo boen

thoroughly mixed nnd whipped to--

SPthcr.

Job Printing Star Office.TV r

rougm anu joinea to uio suinuarus oi or. bettor yet, uso tho one, two,the vases, but they aro not especially 'three, four recipe, which Is knownnew and tho floral effect Is equally to most cooks.good without them. The linked glass The secret of a good ahortcako inchains aro moro artistic with glass lo have half the berries sugared anilvases than tho china ones, or pretty crushed for filling. This is alsooffects can bo had with chains of crys- - used on tiio top layer, topped' 'bytal b:ads. whol'o berries.

These combination flower holders Plenty of rich cream Is good- - withnro charming for summer cottages in shortcake, but a scant supply is trv.wlilto Dresden or belllque. They como ing, nnd it will farther' whenin novel shapes, many of them con-- ( whipped. A sauco of strawberriesnccted by a low fncc-llk- o arranger; nnd a syrup of boiled andment In sanio ware. Ono In wafer makes an ngroeablo change.Greek design had all tho bases Bhaped Sometimes shorry Is used for flavor-lik- e

n Doric coluimV with tho tops hoi- - ing.lowed to hold flowers. . ....

sugarwith addcold; bars pasto 'aril'lonB. bordered

ends; lay across! rl,. This

ml--na'H

bi

Very and corr?- -

cost, is an floraltho of

mo nowors

holdstemmed llowors, with

tot cap s?ction. the

nro .roctangu- -

In shape. florabo In those.

Boy Suits free. callstore man,

freo for Fort and

Flno at Star

r."

isfrankly.

,nrtonly how

notsol--

is it.

glvo

been

to

n,0ro

,to

and.,....are moro

be

docs tho

For

.with of

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hn.fwith

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than

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Page 20: AVIATOR II 5IIIS...omul, brown spot of decay on the stand that unless interest Is shown In Iruit. As soon as the owners of trees this matter there will be very little notice this,

TWENTY

FILLINGand ,

GRADING

Your lot graded nnd filled by

cnpablo workmen In chargo of

im ouglnccr.

Estimates furnished.

F. M. PondCONSTRUCTION CONTRACTOR.

Waste Baskets of BambooWe have a large stock of Bamboo Waste Baskets In many shapes

and sires and attractive patterns suitable for office and home.

$1.00, $1.25, $1.50 each.

Hawaiian News Company, Ltd.ALEX. YOUNG BUILDING.

AUSTRALIAN BUTTERWILL ARRIVE PER "MARAMA" FOR

C. Q.Yee Hop & Co.' 1851

EXCLUSIVE PATTERNS IN HANDSOME GREYSEnglish and American Weaves. Mode to youx wdr with S

and style unequalled. ,

W. W. AHANA 82 Soth King Street I

TOM SHARP hew phoke 5HARP 5103The Painter A

847 Kaahumanu St. Trade Promoters

lo nd CoalBest Grades Always On Hand

Concrete Brick, Crushed

Rock and Sand

Phone 2295 ' 63 Street

Tho Garden Island, the bright, newsy paper o theIsland of Kauai, lias been doubled in size and is now

a more desirable publication in every respect thanover. (

Tho Hawaiian Star (dally) Is '?8.00 and Garden

Island ?2,50. Wo offer both, one year, for $9.15;

six ?4.85. Or. Star (?2.00)

and Garden Island ($2,50)' will be sent to any ad-

dress for ,?3.05.

Address: Hawaiian Star, Honolulu.

Plioi.e 2890 J

ck Ge ID.

Queen

Great Club Offers

Hawaiian Star Garden Island

Semi-Weekl- y

1

i

months,

5

THE HAWAIIAN STAR, SATURDAY, JUNE 17,' lull.

PSiysical Factors of

A Good Complexion

By HEBE.'

In building upn good complexion,tho flr3t thing to look to Is tho gen-

eral health. Good health Is thofoundation of a good complexion.

All tho special caro of tho skin tntho world will not make the com-

plexion nil It might bo, if tho generalhealth Is bad.

Good health must, to bo sure, bo

supplemented by certain specialtreatments .of tho skin, but good

health Is tho first essential. There-

fore, thoso who wish to acquire a

good complexion, must pay attentionfirst to tho general care of tho bodr,must build tho foundation strong andsure.

Health Is a complex matter, mnnythings enter Into it all, of course,have their bearing upon tho complex-

ion, but somo are moro Importantthan others.

The condlttAn of tho blood, theliver, tho digestion, tho nerves, aredirectly reflected tSn the skin; and,they, therefore, "need the particularattention of tho person seeking a

good complexion.Without pure blood and good circu-

lation, It Is impossible for anyone to

have a good complexion. To bo in

good condition, tho blood must notonly have its proper supply of nutri-

tion from food, but It must have Us

full percentage of oxygen. Both of

these are necessary to make good

blood.The nourishment from tlie food

builds up used tissue, as every oneknows, but the oxygen Is equally im-

portant.Oxygen purifies the blood, and so

When tho blood Is properly oxygen-

ated, it goes on its journey through

tho body carrying purity Instead of

impurity. If the blood is not oxy-

genated as it should be in the lungs,tho Impurities remain in It and arelodged in various parts of the body,

breeding disease, so that It is mostImnortant that oxygen in its fullquantity should be taken Into thoblood. Besides, tho food when 'di-

gesting, needs a certain amount of

oxygen. If the blood Is short of'

oxygen, digestion is impaired, andthis in turn reacts upon the health,and upon the complexion, so that thequality of tho blood has much to do

with the condition of tho skin,Then to Insure a good complexion,

tho circulation must be good. No

matter how pure tho blood may bo,

if it does not circulate properlythrough tho capillaries and veins thetissues will suffer from lack of nour-

ishment. They will shrink and

.wither and wrinkles will ensue. Thoskin, in addition, will have astarved, colorless look,

j

j So that, In looking to the physicalfactors of a good complexion, thounseen foundation, as it were, theblood and tho circulation need seri-

ous attention.A torpid liver can completely

wreck a complexion, for tho effectsof a bad liver reach out into thobody in many ways. The complex-Io- n

gets sallow, dry and loses all ap- -

pearance of freshness and pretty col-

oring.j' The -- liver Is a veritable skin bar-

ometer, and a good laxative is oftenmost essential.

Tho first evidence of a torpid liveris constipation. This condition pol-- j

sons tho whole system, and It showsat onco In the complexion. The skinbecomes dull,' muddy, pimples ap-- ,

pear, blackheads and enlarged pores(follow. This condition is ruinous togood looks. Nq ono can hope for afresh, clear, pretty skin unless thowasto matter is properly eliminated.

Tho skin acquires a yellow, sal-

low tinge, the whites of tho eye lookyellowish, every one knows tho complexion of tho bilious person. It isin no way attractive.

In laying tho foundation for a good

complexion, oilo must see that tholiver Is healthy, the digestion good.Good digestion Is, of course, ossen-tla- l,

that tho body may receive itsproper nourishment. Tho

person is thin, anaemic, theoyes are hollow, tho cheeks sunken,tho Hps pale, tho skin whlto. Indi-

gestion Is a foo to a good complex-

ion. ,

Not only Is thero a lack of nourish-ment, but when tho food does notdigest, other Ills follow that showupon tho face. Fermentation of va-

rious kinds set up in tho stomach;sometimes thero Is an acrid stomach,again various forms of dyspepsia af-

fect tho heart.All thoso conditions are bound to

show In tho complexion; tho skint

cannot bo pretty while tho stomachat tho qno who

tm4n--. f tf

.

to it that tho digestion Is good.Not many pcoplo associate tho

nerves with the complexion, but thcyhavo more to do with It than ono

thinks. Nerves show upon tho skinin tho, way of dryness and wrinkled.' Tho person whoso nerves nro al-

ways at a tension, who Is hurried anaworried, will have a dry, lined face.The nervous person is often thin,and thinness makes for wrinkles.Tho nervous person, too, is usuallytense, the brows are contracted, th6lips compressed, all this makes lines.

Tho face of tho tranquil personwho Is not conscious of havingnerves Is as a rule fresh, plump andunlined.

Taut nervos, too, help to produceconstipation. When we are trying todo moro than wo should, when woare under some mental strain, thereis a sense of tenseness all over thebody that affects all tho organs andparticularly the bowels. This Is notrealized as it should bo. But oftentho cause of a long attack of const!-patid- ti

is not the food that has beeneaten, but tho state of mind.

Theso four important factors ofhealth, then, have much to do withtho condition of the complexion.Many other things, of course, enterinto tho question of health, and con-

sequently Into that of the complex-Ion- .

But with the blood, the liver, thostomach and the nerves sound, oneIs well, started on the road to goodhealth and good looks, so that if onewishes to make aesrlous effort fora permanently good complexion theseare tho matters to bo looked to first.

Never be afraldof fresh air. Thegospel of fresh air, ventilation anddeep breathing should be preachedfrom the housetops.

Thoso who observe these rules haveclear complexions, broader shoulders,a high chest, walk more gracefullyand are less susceptible to diseasethan those who disregard them.

Remember, however, that localtreatments for tho complexion arealways necessary for anyone whowishes to avoid skin blemishes orlook But it is mucheasier to build or preserve a goodcomplexion on a good firm founda-tion than on a shaky one.

MILK TROUBLES ENDED.A boon to Infants, a milk easily

easily digested; a safemilk; sick babies thrive on It; a neces-sity for bottle; babies, a milk: im-

proved in keeping aualities; bottledand capped by sanitary machinery;electric purified. Honolulu Dairy.men's Association, Limited.

Fine Jol Prinilne Star Office.

ORDINANCE No. 25.An Ordinance Relating to the Collec-

tion and Disposition of Rubbish andGarbage In the City and County ofHonolulu.

Be it Ordained oy the People of theCity and County of Honolulu:Section 1. The Board, of Supervis-

ors of the City and County of Hono-lulu Lhall appoint, and may remove atpleasure, a suitable person as In-

spector of Garbage of tho City andCounty of Honolulu, whose salary shallbo fixed by said Board. It shall be thoduty of such Garbage Inspector to sup-

erintend tho collection and dispositionof rubbish and garbage In tho Cityand County of" Honolulu, and to per-

form such other duties as may here-after bo designated by tho Board ofSupervisors.

Section 2:. It shall bo tho duty ofthe Garbage Inspector, not later thantho fifteenth day ot each and everymonth, to report to the Board of Supervisors tho work done in his department during tho preceding month.

Section 3. This Ordlnanco shalltnko effect fifteen days from and aftertho date of Its approval.

Introduced byFRANK J. KRUGER,

Supervisor,Dato of Introduction, tho' 31st day of

May, 1911.

Approved this lGth day of Juno A,

D. 1011.JOSEPH J. FERN, Mayor."

3t Juno 1G, 17, 10.

The CobiiEmma, above Vineyard,

A Private Hotel ofQuality '

SACHS' SALE OF SUMMER DRAP-- '

ERIES.Airy, artistic draperies for uum-nic-

Sunshine and breezes will notharm them. Thoy aro intended forhard sorvlcb and frequent launder-

ing.Thoy aro durablo, boautltm and

vithal most inexpensive In leafgreens, soft wood tones, and prettydolft effects, thoy Impart tho atmos-

phere of cool simplicity which Is thechief charm of tho summer homo.

Sale, prices 15c, zoc and 25c peryard. Salo now going on.

NOTICE.

Tresspassing after 9 o'clock in thoevening on tho premises and water-

melon patch of Chong Wo'Wal atMoanalua, Oahu, is strictly prohib-

ited. Persons so doing will be pros-

ecuted to tho full extent of tho law.

OFFICE OF THE BOARD OFHEALTH.

Hpnolulu, Hawaii, Juno 6; 1011.TENDERS FOR SUPPLIES INSANE

ASYLUM.Sealed tenders, in duplicate, en-

dorsed "TENDERS FOR SUPPLIES,INSANE ASYLUM," for furnishingthe Insane Asylum, City and Countyof Honolulu, with supplies for the per-

iod of six months from July 1st., 1911,to December 31st, 1911, will be re-

ceived at the office of tho Board ofHealth until 12 o'clock, noon, Tuesday,Jun0 20th, 1011.

Specifications and a list of the kindand approximate quantity of suppliesrequired, and other information, maybe had upon application at the officeof tho Board of Health. Tenders tobe based upon the quantities stated,but the Board will not bind Itself topurchase the whole or any particularpart of tho quantities stated, suchquantities being stated merely fortho convenience of bidders in submit-ting their bids.

Tenders must be accompanied bya certified check equaP In amount to5 per cent of tho tender.

All bids must bo made on formsfurnished by the Board of Health andmust he submitted in accordance with,and subject to, tho provisions and re-

quirements of Act 02, Session Lawsof 1905.

THE BOARD OF HEALTH,By its President,

E. A. MOTT-SMIT-

lOts Jun0 C, 7, 8, 9, 10, 13, 14, 15,1G and 17, .1911.

OFFICE OF THE BOARD OFHEALTH.

Honolulu, Hawaii,. June G, 1011.TENDERS FOR PURCHASE OF

HIDES.Sealed tenders, in duplicate, en

dorsed "TENDERS FOR PURCHASEOF HIDES," for the purchase of hidesbelonging to the Board of Health, forthe period of six months from July1st. 1011 to December 31st, 1011. willbe received at tho office of the Boardr f Health until 12 o'clock, noon, Tues-day, June 20th, 1911.

Tenders must be for the price perpound for hides dolivrl on thewharf at Honolulu, on weights aprov-e- d

by an agent of the Bonrd of Health.Payments required In U. S. gold

coin immediately after delivery.Tho Board dons not bind itself to

accept the highest or any bid.THE BOARD OF HEALTH,

By its President,E; A. MOTT-SMIT-

lOts Jun0 C, 7; .8, 9, 10, 13, 14, 15,1G and 17, 1011'.

OFFICE QF THE BOARD OFHEALTH.

Honolulu, Hawaii, Juno 6, 1011.TENDERS FOR DRUGS, MEDICINES,

MEDICAL, SURGICAL AND HOS-

PITAL SUPPLIES.Sealed tenders, In duplicate, en

dorsed "TENDERS FOR DRUGS,ETC." will be received at the officeof tho-Boar- of Health, until 12 o'clocknoon, Tuesday, Juno 20th, 1911, forfurnishing drugs, medicines, medical,surgical and hospital supplies, to allgovernment physicians, hospitals, dispensaries and institutions under thocontrol of tho Board of Health, fortho period ot twenty-fou- r C24) months,from July 1st, 1911, to Juno 33th,1913..

Tho supplies to bo furnished mustbe of tho very best quality only, andshould bo up to tho requirements ofth U. S. Pharmacopoeia. Specifica-tions and a list of the kind ot articlesicquired, and other information, maybe had on application at tho office oftho Board of Health.

All bids must bo mado on forms furnished by th0 Board of Health andmust bo submitted In accordance with,and be subject to, tho provisions andrequirements of Act G2, Session Laws1900.

THE BOARD OF HEALTH,By its President,

- E. A. MOTT-SMITH- '.

IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF THEUNITED STATES' IN AND FORIN THE TERRITORY AND DIS-TRICT OF HAWAII.

TUB UNWED STATES OF AMEIIOA, Plaintiff, vs. THE WATMANAU9 (JUG Alt COMrANT, ot al.. Do

Avtlro brought in said District-Cour- t

nod tko Petition fired In the office oftlio dork said District Court, inMooolulu.THE 'PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED

STATES. GRICETINft;The WAIMANALO SUGAR COM-

PANY, a corporation organizod andexisting under and by virtue of tholaws of tho Territory of Hawaii; THETERRITORY OF HAWAII; WILLIAMO. SMITH, SAMUEL M. DAMON. E.FAXON BISHOP, ALBERT F. JUDD,and ALFRED w. CARTER, Trusteesunder tho Will sad of tho Estate ofBERNICH P. BISHOP, deceased;JOHN A. CUMMINS; KAPHKA XLCUMMINS, wife of JOHN A. CUM-MK- Bf

CUSHMAN CARTER, TrOBteo;JOHN KIMO; KAHALELAU PH, wifeof JOHN KIMO; ANNIE AKONG;JOHJf AKONG, JAMES AKONG.MJCT AKONG and AMELIA AHONG,onfaMwa hoirs at law of MARYAKONG, deceased; HENRY KAHU-NANTJ- I,

CHARLES JCAHUNANULWILLTAM KAHUNANUI, JANE

CLARA KAHUNANUI andMARY KAHUNANUI, nnkflown heirsat law of KAHUNANUI, deceased;THOMAS LAUHEIKU, ROBERTLATTHEIKU, GEORGE LAUHEIKU,ELIZABETH LAUHEIKU, HARRIETLAUHEIKU. and EDITH LAUHEIKU,unknown heirs at law of LAUHEIKU,deceased; and JAMES BROWN, gOHNBLACK, HENRY WHITE, GEORGESMITH. MARY JONES, CLARA HILO,HELEN LANAI and ELSA KONA. n

owners and claimants,You aro hereby directed to appear,

and answer tho Petition in an actionentitled as above, brought against youIn the District Court of tho UnitedStates, In and for the Territory of Ha-waii, within twenty days from andafter service upon you of a certifiedcopy of Plalntift'B Petition herein, to-gether with a certified copy of thisSummons.

And you aro hereby notified thatunless you appear nnd answer asabove required, the said Plaintiff willtake Judgment of condemnation of thelands described In the Petition hereinand for any other relief demanded Intho Petition.

WITNESS THE HONORABLESANFORD B. DOLE and THE HON-ORABLE CHARLES F. CLEMONS,Judges of said District Court, this 18tbday of March, in the year of our Lordono thousand nine hundred and elevenand of tho Indenendenco nf tho TTntStates thn nnn o.j it.i....- "UU uui Lj -nun.

(Sgd.) A. E. MURPRY,

(Seal)(Endorsed)

No. 74. DISTRICT COURT OF THEU. "S. for the Territorv ofTHE UNITED STATUS aiotovs. THE WAIMANALO SUGAR COM-PANY, et al. SUMMONS nnnm xxr

'BRECKONS. United States Attorney.inn umTmu STA'lES OF

District of Hawaii, ss.I, A. E. MURPHY. Clerlr nf th me

tric Court of the United Rttitoa nfAmerica, In and Cor tho Territory anduistnct oi Hawaii, do hereby certifythe foregoing to be a full. trilA ftTiil rTrect copy of the original Summons intno case of THE UNITED STATESOF AMERICA vs. THT5 waimaw4tSUGAR COMPANY, et al., as tho sameremains of record and on file in theoffice of the Clerk of said Court.

IN WITNESS WHEREOF. T hnhereunto set my hand and affixed theseal of said District Court this 25thaay or March, A. D. 1911.

A. . MTTRPHV ,. . .Uieric or United States

Court, Territory of Hawaii.By F. L. DAVIS. .

Clerk.

$8.75FOR A TIME

Works ofR. L. StephensonRichard Harding DavisJohn Jr.Raffle's Series.

District

Deputy

Fox,

W. W. Jacobs.Wilkie Collins. '

(

F. R. Stockton. :

A 11 Scribner Editions. n

FOR A TIME$8.75.

Brown & Lyon Co.,Limited,

Young Building.

Bowers' Merchant PatrolAnd Confidential Agency

Reliable Watchmen Furnished. Phono1051, P. o. Box 284. City Head-quarters, Club Stables.

Y. WO SING. CO.Groceries, Fruits, Vegetables, Etc

Dutto.-- 35o lb.; Fresh Dried Fruits.1186-118- 8 Nuuanu Streot-Toiephon-

1034, Box 953


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