ESTASUSHED JUtV 2. t856- AM CAUTOTO A SAYS DIFFICHLW › bitstream › 10524 › 44399 › 1 … ·...

12
U. S. WEATHEE BUREAU. APRIL 23. Last 24 hours' rainfall, trace. iUGAE 96 Degree Test Centrifugals, 3.42c; Per Ton, $68.40. Temperature, Max. 80; Min. 72. Weather, cloudy; .valley showers. 8S Analysis Beets, 8s 6d; Per Ton, $76.40. ESTASUSHED JUtV 2. t856- - VOL. XLIIL, NO. 7397. HONOLULU. HAWAII TERRITORY, TUESDAY, APRIL 24, 1906. PRICE FIVE CENTS. AM 0 )F C AUTO TO 13 A SAYS FINANCIAL DIFFICHLW WILL CONTINUE SOMl DAYS oooeocoWeo 909090909090909 coooooaoooo 0 0 0 s 0 o 0 0 e 0 9 0 5 9 0 9 0 ...... .... .HUM. ... " ' ?' g,1!".'--.-..- ... ....., . ... , r , " : 7 . , -- "i Mriw iffV- - " vfr t; a--iW?- sv lr f N,t ' n - , ' v " ' r - .v - , - - v, $ . it ' (CABLEGRAM RECEIVED BY BISHOP & COMPANY FROM THE BANK OP CALIFORNIA, SAN FRANCISCO, APRIL 23, 1906. Situation cannot be exaggerat- ed. Financial situation at stand- still, will continue some days. All business and great portion resi- - . 4 ...... dence district totally destroyed. BANK OF CALIFOBNIA. The Bank of California, of which Charles R. Bishop is Vice-Preside- nt, is one of the leading financial institutions of California and of the United States,' and of course would send out nothing that could not be relied upon absolutely. It is the California correspond- ent of the local banking house of Bishop & Company. 0 s 5 East sile. . Ycst s;,ie. VAN NESS AVENUE, A DIVIDING LINE OF THE FIRE. The final stand of the fire fighters was made at Van Ness avenue, where Mavor Schmitz" ordered several entire blocks dynamited in order to tuecis. me auvance 01 lue uesuuaiuu. uese uioens uestroyea siooa along the east side of the avenue. Advertiser Special yesterday. ooooeoootooooc cxoeoooeo o oeoooo oeooooeoeooc8oeoc ooooeoo090o CISCO AN FRAN A c AT :SS 0 HOW THE NEWS SERVICE WAS ALL BROKEN UP TREMBLES STILL N D A A Five Days to Get an Answer From a Cable- gram Around the World to Lbs Angeles, The Operators at the Cable Hut Near the Cliff An Answer Yesterday to the Advertiser's Re- quest on Sunday for Details of the Disaster. House Felt One More Shock of Earth- quake Last Night. To show how badly the land line news service has been inter- rupted by the earthquake we publish- - below the answer, received about 7 :3o lost evening, to a round-the-wor- ld message for informa- tion sent to the Los Angeles Herald last Wednesday night. The news in the main is stale, though expensive; but it helps to confirm some of the special advices of yesterday: SAN FRANCISCO, April 23. (10 145 p. m. S. F. time.) Just load another shake. We were just getting out when it stopped. THE FIRE IS ALL OUT. Yesterday afternoon the Associated Press sent an answer to the Advertiser's request, made on Sunday, for additional and specific information relative to the San Francisco disaster. The cablegram sent by the management of this paper was as follows: April 22, '06. Associated Press, Oakland. cau Anril 2r o :so a. m. Fire all rieht. Now absolutely out. Military and everybody clearing streets of debris. LOS ANGELES, April 23. The loss of life in San Francisco is estimated at 5000; loss of property at $300,000,000. The entire Cars mnning on part ot Market street, ctartea xne new mms. oum ing. Very little sickness. IT IS RAINING IN SAN FRANCISCO. SAN FRANCISCO, April 23.-- 9:48 a. m. Nothing new this a. m. Started raining during the night causing great deal of dis business and residence sections of the city have been destroyed by earthquake and fire. Hundreds have been killed in the interior of the State. Stanford University is demolished. Relief trains are approaching. HUGH K. O. HARTUNG, Herald. 8O9OSOO0OO(KSO9OC' 3KIK00Ok comfort in the park. Absolutely no otner news tms morning. LIFE LOSS NOW STATED AS FIVE HUNDRED. SAN,FRANCISCO. April 23. 10.30 a. m. McAdie, the? weath Wanted Status wharves, shipping, outside towns, number lives lost, names leading killed, why Sonoma withdrawn, are banks open. ADVERTISER. The reply from the Associated Press was received yesterday afternoon, and was at once given to the public in the Advertiser's free special, No. 22. It follows: SAN FRANCISCO, April 23.-- 3:23 P. M. The wharves are unharmed between Market street and the Pacific Mail dock North of Market the wharves are damaged. Five hundred bodies have been officially interred. Many probable private burials. . Details of deaths are impossible to get. observer, says he believes the disturbances are over in. nib vicm- - er 0 0 ity. The loss of life is not more than 500. 2 0 0 0 0 0 o 0! 0 Fire Chief Sullivan is dead from earthquake injuries. Herbert 0! s Tuden, millionaire merchant, was shot and killed by vigilantes while j doing relief work. (This is very probably Heber N. Tilden, a 1 wholesale dairy produce merchant doing business at 211-21- 3 Sacra- - 0.... 0 o mento street. That would be right in the heart of the burned dis o trict.) 2i V S e 0 0 9 PHASER SENDS NOTICE TO PEOPLE OF HAWAII Yesterday Acting Governor Atkinson received the following from E. A. Fraser, in charge of relief work in San Francisco for Hawaii: San Francisco, April 23, iqo6. io:q5 a. m. To Atkinson, Honolulu. Notify all that individual inquiry is extremely difficult and slow. People are widely scattered. Many have lett the city. All existing public service is absolutely uncertain and under strictest martial law. Am confident however from personal penences gat safe and well provided for. Cable all inquired for are perfectly locatedat the beach is little known and difficult of access requiring and much walking. The following notice mmt and police passes is beblhedANs pLEAsE COMMUNICATE WITH E. STREET, SAN FRANCISCO. a ERASER w ASHBURY WILLEND ANY CABLE MESSAGES FREE OF CHARGE AND PROVIDE FOR ANY NECESSSITY. OPENING HEAD- QUARTERS HERE AND AT OAKLAND." STANFORD UNIVERSITY IN ABSOLUTE RUINS. University in absolute ruins. Student Junius Hamia and oneo?ner student nd engineer killed.. .The China landed her All shipping is safe. Usaal San Friday. nassensrers at Oakland on supplies is your problem. All parts of the city m indefinite Ml cookm the tree electricity darkness. No gas or Locters are killed instantly. The State Militia and 3,000 Regulars have been called out. The civil government is controlling all movements of military. All leading banks are burned, but the mint is undamaged. .There is an abundance of coinage, but banks will not resume 9 01 o! 0! 0! 0 ,Aovr SAV PABLO x3e- - X TT X )m i 'jSS"" rSs5sT h r L V'f -- 2- "2? V-- v. q business for thirty days. ; San Jose and Santa Rosa are the only towns seriously injured. m One hundred haye been killed at Santa Rosa. Southern California is unharmed. The State militia will be withdrawn. (Probably meaning from 0 9 0 2 0 duty in the south.) 0 No supply steamers are permitted to depart. 0 0 o 0 c 0 Q o 0 e 0 0 & 0 o 0 o 0 o 0 0 0 0 Two hundred thousand people are homeless and camping in Cable general order on tne steamsmp wmpamca Xian' FRASER. 0 the .parks. Thousands of refugees are departing for the interior. The earthquake destroyed the water mains and the firemen were HONOLULU JAPANESE DISCUSS RELIEF NEEDS 0 helpless. 0 9 o 0 o 9 0 o There was much dynamiting of buildings. Fire immediately followed the earthquake and burned for four days, consuming the entire business district and three-fourt- hs of the residence sections were wiped out. The Western Addition and the remote suburbs only remain. Relief is pouring in from all sources. The loss is $300,000,000; insurance $175,000,000. t 0 o " There was a warm time at the Japa-- ) San Franciscoa panic message, which last night called was received with considerable distrust nese maas mcetin digtTt to see what share they wishea to taKe heng thoroughly aired at the meeting. in the matter of raising funds for tne j Themessage was: relief of their fellow countrymen in .As a result of the recent earthquake there are about ten thousand Jap-ha- d SanVrancisco. Vice Consul Matsubara here at i Continued on FaBe 4., received from Consul Uyeno. Z OCA TOAf CAB "a(7: " SAN FEANCISCO BAY COUNTRY. . oc ooooooo&oeo oooooofoooooc '

Transcript of ESTASUSHED JUtV 2. t856- AM CAUTOTO A SAYS DIFFICHLW › bitstream › 10524 › 44399 › 1 … ·...

Page 1: ESTASUSHED JUtV 2. t856- AM CAUTOTO A SAYS DIFFICHLW › bitstream › 10524 › 44399 › 1 … · The final stand of the fire fighters was made at Van Ness avenue, where Mavor Schmitz"

U. S. WEATHEE BUREAU. APRIL 23. Last 24 hours' rainfall, trace. iUGAE 96 Degree Test Centrifugals, 3.42c; Per Ton, $68.40.Temperature, Max. 80; Min. 72. Weather, cloudy; .valley showers. 8S Analysis Beets, 8s 6d; Per Ton, $76.40.

ESTASUSHED JUtV 2. t856- -

VOL. XLIIL, NO. 7397. HONOLULU. HAWAII TERRITORY, TUESDAY, APRIL 24, 1906. PRICE FIVE CENTS.

AM 0)F CAUTO TO 13 A SAYS FINANCIALDIFFICHLW WILL CONTINUE SOMl DAYS

oooeocoWeo 909090909090909 coooooaoooo000s0o00

e09059090

...... .... .HUM. ... " ' ?' g,1!".'--.-..- ... .....,. ... ,r , " : 7 . , -- "i

Mriw iffV- -"

vfr t; a--iW?- sv

lr f N,t ' n - , ' v " 'r - .v - , - - v, $ . it '

(CABLEGRAM RECEIVED BY BISHOP & COMPANY FROM THE BANKOP CALIFORNIA, SAN FRANCISCO, APRIL 23, 1906.

Situation cannot be exaggerat-ed. Financial situation at stand-still, will continue some days. Allbusiness and great portion resi--

. 4 ......dence district totally destroyed.

BANK OF CALIFOBNIA.The Bank of California, of which Charles R. Bishop is Vice-Preside- nt,

is one of the leading financial institutions of California

and of the United States,' and of course would send out nothing thatcould not be relied upon absolutely. It is the California correspond-

ent of the local banking house of Bishop & Company.

0s5

East sile. . Ycst s;,ie.VAN NESS AVENUE, A DIVIDING LINE OF THE FIRE.

The final stand of the fire fighters was made at Van Ness avenue, where Mavor Schmitz" ordered several entire blocks dynamited in order totuecis. me auvance 01 lue uesuuaiuu. uese uioens uestroyea siooa along the east side of the avenue. Advertiser Special yesterday.ooooeoootooooc cxoeoooeo o oeoooo oeooooeoeooc8oeoc ooooeoo090o

CISCOAN FRAN A c AT :SS0HOW THE NEWS SERVICEWAS ALL BROKEN UP

TREMBLESSTILL N D A AFive Days to Get an Answer From a Cable-

gram Around the World toLbs Angeles,

The Operators at the Cable Hut Near the Cliff An Answer Yesterday to the Advertiser's Re-

quest on Sunday for Details

of the Disaster.

House Felt One More Shock of Earth-

quake Last Night.To show how badly the land line news service has been inter-

rupted by the earthquake we publish- - below the answer, receivedabout 7 :3o lost evening, to a round-the-wor- ld message for informa-tion sent to the Los Angeles Herald last Wednesday night. Thenews in the main is stale, though expensive; but it helps to confirmsome of the special advices of yesterday:

SAN FRANCISCO, April 23. (10 145 p. m. S. F. time.) Justload another shake. We were just getting out when it stopped.

THE FIRE IS ALL OUT.

Yesterday afternoon the Associated Press sent an answer tothe Advertiser's request, made on Sunday, for additional and specificinformation relative to the San Francisco disaster. The cablegramsent by the management of this paper was as follows:

April 22, '06.Associated Press, Oakland.

cau Anril 2r o :so a. m. Fire all rieht. Nowabsolutely out. Military and everybody clearing streets of debris. LOS ANGELES, April 23. The loss of life in San Francisco

is estimated at 5000; loss of property at $300,000,000. The entireCars mnning on part ot Market street, ctartea xne new mms. ouming. Very little sickness.

IT IS RAINING IN SAN FRANCISCO.

SAN FRANCISCO, April 23.-- 9:48 a. m. Nothing new thisa. m. Started raining during the night causing great deal of dis

business and residence sections of the city have been destroyed byearthquake and fire. Hundreds have been killed in the interior ofthe State. Stanford University is demolished. Relief trains areapproaching.

HUGH K. O. HARTUNG,Herald.

8O9OSOO0OO(KSO9OC' 3KIK00Okcomfort in the park. Absolutely no otner news tms morning.

LIFE LOSS NOW STATED AS FIVE HUNDRED.SAN,FRANCISCO. April 23. 10.30 a. m. McAdie, the? weath

Wanted Status wharves, shipping, outside towns, number liveslost, names leading killed, why Sonoma withdrawn, are banks open.

ADVERTISER.The reply from the Associated Press was received yesterday

afternoon, and was at once given to the public in the Advertiser'sfree special, No. 22. It follows:

SAN FRANCISCO, April 23.-- 3:23 P. M. The wharves areunharmed between Market street and the Pacific Mail dock Northof Market the wharves are damaged. Five hundred bodies havebeen officially interred. Many probable private burials. . Detailsof deaths are impossible to get.

observer, says he believes the disturbances are over in. nib vicm- -er 00ity. The loss of life is not more than 500. 2

00

0

00o

0!0 Fire Chief Sullivan is dead from earthquake injuries. Herbert0!

s Tuden, millionaire merchant, was shot and killed by vigilantes whilej doing relief work. (This is very probably Heber N. Tilden, a1 wholesale dairy produce merchant doing business at 211-21- 3 Sacra- -0....

0o mento street. That would be right in the heart of the burned diso trict.)2i

V

Se009

PHASER SENDS NOTICETO PEOPLE OF HAWAII

Yesterday Acting Governor Atkinson received the following

from E. A. Fraser, in charge of relief work in San Francisco for

Hawaii:San Francisco, April 23, iqo6.

io:q5 a. m.

To Atkinson, Honolulu.Notify all that individual inquiry is extremely difficult and slow.

People are widely scattered. Many have lett the city. All

existing public service is absolutely uncertain and under strictestmartial law. Am confident however from personal penences gat

safe and well provided for. Cableall inquired for are perfectlylocatedat the beach is little known and difficult of access requiring

and much walking. The following noticemmt and police passesis beblhedANs pLEAsE COMMUNICATE WITH E.

STREET, SAN FRANCISCO.a ERASER w ASHBURYWILLEND ANY CABLE MESSAGES FREE OF CHARGE

AND PROVIDE FOR ANY NECESSSITY. OPENING HEAD-

QUARTERS HERE AND AT OAKLAND."

STANFORD UNIVERSITY IN ABSOLUTE RUINS.

University in absolute ruins. Student Junius Hamia

and oneo?ner student nd engineer killed.. .The China landed herAll shipping is safe. Usaal SanFriday.nassensrers at Oakland on

supplies is your problem. All parts of the city m indefiniteMl cookm the treeelectricitydarkness. No gas or

Locters are killed instantly.The State Militia and 3,000 Regulars have been called out.The civil government is controlling all movements of military.All leading banks are burned, but the mint is undamaged.

.There is an abundance of coinage, but banks will not resume

901

o!0!0!

0

,Aovr SAV PABLO x3e- -

X TT X )m i'jSS"" rSs5sT

h r L V'f --2-

"2? V-- v.

q business for thirty days.

; San Jose and Santa Rosa are the only towns seriously injured.m One hundred haye been killed at Santa Rosa.

Southern California is unharmed.The State militia will be withdrawn. (Probably meaning from

09020 duty in the south.)

0 No supply steamers are permitted to depart.

00o0c0Qo0e00&0o

0o0o000

0 Two hundred thousand people are homeless and camping inCable general order on tne steamsmp wmpamcaXian' FRASER. 0 the .parks.

Thousands of refugees are departing for the interior.

The earthquake destroyed the water mains and the firemen wereHONOLULU JAPANESEDISCUSS RELIEF NEEDS

0 helpless.09o0o90o

There was much dynamiting of buildings.

Fire immediately followed the earthquake and burned for four

days, consuming the entire business district and three-fourt- hs of the

residence sections were wiped out.The Western Addition and the remote suburbs only remain.Relief is pouring in from all sources.

The loss is $300,000,000; insurance $175,000,000. t

0o

" There was a warm time at the Japa-- ) San Franciscoa panic message, which

last night called was received with considerable distrustnese maas mcetin digtTtto see what share they wishea to taKe heng thoroughly aired at the meeting.

in the matter of raising funds for tne j Themessage was:relief of their fellow countrymen in .As a result of the recent earthquake

there are about ten thousand Jap-ha- dSanVrancisco. Vice Consul Matsubara hereat i Continued on FaBe 4.,

received from Consul Uyeno.

Z OCA TOAf CAB "a(7: "SAN FEANCISCO BAY COUNTRY. .ocooooooo&oeo oooooofoooooc '

Page 2: ESTASUSHED JUtV 2. t856- AM CAUTOTO A SAYS DIFFICHLW › bitstream › 10524 › 44399 › 1 … · The final stand of the fire fighters was made at Van Ness avenue, where Mavor Schmitz"

THE PACIFIC COMMERCIAL ADVERTISER, HONOLULU, APRIL 24, 1906.2

999c ooooooooooooooo ooooooooooooooooooooooo

,.:. ojoATAi. - --ro wATej? - .'jca rso y potts o - csvtrs

00

z

k ; a mmm m

pom ,,, s Jmmm&Mmm mif

Z

00oo0ozz9o00ooooaO

f090Z

oz90

0z5

THE SAN FRANCISCO MAP BROUGHT UP TO DATE. REVISED FROM FACTS IN LATEST DISPATCHES. THE BURNED DISTRICT BLACKENED.900090000000OOOeOOeC O0000000000 0OCO300000 0000000OOOeoe0809C OOOOOOOSOOOtOO 0000000000000C 009000C000READY TO AIDARE MORE THANPEOPLE FERESLAN

aoooeoooeoeooo eooooooooooooooo030oo oooooooooeoooooooooooeo oooooeoooeo oooofloooaoo9oooooooo o ooooooooo oooooooooooober of the Yokohama Specie Bank wasadded, making: the committee as above HONOLULU ILL RUSEWnamed.

Andrew Moore, Kilauea.E. A. Knudsen. Waimea.H: H. Brodie, Hanapepe.P. JIcLane, Koloa.C. W. Spitz, Nawiliwili.

Ill FRANCISCO RELIEF

MOVEMENT UNDER

SUBSCRIPTION LIST.Subscriptions have been recorded al-

ready as follows, lists being at theGovernor's and the Hawaii PromotionCommittee's offices:Haw'n Planters' Ass'n $20,000.00

WAY VERI SUBSTANTIAL Sum2,500.00

25.00100.0010.00

158.50

Chamber of Commerce.CashBruce CartwrightJohn Chas. Peterson....Cable Ship Restorer. . .

Kakaako Mission S. S. 9.10

$22,802.60

Nearly $23,000 Subscribed Before the GeneralCanvass Begins Executive Committee of

Thirty WorKs Through Sub-Committe- es.

Leading Citizens Take the Matter of Aid forthe San Francisco Sufferers in Hand

and Work Begins.

Mr. Peck was appointed treasurerand H. P. WTood secretary, and thesecretary was allowed the assistanceof three stenographers for communi-cating with the subcommitteemen onthe other islands.

E. A. Fraser was appointed agent ofthe Executive Committee in San Fran-cisco.

A general order will be cabled tothe steamship companies tc nrovidetransportation to people of Hawaii, indestitute circumstances, who mightwant to come home. Mr. Fraser wasvoted $500 for immediate expenses.

Governor Atkinson was requested toable to President Roosevelt asking

permission for steamers under foreignflags to carry passengers to Honolulu.Such transportation it to be only forHawaiian citizens.

Another meeting of the bankers'committee will be held at 9 o'clock thismorning.

There was practically a full attend-ance of the Executive Committee,named by Acting Governor Atkinsonthrough yesterday's Advertiser, at itsopening session at 11 o'clock.

Mr. Atkinson, on calling the meet-ing to order, intimated that the objectwas not to discuss the disaster, but toget to work. Because he was askedby the Chamber of Commerce and theMerchants' Association to take chargeof a general relief fund, he had con-vened them to devise ways and meansof collecting and expending the money.

E. D. Tenney, with remarks of sim-ilar tenor to those of the Acting Gov-ernor, moved that a committee of Avecomprising the Acting Governor andrepresentatives of the four banks be

fHawaii's movement for the relief of the San Francisco disaster

sufferers, inaugurated by the Honolulu commercial bodies and urgentlypromoted by Acting Governor Atkinson, is in full swing. Subordinatecommittees have been appointed by the Executive Committee, to coverthe whole Territory, and already the general relief fund foots up nearlytwenty-thre- e thousand dollars. This, too, before any canvassing hasbeen done.

"Whereas, This committee is desirous of notifying the San Fran-cisco sufferers that a substantial sum has been raised for their relieftherefore, be it

"Resolved, That the fraternal orders of the city of Honolulu, hav-ing appropriated, or who may appropriate, sums of money for the re-lief of the San Francisco sufferers, be requested to turn over the fundsto the Executive Committee, appointed by Acting Governor Atkinson,with the understanding that the same will be reappropriated in anymanner and among such persons in San Francisco as they may desire."

fi

Voted but not yet placed on the offi-cial list is also $2000 from the Mer-chants' Association, together with do-

nations from fraternities, to be expend-ed through fraternal channels, and in-

dividual subscriptions, all amountingto about $12,000. So that the grandtotal of relief money in sight is about$35,000. Other fraternal organizationsand some of the churches, not to men-tion national societies, are moving andthe estimates, .variously made as be-tween $100,000 and $200,000, of Hawaii'sgrand total of relief are thus made toappear not extravagant.

RAPID TRANSIT PLAN.What is considered by the commit-

tee in charge of the collection of arelief fund as the most equitable plan,so far suggested, will always be knownhere f.s the Rapid Transit plan. Thisis coutlined in the following letter pre-pared by Secretary Wood:

Honolulu, April 23, 1906.To the Employers of Honolulu.

The Special Committee having inhand the duty of securing funds forthe relief of Jhe sufferers by earth-quake and fire in San Francisco, aremeeting with the greatest encourage-ment. The desire to assist seems to

tHonolulu will help the sufferers and met with the approval of (he office

do it well. The germ of giving has force 'and some of the employes whamsbored into the anatomy of the public he nad ta!ked with. These men wereand it is not thought it will stop its sMeThltL"00 " TlT'Sday t0 Cn'

Mr- - McCandless said itwork until the sum of one hundred was a good thing to let every marthousand dollars has been contributed have a chance to do all in his powerto the fund. to assist at this time.

Senator Hayselden, Lahaina.Hugh Howell, Nahiku.A. F. Tavares. Makawao.Geo. C. Beckley, special agent as

above.KAUAI.

Wm. H. Rice, Lihue.A. S. Wilcox. Lihue.H. D. Wishard. Lihue.Francis Gay, Makaweli.Z. S. Spalding, Kealia.J. K. Gandall, Lihue.W. D. McBryde, Koloa.C. B. Hofgaard, Waimea.B. D. Baldwin, Makaweli.Wm. Stodart. Eleele.H. P. Faye, Kekaha.

vv nen the meetingThe subcommittee annointri nt th0 was regularly- -

At a meeting of the Executive Com-

mittee appointed by the Acting; Gov-

ernor, to take charge of a general re-

lief fund for the San Francisco dis-

aster sufferers, held at the Governor'soffice yesterday forenoon, the follow-

ing were elected as a financial and ad-

visory committee: Acting GovernorAtkinson (chairman), S. M. Damon, E.I. Spalding:. L. Tenney Peck, C. M.Cooke and M. Kishi. On the outsidethis body is more conveniently calledthe bankers' committee.

At a meeting of this committee thefollowing subcommittees were appoint-

ed to solicit contributions on the dif-

ferent islands:OAHU.

J. A. McCandless, J. R. Gait. WalterDillingham, R. II. Trent. Bishop Li

opened there was a good deal of dis-cussion as to the possibility of com-mittees getting mixed. Mr. Shingle .

said there was a committee now oithe street, or they should be, trying:to ft't fnns . .1 t I, .

appointed, as a finance and advisory be general no one is willing to be leftcommittee, with power 'to appoint sub- - out.committees if deemed necessary. At I While the committee is desirous ofthe suggestion of Mr. Damon, a mem- - (Continued on Page 3.)

meeting in the morning consisted ofMessrs. J. A. McCandless, chairman;R. H. Trent, H. Fon, John Hughes,W. F. Dillingham, E. A. Melnerny,R. W. Shingle, J. R. Gait) Bishop

- - 'uiiuji, emu u me prewni com i

mitteeOO OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO OOOOOO 000OfiOe090a C0OO0O8O908OK0eO went around there would beCVttAnn.., rr-- i . .Libert and Mr. onwiana. inese eren- - some oDlections mar o TrQc0

. - . uu t ntwutlemen met at the Promotion Commit- - that it had been000

Rob- -bert (with power of substitution)Hn Fon.ert Shingle. E. A. Mclnemy

Hughes.O. Shiozawa and John A

Xj tee's moms at 4 o'clock yesterday eomm'ttee appointed by the Merchants'afternoon for the purpose of planning thTnllZV? '"'V108 Trm Whm

A would be call- -V a campaign and hearing a report pre- - ed upon again. He was afraid thispared by Mr. Shingle. .would not be satisfactory arid he didS Before the committee was called to- - nrt believe jt would result in bring- -2' more ,Tloney to thc fund- - Firmsgether the chairman stated that a ten-;I"S1a- ny

iand corl'nrations usually appropriatetame hst had been prepared by Mr. so much money for a f OIje.shingle and some of the members and collector tells them they may be tap- -it showed what the committee be- - j I'i again they will ffive only a portion,

S.lieved the different corporations an(hldinff back for the otl,er "'Hector0 firms should donate. He added that .

a lf he sho'u,rl ta P the com- -iSan Francisco is closely related to

' mitu'-- ' is that much beliin.l. This com-0- !Honolulu mittee had Put the Merchants' Asso-!in- gand the people here were go- - i

to show their sympathy In a suh- - i nation down for t he learned

is w3 , i . M -- :C?-;:

Y stantlal manner. Hf i S(,pn i trom Mr- - Smith, Presid.-n- t of the As

io0o0O

'V

0

&00ooo0

009o0

iO

sociation, that it had b.--- under such'heavy expense for cable tolls th'it hedid not believe more tluin $1000 wouMbe raised from that source. There aremembers of the association who arealso members of the Chamber of Com-merce, a body that has subscribed fTMO.In order to get that amount it maybe necessary for the members of tho

Rishop of the Planters' Associationq ' and secured from him a donation ofA 'twenty thousand dollars from the as-- O

sociation, a pretty good start, and this0 j was a good pace, to begin with. He

said he had called on the HawaiianV, Electric Co. and Mr. Gartley said they? I would donate. The same sort of

was received from tli

HAWAII.II. L. Holstein., Kohala.John T. Moir. Paoaikou.Carl Smith, Hilo.Judge Chas. P. Parsons. Hilo.Rer. Stephen Desha, Hilo.A. Lidgate. Paauilo.W. G. Walker. Ookala.Geo. Ross, Hakalau.C. C. Kennedy, Hilo.T. Forbes, Kukuihaele.T. S. Kay, Kohala.John Hind, Kohala.J. Watt, Olaa.E. K. Olding. Kohala.K. S. Gjfrdrum, Honokaa.J. D. Paris, Kamuela.Geo. C. Hewitt, Waiohinu.Palmer P. Woods. Mahukona.Geo. C Berkley, special agent with

copy of above list.MAUI.

1. Barkhausen, Lahaina,II, P. Baldwin., Puunene.C. B. Wells. Wailuku.Judge Kepoikai. Wailuku.John "Chalmers. Hana.James Scott, Kihei.Geo. Gibb, Lahaina.T. C. Lindsay, Paia.A. Gross, Kipahulu.1. H. Case. Wailuku.

j Telephone Co., but the acme of perfect "Saniitions to pay twice and thatfcfsehemes for securing funds was reach- -' tu,,,je't as I;lr as poKsiDie.

In some instances th.i n..,.i.i uthIi!

0o00o00

ed at the Rapid Transit Company's '

barns. He asked there if the companywould donate and was informed thathis wants had been anticipated by themen who are all very anxious to con-tribute. Rut they had a scheme oftheir own. which is to deduct erne day'spay from every employe of the com- -pany, from the manager down. Thiswas suggested by the men and it wouldbe carried out. He then called unon t

be called upon three tinv-.- s for thesame purpose and would be expectedto donate to each committee. Mr.Smith had suggested that one a?vss-me- nt

be levied and the work could beapportioned off. Mr. Dillingham, whois a member of the association, couldcall upon all of the other membersand the employes. The list includesthe fraternal organizations and he

THE SAN FRANCISCO OPERATORS.The man on the extreme left of the picture is ilcKenna, the operator at the hut. A

ooooooooooooooooooooooc ooooooooooooooo ooooooooooooooooooooooc o the Honolulu Iron Works people and .um cau upon lhe representatives or

suggested the same plan there. It (Continued on Page 3.)

Page 3: ESTASUSHED JUtV 2. t856- AM CAUTOTO A SAYS DIFFICHLW › bitstream › 10524 › 44399 › 1 … · The final stand of the fire fighters was made at Van Ness avenue, where Mavor Schmitz"

THE PACIFIC COMMERCIAL ADVERTISER, HONOLULU, APRIL 24, i9o6 9

1 Kill II P 1 1 1 RlTfiSEISMOGRAPH

RECORDED

HAS

JO

iivitnLiMimANXIOUS

4 Telephone Main 424. SHOCKS SINCE FIRST Want to Know What'

that it might be well to send all pos-sible on the Wntura and let the restfollow UU-r- . but thru committees mustbe appointed to save confusion. Mr.Dillingham approved the plan.

The chair wanted a committer offour and to hive the town laid out in.districts. Trent suggested a committeeof two to call upon the bulks and theagents for the sugar companion; an-other commit tee to c aU upon the mer-chants and to visit the small dealers.There is a lot of money here waitingto be sent away for this cause, but thepeople did not know where to send it orwho to pay it over to. One good lady-calle-

upon him today and left fiftydollars for the sufferers because shehad no knowledge where it should bePaid.

There was some discussion on thispoint, but it ended by the passing of amotion to th? effect that the commit-tee of the Merchants' Association basked to withdraw. Mr. Gait said itdid not make any difference to thiscommittee how the money was collect-ed or how it was sent: what waswanted was money. The motion totppoint committees to solicit from

' J 7 A ?Has Happened to

Their Agencies .The matter of supplies is being dis-

cussed by the dealers in groceries. The

NOTE. Parties desiring to assist thesufferers in San Francisco, and moneynot being convenient, may send to mysalesrooms, such articles which theymay be willing to dispose of for said

t

purpose.

No Entry of Sunday's Quakes at San Francisco

Excepting Small One at II P. M. How

Magnetic Station Is Equipped.I will hold an auction sale of all r ui. me vessels to leave Sanf?ueh articles received on SATURDAY

XEXT, and will give my services Francisco has given all of the dealersE. A. FRASER, HONOLULU'S AGENT here various nuts to crack and fewAT SAN FRANCISCO.FREE OF CHARGE.The following articles have been re

ceived from J. Rosenstein, Esq.of them have a cracker.

win tvuow just wnere we are1 Elegant Leather Pillow (raised at." said Manager Lucas of the Hwork),1 Elegant Plaque (mangoes). May & Co. "Our agents in San Fran- - I banks and" business houses carried Mr.In a small, wooden, almost air-tig- ht

Cisco were Williams. Dimond & Co Ga,t sai1 that a each party was caHedlittle structure built upon a foundaThis list will be added to as goodsare received with the donor's name and their place of busing Q

upon' the RaP,d Transit plan might betion of coral reef outcrop half wayaffixed. W. h,--a

"Z suggested and Mr. Dillingham said it

Superintendent Gaines of the CableCompany was justly angry yesterdayafternoon when some one who had thesense of a calf pasted an item on thecable' office window to the effect thatMonterey was in ruins. The practicaljokers just at this time should receiveinitiation into the tar and feather de-gree.

Yesterday the banks were selling ex

- ttunaea or me nrm should be more than a suggestion.present location and as we have heardbetween Ewa sugar plantation and theseashore on this island, the tremorsof Mother Earth are recorded, andthose which razed San Francisco last

WILL E. FISHER.AUCTIONEER. nothing from them we do not know)

wnemer tney are prepared to fill our

Mr. McCandless said Executive Sec-retary Wood should be asked to pre-pare a letter which, he thought, theAdvertiser would be glad to publish,calling attention to the action of themen employed by the Rapid TransitCo. This was tut as n. motion nnA

general and not the islands in par-ticular.

Cockroach powder is plentifullysprinkled about the earthquake boxes.There is mucilage on the end of theboom and cockroaches are susceptibleto this tempting edible. The result isthat some cockroaches have invadedthe interior of the earthquake houseand have even gotten into the boxes.Mr. Nyswander does not attempt underpresent circumstances to catch such acockroach, as a shock may need to berecorded any instant. That cockroach,it is said, could make the biggestearthquake tracing on record and haveit recorded on the tape, should he takeit into his head to travel along that

orders. Ours was the only merchan-- 1dise account that had for Honolulu,change orv San Francisco as usual, as tnougn they still act for Hackfeld &lthey naturally expect the bankers

there to --arrange at once to have the Co. and one or two more agents, in the j carried and the following committees

Wednesday, as well as subsequently,have been traced minutely and pho-

tographically on a sensitized tape. Thetremendous shock of Wednesday causedthe pendulum needle to make terrificgyrations across the tape. On Fridayslighter shocks were recorded, and a

same honored. The tourists who are nanclling of sugar. The announcement j appointed:mat tne isevadan will go North is District No. 1, makai side of Kin

SendInYourGoodsFor

cueenng, due win the agents fill orders j street and on the west side of Fortfrom there that were expected from J street, to the river: Messrs. Gait.

going through on the Nippon Maruhowever, did not care risking the mat-ter of securing funds at the Coast ontheir letters of credit drawn on thSan Francisco banks and drew the

can rrancisco.' unless I hear this J Hughes and Shlozawa.visit by an Advertiser man to the lit- - fiiernoon x wm go up on the Ven-- 1 District No. 2. east side of Fbrtboom or un the tinv threads holdingcash on them here as soon as thevtie nouse yesterday aiternoon reveaieu j th& boom in position. tura- - I street, makai of King street: E. A.

It seems surprising that men of large Mclnerny. W. F. Dillingham and R.the fact that at 11 o'clock Sunday) The whole earthquake recording sys-- i could reach the banks from the waterfront. Dusmess experience do not communi- - W. Shingle.night still another light shock was reg.

caie Aim men- - houses here or their I District No. 3. east side of Forttern suggests that Mr. Nyswander isone of the caretakers of MotherEarth's nervous system, and the tapeistered.Wednesday's Sale relatives in some instances. Mr. and street, mauka of King street: Father

Dispatches from San Francisco on Mrs. Hayes are in San Francisco and I Valentin, R. II. Trent and W. ILthere are firms here more anxious to I Harris.

SAN FRANCISCO

RELIEF MOVEMENTSunday afternoon said that two shocks

I get Mr. Hayes' address than the gov- -had been felt. Both these items were

indicates that she is now having acase of nervous prostration.

ANXIOUS INQUIRIESABOUT STANFORD

District No. 4. west side of Fortstreet, mauka of King: Messrs. J. A.McCandless, Ho Fon and G. J. Waller.

The chair 'expre ssed the opinion that

WILL E. FISHER,AUCTIONEER. as the representative of the Pacificreceived during the course of the aft-

ernoon. No such quakes are shown Hardware and Steel Co. "Tell mewhere Hayes is," remarked E. O the committees would have to get toon tne tape or tne magnetic siauuu

at Sisal. vvmte yesterday, "and I will feel work and put in good timb for theeasier. e do a lot of business with I next day or two. Mr. Shingle, who hadR. E. Nyswander, in charge of the

Continued from Page 2.

securing as lirge an amount as possi-ble they realize that the duty of givingshould not be made burdensome.

The Rapid Transit Company hareadopted a plan which the committeeconsiders a most commendable one.

him and we are anxious to learn some- - I been at the telephone for several roinUnited States Magnetic Station of the thing about our orders." I utes, returned to the table and statedA. Lewis, Jr., one of the pioneer

graduates of Leland Stanford, sent the Tr Vi!to AT. T ...... n n . . I t V 'i Via V. .1 , . , 1 . .Geodetic and Coast Survey, developed i. . "nu ..xx. jjul cxa ait? iiui I nau uvi. 1 1 liiiuiijicru uy ic r. x pnWho? aiune in wieir anxiety prooaoiy every I ey over tne pnone tnat Casus xthe tape after last Wednesday's earth The employes of that corporation have mercantile house in the city has some I Cooke would donate the sum of one

following message of inquiry to .hisalma mater at noon yesterday;"President Jordan, Stanford Univers

quake, .and on Friday did the same for of the same brand of trouble. thousand dollars and set the pace.Stanley Stephenson. decided unanimously to give one day'swages each from the highest salariedthe remainder of the tape up to that This was applauded and Mr. Gait

time. Both of these results have DeenWhat ? asked if the committee was to collectmoney from the people willing to giveBOiLllLU WILL RAISEor merely take subscriptions. The chairThe Painter. replied, "Cash down," and BishopLibert added that money in hand, was

ity."Any Honolulu student injured?

What buildings destroyed?"A. LEWIS,. JR."

WORKS NOTBADLY HURT

VEBY SUBSTANTIAL SUM

employe to. the man receiving thesmallest salary toward the San Fran-cisco fund.

The employes of the Honolulu IronWorks are also considering this planwhich if carried out as fully as maybe will result in a large donation tothis very worthy object without im-posing any hardship upon the givers.

The Rapid Transit Company plancan be carried out In smaller concerns,

better than a promise. Collect as youWhy ?go and save the bother of going around

told in the Advertiser.An Advertiser man went to the mag-

netic station yesterday afternoon. Ewaplantation furnished him with a horseand facilitated his efforts to obtain thelatest results. On arrival at the sta-tion Mr. Nyswander was found in oneof the magnetic houses taking hisweekly figures of possible magneticvariations in the dip of the earth to

a second time. There was a. short disHis Work Lasts. cussion relative to the fraternal organizations and Mr. Shingle presented(Continued from Page 2.)the following resolution, which wasthose bodies. He said if their d ona- -unanimously adopted:in stores for instance, where there are j tions could pass through this commit

SAN FRANCISCO, April 23.-1- 1:50

a. m. Damage to works will not ex-ceed five hundred dollars. Everything uiiijr iictic a. uucu diiyio ui pcoictya I tee there would be no difflcultv of rais.even less. .The crews of ships in tne ( In? fiftv thousand Hrvl ' a fnr-- V,o. ofC - .7 . ... . . . ..j 1 1IL Lily. iTUl

narDor may aiso wisn to join in sucn , ferers. It would mean something if itworking all right. LAHANEY.

(Mr. Lahaney is Superintendent ofthe Pacific Guano and Fertilizer Worksat the Potrero, San Francisco.

ward the North Pole. He was tre-mendously busy and had not heard upto that time of the dispatches fromSan Francisco announcing furthershocks on the Coast. After finishingwith the magnetic instruments, heturned his attention to the "Earth

a movement ana even tne scnooi cnu- - j were iearned that Hawaii had condren may desire to donate pennies that tributed that sum.

'SSi

ns

iney nave oeen saving, in oruer 10 neip Governor Atkinson arrived at thisswell the fund. time and said that Hawaiian Lodge

"Whereas, This committee is de-

sirous of notifying the San Fran-cisco sufferers that a substantialsum has been raised for their re-lief, therefore, be it

"Resolved, That' the fraternalorders of the city of Honolulu, hav-ing appropriated, or who may ap-propriate, sums of money for therelief of the San Francisco suffer-ers, be requested to turn over thefunds to the Executive Committee,appointed by Acting Governor At

it is nopea Dy tne committee mat has no strinp-- on it nor on tho mnovNOTES - O - " .. W. t J .

It will go through the hands of thisquake House," which is some distanceapart. It is a queer-shape- d structure.It is sunk into the coral reef a couple committee. As to the Elks' donation

the members want to distribute itA cablegram announces that the

bark Edward May is O. K. at SanFrancisco.

The San Francisco earthquake oc- -

through their own channels but itcould still be handled by this commit

the plan suggested may meet withgeneral approval and be productive ofgood results.

Respectfully submitted,H. P. WOOD.

Secretary, Executive Committee.THE CABLE SHIP RESTORER. .

The officers and men o? the cable

of feet so that the floor is perhaps twofeet below the surface of the ground.It is windowless save for one aperturewhich is provided with a red glass kinson, with the understanding thattee and used as directed by the local

the same will be reappropriated inlooge.I curred on the anniversary of Honoluusually found in photographer's dark-

rooms. After passing through one door, any manner and among such perMr Hughes said the money donatedby the lodges was all treasury money sons in San Francisco as they maythe visitor finds himself in a small desire.and not donated by the members ofthe orders. There was an exception in The mover said there were $14,000 on

ante-roo- m, with just room enougi toturn around in. The door is closedand then an inner door is opened. This the list appropriated by fraternal or

lu's first Chinatown fire which tookplace on April IS, 1SS6.

"Telegrams are being sent, from hereto friends in San Francisco to the ef-fect that Honolulu is at present apretty good place to visit. These dis--patches are being sent not only bykamaainas but by visitors.

ship Restorer were early in the runin collecting funds on the ship for therelief of the sufferers ip San Francisco.A report was made to Secretary Woodyesterday that the ship had subscribed$158.50. The Kakaako Mission SundaySchool children sent a donation of

ganizations and it would be well if thisamount could be made a part of thegeneral donation under the conditions

opens into the room where the tremorsof the earth" are recorded. Jn the dimlight which perflates through thered glass the outlines of some dark-woo- d

cases are to be seen, while thenamed in the resolution. AH of the

$9.10 to the same cause. money collected under the direction ofthe committee would be placed In theear is smitten with the regular tick- -hands of the treasurer, L. Tenney Peck,tack of a clock. A small lamp with a

the case of the Elks, $1000 being givenby the lodge and the other thousandby the members individually.

Mr. Gait said it would be well to avoidmixing things as far as possible. Thepeople would certainly object to beinggone after more than once. He mov-ed that the chair appoint a commit-tee to solicit funds from all of thebusiness houses and to suggest to themanagers the Rapid Transit plan.There should be another committeeappointed to wait upon the heads ofthe local fraternal orders. In that waybut one visit would be madfc to anindividual or a firm.

and if it was found necessary it winbe transmitted by cable if it can not

dim light stands upon the cover otthe box beneath which is the delicateEyes be had before the departure of Mr.pendulum which registers the quakes, j

Morgan, 'tne following places aroAfter shutting on tne ciocK-wor- n anadesignated as depositories for relieftherefore stopping the tape from movfunds:EXAMINED ing on its constant way beneath the

Benson, Smith & Co., the Hollisterpendulum, the red window Is thrownDrug Co., Hobron-Newma- n Drug Co.,the Chambers Drug Co. and the Ho

open, and tne casings or woou aie it-mo-ved

revealing the main instrument.There Is a vertical metal post and

Mr. McCandless said he would likeHonolulu to make a good showing;"Eyes examined" may mep some nolulu Drug Co., Hawaiian Trust Co.,

thing for you or it may mean rothing;Ct depends upon the skill, knowl from the lower part there projects

horizontally a long slender boom, theend of which is just above the sensi-tized tape. A tiny thread runs fromthe outer end of the boom to the top

edge, and fitness of the examine- -.

Our examinations are conducted af

the Henry Waterhouse Trust Co., M.Mclnerny, R. II. Trent, the rooms ofthe Promotion Committee, the Hawai-ian Hotel, the Alexander Young Hoteland the Moana.

The committee will meet at the Uanltof Hawaii at 9 o'clock this morning.

there is great distress over thereamong the people and while we haveset our mark at $30,000 there is no rea-son why we should stop there wemust not be satisfied with that; ' wemust have more.

Mr. Gait said the time is so short

,00OJK09000SOOOOt)

ter the most approved methods, and.of the metal post. If a bit of canvaswere fitted to the boom and thread itmight suggest the appearance of a toyyacht's mast and rigging.

tack of all, we have adequate kr-wl-d-ge

of the eye and Its needs.A. N. SANFORD

OPTICIAN.Boston Building, Fort Street, Ovr-- ti

May & Co.

The instruments are known as the THOSE SAFE IN

SAN FRANCISCOMilne Horizontal Pendulum. Its bearings are hard steel points in order tominimize irieuon, ana tne muuiuiiigsare of the nvst accurate kind.GUIDE The outer end of the boom carriesa thin metallic plate with a slit in it.Underneath the end of the boom is a

The following additions to the listof those who are safe were made bycablegrams received yesterday:box containing a roll of sensitized pa

' Seventh Year of Publication. A Co-rrect, Complete and Convenient Ship-Jlin- g

Paper for the Hawaiian Island?.GUIDE PUBLISHING CO.

TOITNG BUILDING.P. O. Box 30;J. Telephone Main 374.

per driven by clockwork. In the cover ('apt. von Otterndorp, S. F.J. T. Warren's mother andof the box is a slit identical with the slater.

a slit in the pendulum so that a beamof light passing both slits falls upon Berkeley.

Mrs. O. J. Hettis, Broderick street,S. F.

A. Alston Deas" sister.Maurice Branch's sister, 2018 Bush.Mr. Schultze, Mrs. Pfotnhaucr and

the photographic roll of paper tracinga sinuous line as the boom movesright or left. This beam of light fallsupon a mirror and is reflected by thatthrough the" first slit and falls uponthe slowly moving ribbon.

The boom is four feet long and car- - ;

t ies a sliding weight. It has a cup i

of quartz at the inner enj which rests ;

upon a hard steel point set in the up- - j

right steel post. j

The whole apparatus is enclosed in(

wooden boxes to shield it from aircurrents, which have an effect upon j

Mr. and Mrs. Humburg safe in Oak-land.

C. J. Cooper, of Wm. G. Irwin & Co.J. W. Jones' family at Webster and

Fulton streets.Son of S. I'.. Rose.Flos-ro- V. Perkins' father, Haight

and Scott anl Page- .irnl Websterstreets.

Frank Jordan and Alexander May,Oakland.

J. A. Hughes' relatives.Mrs. Capt. Benriet and child, sister

of Mrs. V. Is. Waldron.Mrs. J. P. Sargent, sister of Mr.

Falk.

Headquarter for Automobileswith fully equipped fireproofgarage.

VON HAMM-YOUN- G CO.the pendulum.

The instruments are placed to pointnorth and south and so take - mainlyshocks which are east and west inmovement. It is susceptible only toquakes elsewhere in the wor'-- d than in

the islands. Shocks here would hardlybe traced on the tape. This is ac-

counted for by Mr. Nyswander as fol-

lows: The instrument is attuned totremors from other sections of theworld. Take two piano strings andhave each attuned to the other. Twangone and the other will sing. If theyare not attuned to each other thetwansr of one does not start the other.

WILL HANDLEALL SHIPPING

.SHOGEiSU RESTAURANT' f Just Opened

17 Hotel Street, Near Nuuanu.MEALS SERVED AT ALL. HOURS.

Ice Cream and CakesServed on Ground Floor.

RESTAURANT UP-STAIR- S.

SAN FRANCISCO. April 2.-1- 2:00 m.Office destroyed, all shipping left in

hands of commercial bodies.HUMBURG.That is the case with the Sisal instruBEAD THE ADVHETI3EB

fX. WORLD'S NEWS DAILY. ment. It is attuned with the world in STANFORD UNIVERSITY CHAPEL.

Page 4: ESTASUSHED JUtV 2. t856- AM CAUTOTO A SAYS DIFFICHLW › bitstream › 10524 › 44399 › 1 … · The final stand of the fire fighters was made at Van Ness avenue, where Mavor Schmitz"

:' ,if, in'';.? '

iithif THE PACIFIC COMMERCIAL ADVERTISER, HONOLULU, APRIL 24, 1906.

0000000000000X)00XXX00000X)XOOOOOOOC)3THE PACIFIC.'. !f f. HOW THE PUBLIC LOOKS AT

COMMERCIAL ADVERTISER A FRESH INVOICE OFADVERTISER ENTERPRISEEDITOB.

WALTEB G. SMITH GoodsJapaneseAPRIL 24TUESDAY would it not have been equally import-ant and valuable at T or S o'clock last

Lihue, Kauai, April 21, 1906.

Editor Advertiser: This community,in common with Honolulu and many Snighf. Star."JUDGMENTS OF GOD

It happens that the closing paraThe idea of special judgments is, as Bishop Restariek pointed out in his . Qther paees; has been stricken with... t v, A n Xr aires mon wpw nrtine to ... . graph? of the message arrived after al-

most everyone had left the streets ex- -admirable sermon, essentially pagan. iu iue - terrible suspense ana anxiety over tnerard nature's handiwork, especially the phenomena of force, with superstition, distressirigr rep0rts from the Coast con-- J

j cepting a few night hawks and theeerning the awful wreckage of the citynumber of Star and Bulletinu r., off the ! usualSeveral

their opportunity. Let there be a volcame out-

breaka fact which gave wily priests

and the people, in their terror, and the priests, in their cunning, saw God's

angry presence in the smoke and flame. Some there were who claimed for a

rreat general the credit for nature's destruction of their foes, as when onespes who haunt this office in the ef-

fort to filch a little news. Ed. Adv.leading families here have "loved ones"in San Francisco or the immediate vi- -

JUST ARRIVED FROMTHE ORIENT

will be opened this week and placed on exhibition and saleat the Art Rooms of the

Pacific Hardware Company, Ltd,i corner Fort and Merchant streets.

Carved chairs, boxes and stands, lacquered trays andtables, carved Xikko tables, Satsuma decorated cups andsaucers, tea sets, plates and vases, buttons, belts. Hibachibrass ware, candle sticks, in .qfreat variety; srongs, leather andembroidered purses and card cases, Mandarin silk embroid-ered coats, blouses, jackets and shawls, etc., etc., etc.

leader, with the blowing of a ram's horn, got the honors, which were due to an cln,ty and their anxiety is almostof the fall of Jericho. Modern learning has done away with much bearable. The flrst message received

of this crude superstition, but not all. Despite the reason and experience of wag a Wjreless last Wednesday morn- -HONOLULU!

JAPANESEman, which teaches him that ruin, like rain, falls alike on the just ana unjust,

ii time of calamity alw.ays brings out the pious croakers who talk of "judg-

ments against the wicked," forgetting that, in such a disaster as the one of

San Francisco, misfortune falls with eual force upon those who had spentfhni'i- - Hum in trvins? to redeem the wicked.

ing at 8 o'clock, which was terriblyshocking, and since then, owing to theabsence of fuller particulars, the sus-pense has been almost paralyzing. Thismorning's mail contained your "Spe--

(Continued from Page I.)ar.ese in San Francisco who have losteverything and who are suffering fromstarvation hungry and thirsty. Reliefat once requested."

The substance of this report was atonce communicated to the leading

to those cial" headed "Free." which was greatlydeathinWhen the great charity bazaar was burned Paris, came, . : .u.. or,,! nmn of th appreciated and for which you deserve yx0000000000(engaged in tne oesi causes iu iue --

.' our hearty thanks. It

great city. In the destruction of the Tay bridge, in Scotland, the Christian in. on your part amJwas enterpris-tende- d

greatly

lit

IfIf

?

I

Japanese, whose opinions were voicedin the Vice Consul's reply:

"Considering current reports herethat there are sufficient supplies offood in San Francisco, it is to be wondered why the Japanese only are in Pabstsuch a distressed condition."

A call was. however, issued for a

and the unbeliever went down to a watery grave together. The Chicago fire

swept through churches, hospitals and prayerful homes as it did through

theaters and saloons. And, as Bishop Restariek pointed out, Baltimore, thecity of the most church-goers- ; Grinnell, Iowa, a city of high moral and relig-

ious life, and Johnstown, an average American country town, went down as

easily before fire, cyclone and flood as did Sodom and Gomorrah before thesweep of nature's destructive forces. ,

- -

God in His majesty has established, for nature, certain immutable lawswhich- - the good or the bad may. not violate with impunity. .If a wooden city5s buSlt in a, - wind-swe- pt -- land, though every inhabitant be a Christian, andevery other building a spire,-- God will not perform a miracle to save it fromUie conflagration." Those who expeet the miracle' and do not take ample pre-

caution against fire have only themselves to blame .when the' worst happens.rtr.wlTala nr no safer than saloons, except that they-.- . may . be . more

to alleviate the worst fears, to wit,that the whole city had gone under.As it is, the disaster is terrible beyondexpression and we await still furtherdetails with hearts full of sympathyfor all who may be directly .afflictedwhen the loss of life is more fullyknown. God grant that it may not beas great as "many seem to fear!

Faithfully yours,JOHN V. WAD1IAX.

"

BESTOWING CREDIT.Editor Advertiser: Kindly permit

me to make a suggestion to the busi-ness men and people of Honolulu,

meeting, . in- - response to .which aboutforty Japanese gathered last night in flaltEthe Japanese school on Nuuanu street, xtractMr. Matsubara taking the chair. Fromthe beginning it was seen that therewere .two factions represented, ' one

Is Recommend-

ed To

Produce Sleep, Con-quer DyspepBla,Strengthen theTVeak, Build Up theConvalescent, HelpRecovery front slck.ness. Build Up andFeed the Nerves. As-sist Nursing Moth-ers, Help Women.

urging that immediate steps be takento send money to San Francisco, theojher objecting strongly to the Japanese taking any part as a class.stroAelv built, when caught in the whirl of the tornado. A missionary ship is through, your valuable paper: and it

The "Best" TonicMANUFACTURED BY

"

PABST BREWING CO..Milwaukee, Wis.

For Sale by W. C. PEACOCK & CO., LTD.

It was pointed out that the Honoluluas susceptible to the perils of the sea as a pirate ship. If a great dam breaks, would be well if both the Chamber ofJapanese had been called on 'oftenerCommerce and Hawaii Promotion Com than they could afford to answer, theall that is in its path goes, too sanctuary as well as gambling hell. God is

not responsible for it. He made the laws and he gave man the reason to mittee were to pass resolutions per- - majority of them being poor laborers. . . . v...-i,- i oi--o v0 lainingr to mem. At the present time they were sub-

scribing towards the Soldiers ReliefFund and the Japanese Famine Fund,and while, if it were necessary, theywould also answer a call from SanFrancisco, under the circumstancesthey did not believe that it was neces

iisary. The Japanese merchants and theothers who were in a position to give

. isnehelp could do so in connection withthe general fund being raised, but as irao -- j

is herefor there being any necessity for aspecial Japanese fund, or any question

interpret tnem; ana so, u man uuu v '' Thefe are four perSons, as well asearthquake surges and rolls; if he erects his marts of trade where the great thelr subordinates, to whom the peo--winds blow, or where fire may find convenient fuel, it matters nothing as to pie in this community have cause to bethe man's morality, his practices of worship or his gifts and habits, of prayer thankful.he must pay the penalty of violating the laws of nature, which are also the tFlt- - r- - McKenna and his heroic

San Francisco, who first gavelawa of God. -

, the news of the awful catastrophe to; . this city.

.I Second. Mr. Gaines, superintendent

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS. of the cable office here, through whoseThe Associated Press, in direct reply to the Advertiser's cabled questions, untiring efforts communication was at

gave this paper a comprehensive message yesterday which . served to show, fiamong other things, how well our special correspondent had covered the fie'd faithfully in getting all the informa-Ih- e,

night before. tion possible regarding Hawaiianthe Associated Press will send regular advices to Honolulu, with- - landers and their relatives, as well as

ont further delay, will be known by the Advertiser's front page this morning, allgeneral information affecting these

At the present writing no light has been shed on the subject. Fourth. And last, but not least, tola the great temblor and fire the Associated Press oflices went with the the management of the Advertiser,

other business concerns. It took some time to collect the force and reorganize who as rapidly as the news was re-

st service in Oakland. Then came a deluge of orders from eastern and mid- - cejved- - disseminated it gratuitously ina series of specials. This was amostwestern papers, which doubtless overworked a nervous and drowsy staff. The ynseifiah, public-spirite- d act, and has

Oakland office is about sixteen miles from the cable hut and to get a news earned the praise of all with possibly

of the Japanese being treated any waybut the same as the other sufferers,the report was incredible.

It was asked what their Consul inSan Francisco was doing to allow thedistinction to be made that he re-ported in his cable?

A vote being taken, after each oneof those present had made at least one'

message through to Honolulu a man must cross the bay, pass the military one exception(It seems almost Incredible that a

Jjr The hot sum- -

if. mer days without an

' electric fan are, to put it mild-- M,jfly, unpleasant. You " ' can ; find in- !

V stant relief in an electric fan.

- Special for one week

only. $13.50. jffl

cordon, pick his path among smoking ruins and do several miles of walking allto send a comparatively short message. Probably it costs as much to carryan average Honolulu news budget to the cable hut as the Associated Presswill get for it.

So in case the great news agency drops its regular Honolulu service for afew. days. nobody need be surprised. .

long speech, resulted in a tie, with theresult that the debate grew more andmore heated. Finally it was decidedto wait for further information, thosewho could afford it to help meanwhilethrough the general relief committee.THE CHINESE SOLICITING FUNDS.

: A joint meeting of the Bo On As-

sociation and the United Chinese Asso-ciatio- rf

was held last night in the U.C. A, Hall, the place hc-in-g crowdedwith members. '

Here there was unanimity of opinionand a soliciting committee was ap-pobw-

to ' canvass Chinatown formoney, which will be expended by thecommittee for rice and clothing andtJ JB rushed to the Coast as soon aspossible. The committee will be atwork today and tomorrow and will re-port the result of their canvass at a

member of the Chamber of Commerce,who poses as one of the leading busi-ness men in this city, should makean address to that body, accusing theAdvertiser of "croaking," and in gen-eral running it down. One might thinkthat, this worthy gentleman was' theowner of a few paltry shares in one ofthe afternoon papers, and was conse-quently doing most of the "croaking"himself.) A RESIDENT:

THE RELIEF FUND.Honolulu ought not to send less than $100,000 to the relief of San' Francisco.

Hawaiian Electric Go.Oar prosperity has long been inseparably bound with that of the Coast metropo-'-l- is

and San Francisco, in its extremity, should know that we are not unmindful THANKS AND INQUIRIES. Main 390.Editor Advertiser: The public is

greatly indebted to the enterprise ofthe Advertiser for , getting the detailed LADIE

of the ancient partnership in trade and commerce. Hawaii has never askedSan Francisco in vain for the use of its influence in Congress and elsewh'ere;California capital has been heavily invested here; our banks have long hadtheir correspondents on that groundj we are both good customers of the other.Duty and sympathy prompt us to give from our abundance freely, promptly andmost of all adequately.

The fraternities started off with $14,000. The planters followed with$20,000. Some other contributions are helping the fund along substantially.

Very latent styles and lowest prices.No trouble to show goods.Call and be convinced. ,

account of the San Francisco disasterin today's paper and also for their ex-

cellent map of the city, showing por-

tion destroyed, in yesterday's issue.But there ia one point still in somedoubt. When the fire started at the KINO STREET.

NO. 30, K. ISCDSHIMHIt is' possible that with aid from the other islands, the desired figures of $100,000 corner of O'Farrell and Jones streets

meeting called for tomorrow night.E. Yap, a prominent local Chinaman,

said last night that Honolulu Chinesewould probably send 4000 bags of riceto San Francisco to relieve their suf-fering countrymen.

It is understood that such an amountof rice can at present be spared with-out materially affecting the local mar-ket. The cost will be about $16,000.$12,000 of which will be drawn fromthe fund raised to support the boycottin China and the disposal of which re-cently caused great dissension amongthe officers and members of the Unit-ed Chinese societies.

and swept towards Telegraph Hill (thatmay be exceeded. .

. ' is in a northeasterly direction), how-fa- r

did it go north or ,northwest? Themap shows the burnt part to extendas far as California street, but there isnothing to that effect in the despatches.

; When the buildings were demolishedon Van Ness avenue to save the West-,er- n

Addition how far up were they de-molished? Would it be possible to ob-- !tain any information as to buildings on

t; Pine or Bush street east of Van Ness,that is to say, in the vicinity of Polkor Larkin street? Yours,

The Grub that Makes the Butterfly

There is an ancient conundrum in which the question ispropounded Why are hot cakes like a caterpillar? The an-swer is : It's the grub that makes the butter fly.

CRYSTAL SPRINGS BUTTER is so good that any-thing that it is eaten with makes it disappear rapidly. Itsflavor is indescribably delicate, and its quality never varies.One pound is just as good as another.

6

t

4

1

r

4

LATE NEWS NOTESFROM COAST FILES

. ; Two days before the earthquake ruined San Francisco the Call saideditorially: ' -

,, , . Our destiny is upon us. We cannot escape it. San Francisco4 v has an impetus that nothing can check. Cosmopolitan, uttering

--. . more languages than made the confusion of Babel, combining the

energies and the arts of many peoples, the meeting place of theOccident and Orient, with the picturesque features of both, this... city is emerging into literature and rising to her inheritance and.opportunity. So much of our advantages are ready made for us bynature that our task is the light occupation of showmen. "All that '

'" we need to do is to direct the crowd to points of interest.Man proposes, God disposes. Within forty-eigh- t hours from the time the

jubilant Call appeared on the streets, destiny was indeed upon the proud city.Now it lies in ashes. The "light duty of the showman" was to direct thecrowds to points of safety.

Yaqui Indians have ambushed and. . A NERVOUS SUFFERER.

The map was made according to alladvices, public and private, that couldbe procured. The revised map appearsin today's issue and will, perhaps, giveour correspondent further light. Wehave no details not published.

TWO POUNDS 65 CENTS.DELIVERED FROZEN AT YOUR RESIDENCE.

killed mining parties near Carbo, So-noma. " : "'''.

American farmers to the number ofover 80,000 are expected to settle inCanada, this year.". ':: j

A panic in a 'Chicago church, causedby a false alarm of fire, resulted inthe death of four persons.

By the Kearsarge accident two off-icers and five men were killed and four-teen men were injured, eight of them

METROPOLITAN MEAT CO.- Telephone, Main 45.

FROM THE BEATEN PAPERS.The morning' paper says it has been

criticised for issuing its freak freespecials. "

.

It is deserving of pity more thancriticism. Its struggle with the newsfor " the past few days has been thebombastic cavorting of an alleged has-bee- n

that never was.The greatest news crisis Honolulu

The cablegram printed elsewhere in this paper from the Bank of Californiato its local correspondent, while it confirms the worst relative to the destruc-tion of property , that has been wrought in San Francisco, will yet convey alarge measure of reassurance to bankers and business men generally in thestatement that, while , the financial situation is at a standstill, the period ofthe continuance of this condition is placed at no more than "some days."The great banking institutions of San Franeiseo are rallying from the disasterthat has fallen upon the city.

3

seriously.A religious war has broken out be-

tween the Catholic sects in Poland,clashes resulting in the killing andwounding of many.

Lady Dockrell has been elected chair-man of the Blackrock (Dublin) UrbanCouncil, the first woman Mayor ever

GIVEN the best and only the best pure, rich milk asa selection, nearly 50 years' experience, the most scientificmethods, and it is easy to see why

Lelected in the United Kingdom.The 22nd Advertiser free Extra came out about the middle of the after-noon yesterday with an exclusive dispatch from the Associated Press. ; A largenumber of the Extras went to the country and everybody within reach of therailroad probably saw the news or heard of it by dinner time. A staff mem-ber of the Advertiser family went up the road on the 3:20 train with a bundleof Extras for free distribution. Thousands of copies were sent where theywould do the most good iu town and out

has thus far known found every otherpaper in the city so far outstripped bythe modern equipment of the EveningBulletin that they were brought to astandstill. The people got the newsfrom the Bulletin.

After waiting two days the morningpaper found it was so far out of it,and its equipment so utterly incapableof handling the news that the freejob office "specials" was the onlymeans of its keeping before the public.As a piece of newspaper enterprise, Itwas on the border of a country townbazoo. Every newspaperman whoknows anything of the business smiles.

Bulletin.

The Czar has issued a royal decreewhich takes out' of the hands of thenew Russian parliament all controlover the finances of the Empire.

The London press lauds PresidentRoosevelt's speech suggesting a pro-gressive tax to prevent the inheritanceof over a certain amount of money.

Maxim Gorky has been ordered outof his New York hotel following theexpose of the fact that the woman ac-companying him is not his wife.Gorky denies the charge.

Of 6oto0H

BORDEN'SEagle Brand

Condensed Milktakes first rank and why Borden's pro-ducts have taken the highest awardwherever exhibited.

The Star, which felt hurt because the Advertiser got out specials by day,thus depriving "the newsboys" of a ni.kel harvest, now feels angrv becruiethis paper did not get one out Sunday evening after everybody hadVone home.Nothing suits our asteroid contemporary these days. Evidentlv the Riddenstoppage last week of skin-gam- e extras itgave an attack of s swanzv-mani- a,

a very painful disease of the month.

-

Br,Allre- -

The above needs no comment,that it requires is the publicity itceives in these columns.

LINGERING COUGHS.Persistent coughs that continue

through the spring ana summer usual-ly indicate some tnroat or iung trou- -

tnat :iroSo far.

:it all sorious at S-- Kram-isc- willsitu-- last Wednesday, onlv moderate

maKe instanttremors have

Any shorksrecord at Sisal,been registered.

In view of the expressed anxiety ofthe Ailv-itise- r to give the people of uie ana it is a serious mistake to neg- -iionoiuiu ir.e news so promptly, why lect them. Ciiamberlain's Cough Re-w- as

the news secured through its rnedy is famous for its cures of roush1?The Bulletin li;is eeu so luisv .iilmirimr t .. '",.,;;.;...' Mr. Damon 'monumental feat of iournalism. of this nan and a few doses taken 0Txoaneu ii, mat tlie paper was unable to The. H.withheld for nine or ten hours notime out with anv fresh news. in time may save a doctor's bill and aves WholesaleDistributors.u. hjs it not gien iree. out wny perhaps years of suffering. For salewas it not given at all? If it was im- - j by Benson, Smith & Co., Ltd., Agents

rorlant to the people at 5 this morning for Hawaii.Meanwhile Clarence Macfarlaue is sailiu- - alone

Page 5: ESTASUSHED JUtV 2. t856- AM CAUTOTO A SAYS DIFFICHLW › bitstream › 10524 › 44399 › 1 … · The final stand of the fire fighters was made at Van Ness avenue, where Mavor Schmitz"

' T...W

THE PACIFIC COMMERCIALS ADVERTISER. HONOLULU, APRIL 24, 1906, 5,Not fr ST. LOUIS.

1 WEEKLY WEATHER BULLETIN. 1v

IT GIVES iSLMOSHNSIiNT EFFECT

PAINE'S CELERYCOiYIPOUrJD

HIS OU1CK RESTORATION.

EATERSCHEESE

READ7" u ne ec-- fmuntr -- Mini 21. ; ,tv r....

Few Days of Pair.e's Celery Com I movraut one '.vrVi j ; ww) pound .Made this WoTn-O- ut .Manl il I". S. WYaThrr Bureau, Health."icture or. F. II. Ilayselden.

Th wi-ath-- r has beenrainfall .... me!:

Naah-h- (IV)warm and drv victim nervous debilitv.ib'!H:,.iu, T. April 1'.

GENERAL SUlIilASY.trad?with strong

"I wascaused byFor a Ionsnot work

a severe attack of ia Grippe.: time I was sick so I couldwithout an awful effort and

allor-- : to hav,i ;RSyA,cr Hair :!1T. .a,t

tinuanc-i- ' or

(1: wa marked by a enn-a-l- v

trade winds of niod- -aa r: woir.cn would e

greatly improved byit, too. It means so nv.tcliXNS f V v0 s

winds at intervals: the total rainfallwas .'JO inch. G. (1. Kinney.

Pahala (1) The entire week hasbeen dry. with a mean temperature of71 deg. II. D. Harrison.

Kapuho (1) The weather has beenwarm and showery, with a heavy rainduring the forenoon of the 19th; theweekly mean temperature was 72 deg.,and the total rainfall 2.59 inches. H. J.Lyman.

INLAND OF MAUI.

Oi ' 'i" A'

You never get dried-ou- tcheese from us. When wecut a largv cheese it is sofaso rapidly that it doesn't havetime to get dry where it liasbeen cut. That's only one ofthe advantages of buying froma big store. Besides our bigNew York and Californiacheeses, we have all the fancyvarieties, including:

EDAM, PINEAPPLE,ROQUEFORT, STIL-TO- N,

M'LAREN,SAP -- SAGO (Green).PARMESAN ( tjrated 1

LIMBURGER, GE-NUINE IMPORTEDSWISS, FOILCREAM.

- - - - . . - .r: 1 , ifcTjThair; soft, smootli, glossy Lair. Andthis is just the kind of hair you may '

Lave, if you wish it. If you wish all j

tbo deep, rich color of youth restored jto your hair,

could not eat because of having no ap-petite. I was extremely nervous. Itried several remedies with no erf'ect,and a vacation did not accomplish anygood resuits.

"A friend recommended your Paine'sCe iery Compound. To my surprise, IXA FEW DAYS I noticed a general im-provement in my health.

I became THE PICTURE OFHEALTH and have not felt badly sincethen.

''Gratitude compels me to write toyou to tell you how Paine's CeleryCompound restored me from a wreck.

"I wish to heartily thank 3'ou for thisbenefit." W. E. Grove. 1603 Locust St.,St. Louis, March 5.

i N

orate force. :tt teii'l' 1, as is usual at thisseason of the year, by fairly heavyshowers in nearly all windward dis-

tricts of the jmup. The week wasiuite dry. Imwever, in the lower levels

of the Kau district of Hawaii, iu lee-ward anl central Maui and leewardKauai. Fairly good showers occurredin the tipper levels of the leeward val-leys of Oahu, but the leeward coast dis-tricts continued dry.

The rainfall of the week occurredprincipally at night, the days beingwarm and sunny and mean temperaturesbeing well up to the normal. Ia Oahuand Kauai, temperatures were apprecia-bly higher than those of the previousweek.

The following table shows the weeklyaverages of temperature and rainfallfor the principal islands and for thegroup:

Temp. Rainfall.

iers 5f

MR.

Hana (17) The week has been one ofwarm, sunny days, light showers, andtrade winds. X. Omsted.

Nahiku (19) The week has beenwarm and cloudy, with showersamounting to 3.18 inches. C. O. Ja-cobs.

Huelo (19) The weather has beenshowery, with normal temperaturesand northeasterly winds; the weeklymean temperature was 70 deg.. andthe total rainfall 2.66 inches. W. F.Pogue.

Peahi (19) The week has been oneof occasional showers and light tradewinds. Geo. Groves.

air VigorHenry May & Go., Ltd.

trill certainly satisfy you.Do not be deceived by cheap imita-

tions which will only disappoint you,Make sure you get AYER'S HairVigor.PrranJ tj Or. J. C. Aw Co.. Lo-vtl-L HUt C. SL A.

KOLLISTER DRUG CO.. AGEJJTS.

Deg. Inches.2.111.00

TELEPHONES:Retail, Main 22; Wholesale. Main 93.

Hawaii 70Maui 71Oahu .. 74Kauai 74

Haiku (19) Steady trade winds haveprevailed throughout the week, accom-panied by considerable rainfall hereand heavier rains in the forests to the

0.290.52

j 40 eastward; the weekly mean tempera- -. X Hawaiian flnara fanneo KntiregrouP 72

few correspondents in Hawaii andUUUUUUU VJJU1U UUUUUi AKauai reoort that, verv hunt earth- -

and bldgs, Kapiolani Park. Honolulu.Oahu. $18,000. B 2S4, p 97. Dated Feb14. 1906.

Est of Antone do Rego by admr toCarolina do Rego. A M: mtg V ACawalho et al on pc land, Kukuau 2nd,Hilo, Hawaii. $350. B 2S1, p 25. DatedApr 5, 1906.

Matsushima Unokichl to L Chong, CM; cane crops on lands. Kau, Hawaii.$200. B 279, p 172. Dated Mar 31, 1906.

Aiona to Tet Yop. B S; leaseholdand taro crops, Niulii, N Kohala, Ha-waii. $105. B 2S3. p 131. Dated Mar14, 1900.

Panui Naea to Ceo Wan Hoy, D;aps 1 and 2 R P 7294 kuls 10210 and10376. Keei 2, S Kona, Hawaii. $50. B280. p 40. Dated Mar 17, 1906.

Ana Peterson and hsb (W F) to KauAgrctl Co Ltd, D; 1- -9 int in gr 2152ap 1 and kul 7629. Kowala, etc, Kau,Hawaii. $150. B 2S0. p 41. Dated Mar26. 1906.

Puu Hakolo Jr to Kaimi Waikikl(k), D; int in R Ps 2158 and 5974, Wai-luku. Maui. $50. E 230. p 37. DatedApr 9. 1906.

Lihue Plantn Co Ltd to G N Wilcox,

GEMS, GOLD AND SILVERJEWELRY.

UP-TO-DA- TE STYLES.Ready-mad- e or by special order.

Prices reasonable. Call on us.

S TJ" 2ST "WONo. 1308 Maunakea St. P. O. Box M3.

ture was ii deg. R. T. Christophersen.ISLAND OF KAUAI.

Makaweli (20) The weather has beenfair, warm and dry; the weekly meantemperature was 76 deg. HawaiiahSugar Co.

Koloa (20) The past week has beenvery warm, with moderate north-easterly winds and light showersamounting in all to .85 Inch; the weeklymean temperature was 73 deg. KoloaSugar Co.

Lihue (20) Regular trade winds havecontinued during the past week, ac-companied by occasional showersamounting: to .58 inch; the weeklymean temperature was 72 deg. F.Weber.

Kealia (20) The weather has beenclear and dry. with trade winds; asHsrht earthquake shock was felt bysome of the people here during theearly morning of the 18th; the weekly-mea-n

temperature was 74 deg.. and thetotal rainfall .03 inch. W. Jarvis.

Kilauea (20) The weather has beengenerally fair, with trade winds andoccasional night showers; the weeklymean temperature was 72 deg., and thetotal rainfall .52 inch. L. B. Boreiko.

Hanalei (20) Except for showers on

quake shocks were experienced in theirlocalities during the early morning ofthe ISth. The Pacific Coast disturbancewas also recorded on the seismographof the U. S. Magnetic Station nearEwa, Onhu.REMARKS BY CORRESPONDENTS.

! ture was 71 deg., and the total raintan2.17 inches. D. D. Baldwin.

Paia (19) The days have been warmand sunny, with light trade winds;

hiv.'ors have fallen at night,amounting in all to .73 inch. J. J.Jones.

Kahuiui (17) The weather has beenj partly cloudy, warm and dry. R. V.

'j Filler.

Puunene (19) We have had steadytrade winds all week, with moderate

' temperatures and good rains at the

THURSDAY AND SATURDAY EVE-NINGS, ALSO SATURDAY MA--'

TINEJC, APRIL 2S AND 2S.

Monster Benefit Par-forma-nce

In Aid of the San Francisco SufferersUnder the Auspices of the Myrtle

Boat Club.

ditch heads; some pumps have beenshut down; the rainfall here was .05

(Note: The figures following thename of a station indicate the day ofthe month with which the week's re-

port closes.)

ISLAND OF HAWAII.Kaumana (19) The past week has

been one of moderate temperatures,firl- - atpadv trade winds, and intermit- -

inch. J. X. S. Williams.Wailuku (19) We have had warm,

cloudy days and cool, showery nights:the weekly mean temperafure was 72GEORGE ADE'S GREATEST

COMEDY.

Nebraskan brings

Strong, Young

MULESCalifornia will probably not

ship mules to Hawaii for along time as she will need ev

lAgrmt; in re cultivation of 1000 acres'of sugar cane on lands, Lihue, Kauai.B 284, p 94. Dated Feb 22, 1906.

Recorded Arril 11, 1906.

! tent "sunshine and showers; the weekly deg and the total rainfall .19 inch.Frank.I mean temperature was 69 deg., and the j Bro.

09 inches. J. K. (Jam- - Kihei (17) Temperatures during thetotal rainfall

the 19th and 20th, amounting to 1.15inches, the week has been dry, withnortheasterly winds. E. G. K. Deverill.

A. McC. ASHLEY,Section Director.

118 ill II i past wees have been appreciablyfr. with variable winds; some rain hasalielson.

PmiahHwrii C19) Vervweather has continued; we have had , fallen to windward, but none here; therainfall and s i,V;a in r.bout the weekly mean temperature was 74 deg.

; ' , . . . -

Metropolis Trust and Savs Bank toMary A Lee, Rel; lots 13 and 14 blk 2,bldgs, etc. Kapahulu tract. Honolulu,Oahu. $523.50. B 279, p 173. DatedMar 26, 1906.

John de S Vierra and wf to AntoneCorrea, D; !ots 4 and 5 blk R, Kaiu- -

BEALTY TBANSACTIONSproportion ami moderate traue ; ". oll.the total rainfall was 2.17 I Kaannpali (20) We have had strongproper

winds; ery draught animal she can

BIG CAST.NEW SCENIC EFFECTS.SPECIALLY PAINTED SCENERY.

Seats on sale at Wall, Nichols Co.Box office opens WEDNESDAY,

APRIL 25.

get.Jam tract. Honolulu, Oahu. $400. Itinches. .T. K. GainaHelson. j trade winds all wee, out no raintan;Hilo (19) We have had showery j the weekly mean temperature was 69

weather all week, with warm days and j deg. Wm. Robb.cool nights; the weekly mean tempera-- j ISLAND OF OAHU.

an early se280, p 43. Dated Apr 10, 1906.Miyata & Co to T Hoyama. C M

Better makelection atEntered for Record April 1906,

From 9 a. m. to 4 p. m. mdse, 3 horses, wagons, etc, King StHonolulu. Oahu. $500. B 279, p 174Taunawili (21) The weather hasture was 73 deg. and tne toxai rainian j

1.S9 inches. L. C. Lyman. ' Huhu (w) ...Huhu to Kini

KapahuKapahu Dated Mar 13. 190S.R W

Kapahu (w)Si been warm and showery; the weeklymean temperature was 73 deg., and the Cecil Brown tr to Florence E Dove.D

(k) to Harry Oneha... D Par Rel: por R P S050 and R P 2593Waimnn-il.- . CWl The wpnther lwa Koolua Pai ap 3. Dortch Ave. Honolulu, Oahu. $1

Papaikou (19) We have had niceshowers every day of the week, the to-

tal rainfall being i).33 inches. J. T.Moir.

Pepeekeo (19) The weather hasbeen partly cloudy and showery; anearthquake shock was felt here between

SchumenCarriage Co.

Alex. Young Bujlding.

B 2S1, p 25. Dated May 23, 1905.Nawahine 'and wf to Minnie Silva,

D; R P 374 kul 2962. Lehanonui. Waianae, Oahu. $5, etc. B 2S0, p 45. Dated Arr 7, 1906.

I'ilama and wf to T Kutsunai DO C Akina to T Kutsunai DMinnie Iona and hsb to John Nevin DA Marques to tr of Maria C Ponti

' AMMaria C Ponti by tr to Flora M

Decker RMrs Eugenie II Emerson by atty to

'been moderately warm, with occasionalshowers amounting in all to .59 inch.A. Irvine.

l Honolulu (21) The weather has beenpartly cloudy, with fresh to brisk tradewinds, occasionally very light showers,and temperatures slightly above thnormal: the weekly mean temperaturewas 74 deg.. and the total rainfall .11

Wm G Irw:n by atty to H WilhelmWolters. Rel; 2SS05 s-- i ft land, bldgsetc, Fort St, Honolulu, Oahu. $20,000.Levi Perkins R

R B 281, p 26. Dated Mar 31. 1906.;,.h- - or...,i hmrc havt fniicr, in fhe'Cfcil Brown tr to Florence E Dove

Part Horse. Part ManFREAK OF" NATURE.

Born in Pearl City, Ewa.On Exhibition Saturday A prll!4- -

Jeong Mow to L-- Yin. D: por R PYanagihara to Chung Chang Ki 3546 kul 10498. Kamehameha 4 Rd, Ho

i!:30 a. m. and 3:00 a. in. of the lth;the weekly mean temperature was 73

dep.. and the total rainfall 2.1)1 inches.VV. H. Koeis.Honon.u ('Jo) The favorable weather

of last week has continued with highertemperatures and frequent rainsamount in-,- ' t" inches Wm. Pullar.

Hakalau (19) Normal trade windshave prevailed all week, with showersof rain nearly every night amountingin all to H inches. Hakalau Planta-tion Co.

Honohina (19) Several shower? fell.1, .;n.r tii week, the total rainfall be- -

B S nolulu. Oahu. $500. B 278, p 405. DatOR SO EES, PILESneighboring valleys. Local Office, U. S.Weather Bureau.

Ewa (21) The weather was quitechangeable last week, in the fore partof the week the days being warm.

ed Apr 10, 1906.M Nuuanu Street, Between Hotel andEllen Cathcart and hsb ( R W) toailments that are

Wm t Smith to Edwin P K Stone RBishop & Co to Oahu Sugar Co

Ltd ROahu Sugar Co Ltd to Bishop Trust

Co Ltd tr TMKnudsen Bros to Dept of Public I

King.ADMISSION, 10 CENTS.

or other skinincurable, use

Mary K Smith. D; pes land, Piihonua,Hilo, Hawaii. $1. B 280. p 44. DatedNov 1. 1905.

Frank Oliveiras to Joe R Costa, L;IInstructionJI 1 snare 111 nui lana. noiuaioa 1 and

... L

...T DK Hose to Hoffsehlae;John W

Co Ltd' N Kona. Hawaii. 10 yrs at. $45 per yr,ilttiiHenieis

For sale at all Drug Stores inthe City.

Manufactured by

MUSIC AT THEB 283, p 132. Dated Feb 26. 1906.1

Abraham Paniani and wf et al to

in l.sl inches. .J. Patterson..Papaaloa (19) The past week has

been showery, with warm days and cooi

nights; the' total rainfall was I'.o.'i

inches. ('. McLennan. !

Laupahoehoe (19) The weather ha?.',.Iam,Iv palm and verv warm, with

Recorded April 10, 1906. D Paul R Isenberg tr. D; R P 1706

and 25-1- 00 acr land. Pahoa, etc. La-hair.- a,

Maui. $300. B 2S0, p 46. DatedApr 9, 1906.

Recorded April 12, 1906.

George R Carter and wf by atty etal to Territory of Hawaii. D; por R P4520, Manoa. Honolulu, Oahu. $1. B2S0. p 38. Dated Apr 4. 1906. J

(

while during the latter part lower tern.peratures and cloudy days prevailed;the nights were cool: a trace of rainfell on the 20th; the weekly meantemperature was 74 deg. W. Lohren-ge- l.

Waianae (20) The weather his beenrather warmer this week; the latterpart of the week was cloudy, but with-out rain: the weekly mean temperaturewas 76 deg. F. Meyer.

Waiawa (20) The past week hasj been very chmdy, with a few lightshowers amounting in all to .28 inch;

' the weekly mean temperature was 73deg. W. R. Waters.

j Kahuku (20) The week has beenvery dry. the total rainfall being only

1.08 inch: temperatures have continued!to rise, and the days have'been warmand sunny: the weekly mean tempera -

ODOllllU HiSH? do LCV 11 loovi " "heavy night showers aggregating ;., O OP. O. Box 577.

3i Genevieve Dowsett to Henry Water-- .house Tr Co Ltd, M ; lots C and G of'R P 3466 kuls 6732 and 10806 and R WKapalama, Honolulu. Oahu. $1500. B

kekoena Smith and hsb (A) to JasA Thompson, P A; special powers. B2S4. p 95. Dated Apr 9. 1906.

Geo R Carter by reg. Notice; ofdecree of title in Land Reg Court CaseNo 71. B 2S4. p 96. Dated Apr 10, 1906.

Adolph J Baetcke and as exor et alto County of Oahu. B S: leaseholds otlots 120, 121, 122, 123. 124, 125 and 120

SUNDAY,

FROM 2 to 5 P. M.

inches; the water supply is increaMng.E. W. Barnard.Ookaia (19) The weather has been

showery, with warm days, cool nights,and southeasterly wiuds; a light earth-quake shock, lasting almost a minute,occurred at 3.-J- a. in. of the ISth; theweeklv mean temperature was .70 ileg.,

and the total rainfall 3.93 inches. W.G. Walker."

Paauilo. (19) The week has Veenwarm and wet, with high easterlywinds little sunshine and some fo-;- ;

the rain was well distributed at all ele-

vations; the weekly menn temperaturewr.s 66 deg.. and the total rainfall 2.9S

inches; showery weather continues. C.

K. Blacow.Paauhau (19) The weather has been

warm, with steady though light tradewines and good rains amounting in all

. , t, t ii. ;..ti

2S1, n 27. Dated Mar 1. 1906.

Ella L Kinslea and hsb to VirginiaSantos, M; lots 13 and 14 blk, Kaimu-k- i

tract. Honolulu, Oahu. $700. B 281,p 31. Dated Mar 20, 1906.

H A Heen to Yee Sung. L; lot 5.

Paalaa. Waialua, Oahu. 12 yrs at $30per yr. B 2S3. p 133. Dated Mar 2,1906.

Kepani (widow) to John Kali.no, D;int in por kul 3435. Palaoa, Waiehu,Maui. $1. etc. B 273. p 405. DatedApr 7. 1906.

YAMATOYAMERCHANT TAILOR AND SHIRT

MAKER.Nuuanu Street, one door above Pauahl.

P. O. Box S2&.

SHIRTS OF ALL KINDS, KIMONASAND PAJAMAS MADE TO OR-

DER AND ON SALE.

EAGLE CLEANING ANDV- - DYEING WORKS.

IPort Street, opposite ctar Block.iiiADIFf" AND GENTS' CLOTHING

CLEANED AT LOWE3TPRICES.

Phone White JSS2.

DON'T MISS IT;

THEANY GODS Or-- IDOLS TO SELL! Hawaiian Employment

to '2.07 incr.es. l aaunaii .1 winmUT.ICO

' Vnilii (19) The weather has beeniwarm and showery, with easterly andf northeasterly winds; the weekly mean

and the totaltemperature was 72 deg..rainfall 1.33 inches. F. C. Paetow.

Plantation laborers supplied; maleand female help; waiters, generalhousework, yard men furnished. P. O.Box 690. Main office 449, King street,Palama. Tel. White 1351.

Enterprising I.I.n Sses ?. Chance

Amon People in South India.The following is an extract from a

letter actually received by a New Yorkhouse doing business with foreigncountries. Th-- i letter came fromKumbhakonam. South Tr.'i'.a:

'"As natives of India are always wor-

shipers of all gods and idols, if you

fan favor me with a iist of idols, their

The Best CardIs the Congress New Picture backs.New stock just opened up.

HAWAIIAN NEWS CO., LTD.,Young Building Store.

n The (lavs nave oeenand theenn nn.l moderatelv warm

t em- -5i-pr- the weekly mean

perature was 72 deg., and the total rain-

fall 1.73 inches.-- W. O. T.ivlar.i.'.,i,,u Mission (20') The. weather

QUALITY, STYLE AND FITIN OUR

S2S.OO SUITSGeorge A- - MartinArlington Block, Hotel Street.

OPN ON SATURDAYS TIU,P. M.

Pure Soda WaterTon Gnt ret better Soda Water

1 vonum - 'has been partly clomly and showery;tbe mean temperature was 71

do-'- "n l "the total rainfall 1.50 inches. t

prices and some simple idols. I willbe able to send you a large wholesaleorder for these gods, which will takeup exceedingly well among natives allover India; and if you can get me the

than that hearing tne rub.MAwbrand, for the simple reasoa ttoat Dr. B. D. Bond.

Puakea Ranch (19) We haveennv .lavs an 1 showery nights,

had i

with ihere isn't any better made-Fountai- n

Sod Wor&s.Bheridan Street, near King.

Phone Main 270.

NOTICE.steady trade winds and moderate tem-

peratures; the total rainfall was 2.35

inches. A. Mason.Puuhue (19) We have had good

rains, amounting to 4.67 inches and11

1. q oh i k moderate trade winds. S. P. oods.ANY WOMAN OR GIRL NEEDING

aeip or advice, ia invited to communi-cate, either in person or by letter, wltHEnsign L. Anderson, matron ot thSalvation Army Woman's IndustrialHome. No. 16S0 King atreet.

repaired or

Are You vVeak?Do you want to be strong? Do you want to feel the vim,

the snap and fire of vigor? Do you want courage, energy andambition to support you in your cares and troubles?

I have devoted my life to the development ot manly and womanly vie;or.I've made a great success. My methods are now being approved by the greatestscientists ari doctors and copied.

I've proven that electricity is the basis of all animal life, and that "weakn'env' dysI'ePtlcs- - rheumatics, sufferers from lot.t energy, weak kiduevs, pains inthe bnck. head, chest and shoulders, etc., are weak in electricitv.lly Electric Belt restores this life iu a few weeks and cure's every time.

MSX OVEE. It bents the world for building 110 men broken down fromdissipation and neglect of the laws of nature. No matter what your trouble is,you can be mde better and stronger by using this wonderful Belt. It poursyou can be made better and stronger by nsin? this wonderful Belt. It poursbills and useless suffering. It cures liheumatism. Back Pains and all organicweakness.BEAD MY BOOK. I have a book which every man should read (one for womenalso';. It teiis facts that are of interest to" every man who wants to remainyours m vitality at any age. Send- - for this took toda? if vou can't calL Imail it. sealed, free. If you call I will srive you a free test. Remember, mvBelt does njt burn, though you feel the current and can regulate it. I warrant itto crive a stronsr current fir yenrs. thonh r-.- man who "uses it right needs itover three months. Cut this out and act todav.

. BICYCLES Sold, bought. Kamuela (20) The weamer nas utshowery, with fresh northeasterlywinds: the total rainfall was 1.0--

sole agency from that fa-.tor- fortheir idols throughout India.

I am sure to make their business athorough success here in the event oftheir undertaking to give the soleagency throughout India, Burma andCeylon, and also a fixed traveling al-

lowance, say 125 a month includingBatta to one of my clerks to beginwith, who will go throughout Indiaand secure orders from natives, richand poor, merchants and nobles, ere.

"If you. can kindly see your way 10

get me the sole agency on the abovelines, I can make it a great successfinancially for both of us. you under-taking to supply me with idols and a

ondertaking to gel! them as fast as pos-

sible. There is no competition for this

. - exchanged.CLOTHES Cleaned, pressed dyed and

Snehes. Mrs. w. rtajweek has beenrepaired.

STRAW AND PANAMA HATS Care Pimwaavraa (19) Thedry. F. R. Greenwell.

T.t,v-vnf- l MS)-- The weather hasfully cleaned.163 King St.. Opposite Toun Bldl

PAPEE NOVELS.The largest and finest assortment

In the city. CHEAP Almostgiven away. Don't miss seeing ourwindow display.

Remember your money savers.

WALL, NICHOLS CO. LTIElegant Footwear

been partly cloudy, with good show-

ers amounting to 2.19 inches. Rev. i.Hk?alakekua (19)-- The weather hasbeen partly cloudy, with light rainsamounting to .74 inch. Robt. N all ace.

weather has beenKau (IS) The-- ith ctradv trade winds and

line of business here, ana hence I wlsnto be first in the field and natives aresuch a bigoted people who will selltheir souls, if possible to worship anIdol of their own.

dr. m. g. Mclaughlin, SAN FRANCISCO, CAI906 MARKET ST

... .CIUUUJ 1

THE FINEST STOCK IN THECITY NOW ON DISPLAY AT

McWERNY SHOE STORE.BEAD THE ADVERTISER

WORLD'S NEWS DAILY.showers: the weesi) iuh1 tTiolight

Was 05 Ueg., anu -- "v.perature

Page 6: ESTASUSHED JUtV 2. t856- AM CAUTOTO A SAYS DIFFICHLW › bitstream › 10524 › 44399 › 1 … · The final stand of the fire fighters was made at Van Ness avenue, where Mavor Schmitz"

THE PACIFIC COMMERCIAL ADVERTISER, HONOLULU APRIL 24, 1906.

-- 1

' filed a motion for plaintiff in the suit O00000 0000IKefOO000800The Newest of

New Figured Organdiesj g

of Territory of Hawaii vs. Cotton Uros.& Co.T "to dismiss defendants' pretend-ed bill of exceptions filed Jv.be1904." Defendants are fighting everyinch of legal ground to avoid paying averdict of $2o,000 for a lost dredger.

FEDERAL COURT.Judge Sanford B. Dole being ill, the

United States District Court was ad-

journed yesterday by . Marshal E. R.Hendry until' Monday next.

Commissioner W. B. Maling yester-day after examination bound overIsuya Ogawa and Takao in $500 each toappear before the U. S. grand jury onOctober 8 upon a charge of violationof the Edmunds Act.

GAMBLING

CASEFAiLS

Different Crime ProvedFrom What Was

Charged

We are showing- - this week a new lot of

Fmure rqanaiesAT 12 i-2- c, 15c. AND 20C PER YARD.

Also a splendid new line of VALENCIENNES TOR-CHONS, ORIENTAL and GUIPURE LACES.

Also a choice new line of ALL OVERS in black, whiteand ecru.

Also choice lines of Ladies' Neackwear.

TBI KOA LUMBEQ

DEAL ABANDONED f

PROGRESS BLOCK,FORT STREET.H. BLOM,

OK00009000OK0K 000OKtOtOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO 000000K 6

SMART CLOTHESAre Here I

We show four brand new Spring shapes insacks. General tendency is toward greater length,more shaping into figure, and deep vents. Stein-Blo- ch

make ours, with the unequaled skilled of i

years of Knowing How, and the force of the per-

fect organization. -

Try on merely that but try.

o

o0o05

0Z

Z

z

M . Mclnerny, Ltd.Corner Merchant and Fort Streets.

Choy Look was put on trial beforeJudge De Bolt yesterday morning formaintaining and assisting a lottery.County Attorney Douthitt appeared forthe prosecution, and G. D. Gear and S.

F. Chillingworth for the defendant.The jury consisted of Wm. Rose, Wm.Barclay, Jno. A. Noble, Edward Drew,A. C. Dowsett, A. E. Lloyd, Frank J.Dutra, Clifford Kimball, Nelson B.Lansing, J. Ordenstein, Jas. D. Cockettand Clinton W. Crandall.

A motion for a directed verdict ofacquittal was granted and defendantdischarged, because the prosecutiononly proved a case of .having lotterytickets in possession.

PROBATE MATTERS.

C. W. Booth has. filed his bond asguardian of Elizabeth E. Booth andMargery E. M. Booth, minors.

Probate matters were disposed of byJudge Robinson yesterday as follows:

Thomas W. Hobron was appointed ad-ministrator of the estate of Frances E.Hobron, deceased, under $2000 bond.

Richard II. Trent was appointed ad-

ministrator of the estate of Dale Mc-Alpi- n,

deceased, under $1500 bond.Helen E. Kekoi was appointed admin-

istratrix of the estate of Kulukaalani,deceased, under $500 bond.

The will of Lapeka Paniani was ad-

mitted to probate, but the granting ofletters of administration, petitioned fortwo persons, was continued for oneweek to allow Attorney Achi to pro-cure a renunciation from WilliamWhite of Lahaina, named as executorin the will.

The order to Mrs. Jessie Kaae, on thepetition of Edgar Henriques, to showcause why she should not be removedas executrix of the estate of MargaretV. Carter, deceased, was continued byconsent for one week.

TITLE QUIETING CASE.Many witnesses for defendants were

called in Judge Lindsay's court yester-day, in the suit to quiet title of Alexan-der Young against F. W. Macfarlaneand others. The trial will occupy somedays yet.

LOST DREDGER CASE.Attorney General Peters yesterday

The proposed lumbering operationsin the koa forests on the Bishop Es-

tate property on Hawaii are off. O. T.Shipman, who holds a ranching leaseof much of the lands proposed to beincluded in the area over which thelumbering operations were to have beencarried on, has refused to relinquishany of his rights- under his lease, thusshutting out the lumbermen.

The land in question consists of 12,-00- 0

acres in the Keauhou district, ex-

tending some miles back from the vol-cano, and negotiators for the lumber-ing rights in the big koa forests on ithave been going on between the trus-tees of the Bishop Estate and a syndi-cate of local lumbermen for the pastyear and a half. All the men interestedin the matter were Honolulans, whowere ready to put up a mill and goright ahead getting out lumber, ofwhich fifteen million feet were esti-mated as available.

The trustees had included provisionsin the lease they had prepared wherebythe lumbering operations would be car-ried on in such a way that the koawould not be exterminated and if thedeal had gone through the forest wouldhave been greatly benefited through thedead growth being cleared out.

A month ago it was thought by allparties concerned in the matter thateverything in connection with the is-

suing of a timber license and the or-

ganization formally of the lumberingcompany would be concluded beforeMay 1, and the matter had gone to thelength of having the formal agreementdrawn up ready for signature.

BURNS AND SCALDS.

The pain of a burn or scald is almostinstantly relieved by applying Cham-berlain's Pain Balm with a feather.It also heals the Injured parts morequickly than any other treatment andunless the burn Is very severe does notleave a scar. For sale by Benson.Smith & Co.. Ltd., Agents for Hawaii.

y.'fmvt st. .'J' jBr . .:

A'-- v :

.--7

x - l

When Yon Reed Hot Water00o0

0o0

it's easier to light the flame of anIndependent Gas Water Heaterthan to build a fire in the coal range !

Cleaner, , too, and more economical.zz

Water eater90e00

Tie Gas90z

is attached to the circulating boilerand provides hot water in a shorttime, to be drawn from any faucetin the house.

1

is-- .

I'

90oo9090

Gas Ranges and Water Healers Sold by, Dealers and

WAIPAHUHONOLULU GAS COMPANY, LIMITED.

THE VAN DYCK CIGAR.

The finest Havana tobacco that grows and has grown forthe past fifty years comes from the Vuelta Abajo district ofCuba and is the tobacco that was always sought for and pur-

chased by discriminating smokers that is, before an unnat-ural craze arose for light colors.

This craze for light colors has caused the growing of moretobacco in other districts of Cuba which is of an inferior qual-

ity but which at the same time, owing to this demand forlight colors, has been bought up by manufacturers who usethe tobacco irrespective of its lack of good qualities in orderto please the eye of the smoker who thinks that acigar witha light wrapper is milder than one with a medium or darkerwrapper. ,

Any cigar wrapped with fine, well matured, thin, glossy,medium colored tobacco is, if anything, milder and is certainlymore aromatic than a cigar with a yellow colored wrapper.

The medium colors in Vuelta Abajo tobacco make a muchbetter and sweeter smoke, are better value and give greatersatisfaction to the consumer than he can get from any lightcolored yellow uncured tobacco.

VAN DYCKS are made of Vuelta Abajo tobacco.We recommend our "VAN DYCK" Quality cigars to the

discriminating smoker.Now made in Tampa, Fla. New and improved sizes.

o0

00

0

0

c

3

I

How hungry the inhabitants of cities are for an opportunity toget into the country. When the Day of Rest comes around what athrong of people embrace the opportunity of a trip on the water oron the outgoing' trains to some of the rural resorts, where care canbe forgotten and the tired brain recuperated.

My Missourian tourist, always seeking some new point of in-

terest, willingly accepted my suggestion for a trip to Waipahu and atramp over the grade being made for the new railroad from there t:Wahiawa.

At Waipahu, the name of the land 'whereon the Oahu SugarCo.'s plantation is located, we left the train and wandered throughthe weird, straggling Oriental village consisting entirely of Japa

09o000o0o0o60909.009090z

nese and Lninese stores and workshops. 1 hen we went over thegreat mill and viewed the labyrinth of machinery and the endlesstrain ot cars loaded with susrar cane ready for the morrow sgrinding.

"Now," I said, "I will show you why the valley and land isTHAT YOU CAM BRIHK.IF YOU mNT TO - mm

S h.J?fGUNST-EAK- IN GEGAR GO,, Inc.

called YY aipahu ; the meaning of the word is 'Forced Water.' " Wewandered into the ravine where a large stream from a subterraneansource forces its way under the cliff through the rocks. '"Wheredoes it come from?" inquired my friend. "That," said I, "is a ques-tion we wish we could answer, and an answer has been sought atmuch expense. Many punctures have been made far up on the

909090oo

"THE HOUSE OF STAPLES."Honolulu, T. H.SAHJ1BR EOTTL'Q WKS,

9walo. PHone White 1331.mesa in the vain hope of tapping this subterranean stream. Tradi O9OOO0O9OOOOeC GOUO0004K00C000tion savs that in ancient times a woman beating kapa on the uplands of Kahuku, fifteen miles away, dropped her kuku or beating

21stick into the water and it was found here at Waipahu. It hasalways been the belief that the stream comes from a long distance

To spend money on clothesof unproven merit is

to squander It.

Reliable clothes quality Isnot made by glowing

advertisements.

and that at certain seasons in the year has many accretions to it, forthe water comes out with greater force."

All the way up the Waipahu ravine, water is found by artesianwells in apparently unlimited quantity, but the expenses of liftingit up onto the mesa for irrigation purposes is very great. This isone of the instances where cane planting could only be done by largecapital and would be prohibitory to subdividing the land into small

LOOK FOR THE PERFORATION

& & C J

The word "Cremo" is perforated in the wrapper of everyone of our celebrated

holdings. The outgushing water was pure and limpid and Japanese J CLOTHEwere washing large quantities ot vermicelli in the pool.From here we followed the grade of the new railroad in its

tortuous course up the valley, descending at times to inspect theelectrical pump in charge of a Japanese and the steam pumps incharge of white men, which gave the water its first lift out of theravine.

Consists in getting the best clothes at right prices, suchgarments as

Correct Clothes for MenMADE IN NEW YORK.5c Gigars

THEY HAVE NO BANDS. Alfred Benjamin & Co. MAKERS.

New Ycrir r if. r

Hack fe id A Co;. Ltd.

We then climbed out of the valley and descended towards themill and village. At the manager's house our attention was at-tracted to the magnificent view to the eastward. From that eleva-tion, with Diamond Head in the background, a fine vista of the en-

trance to Pearl Harbor, with the lochs and the mill buildings in theforeground, together with the wonderful shades of red earth andgreen fields, makes a most charming picture. It is singular thatsome of our local or visiting artists have not already transferred itto canvas.

From there we walked over the cane-covere- d Waipio Peninsulaadmiring the clean and symmetrically-plante- d rice fields of the Chi-nese on either side of the roadway connecting it with the mainland.Any observing person who visits Pearl Lochs can not fail to notethe value or the industrious and economical Chinaman, who utilizesevery waste corner or pond, cultivating the former and convertingthe latter into duck farms or fish ponds.

My companion remarked on the apparent suitableness of the lo-cality for the growth of cocoanut trees and that one-twentie- th ofthe land, valueless for other purposes, was not planted. Beingfarmer-bor- n he appreciated the wealth of the soil and loved to seeit al! utilized.

From the crest of the peninsula, which is occupied by a reser-voir, we had another view of the lochs and promised ourselves a dayin a steam launch, running in and out of their intricacies.

JAS. W. GIRVIN.

These Correct Clothes for Men, Made in New York, areequal to the garments in everything but theprice. We have proven this to more than a thousand menlet us prove it to you.Wholesale Distributors.

Palm Ice Cream Parlor(Late Miller's.) 116 HOTEL ST., NEAR PORT.

X.UDWIGSON & JUNGCLAUS, ---- Proprietors.

First Class i unch Rooms, Civility and prompt attention to nitrons by capable waiters.

CANDIES AND ICE CREAM ARE SPECIALTIES.

THE (ASH COMPANY, LTDTel. Main 25 Cor. Fort and Hotel Streets.

Page 7: ESTASUSHED JUtV 2. t856- AM CAUTOTO A SAYS DIFFICHLW › bitstream › 10524 › 44399 › 1 … · The final stand of the fire fighters was made at Van Ness avenue, where Mavor Schmitz"

THE PACIFIC COMMERCIAL; ADVERTISER, HONOLLLU. APRIL 24, 1906

change ticket. This guarantees all aneci'jal chance.

The play Is ready for presentationar.; vi:l be a very Interesting anderjoyab: one. The f.nal touches willi-- :'!it (in and thvn for a grand suc-ces- i.

and as a result, a rousing benefitthat v.e all have so much heart in.

Special eductio SaleTWO FRUIT

COMPANIESJDnnkOur NewTea

Keeping r remisesHi!o

THE LEAST TM 100 CAN DO

is to find out what will br-co-me

of your property ifyou die without making- - awill, and then decidewhether you will be satis-fied to have it go that way.If you die without makinga will, the law decides themanner in which your pro-perty shall be divided. Ifyou are in doubt as to how-t- o

go about making a will,consult us. We will putyou on the right track andwill assist you in any wayin our power. Our advicewill cost you nothing.

People in GeneralTake Stock in

Cannery.

Honolulu Appreciates Always WhenPromises Are Kept.

Every time you read about Doan'sBackache Kidney Pills you are toldthey cure every form of kidney ill.

Articles of association of the HiloFruit Company, Ltd., have been filed,the foremost purposes of which are from backache to urinary disorders.

IRISH POINT APPLIQUE, NET aid Swiss Cartaias

.The Curtains we place on sale at a great reduction areall in good condition, only quantities of each lot are fromone to three pairs; this the only reason that prices are cut.et Curtains that were $2.50 now......... $ pair.Jet Curtains that were $3.50 now.- - - -- 0Net Curtains that were $4.50 now. Too "Net Curtains that were $6.00 now 4.2' "

Irish Point Applique Curtains,$10.00 now on sale at .$ 6.75 pair.

9.50 now on sale at 6. so "8.50 now on sale at c.oo "7.75 now on sale at.. 756.50 now on sale at 4 -- Q

Dotted Swiss Curtains with ruffles, special good value '$1.50 pair.

PBeiFie import eo.84 Fort Street.

How are our promises kept? Ask anycitizen wno has tried the treatment.Ask the following Honolulu man.

W. J. Maxwell of this town. Truantofficer, writes thus: "I suffered with a

to can and preserve pineapples andother tropical fruits for sale. Hilois the location of the principal office.The term is for fifty years and thecapital stock is $15,000 with privilegeof extension to $100,000. John A. Scottis president, H. Vicars secretary andH. V. Patten treasurer.

The 1903 crop of choicest teas has

just come to hand and we are now

selling it in bulk In any quantity.

If you use this tea there is no

excuse for not having the very

choicest beverage, because this teais new and fresh.

Besides you don't pay for the

package and we offer a better qual-

ity for the money than you can get

elsewhere.

Ceylon, Oolong, English Break-fas- t.

Japan, Toung Hyson and oth-

er varieties.

Hawaiian frost

Co., Ltd.

Fort Street,Honolulu.

ili(an almost invanaDie symptom of kidney trouble; for a number of years. Iwas advised to take some of Doan's

Subscribers to the stock, with the Backache Kidney Pills, and foliowinnumber of shares at a par value of i the suggestion I went to the Hollister$10 taken by each, are as follows: C. Miug cos store, ort street, ana got WM. G. IRWIN & CO., LTD.C. Kennedy 100, John A. Scott 100,

some of these. Having taken them,they relieved me straight away, andare, 1 may say, the best and in factJohn T. Moir 100, F. S. Lyman 25, G.

H. Pierce 25, D. E. Metzger 25, E. E. the only cure for baqkache. I havementioned the virtue of this wonderfulremedy to several persons, among

Wm. Q. Irwin. -- President and If&otcteJohn D. Spreckels.. First Vice-Prwctfe- aS

W. M. Giffard.. Second Vlce-Ptst- e$

H. M. "Whitney Tre&vumrRichard Ivers Secretary)E. I. Spalding AwKCupi8UQAB FACTORS AND

COMMISSION' AHS2CTS.

AGKNTS FOR

'" '

J H LEYY & CO.

Richards 25, L. A. Andrews 130, E. N.Holmes 40, Chr. Castendyk 10. H. E.Kelsey 10, Adam Lindsay 10, J. E.Gamalielson 10, Frank Medcalf 10, T.Guard 10. H. Vicars 10, Wm. McKay10, Charles Furneaux 50, A. M. Cabrin-h- a

10, Josephine Deyo 20, Frances M.Wetmore 10, Catherine Deacon ,10, E.H. Moses 10, George Desha 10, C. H.Siemson 5, W. H. Ludloff 5, Geo. Ha-p- ai

10, P. C. Beamer 5, J. D. Easton

whom is my friend, Mr. Frank Metcalf,who found relief, and he is now a firmbeliever in Doan's Backache KidneyPilJs."

Doan's Backache Kidney Pills aresold by all chemists and storekeepersat 50 cents per box, six boxes $2.50, orwill be mailed On receipt of price bythe Hollister Drug Co., Honolulu,wholesale agents for the HawaiianIslands.

Phone Main 149.King St. Oceanic SeaSteamship Co.,Sold at the Same Old

Price. Cisco. Cal.Western Sugar Refining- - Cfe, Sua

10, C. M. Hudson 10, T. T. Chave 10.Thos. E. Cook 5, E. F. Nichols 10,Geo. Mumby 5, E. C. Melior 1, Geo. T.

Francisco, CaLBaldwin Locomotive "Wort. FfeXfo

delphla. Pa.Newall Universal Mill Co-- IfssesOccittl ResiBtiiiiges Bins.

J facturers of National Cane ESxrvCDay 1, George H. Akau 2, M. LouiseDeyo 2, Mary Deyo 1, V. E. M. Osorio1, Lewis Schoen 5, H. V. Patten 25, J.Watt 100, F. Brughelli 10, Geo. H. Wil-liams 10, S. L. Desha 10, D. S. Bow- -

New Torlc, N. x.Pacific OU Transportation Co, tsm

Francisco, Cal.

Everything new. First-clas- s cooksjcourteous waiters.BEST MEAL TO BE HAD IN TOWN.

Open from 5 a. m. to 8 p. ni-- PrivateDining Room for Ladies.

7320 LEONG HOT, Proprietor.

A REMEDY THAT IS TRULY MA-GICA- L

IX ITS POWER TORELIEVE PAIN.

Mr. Lewis Rozario, Manager of Mad-

ras Co-o- p. Stores, of Madras, India,says: "I certainly think Chamber-lain's Colic, Cholera and DiarrhoeaRemedy is one of the best medicinesmade. I had been suffering from an

j man 0, J. A. M. Osorio 1, T. A. Dranga! 10. W. H. Beers 10. Noa W Alul'i 10.

Despite the fact that PRIMO LAGER is better than everin point of quality, and just as reliable, there has been no in-

crease in price. ' .It is ten cents . per glass, all over town, and a whole lot

cheaper by the case.

R. A. Lyman, Jr., 10, W. H. Schoening. , , . .irt; 1 tt-- . tti r, r

Fire Insurance,THE B. F. DILLINGHAM CO,

LIMITED.

1 xn. r . rarson? au, Arcner ir- -'

win 10, D. A. Loebenstein 5, S. Sato10, K. C. Kubo 10, R. Degawa 5, JohnT. Brown 5.50, F. G. da Rosa 5, H. attack of colic and after trying a

The

"OLD PLANTATIOH" Tamimoto 10, H. M. R. Rose 10, Joa iirilHNiiquin Carvalho 2, A. W. Richardson 10,G. W. Lockington 2, R. T. Moses 5,

General Agents for HawifiLAtlas Assurance Company of LoxtaimPhoenix Assurance Company of LamThis beautiful new Hawaiian Songi

; James D. Lewis 25, C. E. Wright 10,now on sale in sheet music form., Eugene H. Lyrnan 5, Jas. M. Cameron

NEW EMBROIDERED

Waist Patterns

couple of prescriptions without relief,a friend suggested that I take Cham-berlain's Colic, Cholera and DiarrhoeaRemedy. I did so and the result wastruly magical for it gave me Immedi-ate relief. About that time several ofmy staff were attacked in a like man-ner and out. of this same bottle I curedthem all." For sale by Benson, Smith& Co., Ltd., Agents for Hawaii.

Shirt5, G. W. A. Hapai 10, Lilinoe H. HaLTD.,don.

New York Underwriters' Agency.Prov idence Washington InsuraaoeCcw

pany.

BEBGSTBOM MUSIC CO.,

Odd Fellows' Bldg. pai 10, R. A. Lucas 25, Antonio Pavao5, W. S. Terry 5, John T. Baker 100 SILK, COTTON, CREPE AND GRASS LINEN JUST OPENED.

SAYEGUSA. - - 1120 Nuuanu St.Sam'I M. Spencer 10, Y. Nakayama 10,R. A. Lyman 10, Mrs. J. B. King 10,Miss A. C. Chong 5, Mrs. Grace LyThoroughbred Stock man 10. Mrs. J. I. Richardson 20, JohnD. Kennedy 5, Paul R. Kai 11, A. A.Just arrived per Nebraskan: Horses,

Fourth Floor, Stangenwatd BtriMfoe.

HAWAII SHINPO SUA.THE PIONEER JAPANESE PIUNTV.

Ing office. The publisher of U&irsJaShinpo, the only daily Japanese paixwpublished in the Territory of Ilstwaig.

C. SHIOZAWA, Proprietor.Editorial and Printing Offles IfiSH

Smith St.. above King. Phone Mtla tt.

Fresh Milch Cows and a large number I Hapai 5, Jno. K. Kai, Jr., 5, T. K.Iake 10. A. Bargquest 20.nt'nnr Kukulof Chickens to be seen

Pacific Fruit Company, Ltd., is theStreet Stables.CLUB STABLES TEL. MAIN 109. f CntenonJ PP1M WM. G. IRWIN & CO., LTD,

title of an incorporation formed byHenry A. Jaeger, John Nevin, Hugh H.Brodie, John I. Silva and Allen Jaeger,all of the county of Kauai. The termis fifty years, the chief place of busi-ness Koloa and the capital stock $5000

with privilege of extension to $50,000.For purposes the articles mentionthe raising and preserving of fruits,also the cultivation of sugar, with oth-er things pertaining to these. HenryA. Jaeger is president and the otherincorporators fill the remaining offices.

mt I

''.31

;'3

I.)

If

3 :

A'

AGENTS FOR THERoyal Insurance Co., of LtYrpoot,

England.Alliance Assurance Co., of LocmIo

Get a Postal Card

Album. England.Scottish Union & National Ineura

Co., of Edinburgh, Scotiana.Now Open and Ready for Businessat 27 Hotel Street, Fire Association of PhlladefpfcU.

The Postal Card fad has come to CONGRESS OF SONGstav. Postal cards, however, losehalf their value when not properly

Alliance Insurance Corporation JJt.Wllhelma of Magdeburg Genera

mrance Co.

C. BREWER & CO., LTD.Sugar Factors and Commissio

Merchants. i

FOB RELIEF FUNDdisplayed. Placed in a neat albumtheir value from an artistic and in FAMILY TRADE SOLICITEDstructive standpoint is greatlyadded to. We have a fine selection k

89

The Music festival, like everytliinof albums, which will display your LIST OF OFFICERS. '

C. M. Cooke, President; George SL

Robertson, Manager; E. F. Bbthaand everybody else, wishes to haveshare in the yift to the sufferers in SaFrancisco, it has been decided to giv Treasurer and Secretary; F. W. !

farlane, Auditor; P. C. Jonea, C Id

collection of postal cards to the bestpossible advantage. The corners of

each card are fitted into slits in thepage of the album and may thus be

removed for inspection when de-

sired, without in any way damaging

the net proceeds of the Congress oCooke, J. R. Gait, Directors.

Song in the Opera House to the Keliefund. Money to Xcajp.

The CRITERION (C. J. McCarthy, Prop.) has opened a job-

bing- department adjoining", but separate from the saloon.A specialty will be made of all first-clas- s "Wines, Beers and

liquors in bottle. Also Wines and Whiskey by. the gallon.All goods delivered by Merchants' Parcel Delivery to resi-

dences.With the excellent reputation the CRITERION has establish-

ed for selling onljr pure licpuors the public is assured of proper treat-

ment.

The two soloists, if they get hereON JEWELRY, ETC., ETC., 3f "

and ihers is every reason to believethat thev will be triad to come, will

tbe i carlo mimm itneed the cheering influences of ouhospitable place. More than that, how

CORNER UNION AND HOTEEever, if the young people in the choruses

either the card or the album.

1

HONOLULU

Photo-Supp- ly Co.FORT STREET.

take hold, as it is believed they willa large number of tickets will be sold JOHN REILL, Engineer,which will net a neat sum for the causewhich atDeals most to the Honolulu SPECIAL TELEPHONE MAIN 36.people iust now.

Dealer In fNEW AND SECOND-HAN- D MA-

CHINERY.Repairing of All Kind.

President Griffiths and Mr. French of'Punahou are particularly desirous thatthe pnpils of that institution aid in GASOLINE ENGINES A 3PECIALT2T .

every way possible, lhe choruses are 1S5 Merchant Street. Tel. M.being: worked up to unusual emciencythis vear and. soloists or not, tne eveninir will be a delightful one. But theappeal now can be made solely to thekindly feelings of Honolulu residents.

Standard BooksSOLD ON EASY PAYMENTS AT

WSI. C. LIOH CO., LTD.

Cor. Fort and Hotel Sts.; Upstairs.

Manufacturers' Shoe Company, Ltd.Every ticket sola can now aiu to some

RICE & PERKINS,

ARTISTIC PHOTOGRAPHERS.

Studio: Hotel Street, new Fort.

extent the peoole who need aid. Here- - 1051 Fort St. Honolulu. T. H.We Are ExpertShoe Fitters.

We Fit ShoesRight.after the commission which has been

offered to sellers of tickets will not beheld out as an inducement. Every body

Correct Styles in Spring Shoes!wants to help.Pure Winesand Liquors The Cobweb CafeWIDOWCOLLEGE

Family Trade Solicited. QUEEN AND ALAKEA STS.

IiOveioy & Co. MATINEE BEIiEFIF THE FINEST MEALS,Nutianu St. : : Phone 308.WINES, LIQUORS. ETCTO BE HAD IN THE CITY".

Have you seen the new line of Spring" styles in shoes, which we have just opened up?The increased demand for snappy stylish shoes has been the means of us going- to Manufactur-ers renowned in that capacity. This is OXE TIME of the year when every woman shouldhave a new pair of shoes. The new Spring outfit will not be complete without them. Wehave shoes and Oxfords in all leathers and at all prices, consistent with good quality.

Blue and pink canvas pumps are stylish now. We have them!!! We'd rather miss asale than sell vou a shoe that wasn't right in every particular.

One of the prime features of theS. PUJIMURAMASSAGE

series of benefit performances to De

given at the Hawaiian Opera House,CAPilARA & COMPANY, Pross.

in aid of the San Francisco sufferers.Rheumatism. Bruises. Sprains, TiredFeeling and other Ailments QUICKLY will be a matinee performance on Sat

All Tourists Get Their.urday afternoon, April 2S, of GeorgeRELIEVED.444 King Street, Palama,

PHONE? WHITE 1351. Ade's clever comedy "lhe c:onege JAPANESE KIMONOSsnd such goods atWidow." Here is an opportunity tor

students to lend their hands for thisworthy cause as well as appreciate FUKURODA'S.

28-2- 2 HOTEL STREET.and enjoy an excellent penormauctrdepicting college life and activities.

Gun Metal Calf Blu Tie. WeltSole. Cuban Heel. Wide SilkLaces. Extremely Stylishand exceptional Value. $3. 50

(Same as cut 0:1 left.)

Tat. Colt Oxford Cap Toe.Welt- Sole, Cuban Heel, anElegant Street Dress Shoe

$3-5-0

(Same as cut on right.)

SMOKE

MIKE WRIGHTO B O A re There will also be the Thursday ana 4XL, KINDS OF BUTL.DINO ANT

REPAIR WORK DOXE ONSHORT NOTICE

Saturday evening performances, April26 and 28, for this benefit, and allthose having exchange tickets will beHayselden Tobacco Co.

DISTRIBUTORS. in the front in the choice of seats, aswhen the box office at Wall. Nichols tfm. T. Patv.Co.'s opens on Wednesday morning.

1048 ALAKEA STREET.April 25. no seats will be sola wunoutEXAD THE ADVERTISESVTOXLD'8 NEWS DAILY payment, either in cash or an ex- -

Page 8: ESTASUSHED JUtV 2. t856- AM CAUTOTO A SAYS DIFFICHLW › bitstream › 10524 › 44399 › 1 … · The final stand of the fire fighters was made at Van Ness avenue, where Mavor Schmitz"

' THE PACIFIC COMMERCIAL ADVERTISER, HONOLULU, APRIL 24, 1906.

.7

i - v 1f'""r" I,'

--" ':'r

. "v -r r.

'"I

Today Last Day I Today Last Day IA good, strong, well-ma- de

chair. Golden oak; cane seat; well-brace- d.

A dining chair which will last.MONDAY AND TUESDAY,

SOS EACH.

ipiSpit1 1 5 ml i

I rpSomethinsr a little better than you This is a high back, fancy appearing- Here is an imitation leather seat This chair, box cane seat, golden

oak, a sensible and attractive piece, isone of our barkains. Notice the Frenchlegs. It is comfortable and the kind,that lasts.

MONDAY AND TUESDAY,$3.10 EACH.

A Tre2-nish- ed chair. Cane seat, have paid $2.50 each for at other times, dining chair. It is a hummer. Cane dining chair. It has to be seen to be"353 entirely of .oak, strong. Has Worth more than that. Golden oak, seat, nicely finished oak. Fit for any- - appreciated. You have room for a

i&3e finish. cane seat, dining chair. one's diningroom. half dozen in your diningroom.3SOKCAT AND TUESDAY. MONDAY AND TUESDAY, MONDAY AND TUESDAY, MONDAY AND TUESDAY,

"

U.50EACH. . ?1.90 EACH. $2.25 EACH. $2.75 EACH.

This is a box cane seat dining chairof extra strength, nicely finished, onethat will go with a very expensive tableor sideboard. Hard to tell it froma high-price- d chair.

MONDAY AND TUESDAY,$3.00 EACH.

v ( X ComC3OLD RELIABLE FURNITURE HOUSE ALEXANDER YOUNG BUILDING TWO STORES BISHOP ST.

JESS

THE ROYAL PA STOR WADMAIN'S PLEAFOR CONDEMNED MURDERERS

accorded them. The criminals were toopoor to engage a lawyer. The gentle-man who kindly offered to defend thembelieves that no plea for mercy shouldbe entertained. He wrote thusly to thedeputy attorney general. This" createsthe suspicion that his whole heart wasnot in the defense. I may be wrong inthis suspicion. And yet, considering

MM HOTELBrings Mew Day

the brier duration ot the trial, the fewforce out laws and secure order amongthe Orientals who flock to our shores,still may we not, at the same time by atoo hasty method of procedure, so op-press their sense of whatsis strictly

witnesses called, the dispatch with,which the jury did its work, would it fnot be well to stay proceedings a little :

longer until we are all satisfied that

YOU GAN

SPARE TIME

to run over to the ANNEX andinvestigate the lunch counter.You'll always find something totickle your taste. If you are ondeck when the Cottage Cheesecomes round you may consideryourself lucky. You want to getacquainted with that cheese!

SCOTTY'-- i

Royal AnnexOPPOSITE POLICE STATION.

Lihue, Kaoai, April 21, 1906.Editor Advertiser: May I be per-

mitted, through tte courtesy of yourcolumns, to speak one word more forthe "poor Koreans," so soon to die inexpiation of their crime? Here onKauai my missionary labors take meover the plantations to all the Koreancamps and within the past few days I

and with It light and Joy to theworld.

SUNRISE BUTTERbrings to the table the best butterin the Honolulu market, and there-fore joy of the housewife and pleas-ure to those about the familyboard.

Sunrisehas been adopted as the banner but-ter by all who have used it. It

TEEB 70TTRIST HOTELi OF THETSTCfiS:U. Why, because the travelerany so. Here you have a tropical2S5o43, at out, of doors the year round.

Dae 3icyal Hawaiian Hotel is the only1343 teat can give these advantages.2?ys J all descriptions, porches,

vtsraazgas, large lanais. Hotel has been"fc&rawssXJy Tenovated, hot and coldTaraiw za every room, new management.2aBfcg2Bent will spare no expense ont&e t&Me. Summer rates commence2Saar 1st ior six months. City people

right as to create a gulf of separation F these five men should die for theirthem and ourselves? These 'fense? I cannot dismiss the fact from

Koreans are densely ignorant of our j my mind that the dav of mv interviewlaws and customs. They are not quar- - j with Governor Atkinson, between therelsome and dangerous. Drink, the aw-- ' place of my residence and the Execu-fu- l

curse of these Islands at the pres- - tive Building, one block awav, fourent time, makes them so. And while leading citizens, including a prominentdrunkenness cannot be accepted as an physician of Honolulu, volunteered toexcuse for crime, still we ourselves are express themselves as strongly opposedmore or less responsible for the ravages to the death penaltv in any case which

have conversed with scores on this andother subjects and find that their opin-ion is not so different from that ofmany "white" people who have also which this evil is causing under the goes to show that sooner or later we never fails to give satisfaction.present liquor law and the facilities by will amend our statutes on crime and

which, under its control, drink can be Give it a trial!obtained.

3wed et keep house, it is cheaper to

TCter will be a monthly dance during2 sssamer months.

HENRY BEWS,i .., Manager.

In this case we are about to hangfive men for killing one. One escapeswho ought to be included if the spiritof the law were to be applied. Others

C. Q. Yee Bop& COMPANY.

N. King Street. 'Phone Main 251.

also were badly implicated. Indeedwhole camp was more or less itossessed

TRY OUR of the mob spirit. If all, say 40 menhad shared in these deeds of tortured

HAVE YOURROOMSBRIGHT I

spoken to me on the subject. The mur-derers committed an atrocious crime tobe sure, and should be severely pun-ished. They confessed with the expec-tation of being dealt with after theirtransgression. But the victim was athief and a liar and as your correspond-ent, a prominent lawyer, in today's(Friday; issue points out, it was moreor less a mob. Others were also indi-rectly concerned and the man who in-stigated the crime, the ringleader, whosupplied the wine and the soy, andwho, in the eyes of the Koreans, shouldnot be allowed to escape the death pen-alty if any should die, suffers a lesserpunishment than the others-- . I do notin the least find fault with the Gover-nor. He is acting in a very kind andconscientious manner. But are therenot cases in which the spirit of the lawshould be interpreted rather than the

after Korean style, would our Executive

fall in-lin- with some of the leadingstates in abolishing this gruesomehanging business and imprison for life.

Most respectfully yours,JOHN W. WAPMAN.

ODD FACTS ABOUT NEW YORK.That New York City is the metrop-

olis of the United States and is thesecond largest city in the world isknown to every one. But New Yorkreally is much more than that. Awriter in the' Search Light says:

Greater New York, the second cityof the globe, might be called "the is-

land city of the world," for it con-tains forty-fiv- e islands, as many is-

lands as there are States in the Uriion.The city pays each year to run its

Catton, Neill & Co., Ltdthen proceed to hang, the forty?Wherein lies the discrimination?

CXcr CtieSated Bromo Pop, P&3ssas? Bishops Tonic, Klondike Tlma,

Sj3 mmxj others.ARCTIC SODA WORKS,

SW MSSwr Honolulu. H. T.

Moreover, must the criminal, who con ENGINEERS and MACHINISTSfesses and quietly surrenders be pun QUEEN AND RICHARDS STREETS.ished in like manner and in like degreewiin tne man wno tries to conceal and Boilers re-tub- ed with ch&rcoal-lro- aescape? Your correspondent, I fully be teel tubes; general ship work.iieve, voices public opinion when hepleads for a little more extension oftime so as to allow the fullest enquiry

& LAND CO.in regard to this tprrihle ipL As nnf Latest Booksletter! government about one-thir- d as much

Tasty wall paper is the light andlife of a room. We have just re-ceived a stock of 1906 wall papersfrom which may be chosen pat-terns which would make your homean abode of delight.

Never have , we had such won-drous- ly

artistic designs or such awealth of striking, yet tastefulcoloring. Our new stock is nowdisplayed and your inspection iscordially invited. The sooner youcome, the larger and better will bethe selection presented to you.

onouiu we not also endeavor to deeplv interested in the Koreans, I feellook at such matters from the stand- - that it would be most unfortunate if as Uncle Sam spends to govern the naTIME TABLE tion.point ot the people themselves and, they in any way should get an idea HAWAIIAN YESTERDAYSOctober 8, 1904. New York's annual budget is greater"uue 11 1S aosoiuteiy to en-- , thatnecessary undue harsh treatment was being than that of any other five American I

cities combined.Chapters from a Boy's Life In the

islands in the early days, by HenryM. Lyman, M. D.

VERY INTERESTING.New York is over twice the size of .

the Danish West Indies and if largerthan Chicago and Philadelphia com- - ;

bined. J

OUTWARD."W5anae, Waialua, Kahuku and

T3R7 StJttfoos 9:15 a. m., 3:20 p. m.Ptor leari City, Ewa Mill and Way

SSaUrais a. m., 9:15 a. m., 11:05a. ziL, 2:15 il m., 3:20 p. m., 5:15 p. m.t

Ik is, tlJ":15 p. m.INWARD.

Jrrrtve. HoboIuIu from Kahuku, Wai-la- a.

tad-Waiana- 8: a. m., 5:S1

Thos. G. ThrumHEADQUARTERS:Y Wo The most crowded block in the city

:COo Hawaiian Books, Bookseller andis on the West Side, where over fourthousand people live in less than four m ii Mi, I iStationer.

1063 FORT STHRET.acres of ground..Its population is 4.014,304, its in ""lf-T- T li-- il WW III llMlm 1 m177 SOUTH KING STREET.crease in five years being: a larsrer co

pulation than that of the city of Bos COTTON BROS. & CO.ton.The Germans in New York, by 'birth ENGINEERS AND GENERAL CON

and parentage, would make a citv TRACTOR3.equal to Leipzig and Frankfort-on-Mai- n

combined; the Austrians and Plans and Estimates furnished for allclasses of Contractin Wort.Hungarians. Trile and Fiume; the Boston Block. : : : : Honolulu

Axrire. ISioaolulu froia Ewa Mill andPfearl C3ty-t7!- i6 a. m., S:36 a. m.,3z28 a rn., i:40' p. mv, 4:S1 p. m.,fc23 jx in., 7:30 p. nu

1r2t--:"? SrjRilaT Exceiitftd. .

Z Sunday Only.roe Haleiwa Limited a two-ho- ur

trafn, leaves Honolulu every Sundaymt 3;t2 a. m.; returning arrives in Ho-JMtfu- Za

at 2W8 p. m. The Limitedstops only at Pearl Cityi and Waianae.DENISON, F". C. Smith,

Sn-- - G. P.&T.A.

WHOLESALE AND RETAIL GROCERS.

Will remove to large and more spacious quarters at1 186--1 188 Nuuanu street, between Beretania and Pauahistreets on May 1st, where we will carry a full line of family

GROCERIES, FRUtTS,VEGETABLES, ETC.

Prices low and qualitythe best.

Irish. Belfast. Dublin and Cork; theItalians, Florence; the English andScotch, Aberdeen and Oxford; the V. A liana & Co.Poles, Poltava in Russia. One-seven- th

of the people are Jews, and their num-ber equals the population of Maine.

There are more people living in NewYork City than in fourteen of ourStates and Territories: Arizona, Dela-ware, Montana, Nevada, Indian Ter-ritory, Idaho. New Hampshire, NewMexico, North Dakota. Rhode Island.

Limited

Merchant TailorsWaityBuildingr.KingSt

Phone Blue 2741(Opposite Advertiser Office.)

AMERICAN AND FOREIGNWORSTEADS.

South Dakota, Utah, Wyoming, and

Dry CleaningOarments cleaned by thi process at

Mrs. A. M. Mel lis'Js3alting Establishment.Sacha Black, Honolulu.

SATISFACTION- - GUARANTEED

Vermont.One out of every twenty-on- e personsTelephone, Main 238. P. O. Box, 952. m the United states, or one member

of every four families, lives in Newlork City the others live out of town.

Page 9: ESTASUSHED JUtV 2. t856- AM CAUTOTO A SAYS DIFFICHLW › bitstream › 10524 › 44399 › 1 … · The final stand of the fire fighters was made at Van Ness avenue, where Mavor Schmitz"

THE PACIFIC COMMERCIAL . ADVERTISER, HONOLULU, APRIL 24, 1906.

ASSIGNEE OF MORTGAGEE'S NO- - ASSIGNEE OF MORTGAGEE'S NO-TICE OF INTENTION "OF FORE- - TICE OF INTENTTnv rvDETAILS OF THE

FORMOSA QUAKE

CLOSURE AND OF SALE.

Notice is herebv

arrive that she is wanted in SanFrancisco she will be ordered by wire-less to return.

CHARLIE BROKE THE NEWS.The people aboard the transport

Sheridan, which arrived yesterday,were apprised of the disaster to SanFrancisco by "Diamond Head" Char-lie Peterson, who hoisted signals to

JS00 per annum for the first ten yeansof said term, and of J1000 for the sec-ond ten years of said term, and of;$1200 for the third ten years of saidterm, of the premises situate on thEwa side of Punchbowl street, Hono-lulu, between King and Queen streets;being a portion of the land describedin R. P. 63 to Hakau; which said leaseis recorded in Liber 202, pages 346, t.seq.

Together with all and any buildingsand improvements situate thereon andall the rights, privileges and appur-tenances belonging to said piec ocparcel of land.

Sixth: Lease from the Trustees un-der the Will of Bernice P. Bishop toHawaii Land Company, Limited, datedFebruary 17, 1900, for the term oftwenty-on- e years from July 1, 1900. ata rental of $300 per annum, of land at

the effect that the city had been de- -

!!" h.tAwas thought that the signals referredto the cruiser San Francisco and theirimport was not realized until PilotLorenzen took the news aboard.

MATSON BOATS COMING.Irwin & Co. have received the fol-

lowing cablegram from Captain Mat-so- n

of the Matson Navigation: Co."Navigation vessels will load at Se-

attle for Hilo via Honolulu. NotifyHilo." Matson.

Captain Matson went up to the Coastby the S. S. China. The Matson steam- -ers have heretofore gone to Hilo dirfct.

NEVADAN TO SEATTLE.General Freight Agent Morse of the

American Hawaiian S. S. Co., receiveda cable yesterday to the effect thatthe S. S. Nevadan, advertised to sailfrom san Francisco for Honolulu, May3, has been ordered to Seattle and willsail from that port May 2 for Hono- -lulu direct. This vessel has large coldstorage space.

PLENTY OF OIL.Th fv,iwvir aM0 o ri,. Hir

the B. F. Dillingham company yes-terday.

"Oil shipments uninterrupted." Themessage was from the Union Oil Com-- .pany. This does away with any fearof an oil shortage which would affectthe mantations more or less seriously.

mahENO NEXT MONDAY,Theo. H. Davies & Co. received the

following caDje yesteraay: AiaaenoMonday. April 30. All accommo- -

dations taken up. Nothing -- left forHonolulu passengers." The New Zea-land agents were the senders of themessage.

RESTORER SHIFTS.

4 ?.

. . . .j." The T. K. K. liner Nippon Maru ar-

rived from the Orient about 2 p. m.yesterday, going to the Hackfeldwharf. Except for a spell of roughweather out of .Yokohama, CaptainGreene reported a fine trip. The bark- -

entiiie S. G. Wilder, bound for SanFrancisco, was passed yesterday morn-ing.'

The steamer had 428 tons of freightfor here and 2300 tons for San Fran-cisco. " She brought 39 bags of mail.There are 72 cabin passengers for theCoast, and 149 Asiatics. The cabin passengers for Honolulu were two Japaneseand cne Chinaman. In the steeragewere 215 Japanese and two Chinamenfor this port. A Japanese stowawaywas discovered after leaving Yoko-hama.: ..

The Nippon Maru received cable or-

ders to take on enough supplies hereto bring her back from San Francisco.This matter has been, attended to.

TheYe are no San Francisco peopleaboard" the vessel, as far as could beascertained, the passengers all beingbound, through to otnr joints.

Purser Roberts stated that the boy- -

cott'in China was at an 'end and thatsomething like a boom was making itself 'manifest In Shanghai.

The- - Nippon Maru will depart forSan Francisco at. 10 a. m. today,

... ,;. SHEBXDAN GETS IN.The U. S. A. transport Sheridan ar-

rived from San Francisco yesterdaymorning, having left that city on Mon-day, the 16th inst. She brought twodays' later mail. . She will take on 550

tons of coal and depart sft noon todayfor Guam and Manila. Among- thepassengers for this port were the wifeand daughter of Postmaster Pratt.Several passengers are going throughto Manila. Aboard are 492 men of themarine corps and 26 enlisted army mengoing to the Philippines. The Sheri-dan passed close to the S. S. Alamedaon Saturday morning but no notifica-tion was signaled by ihe latter ves-

sel of the calamity in San Francisco.The officers of the Sheridan pull

pleasantly together, several of themhaving been with the transport forsome time.' Captain Peabody has commanded the vessel for four years, andChief Officer J. N. Ansell has been withthe transnort for half that period.Captain Quartermaster Morrow is makine his third trip with the Sheridan.

The cable ship Restorer was shifted Kanohokula Enos of Honolulu, Oahu,from her accustomed place in the the guardian of the property of Leonstream yesterday afternoon and pull- - Sterling, the above-name- d minor pray-ed by the tug Fearless to the Ewa side ing for an order of sale of certain realof the Inter-Islan- d slip. The moving estate belonging to her said ward, theof the vessel Jed to the circulation of a same "being all of Lots 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7,rumor that she had been ordered to 8, in Block 17 in the Kaimuki Tract,San Francisco. ' in Honolulu. Oahu, as plotted and

NOTES. J corded in the Hawaiian Registry of

f

l

T '

The transport Logan is now in Ma- -

nila..The S. S. Ventura is due from the

Colonies this morning. -

Things hummed some along the frontyesterday with four steamers arriv- - oti er proper'' v, and that it is neces-

sary that said property be sold for the

The sseLJs one of the most popularvessels afloat with the San Francisco' gnewspaper fraternity who meet with 23

unjutiw AND OF SALE.

Notice is hereby given that pursuant !

to power of sale contained in thati certain mortgage dated October... .( v.i jiuuuiuiu, is- -land of Oahu. Territorv of Hawaii"Mortgagor (Mary Achi, wife of said

I W. C. Achi, joining therein to releasener ngnt of dower to Royal D. Mead,Mortgagee, of sail Honolulu, whichsaid mortgage is recorded in the Ha-waiian Registry of Deeds in said Honolulu, In Liber 227, on pages 392-40- 1

inclusive, and which said mortgage wasthereafter, to wit, on the 31st day ofJanuary, 1902, by said Royal D. Mead,assigned to Kihei Plantation Compa-ny, Limited, the said assignee of saidmortgagee intends to foreclose saidmortgage for conditions broken, to wit:the non-payme- nt of principal and in-terest when due.

Notice is likewise given that theproperty conveyed by said mortgagewill be sold at public auction at theauction rooms of James F. Morgan,Kaahiimanu street, Honolulu, on Sat-urday, May 12, 1906, at 12 o'clock noon,of said day. The property conveyedby said mortgage and which is to besold under said power of sale as afore-said consists of:

First: That certain piece or parcelof land situate on King stieet, lyingat the foot of Liliha street. Honolulu,Oahu, and more particularly describedas follows:

Beginning at a point on the new makai line of King street, opposite thefoot of Liliha street, and run by thetrue meridian:N. lo" 56.', w. 48.5 feet alons Kins

street;N. 21 39', W. 150 feet, along. King

street;68" 21', W. 30 feet at right angles tothe line of King street;

22 03', W. 140 feet along the Eastbank of a small water-cours- e;

47 25', E. 76.1 feet along upper edgeof coral bank;

S. 30 50', E. 43 feet along the same onthe mauka side of an eight footlane;

N. 58 50', E. 84.3 feet along North sideof a lane to the initial point. Area429-10- 00 acre.

Being the same premises conveyedto Wong Wa Foy by deed of Jas. AKing, Minister of the Interior, datedJuly 6, 1896, recorded in Liber 165, page41; and the same premises conveyedto said W. C. Achi by deed of saidWong Wa Foy, dated July 8, 1896, recorded in Liber 164, page 81

Together with all and singular anyand all buildings and Improvementssituate thereon and all the rights.privileges and appurtenances belonging to said piece or parcel of land.

Said premises above described aresubject to a mortgage made by saidW. C. Achi, to the Western and Ha-waiian Investment Company, Limited,for Twelve Thousand Dollars ($12,000)dated October 6, 1899, and recorded inLiber 188, on pages 47, et. seq., in saidHawaiian Registry of Deeds.

Second: The following eleven hundred and fifty (1150) shares of thecapital stock of Kihei PlantationCompany, Limited, represented by thefollowing numbered certificates ofshares of stock for the numbers ofshares- - thereof respectively as follows:Certificate No. Shares.

: 537 for..... 100. . 1429 for. . . ... . . . . ." ". . . . . . 60

74 for ..:..100149 for 200450 for. 100494 for ...100

1193 for ,.1001575 for...... 3a0

Terms: Cash, United States goldcoin; deeds at expense of purchaser tobe prepared by the attorneys for saidAssignee of said Mortgagee

For further particulars apply toSmith & Lewis, attorneys for said Assignee of said mortgagee.

Dated, Honolulu, April 9, 19C5.

KIHEI PLANTATIONLIMITED.

By H. P. BALDWIN,Its President.

(Seal) By J. P. COOKE,Its Treasurer.

Said Assignee of Said Mortgagee.7383

ESTATE OF WICHMAN.

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THEFIRST CIRCUIT, TERRITORY OFHAWAII. AT CHAMBERS IN oPROBATE.

In the Matter of tlje Estate of HattieLouise Wichman. Order for notice of Hearing Petition for Probate of Will. .

A Document purporting to be theLast Will and Testament of HattieLouise Wichman, deceased, having onthe 2nd day of April, A. D. 1906, beenpresented to said Probate Court, anda Petition for the Probate thereof,and for the Issuance of Letters Testa-mentary to Henry Frederick Wich-man, having been filed by said HenryFrederick Wichman:

It Is Hereby Ordered, That Monday,the 7th day of May, A. D. 1906, at 9

o'clock a. m., of said day, at the CourtRoom of said Court, at Honolulu, Is-

land of Oahu. Territory of Hawaii, beand the same hereby is appointed thetime and place for proving said Willand hearing said application.

It Is Further Ordered. That noticethereof be given, by publication oncea week for threfe successive weeks, Inthe-- Pacific Commercial Advertiser, anewspaper published in the Englishlanguage, the last publication to be allnot less than ten days previous to thetime therein appointed for hearing.

Dated at Honolulu. April 2. 1906.W. J. ROBINSON.

Third Judge, First Circuit Court.Smith & Lewis, attorneys for peti-

tioner.7379 April 3, 10. 17 and 24.

TO WHOM IT MAYCONCERN.

183,

Notice is hereby given that from thisday on Chas. A. Manu has severed his allconnection with the Hawaiian Realtyand Maturity Co. of Honolulu and hasno authority to act for said HawaiianRealty and Maturity Co. as agent, em- -Plovee or otherwise.

Honolulu, Oahu, April 12, 1906. 73S3

ant to the rwc.wmin mortgage dated Novem- -

urr o. hvPnmnnv r.i.t aa.lJ " "'"ru- - au v." 2'poration. to p nHonolulu, IslaLo, Oahu. rr" t 2Hawaii, Mortgagee, which said mort- -gage is recorded in Liber 232, on pages62 to 69, inclusive in the HawaiianRegistry of Deeds in said Honolulu,aiiu wnicn said mortgage was assigned by the said R. D. Mead to KiheiPlantation Company, Limited, an Ha-waiian corporation, on March 3, 1902,the said assignee of mortgagee intendsto roreciose said mortgage for conditions oroKen, to wit: non-payme- nt ofprincipal and interest when due.

Auuee is imewise given that theproperty conveyed by said mortgagewill be sold at public auction at theauction rooms of James F. Morgan,Kaahumaiu street, said Honolulu, onSaturday, the 12th day of May, 1906,at 12 o'clock noon of said day. Theproperty conveyed by said mortgage,ana which is to be sold under saidpower of sale as aforesaid, consists of

First: All that certain piece or par-cel of land situate at Kaakopua, Hono-lulu aforesaid, and more particularlydescribed as follows:

Commencing at tne south corner,joining the lot of Kalaau and Lahaina,and running:N. 502. E. 7S links along lot of La-

haina;N. 354, W. 96 links along lot of Lono;S. ,43, W. 88 links along lot of Kepio;S. 40. E. 99 links along lot of Kala-

au. Containing an area of Q.Macre; and being a portion of I C.A. 9971 Ap. 26, R. P. 7799; and be-ing the same premises conveyed bydeed of Kamaio Drew to H. N.Rosa, dated December 11, 1899, re-corded in Liber 173, page 403, andthe same premises conveyed to saidHawaii Land Company, Limited, bydeed of said H. N. Rosa, et al.,dated March 1, 1899, recorded inLiber 191, pages 24-2- 5.

Together with all and any buildingsand improvements situate thereon andall the rights, privileges and appur-tenances belonging to said piece orparcel of land.

Second: That certain land at Plli-amo- o,

Waikiki, Honolulu, aforesaid,being a part of the premises describedin R. P. 4932 on L. C. A. 1274 to Huli-la- u,

bounded and more particularlydescribed as follows:

Commencing at the south corner ofthis land, and run:N. 37" 00', E. 150 feet along Aea;N. 34 00', E. 98 feet along Aea across

the road and along Apana 2 to Ka- -akau;

N. 8 00', E. 89 feet along Kaakau;N. 61 00', W. 251 feet along Kauhola's

land;S. 42 00', W. 244 feet along Apana 1

to Kaakau;S. 50 00', E. 198 feet across the road

and along stone wall to the stream;S. 43" 30', E. 120 feet along Kuauna to

the initial point.Containing an area of 1.87 acres; and

being the same premise? described indeed of F. W. Macfarlane to W. C.Achi, dated December 12, 1898, record-ed in Liber 1S9, page 184 and the samepremises conveyed by said W. C. Achito said Hawaii Land Company, Limit- -

edr by deed dated March 6.. 1900, recorded in Liber 200, on pages 497 and 498.

Reserving, however, all portions ofsaid premises which may be taken bythe Government for widening and ex-

tending the Waialae or extension ofBeretania street.

Together with all and any buildingsand improvements 'situate thereon andall the rights, privileges and appurtenances belonging to said piece orparcel of land. 1

The pieces or parcels of land underheadings, First and Second, are subject to a mortgage .made by the Ha-waii Land Company, Limited, to J. A.Magoon, dated March 29, 19)0, for $2000,

which said mortgage last mentioned isrecorded in Liber 207, on pages 81, et.sea., in said Hawaiian registry oiDeeds.

Third: Thost certain lots of landsituate on Emma street, in Honoluluaforesaid, known as Lots 6 and 6a,respectively, bounded ?id particularlydescribed as follows:

Let C. 3 hoomaka ma ke kihi Kom.Keia ?Lot ma ke alanul liilil hele

kahiko 4 kp. akea e pili ana i ka paJ. Dudoit a nolo aicu ma Ke aianui

liilii i oleloia:Ak. 46 30', Hik. 33 Kap. ma ke alanul

liilii 4 kp. akea;He. 46 30', Hik. 74 Kap. me Lot 6a;He. 46 30', Kom. 35 Kap. me Lot 5;Ak. 45" 00', Kom. 14 Kap. L. C. A. Ka- -

luahinenui;Ak. 46 30', Kom. 60 Kap. me J. Dudoit

a ike kihi mua. He 2590 Kap. ill.Lot 6a. E hoomaka ma ke kihi

Akau o keia Lot ma ka Huina o keala liilii kahiko me ke aianui hou 1

wehe ia nona ke akea 10 Kap. a noloaku:He. 39 30', Hik. 74 Kap. me ke aia

nui;He. 46 30', Kom. 17 Kap. me Lot 5:Ak. 46 ZV, Kom. 74 Kap. me Lot 6;Ak. 46" 30', Hik. 26 Kap. me ke ala lii

lii a I kihi mua. He 1578 Kap. ill.Said lots 6 and 6a being the same

premises described in deed of MaryChang Kim to En Syak Aseu, datedOctober 17. 1895, recorded in Liber 155.

pages 352-35- 3. And the same premisesconveyed to said Hawaii Land Com-pany, Limited, by deed dated April 5,1900. recorded in Liber 208, page 21.

Together with all and any buildingsand improvements situate thereon and

the rights, privileges and appur-tenances belonging to said piece orparcel of land.

Fourth: Lease from the Trusteesunder the Will of Bernice P. Bishop toHawaii Land Company, Limited, datedFebruary 18, 1S99, for the term oftwenty-or-a yea.rs from the 1st day ofJanuary, 1S99, at a rental of 51. o perannum, of the premises situate on themakai side of School street, Honolulu,near Nuuanu Stream, Kauluwela;which said lease is recorded in Liber

on pages 34-32- 7.

Together with, all and any buildingsand improvements situate thereon and

the rights, privileges and appur-tenances belonging to said piece orparcel of land.

Fifth: Lease from J. Kumalae toHawaii Land Company, Limited, datedFebruary 9. 1900. for the term of thirtyyears from April 1. 1900, at a rental ot

TOKIO, April 14.- - -- Dispatches thatwere received here by the Governmenttoday bring the news of a . violentearthquake which occurred this morning in the southern part of the islandof Formosa. Upward of 1000 personswere killed, and the list of casualtiesmay reach anywhere from that figureto 5000, for the damage done is reported to have been much greater thanat the time of the earthquake which'occurred last month.

By the great earthquake in March1014 persons were killed, 695 were injured and 1200 houses were demolished

The town of Takow, one of thesouthern treaty ports, is in the regionmost seriously affected by today'searthquake and although the dispatches from the scene of disaster aremeaeer. it is feared that the town hasteen destroyed. All the towns in thesouthern part of the island are believedto have been seriously damaged

The damage done by the earthquake0f last month was roughly estimatedat f4a.000.000, and the prosperous townsof Datiyo, Raishko and Shinko werecompletely destroyed. As ' today'searthquake is reported to have beenmore serious both in loss of life andInjury to the cities, it is feared thatdetails of the disaster will be appalling.

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THEFIRST CIRCUIT. TERRITORY OFHAWAII. AT . CHAMBERS INPROBATE.

In the matter of the Guardianship ofLeon Sterling of Honolulu, Oahu,Minor. Order to Show Cause onGuardian's Application to Sell RealEstate. , . -

J On reading and filing the petition of

' Conveyances in Liber 178, page 294,: containing an area of 120,000 squarefeet and settinsr forth certain lesralreasons why such real estate should be

j soldi t0 wit; that said property bringsno income; that said minor has no

education and support of said minor;It is hereby ordered-tha- t the heirs

and next cf kin to said ward and allpersons interested in the said estate,

i appear before this court on Monday.the 7th day of May, A. D. 1906, at 10o'clock a. m., at the courtroom of thiscourt, in Honolulu, Oahu, then andthere to show, cause why an ordershould not be granted for the sale ofsuch estate.

And it is further ordered that a no-

tice of this order be published at leasttwice a week for two weeks before the

day of hearing, viz., on April 23,24, ,30, and May 1, 1S0C, in the PacificCommercial , Advertiser, newspaperpublished in Honolulu. ...

Dated at Honolulu, T. H., April 21,ices. .

(Signed) W. J. ROBINSON,Third Judge of the Circuit Court of the

First Circuit.Attest:

(Sgd.) M. T. SIMONTON,Clerk of the Circuit Court cf the First

Circuit.C. F. Peterson, attorney for peti-

tioner.April 23, 24, SO; May 1.- -

NOTICE.Sealed bids will be received by the

,Vw,

in trade, fixtures, and book accounts,belonging to the firm of Woodr &Sheldon, Dealers in Sporting Goods,Bicycles, etc.. No. 91 S. King street.Honolulu. Separate bids may be madefor the stock, fixtures or book accounts,or for the entire assets as a whole.The highest or any bid may not beaccepted. - -

R. R. REIDFORD.Bishop Trust Co., Ltd., Honolulu.

7397

NOTICE.

The Promotion Committee has open-ed up a relief bureau, at its rooms inthe Alexander Young building, for thepuTpose of receiving and forwardingany packages or remittances of moneyto San Francisco by Mr. Morgan onTuesday, or to him after his arrivalthere. 173

NOTICE.

ESTATE OF N. F. BURGESS. DE-CEASED.

All persons indebted to the late N.F. Burgess are requested to call at theoffice of Trent & Co., 938 Fort street,T--I -- 7it on1 rm o Ir ct f tamAn - arr?alJ perso;s having ciaims against thepaid estate are requested to present thesame to the undersigned on or beforeJUile 1. l&0t.

RICHARD H. TRENT.Honolulu, April 16. 1906.

7391 April 17. 24, May 1. 8. 15."

FAVORITE GROTTOThe chef at the GROTTO

aims to give patrons, fromtime to time the old fashioneddishes that you liked so wellwhen VOU Were 3 D0V.

Today's lunch menu:PEARL BARLEY SOUP

HUNGARIAN GULASH, BOILEDRICE

FRlCASrE OF LAMBMASHED POTATO

STEWED PUMPKINONION SALAD

2c with Beer, Wine, Teaf nffaa

FRED KILEY, Prop.,Cor. Hotel and Bettel Streets.

Kapalama. Honolulu, near Tramway'sDepot; which said Ic-as-e is recorded iaLiber 202. on pages 3S0-3S- 4.

Together with all and any buildingsand improvements situate thereon andall the rights, privileges and appur-tenances belonging to said piece orparcel of land.

Leases designated above as Fourthand Fifth are subject to mortgage byHawaii Land Company, Limited, to S.C. Allen of $2500. dated February 2L1900, and recorded in Liber 199. onpages 469, et. seq. records of said Regis-try Office; and also mortgage by HawaiiLand Company, Limited, to S. C. Al-len for $4500. dated April 9, 1900, record-ed in Liber 207. on pages 74, et. seq..records of said Registry Office.

Lease designated hereinabove asSixth is subject to mortgage by Ha-waii Land Company. Limited, to S. CAllen for $3000, dated August 23, 1900.and recorded in Liber 215, on pages 122,et. seq., records of said Registry Office.

Seventh: Six hundred shares of thecapital stock of the Kihei PlantationCompany, Limited, represented by thefollowing certificates of stock for thenumbers of shares thereof respectivelyas follows:Certificate No. Shares.

1061 for 151183 for Jt1273 for 21414 for 291423 for 251426 for..... 251427 for 251563 for.... 691574 for 1001582 for.. 941604 for1645 for 741679 for 2S1868 for 101905 for 102122 for.... 80

Terms: Cash. United States goldcoin; deeds at expense of purchaserto be prepared by attorneys for saidassignee of mortgagee.

For further particulars apply toSmith & Lewis, attorneys for said As-signee of Mortgagee.

Dated, Honolulu, April 9, 1906.

KIHEI PLANTATION COM PANT,LIMITED.

By H. P. BALDWIN.President.

(Seal) J. P. COOKE.Treasurer.

Said Assignee of Said Mortgagee.7385,

ESTATE OF RAY.

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THEFIRST CIRCUIT, TERRITORY OFHAWAII. IN PROBATE ATCHAMBERS.

In the Matter of the Estate of D, A.Ray, Deceased. Before Judge Rob-inson.

Order of Notice of Petition for Allow-ance of Final Accounts and

Discharge in This Estate. .

On reading and filing the Petitionand accounts of E. R. Hendry, Ad-

ministrator of ' the Estate of D. A.Ray, late of Honolulu, deceased, where-in he asks to be allowed $622.30, andhe charges himself with $727.26, andasks that the same may be examinedand approved, and that a final ordermay be made of Distribution of theproperty remaining in his hands to thepersons thereto entitled, and discharg-ing him and his sureties from all fur-ther responsibility as such Adminis-trator:

It Is Ordered, That Monday, the 14thday of May, A. D. 1906. at 10 o'clock,a. m., before the Judge of said Court,at the Court Room of the said Cwttrt,at Honolulu, Island of Oahu, be andthe same hereby Is appointed as thetime and place for hearing said Peti-tion and Accounts, and that all per-

sons interested may then and thereappear and show cause, if any theyhave, why the same should not begranted, and may present evidence asto who are entitled to the said prop-erty. And that notice of this Order,in the English language, be publishedIn the Pacific Commercial Advertiser,a newspaper printed and published inHonolulu, once a week, fortthree suc-

cessive weeks, the last publication tobe not less than two weeks previousto the time therein appointed for saidhearing.

Dated at Honolulu, this 2nd day ofApril, A. D. 1906.

W. J. ROBINSON,Third Judge of the Circuit Court of

the First Circuit.Attest:

M. T. SIMONTON.Clerk of the Circuit Court of the

First Circuit.7379 April 3, 10, 17 and 24.

NOTICE OFELECTION OF OFFICERS.

W. C. PEACOCK & CO.. LTD.

At a meeting of the stockholders ofW. C. Peacock & Co.. Ltd., held at Ho-

nolulu, April 1?. 1906, the following of-

ficers were elected:W. C. Peacock.... PresidentAndrew Brown .. ,.. .Vice-Preside- nt

R. L. Auerbach... TreasurerC. S. Weight SecretaryT. F. Lansing..... Auditor

The above ofiiff-r- s constitute ex officiithe Board of Directors of said corpora-

tion.C. S. WEIGHT,

Secretary, W. C. Peacock & Co.. Ltd.

BEAD THE ADVEP.TISEEWO ELD '3 NEWS DAILY.

unvarying courtesy from the officersin their search for news.

OREGONIAN ARRIVES. i

The Afllerican-Hawaiia-n S. S. Co.'ssteamer 6regonian arrived from Se--attle and Tacoma yesterday morningabout 8 o'clock, going to the Railwaywharf. She left the Coast on the 13thinst. The-steame- r had,,a. fair-size- d lotof Puget Sound cargo, 'ineluJQjia 'flour,feed., stuffs, lumber, lime, etc. Capt.Nichols reported fine weather all theway down. The Oregonian will sail at5 p. m. Sunday for Kfthului,. proceed- -Ing thence to New York. She broughtlo.uOO sacks of flour, 25,000 sacks offeed and about 400 sacks of potatoes.There was also aboard a ram for theAmerican Sugar Company's ranch.

. DIX HAS SMALL-FO- X.

The U. S. transport Dix arrived fromNagasaki and Manila about 5 p. m.

. yesterday and came to an anchor out-side. She has a suspected case ofsmall-po- x aboard and will . probablyremain outside for a day or so. Cap-

tain Ankers reports a fine trip fromJapan. The Dix has 4000 tons of coal

'

aboard for Honolulu. She will prob- -ably not budge sheet or tack until shehas been fumigated.

LAWTON LEAVES.The U. S. naval transrort Lawton

deDarted for Pag-- Paeo at 2 p. m.

Ing.The transports Warren, Crook, Sol-

ace and Buford vere in San Franciscoat the time of the earthquake.

T.siet UN-i- d a v nlirht tho S S Ore--ninn which rrivpd vpstordav ss--

en a steamer wnjcn was tnougnt to oethe San Mateo, bound from Seattle toHonolulu with a cargo of coal.

VESSELS IN FORT.ARMY AND NAVY.

A. T. Dix,: Akers, Manila, Apr.

U. S. A. T. Sheridan, Peabody, SanFrancisco, Apr. 23.

U. S. Revenue cutter Manning, Rob- -erts. ,,

U. S. S. Iroquois, Niblaek.Merchant Vessels.)

Archer, 'Am. bktn., Lancaster, SanFrancisco, April 16.

Cainsmore,, Br. bk., Owen, NitratePorts, April 9

Catarina Eecame, Rocca, Hamburg,April 13.

Dirigo, Am. sp., Goodwin, Philadel- -phia, April 18. .

Elwell, Am. sp., Young, Lahaina, April20. (In distress.)

Morning Star, Am. s.s., Garland, Gil-

bert Is., July 15.Newsboy, Am. bktn., Peterson, Aber-

deen, April 5.Nippon Maru, Arc s.s., Greene, Yoko-

hama, Apr. 23.

Oregonian, Am. s.s.. Nicnols, beatue,Apr. 23.

Pactolus, Br. bk., Watts, Newcastle,Mar. 30. (For Eleele.)

Restorer, Br. cable stmr., Combe, SanFrancisco, Feb. 9.

THE MAILS.Mails are due from the following

points as follows:San Francisco Per Alameda, May 4.

Orient Per Doric, May 1.

Uolonies Per Ventura, April 24.

...... . . . .... ...H t ij mv t l ij..and accommodations. The JapanesePresident Goulder, writing on the

moderate - sized steamships running from

line has secured an option on the

H, trom our government, ana

yesterday.. She was held pending the -- .

possible arrival of orders from the Mails will depart as follows:Navy Department which might have San Francisco Per Ventura and Nip-chang- ed

the vessel's destination. She pon Maru, Apr. 24.was to have kept in wireless communi- - Orient Per Sheridan, . Apr. 24.iation with the local naval station for Victoria Per Maheno, May 1.

"about twelve hours and should word Colonies Per Moana, May 5.

JAPANESE SAID TO WANTPACIFIC MAIL STEAMERS

fx

This is from the Consular Trade Reports issued by the Department of

Commerce and Labor, April 10: .

President Harvey D. Goulder, of the Merchant Marine League of theUnited States, in a letter to the Milwaukee Wisconsin, says that the Japaneseare negotiating for the purchase of the larger number of the United States

' ships in the foreign trade on the Pacific Ocean. The Japanese are in a positionto operate their ships for far less money than an American owner can operate

. V : t, I, . - 7 . I. . . ? T,rvn n . 1 io fry! nlhir rAnuirnmAiite. V.triJCri9, U T 1 IJ fcUl LUC lit J J 'IT I XJM.

' of Japanese sailors in the matter of foodgovernment also pays liberal subsidies.subject, says:

There is a Japanese line of threeYokohama to San Francisco that receives $'600,000 a year in subsidies from theJapanese government, and it competes with an American (the Pacific Mail)line which last year received ?63,000 from our government. The Pacific MailLine has five ships, any one of which is larger and better than the best of thethree Japanese. Naturally, this competition must be ruinous to the Americanline, and the sequel is that the JapanesePacific Mail Line for the purchase of its five ships. A similar line of five fineAmerican steamships, each of which ships received last year from $5,000 to '

$12,000 from our government, runs from Seattle to the Orient in competition j

with a smaller Japanese line, receiving1 $330,000 a year from the Japanese :

government, an.l with' a British line, of smaller ami a less number of. ships, '

that receives an annual subsidy of $300,000 from the British government.These ships the Japanese want and may get. A 15t? of three up-to-n- te Amri- - j

can steamships runs from San Francisco to Hawaii. Samoa. New Zealan 1 an.l j

Australia, which line received last yearits owners claim lost $371,000 in operating its ships, is also wanted by theJapanese. J

II

Page 10: ESTASUSHED JUtV 2. t856- AM CAUTOTO A SAYS DIFFICHLW › bitstream › 10524 › 44399 › 1 … · The final stand of the fire fighters was made at Van Ness avenue, where Mavor Schmitz"

THE PACIFIC COMMERCIALS 'ADVERTISER HONOLULU, APRIL 24, 1906.ID

aATERWAL MEETINGS. Castle & Cooke, Ltd.KON02.UIU.POLYNESIA ENCAMPMENT,

some chance left forlTHE refunding measur. NO. 1, I. O. O. F.

everr first and third FRIDAYCOMMISSION MERCHANTS

SUGAR FACTORS.f tha Jttonth at 7:30 p. m., in OddtjVoW nail. Fort street. Visiting of the latest dates

and PhotographicMaterial of everydescription.

A GEXTS FORtrotiim cordially invited to attend.. P.4UL SMITH, C. P.

1 L. LA PIERRE, Scribe. The Ewa Plantation Co s.ID The Waialua Agricultural C AtmThe Kohala Sugar Co,

XXCEXSIOR LODGE MO. x,Speaker Cannon Promises Representative Cole

3. O. O. F.Developing and PrintiDg

The Waimea Sugar Mill Co.1

The Fulton Iron Works, St. Lo&fa.The Standard Oil Co.The George F. Blake Steam PiaWeston's Centrifugals.The New England Mutual Life Inmjance Co., of Boston.The Aetna Insurance Co.. of tt

3tteets trrexy TUESDAY evening ati Odd Fellows' Hall, Fort street

rsriaSW bothers cordially invited toThat the House Shall Have a Chance to

Vote on the Bill. THIS DAY andti2& B. F. LEE, r. U.1. L. LA PIERRE. Secretary, a specialty

satisfactoryguaranteed.

work toLi' cf. .

PACIFIC REBEKAH LODGE, nuance Assurance Co., ofdon.Auction SaleNO. 1, I. O. O. F.

(Mail Special to the. Advertiser.)Me-!- ! vrv second and fourth Give us a trial ITUESDAY, APRIL 24, 1906.ffianaaaT. it :30 p. m.f Odd Fellows WASHINGTON, D. C, April 10. The fortunes,of the refunding bill are

--vsit srt street. Visiting Rebekahs AT 10 O'CLOCK A.looking up a little. Representative Cole, of Ohio, went to see Speaker Cannon"HOW SAVINGS GROW"

Our little booklet with the aboTtitle free for the asking.

AMERICAN SAVING AMD

csviaUy invited to attend.JFLORENCE LEE. N. G.JIENNY JACOBSON, Sec'y.

recently and received assurances that there would be an opportunity for theRegular FurnitureHouse to vote upon the measure. Although the Speaker put the bill on the

highest shelf he could find the union calendar he told Mr. Cole that he (the XBUST CO. OF HAWAIT", LTD.DLTVE BRANCH REBEKAH ollister DrngLSpeaker) did not want to deprive him of his day in court. SaleAt my salesroom.

LODGE NO. 2, I. O. O. F."Keels every first and third Thurs "You have been loyal to the House organization, my boy,", said the

COMPANYSpeaker to Mr.. Cole, "and I feel like giving you a chance with your bill."day at 1:2 p. m., in Odd Fellows' ALL KINDS OFRUBBER 800DSIt had been Mr. Cole's intention to offer a resolution for a rule under which THE PIONEER PHOTOGRAPHIC3Ea9L JYfirt street. Visiting Rebekahs Draw attention to Collard & Collard DEALERS, FORT STREET,to bring up the bill. This course was suggested by Gen. Grosvenor, wTho is a Piano. NEAR HOTEL.mn cordially invited to attend.

.AGNES DUNN, N. G.THORA OSS, Secretary. member of the Rules Committee. But Speaker Cannon thinks Mr. Cole had

first better try to get the bill up under the suspension of the rulesy which daycomes every month. It requires a two-third- s vote to pass a bill on such days,but Mr. Cole may decide to hazard it. .

"JAS. F. MORGAN,AUCTIONEER.OCEANIC LODGE NO. 37L

F. & A. M. "I have talked with Mr. Dalzell recently," said Mr. Cole today, "and SEE OUR FINE NEWLINE OF2Eels en the last Monday of each

Goodyear Eabber Co.H. H. PEASE, President.

San Francisco. Cal., U. S. A.

Oahu Ice &lectric Co

Ic delivered to any part of the ettr.

he feels somewhat friendly to the measure. Eepresentative Lloyd, of Missouri,who was a member of the subcommittee that considered the bill, is fighting it.3BHe2X at Masonic Temple.

"Vlisisimt? brethren and members OIZSKirsuian and Pacific are cordially in-li- fe and Eepresentative Beall of the committee have drawn up a minority re- - Without Reserveport and now they are trying to line the Democrats of the House up solidlyt attend.

' C. G. BOCKUS, W.M. against the bill. sc"But I doubt whether they will succeed. Eepresentative Webb, of NorthIsland orders promptly. filled. Tel. BitCarolina, a member of the Territories Committee, is very friendly to the bill;

so is Eepresentative Moon and other Democrats of the committee. The situa-tion in Hawaii seems to me deplorable and I think Congress ought to do some

U1L P. o. Box 600. Office: KewsJC

HORSE SHOEING!CDthing to relieve that situation. No state in this Union could stand up against

3JEAHI CHAPTER NO. 2,.O. E. S.

ilrytt eTery third Monday at 7:30 p.

Ol 3a lbe Masonic Temple, croner ofJsiake And Hotel streets. Visiting

tetcra d brethren are cordially in--vit- ad

Ao attend.LONG STREET RICH CRABBE

P. W. M-- , Secretary.MART E. BROWN,

Worthy Matron.

what Hawaii has had to endure in being deprived of such a large portion ofher revenues."

PROPERTY

At AuctionSATURDAY, MAY 5, igo5.

AT 12 O'CLOCK NOON.

I will sell at my salesroom, 857 Ka--

The Senate on motion of Senator Piles, of Washington, has passed the billw!w. WrigM Co., ltd.

to provide for the disposition of certain property in Hawaii. This was doneon the recommendation of Gov. Carter, who represented, as was printed in theAdvertiser some months ago, that there was no authority to sell any of theproperty of the Territory. The Senate Committee on Pacific Islands and Porto

ALL THE WAY FROM

$2.00 Up.New and exclusive designs.

have opened a horse-shoein-s; depcrtment In connection with their e&rrlaea

ahumanu street.Bico made no written report on the bill. As passed by the Senate and re-

ferred to the House the bill reads as follows:

LEI ALOHA CHAPTER, ,

1 NO. 3, O. E. s.3teeV t tire Masonic Temple every

racMTiO S&terday of each month, at 7:30

shop, etc. Haying; secured the acrttoMPROPERTIESWithout Reserve.Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Bepresentatives of the United of a first-cla- ss shoer, they are prepr4

tfidas ix m. Visiting sisters and iw ao an worjc intrusted to them laflrst-cla- ss manner.LOTS 1, 2, 3 and 4, Block M

fiavOtsrs are cordially Invited to at- -

LOTS 43 and 44, Block B KapiolaniPark Addition.

LOTS 26, 27 and 28," Block H; PortionBznose- -MARGARET HOWARD, W. M.

3&ARGAEKT LISHMAN, Sec'y

LADIES' AUXILIARY,'A. O. H, DIVISION NO. 1.

States of America in Congress assembled, That all personal and movableproperty ceded and transferred to the United States by the Republic of Hawraiiunder the joint resolution of annexation approved July seventh, eighteenhundred and ninety-eigh- t, may be sold, leased, or otherwise disposed of insuch manner as may be provided by the laws of the Territory of Hawaii:Provided, That all sales, leases, or other disposals of such property heretoforemade by said Territory, under the authority of such laws, are hereby ratifiedand confirmed, and all moneys or revenues derived from sales or disposals-heretofor- e

made, or made under authority of this Act, shall remain the prop-erty of said Territory.

The Senate Committee on Pacific Islands and Porto Eico has referred the

of Lot 1, Block 12E KapahuluTract.

This list will be added too before

H. J, N.PANETELAS

CIGABS

BEAVEB LUNCH BOOMSH. J. NOLTE.

day of sale.Send in yours.3Iel9 vixtj first and third Tues- - , LTD.

LEADING JEWELERS.4tacr, 4 t ro--. in C. B. U. Hall, FortoftreeL Visiting sisters are cordially JAS. F. MORGAN,

AUCTIONEER.telephone bill, affecting the franchise in the Island of .Oahu, to Senator Flint, HONOLULU IRON WORBOCOMPANY.of California, for consideration and report.

3BYited to attend.' 3a. ALICE DOHERTT, Pres.

2SA3tGXET K. TIMMONS, Sec'y.

HAWAIIAN TRIBE NO. x.L O. R. M.

The House Committee on Public Lands has reported favorably a bill in UseNovelty Millstroduced by Delegate Kalanianaole January 4 "providing for the setting aside

for governmental purposes of certain ground in Hilo. " Machinery. Black Pipe. Oilmlwa2eeA eTery second and fourth FRI- - Mortgagees Sales: . . . KB NEST G. WALKEE.eacb month, in I. O. O. F. Hall. Pipe, Boiler Tubes, Iron and Stl. ffrwglneers Supplies.EXCELLENT FLOORCALIFORNIA FEED CO., Ag-ant-s

rS5Ss5i333g brothers 0 rdially invited to accepted, to take effect upon his dis Office Nuuanu street.Works Kakaako.charge from all accountability ,. forHEW OFFICERS Government property. . Kaahumanusalesroom, 857

I

sattsad. w. C. McCOT. Sachem.A. MURPHY, C. of R.

WILLIAM McKINLEYXODGE, NO. 8, K. of P.

At mystree-t-Mark P. Robinson is reported as say

ing he .will not accept nomination toOB M, C, r,

NEW SPRING HATS DIRECT FROMNEW YORK AT

Miss Power'sthe Board of Supervisors, also thathe thinks Delegate Kuhio can serve SATURDAY, APRIL S Property, Lirli-h- a

street, lower end.23 sets every SATURDAY evening at Hawaii better than a new man could3S orcktcK, in Harmony Hall.: King

Choose the Artistic

MANY NEW DESIGNS IN

MonumentsCan be seen at 1043,50 Alake Street.

IThere was a good attendance at the The Korean laborers at Waipahuplantation refused to work yesterday MONDAY, APRIL SO Vineyard street MILLINERY PARLORS. BOSTON

BUILDING, FORT STREETannual business meeting of the Y. M.Street. YlsJling brothers cordially la-nEL-

t atttend.MTXJLE. M., JOHNSON, C. C.jR. A. JACOBSON, K. of R. & S.

near Emma street.unless a Japanese luna was disC. A. in Association Hall last evening. charged. Manager Bull gave them

Punch- -Mr. C. J. Day, thej-etirin- g president, the option of going to work or leaving SATURDAY, MAY 5 Cornerbowl and Beretania streets.the plantation and they chose the forHONOLULU TEMPLE NO. 1, mer alternative. iiiii m inoccupied the chair. The meeting was

opened with the singing of that well-kno- wn

hymn, "Blest be the Tie thatBinds our Hearts in Christian Love,"

KATHBONE SISTERS. --Valuable realHawaii LandMajor Scott, IT. S. A., aboard the J.C. AXrJELL & CO.

SATURDAY, MAY 12-est- ate

and stocks.Co. to R. D. Mead.transport Sheridan, can easily be taken39eets eTery 2nd and 4th Monday, at after which prayer was offered by Phone Blue 180L P. O. Box 4x.for Col. Scott, U. S. A., now in theaCaigMa of Pythias Hall, King street Principal Home of Kamehameha

DRY CLEANING AND DYEINGDEPARTMENT.

Telephone Main 73. 'AH visitors cordially invited to attend. Saturday, may 12 Property onPhilippines. Major Scott bears a

striking resemblance to Col. Scott andSchools. 'The officers elected to servefor the ensing year were as follows: King, also 1150 share Kihei Plan

tation Co., Ltd.President, F. C. Atherton; directors they are not relatives either. Col.Scott is known in the army as "Texas"Scott.

IWALANI K. DAYTON, M.E.C..GJtACB O'BRIEN, M. of R.&C.

HONOLULU LODGE 616,B. P. O. E.

to succeed C. J. Day, C. H. Athertonsaxukuai, max 28 iToperty onand Jesse Dutot, whose term of office

Five Japanese were drowned in theflood from the breaking of a reservoir

King street, near Kamehameha IVroad good buildings.

expired, F. C. Atherton, Mark John-son and C. H. Atherton, the latter toIBaMttofa Lodge No. 616. B. P. O. E.,

JAPANESE AND AMERICAJS

Dry and Fancy GoodsManufacturers of Straw Mat.

HOTEL STREET.

TRY OUR DELICIOUS"Peach Mellow" and "Rasport

AS

succeed himself as director and treasKB eet in their hall, on Miller and All particulars at my office.urer, a position he has filled with con-spicuous success for a number of

above Waikapu, Maui, between twoand three o'clock last Thursday morn-ing. A mother and two little girls,with two other children, were the vic-tims. Several persons were Injuredfrom being knocked about in the

years.JBeretanla streets, every Friday eve-nts. JBy order of the E. R.

3TARRY H. SIMPSON. Secy.HARRY E. MURRAY, E. R.

JAS. F. MORGAN,AUCTIONEER.

The new chairmen of the variouscommittees are: Devotional, P. E Dear Madam:

Do you want a pretty new, new dressthis week? Of course you do, per

Tosh; financial, C. H. Atherton; edu-cational, Edgar Wood; physical, GeoCOURT CAMOES,

NO. 8110, A. O. F. Vaterhouse; membership, Edward COWSHED Ml MM EMTowse; entertainment, Willis T. Pope; 4junior department, W. A. Vann. NOTICE OF S ALE chance several and another next week.Meets every 2nd and 4th

Tuesday of each month at7:30 p. m., in San Antonio

PHONE MAIN 7LAt the close of the business sessionGranted then that you do want aa brief but bright program was well

rendered. Miss Whltford of the High new dress, the chances are good thatschool in recitations and Mr. Arthur I will offer for sale by public auctionMyhre in selected readings were greet

Hall, Vineyard street. Vis-iting brothers cordially in-it- ed

to attend.A. K. VIERRA, C.R.,

M. C. PACHECO, F.S.

at my salesroom No. KaahumanuTHE HAWAIIAN REALTT3

AND MATURITY CO.Limited.

REAL ESTATE. MORTGAGE.

ed with applause. Mr. Ishida gave an street. Honolulu,

you want it to be of the light coolsummery kind to get the better of thecoming hot weather.

exhibition of fine skill, reproducing- - inminiature, on trays, well-kno- scenes

On Saturday, tbs 28th Dayin Hawaii and 'Japan. At the conclu230HOLULU HARBOR NO. 54, Our offerings of summer Wash Masion of this part, refreshments werserved to all. This was surely One of

LOANS AND INVESTMENT SECU-RITIES.

Office: Mclntyre Bldg., Honolulu,T. H. P. O. Box 265. Phor.e Main 14L

terials comprise the cream of the seaA. A. OF M. & P.IXeeij on first and third Sunday even- -

or April, 1906,AT 12 O'CLOCK NOON,

the most enthusiastic and lively busi-ness meetings held for some years. son s novelties in Batistes, Organdies,eacn month, at 7 o'clock, at?. HalL All sojourning brethren Mulls, etc., being priced from 12 c.

LOCAL BREVITIES. by order of the Pledgee, the followingshares of stock:

per yard up.set ewvfi&Ay invited to attend.

:sT order Worthy Captain,F. MOSHER.FRANK POOR. C.C.

TT'rt i.i . .c icrtri jcusuimuiy certain that youHenry Klemme's resignation of theJNO. CASSIDY,

Electricalcaptaincy of Co. C. X. G. H., has been will find just what you want some-

where in our stocks, your inspectionHONOLULU AERIE 140,F. O. E. MEETiNG NOTICE. o r k e r.1

t of which we respectfully solicit.

Auction SaleWednesday, April 25, 1906

AT 12 O'CLOCK NOON.

On Railroad Wharf

.945 Bags A Sugar

On Wednesday, April 25, 1906. at

MMfo n n O 1 I . - .c. Kjn jiu aim KAl'K .S flH T nnnp i t- -i-- i in 159 EJNG ST.Yours truly,

. 4TEL. ATJf 133.' ' " '4th WATlftO'H, a. rev I- ...V.LV J- ' I TV, ...... ....tngs of each month at nm u a. regular meeting or

Excelsior Lodge No. 1, I. O. O. F.. on 8. F.EHLERSiGQ.Tuesday evening, April 24, at 7:30 p,

One hundred shares of the capitalstock of the Waialua AgriculturalCompany, Limited, a Hawaiian corpor-ation, of the par value of One HundredDollars ($100) each, being the sharesreferred to in Share Certificates Nos.1666 and 1667 issued to A. S. Wilcox.

Fifty shares of the capital stock ofKihei Plantation Company, Limited, aHawaiian corporation, of the par valueof Fifty Dollars ($50) each, being theshares referred to in Share CertificateNo. 160S i?sued to C. H. Willis.

One hundred and thirty-seve- n sharesof the capital stock of Olaa SugarCompany, Limited, a Hawaiian corpor-ation, of the par value of Twenty Dol-lars ($20) each, being the shares re-ferred to in Share Certificates Nos.1338 and 1795 issued to C. H. Willis.

53 V'-yi- s in K. of P. Hall, KingBlreeU ;ing Eagles are Invited tosttead. SAM'L McKEAGUE, W.P.,

H. T. MOORE, Secty.

m.Business Consideration of resolution 12 o'clock noon. I am instructed to sell

on the railroad wharf, Honolulu, on

F. D. WICKE,CONTRACTOR AND BUILDER.

Store Fittings a Specialty.Repairing, Cabinet Work and PoIIshin.

y&t Alakea St., rear of Y. M. C. A.Phone M. 447. residence Phcne W. 1I1L

adopted at a special meeting held onB. F. EHLERS .& CO.,

Dealers in Good Goods.April 21 account of whom it may concern,about 945 bags sugar, damaereil hvTHEODORE ROOSEVELT,

, Csanp No. 1, U. S. W. V.All members are requested to attend.

B. F. LEE, N.G.. water ex schooner "Luka." Cant. J.173 L. L LA 'PTTvTJ Tt Corrw ',

Pahia. on voyage from Koholalele, Ha-rnak-

Hawaii, towards Honolulu,Oahu. Arrived Saturdav, April 11906.

ANCIENTQ C. B. Reynolds & CoMark

Department Hawaii.Meets every 1st and 3rd

Wednesday. Suites 15 and16 Progress Block, Fortand Beretania streets, at7:30 p. m. Visiting com-rades cordially invited toattend.

H. T. MOORE, Comdr.H. H. LONG. Adjutant

on jy in circle over ABags

ORDER HIBERNIANS,DIVISION NO. 1.

Meets every first and third Wednes-days, at 8 p. m., In C. B. U. Hall, Fortstreet. Visiting brothers cordially in-vited to attend.

Fresh lowersAT

Mrs E.M.TaylorJTOUNG BUILDING.

Terms: Cash United States gold coin.Dated, Honolulu, April 18, 1906.

JAS. F. MORGAN,AUCTIONEER.

IMPORTERS AND DEALERS E3BUILDING MATERIALS:

- DOORS, SASH, SHINGLES.Builders Hardware at lowest rsJflB

Alakea t, mauka Sailor' Homo.

JAS. F. MORGAN,AUCTIONEER. J

Page 11: ESTASUSHED JUtV 2. t856- AM CAUTOTO A SAYS DIFFICHLW › bitstream › 10524 › 44399 › 1 … · The final stand of the fire fighters was made at Van Ness avenue, where Mavor Schmitz"

td.THE PACIFIC COMMERCIAL ADVERTISER, HONOLULU, APRIL 24, 1906.

1

The Policeman LOCAL BREVITIES. DESKY 5 i

TMMM C

Mrs R. T. Forest of Pahala Is in thecity.

The Hawaiian Women's Clubmeet at the Kaiulani Home at

will2:4 isFmiM ill!" fDOING THINGS I

ioWhat isVibe policeman is a big man with

lbrtS3 buttons and a blue coat. Hetoday.

Mrs. W. PuIJar and her sister. MissFarquhar, of Honomu are spending tEiewepk here.

Marshal Hendry has arrested two 9r Advertiser: Kamehameha III. built a mad nn th

wears a helmet and carries a big tick.

The stick is used to thump evil doers.

Is the policeman a good thing? Yes,

sometimes you wouldn't think of dis--We have it in ail colors.Chinese for perjury before an immigra-

tion officer.All fers of a flour shortage werewith him at any event; hensim Ask to see it.

.j? protects you, your home and valuables.

-

side of Kalihi Valley. Kamehameha IV. built one up the west side.'I have built a road connecting the two, including a bridge across

'

the Kalihi stream, completing a "loop" around the valley. !

It opens up 120 acres of land immediately adjoining, and ofthe same quality as that sold five years ago, in city lots, for $2250an acre. It is fine agricultural land and will raise-anything- .

I have secured this land at a bargain and believe in small profitsand quick sales. -

j

dissipated by the arrival of the Ore-gcni- an

from Seattle.Chas. K. Notley is said to be sure

for the Home Rule nomination forDelegate to Congress.

The engagement is announced of MissMattie E. Kanuha of the St. Andrew'sPriory to Mr. Carl H., C. Willing ofLewis & Co.

"Diamond Head Charlie" is near the

An insurance policy would do thename thing for your home and be-

longings. It isn't good business to dis-

pense with insurance. It protects. We

Issue best policies. Insure with us.

WHITNEY & MARSHtm

xne new suDurD nas Deen named "tJellaire. ' It' is an idealspot for a country home, and is only twenty minutes drive fromhead of the San Francisco relief fund

list, with his full name John CharlesPeterson for a very generous amount.

the post office.I have sold 33 acres in the last three months,

acres left.There are 87jnPMT nnnnAIMV I Actinpr Governor Atkinson last night

I1--1 AND wWlflrnli I delivered an address before the Social1 " r if FT

i AS LONG AS o ;

li'i w fscience Club on the subject of "Labor

938 FORT STREET. The club met at the residence of TWhile it lasts, I will sell this land for from $200 to $400 an

acre; one-four- th cash; the balance in 6, 12 and 18 months at 6 percent interest.- -

Clive Davits.Geo. P. Thielen received a cablegram m u yu fill cave UciSilstating that Ginaca's perfected cane

harvester was destroyed in San Fran- - CHAS. S. DESKY,Progress Block. YOU NEED AI reallv don't know what to do ! Cisco. He at once ordered a duplicate

"Go to the Criterion," said the trom Aew lorK Honolulu, April 14, 1906.Colonel. "And that's wherein An..emTea ,eatnr soia.." Cash. ... . I was tne first article aonated for will Stee isterfa the trouble lies. rcolieu the t- - t7.v..,.

' . - r " nr i 1 A 1 A I

iiviajor. l nave oeen mere 10 tion sale. The pattern is of breadfruitV

lunch and I am so gorged as to leaves and fruit. ASK TO SEE THE NEW "C" MODEL.be on the point of bursting. I Judge Dole's illness yesterday caused

"nirln't hfn vrk hA a revival or tne agitation for a Dill Justa V A A t, v m a 9 A A X 4 A V vr l A J 1

i. w " - i 4i. joy congress to provide for a substi eceivedASSORTHENT

fj ifenough to eat' "well

tute on the Federal bench when theColonel, that's a distressing incumbent may be incapacitated HAWAIIAN OFFIGE SPECIALTY CO.Everything for the Office.

8 COMPLETEState of affairs, but it's the way The "Theosophical Society in Amer- -

0.

I.

at the Cri they force you to eat J lea" are going to start a group for thea dollar's worth for a quarter." study and discussion of theosophical

1 ""jv-l.-- , ljic iiircuiigs lu ue neiu everyCor.-Hote- and Uethel streets. Fridav evening in th Prnm wnf.v

H. L. Shaw and wife will remain in

WHICH INCLUDES A SPLENDID VARIETYOF TEA POTS, SUGAR BOWLS, CREAM-ERS, CUPS AND SAUCERS, PLATES, FRUITSAUCERS, GIN TRAYS, BON BON BOXES,VASES, TOOTH BRUSH HOLDERS, EGGCUPS. MATCH SAFES, PEPPER AND SALTSHAKERS, TOOTH PICK HOLDERS, CAN-DLESTICKS, ETC., ETC. .

Hi!o.. After resigning his position anddi?o.Mn? of his effects, he was cabledfrom Havana not to leave. He willcontinue as manager of the Hilo DrugCo.BAUD TO BELIEVE

iCourt Camoes, No. 8110, A. O. F., IN LESS

THAN 3 DAYSTHE TENSION AGAINholds an important meeting this even-ing to provide means for the relfef ofAncient Foresters in San Francisco.Every member is requested to be pres ' W. W. Dimond & Co., Ltd.ent.

and over THE ONLY DOUBLE-TRAC- K RAILWAY between tbMissouri River and Chicago.THREE FAST TRAINS DAILY.

VIASOUTHERN PACIFIC, UNION PACIFIC AND

The Hawaiian Band will give a pub excelsior Lodge, I. O. O. F., meetstonight to consider the resolutionlie concert this evening at 7:30 at the We have just received ex NebraskanYoung Hotel, with the following pro adopted at a special meeting regard-ing relief for the San Francisco suf CHICAGO & NORTHWESTERN RAILWAYSferers. All members are requested togram:

PART I. attend' this, meeting. - Overland Limited. Vestibuled. Leaves San Francisco at 11High Sheriff Henry on Sunday anMarch "Comrr des" Teike

Overture "Semiramide" Rossini nounced to the five Korean murderersunder .death sentence that executiveclemency for them had been denied.

Ballad "Elua. Maka TJliuli" HermsSelection "Maritana" Wallace

PART II. They received the information withoutexhibiting any emotion.Vocal Hawaiian Songs.. A r. by Berger

a full line of

New StylishUp-to-d- ate Goods

Mesdames Nani Alapai and Lei Lehua J. Walter Doyle has been appointed

daily. The most Luxurious Train In the World. New Pullman Drxwta-nx- m

and State-roo- m cars built expressly for this famous train. Gent&s-me- n's

Buffet and Lady's Parlor Observation Car, Book Lovers Llbr&rr.Dining Car, Meals a la Carte. Electric Lighted throughout.Eastern Express. Vestibuled. Leaves San Francisco at 8 p. m. daflr.Through Pullman Palace and Sleeping Cars to Chicago. Dining: Cart.Free Reclining Chair Cars.Atlantic Express. Vestibuled. Leave San Francisco at 9 a. m. d3r.Standard and Toui-is- t Sleepers.

PERSONALLY CONDUCTED EXCURSIONSWednesdays, Thursdays and Friday. The best of everything.

r. r. ritchte, G.A.P.C. vvwxM ft tfnBTnwrMTDif or

an assistant to J. F. Morgan in theSelection "La Perichole".."In My Merry Oldsmobile". . .EdwardsFinale "Happy Heinie" Lampe

relief measures, and will leave on theVentura for San Francisco. Mr. Doylereceived his appointment yesterday"The Star Spangled Banner."- f- - afternoon through Acting Governor Atkinson, - v.. . ...ft RUSSELL PARKED uuiuuuu a iiuuiii u ijuiiiuil ai.A meeting of Leahl Chapter No. 2,Order of the Eastern Star, will be held San Frccs(tc461 7 Market Street. (Palace Hotel)

or U. P. Company's Agent.W WALBRIDGE DEAD on Wednesday evening to discuss relief for San Francisco. The plan is to making all our departments complete.have the proceeds of a fair to have

J

.it-

been held for another purpose devotedto the relief fund.

Russell Parke Walbridge, only sonof Mrs. R. D. Walbridge. died lastevening at the residence of Mrs. A. S.Parke, Beretania street. The boy was HA EIWAThe ladies' minstrel show which was All will be on display Saturday.to have been given by the Kunalu

Rowing Club on the evening of Mayten years of age. He was operated on s11, has been postponed for the presenton account of the California disaster. On the Oahu RailwayTickets already bought may be re-turned to club members and money

yesterday afternoon for appendicitis,but did not recover from the shock.Notice of the funeral will be givenlater. . -

BUSINESS LOCALS.

will be refunded.Will E. Fisher well knew Mr. Til- -

den, the merchant killed by a blundering shot from vigilantes. He was a L. KERR & e., LTD.neighbor of Mr. Fisher s father anda most estimable gentleman. The elderMr. Fisher was a heavy loser in Grant ALAKEA STREET.avenue property from which he derived a goodly Income.

&

Morgan's Tuesday sale today at hisrooms.

Morgan sells 945 bags of sugar onWednesday.

Clean and washed rags are wantedat the Gazette office.

Make your home beautiful with Lew-er- s& Cooke's new season's wall papers.

Inter-Islan- d and O. R. & L. shippingreceipt books, 50c. each, at the Gazette

ADVERTISER WANTS PICTURES.Will any friend of the Advertiser

"ir ' rBUTTEwho has pictures of Stanford Univer-sity, San Jose, Santa . Rosa, Oakland Golf, Tennis, Fresh and Salt Water Bathing, Riding and Driving aw

and other points in the desolated re- -office.A shipping clerk with

of the pastimes. The Table and Service are of the Highest Quality. Tfefcateand Information at the Honolulu Station and Trent & Co., or ring ap ialetesome knowl-- - on outside of San Francisco, oblige

edge of plantation business --can secure his paper by loaning them for a few Hotel King 53.From Denman Creameryhours. The earlier they are receivedthis morning the better.

On Sundays the Haleiwa Limited a two-hou- r train leaves at 8:22 . afereturning arrives in Honolulu at 10:10 p. m.

Our sole agency. We are proud of it. Try a block.THE FINEST IN THE WORLD.

a good situation by consulting ourWant ads.

3flarge front mosquito-proo- f roomwith board in a private family for manand wife can be had by consulting ourcassined ads.jA. young man as salesman is wantedfor a country store. Must have someknowledge of merchandise. See our

LEWIS & CO on IaMawaeep YourSale of . . .

R.SG. CORSETSNOW ON I

classified ads for particulars. Telephone, 240.169 King Street.First-clas- s tickets to ail stations on

Lm b Oahu Railroad and Haleiwa coupon1A of thtt offlrA

CKCK0000000000I Ortain lots that we will discontinue.In some we have full line of sizes;other sizes are broken, but they areall stylish up-to-d- shapes. They

Noiseless Easily Repaired

"NEW DOnE"Siphon jet low down closet, embossed bowl, bent oalc;

piano finish and paper lined tank. Natural oak, never splitsseat, and Douglas siphon valve.

Sample in our show window.

will be placed on sale at less than costprice.

STRAIGHT FRONT

W. M. CampbellBUILDER AND REAL ESTATE AGENT.

Announces that he Is prepared to furnish homes complete.the lot and latest modern Improved cottages for $1000 and up.

Lots for sale at $250 each on easy terms-Five-roo-

cottage, good plumbing, for $700.

PHONE OR ADDRESS WHITE 951.

of Trent & Co., 936 Fort street.Congress playing cards take the eye

and are decidedly the best. We havea new lot with new pictures on thebacks. Hawaiian News Co., Ltd.

All our celebrated Cremo cigars havethe word "Cremo" perforated in thewrapper. They have no. bands. H.Hackfeld & Co.. wholesale distribu-tors.

Tenders will be received by R. R.Reidford for the entire stock in trade,fixtures and book accounts of the firmof Woods & Sheldon. Full particularsat the Bishop Trust Co., Ltd.

Passengers sailing on the S. S. Ven-

tura have your baggage checked atyour residence and hotels by the UnionExpress Cot, Baggage Agents O. S. S.

; JOHUThe Plumber.nr o i? it

85 King Street. (

.50 Corsets. 2styles, at.STic.75 Corsets. 2styles, at. ..60c

$1.00 Corsets. 12styles, at ..S0c

$1.50 Corsets, 3styles, at.. $1.15

$2.00 Corsets. 5

I

000000000CK000Rew Goods Jusf REGeived by

QUALITY. ECONOMY.

SOAPsryies. at. .i.-i-$2.50 Corsets,

at $2.10

RIDING SADDLES. BITS. SPURS,BLANKETS. WHIPS AND CROPS,DOG COLLARS AND CHAINS,HORSE BRUSHES, C H A M O I S,SPUNGES, HARNESS AND SADDLESOAPS, OILS. DRESSING, GREASEWASHERS, ETC.. ETC.

SSon-ol-ULlia- . Soap T77"oxlrs Co,C. R. Collins,King Street near Fort.

'Phone Main 427.G.

Co., 63 Queen street, telephone- Y, Wo Sing Co.. the grocers in theClub Stables on Fort street, will re-

move on May'lst to larger and morerammodious quarte-r-s on 1186-11S- S Nuu-an- u

street, between Pauahi and Bere-tania, where they will carry a full andvery complete line of staple groceries.They will add a wholesale departmentto their establishment in their newQuarters. . '

FRED. L. WALDRON,Sole Apcct.Spreckelf Block. :

CORSET$1.00 and $1.25Qualities on saleat

'50c. PAIR.

Miss Alice Sullivan sailed last Fridayfor Honolulu. There she will join her

Our Belts Susenders Trunks GlovesSpring Neck-- Hanck'fs and Under--

andSummer wear . Duck Valises wear,

Stock Hats , Pants Shirts Etc.

ister. Miss Ada Sullivan, who has

FRENCH LAUNDRYAll work carefully done by hand. Shirts, collars, ladi

and gent's suits washed. Dry Cleaning also.Goods called for and delivered.

J. ABADIE, Proprietor,r Tterrtrrnln flnW. onwt rfnr entrance ITniraiinn Uotfi. 'Phime Hive

been spending the past four months inthe islands. Within a short time thesetwo popular sisters will sail for Japan I

FORT AND BERETANIA1044 lort Street, I. O. O. F. Building and 152 Hotel Street.to remain for the entire summer. Ex- - CORNER

amlner. STREETS.

Page 12: ESTASUSHED JUtV 2. t856- AM CAUTOTO A SAYS DIFFICHLW › bitstream › 10524 › 44399 › 1 … · The final stand of the fire fighters was made at Van Ness avenue, where Mavor Schmitz"

THE PACIFIC COMMERCIAL' ADVERTISER, HONOLULU, APRIL 24, 1906.

j SHIPPING INTELLIGENCE. HONOLULU STOCK EXCHANGE.

Honolulu, April 23. 1906.Canadian-Australia- n Royal Mail Line Halst6ad&i-o.,Ld-l

STOCK AND BONDwith the Canadian Pacific Railway Co. TtyMf 3jU35T COMPANY.

ARRIVED.jioiuay. April 23.

T. K. K. S.'S. Nippon Maru, Greene,9 davs from Yokohama, general mer- -

, Eletmera running In connectiongal at Honolulu on or about the following dates:

ii

l chandise and passengers to H.! fe(j & Co., Ltd.. agents.

FOR FIJI AND AUSTRAILIA.

MAY 5MOANA "". JUNE 2MAHENOAORANGI "". JUNE 30

Pacific mail S. S. Co.,

S. S. Co., and Toyo Kisn Kaisna.Bteamers of the above companies will call at Honolulu and leave this

on or about the dates Deiow men

TOOK SAN FRANCISCO TO THEORIENT.

SIBERIA .APRIL, 14

AMTTRTCA MARU APRIL, 21

MONGOLIA MAY 2

nrrvi MAY 9

LOANS NEGOTIATED.

Members Honolulu Stock and

Exchange.

W. L. HOWARD, FINANCIAL AGENTFor Rent IS furnished house, Prosper

St.; 2, Young St., 6 B. 11.; 3, WVUiiSt., 2 B. .

For Sale 1, Prospect St., fine view2, Charming place, Beretania St.;Etc., see me; abstract title, loans '

5 McINTYRE BUILDING 5 '

CHAS. BREWER & CO.'S

lew York LinoRegular line of vessels piyinjbetween New York and Hono-lulu. .

BAEK NOT7ANU will sailfrom Iew York on or aboutJuly loth, 1906.

FREIGHT TAKEN AT LOW-EST RATES.

For freight rates apply toCHAS. BREWER & CO.,

27 Kilby St., Boston, orC. BREWER & CO.. LTD..

Honolulu.

FOR RENT.

VlJPor further Information apply to

tj tiAPPTTi COMPANY. LTD., AGENTS.

Steamship Oo- -41. unwm

Oooanio. ...

The toe passenger steamers oi wiU h.rem.der:

VROM SAN FRANCISCO. 1

' A TT?TT. lSONOMAALAMEDA ..MAY 4

VENTURA .MAY 16

ALAMEDA ..MAY 9

I

'Bg

L

In with the sallling of the above steamers, the agents are pre-S- ue

passengers. Coupon Through Tickets by any rail-- "

FnSSi5 U point, in the United States, and from Newsteamship line to ail European porta.

York by anyPARTICULARS. APPLY TO- FOR FURTHER

t W. G. IRWIN & CO., LTD.

Imerican-HawaHa- aTXOM NEW YORK TO HONOLULU.

a. S. Alaskan .May 1

8. S. Texan May 25

Freight rooallved at all times at theCompany's wbarr, 41st straey SouthSfroottyn.

SAN FRANCISCO TO HONO- -.

LULU DIRECT.

fj. S-- Nevadan May 3

8. S. NEBRASKAN.. ..MAY 24

Aa &ch month thereafter

FOR VANCOUVER.19C6

MAHENO . 1

AORANGI .... MAY SO

MIOWERA ....JUNE 27

GENERAL AGENTS.

Occidental & Oriental

woueu.

FOR SAN FRANCISCO.

NIPPON MARU APRIL, 14

DORTO MA i 1

MANCHURIA ..MAY 8

HONGKONG MARU MAY 18

it .! o ir. anA 1mt thifl TOrt;

FOR SAN FRANCISCO.A T. A MKT) A AFK1L. IS

VENTURA .. APRIL 24

ALAMEDA MAY 9

SIERRA ... MAY 15

Steamship CompanyFreight received at Company's wharf,

Greenwich-- street.

FROM HONOLULU .TO SAN FRAN-CISCO.

S. g. Nebraskan,.... ....April 22

S. S- - NEVADAN MAY 13

FROM SEATTLE AND TACOMA TOHONOLULU.

S S. Nevedan. 8. F April 27

S. S. NEBRASKAN ...MAY 18

: ft

Branch of

Street.

Telephone Alain 86

Sand. Telepfeoh Mala 29S.

METEOROLOGICAL RECORD.

issued Every Sunday Morning by thLocal Office, TJ. 8. Weather Bureau.

WIND

o

j. A. w- - . .Juage urreiania St., near QueenHospital, cottage King St., next Aleiftljander Touns's residence

FOR SALEBuilding lots at Kalihl, Waikiki, Mfr.

noa and Puunui.Apply to W. W. CHAMBERLAIN;

room 206 Judd Building.

FOR RENT.Cottage, 1S27, Wilder Ave $16Cottage, Adam's Lane 20Cottage, School St. 25

Cottage, 1114 Guliek Ave 15Furnished Cottage, Wilder

Ave 20Large House, Nuuanu valley.. 40Furnished House, Nuuanu

valley 75Cottage, Nuuanu Ave 35Two-stor- y House, Nuuanu

" Ave 60Warehouse, center of town... 50Store on Queen St.THE WATERHOUSE COReal Estate Agents, Judd Bldg.

Professional Gards

ARCHITECTS.W. MATLOCK CAMPBELL PhOBf

White 951.

DENTISTS.

H. HACKFELD & COMPANY, LTD., AGENTS.C. P. MORSEl. General Freight Agent.

a fS '. T?'acme, u ransYorWILL CALL FOR YOUR BAGGAGE

We pack, hul and ship your goods and save you money;.

Dealers in stove wood, coal and kindlings.Storage in Brick Warehouse, 126 King Street. Phone Main 58.

liilU 11 LUAgJl fSOO UU. Hustics :k Co., Ltd. a. X3. iijailiv. XJ. XJ . rnnm .'1 1 IJnaJL- -'

NAME OF STOCK, PaCp Val.; Bid 'Ask.i

MkbCantili. Ii405

C. Deiwsb Jt to.. ti .000,000 aooiUUXB.

Ewa i 5,000.0(0 20 j

Haw Agricultural.. .1 l.vOi.OOf ICO i

Haw. C oin Co' 2.S12.7.-.- itHawaiiau euK.r Co.. 2,000,000 i0UotiUmu 7.M.(00 IfX) ;

HonokHa ! 2,000.0i -- 0 10Haiku.... '

ouO-Wi- - 100 lft5Eabuku i 5.0,0i0 i0 i

plhei flau. Co. Ltd..! 5J i saipaiiulu I HW.OUJ 1UJ 25Koloa ! 500 uuO 100McBreSu(t.Co.,Lt4.i S, 0,000 20 rl 4Oahu dusrar Co 3.60ii,i00 1C0 i5Onotuea........ 1.0(i0.0 0 'JO 2iiOokala 500.000 20OUa Supar Co. Ltd... 5.O00.0U0; 20 3Olowalu 150.lX)0 103 84Faauhau iuPlaiiCo 5.OH0 000 50Prtcitic 500,(00 100 200Paia 150.0001 100Pepeekeo 750,000' 100 150Pioneer 2.750,000! 100 37Waialua igri. Co?.... 4.5WI.OI.O 100 60 61Wailuku - 700.000 100 75rt'aiiuku tufar Co.

Scrip 105.000) 00Waimaoaio . . 'Z52X0 100 10Waimea .Sugar MI1 125,000 100 ! 60

MlSCKLLAHKOt'8.iQter-- J aland SJ S. Co. 1.500,000 100 1V4

Hw. Electric Co... 500,000 100 0

H. K.T.4L. Co., Fid. 100 SiH. K. 1 k L. Co.. C. l.i50,or j

Mutual Tel. Co 1S0.OO0 10O. K. & L.Oo 4,tCO,000! 10 100SlloE R. t f i,coo,ooc; wHonolulu Hit wing &

Malting Co L:d .. . 400,00.'; 20 23Amt.Outi

Haw.Ter.,' (Flre (standing;Claim; Jia.wt; ... 1C0

Haw.Ter. 4 p. c. (Re-funding

i

1B05 6ft.00Ci ...Haw. Ter.4J p. c 1.000,000'Haw. Ter. 4 p. o l.COO.O0 .Haw. S p. e Z09,000: ;looCal. Beet A Sue. Rf-Co-- ucoo.ooo'6. p. c 103Haiku 6. p. e 8(i0,000jHaw. Com. 3t iSujjar

C o, 5 p. l,677,00o'Haw. ftugar ft p. c 500,000;Hilo K. K. Co.. 6 p. c. l,0u0,(0 75Hon. K. T. A L. Co.,

6 o. c 70,000 108inuku 6 p. o .... 200,000, iaO. K. & L Co. 6d.( 2.000,000

Janu Miliar Co. 8 p.o.1 750,000iOlaa Huj;ar Co.. 6 p. c. ' 1,250,000Paia 6 p. c 450,000Ploi.eerMll)Co.6p. e.' 1,250, "00; 105'i 106Waialua Ag. Co. 6 p. c.i l,0o0,000iMcHrrtleBugar 2,0 Xt.OOOl j ....'lOO

23.1275 paid. t35 per cent paid.SESSION SALES.(Morning Session.)

50 Kihei, 7.50.

SALES BETWEEN BOARDS.None.

TIIIELEN & "WIIiX,IAMSON

BROKERSStocks, Bonds and Real Estate

FOR SALE.

30 Acres. OF

Pineapple Land: AT

Wahiawa.NO. gi2 FORT STREET.

Ciasliiea AQvcniicmcnts.

WANTED.YOUNG man wanted as salesman fortcountry store; must'have fair knowl-edge of merchandise. Address"Country Store," Advertiser office.

7397

YOUNG man wanted for country storeas shipping clerk. 'Must be activeand have a knowledge of plantationbusiness. Address "Country Store."Advertiser office. 7357

AN EXPERIENCED lady for Art Department. Apply by letter statinjexperience. N. S. Sachs Dry GoodsCompany. 173

A FIRST-CLAS- S salesman for Silksand Dress Goods. Apply by letter,iv. b. Sachs Dry Goods Company. 173

COMPETENT stenographer and typewriter wanted for plantation on Island of Oahu. Reply to "Stenojrapner," this office. 7394

0i KAUAI. A young man as assistant bookkeeper, $60 per month andfound. References required. Stateage and nationality. Address Kauaigazette office. 7393

A LADY for the position of governess,with best of references. Address "A"Advertiser Office. 7390.

CLEAN washed rags at Gazette of-fice, 7376

FOR SALE.HOME in Kona, Hawaii, 32' acres; 4

acres in coffee and fruits; cottage of5 rooms and ofher improvements.Fronting on government road aboveKailua. Address Jas. Edwards, Ki-laue- a,

Kauai. 7390.

AN ENGLISH saddle and bridle; goodcondition. Will bs sold cheap. Inquire at Gazette office. 7376

ACRE PROPERTIES for sale, in andnear Honolulu, at from $300 to $400per acre. Charles S. Desky, ProgressBlock. 7279

COMPLETE set bound volumes Plant-ers' Monthly. 22 vols., 1882 to 1S04.Uniform binding: full sheep. Price$175.00 Address P. M., care HawaiianGazette Co.

FOR RENT.EIGHT-roo- m furnished house for term

of 6 months. High elevation. Ad-dress Q., this office. 173

COTTAGE for rent, also rooms fur-nished or unfurnished. 1114 King St.Susanna Wesley Home. 7394

MOST attractive cottage at Waikikiwith large grounds and cocoanutgrove. Situate directly opposite theHawaiian Annex. Apply to F. J.Church, at the Annex. 73SS

LOST.LADY'S dark gray rain coat, between

Club Stables and Naval wharf.Finder will be rewarded by leavingsame at Club Stables. 7391

ton Building. I63 QueenHENRY BICKNELL, D.D.S. Unlaw'

U. S. A. T. Sheridan. Peabody. 7 day.sfrom San Francisco, passengers andstores to IT. S. Quartermaster, 10:30a. m.

A.-- H. S. S. Oregonian, Nichols, 9 daysfrom Seattle, general merchandise toagents.

U. S. A. T. Dix, Akers, from Manila,5 p. m. (Anchored outside with caseof smallpox.)

, DEPARTED.Am. bkt. S. G. Wilder, Jackson, for

San Frnncisfo, 11 a. m.U. S. S. Lawton, Parker, for Pago

Pago, 1:40 p. m.DUE TODAY.

O. S. S. Ventura, Hayward, fromPago Pago, 6 a. m.

SAIL TODAY.Stmr. Maui, Bennett, for Mahukona,

Faauhau, Kukajau, Ookala, Laupahoehoe and Papaloa, 5 p. m.

Stmr W. G. Hall. Thompson, forKauai ports, 5 p. m.

Stmr. Ke Au Hou, Tullett, for Kauaiports, 5 p. m.

Stmr. Kinau, Freeman, for Maui andHawaii ports. 12 m.

Stmr. Likelike, Naopala, for Molo-k- ai

ports, 5 p. m.T. K. K. S. S. Nippon Maru, Greene,

for San Francisco, 10 a. m.O. S. S. Ventura, Hayward, for San

Francisco, p. m.Stmr. Mauna Loa, Sim'erson,. for

Maui, Kona and Kau ports, 12 m.U. S. A. T, Sheridan, Peabody, for

Guam and Manila, noon.PASSENGR3.

Arrived.Per T. K. K. S. S. Nippon Maru,

April 23. from Orient. For San Fran-cisco: Lam Quan, C. L. Bax, O. D.Bax, Mrs. Pent, G. Bovard. Mrs. G.Bovard, Miss A. Brand, J. H. Bouford,E. Cannon, Mrs. K. E. Clinton andchild, Mrs. A. Curtis, Marcus Covell,H. Dahlms, C. F. Davis, M. Diachen-kof- f,

Miss A. G. Downie, H. V. DeBocarine, Louis De Blois, Dr. J. B.Fowler, F. S. Fulcher, G. Furukawa, J.George, H. H. Glover, W. Hadert, H.J. Haslett, S. Henry, Frank Hitch, T.Kakinchi, H. Kondo, A. Kolwitz, Mrs.Kolwitz, J. W. Kitchen, Miss P. Lange,Miss A. Linker, Frank Lovitt, Geo. M.Lukish, K. Mayeda, Mrs. C. E. Maltby,John MacGregor, T. Macnaughton, R.K. Moore, J. Mustaros, H. Xorthey,Miss M. Northey, E. Ono, T. Oi, E. W.PatUson, Mrs. E. W. Pattison, Mrs. M.Paxton, A. Penner and child, MissQuesnelle, Bernard Rensel, Mrs. E. W.Rice, Miss K. Rice, Wm. Redles, K.Suzuku, T. Saito, H. Sakurai, K. Say-ek- i,

H. H. Sebree, D. H. Singh, J. C.Sweeney, Mrs. J. C. Sweeney, Miss S.Sweeney, W. M. Thakur, Mrs. M. A.Taylor, Miss F. Tencate, J. E. Thompson, A. U. wassenion, jyijss j. waiero,T Yuki. For Honolulu: T. Murakamiand servant.

Per U. S. A. T. Sheridan, April 23,

from San Francisco. San Francisco toHonolulu: Mrs. Joseph G. Pratt anddaughter, family postmaster Honolulu;Mrs. Frank T. Sullivan, wife clerkP. O.; Mrs. J. E. Venable, wife chiefengineer- - U. S. S. Lawton; J. J. Kelly,clerk customs; Major H. Li. Scott,14th Cav.; Capt. J. N. Wright, U. S.M. C, Capt. J. M. Salladay, U. S. M.C; Capt. G. M. Holley, PhilippineScouts; Capt. C. N. Murphy, 13th Inf.,wife and child; Lieut. T. S. Moorman,8th Inf.; Lieut. E. T. Fryer, U. S. M.C; Lieut. F. C. Lander, U. S. M. C;Lieut. B. F. Pope, 8th Inf., and wife;Lieut. R. B. Sullivan, U. S. M. C, wife,two children and mother; Lieut. W. G.Murchison. 19th Inf. ; Lieuts. R. G.Bartlett, W. Ellis, E. W. .Sturdivant,Jr., V. I. Morrison, J. R. Henley, Hol-land M. Smith, U. S. M. C; Lieut. E.R. Ebersole, M. H. S., and wife; Mr.Stephen M. Long, contract surgeon, U.S. A.; Miss Ethel F. Cook, army nursecorps; Miss Mary E. Sheehan, armynurse corps; Mrs. A. U. Loeb and in-

fant; Miss Rose T. McKee, sister em-

ploye Insular Govt.; Mrs. Fanny Salts,mother Mrs. Loeb; Miss Edith Mans-field, sister Col. 2nd Inf.; Ed. N. Ender,pay clerk, U. S. A.; J. H. Porter, clerkheadquarters Philippine Div.; Mrs. A.M. Guittard and nine children; MissAlice E. Scully, family J. J. Gallagher,clerk P. W.; Miss Bertha E. Cary,family J. A; Fay, clerk; S. M. Mason,clerk Q. M. D., and wife; Mrs. Alex-ander O. Brodie, wife Col. Brodie, M.

Lieut. Crai. 26th Bt.:" Theodore Hunt- - J

er bookkeeper Philippine Islands; Mrs.John A. Gamill and two children, fam-ily Superintendent of Schools, Iloilo;F. W. Gorham, employe navy, wifeand daughter; Mrs. W. T. Maffey andchild, family employe navy; Geo. T.Gazeltlne, master shipwright, navy;Mrs. E. M. Williams, wife orderly ser-geant; John R. Kuykendall, clerknavy; Mrs. Geo. M. Pottle; J. R. VanFossen, clerk navy (Guam); 492 en-

listed men U, S. Marine Corps; 26 en-

listed men U. S. Army. --

Departed.Per bkt. S. G. Wilder, April 23, for

San Francisco. Mr. and Mrs. Gordon,Mrs. Bauman, Mr. J. Wilcox, Mrs. R.Weir, Miss Gordon.'

Booked to Depart.Per O. K. S. Ventura. April 24, for

San Francisco. D. M. Ross. Miss Mc-Lean, F. Thomas and wife, H. T. Cook,H. K. Brown and wife. C. P. Buseltine,Miss Buseltine, T. H. Petrie, W. J. Mc- -Inerny, S. Pontual, Mr. and Mrs. Mar--quardt, J. Andrade, W. H. Sigafoos, S.P. Bartley and wife, Miss C.berg, Miss Flood, A. W. Kirkland andwire, j.. n. iteynojas, x. vv . iooron, .u.S. Woods, J. D. Dole, H. G. Thrift, A.McC. Ashley and wife, C. J.' Palpi andson, E. Winant, E. W. Quinn. G. W.Brown, Mr. and Mrs. H. C. Turner, E.B. Weller, James E. Jaeger, H. H. Ren-to- n,

J. L. P. Robinson, Mr. and Mrs.Alexander Young, A. Robinson, DanCrowley. R. A. Mc Wayne. Dr. Putnam,Oscar White, Jose Pond, J. S. Young,Jr., C. D. Green and wife. J. C. Coneyand wife. Rev. W. J. Cleveland andwife. B. T. Nishimura, Mrs. Toku. MissBaker, Mrs. S. Tanaka, C. R. Faurot.S. D. Lewin, F. G. de Rosa, F. W.Gildersleeve and son, W. Rouse, W. F.Franks, G. Wagner, Miss I. Mills, K,Yamanoka, Walter Doyle, Mrs. J. H.Richards. Mrs. E. Swank, Miss L.Swank. Miss D. Swank? Mr. and Mrs.W. J. Kline, H. G. Ramsay. Mr. andMrs. J. D. Marques, Mrs. J. B. Freitas,

For Sale

Kapiolani Park Addition, Mon-sarr- at

Avenue, five lots 200 feet

frontage, best view in tract.

Lots graded ready for building.

Low price for quick sale.

HENRY WATERHOUSE

TRUST CO., LTD.

Corner Fort and Merchant Sts.,

Honolulu.

A splendid opportunity isoffered in completely furnish-ed houses one in Manoa Val-

ley,S3--

one on Beretania street,and one on Thurston avenue.

ftwTO LET.

B1

Liliha St., 2 B. R $10.00Union St., 2 B. R 20.00

Green St., 3 B. R 40.00

Thurston Ave., 3 B. R. 40.00Young St., 3 B. R 20.00

Victoria, 5 B. R 35.00Xonpariel St., 2 B. R... 17.00

Nuuanu St., 2 B. R 30.00

Xuuanu St., 5 B. R... .40.00Waikiki Road, 5 B. R.. 25.00

Lunalilo St., 3 B. R 0.00Beretania St.. 2 B. R 25.00Young St., 2 B. R...... 30.00

King St., 2 B. R 25.00

Stores on Beretania St.,Nuuanu St. and HotelSt.

NOTICE.

Beginning with May 1. 1906, theALEXANDER YOUNG HOTEL, willbe conducted on the EUROPEANPLAN only.

NOAH W. GRAY,7391 Manager.

J. P. Dias, Mrs. J. W. Laing, Mrs. G.C. Walker, Mrs. M. A. Salisbury, Mrs.C. D. Gilfiilan, Miss E. K. Gilfillan, Mr.Moffitt, W. A. Bryan, Mrs. W. W. Hall,P. H.Crombe and wife, Mrs. B. J.Waddell, J. S. Horton and wife, L. L.Gray and wife, Mrs. P. Watson, Mr.and Mrs. E. A. Bruck and son. Miss J.M. Tebbs, Dr. and Mrs. Mouritz.

TEAKSPOET SEEVICE.Logan, sailed from Manila for Hono-

lulu and San Francisco, April 15.Thomas, sailed for Guam and Manila,

April 4.Sheridan, in port.Sherman, sailed for San Francisco,

April 18.Lawton. sailed for Pago Pago, Apr. 23,

" "JBUina'Supply, atMeade, at Manila.Dix, in port.Warren, at San Francisco.Buford, at San Francisco.Crook, at San Francisco.

DIED.FALK In San Francisco, April 13, 1905.

Ray G. Falk. beloved husband ofAnnie Falk, father of R. G. Falk, Jr.,and Marion Falk and brother of Mrs.Gussie Schmitt, Mrs. J. P. Sargentand C J. Falk.

(lasted Advertisements

SITUATIONS WANTED.BY A LADY as housekeeper, nurse or

companion. Address W., P. O. BoxS16. 7292

OFFICES FOR RENT.STORE on Fort street, next to Club

Stables, now occupied by Y. Wo Sin?& Co. Possession given May 1. In-quire Club Stables. Tel. Main 109.

7396

THE STANGENWALD." only fire-proof office buildMng In city.

ALEXANDER YOUNG 3TJILDING,Honolulu's only up-to-d- fire-pro- of

building; rent includes electric light,hot and cold water and janitor ser-vice. Apply the Von Hamm-Youn- g

Co.. Ltd. 7276

ROOM AND BOARD.ONE LARGE front mosquito-proo- f

room with board, in private family,for man and wife. Electric lights,hot and cold water. Cars pass thedoor, etc. Address M. E. D. 7397

' Having baggage contracts with the foHoi?! tteamship lines:v.Ooeania Sm hii O. ; Pacific Mail Sttsfeflfc'p Co.,0eWentaI Oriental Bteanahlp Co. Toy K&.isa Kaizli Steamship Co.

We check your baggage at you? home, savilajj you the trouble6f checking on the wharf.

Piano and Furniture Moving-- a Specialty.

"j. TV Morgan. President; C. f. Campbell, Vice-Preside- nt; J. I Mc--KXaa, Secretary; A. w. CKurk, Treasurer; w. is. tiedge, Auditor; jnrazucHnstac, Manager.

UliAYMEN", 63 Queen itivsct.,DEAUGRS IN s

FIREWOOD. STOVE and STEAM COAL.K Also Whtt and Black

THE PACIFIC

Commercial AdvertiserXatered at the Post Office at Honolulu,

T. H., as second-clas- s matter.u.

SUBSCRIPTION RATES:One Year S1200ElZ Months 6.00

Advertising rates on application.

Published every morning except Sundayby the

HAWAIIAN GAZETTE CO., LTD.,Ton Holt Block, No. 65 South King St.G S. CRANE - MANAGER

LOCAL omCE OP THE UNITEDSTATES WEATHER BUREAU.

Alexander Young Building. Honolulu,Monday, April 23, 1906.

& s " a oS 'l5 30-P- 9 7S 68 . 08 75 5M 1 ao-- K) 70 T 67 3T 17, 80.10 81 73 T 62 2W 18 30-1- 2 SO 70 T 63 7T !l9. 30.W 7S 70 T 68 2F ;V0 80 08 74 67 08 75 5S jal 0 78 68 T J 64 5

street, corner Hotei; Tel. Main M4

....... . ':.music. .

PIANO taught in 6 months by experienced teacher; $3 month (8 lessons);special attention to adult beginner;Address Music, this office. 7391

HUGO HERZER Teacher of singing.corner of Beretania and Miller Uor Bergatrom Music Co.

BishopTrust Co.

Limited.

Do a general trust andsecurity business.

Act as Executor, Guard-ian, Assignee or Trustee.

Manage Estates, real andpersonal.

Safe Deposit Boxes forRent.

75 MERCHANT STREETHONOLULU.

FOR SALE !

A LOT (100x23?) on Rose St.. Kalihlwith outbuildings and other substan-tial improvements and water laid on.Good neighborhood. This lot is plantedwith a large variety of the choicest'fruit trees, all in full bearing, and hasfine soil. Price $1700; a real bargain.A house and large lot on Hotel St. Just

few more Kaimuki lots, the best andheapest in the market on easiest

terms. Several good a.id cheap homesin Nuuanu tract and other parts of theity. A large lot at Leleo, close to

Aala park, less than half price.

FOR RENT !(

Two clean, roomy, newly papered"cottages with electric light, free ofcharge, on verandas, and within walling distance from Postoffiee at $17 pe2

month. Good horse pasture withlweasy reach at $3 per head per month.

J. H. SCHNACK.

STEINWAYAND OTHER PIANOS.

THAYER PIANO CO.156 AND 158 HOTEL STREET,

Opposite Young: Hotel.

J? ? THERMO. 52 r!5 WIND9 i

S 1 1--

sr S 2 s 5 rr'P 23 ST

- ? : s g I laM I ' : - g ; li

cI '

1V 30Jffi 60 6 7 18 72 7 Ngj

1901 29 916i 6 j 73 .00 6S i sw . ..1C02 30i. 17 70 I 7 .01 74 4 5K ...13CS 78 68 73 .01 70 2 S ....29.Wj

3SC4 86.04; 78 71 74 .11 76 4 Se ....C5 130.18 78 69 74 01 58 j 2 KE 11

i ! i

1 SO-1- 4' 60 72 i 76 T W 5 SE 9

ATgc 30-C- 7 i 69 j 74 05 69 4 V '

8NK 8NE 10NJt fl

ItNR ieKB is

Note: Barometer readings are cor-rected for temperature, instrumentalerrors and local gravity, and reducedto sea level. Average cloudiness statedin scale from 0 to 10. Direction of windIs prevailing direction during 24 hoursending at 8 p. m. Velocity of wind Isaverage Velocity in miles per hour.

ALEX. McC. ASHLEY.Section Director.

TIDES. SUN AND MOON.

3 "3

a, . l, i s o s !

IP 111 Ft ia m a m.lp I!'..M 23 4.05 6 8.25; V 2tT10 35 5 31 6.22'sets !

)T 24. 4 38 1 7 3.53 9 5011.13 5.34 6.22 j

W 25 5 18 1 7 4 23 10 13 11.58,5.33 6.23 8.25

T 2tV 5.5D; 1 7 4.5311 40 ...15.32 6 231 .14I i 'ami I j

F 27j 1 1.6, 5 25 11.07 8 5.32 6.2310.04III) i ( I

S 28 7 20 1-- 8 6 1211 41 1 49 5.31 6.2410.53I I I pin.

29 8 lti 1 5 7 .25 12 27 2.59 5 80 6 2411 43

New moon April 23rd at 5:35 a. m.Times of the tide are taken from the

United States Coast ana Geodetic Sur-vey tables.

The tides at Kahului and Hilo occurhout one hour "axlier than at Hono-

lulu.t

Hawaiian Standard tlm In In fennra30 minutes slower than Greenwich '

time, being that of the meridian of 157degrees thirtv minutes. The time whis-tle blows at 1:30 p. m., which Is thesame as Greenwich, 0 hours 0 minutes.Sun and toon are for local tint terthe whole .Touy.

ALEX. M'C. ASHLEY,Section Director.

THE OLD RELIABLE STAND; PANAMA AND STRAW

EC --A. T SCleaned and Block-wor-k Absolutely

Guaranteed.

Globe Clothing Co. HOTEL STREET.