ft?;COLUMBUS, Ohio, March 31. (Spo-cia-l to Tho AdvertiBOr) Sixty-fou-r bodies of flood victims wcro...

8
1 Jim i wi iyr'"tdV' vmyy.!w wi iVilraTlta'i" "IT. TP"H ""ip'"'r' VOL VL. NO. 119 HONOLULU, HAWAII TERRITORY, TUESDAY, APRIL 1, 1913. -S- EMI WEEKLY. WHOLE MO. 1811 HAD TO I WIS. BUT STARVED DEATH, SAT PHYSICIANS -- J. P. MORGAN DEAD IN ROME Wall Street Mourns for Him Blame Put on Congress (Br Federal Wireless Tsfocnph.) ROME, March 31. (Spocial to Tho Advortiscr) J. Piorpont Morgan, tho famous Amcrlcnn finnncior, died at tho Grand Hotel hero at flvo minutes after twolYo o'clock this afternoon. Tho announcement of his death was withhold from tho nowspapoTS until pri-vat- o cables had been sent to tho Mor- gan banking houses in London and New York. Tho end was pcacoful and came whilo tho great finnncior was unconscious. Herbert Sattorleo, Morgan's Mrs. Sattcrlce, Morgan's daughter; Professor Bastianelli, Doctor Starr, Doctor Dixon and othors-o- f tho Morgan party wcro at tho bodsido v.3n tho end came. For hours botoro his death Morgan was in n stato of coma. Mrs. Battcr-ie- o visited her father at cloven o'clock and again at noon. Throughout tho morning Mrs. Sattorleo and hor hus- band remained in an adjoining room, waiting tho end. Blames Uongress. Doctor Starr declared Morgan's death was duo to the strain inc.acntal to his rocent appearance boforo tho American t congressional committee, neaaeu Dy Representative Pujo, which investigat- ed Amorica's money trusts. Monarchs Interested. Representatives of Popo Pius, tho King of Italy and tho German, British and Grcolc Embassies called at tho hotel today to enquire into condition. They were told that ho was near death. Morgan's death followod a wook of critical Ulnces. Ho had been practically Hnc6nscTous since last Wednesday. Arrivod Very 111. When J P. Morgan arrived at Na ples from Egypt ho was brought on a special train. Ho was palo and ema-- , ciated and had to bo helped on and ott his private car. Despito his apparent' 'he continually puffed big black cigars. Since his arrival in Rome four nurses and half a- dozen of most noted specialists were in constnut nttondanco. Doctors Dixon and Hnstianclli ordered that ho tnlto a complete rest except for an occasional drive; Morgan remained in his rooms. Could Eat Nothing. On Easter Sunday, tho banker was etricken with indigestion and weaken-- , d rapidly. Death was directly duo from the banker's inability to obtain nourishment from his food. Sinco Easter his physicians had .been unable to induce Morgan to cat becauso of a lack of functional vitality of tho nervo centers, the refusal of tho muscles of tho throat to work making it impossi- ble) for him to swallow. Ho was fed by injection, but this holped but littlo Last night it was discovered that Morgan was not nssimilating oven tho liquid diet and his physicians know tho end was near. Morgan had no illness and suffered no pain. Ho just wasted awny, simply liecnuso his body was incapable ot nourishing itself. Knew End Was Near. Tho great financier knew that ho had not long to live. When ho arrived at .Naples from Egypt, Herbert Sattcrlce, Ms pleaded with him to re- turn nt once to Now York. Morgan rofufod, saying ho probably would tiovcr be able to go abroad again and wished to say goodbye to his friends among tho crowned heads of Europo and others. Tho critical rnndit'nn of the lluuncler whs withheld uiitll'Snturduy, when it was admitted by Satterloo. Hotel Besieged. Tho Orund Hotel wn besieged Sun-li- by toiirints and reporters inquir- ing about hi condition. Ijit nlglit n bulletin wiih lMied by Morgun's phy-- cinn which ttuteil that ho wan sink- ing np'illy, that his iuli wm HO, Mh ten pent nro 101 mid rcuplriitlon 18, After the death was niiiiouiicml the (Irili'l wu ownvliulineil iy crowd. IN ''"I wiio'tM rttH i i v. .OHK, Mfll II. (rlil li i .!) A Iwjl CMWiJ galwtr ' i' Mitw ('wii.u ' ot I In. ll.UlJU4.tl, 111 , Ul it ,.i t. . i,i,,.u, ,4 , niw u'timsit, . I. n lli Miivf ilur fuivwy it , imU. I. .I.,... .1. .,MU, ..Il,uf Jl il .,(.,, ), Ihl, .. 1 1 ,.lll,l. II 1,1, . , 4, ; l 1,, .,,,, i i ,.! . ll. I I . , f, 1k it I ll H. , Ut I t - . ' 'I I I' M !,. $ ... J. PIEEPONT MORGAN ft?; say that hereafter tho firm will confino itsolf strictly to conservative banking policy devoting but little attention to speculation. In a statement issued hero, Henry Clews, member of tho Morgan's firm, blamed Morgan 's nppearnnco beforo tho house committee which investigated tho money trust as hastening tho banker's doath. OF s penii n (Ilv Federal Wireless Telegraph.) LONDON, MARCH 31. (SPE- - : OIAL TO TIHJ ADVERTISER) ALARMING DISPATCHES ARE . TELLING OF AUSTRIA'S IN-- TENTION TO INVADE MON-- TENEGRO, SHOULD THE LAT- - TER CONTINUE TO BOMBARD SCUTARI. THESE WERE RE- - OEIVED HERE TODAY. I., ii AIHHIISE PALO ALTO, Aprl 1. (By Associ- ated Press Cablo) Tho nine from Honolulu won their second bnbcbill game yesterday, defeating tho fabt Stanford University team with a one-side- score. Tno Chinese ran up a total of seven runs, with fivo hits and two errors, while tho Collegians wcro held down to threo runs and four hits. Seven errors found their way into the Varsity score. Tho battcrv for tho Chinese was All Hcong and Kan Yen. IN TWO BUTTLES OJr WiWal WirrirM TVeriS. DUltANOO, Mexico, March 31. (bpeclal to The Advertiser) Following a sharp battlo at San Gabriel, thirty-flv- o miles north of here, six hundred federals defeated n band of one thou- sand rebel today, Eighty nlnu nro dead today, follow I ml' a sixtccn-liou- r Imttlo between a liuuilful of federals and u band of eight liniuired follower or Currunzu, rebel Governor of Coiihulla, at Lampatos, eighty mill tenth of here, LEWIS' NOMINATION PAPERS IRE MISSING Tilt u h Ut tiy uij wtiLh uoh.i HHWI 1WI ll t9 IIII IIUI. ftiwl. 'Iimt ! itw Mtw a! Juimmi i lm, wh li.n 1" ii iKpuiiu.i . ii.. fUnUH U4ilict UUU'IMV, lik.ii i, t I.. . 1. ILIIllJ I . I l.ltL Ii MlllIlL I ,, U,WI, ,,., ', uUln t ,,!, (1, M (l ,,, im4ut l(1 B Relief Funds are o o o o Soldiers Seize i' Fulrriil WlrlM Trtrcrnvn 1 I DAYTON, Ohio, Mnrch 31. (Spocinl to The Advortiscr) Following com- plaints that some dcnlcrs are charging exorbitant prices, the militia soized all grocery stores early today. Soldiers nro guarding tho stores nnd relief rom-intttc- nre distributing supplies from on sumo. A record is boing kept of theso distributions and tho grocers will bo p.ild n reasonable sum for their foods. Money Is Needed. John Patterson, president of tho Na- tional Cash Register Company, who is directing the rolief work, stated todny: "The relief committco has all tho food and clothing necessary at present. Money is urgently required to put tho! city in condition to prevent tno out-- 1 reak of serious diseases nnd rehabili- tate the thousands of homes." Patterson also wired President Wil- son early toilay: "I am guilty of no crime. I want no pardon. I want only iust'co and soniQ federnl action making Dayton safe from a recurrence of bucIi a catastrophe ns it has just had." to Bcliof Funds Slow. COLUMBUS, Ohio, March 31. (Spo-cia- l to Tho AdvertiBOr) Sixty-fou- r bodies of flood victims wcro in tho morgue hero today, but only threo of them havo been identified. Tho waters which covered central In- diana nnd Ohio havo receded, leaving mud and slimo everywhere. Governor Cox has been advised that tho situation throughout tho Stato is "now well in hand." Japanese and Chinese o o c o Americans Helped Them Indicating tho wido spirit of sym- pathy is among tho people of Honolulu for tho Ohio flood sufferers, tho Chincso and .Tapaneso of this city yestordny respond- ed in tho most generous manner to tho call of distress from tho mainland, ac- centuating their donations w,ih cxpTOS- - p'ong of gratitudo for what Jtho citizens ot tno united atntes havo dono w.tho, ot relief rclicf whicli IVrst rclicf to it signature. rnnsiilnrolilft a : to Tho Advcr- - tiscr contributions will bo fully acknowledged in i1nv' Respond. Mr. Westervelt, with A. Cottril constitute imcKeyo reports with tho yesterday is still $r00 and moro is plodged, uoaiuc to tno n fund, amounting to Thero yUBQLl'H HIIUWKIi:ii II , , ,.. ,. wl l.ll,l.lj. v ' it- i lit ii at i niuu - . I" l' I III II ll "" " il'i"l" ' l ' I I ':', " ' l.l .1- . iiiIm Much Needed o o o Grocery Stores Money is needed through the flooded uisiricis oi vinio very natuv. uuiy was received by tho relief although more thnn $1,250,000 had been subscribed throughout tho country.. Rehabilitation is progressing Tapldly. There is from four to five foot of slimo tho streets of tho west sldo of Columbus. Illinois City Alarmed. SHAWNEBTOWN, March .11. (Special to Tho Advertiser) Tho Ohio is rising more rapidly than ever hofore nnd tho is two feet higher than nny former record and is still rising. Women nnd children hnvo nlready been sent to tho companies of militia nro patrol- ling tho city with orders to and kill any one attempting to loot. Dispatches from Evansvllle, htivo been received warning that tho flood is sweeping the valley, doing immense damage. Appeal to Wilson. CAIRO, March The Advertiser) Fearing in rising waters, citizens of are making n gonernl exodus today. Every is boing to strength-o- n levees but help is scarco and nnd Wilson havo been appealed to. Worst in Forty Yoars. CINCINNATI, Ohio, March 31. (Special to Tho Advertiser) Tho Ohio river is tho highest it has hoen in forty bore today. A maximum of sev- enty foet is expected. Contributing Liberally o o o Now is Their Turn also tho fund of $561 from Chi- ncso Merchants' Association. An exceedingly pleasant foaturo of the day was a committco from tho Chung Wah Merchants' Association, iomposod Chu Gem, O- Kim Fook, Ching Shni, Pang Lum Lung Man and Wong Chaw, hunted up Mr. Wcstcrvclt nnd turned over to him tho subscriptions from tho Chincso of tho The committee spokesman ox- - ilay School 20.00 Mrs Ii. II. MllTX 10.00 s Cn!tl0 - 00 C'' 00 ,: V.0"" Gulick 10.00 .1.0. Dock us. 10.w to tho Front. Tho following letter sent to Tho Ad- - vcrtisor from Kditor Shebn, of tho Ha wn oipo, "Honolulu, March 31, 1813. "Editor Advertiser: It ctves mo to aniiounco that tho Japancso community of Honolulu is (Continued on paco 8.) ' WAIJ'llll I'AUIl. I I'.r -Wri t ..., nH i'p 1jii i. .....-- , ., ,. , U...11.1 . ,,ii, , i l i, ,.,.. .1 . .l.i,. ... .. past for' theso countries in times 'Of llis- - pressed its sympathy, and that of their countrymen here, tho sufferers in tho States, and stated that not only was As treasurer tho fund com- - (h,s for thp of t,,0 flo()( v,t, nnttoe of the Uucltcye Club Rov W. D. but also an expression of appreciation Westcnolt, yesterday afternoon, for- - for tho aid tho United Stat has warded, through tho National e,tpndod to tne Chinese nt the timo of Rank, to Governor Cox of Oliio, $2000 rwr floa dier for tho of tho Hood sufferers. This Queen Also Contributes, makes a total of; $7000, which has al-- ! ready gono forward help those who1 Ul Il8f of BUuscrlptions reported by need in this timo of disaster. i;Mr- - Westorvclt ami Mr. Cottrnl yes- - In tho senate yesterday tho bil- - ap- - Jonlnyi ns fo lows: propriating $10,000 to tho flood s lerers Queen Lllluokaloni $100.00 passed final reading and went to tho Robinson 100.00 house, where it will bo upon C- - V' lauhea. . . 10.00 uniclri,- - m.,i fi.n,, r. 4 i, n..o.... I'ortugiieso Congregational Sun- - tor his mnnmr 1,,1I the relief fund through yesterday and Wcdncs- - t,nni.r Too, who Charles tho committco of tho Ulut), that tho trnding of $2000 there left in tho bank about $1.j0 which roliably auuiwons about $200. ,ff.riir ulm l'l.l,, m '" ,1 $23(5,000 Illinois, river Wabash hills. Two shoot Indiana, Cairo down Illinois, 31. (Special death the tho Cniro effort made tho President years tho whon of Mau, Chow city. Japancso explains itselt: trrcat plcasuro )'. FlL. aster. for recently, Mnrlt acted theso Chincso, SPREGKLES M BERLIN AND PAGE FDR ID10N NAMED Btf PRESIDENT Iii.li.ii -- j..i i.. ....-- i i. ..I .in I LANE WANTS TO SEE CANDIDATES WALLER NOT DECIDED ABOUT TRIP WATSON BAYS HE WILL NOT CIO. . v WASHINGTON, March 31. (Special by Cablo to Tho Advcr- - tlsor) Secrotary of tho Interior Lano today Informed your corro- - spondont that ho will mako n roc- - ommendation to Prcsidont Wilson rogardlnr; tho governorship of Ha- - wail until tho various Democratic candidatos havo vlsitod Washing- - ton and ho has had a cnanco to sco thorn personally, YfALKER. "That confirms tlio information had jfrom Washington bomo days ago," said O. J. Waller yesterday afternoon, whon shown tho nbovo despatch to this paper. "1 understand that Secretary Lano wishes to talk over tho Hawaiian situn. tion with Uiq gubernatorial candidates, ns well as to look over tho candidates themselves. I saw tho secretary only a snort timo ago, howovor, and I do not know definitely whether ho wishes mo to uiako nnothor trip to Washington or not. "I havo not made up my mind whethor I should go or not." Mr. Wallor had several letters from Washington yostorday and appeared considerably chcorod with thoir con tents, although ho told no part of tho nows they contained for publication. I Watson Not doing, Edward M. Wntson, tho third of tho inreo nvoweu candidates L, L. boing now on his way to tho National Capital stated again yester- day that ho has no intention, especially at this time, of making a trin to Wash- - ; ington. Ho qualified this, however, by I saying that ho would no if Sceretnrv Lone personally requested him to, or wnson sent nun n note to this effect. I "Otherwise," said Mr. Wntson, "I do not enro to eo to Wnshlnirtnti n push mysolf as a candidate. Jly friends thero uro looking after my interests, and tho trip is a long and oxpensivo uiio. iiowevcr, it i am asked by Jlr, Lano to meet him thoro, 1 "will-g- foi I am, physically, well able to mako the trip. .Mr. Watson has received no intiniu-tio- n by cable, or otherwise, that bin lresonco in Washington is necessary to further his candidacy. Ho Ims roceutlv recoivcil ictterH from n numlior of In-- , lluential men in tho National Canitul 'expressing their cordiul desiro to havo lum named tho next Oovcrnor of tht Territory anil nssiirlng him of their sup port. Mr. Wntson was smilingly optimistic ns to his chances for tho governorship. "I am improving ranidlv in health an.l can attend to my work ns usual," Jio said. "I hope soon to bo ontirelv rn- - covered nnd my physician tells mo it 13 uiii- - n (jtumion oi timo, " '' Til START HILO 1'RORK COMMISSION. William Williamson of Hono- lulu. Dr. Harold H. T.lliot, presi- dent of hoard of trado, Hilo. .Imlgo Archibald 8. Mnhuulu, district magistrate of Wuialua. (iovcriior I'roar is oxpocteil to send the iiiuiil'H of tho three men ubovn to the senate this morning, asking tho ap- pro' ul of Unit body for their appoint-mci- t us inembors of the illlo luveatlgat-ni- g fominisHloii. Tint naming of Judge Mnluuilii ns a member of the t'oinuilj-i- i ii has been urged for tlm purpose of malting tho I'liiiiiiilsulnii one tyjilcally ri'pri-i.intiih- f nil peoilo in tlm Tor-lit- uml for the fnrtliur reamu that I lie nittgistrntn U fir his nlilllly to iiircfiilly wiiluli ovl-- i lieu mid get nt tlm bdttiim of rniidi- - tK.llH i inemor J'rowr it imInrtooiI to Imvit nirifiilly rfintlilurtMl tlm iimntM of u 'ii ii or more wtlMtnowii eilliwiit, ineii H'iiihiI ,i prolwble iiimiiliTn of thtt loin- nm, but iu Hi) gUi nliuvii In lit)-l.- , , , lu funtMiu lb uiiuitM uf tlm ihiui ii., Hill ruiiijiriM liiv lly, I'Iioii1i II. flooding liU, lb" imrt iiimi. will prulmbly nut I m ,,.ll,llf uf tlltl WHiNliMioil, It is now H,i irlwiiil lliut h ruwwlMUuu will look to hi in II aiotl iMlwriinl i.l i ii'iidui'liuK tUt livigiiiii STMKST TALE IET TOLD in M Another Survivor of Moi Wahine Wreck Has Been Found Korean Sailor Turns Up With Amazing Story In tho person of Han Duck Hyung, Korean, another survivor of tho famous Moi Wnhino wreck in tho Moloknt channel has boon found. Since tho lit- tlo schooner went down, cut in two, just two years ngo, until last night, it was not known that any ono of thoso aboard her, except Captain Sam Mnna, had survived. Captain Sam dors not know yot, nnd will not know until ho hears tho nows this morning, that whilo ho was swimming through tho miles of choppy wntor towards Lanal another twimmor was near him, struggling for life, nnd that whilo ho was resting on Lanal, recovering from his great swim- ming feat, ono of his men was lying oa tho littlo island of Molokini, deliriously raving from tho effects of tlio hnrdships ho hnd survived. Walking upon the footsteps of Officer nnd Interpreter John Woo, Han Duck Hyung, n fcobje, crippled man, startled tho detective department nt tho pollco station last night. For two years tho history of this famous wreck has been tlio history of ono survivor old Cap- tain Sam but before tho startled po- llco there stood another survivor, who after boing considered dead and buried deep in tho Pacific, now makes n d but dignifiod ontrance into His- tory ns n hero of some magnitude. Ruined physically by tho most ter- rific effort towards heard of in tlio Islands for ninny, many years, this Korean last night proved himself to bo n survivor of that tcrriblo experience, although ho has but a dim recollection of tho wntcry hell ho went through after tho schooner wont to tho bottom, rninmed by the lighthouso ten-de- r ICukui. Ho told his tnlo too circumstantially to bo doubted. Swam Twonty-tw- Miles. This story, incredible ns it seems, in- cludes n swim of twenty-tw- o miles nnd of an indefinite stay on a barren rock, whero ho drank suit water until left him, nnd providential .Tap'incso fishermen arrived, The story Han Duel; Hyung tells is different in many ways from that told by old Sam Mnna, tho aged Hawaiian hero who Bwam nlmost a dozen miles himself bo- foro limiting a landing. Tlio Korean wns in finest detail by Chief McDufllo last night ns to the beginning of tho voyage, in nn attempt to determine whether tho man was an impostor or not. Ho proved absolutely that ho was not, assisted by records of tho police Three years ago tho man was an informer for McDufllo and a number of men about tho pollco station last night recognized Bears ho carried. Was Polico Informer. Just beforo tlio Moi Wahlno loft Ho- nolulu on her Iimt crulso, tlio informer had caused tho raiding of a blind pig, in which enso ho was tho principal wit- ness. When tho man was "drowned" tho ease had to bit dropped. Tho Inci- dent was reported in Tlio Advertiser ut the time. The local Korean community bolicvcd linn Duck Hyung to liu iloudj tlio believed lilin dead, Ciiptnlii Snm mid ho was dead, uml the pollco bo lloved him dead, so ihiud, in fiirt, that they nolle iirimsoil his llijuor fiifco for luck of n wltnesa. His Strange Htory. IIAii'h ntory of tlio llrnt part of tlio trip conforms with the known facts, Of tin- - iielual wriiuk. tiieuklng through mi iiilerpfulur, lie mild lust iiightt "It was my turn In sleep uml I wut dft'k. Nuiiiti Hum In the night, I do not know wlion. tho tlir Iforinmi I'ttimi don ii hiii) wo lie mo up. went on iltwlt uml tw iH'ury tiling In (jnut 1'Uilfiwluu. Or wit wuv tvrii breuluug hut I In' deck. I liiMinl Hi tujiliiiii u on urilvr to luwiir tlio ut, U rU Hio lllp, HUll lbU III cut duWII lite llin-,- Wlillu u worn do) My hit tlif l r rulitwl urn. Wlmo I u,s thul n . t liVi'llllljUU ililliyirilUii 1 Ii. W HI, I,, i.iitt lii Id it in in) ' ii I liu n I.I. I, 'III if Mil, 111. I up 141 I Ill III, l.i No llii- -i i Ui bn U III lti'n.i.ni.. II i '' I'ImImi, It U Mild, Mil M mh.ii ,u ii. "' Mi' ! In I n.i I i illllpU (UllflllU Itl Plll-l- il i ' llii" I'VlJ liiulni! .. I Ml. i . kUKl'"H wl lit Uyl.i..l - I ll. ''''I' M''t "tt" "" " '" '"' ' i.i n.nviiii trill w I.. i.i i i.i. 1, i" i ii iii, i In ii. h- i- ,i.. ul Itilt wMi. Ml I II I Ii - ..,if 4 . i i in ijni ..it iin ni. mill i. PAWm Wm HUD ...MirUw-,- . iii, rfOmi tfuitftf iiti.i4 i ii" ' ' .... I IIWI fl'i. !,, '.' II l.llil.lll'l 'I' ' I. . ' ' !r':. '.. ' ;,:,: I. .1 . I I II, , ,1 ' i !l I ' , I . 111 III. II. I, 'i ' ll I. . I - "' ll lUi 1I viUgU.. . I I , , . i .1 "'. i I li a l,,: ( . I) ll d.i 1,11 I.I I . I ll ,. .1 . . I .1 . I , ...It- - ri, ... , I ... I , .111.11 .1 ll I 11.11 . 'I , I H(t ! If. II l I II ll, 1,1 1,1 II ' M ,' W ,, I , I. ,, j ll lu; I,- -, (til I I I I I nii Wk. i .t III. 1.1 I I I' .1 ll'flf.J MM I Il ! I -- m

Transcript of ft?;COLUMBUS, Ohio, March 31. (Spo-cia-l to Tho AdvertiBOr) Sixty-fou-r bodies of flood victims wcro...

Page 1: ft?;COLUMBUS, Ohio, March 31. (Spo-cia-l to Tho AdvertiBOr) Sixty-fou-r bodies of flood victims wcro in tho morgue hero today, but only threo of them havo been identified. Tho waters

1 Jim i wi iyr'"tdV' vmyy.!w wi iVilraTlta'i""IT. TP"H ""ip'"'r'

VOL VL. NO. 119 HONOLULU, HAWAII TERRITORY, TUESDAY, APRIL 1, 1913. -S- EMI WEEKLY. WHOLE MO. 1811

HAD

TOI

WIS. BUT STARVED

DEATH, SAT PHYSICIANS

--J. P. MORGAN DEAD IN ROME

Wall Street Mourns for

Him Blame Put

on Congress

(Br Federal Wireless Tsfocnph.)ROME, March 31. (Spocial to Tho

Advortiscr) J. Piorpont Morgan, thofamous Amcrlcnn finnncior, died at thoGrand Hotel hero at flvo minutes aftertwolYo o'clock this afternoon.

Tho announcement of his death waswithhold from tho nowspapoTS until pri-vat- o

cables had been sent to tho Mor-

gan banking houses in London and NewYork.

Tho end was pcacoful and came whilo

tho great finnncior was unconscious.Herbert Sattorleo, Morgan'sMrs. Sattcrlce, Morgan's daughter;Professor Bastianelli, Doctor Starr,Doctor Dixon and othors-o- f tho Morganparty wcro at tho bodsido v.3n thoend came.

For hours botoro his death Morganwas in n stato of coma. Mrs. Battcr-ie- o

visited her father at cloven o'clockand again at noon. Throughout thomorning Mrs. Sattorleo and hor hus-

band remained in an adjoining room,waiting tho end.

Blames Uongress.Doctor Starr declared Morgan's death

was duo to the strain inc.acntal to hisrocent appearance boforo tho American t

congressional committee, neaaeu DyRepresentative Pujo, which investigat-ed Amorica's money trusts.

Monarchs Interested.Representatives of Popo Pius, tho

King of Italy and tho German, Britishand Grcolc Embassies called at thohotel today to enquire intocondition. They were told that ho wasnear death.

Morgan's death followod a wook ofcritical Ulnces. Ho had been practicallyHnc6nscTous since last Wednesday.

Arrivod Very 111.

When J P. Morgan arrived at Naples from Egypt ho was brought on aspecial train. Ho was palo and ema-- ,ciated and had to bo helped on and otthis private car. Despito his apparent'

'he continually puffed bigblack cigars. Since his arrival in Romefour nurses and half a- dozen of

most noted specialists were inconstnut nttondanco. Doctors Dixonand Hnstianclli ordered that ho tnlto acomplete rest except for an occasionaldrive; Morgan remained in his rooms.

Could Eat Nothing.On Easter Sunday, tho banker was

etricken with indigestion and weaken-- ,d rapidly. Death was directly duo

from the banker's inability to obtainnourishment from his food. SincoEaster his physicians had .been unableto induce Morgan to cat becauso of alack of functional vitality of tho nervocenters, the refusal of tho muscles oftho throat to work making it impossi-ble) for him to swallow. Ho was fedby injection, but this holped but littlo

Last night it was discovered thatMorgan was not nssimilating oven tholiquid diet and his physicians knowtho end was near.

Morgan had no illness and sufferedno pain. Ho just wasted awny, simplyliecnuso his body was incapable otnourishing itself.

Knew End Was Near.Tho great financier knew that ho had

not long to live. When ho arrived at.Naples from Egypt, Herbert Sattcrlce,Ms pleaded with him to re-turn nt once to Now York. Morganrofufod, saying ho probably wouldtiovcr be able to go abroad again andwished to say goodbye to his friendsamong tho crowned heads of Europoand others.

Tho critical rnndit'nn of the lluunclerwhs withheld uiitll'Snturduy, when itwas admitted by Satterloo.

Hotel Besieged.Tho Orund Hotel wn besieged Sun-li-

by toiirints and reporters inquir-ing about hi condition. Ijit nlglit nbulletin wiih lMied by Morgun's phy--

cinn which ttuteil that ho wan sink-ing np'illy, that his iuli wm HO, Mhten pent nro 101 mid rcuplriitlon 18,

After the death was niiiiouiicml the(Irili'l wu ownvliulineil iy crowd.

IN

''"I wiio'tM rttH ii v. .OHK, Mfll II. (rlil li

i .!) A Iwjl CMWiJ galwtr' i' Mitw ('wii.u ' ot

I In. ll.UlJU4.tl, 111 , Ul it,.i t. . i,i,,.u, ,4 , niw u'timsit,. I. n lli Miivf ilur fuivwy it

, imU. I. .I.,... .1. .,MU,..Il,uf Jl il .,(.,, ), Ihl,

.. 1 1

,.lll,l. II 1,1, .

, 4, ; l 1,, .,,,, i i

,.! . ll. I I . ,

f, 1k it I

ll H. ,Ut I t - .

' 'I I I' M !,. $ ...

J. PIEEPONT MORGANft?;say that hereafter tho firm will confinoitsolf strictly to conservative bankingpolicy devoting but little attention tospeculation.

In a statement issued hero, HenryClews, member of tho Morgan's firm,blamed Morgan 's nppearnnco beforo thohouse committee which investigated thomoney trust as hastening tho banker'sdoath.

OF

s

penii n(Ilv Federal Wireless Telegraph.)

LONDON, MARCH 31. (SPE- -: OIAL TO TIHJ ADVERTISER)

ALARMING DISPATCHES ARE. TELLING OF AUSTRIA'S IN--TENTION TO INVADE MON--TENEGRO, SHOULD THE LAT- -

TER CONTINUE TO BOMBARDSCUTARI. THESE WERE RE- -

OEIVED HERE TODAY.

I., ii

AIHHIISE

PALO ALTO, Aprl 1. (By Associ-ated Press Cablo) Thonine from Honolulu won their secondbnbcbill game yesterday, defeating thofabt Stanford University team with aone-side- score. Tno Chinese ran up atotal of seven runs, with fivo hits andtwo errors, while tho Collegians wcroheld down to threo runs and four hits.Seven errors found their way into theVarsity score.

Tho battcrv for tho Chinese was AllHcong and Kan Yen.

IN TWO BUTTLES

OJr WiWal WirrirM TVeriS.DUltANOO, Mexico, March 31.

(bpeclal to The Advertiser) Followinga sharp battlo at San Gabriel, thirty-flv- o

miles north of here, six hundredfederals defeated n band of one thou-

sand rebel today,Eighty nlnu nro dead today, follow

I ml' a sixtccn-liou- r Imttlo between aliuuilful of federals and u band of eightliniuired follower or Currunzu, rebelGovernor of Coiihulla, at Lampatos,eighty mill tenth of here,

LEWIS' NOMINATION

PAPERS IRE MISSING

Tilt u h Ut tiy uij wtiLh uoh.iHHWI 1WI ll t9 IIII IIUI.

ftiwl. 'Iimt ! itw Mtw a! Juimmii lm, wh li.n 1" ii iKpuiiu.i . ii..fUnUH U4ilict UUU'IMV, lik.ii i, tI.. . 1. ILIIllJ I . I l.ltL Ii MlllIlL I,, U,WI, ,,., ', uUln t ,,!,(1, M (l ,,, im4ut l(1 B

Relief Funds areo o o o

Soldiers Seize

i' Fulrriil WlrlM Trtrcrnvn 1 I

DAYTON, Ohio, Mnrch 31. (Spocinlto The Advortiscr) Following com-

plaints that some dcnlcrs are chargingexorbitant prices, the militia soized allgrocery stores early today. Soldiersnro guarding tho stores nnd relief rom-intttc-

nre distributing supplies from onsumo. A record is boing kept of thesodistributions and tho grocers will bop.ild n reasonable sum for their foods.

Money Is Needed.John Patterson, president of tho Na-

tional Cash Register Company, who isdirecting the rolief work, stated todny:

"The relief committco has all thofood and clothing necessary at present.Money is urgently required to put tho!city in condition to prevent tno out-- 1

reak of serious diseases nnd rehabili-tate the thousands of homes."

Patterson also wired President Wil-son early toilay: "I am guilty of nocrime. I want no pardon. I want onlyiust'co and soniQ federnl action makingDayton safe from a recurrence of bucIia catastrophe ns it has just had." to

Bcliof Funds Slow.COLUMBUS, Ohio, March 31. (Spo-cia- l

to Tho AdvertiBOr) Sixty-fou- r

bodies of flood victims wcro in thomorgue hero today, but only threo ofthem havo been identified.

Tho waters which covered central In-diana nnd Ohio havo receded, leavingmud and slimo everywhere.

Governor Cox has been advised thattho situation throughout tho Stato is"now well in hand."

Japanese and Chineseo o c o

Americans Helped Them

Indicating tho wido spirit of sym-

pathyis

among tho people of Honolulu fortho Ohio flood sufferers, tho Chincso and.Tapaneso of this city yestordny respond-ed in tho most generous manner to thocall of distress from tho mainland, ac-

centuating their donations w,ih cxpTOS- -

p'ong of gratitudo for what Jtho citizensot tno united atntes havo dono w.tho,

ot relief rclicf

whicli

IVrst

rclicf

toit

signature.rnnsiilnrolilft a :

to Tho Advcr- -

tiscr contributionswill bo fully acknowledged ini1nv'

Respond.Mr. Westervelt, with A.

Cottril constituteimcKeyo reports with

tho yesterday isstill $r00 and

moro is plodged,uoaiuc to tno n

fund, amounting to Thero

yUBQLl'H HIIUWKIi:iiII , , ,.. ,. wl

l.ll,l.lj.v '

it- i lit ii at i niuu- .I" l' I III II ll "" " il'i"l" ' l

' I I

':', " 'l.l .1- . iiiIm

Much Neededo o o

Grocery Stores

Money is needed through the floodeduisiricis oi vinio very natuv. uuiy

was received by tho reliefalthough more thnn $1,250,000

had been subscribed throughout thocountry..

Rehabilitation is progressing Tapldly.There is from four to five foot of slimo

tho streets of tho west sldo ofColumbus.

Illinois City Alarmed.SHAWNEBTOWN, March

.11. (Special to Tho Advertiser) ThoOhio is rising more rapidly thanever hofore nnd tho is two feethigher than nny former record and isstill rising. Women nnd children hnvonlready been sent to tho

companies of militia nro patrol-ling tho city with orders to andkill any one attempting to loot.

Dispatches from Evansvllle,htivo been received warning thattho flood is sweeping the valley,doing immense damage.

Appeal to Wilson.CAIRO, March

The Advertiser) Fearing inrising waters, citizens of

are making n gonernl exodus today.Every is boing to strength-o- n

levees but help is scarco andnnd Wilson havo

been appealed to.Worst in Forty Yoars.

CINCINNATI, Ohio, March 31.(Special to Tho Advertiser) Tho Ohioriver is tho highest it has hoen in forty

bore today. A maximum of sev-enty foet is expected.

Contributing Liberallyo o o

Now is Their Turn

also tho fund of $561 from Chi-ncso Merchants' Association.

An exceedingly pleasant foaturo ofthe day was a committco fromtho Chung Wah Merchants' Association,iomposod Chu Gem, O- Kim Fook,Ching Shni, Pang Lum Lung Man

and Wong Chaw, hunted up Mr.Wcstcrvclt nnd turned over to him thosubscriptions from tho Chincso of tho

The committee spokesman ox- -

ilay School 20.00Mrs Ii. II. MllTX 10.00

s Cn!tl0 - 00C''00,:

V.0"" Gulick 10.00.1.0. Dock us. 10.w

to tho Front.Tho following letter sent to Tho Ad- -

vcrtisor from Kditor Shebn, of tho Hawn oipo,

"Honolulu, March 31, 1813."Editor Advertiser: It ctves mo

to aniiounco that thoJapancso community of Honolulu is

(Continued on paco 8.)

'

WAIJ'llll I'AUIl.I I'.r -Wri t ..., nH i'p 1jiii.

.....-- , ., ,. , U...11.1 .,,ii, , i l i, ,.,.. .1 . .l.i,. ... ..

past for' theso countries in times 'Of llis- - pressed its sympathy, and that of theircountrymen here, tho sufferers intho States, and stated that not only wasAs treasurer tho fund com- - (h,s for thp of t,,0 flo()( v,t,

nnttoe of the Uucltcye Club Rov W. D. but also an expression of appreciationWestcnolt, yesterday afternoon, for- - for tho aid tho United Stat haswarded, through tho National e,tpndod to tne Chinese nt the timo ofRank, to Governor Cox of Oliio, $2000 rwr floa dierfor tho of tho Hood sufferers. This Queen Also Contributes,makes a total of; $7000, which has al-- !

ready gono forward help those who1 Ul Il8f of BUuscrlptions reported byneed in this timo of disaster. i;Mr- - Westorvclt ami Mr. Cottrnl yes- -

In tho senate yesterday tho bil- - ap- - Jonlnyi ns fo lows:propriating $10,000 to tho flood s lerers Queen Lllluokaloni $100.00passed final reading and went to tho Robinson 100.00house, where it will bo upon

C-- V' lauhea. . . 10.00uniclri,- - m.,i fi.n,, r. 4 i, n..o.... I'ortugiieso Congregational Sun- -

tor hismnnmr 1,,1I

the relief fund throughyesterday and

Wcdncs- -

t,nni.rToo,

who Charlestho committco of tho

Ulut), that thotrnding of $2000 there

left in tho bank about$1.j0 which roliably

auuiwonsabout $200.

,ff.riir ulm

l'l.l,,m

'",1

$23(5,000

Illinois,

riverWabash

hills.Two

shoot

Indiana,Cairo

down

Illinois, 31. (Specialdeath

the tho Cniro

effort madetho

President

years

tho

whon

ofMau,

Chow

city.

Japancso

explains itselt:

trrcat plcasuro

)'. FlL.

aster. for

recently,

Mnrltacted

theso

Chincso,

SPREGKLES M BERLIN AND PAGE

FDR ID10N NAMED Btf PRESIDENT

Iii.li.ii-- j..i i.. ....-- i i. ..I .in

I

LANE WANTS TO

SEE CANDIDATES

WALLER NOT DECIDED ABOUTTRIP WATSON BAYS HE

WILL NOT CIO.

. v

WASHINGTON, March 31.(Special by Cablo to Tho Advcr- -tlsor) Secrotary of tho InteriorLano today Informed your corro- -

spondont that ho will mako n roc- -

ommendation to Prcsidont Wilsonrogardlnr; tho governorship of Ha- -

wail until tho various Democraticcandidatos havo vlsitod Washing- -

ton and ho has had a cnanco to scothorn personally,

YfALKER.

"That confirms tlio information hadjfrom Washington bomo days ago," said

O. J. Waller yesterday afternoon, whonshown tho nbovo despatch to this paper."1 understand that Secretary Lanowishes to talk over tho Hawaiian situn.tion with Uiq gubernatorial candidates,ns well as to look over tho candidatesthemselves. I saw tho secretary only asnort timo ago, howovor, and I do notknow definitely whether ho wishes moto uiako nnothor trip to Washington ornot.

"I havo not made up my mindwhethor I should go or not."

Mr. Wallor had several letters fromWashington yostorday and appearedconsiderably chcorod with thoir contents, although ho told no part of thonows they contained for publication.

I Watson Not doing,Edward M. Wntson, tho third of tho

inreo nvoweu candidates L, L.boing now on his way to tho

National Capital stated again yester-day that ho has no intention, especiallyat this time, of making a trin to Wash- -

; ington. Ho qualified this, however, byI saying that ho would no if Sceretnrv

Lone personally requested him to, orwnson sent nun n note to this

effect.I "Otherwise," said Mr. Wntson, "Ido not enro to eo to Wnshlnirtnti npush mysolf as a candidate. Jly friendsthero uro looking after my interests,and tho trip is a long and oxpensivouiio. iiowevcr, it i am asked by Jlr,Lano to meet him thoro, 1 "will-g- foiI am, physically, well able to mako thetrip.

.Mr. Watson has received no intiniu-tio- n

by cable, or otherwise, that binlresonco in Washington is necessary tofurther his candidacy. Ho Ims roceutlvrecoivcil ictterH from n numlior of In-- ,lluential men in tho National Canitul

'expressing their cordiul desiro to havolum named tho next Oovcrnor of thtTerritory anil nssiirlng him of their support.

Mr. Wntson was smilingly optimisticns to his chances for tho governorship."I am improving ranidlv in health an.lcan attend to my work ns usual," Jiosaid. "I hope soon to bo ontirelv rn- -

covered nnd my physician tells mo it13 uiii- - n (jtumion oi timo, "''

Til START

HILO 1'RORK COMMISSION.

William Williamson of Hono-lulu.

Dr. Harold H. T.lliot, presi-dent of hoard of trado, Hilo.

.Imlgo Archibald 8. Mnhuulu,district magistrate of Wuialua.

(iovcriior I'roar is oxpocteil to sendthe iiiuiil'H of tho three men ubovn tothe senate this morning, asking tho ap-

pro' ul of Unit body for their appoint-mci- t

us inembors of the illlo luveatlgat-ni- g

fominisHloii. Tint naming of JudgeMnluuilii ns a member of the t'oinuilj-i- i

ii has been urged for tlm purpose ofmalting tho I'liiiiiiilsulnii one tyjilcallyri'pri-i.intiih- f nil peoilo in tlm Tor-lit-

uml for the fnrtliur reamu thatI lie nittgistrntn Ufir his nlilllly to iiircfiilly wiiluli ovl-- i

lieu mid get nt tlm bdttiim of rniidi- -

tK.llHi inemor J'rowr it imInrtooiI to Imvit

nirifiilly rfintlilurtMl tlm iimntM of u'ii ii or more wtlMtnowii eilliwiit, ineii

H'iiihiI ,i prolwble iiimiiliTn of thtt loin-nm, but iu Hi) gUi nliuvii In lit)-l.- ,

, , lu funtMiu lb uiiuitM uf tlm ihiuiii., Hill ruiiijiriM liiv lly,I'Iioii1i II. flooding liU, lb" imrt

iiimi. will prulmbly nut I m

,,.ll,llf uf tlltl WHiNliMioil, It is nowH,i irlwiiil lliut h ruwwlMUuu will

look to hi in II aiotl iMlwriinl i.li ii'iidui'liuK tUt livigiiiii

STMKST TALE

IET TOLD in

M

Another Survivor of

Moi Wahine Wreck

Has Been Found

Korean Sailor Turns Up

With AmazingStory

In tho person of Han Duck Hyung,Korean, another survivor of tho famousMoi Wnhino wreck in tho Molokntchannel has boon found. Since tho lit-

tlo schooner went down, cut in two,just two years ngo, until last night, itwas not known that any ono of thosoaboard her, except Captain Sam Mnna,had survived. Captain Sam dors notknow yot, nnd will not know until hohears tho nows this morning, that whiloho was swimming through tho miles ofchoppy wntor towards Lanal anothertwimmor was near him, struggling forlife, nnd that whilo ho was resting onLanal, recovering from his great swim-ming feat, ono of his men was lying oatho littlo island of Molokini, deliriouslyraving from tho effects of tlio hnrdshipsho hnd survived.

Walking upon the footsteps of Officernnd Interpreter John Woo, Han DuckHyung, n fcobje, crippled man, startledtho detective department nt tho pollcostation last night. For two years thohistory of this famous wreck has beentlio history of ono survivor old Cap-tain Sam but before tho startled po-llco there stood another survivor, whoafter boing considered dead and burieddeep in tho Pacific, now makes n d

but dignifiod ontrance into His-tory ns n hero of some magnitude.

Ruined physically by tho most ter-rific effort towardsheard of in tlio Islands for ninny, manyyears, this Korean last night provedhimself to bo n survivor of that tcrribloexperience, although ho has but a dimrecollection of tho wntcry hell ho wentthrough after tho schooner wont to thobottom, rninmed by the lighthouso ten-de- r

ICukui.Ho told his tnlo too circumstantially

to bo doubted.Swam Twonty-tw- Miles.

This story, incredible ns it seems, in-cludes n swim of twenty-tw- o miles nndof an indefinite stay on a barren rock,whero ho drank suit water until

left him, nnd providential.Tap'incso fishermen arrived, The storyHan Duel; Hyung tells is different inmany ways from that told by old SamMnna, tho aged Hawaiian hero whoBwam nlmost a dozen miles himself bo-foro limiting a landing.

Tlio Korean wns infinest detail by Chief McDufllo lastnight ns to the beginning of tho voyage,in nn attempt to determine whether thoman was an impostor or not. Ho provedabsolutely that ho was not, assisted byrecords of tho police Three years agotho man was an informer for McDuflloand a number of men about tho pollcostation last night recognized Bears hocarried.

Was Polico Informer.Just beforo tlio Moi Wahlno loft Ho-

nolulu on her Iimt crulso, tlio informerhad caused tho raiding of a blind pig,in which enso ho was tho principal wit-ness. When tho man was "drowned"tho ease had to bit dropped. Tho Inci-dent was reported in Tlio Advertiserut the time.

The local Korean community bolicvcdlinn Duck Hyung to liu iloudj tlio

believed lilin dead, Ciiptnlii Snmmid ho was dead, uml the pollco bolloved him dead, so ihiud, in fiirt, thatthey nolle iirimsoil his llijuor fiifco forluck of n wltnesa.

His Strange Htory.IIAii'h ntory of tlio llrnt part of tlio

trip conforms with the known facts,Of tin- - iielual wriiuk. tiieuklng throughmi iiilerpfulur, lie mild lust iiightt

"It was my turn In sleep uml I wutdft'k. Nuiiiti Hum In the night,

I do not know wlion. tho tlir IforinmiI'ttimi don ii hiii) wo lie mo up. wenton iltwlt uml tw iH'ury tiling In (jnut1'Uilfiwluu. Or wit wuv tvrii breuluughut I In' deck. I liiMinl Hi tujiliiiii uon urilvr to luwiir tlio ut, U rU Hio

lllp, HUll lbU III cut duWII lite llin-,-

Wlillu u worn do) My hit tlif l rrulitwl urn. Wlmo I u,s thul n . tliVi'llllljUU ililliyirilUii 1 Ii. W HI, I,,i.iitt lii Id it in in) ' ii I liu nI.I. I, 'III if Mil, 111. I up 141 I Ill III, l.i

No llii- -i i Ui bn U III lti'n.i.ni.. II i ''I'ImImi, It U Mild, Mil M mh.ii ,u ii. "' Mi' ! In I n.i I i

illllpU (UllflllU Itl Plll-l- il i ' llii" I'VlJ liiulni! .. I Ml. i .

kUKl'"H wl lit Uyl.i..l - I ll. ''''I' M''t "tt" "" " '" '"' 'i.i n.nviiii trill w I.. i.i i i.i. 1, i" i ii iii, i In ii. h- i-

,i.. ul Itilt wMi. Ml I II I Ii

- ..,if 4 . i i in ijni ..it iin ni. mill i.

PAWm Wm HUD ...MirUw-,- .iii, rfOmi tfuitftf iiti.i4 i ii" ' ' ....

I IIWI fl'i. !,, '.' II l.llil.lll'l 'I' ' I. .

' ' !r':. '.. ' ;,:,:I. .1 . I I II, , ,1

' i !l I

' , I .

111 III. II. I, 'i 'll I. . I - "' ll lUi 1I viUgU.. . I I , , .

i .1 "'. i I li a l,,: ( . I) ll d.i 1,11 I.I I

. I ll ,. .1 . . I .1 . I , ...It- -ri, ... ,

I ... I , .111.11 .1 llI 11.11 . 'I ,

I

H(t ! If. II l I II ll, 1,1 1,1 II ' M ,' W ,, I , I. ,,j ll lu; I,- -, (til I I I I

I nii Wk. i .t III. 1.1 I I I' .1 ll'flf.J MM I Il ! I

-- m

Page 2: ft?;COLUMBUS, Ohio, March 31. (Spo-cia-l to Tho AdvertiBOr) Sixty-fou-r bodies of flood victims wcro in tho morgue hero today, but only threo of them havo been identified. Tho waters

FIFTH CHUnl:

HIOJEDA

Federal Force Ready to

Battle Again on

Border.

(Dy Federal Wlrrlni Telerraph.)NAPO, Arizona, March 2!'. (Special

Io The ViUertisor) General 1'cilro

Ojcda ninl Ins four hundred ledcrnl soliliers who were surrounded and attack-ed by 0110 tlionsinil Stato troops belowtlic border yesterday, arrived at Nnco,Soiiorn, tolaj, having cut their waythrough tlio robel lines and escaped.

Ojeila left several days ago with tlioavowed intention of relieving tlio fedcrnl garrison at Cnuanea. The surren-der ot i annnra frustrated Ids plan andleft Imii to mnkc his way back to head-quarters, ns best ho might.

General Obriejon of the insurgentslms ordered that no attack bo madeupon Nnco until it may bo dono withleast danger to American citizens nndsoldiers on the American side.

A strong patrol of tho Fifth andNinth t'nltcd States Cavalry is drawnup thcro.

(Il Federal Wireless Telecraph.)mi.UMHUS. Ohio. March 2D. (Spo

rinl tn Tim Adv ortiser) Talking fromil telerrrnnli nolo. socnty-flv- milessouth of Lancaster, C. Bravvicg todaytelephoned Governor Cox that tho sitnation at Marietta. Ohio, hardly couldbo worse Tho river there, bo said is

six feet higher than it wub in 1881,when its Hood waters uistroycu one-thir- d

of tlio city.Supplies, Brawieg baid, were needed

immediately.Whnlo Valloy In Danger.

Reports reaching hero today say thattho entire Ohio River Valloy is now ingreat danger. Portsmouth and Irontonnro inundated and tho crest of tlioflood is jet to come. A soventy-foo- t

stage is exported nt both places.Tlio flood waters hero and nt Dayton,

Znncsvillo and 1'iqun aro subsidingrapidly.

Governor Cox has announced that to-li-

hns reached all theso points butthat clothing and mora food suppliesaro still needed

Fifty six bodies had been recoveredhero by this afternoon.

Colonel Hargcr, commanding thotroops guarding tho flooded districts,still estimates tho dead hero at onohundred.

UnderUkor Ghouls."Undertakers who aro fighting for pos-

session of the bodies and removingthem to privnto morgues aro delayingidentification. Tho militia at Diytonwas forced to uso harsh means to provent undertakers from fighting for tho

noscsion of bodies,G. A. Turnoy. who was removed to

tho morgue hero last night ns dead,fcuddonlj rained up from a slab, frightening persons noar by.

Indiana Reports Better.(TT Federal Wireless Telecraph-- )

INDIANAPOLIS, March 20 (Spocial to Tho Advertiser) lioccding floodwaters today reveal that only tho flim-

siest homes in Indianapolis wore destroved, hut tho homes remaining arofilled with mud and oozo and aro uuinhabitable.

Tho deaths throughout Indian i todayare estimated at ono hundred

The situation of tho flood districts isgreatly improved, with tho Stato earingfor its own victims as woll ns ennugfor Hood suflcrcrs m Ohio

Residents of Richmond, Indiana, almost stariod themselves by housing nndfeeding refugees from Ohio. Tho statoboard of health is milking frantic

today to prevent an epidemic nndeloar and cold weather is aiding themin this work.

Railroads Resuming.Tho Tailroads aro slowly resuming

operations, but nothing liko regularschedules aro hcuiL' attempted.

Tho dainngo to Indiana railroads anuilutcrurban lilies was fixed at $10,000,000todav and tho losses to homes and morenntilo concerns is estimated nt $10,000,000

All wires to tho Wubnsh Valloy bolow Terre llnuto vvtiro lost today andflood conditions nt Vincontics andHvansvillo are not known Hosulentsiof low lying districts, however, w ore J

warned in time to (Uo to high groundand deuths nro not feared.

Tlio property loss, however, will boheavy

-- ..(Ilr Federal Wlreleu Tlerrali )

DAYTON, Ohio, March 20.(Speclnlto Tho Adveruier) All vvator floodingthu streets is poll ut ml and tho heaps ofdebris on alt nldM nro breeding dUeaie.The assistance of outside sanitation exporti is required Immediately,

Dayton uudcrtakori today ncsort thateight hundred pontoui ura dead here,'1'hpy InsUt tlml ietterdoy's (llmiitidof from ore hundred and fifty to tohundred victims its too low by hundruds.

in thw wrwliu;' it pro),lug rapidly nnd th dsatli lit Is gro-)p-

h) ttiup imd buuudWi'1 l)o rih tuiiui.il it to laauv tavfiral

rwruewy lwudt to jirovlda fin) forfood kui'jilikMi. ir of thu boftliilw nndto ni rute tin jwlUing

Booftry QftTrlwti Oh Jln4Mercury ut Wr (U'Imm, Urn

J.K.U6N Wuud, klf of tff IU1 it. M Htftl .niuf, id UftUlflM

4 I4. wnrttl si lw'i ii twlv e'slvek lU JtiMfiwi.ijr .MHhMiUljf sxlit MtVr FM

i Ixhu J'.ii.i,,... iraaliMJ it k.i xual i it nn ' wwUMl Mil.iin t. ,.iU , iimiis IMIMMllMl tit

. 14 UMll i

I Hi Htm If nwiwifr, to litThe

rd ( Willi tiki afclpfMtd limer .littnfMtant here to prevent

t i male ttita .ftrnornto nt ' th IHrton waterworks

Mayor Blames and I'ralta.M r itilllifHi bftltev tho long

death I eould havo boo avoid! badthe ritv council Rrantod a mont roqnett.

"I Asked In .Tnrnwry that the Miamibe dreliicd," ha eald, "and had thisbeen dmi I am cohtItiom tbat manywould hne escaped. If the nhat. actionhad been moviw from I lie bed of thoriver, I think inundation would havebeen delated until every man, womanand ehild in Dayton could have gottenbeyond tho danger rono."

Patterson A Hero.Mnvor l'liiMlpa today was loud in his

praise- for tho work of .lohn Pattersonin ffomg to aid tho victims and cnllcdunon tho cltliens to rocognlzo Mr. lattorson n "Mayor of Dayton during thoemergency period."

.Mr. Patterson, wlio is president ot tnoNational '.ash Register Company,

was sentenced to a year's im-

prisonment for violation of tlio Sherman Anti trust Law. A movement hasbeen started hero, nnd in Cincinnati,for executive clemency, but Pattersoninsists that ho docs not want a pardon

Fear For Buildings.it is feared that some of tho flooded

buildings hero aro in danger of colInpiing. Olllcinls inspected the StcoloHigh School nnd ordorcd it roped offThey declared tho water had under-minde- d

tho structuro and it) may fallnt any time. Thoro is plenty of foodto supply present needs, but moro willbo needed soon.

All tho Dayton saloons aro closed.

HOME, March 30. (By Associated1'rcss Cablo) Despite tho reassuringreports being made by his relatives, itis now known that tho condition of J.1'icrpont Morgan is serious. His phy-sicians hivo prescribed absolute restfor tho financier and havo Tofused himpermission cither to mnko tho round ofvisits ho hnd proposed at tho variousEuropean capitals or to Icavo forAmerica.

Ho is not to bo allowed to boo anyof his friends or business nssociat s.

Rolapso Carao Sunday.(TV- - lViUrnl WVpJewi TeWri.nl.

ItOMH, March 29 (Special to ThoAdvertiser) As tho result of a slightrelapse from his recent illness, J, P.Morgan, tho American financier, is conlined to his bed in his hotol hero today.Tho relapsed occurred Sunday.

Herbert sattorJce, .Morgan's son in-law, who is with him here, declared to-

day that'his condition is not serious.t

(Ty Federal Wireless TelecraDh.)MADISON, Wisconsin. March 29

(Special to Tho Advertiser In responso to n telegram sent bj RichardJones, nBking that ho wire GovernorMcGovcrn his position on woinnn

Theodore Hoosevelt todaytho Governor ns follows:

"I earnestly liopo all Progressivesin the Wisconsin legislature will support tho suffngo amcndinciit. We, inAmerica, should lead tho way in thismove. Wo do not hnvo to "jioint tovvlnt has boon dono abroad. Tho PacificCoast and Rocky Mountain States havotried tlib experiment and it his worked admirably."'

r--(Ily Federnl Wireless Telfirraph )

LONDON, March 29. (Spocial toTho Advertiser) Tho Bulgarian troopspierced the Tchatalja lines in tho neigh-borhood of Lako Dorkes of tho BlackSea today and aro pushing forward vic-toriously on Constantinople according toa Central Nows dispatch from Sofia.

By appearing to rotrcat in disorder.tho Bulgarians operating in tho vicinityof Buyuk Ohakmodye, ou tho southernend of tho Tchatalja lino, induced arorco of Turks, undor Envor Boy, topursuo thom, says tho correspondent atConstantinople ou the Dally Mall. Thoground had been carefully mined) and astho Turks advanced tho mlno3 were ex-ploded causing heavy losses.

During tho Bulgarian attack on theTurkish center last Monday tho TurUslost 1700 men killed.

SULTAN CALLS FOR PEACE.(Uy Federal Wireless Telegraph )

LONDON, March 29. (Special to ThoAdvertiser) All accounts reaching horoagroo that tho Turks suffered a sovcrodofoat at Tchatalja. Sonio correspond,outs placo their loss at 2C00 killed and7500 woundJcd, but these figures prob-ably aro exaggerated.

Tlio Sultan wopt bitterly when in- -

rorruoa or tho goneral situationIt is reported that tho Turkish Ein--

bossies havo been ordered to appeal totho Powers to hasten mediation,

THE SERVIAN DEATH ROLL.(Ur Federal Wireless lelerripb i

BELORADE, March 20. (Special toTho Advortlser) Tho Servian troopssuffered groat losses in tholr sharo oftho attack on Adrianoplo. Tlio Thirdand Fourth Batallions of the thirteenthcolumn of infantry lost ono thousand'men killed and from three thousand tofour thousand wounded, Including onohundred officers.

(lljr Federal Wireless Telecraph )WASHINGTON, March 20, (Special

to Tho Advortlser) 1'rcMdent Wilsonlearned today that an American flnan.rliil tyndicati) stood ready to furnishthe Iti'iinblk' of China with a abortterm loun ot about 10,000,OUO andwould later negnlluto long term loanup to 1100,000,000, or whatever shouldlu Clilnu't tH'Od,

'I lie tyndUulo had nikixl for aemr-wi-

i) that tho Unites! Htatet gouirnniuutwould not mr(UIiuti) in any way iuthe nuKutlutlon,

mill f us. i. iiiw L

(Ilr KeJ.rsI WlrrWts T.)rii )

iiKMU, Marh K). faiin.ttt to'l'h AdM'rtlr) Kliig flwrgo ni)(rUMH Mary, in May, will wake ortiajaiwalls U pari, lrlln am Vlnsut o

Itkv tin pjurn ut M tuiumum vjUU had arri4 tur IVlt, but wwitm iiusihuhw imi annum mi tu mum

MuuMns-

OQWYim mtMmm! tfMaa, faaMiahb 1

MA ) JHI . W. MArk mUkmmU m MM m aTalsIl lalaasTl inaTT II

.lAWAIIAN (.ZFTTtt. TtTSilAY, APim. J 101.1 k MI - WEEKLY.

These Are Moving Days for The Advertiser

" w ,atSW VH ssssssB 5? 'sssesssssssssssssssH

l tr vjl eaffSf? BsassssTw t HB ff B

NEW HOME OF THE

AVithin tho next few days tho firstnumber of Tho Advertiser to bo issuedfrom its new homo on south King street,brirween Alakca street and PalacoSquare, will bo out. Tho new Adver-tiser will bo enlarged to seven columnsand will bo printed by tho newest nndmost modern press that has yet beenbrought to tho Territory.

Yesterday (tho process of moving fromtho old ofllco on King street to tho nowbuilding commonced. Tho books andrecords, ns well as most of tho businessoffice furniture was taken over and intho great airy and light ground floorbusiness oflico in the new building

Honolulu Flood Fund Now $10,000Ow 0 0 O O

Legislature's $10,000 Being Hurried

Sympathv for the destitute victimsof tho floods on tho mainland, especiallynt Dayton. Ohio, was further manifested

Honolulu yesterday in a substantialliner nnd with open hands all gave

who could in a generous wny, typicalof Ilawan and its citizens, when sudor- -

mg calls to trie heart of its people Al-

together $24 Jl 75 was contributed yes-terday to the fund which is being raisedhero for the flood and flro victim?

Rev. W. D. Westervelt, president ofthe nuekove Club, and United StatesInternal liovenuo Collector Charles A.Cot trill, ono of the prominent Ohioansin tho city, are acting ns a committedlor the collection ot relict lunus witlitho daily preis. Mr. Westervelt is thotreasurer ot the committeo anil Mr. Lottrill is tho secretary. To date thoroIiiih been turned over to them appioxi-matol- y

$7270, of which $7070 hns beendopositcd in tho First Nntionnl Dankto bo rorwnnlcil to New lorlc by wireless, and from thcro sent immediately to(jovcrnor vox, of Ohio.

Tho committeo was a busy one yes- -

tcrday, although it found n most willinghelper in J. I. Cooko, of Alexander &

Dnldnin, to whom tlio committeo desires to express its appreciation for thowork ho lias accomplished toward rais-ing tlio funds for tho sufferers in Ohio,In addition to what was bunked therominitteo personally collected about(200 yesterday afternoon. Through thopnpurs hoiihi $KI00 came in. ,

Commlttee'a Uubscriptlons, I

The eontrlbiitloiia received by thanui'Keye i iuii roiniiiiiiro were:Cash 10.00Pntli COOAlpha . 10,00Mm 1', A 35,09Mr. U. K Wilder. MMrimrlw Cwtlrill . 1QMHawaiian Nw Company.... . U.00lUwiiUliau aterulnury ....,,.. 11JS0II, J. Thomas, i'y l', Wrtt Jn

isniry llllllltl VAfcruv

Mm. II VIimimfo .... M9MiM Ksira wuritWH . .... 60wr. m wr m ii. am .insHdhuliua Kim trie He.IfWtit ou. "HsiUdistlu XmaUw t4U A, ftU.u nix" ' "" B1KiSrni Tf.lWti f UMMilatuliNtsw rt k i u

vrnwiMt i . tit Kfltw4 ll

IIffl

ADVERTISER, SOUTH KING STREET, NEAR A LAKEA.

iyiiMi!

MM

ON

(From Sunday Advertiser)

ovcrything will bo in shapo by tomor-row morning to transact business asusual.

Tho new building is of concrete,and built expressly for Tho Ad-

vertiser, and to house all tho depart-ments which go to mako up tho plnnt ofa modern daily newspaper. Tho nowpress, upon which tho finishing toucheswero being givon yesterday afternoonea that it will Tun as smoothly as awatch, is on tho ground floor in tho rearof the business offices with entranco onMerchant street, and directly below thocomposing room.

Tho latter, on ho second floor, is d

tho oditorial rooms and is in evory

In the tabulated statement of tho )

. , ., ifunds received by Tho tvuveruser yesterday morning Clark Biggs was credit-ed with $5, and Mills School, in Ma-no-

with $5, although the correctamounts vvoro otherwise credited. MillsSchool students and faculty gavo $10.75,and Clark IJiggs, $10.

The following contributions vvorohanded in to Tho Advertiser yesterdayfor tho fund:Christus $ 30.00Ilnwau 10.00 '

Mrs. J. H. Coan 10.00 '

Cash 1.001'. MacPhotridgo c.ooi1 ong Kan 5.00Mrs. Tong Kan 5 00Alika Dow sett 1.00Ester Kaha 2.00Joseph Putsch! 5,00II. O. Forbes 5.00llnuiuno Shotcn 25.00W, K. Mncl'herson 1.00Cash 5 00Cash 5.00.1. J, Cardcn 10.00Club Stables 10.00W. C. loirko 5.00A Friend 5.00A Friend 2.50Daughter of Hawaii 10.00Hawaii Motion Picture Co. ... 25 00IViend , 1,00Margaret V., Clarke 10.00Friend "O" 5.00CI.H 25,00

Other Contributions.Thu tiihucrlptioni dent to the Star- -

llulletln ndlco armMm, W, W. nimond 5,00Mrt. K, A. llerndt 54)0Oity Hark fltand 5,00Isabelle II Jenkins ,, 1.00lluiler Andrew! . 0.001)1, Imp i. Co. ... KIIIIH 100.QOW, J. I'onn . . . ' t V M H 5,00W, W. Aliaim Co. W(thufk Hoy ....

, A. Hecn ... IIMUMng (lliuug & (Jo, MIHIHfB!Hy . .....,..,.,.Fiiii'Kiwrr i. ..iioilMI ' ' ii. iMIHtllJJM Jriiik ! HawiU,,,,,

... II M. AllMt

t t t t

' t I i I

JlMM)'

n

i ft

BssBrttayM WsW Miflinmm i 'HAM

respect complcto with its battery oflinotypes and new cases and metal fur-niture for type. It is largo and wellventilated and tho most complete com-posing room in tho Islands. Above, ontho third story, aro tho binding and engraving plants, all arranged with an eyoio ino emciency ot tno departments andall labor saving devices.

The editorial rooms, the heart of anewspaper, aro situated on tho secondlloor, fronting on King street, andhero, urjti three o'clock in tho morn-ing, will center tho news of tho worldami from there it will bo distributedthrough Tho Advertiser to its readersat many thousand breasfast tables.

flood and firo sufferers, will come up fortnini Tending anil will immediately boseni to mo nouse ior action, it is ex.'pected that tho houno will act in rcC'ord timo nnd pass the bill on to thoUovernor.

Tho total contributions to dato nroas follows: Previously acknowledged,ijosou; turough tno uucKeyo Uiub com-mitteo yesterday, $1095.00; through

$1112.70; through ThoAdvertiser yesterday afternoon, $223 50.Grand total, $3291.75.

Bcsido these contributions tho F.lkshavo sent on money to their exaltedruler for distribution where tho moneywill do most good, and Friday night ata special mooting of Hawaiian LodgeF. and A. M., tho sum of $1000 wasvoted for uso among tho sufferers

.

(lly Federal Wireless Telegraph)SAN FItANCISCO, March 20.

(Special to Tho Advertisor) Ad- -

vices from Wnshington state thatRear Admiral Homer R. Stanford,chief ot tho burenu of yards anddocks of tho "Navy, Accompaniedby Civil Engineer Frederick R.Harrison of tho New York navyynrd, left tho Capital today forHonolulu,

Tlioy will mako a professionalexamination of tlio dry-doc- atPearl Harbor and will doviso newmeans of finishing tho structi.roin time for tho opening of thePflnnmn Canal,

ELEVEN DEAD FOUNDAT MIDDLETOWN, OHJO

(Ilr Fed. rat Wireless Ttlscrtpfa.)MJDDLBTOWN, Ohio, March 29,

(Special to Tlio Advertiser) KlovcnPersons nro known to have met deathIn the flood waters here, Tho propertyIons It fixed at 350,000.

Mluuiltburg reports three are knownto bo dead und property loss U esti-mated lit (330,000."'NO MERCY SHOWN TO

LOOTURH BY 0OLDIER0

(Mr federal Wireless Tstisii )COMIMIIUH. Ohio. March &V.-I- BM

to The Ail'rlipr)--- A tquail ef nliller aeuiied io hunt looter, workingtin the west ud tod) shut nd HIMIWwurd MtlUulo u4 JMward WhiteJlkrtidiiuls iitur (men hud tornljftsajwl thai their Uamtt vrr)UM Haiti M.JCinJey n4 Whllvi! twuki kwliHtr, ruh rarrylugak & l vaiuablat

fsr )'wo4.HsNN tl)lli mk aWu'4 at

UijMHslNU, tmi i giMHf Hmip Mtif Mmm gum l u Uw mdw t4asssssssssbssa

RELIEF BILL 15

IMMa

READY TO ASS

UP IN SENATE TOMORROW FORTHIRD READINO TO HELP

TLOOD SUFFERERS.

(From Sunday Advortlser)Vnleas something uuforsoen occurs,

onntor Wirtz's bill appropriating $IC,- -000 for tho sufferers from lire nnd Uo-n- l

in .Nebraska, Ohio and Indiana, willpns third reading and bo sent to thohouse tomorrow morning. It can botaken up by that body at onco nnddiould reach tho Governor for sigunturosome timo Wednesday morning.

Tho bill was on tho special order filoin the senate yesterday morning andnith a few minor amendments makinghe text moro clear it passed withodt

a dissenting voto.Q'l'ck timo was mado in handling tho

1 usiness of tho dny to give tho lawmak-tr- s,u opportunity for a recess in time

to hear the eloquent address of 'orniorAttorney General Wickersham ia thehous.

The distinguished member of formerPresident Taft's cabinet, accompaniedby Secretary of tho Territory Mott-Smit- h

and Speaker Holsteln, afterwardpaid a brief visit to tho senate, meeting tho members in nn informal way.

Pumpkin for Wlckersham.A massivo pumpkin sent to Senator

Rico by an admiring conilituent wasthe only token Senator Ta ikea eouldfind handy and in a good nttured wayoffered it to Mr. Wickershnm.

President Knndscn intro lucod thedistinguished visitor to the members ofthe senate.

Houso Bill 201, relating io the salariesof officials of the city of 'Ionolul'i wentthrough first reading. This measurewould increase tho salary of the treas-urer from $2400 as at present, to &1000per year.

Members of tho houso failed to ngrcowith amendments mndo by tho sennte toHouso Bill 78. This relates to tho

of tho circuit courts. The sen-ate amended the measuro to increase thonlnries of clerks in some of tho dis-

tricts reducing the expense appropria-tion for others. These wero not ap-proved by the lower houe and a re-port was sent in to this offect. Presi-dent Knudsen appointed Senators Judd,

tct7gcr and Coko as a committeo toconfer with Representatives Sholdon,f larcnco II. Cooke nnd Kupihoa and ef-

fect a compromise on tho measuro ifpossible

Motzger's Bill Tabled.Mctzgcr's bill, saved by tho oratory

of its sponsor Friday, met a roughwhen it came up for third read-

ing yesterday. Finally, to save it fromdefeat, if possible, a motion was madoto defer. This was "voted down nndwhen the bill came up for third read-ing it fnilcd to receive sufficient votesand went on the table.

This is House Bill 54, appropriating-$12,00-

for building a road into WaipioValley, Hawaii. Metzgcr will probablymako an effort to get tho measuro offthe table when ho can muster morestrongth than developed yesterday. Thovoto stood seven to five for passage,lacking one vote necessary to a major-ity.

It was after twelve o'clock when thosenate adi'ourned until Monday. Sen-ators Baldwin and Penhallow acted ashosts for their fellow senators on t'iotrip to Maui. Tho party departed arthree o'clock yesterday afternoon andaro expected back hero tonight.

FROM 'WASHINGTON' TOSAN FRANCISCO PLACE

SAN FIIANCISCO, March 20. William Lcsbo Coombs, former jirivato sec- -

rotarj to secretary ot btato Jvnox, ar-ri- v

ed in San rrancisco yesterday to be-come private secretary to ThornwallMullally, assistant to tho president andchief diplomatic agent of the UnitedRailroedi,

Ho was in this city in May last withSecretary Knox. It was during thattrip thnt ho became impressed with SanFrancisco.

Mr. Coombs has tho distinction ofhaving been tho youngest secretaryover nppointed to a socretary of stato.Ho was twenty-thre- years of ago whenKnox selected him for tho post a yearand a half ago.

For six days Mr. Coombs served asprivate secretary to Secretary of StatoBryan.

InVENTURA CARD GAME

IN COAST COURTS

SAN FItANCISCO, March "20. ThatFred, alias "Hookey" Johnson, whowiih scntcnccil last week to twentyyears in tho federal penitentiary onMcNeil Island for raising $1 silver cer-tificates to $20, was a guest at thoHotel Belvedere, and that John Mc- -

Keon, one of tlio defendants chargedvvitn roDDing passengers in a croonedcard game on the steamer Ventura enroute from Honolulu to San Francisco,is n partner in tho hotel was broughtout during tho course of tho trial yes-terday in tho United States districtrourt, McKeon denied that ho knewJohn Osgood, a drug Hand, who was amember of the Johnion gang. JamesWelsh and Lawrence Motor, defend-ants with McKeon, denied they hadmado the trip to Honolulu for tho purpote of playing eordt with paitengert.

"i'BEAT UNEMBHT,

Wight ntcldeott and Injur, ara afriunt otturrenM on tha farm ami Inthe HorVihop. A tut or trulto widthU often Ino cauaa ef much anaoMtaand lost of time, may bo ur4 In aboutcue third tha lima uiually 4 byapplying UaawbirlaJn'f 1'ala Italia moon a tbo injury Ii r Molted, There

I no di'Kr of I'lood peHuBln realt-lo- g

from an Injury whan ltd TlnluMlle pjill4 itfera tl trti Lerowa Inflaw tJ au4 avvrllen Yvt f Vma, Hwltli 4 Uu , lAi , jeiit for Mtrail AdrrrtUouioul

IUL'UI!i:ACOLOIHIJlirDAy

rZSZUZ'L himsWM ' ' " ' ff S 4teaVHWP Mtbjifl UMl JtIUH1f MHJ H i' JW Mpiff i'usliHi4 uij.fc W

W, II e il! , i i Bans . liowauiava i uiHt UMMI, MUlttJ"P spa ,l w$$n W MM urn.

, .1.1 BBBWJmM

1 WL i. .t...M 1.1. . id mlit, i iuM Mffttss t W Tdaftli ,, . f i, ,. ., Tataat Vit mtkmt

if UH

'. 4tM , Imm u, II . ... I i .. l' I 4 n ft) tit Pt.n lt.t jlV- - mm HV UptjiriMiay Hm tm Vm .vw, . ,"r wtmmtmMmm Jw 0 -

Page 3: ft?;COLUMBUS, Ohio, March 31. (Spo-cia-l to Tho AdvertiBOr) Sixty-fou-r bodies of flood victims wcro in tho morgue hero today, but only threo of them havo been identified. Tho waters

fi nnn mirfr isl ...... . . l.JTMCTt jmt .! " 1

a ,- - .,

(ltr Fnlrl Wlrtrs TelftT'tA.)DAYTON, Olilo, Mnrch 2S. (Special

to The Advcrtisor) Tlic dead by Hood

anil lire In Dayton will not exceed tlirco

hundred persons. Tills statement 1b

based on tin Investigation today which

lias covered nil parts of the city. Thoso

districts which had been expected to

show the longest roll of dcntlis havo

.been found almost frco from death.

Heports, however, aro still awaited

from North Dayton and Hivcrdalo,

where the levees aro supposed to havobroUen. The first men tc penctratothese regions reports that thoro havonot been inanv deaths in North Daytonand but few in Hivcrdale. Famlnu isgeneral throughout tho city, but thiscondition is being rapidly remedied.

Some Streota Cloar.

Tor the first timo sinco tho flood allwater is off the street in front of tho.Algonquin Hotel. The wator Tcachcd

tho second story tho first two days.Tho downtown streets wcro crowded

today with hungry citlzons. Tho poo-pi- e

rejoiced in the ruined streotB, thoyim nlail to bn alive. Tho survivorsint.! nnil rripil and lauched by turnsMost of them had prepared to dio bylthor firo or water.

Another HrcTiro broke out again this morning in

Itho plant of Geo. Balas Bros. Plating'Company, across from tho BeaverBuilding, where persons aro marooned.

Hundreds of persons wero romovodlast night and today from tho endan-gore- d

territory. Every institution in

South Dayton is packed with refugeesand hundreds aro sheltored m Tariousresidences. It was reportod that res-

cuers and supplies had roached portli

Mnrtinl law prevails throughout thocitv

The bodies of two womon clasped in--i last embrace wero found in ono o

the flooded houses hero today, A notoipinjicd on tho dress of one of thowomen said, "nawi"-- , "daugbtoT."

!(Bv Ffdernl Wireless Telegraph.)

tntita-NAPOLIS-. March 28.-(- Spe

cial to The Advertiser) EncouragingroportB irom flood swept Indiana weroi: j !,. m1nv. Although it Will

lm months bofoTo normnl conditionsnrn restored, it is beliovcd that rolloti. . .1,11 .nil linoA refucees in cen

tral and northern Indiana. iTanklincounty was hard hit, especially tho town

of BrooTtsviUe, but it is not beliovedItho dead list will exceed fifty.

U'he most discouraging reports todaycamo from tho lower ond or tho WabashEiver. It is reported today tho flood

rost had reached this section and trou-

ble there was just starting. Moro thantwo thousand refugees are being caredtor hero and boats aro scouring WestIndianapolis and Broad Bipplo formaTooned sufferers.

Tho property loss throughout thoState may reach $50,000,000. A' thor-

ough search in tho houses in West In-

dianapolis today failed to reveal a sin-

gle death. Tho river is nearly at itsnormal depth. Humors of heavy fatah-iic- s

hero aro all dissipated today.. -- t-

Ol'AYMAS, Mexico, March 20.'(By Associated Pres-- Cable) It is

rumored that a troopship, carryingMcsiran federals, has boon blown up

and sunk by the rebels.Tobasco Bovolt Crumples.

(Tlv Federal Wireless Telegraph I

MEXICO CITY, March 28. (Specialin Tim Ailvertiscrl Lack of familiar- -

iK- - it.li steambonts resulted in tho

swift crippling of Mexico's latest re

bellion, inaugurated yesterday in th(

Rlntn nf TnliasCO.nun liiinilrml ami seventv men of the

Third Infantry, commanded Iiy ColonelValome at San Juan Bautista, revoltedwith tho cry of "Viva Mailero." Theylooted the houses and robbed the branchof tho National Bank and then embark-

ed The boat foun-

deredon n river steamer.

a short distance from sbore and.ono hundred and five of tlio rebels weredrowned. ..

(Tr Federat Wireless Telccraph.)onl.IIMBUS. Ohio. March 28.

a..nini in Tim Ailvnrtisorl lmnroved-- - -tl. ',,-- .

onuiuons i".b" .flooded districts of Ohio and IndianaSire reported today. Rapidly receding

i .! Aocnf.nn nf rnltlH....... lllllllnnull-I- mm t...u -- w.r.lilnrntionn bv rescue iKirties possibloaind tbebe reportol thut tho early cstimates of death in both Ohio and Indi-

ana were greatly oxnggorutod. Ho

vised nnd conservative estimates pl.ica

the total number of deutliH in Ohioamd Indiana as low as ono hundred.

Suirnring from lack of wood has

been eliminated and with clear undcold prevailing in both of thoutricKen States tho danger of peatil-onci-- s

u ner.Greatly Improved,

The Ohio 1th or ls oil a rampngo in4'urti.lu rectloiii but condition arojjreutly Improved, although cuminurcoin parulytixl "I'd will be tut iiay.Teli'grupli nml ruilruml nvrvini U

hi Ohlii. A imilur Hua-tiu- n

pruuiiU in Jiiilluim.Ji in lifliin burn UUy Hint by

in.. .ii ain mfuL'nu III Iwlll InillHU..iil Ob in Mill Lxi liu tiud rb n.,,.rlv Iu. 1 MtlUUld iwity Hi

IMI JOI, 1)111,

i uii.ui'i lluir ruutiMU4lng lbj u nt. i('v'.M'oi r ll MUi llt'U,wlu, lr .Hn-mii- luxo, Miili4 Wt..i.i' in.ii.l 4'l Umi lllen I'oliiuiliu wIiIm

i . . ''i l.nUl, j ,.i,. H i. mi.,,11, li. vil) iffmttU IbiU '

i ( m4 th 'v J I U'J, i iM.vi, iUi " iC Htrml Hulli.

. Ik 4l Ii ui ' a' hi

i. I. . Hwil I. . .. I iiu. ill.

rum fMummmii.4. ' i$r4t fmgttfk m

in. utH.t 111

"T

HAWAIIAN GAZETTE, TtT.SDW, APKII. 1. 1'M.l -S- EMI WI'.KKI.V 3

DAYTON HYSTERICAL IN RELIEF FROM

MMMUCH Hfc

LLMtLMtLMtLMlLMIWMS&TWLMtMa

MAIN STEEET BEIDQE IN DATTTON

Quick and Generous Response to

Bills Rushed by Both

Houses to Provide

Relief Fund.

(Prom Saturday Advertiser)

Gcnorous hearted Hawaii, quick to

respond to tho pitiful call for help

which has como from flood and flro

stricken Ohio and Indiana yesterday,began sending to tho unfortunato suf-

ferers tho first substantial aid within

its power, gold to buy food and medi-cin- o

for tho sick, hungry and stricken,

the injured and dying. In both housesof tho legislature measures wero in-

troduced appropriating $10,000, subjectto tho order of the Governor and to

,iiinil mnn tho measures canbo rushed through each branch of tholawmaking body.

Two Bills Introduced.Hoprcsentntivo "Watkins introduced

ono measure tho house, whilo Sena-

tor Wirtz introduced similar bill intho senate. The measures passed firstreading in both houses, wero made spo-ci-

orders for today and by next Tues-

day it is belicvod ono of tho two actswin l.nvn rnnehml tho Governor for hissignature. By Tuesday night at tholatest it oouoveu iuo urst uvu

dollars from tho territorial treas-

ury will have heen telegraphed to thobtricken people now battling for theirlives against firo and water, sleet andsnow.

Abundant Aid Assured.

Fifty thousand dollars more, ifneeded, aro the disposal of tho suf-

ferers, say tho legislators. Never wasrespoiibo call for aid moro prompt.Not oeu when the news eamo fromSim rrnncisco that the fair city bythe Golden Gato ns devastated byearthquuko and firo and that its peo-

ple wero naked and homeless was thoaction of tho people moro spontaneous.

cnutor Wirtz, wlioso uoynoou wassnent in the sections now laid low,made an eloquent idea in introducinghis bill yesterday, RepresentativeWatkins also mado brief speech inbehalf of tho stricken States in pre-

senting his measure. Following iscopy of tho Watkin's bill:

"Whereas, Great disastor has fallenupon tho Stato of Ohio and other ad-

joining States and many of thoir citi-

zens aro sufforing from tho ravagesof Hood and fire, and

"Whereas, An appeal to tho Nationfor relief has been mado by tho Presi-dent of the United States, and it isfittinc that this Territory should re- -

spend in so far as it may, thoreforo"Bo it Enacted by tho Legislature

of tho Territory of Hawaii:"Section 1. Tho sum of ten thou- -

direction of and by tho Governor, insuch manner as bo may doom wiso, forII... ,...t.,.rp. ni.l ami rnUnf nf KllfTer.

i,init r10.000 Dolars is horobv an--. ..

OI 'th- - TerritoryfIX-- 1 Ut W lU u.iuu r.

I

I, ii I u it ll, ' i. I I t $

!

i, no as

ina

j

is

orat

to a

a

a

!

disastersStuto and other adjoiningStates. "

-

BELIEF BOATS ABEWORKING PERU

(ltr P"Jrl Wlrrl.M TlKrpl.)I'KIIU. Indiana. March 28. (Special

to Tho Advertiser) Belief oxpoditionsHm iirrlvliirr rlnrin Annllirti in fnrwflrilsupplies by boats thoso sufferingtliero nml loiiuiiions uro lieing rnpiuiy

A n'un'li I being mado bodies.Tim lieud of on n of tho principal reliefmimi'lN tliliiKt the latalltlos will nn- -

prokiumln fifty. Tliure uro stores ofin bill iioii of hero.

HUMORIST AW) HISFUimfDH AIOJ 8Al'B

Vt4Htl WlrHM llrrl I

mmau wok, mi, Murob

fmr n ,', uunii rwf f, I1WIVlultf Vuu ui lr io iiiv. W"" " "" "w immii

Ull ll.'M

HAMMM WIAIH hmJit A UMUItt OHM

, i', mutimt ittpm, iIIAUII HI Ublu Wtl.l. it l

l tu ns A4t tnUmi) thlh KummMf ti.liit.l tu4 Ii i; lildfrnit WiM1M t'U 1imI ItlUi i'lfb ill'ii,,,, ,,!! M I li "" 'n "IMl 4 hf II

AND STEEL HIGH SCHOOL THISAWAY.

For Aid to Flood

SUBSCRIPTION LIST

OF

THE RICH AND POOR

(From Saturday Advertiser)Hero is tho list of tho pcoplo ot

Honolulu who responded bo promptlyto the lar-oi- r cries ot tho starving anunaked children and their strickenmothers and fathers, tho sick andwounded and tho dying peoplostricken states ol Ulno, Indiana anuNebraska. Thoy havo como forth

,'..- -

IllIUMiU u,'V)tuuL

for

fill n,

nobly proved to tho world that j to aid in tho roliof of thoso who aroHawaii is not slow in going to tho aid ,10w helpless, hungry, maimed and dyingof thoso who havo so suddenly found jn tj,0 path tho terriblo floods andthemselves helpless. It is a roll ot lircs which hnvo laid those onco pros-hono- r

which sheds glory on tho name porous districts wasco.of the new-ou- t Territory in tho Union, j id! Cabled Sufferers.rtnu n win grow larger anu larger asthe next few days pass.

Rich and Poor Respond.Rich and poor alike will grace thoi - ...i,i,

.' i .".. -- ..... i...sand dollars it is known that it will

m'Virirf nil wtt-l.;.- l.tD - 1, ,..- - ni:rni..A -- ..!!.... ..r-- -oanj u. iliv vi iuiiuvy u auuu'CA.

Plo.t io c ti,..,-- ,,: .amongt-it- contrVbulors at' Tu

.i....: n;.. . i. ,!. it i. i

ll1tttpMbllkftlMtMylJltJlJa1,Jili.jlMia1M

DANGER

lintr 10.iO. Jubus AscU gave live city Eeady to Aid.dollars. A similar amount came lromLewis Garrison. All thnt has provcuted cicy of Ho- -

Contributions' of hundred dol "olu'u f r"a making liberal appropria-lar- s

nml hundred' and fifty dollnrs! tlon ls uncertainty ns to tho powers of

instanco'!"" ""I"" V,B "rB: " "'"iwere lumorou and in evervthoy wito iiccompanied with tho statoincut that moro money is ready itneeded.

Roll of Honor.Tho subscribers are:

C. Brewer & Co. .500.O0Alexander & Baldwin. noo.ooIlael.fcld & Co, 000,00Oahu Railway & Uind Co G0O.O0Davies & Co 500.00Castle & Cooke 500.00a worKS 250.00Honolulu Iron Works 250.00Inter-Islan- d S. S. Co 250.00Schaefer & Co 250.00Charles If. Cooke, Ltd 100.00Mary Castle Trust 100.00Miss Krmino Cross 10.00Tred L. AValdron, Ltd 25.00L. T. Peck , 10.00John (illllll 10.00bnkaaio Mission . 5.00

"L; Carl Andrew, 4.00," """tie . . . .. 50.00I Wntcrhouso Trust Co 50.00

10.0075.00

1.00

" j.00' -- ""

iIrB- - Jl' i" Coleman 25.00

1 .V ,' !:. ' ' JMrs. M. VnnnirproprJiueu tmi genera, rovc-n-, M , ,M rg. westcrvcltof to be immediately

111 vw T,, .

I

ors from tho present in tuo"c.B "r'c'of Ohio

AT

to

bettered,

rfun4 thi' lb

.4.,ti

lli(

in tho

and

of

,....i

thofive a

two"- -

" "

o

George

Barber

Hall '

MrH. Havwnrd "lloo '

Mrs, William Lovn 10,00u. Mnrv Mnnm 10,00Mrs. Jldwin BennettILr1..,)!... 11... a

Carl W. Tuerko . ., ,,. 5,00.Thffo Ohio Children 5,00

Mr. '. IC, Mvors 5,00; Mr. .Turk Mlllon fi.00

,T. J. Williams , 2,(10.60

W .H ,,, 84)0Ohio J'hiuI ....,,,.,,,,.,.,JlvuJvn JUlin .,, ,,,,',Au, f08lifiV, 'fti. n. rimflAJ ,.,.,fl. W. MnAirtJ) ,,,.A PrlMMl ,,.Arthur P. Wftll ...... , . . . .

Hm I). JtuuAmiti u ti lyMHM

JJ ( ( M'CfMI III,1 ult.M. --i ii;- -UM

W I ui- i.i.i MAO

i,i in, uii,. i :tf

4MU. .,! HM ii

III -- 1,1 Mli r,ui,,i ..I iittiv

i t u I 'ui,- -

PAST

BRIDGE HAS BEEN WASHED.

AppealSufferers Comes

Nearly Six Thousand

Dollars Come in

Voluntarily.

In little moro than ono day nearlysix thousand dollars, in subscriptionsranging in amount from twonty-llv- o

ecnts to fivo hundred dollnrs, from richnad poor alike, poured into Tho Advor-tisc- r

and n and was col-lected by Bov. W. D. Wcstcrvolt to doforwarded to tho sufforcrs in Nebraska,Ohio and Indiana. Bcforo the sun hadsot yesterday ing.ro than fivo thousanddollars of this amount hnd been cabled

Tho manor cabled vestordav was sentfor tho Honolulu Buckoyo Society, Uov,W. D. WcstervcU, president. It wasforwarded by tho First National Bankand was probably ono of tlio first con- -

tributions to roacn Governor Cox at

1'rcsidcnt WoBtcrvelt has a balanco oc$200 to bo sent with tho next installmum. Tho Honolulu lodco of Elkan,.i.i..i nnrA ii. .1 it. iniiuuiou iu io md oruur oi luu uxauuu''" ' h r?r-- M?" n" "ward today, and just as long tho need

body was called yesterday, Supervisorl'otrio proposed tin appropriation anawas willingly seconded by tho othor".

It will first bo necessary to get anopinion from tho city attornoy. Super-visor Wolter urged haste and tho ques-tion was to tho legislativecommittee. It is possiblo that a waywill he found today by which tho citycan add its share to tho contribution.

;, ,7 Campbell 5.00Students and Faculty, Mills

School 5.00II. V. O. K. (Vablcd Bxnltcd

Hnler) 250.00Jiiliili Ascli 5.00Lewis Gnrrison 5.00Clark Biggs, Tlyrla, Ohio . . . 5.00San Franciscan Fire Victim. 5.00Ohionn 5.00u... m ir.-l-l r. nn"J..'' "" .vulicon M. htrnus 5.00C. H.Brown 25.00C. A. ShcpaTd 2.50C. W. Renoar 5.00Miriam Weinberg . . 1.00Barnard Licbman . . 5.00,T. Carlo 5.00

Levy 5.00Mrs, A. V. Shnplcigh 5.00deorgo II. Robertson 100.00

nr,n nn25.00

2.507.00C.00

K''virJ Shepherd Grossman,,. 5.00Kvn Heed Grossman 5.00Clias, L Frashor, . . 5,00F. W. Mncfnrlnne 25.00U. do Qiiadrnss.,., ,.,.,,,,,. 8,00" W, Ho Fref ..,,,.. 5,00'' " I""10'", ''w ..'.. 1.00

Tollil I5,SOO.OO.. . , ,

if(Jly FwJiml WireliNW Teluurapli)

CWaiHNAVI. (Mu, MrJi t.ijMJiil lo Tfcn A4raUi)Willi tin' rir rtturiluu 094) fft.f )i fmt twit Ibti dnwj(Hf IUw iiud111) fltlWM, ClurJ(ltl UN M

f tMkNM Hm4 UiHlAiblt U ll"lew-lyit- gin tt4iig. 4

M 4-

uctofmn rwmuMOST QOWAQti J'ATII'. P..il Vim 4krru l

tiUtHt, Umili . filial U, fhl l,liultiill 7ul!tui "'"I 4Ui m tn nlimi hi

I .! iir. IIWII ILK. Mil ll'll i. U

Cnrtcr 25.00 """'"." - '"A. V. Cooke 10.0fli(1nB!l I';A,W'u,T, i, Cooke CO.OOi " (SilentDavies' !"!"!!!!!'.!!! 2.l!oo HhIl0 ; ;',Mrs. Mary ,T, C.00 '"'Woyes Silent Barber Hlmp, .

Vnn lliimi.Vn,,,,r. r-,-. nr.nn.UT. John W. RolS.,,,,..',',','".

5,005.00

ir.,

kit.tri

MltfM

reforrcd

Frnnris

4itrl'i

George

JM'i.ll KlUluA)I lAltl M - l - tJ l tii'

mi iil.i III. ii.ilw yti4lii inM1,WI4II Aiiuliil Iim4 lfl mu II...U

RAPID TRANSIT

BILL IN IDFura

toGovernor l'ronr In defense oflin franchise bill and in a closingreply to l'reldent Teniioy reeklnit night ssiili

'Tinier this frnnchie tho trans-I- t

company li practically guaran-teed eight lior cent, on its iniest- -

inert throughout its life anil willten rot back Its capital. This isnet the condition under the prowout frnnchlse.

"lirthor, it will get a goodthing for thirty-'cvc- yenrs Instead ol seventeen years, and asure thing instead of an unccrtnlntv.

"The figures I havo used tonight woro taken from tho company's books. They show that itis getting well repaid for its ear.lr efforts. Hut what wo aro in-tercsted In Is not tho present, buttho next thirty.scven years.

"Tho company complains of thopower given the commission. Theyshould study tho power grantedBimilnr commissions on tho m5u--

land."T insist that the only way tho

public enn be protcctod is by put- -

ting it in tho bond.'Under tho proposed franchiso

it is 'heads tho company wins,'for its roturns aro practicallyguaranteed."

tlcftFrom Saturday Advcrtisor.

Both sidcj of tho franchiso question,ono from tho uowpolnt of GovernorFrenr, tho other from tho side of thoHonolulu Rapid Transit 4 Land Com-pany, as presented by President LTennoy Peak, wcro heard before tho select Gahu senato commit tco and othermembers of tho senate nnd houso of rcivresontatlvcs as well ns a lnrgo numberof interested citizens Inst night. Fortlirco hours or moro tlio two speakers inturn addresscil tho crowd which fillodtho assembly room of tho houso of rep-resentatives.

Governor Froar opened nnd closod thonrgument, if such it could bo called,taking tho franchise as proposed by him-self section by section and pointing outtho rights it would grant tho companyand tho benefits which would bo con-ferred upon the pcoplo. A long list offigures, showing tho great caro whichmust hnvo been taken by tho ovornor,woro presented to show that under thopresent franchise the company's earn-ings havo increased 178 per eont. overtho businoss of tho first year and eighty-fiv- o

per cont. encb year for tho pastfive yoars.

"This is not a bad showing," saidtho Govornor, "and would indicate thattlio outlook is pretty good."

This cauied merriment among thospectators.

"But this is a question which shouldbo gono over carefully," continued thouovoriior, m snealting oi the clniiso inbis frnnrlilso limiting tho dividendswhich shall bo paid by the company toeight per cont. "It should be consid-ered by the coniinitteo ns well ns bytho company. Probably changes shouldbo made."

Fivo Per Cent., Says Peck.President L. Tonney l'eck, on behalf

of tho company, took issue with thoGovernor,

"This company was organised tomeet conditions with twelve miles ofhorso transportation in Honolulu," hosaid. "At that time 1707 por cent,was not in slghtl Two por cent, was allwo could got out of it nfter tho oldstockholders had Bold out and returnedto Knglnnd. Tho property has cost1,2.000,000. Tho bondholders and stock-holders, combined, in the past clovenyenrs havo received about five per cent,on their investment. I will not attemptto stato what difference that Is from1707 per cent."

A recent leltor to Tho Advcrtisorpublished by President Peck 'and print-oi- l

lu loaflot form was offered to thocommittee to show tho history of thoearnings nf tho company from tlio timoof organization

Richard Ivors was called upon to'rivii his vnrsion of what returns "n.figured in tho propose, franc isons to what constitute d n twenty flvoper cent addition in stock for developmont.

President Peek again took up thoargument, pointing out how tlun com-pany hnd operated ornplv ears formany months In Manoa Valloy beforopassengers worn finnlly found In patro-nize that system. Ho told of how un-

der tbn present servieo a person canride from ten to twelvo m'les for ftnickel, while tho present frnnrlilso stip-ulates that tho company neo.l not car-ry n pissenger moro than six miles forflvo cents.

The Zone System."Vol tlio Governor would mnko tho

iit:iii(.-- (.till further," nulil the prcsl sli.co'"

Hum in too transit.glvu tho eoiiiminsioiitill illstaimo and

UiM on tho mainland It is rlalmwlthat ix iuIIim Is u rraimiMulH diktanco1

VniSWTb .. tflS3!jwil in tbti fluviirnur' bill Hr ftuij.

um ii. w mum r umiumil mil lasniHMaiu W" in" miIbiutf by u mid nh u h iulrat thtwill iiisuii. I tin i mubt pr vnui iw lb

vnti lUl b juojuiMid M,mmiiluii luipUMU IM)4iaUMji till U Wliirii W'U

wkv fi u(vMU lu iiiuil uurbull urn I

"Tb il'iwimn nf I. '1mm nut1tliu !. lit nut Jlirhi" I

u 111 I uuli livlii l lilitidl'dWi' ul(! ritfUlt "f Hi Ti'lilimy m I i.nlimll.i M U i..i.wl4 "' ''' "''' "' I1'1'. ...Ijull, II !)) Il.y lru, l,,, il l

III, 1 Hi, lu l ul, ll If Un lihg '

it k . ul III Jiiuv WM,IH ..i.imi.' n;.ll.. all, .1.

I . i l...ll, I.) ..l lit imii 'l Ikv

Ii i.I h'r Hfrrn- - vrm itiitdn toti rnUniHy tn O.iln tuid ln11n andthr b.'UH whlrh riffom.imii lniflin. tit.

"Irt y linpr. " h. md Unit n willr mi fiil.liol In nur tlmtt.rpp londltlons will b. tVen into"iiflil.ratlon and Urn I tn the .vent nf

lip happening ot thn iitiforterti tliomiilll li.. kin. l.lrr will nnt sillTor "

It wm ilie to rtpvm ii'rlock whenhnlrniHii iViil Urnwn nniinniircd ft

ii'ieiw of the rommlltw until nextriipdny nljtht, whin further nrgumentwill 1m henrd.

BUI Now Proposed,Tim bill ii. now propod by tho Gov

eriuir Is snld tn bo nlong similar linestho ouu orguuilly pioposoil bv him

ltli seornl inlnor oliiiiiges and thoelaboration of somthI clauses whichare deemed important.

A few of tho most Important of thorl.uiMi are ghen hcionith. Section Isnys:

Extoudcd to 1050.

"That tho term of tho franchisogrunted by Act 00 of the laws of Ha-wn- ll

of 18HS (Chapter CO of thoLaws of Hawaii), Is hereby ex-

tended to duly 1, 11150, subjoct to thoterms, conditions and restrictinns con-tained in said net and all amendmentsthereof."

Commission Created.Ono upon nhlch discussion is

roads as follows:"12. Additions, extensions and im-

provements of tho railway and thoequipment and works connected there-with shall be mado or ncqulrod by thosaid corporation and, when to mado andncqulrod or furnished by othors, shallthereafter be mnlntalnod and oporutodby It, wbonovor. nftor notice ixnd offopportunity to bo hoatu, it shall bodirected so to do by a commission con-sisting of tho Governor, tho secretary,ami tho chiof justico of tho Torrltory,tho first circuit judgo of tho first cir-cuit nnd the. mayor or othor chief oxoc-utlr- o

officer of tho City nnd Countyof Honolulu or its lucecBBor, or by anypublic utility commission or othor com'"mission appointed as provided in Soc-tlo- n

80 of tho Organic Act of tho Tor-rltory of Hawaii that mny bo author-ized by tho legislature to net in thomatter instead of said commission hero-in created; provided, that said commis-sion shall not so direct unless in itsopinion tho earnings of said corpora-tion when maintaining and oporntlngsuch additions, extensions and im-provements, together with its previous-ly existing railway system, will bo suf-ficient for the rcasonnhlo oxponscs ofmaintonnnco nnd operation, sinkingfunds, dividend of oight per cont porannum on tho issued stock nnd thocash basis fund, ns provided in tho firstsubdivision of Section 17 of this actas amended; nnd said commission mayHkowiBo pormit said corporation toceaso tho maintenance nnd oporationof any portion of said railway, equip-ment and works, whenever in its opinion conditions so warrant or roquiro.Any additions, oxtonsions or Improvo-mont- s

mado or acquired by said cor-poration may bo paid for in whole, orin part out of earnings or tho proceedsof bonds or tho proceeds of stock orotherwise ns said corporation may

unless othorwiso dlroctod bysaid commission."

Could Fix Faros.Thnt doallng with tho fares which tho

company enn chargo at tho expirationof thirty yoars, Buys:

"2. After tho expiration of Baldterm of thirty yoars only such farosmay bo charged as shall bo opprovod byuald commission, provided that tho

shall not require a Toduotionof fares unlos in its pinion tho earn-ings of tho corporation aftor such re-duction will bo suflleiont for tho roas-onabl- o

oxponsos of maintonnnco andoporation, sinking funds, dividends ofeight per cont ior annum on tho issuodstock, nnd tho cash basis fund, ns pro-vided in tho first flvo subdivisions ofSection 17 of this Act as amondod,"

Prominent Onoa Intorerted.Among thoso prcsont woro fionator1

Cecil Brown, chairman of tho commit-tco- ;Sonator Wirtz, Sonator O. P.

laukea, Senator A. F, Judd, SenatorL'liag. Rico, Sonator Chas. F. Chilling-wort-

W. It. Cnstlo, A. L. Castlo, Dopu-t- y

Attornoy Oonornl Smith, Representa-tive J. K, Paolo, benator David Bakor,Representative A. Irwin, RoprosontativoJ. W. Ascli, Roprescntatlvo J, H. Conoy,Representative Norman Watkins, Rop-rescntatlvo Paxson, D L. Witmngton,

ronnoy jock, president HonoluluRapid Transit Co., Richard Ivcrs, B. F.uiiiingiiani, uol. J Jl. FiBher, F, J Tes-ta, J, L. McLean, Spoakor II. L. Uol-stoi-

J. C. Lano, O. H. Uomcnway,iin itonrcscntntivo ii. ii."w't, ii.y'": u.iien,;,

i"; a C8kr- - Supervfior 'Sam DwightI)(irVis0r loMo M Do61Ib. Thos

lug-- .

(Dj rdrl Wlrle Telttriph.)COLUMBUS, Ohio, March 28. (Spo-cin- l

to The Advertiser) Severnl him-dre- d

men, women and children wororescued from tho west sidu early today.Scores ran about tho streets crying outthe names of relatives and asking ifany one had seen thi'in,

.1, II. Vestal, wife nml son and L, II,(lliicoy and wife were reseiiml thismorning, They hml been iiiarooiieil Inii liiiimi! whicli had been limiting about

""' "i ' ' V""S "",," ,WIf'ii' ''''"'' L" , ,"', . w1

l ,r?."JJ3 Tl&ff V'tl, ., luidi,- -, wau!,i 1.,' r, ...

,.i

Ho Mory for joumi'uImM MuMt today or.tir, i i s

I loo j a lil ilutrn on tin. .,i ,,vWWi Mjffc bmlliiK,

Tsumli-nlii- twdliw r ulUdy, "

Mll!l lw b Umu d.,.lm. I

MSMIHII n.Hii.il Ul I'llll., I llr. I!I. II I hull Ii tint n.uiii.i.y, but I....ul I.. I

lUntl

tlum ' miii I. i, I i,,i'.il.,u inl.llll llu.il Ul I4lll.4l !"' ' '

I 'iiMUil 1111. 1 UJtil failUl.ft I ,1' 1.

MIMl H',ul4b 4 liiii'i.t -, fi. iMMrkllt MM trf M Ii m

aJw i 4MMMIM U" Jr t fili'Ut4tt iMllh l l,M i.i t 1

rn.i.piiiiy, "nnd ,lo);',waters Tnenday.'.w. ' ntnr Htiirte, rising,'jkiwit to i icreaso

riMliico tlio faro. Iti""1'1 " r ', "w lied to the neroml

Hm

wr- -

Iihiiji i t,i f.il hi 4 vm kill, -- i lli Ii-- . f mI bi.l I. ilul.-- l ;iiiii. i u... ,,, j,,k 1 44 "i i. i,Mi .i il,, .nii il lllj AJititiMtuviil

r'i1

Page 4: ft?;COLUMBUS, Ohio, March 31. (Spo-cia-l to Tho AdvertiBOr) Sixty-fou-r bodies of flood victims wcro in tho morgue hero today, but only threo of them havo been identified. Tho waters

4 HAWAIIAN GAZItTTE, HJItSDAV, APIU't. . I0K1. --SEMI -- WEEKLY.sia SKSt

HAWAIIANaCDXJUOS O. MAXHBBOM

GAZETTEFnttrcl it the Postoflicc of Honolulu, H. T Second-Clas- s matter.

Semi-VVcek- ljr Issueil Tucwlnyi and Fridays.Subscription Ilnlca!

I'r Monti .XJl'nr Month, Foreign I ,UPar Year M.00 Per Yer, Foreign M.00

Payable Invariably in Advance;CHARLES S. CRANE, Manager.

VOCATIONAL EDUCATION.Tim movement fur vocational education in Una country In now in full swing.

Six Slates already line more or lew complete system of vocational training, andn number of others are, considering legislation to Introduce into public schoolswork that will fit lwys nnil girls moruto aid in tho inutemcnt too Nntionnl Society for tbo Promotion of IndustrialKtlucation has Issued a brief, explicit statement of what It consider the main

rincli1cii Hint should underlie tlio proposed legislation, and tho United Htatcsbureau of education, while not glung olllci.il Indorsement to the program ns awhole, is pending copies of tho pamphlets to those who npply for it.

Wlint aro tho essentials of n state system of practical education! Thesociety's circular endeavors to answer tlijs question. In n few short nontechnicalparagraphs it sums up certain of tho fundamental policies' of vocational educa-

tion as this society sees it. It urges state nid to tho local communities. Itrecognizes four fields of vocational training as the kind tho state ought to furnishIts boys and girls: Industrial education for workers In tho trades and Industriesand In tbo household; agricultural education for tho farmers; commercial educa-

tion for clerks, salesmen, etc.; nnd "household arts education" foroccupations connected with the home. In other words, tho state ought to

ronko it possible, for children to rccciro in the public schools instruction that will

lit them directly for productive employment in any of tlieso useful occupations,Instead of sending them out with little or no training for the real work they aregoing to do,

llxpcricncc has already been sufficient to indicate in what kind of schoolsthis vocational training can be given. Tho circular cites a number of types ofschools, some based on European models, others on American practice, among themthe following: Tho vocational schools, whero tho pupils can spend ntleast ono year in nil-da- attendance; tho part-tim- e schools, where boys nnd girlsregularly cmplojed may como for a few hours each week; tho evening schools inindustry or agriculture, for persons over Bixtoen years of ago who work duringtho day; nnd similar evening schools or classes in household arts.

It is significant that the six States that have already set up systems of voca-

tional education Massachusetts, Jfcw York, Connecticut, New Jersey, Wisconsin,and Indiana havo long had excellent schools. Tho newer educntion which theyarc introducing is not intended to replace the old, but to supplement it; to givetraining for a specific employment in addition to tho regular schooling, so thattho boys and girls may bo moro efficient and willing workers, ns well as bettereducated individuals. '

-.

FOR HEALTH? CIUKDEEN.Today, In conunitteo of tho wholo of tho house, the bill to prevent tho mar-riag- o

of a man physically unfit becauso of venereal diseases will bo discussed. Itif tho hopo of many that tho measure, will bo referred back to tho health committee, before which, in public meeting, a number of tho prominent men andwomen of Honolulu desiro to appear to urgo tho passage of the bill. This iimtterof tho insistonco of n clean bill of health from a bridegroom is not a. "freak,"as somo of tho solotis appear to think, butsidcred in many countries and which hastho Union. In advocacy of such a law,her strongest poems, something that is worth whilo rending, oen by a legislator.This is:

THE PRICK SHE PAID.

I said I would have my fling,And do what a 6ung man may:

And I didn't belicTO a thineThat tho parsons havo to say.

T didn t believe In n Godfhat elves us blood like fire,

f lien nines us into lioll becausoYVe answer tho 'call of desiro.

And I said: "Iltllslon is ' " ' '

And tho laws of the world nrc'nll;For the bad man Is ho who is caught

And cannot foot his bill.And tliero la no place, called hell;

And lieacn la only n truth.When a man has his way with a maid.

In tho fresh keen hour of youth.'

"And money can buy us irraco,If it rings on the plate of tbo church:

And money can neatly crasoKach sign of a sinful smirch."

Tor I saw men everywhere,Hotfooting tho road to vlco;

And women and preachers smiled on themAs long n they paid the prlco.

overy

EDITOB

1

directly for earning living. In

something that being earnestly con'already become a' law in somo ofKiln Wheeler Wilcox has written ono

So I had my Joy of life:Rent tho pace of the town;

Anil then I took me n wife,And to settle down.bait gold enough nnd to spareFor nil of tho simple joya

belong with a house and a homeAnd a brood of girls and bojs,

married a girl with' healthAnd virtue nnd spotless fame.gave in my wealthAnd n proud old family name.

And gnvo her tho lnvo of n heartdrown sated nnd sick of sin I

My deal with tho dcll was nit cleaned ip,And tho last bill handed in.

She was going to bring me a child,And when In labor she. cried,

With love, ond fenr was wildHut now alio had died.

For tho alio bore was blindAmi crippled and weak nnd sorot

And his mother was left n wreck.It was so she settled my

power of tho individual writer, Bending

By tho most roundabout wnys,

you doing your pnrtt

nnil nthers that contUlurutiou duosud thliir of "iimll farm'' prtxlutt

said must have, my fling,And thoy know tho path would go;

Yet no one told me a thingOt what wunted to know.

Folks talk too much of n soulFrom heavenly joja debarred

And not enough of tho babes unborn,lly the slus of their fathers scarred.

: a--.

ARE YOU DOING YOUR

you acquainted with Senator John V. Shnfroth, of Colorado! If youarc, tho Sugar Protection Committee would lilto to havo you at head-

quarters, or writo tho tcnator tolling him about Hawaii and hor positionin tho sugar tariff matter, and n special invitation is extended to you to bo

at tho meeting of tho committee nt cloven o'clock this morning. Shafrothhas suddenly become a senator of moro than usual importanco to Hawaii, forho has beeu made tho chairman of tho committco on Pacific Islands nndPorto Itico, nnd is thorcforo nt tlio bend of tho conunitteo whichHawaiian affairs. Tho most recent reports ns tp his nttitudo with regardto tho tariff havo indicated a good chance that ho would bo Hawaii'sside, which is also tho side of tho Colorado beet men. This, howevor, isby no moans certain.

Tho Honolulan, leaving this evening for San 'Francisco will carry a tremen-

dous mail from for tho past few days thousands of letters linvobeen prepared hero for transmission A number of them aro to mom-ber- B

of congress, still moro aro to mnlnlnnd firms which havo business rela-

tions with local houses, whilo there are also hundreds of personal letters.All the classes aro valued highly by Chairman Carter of tho committco. Mr.Carter is a beliovcr in thofncts and arguments to relatives and

a

is

I

I

That

I

I1

II wish

son

score.

Is

I tI

I

Arocall

to

on

in chance talks about Hawaii, they may reach influential sources, says tho ex

Governor, and they aro the most convincing kind of material.This morning tho committee will issuo nuijther broadside, giving somo

very suggestive and striking in support of Hawaii's ease. They nroto bo had at the committee headquarters, by nnyono' who wants to mnko useof them.

In this fight little helps. Arc

Aran.

order

Statesof

started

exchange

friends,

PART?

handles

here, duringtoday.

strong

figures

HTin: BTAHBETT REPORT.

Without knowing what tho members-o-f tho special committee of tho houseexpect n market superintendent to know, nn estimate of their report on thevalue of the sen Ice of Mr. Htnrri'tt l hard to form, Wo have had tho ideathat by ttartlng thu llerinudn onion Industry In Hawaii, the marketing of-

ficial ulone had earned his uiouvy, If nil the reports concerning the onionprospect are to be bullevwl, Hawaii has at ruck another good thing and hasit staple trap in sight euiujwrabW, almost, to pineapples. Of course, Mr, Star-rct- t

list not been utile In two year to reestablish nil the lines of marketingtint hue grttwu up during the 't Itslf century nur wholly foiivluia transportation fouijunlwi, wwImIoii mhhlit Urga "iNiMire (a Ibti kiuhihh ofIf )i had It wiHtll " u8ttriir.

We fuHtl I r4oatHi, bvr, If w full ( wnr Uttrmwrv!!? litrtport whUti my UuM m mmm )m U wU Lihwn Im Mra)U u (mlunlnnikHw turn fMwUft "Ikwwf M HU w MH?itW" tlmt murkotiouHkMaiUttl fgftft pwilMf.

;TJIjy IJUHJIJT HI Ml,

f, MMg tt list MMMfti VMsM tt tk Dtft iMtf fcl Mi tti MM,uM 'ilpipi TiMjIito Utm ft mr i umm m

rjpwiiiwwwMMifflr

milting MMde from the hotter of IsHl MperlMiew, ill of wM'b tletlel,we think, bear tho nuik of fttlle Imagination. Wa 1ll venture lo y

that very little sulfide r Inutility will Im fsHrtil to havo but on

tho rantmry, tltt there was everywhere brate M eheerful sleerHstifc of

tonditlen, utter Ike nsnul fotimgfotii American fituron.The story flf the Ohio eatnstropbo will show Its bright ilde when It nil

romas to Ik told anil when the world lntrni of the eherrful, bravo patiencewith whlh the people, In homes surrounded by water, endured the rold nndhunger, waiting fer relief.

,.HRAMITIOATIONB Or 8UOAR MlOBPEUITr.

Comparatively few people on the mainland, and not ovcryono in Hawaii,realise tho tremendous part which sugar plays in the life of tho Territory or

the Importance It has in supporting the government through Its share of thetaxes, both territorial and federal. Incidentally It is largely duo to tho pros-

perity following good sugar crops horo that the great trado of tbo Territorywith tho mnlnlnnd, amounting altogether to over $70,000,000, as well as thatwith otbor countries, deponds. To acccntunto these facts tho sugar protectioncommittee, which is working to ennvinco tho lawmakers of tho nation thatprotection to sugar, tho only staplo whichpast decade, Is necessary to prcscrvo thispared some figures which should go far tonecessity for protection for tho snke of the

For instance tho following little tnblosugar industry here is certainly paying n

has Inpre

within a fraction of fifty-flv- o per cent, Including the assessment upon tboproperty of tho Cityv of Honolulu:

All Taxes 8ugar's ShareOnhu $ 80,085,40.1 $21,735,000Maul 33,4COr103 29,171,000Hawaii 30,320,012 24,741,501Knual 18,526,852 10,838,480

$108,093,172 $10,480,041Area under cultivation 1912, 235,000 ncres.

Hut, in of the full taxation to the sugar interests contributeso liberally, it is now costing much moro to market a ton of sugar thnn it didformerly, although tho prlco of this sugar has not advanced to tho public gencrally. For instance in 1897, the year before tho annexation of Hawaii ns aTerritory v of tho United Statos, it cost to grow, manufacture nnd market a

short ton of sugar at Kwa Plantation, ono of the big mills with tho most im-

proved machinery, ho sum of $31.25 a ton. In two years afterthe cost had gone up to $47.47 a ton. This was due to higher wages

pnld and greater transportation charges, besides incidentals. Last year, 1912,tho cost of making and marketing a short ton of sugar nt Ewa was $52.52.

Yet tho price of sugar is tho same to the consumer now as it was in 1897.Tako off tho duty nnd tho making

Hawaii cannot compete, with its higher-price-

have no Chinese Exclusion Law, no bars on immigration, no labor laws to o

tho safety of workors.Should congress cut out this protection Jt will cause tho loss, in largo

measure, of tho great trado which is now maintained by Hawaii with tho mainland. This trade is in shipments from Atlantic ports to tho Territory,amounted to $5,731,CS4; whilo from Pacific Coast ports it was $22,530,G65, ora total of shipments from tho mainland to this Territory of $28,202,349 invalues.

On tho other hand tho shipments to tho mainland from ITawail for thoyear 1912, nro to havo been: to Atlantic Const ports, $24,502.27; whilo toPacific Const ports went values of $20,925,411. or n total of exports of $51,427,-OS- .

Certainly it would seem that this immense trado from tho Territory, andto It, is worth preserving.

Hut there is another strong which is made, and that is thoono of reserving the American merchant marine. At present tho larger

part of tho entire fleet of tho nation of deep pea ships nnd steamers, flying thoAmerican flag, is engaged in tho trado with Hawaii.

Hawaii's crop in yenrs averaged 504,000 short tons. Tho combinedcapacity of steamers flying tho American flag carrying tho sugar is 250,000tons, Thcycnpltnl of tho two companies, that carry tho sugar to tho mainlandis $0,733,000. They employ approximately 2500 individuals. Hawaiian sugarcontributed during 1912 $3,500,000 to American shipping.

T TALE

!ET TDLD

Continued From Pnge Ono.)

four ways of swimming and romombershaving used them all.

Ho does not know what time otnight tho Mol Wahino went down orhow long nfterward tho sun roso, butwhen daylight camo ho had boon intho water so long that ho was helpless-ly oxhatistcd. llo continued to swimautomatically and fovorishly, alternat-ing with frequont rests floating, butwhither ho was going or what waspassing iu his mind ho does not nowknow.

Ho does not remember how long itwas beforo he unexpectedly struck ona rock whothor ho was iu tho waterono day or two is a fact so inconse-quential to htm, oven now, tint Idsmind refuses to deal with it nt nil.Time wns measured in moro acute l

and iu finer wnys as ho swam,drifted and was blown ncross tho lengthof tho Mnul channel on that day twoyears ago.

On a Barron Rock.Ho pulled himself up oa tho rock and

fell exhausted. When ho rocovercdsufficiently to tako somo survey of thisunexpected haven, ho found himself ona small barren, doscrted island, whichfrom his description is concluded couldhavo been only Molokinl, tho forsakendot of earth off Maui whereon is a re-

volving light visited twico n yenr bytho lighthouse tender.

Polico officers hist night eagerlymapped out tho courso tho man musthave taken, and judging ns closoly aspossible by tho tlmo schcdulo of thostenmer Miknhala which plies in thosowaters, estimated that this Koreanmust have spanned, in a direct line be-

tween tbo sccno of tho nnd Mo-

lokinl, betwoen twenty and twenty-fiv- e

miles.Lost Ills Reason.

Neither does Han know how longho was on Moloklni. Ho does remomber, however, that ho saltwater nud that ho was. fast going crazy,a naked, demented, starving thing,a plcnyunWh thing crnwllug around ableak rock sot In the midst of tho peacennd ulentv of the Hawnliau Islandsabout it.

The island Is not visited sometimesfor months, but within a few days othis arrival on It a party of Japanrsofishermen, through some strange freakof providence, raw blm and took himoff. Hn does not remember whetherhe first saw them nnd attracted theirattention or whether thoy first sawlilrn. Details of thoso thrno or fourdays were long ago very npparriitlyhlute,l out of lilt mliiil by the mucinbnnr of tin- - horrible who)

TUen (o Molokki,lffl mm ttsnti tt, H slio iu Mulekai,

MhlBal tuwtl kt kahttHN 111. He tUYetlam 11m UJttihs h Mwttk rsVtL' lutlpflsslat ICtUMM thM Haul flMlli HMdal

not ndvancod prlco for thogreat Industry from ruin, has

spite which

1000, annex-ation,

1912,

shown

argument nation-wide

eight

wreck

drank

convince tho moat sceptical of theTerritory and tho country nt large.

will prove nt a glanco that thelargo share of the taxes, actually

of sugar locally will bo at a loss, forlabor with BUgar countries which

Koreans Know Ilia Story.Jllo'Stntcd last night that all tho Ko

reans in tho places ho has visited fromAlolokat to Hawaii .know his story anuknow of his adventure. He .bears everyphysical corroboration to it, Ins carriage, features and waning strengthindicating somo tremendous drain uponhis physical resources that broke themfor good and nil,

The fact thnt his story has not beenlearned oetoro tins is easy to explain,considering, first his own lack of knowledge of any other Innguaco except hisnative ono nnd, secondly, tho exclusive- -

ncss of the Koreans and the little exchange of thought or story botwocnthem and tho other nations by the sideol which they live.

Thought Captain Sam Gone.On tho assumption that Captain Sam

wns tho only survivor of tho wrock.Dolegato Knhio is responsible for a bibiu congress to provido relief for thoold man and somo reimbursement fortho loss of his schooner. Ho is nowbuilding himself a homo nt Laio, nonrthe Mormon settlement.

Until he wns told by Chief McWiilliolast night, linn Duck llyung ueliovodhimself to bo the only survivor and isanxious to meet his former nnd unfortitnnf.0 captain. The chief, who has in-

terested himself in tho Korean, will nttempt to nrrnngo a meeting betweentlip two today.

PASSED BILL BECAME

LOST IN TIE SHUFFLE

t

Speaker Uolstcin commenced to wor-

ry yesterday becauso Seuato Bill 33,which had passed the house March 10and been returned to the sonato, had notyet had thu honor of nn introductionto tho Governor, Someone told ClerkWise of tho senate, who got busy. Af-

ter rummaging, VTiso located tho meas-

ure quietly and peacefully resting inthe midst of dead bills and nn ollapodrjda of scnato rubbish. SenateHill 33 was accordingly rushed acrossthe lobby, which sepnrutes tho rivalhalls of fume, to Speaker Uolstcin, whocertified to it having passed third read-ing in tho house on March 10. and returned It with a quiet pruyer that itwould finally find the right road to theolllre upstairs, where sits tho man who,with a strjKo una nourish or the pen,breaths life Into the work of tho legis-lature nud whose "I approve" adds thofinal sanction to all new laws.

Governor l'ruar will now study thecalender and after a wluld he mnysolve the rcul reason why Beaut o Hill83 took runrtly twtintr-oo- davi tomake the trip ui one short flight oflir,Meanwhile, Speaker HoUleln It hippy

thst Hnulker BtJ htt been jottedi!UM the lurewnt of the ttuule.

vtiM win next will withMiSJfJ'H i, ww it t tmmiA, l IB ItDiirfieJ will twgjr. f duty u,4 JM;

t Miry i My f loialjwUiW bMp fMrfvgur

LUG ARE 9K--H SET

II L

(By federal Wireless TslejTTarh.)

NEW YOlIK, March 30- .- (Sicln),toThe Advertiser) Tlio living hiVo btensuccoured, relief mensttrcs linvo becll

brought into orderly organized work?ing nnd the swollen rivers are recedingwithin their banks throughout tho vastarea devastated by flood nnd lire. To-

day, therefore, was given over in manyof tho stricken cities of Ohio nnd In-

diana to tho burial of tho recovereddead nnd to religious services of re-

quiem for those lost. Hope for thofamilies of those still unaccounted forwas held out and thanks was givenfor almost miraculous, escapes) of thousands, who, but a few hours bofore,had given themselves up and had oyonbeen counted nmong the dead.

Expert ostlmatcs of ho property lossin Ohio alone have now soared to thohtico total of $250,000,000. Tho mostconservative estimates' of tho propertylosses in Indiana, Now York, Kontuckjrand other Ktaten increases this ton orWaste by from 430,000,000 to $00,'000,000.

Tho loss of lifo will never bo def-initely known. '

Tendency to Minimize.In nil tho dispatches received hero

from tho zono of suffering there is nowevident a tondoncy to minimize thesacrifice of men, women nnd children.It is deemed certain, however, by thosopcoplo who had previous experience otthe consuming character of groatrivers, angered in flood, that only ntithe of the dend will come to tho surface within miles of tho places wherothey were swept under.

Sanger Is Passing,Danger from tho rising floods in tho

lower Ohio Vnlloy now seems ,to bo,

over, a stago ot lorty-tw- o anatenth feet being roported nt Louis- -

ono-,t-

oeen ling-o- fhas obverse sido

whichScottish qunrterings aro first fourth,

and Irish third,

used Sovereignall national wnich tho

qunrteringsand Scottish

On sealis effigy the in ul

two verywere bearing

Enclishwise.

... ,, ! II .!.wnu a rise or oniy lurce-ienin- o

n foot hours.day somo feared that tho crest would

forty-flv- o fcef and hundreds otleft homes in Marietta,

Portsmouth, Irontown and (Jinciunati,in Ohio; Covington, Newport andLouisville, Kentucky, Parkers- -

burg, "Wheeling and Huntington, injWest Virginia, havo been dam-- !

nged by the rising .water of lastdays. These sections now

that tho flood will rocedothem an opportunity ior

ujnrk .ami Tponnntrnetinn n isin all affected areas.

-.

(By Wireless Telopraph.)LONDON, , March 30. (Special to

Tho Adverti Tho havecommanded that the war cease,Mno fighting continues, howevor. TheAllies, heart by success,tho ultimatum politely reply thatthey with in principlo butennnot accept alt tlio details. ThoAllies havo Tl'o

of thocling

rofuso prepared-b- y nndTurks accept

terms.Todav hor

weeks Newtho have nnd

defenses, with tliou panicky resistance. Ho

inforeements for arohurried from Adrinnople.

Scutari About to Fall.LONDON, March 30.

Tho Advertiser) A despatchfrom tho Times correspondentthat tho fall of Scutari may "bo expect-ed any Politischo

whichwithout the imprimatur of the Austro-Hungaria- n

says that atelegram has from

je announcing n stunning Scu-

tari. Tho fortress bo acliiuico to surrender, in which ageneral attack will bo made, tho in-

fantry attack follow bombardment.aro a

attack fromhas now out longer than

nnd it is believed tlio garmust

The Terms of theSOFIA, Mnrch 30.

Advertiser) is now con-

firmed that tho ter;ns announced re-

cently as tbo ones tho are pre-pared to and tho only ones.aro

submitted to tho representative'sof tho placedher unconditionallyhnnds. terms demanded nro:

a of negotiations fortho of n

nnd the Allies,a line be drawntho Sea of Marmora to Majatra,soven south of Midia pn the Black

of Galli-nol- i,

which bo loft' Turkoy. Allterritories west of the lino, includingAdrianople nnd Bcutnri. must be coded

Act Iru Charm In

i.enl UpMlflc In

...

Tl rolllatlv In

JW4 !

m W. 7.

by Turkey te the AIIIm.tfeetrti Turkey skill cede the Is

lamia In tkfc Agn Km to the Alliesintra- - itirsey twin ail uer

Interests In the Island ofIVrHrlh The Pette ronient In

principle the) payment nf n war IniiMttnlty, the amount sf which bofixed when eto litis rent

nd alio lo the tmympiil of private individual! of for dnmngo

prior to the war. llicashall pnrtlrlpftto the deliberationsgardlng the Indemnities.

Fifth Tho Allies tho rightto settlo by definite of penco thotreatment bo accorded to subJccts and to their tnde :n the nttoman Kmnlrc, ns well as tho guaranteesto bo regarding tho privilegesof tho orthodox churches nnd tho legnlstanding of their rnctal brothers whoore Ottomnn subjects.

I

DrJ.Cdlis Browne's

ORIGINAL

DIARRHOEA,

CHOLERADYSENTERY.

Uduti'uk.

compensation

HEIiLlN, Mnrch 30. (Special to ThoAdvertiser) Kngland Ger-many contlnuo tho Interesting buthazardous game "I Spy."

Two Englishmen just sen-tenced in Germany for too great curi-osity as to tho military of thofnthcrland, while, through n court sit-ting nt Portsmouth, England is repay-ing this compliment the of aGerman hunchback, Win, Klattz, whois charged with purchasing ofthe British navy.

Tho interesting featuro of tho Klatts.caso is tho disclosure that thocharming "Baroness has gotclear away tho "Tight Little

after picking the closely guard-ed locks of tho Admiralty. Detectives

on her at Dovor, whore shestopped at small family hotel. Theysawher dressed in tho latest Pansfashions, up to her rooms, andthey saw n dashing young man lcavothe nbout nn hour later and never lsuspected the "boy" wns tho mostf--i

wanted political meddler ever s.oen kabove tho sands of Dover tho

was safe at Bca on an outgoing;packet. ltt

The fnct that tho "Baroness" made-he-r

getaway by tho French route wasr Imcrall tho moro exasperating. There noextradition from Britain's ally, France,on tho political count.

M--.

fllT Wireless Telerraph.5EDINBURGH. Scotland. March .in.

ivmcu mis just, inon tho tho

lioyal Arms of Scotland, in thoand

the English second thoas differing from the Royal Arms ofEngland, ns by the for

purposes, havoEnglish first nnd fourth

tho second,tho reverso side of tho thero

an. of King, and,ploting tho design, smallshields included, thoHovnl Arms quartered

vine,in twelvo Early

reachfnmlies their

in nud

whichtho

two .aroand

give relictsuch

goiug on

Federal

PowersBalkan

taking receiveand

agree these

accepted tho Powers peaco Advortiser) Princess Kawanann-term- s

as a basis negotiations but koa will bo centTal attraction of ato determinations to exact round of gaieties in her ho-.- or being

nn indemnity nnd to muzzle Mr. Mrs. Philandorguns until the their O. Knox, tho Jay Goulds and other

eastern friends. Tho Princess, who istho advanco upon Constant!-- ' now on way east California,

noplo "continues, tho Allies pouring wi'l spend several York,through gap thoy mado in tho Washington Newport, under thoTcliaiadia Turks or.-- 1

iering onlytho Allies being

(Special toVienna

says

at Thopublishes nothing

foreign oflieo,been received Cot-ti- n

otwill given

failing

to aTho plans to make, simultaneous

three sides.Scutari held

Plevna thatrison bo exhausted.

Allies.(Speclnl to Tho

It officially

Alliesaccept,

thosePowers when Turkey

affairs in theirThe

First As, basisdelimitation tho territory

Turkey Balkanshall Rodosto on

Capomiles

Sea, excluding tho peninsulashall to

Tho

lit

only

CUwlMS1'iua

rtnotin.frCrete

hllla

sliallbeen bided,

caused Thein re

reservetreaty

to their

given

Doth nnd

have been

strength

in trial

secrets

againKroth"

from

got trnila

going

until"boy"'

is

Federal

their

their

fromin

time.

froiu

hotel

tepeciai to Tlio Advertiser) A bitter'dispute, Is raging in tho . Scottish .:..,..- -

over tne question of tho nationalhonor. Tho new Great 8cal of Scotland....1.1-- - . . ., - . . '

ji is tneso two small shields whichhave roused up the storm. Tho Greatseal or Scotland is used only for purely'"x1 Brants by tho Sovereign and thoScots ar0 wild over this "English lm- -pwtation,' which they regard as arrrntlllTnMO inQtilf to tho people northof the Tweed.

I.

flty Federal Wireless Telegraph.). v

NEW YORK.' March 30. fSnecini to

":'" .uK --'"- juux.When tho former secretary ot stato

and his wife visited Honolulu n theirway back from tho obsequies of tholate Mikado, tho Princess entcrtninedthem regally. Tho Knoxs will nowreciprocate in hospitality.....

(lly Federal Wlrelesa Telerarh.)MEXICO CITY, March 30. (Special

to Tho Advortiser) Near San Orabieitoday, a forco of ono thousand rebelsengaged and defeated bix hundredfederal troops, according to a telegramfrom Duraugo. Tlio rebels captured atrainload of ammunition nnd supplies,both sides sustaining heavy losses,

!

ROME, March 31. (By AssociatedPress Cable) J. Pierpout Morgan isfniling fast and no lurthor attempt isbeing made to conceal tho seriousnessof his illness, from which ho will prob-ably nover recover.

Ho is unablo now to tako nouriBliM. mont and is not able .to sleep. His,physicians announce his condition' ascritical and news of his death at any-time mav bo expected.: hTRENCH WILL TAKE

FLYER TO THE POLE

(Hj Federal Wireless Talesrsph.)PARIS, March 30. (Special to Tho

Advertiser) A French North Polo ex-pedition, which is fo Btart from Havrenext .Tune, under tho direction of M.Jules Do Payor, is to carry with itsome aeroplanes and a military aviator.lieutenant Alcnard, for whom tbo per-mission of tho minister of war Is bo- -

I ing asked, wlirprobnbly accompany itas pilot.

and ONLY GENUINE.1 Checks and arreiti

FEVER, CROUP, AGUE.

Tli BH Rimed? known forC0U0IIS, COLDS,

asthma, nnoHciims.MKUMUJIA. OOUT, RMKUMATItM.

I tto MtnsUamj.n,I

,T-!. I!, 6 fc

amjur msMfl. t ty-- uft.AJH.

Page 5: ft?;COLUMBUS, Ohio, March 31. (Spo-cia-l to Tho AdvertiBOr) Sixty-fou-r bodies of flood victims wcro in tho morgue hero today, but only threo of them havo been identified. Tho waters

1 inilt'nn Iill--

LIlUnL lU I nlL'

THE FIRS!

GAME

aa .

lawanans losq in HotI

Contost on the

Polo Field.

Hardest Fouqht Game

San Mateo's Have

Yet Seen.

(Dt rderl Wlrelt Ttlesraph.)HILLSBOROUGH, Cullfornln, March

30 (Special to The AdvcrtUcr) Tho., iiM sinnhor. will

MM champions oT cSllfornU,

judging xropi tho decisive manner in

lo4 o" discussed about tb Tho' cups. waswo the

iashlonablo attendance.Twnntv thousand dolus is men- -

the probable amount thatetaSecV hand. of thomatch. hkh was tho highest chuoipolo over seen here. I

Todays event was tno nrstscricB of threo mntencs netween mo I

thei; with' ver 'aga dA modeclared A''0 betting two

they regard result, of their nextcontest with tho Islanders ns anythingbut a foregone conclusion, bocauso thoyarc very abort of schooled ponies andmay not bo able to collect enough goodmounts to serve them throughout thoeight days of fust and hard playing.

A Battle Boyal.Tho match was a royal battlo irom

..i.x. i. a:. Ti .,n.lniilaA,ll,. Minlhahardest fought and most excitingtest on local field. At times tho1

-- .i .l .. !, 4V .IJ...IJibuti II lAUII EU l 11111 ,1UL LUU 11MV1D.".... I

BCcmed almost reckless,Rico Out.

Onco during a hard gallop forDan, mo ponies riuaim oy "in .ueiur-- j

caux oi ine niasners aim Anuur mco

nnd l,nt, hnre nid rider wnnt .lnwnlin heap. A cry of alarm went up'as one of the ponies was seen to rollcompletely over Dovcrcaux, who layprostrate on the turf for moment.Timo was called and both players weropicked up severely from tbomishap. After a brief rest they pluck- -

ily and the gamoto the cheers of the spectators.

OF

Tim l.intnrv nf tlm imlo invasion ottliTeo four

bylast year,

ot tho It is

(mm tlin inaidn and bv one men arrivedmlin Iimj in (minrTtiiiirr tiingreat game. Captain Dillingham w rites :

in i........ i,., ,.fin nir i.n. ,invu w.t "-- 'j,....-..- ,,I

to day getting-- to th0 oti

irip. u uuvu huu du iimu uiana misfortunes to tho membersof the polo team we all lett homo'that it almost impossible tosettle down to tho ot ourHowever, 1 am going to now an'dgive you a journal account ofwo have put to since the time woarrived in

"Mrs. Dillingham and I southto Coronado on tho first of February.Wo arrived Sunday noon and foundthat 1 was scheduled to play in a

that afternoon, at three o'clock.As my clothes did not followmo tho hotel for several hours, itwas impossible for mo to tnko part inthe- game, but 1 accepted the invita-tion to referee tbo match. I was gladto get on tho field to judgo thospeed of tho play, as I was aaxious toknow how fast tho game really was.. .

was one made up otmen who comprise tbo Canadian team

from unattached polo players. Tho was a good one, but nobetter than many of Saturday af-

ternoon matches bctweca tho andsecond Oahu teams. What

me was tho lack of. detcimi-natio- n

in tbo ridng. this I mean,the players eocmod to go through tho

of riding than tak-ing their men in hand ob wo do in our

games.Interest in Ponies.

"Great interest bad boen taken intho Hawaiian poplcs and everywas tnado to find out how fastponies could run whether thoy werohandyor not, while talk-in- e

a great deal, hud managed to sayvery little ia regard to class otwork tlmt our ponies do and badno nrrangod it that in exercising and

tho ponies, ho bad kijpt wellout of sight of other grooms, andtho polo

morning after I arrhed, I tookwholo string of itonles over on the

little and worked themout lleforo J bad thornfirst omi motor and then another

ncenn and before the ox-er- r

I no was finished there wan rjtilte an(udlimcu of Interested p'etator linedup to hour tbo jionle behaved,

WaUbiBK Uio Osoockf,ufteruoon, u little

rr'-- i ganin wni rrujfiiil and I W

luvitnJ to tako part in bi, In the,it r.tiM ))twnti our point and

ether the Jfavralmu htitw ihw--up wt The Ouom'IIhii Ipbm hud

bffii iiiHiii r. hi Mi liuvlwixi d nil duiriNu tlwi KUfilb Si

jminrv 14mIhi i h i.'Kfniii f nym ut(w, r i t umn u

n ul an ItM Mt 4rtiy fcW I

HAWAIIAN UAlBlffi. TURsDAY. I. WI.1

ttrnt " wii mi any money

' ?" "17 ,0 "'J'1',h(1 ,,,(, tt, til it. HH.l mirr ncclnd.. . .." ,....,.--.--

inrm in on 1 1TJ nn ul uiKrvuitH- - m tfcrir wfcele MinMMttaii or

team play wai ewmperwl nf a workingWHlnntaMdlng beineen thrtr No. Oneand Ne. Two, who i- fM by bintMtllnir tlr ami fonr. Neither No.One nor Two made nny attempt to ridethHr eponrnl, lint rHol on mi In- -

lerrnnngc 01 pntr 10 get wny amiscore.

Surprise tho Native."Thp ilny after I nrrltod In Coro- -

k...l 1 .1 - ibl...... .............i.. ii.a.f'tffX th. tKmin

Snn Franelsco. Tho managementCoronado polo asked that 'two lift- -

wallnrla play onteam Ingalnst tlio Otironado team thofollowing 8undnv, and the two Cana- -

llan forwurdt, Mr. Carlo ami Mr.u i ... i .. i ...in.tho two ilnwallnna acalnt Miior llo6,the liiRheet Roal ma in Southern Call circuin.iuiicCT. iy mi., u ianucnn,fornla: tho '" t,lclJ lnR' mn'ch ,,ur,liR ' ,0 ,our-o- fHarry RobcrUon, best man

asked for ,ltho teams Mr. C'ntehlcy namont, Jo a

of tho Canadian team, and Mr. Ilmton ",""' aurinR "" 8m" "J Pm'-o- f

Colorado Spring. was Rrantcd.

"I knew that Krank had boon play Boat Canadians,ing polo Maul and Bhould be In fair- - "Wo moved our borses back to

fit condition to play onndo and all but myself camo to Cor-hi- s

arrival. With tho few pnraos that onndo to mako rendy for our first reg-- I

had in tho .North during .Tnnuarv. I ular match. By Tuosday. Lowell wnBtoured it Wniild u. fit fnr fhnSundnv match. Great interest wastaken in this coming game; thero was 'Teat of tbo team. Sunday, March 3, womun talk of seeing some of tho Un-itn- tho in tho first match forwaiian in, On all tho California trophy cup. This Is a

betting is a foaturo, and scratch tournament and for a beautiful..,,.,,, ... .'.. Knlii! Ivor tronhv nnd four indlv dunl"ffl hotel.

" Our match with Canada look-M-

aeftaer8noto0n,5bVeJfo?cn aeanl Coronado team favorites to'fJl!Zgo

vfttors wore 8mj.ll ebampagne weroo

modesty ?'?! Canadians, was

Knocked

a

a

suffering

remounted

HISTORY INVASION

down

objecttry

riding

particular-ly

off

nchooling

practicebeeu

following

drtM.iii,jf

AIMtll.

'.""""""?'

wBwhB

pcnnUlon chango

,,mu. .., .. , ...,. .uc K'"'" wa on in quite abrisk fashion, but at the end of tho

period, and I agreed that''we could find out where forward.-- -- -- - " P '

" .-- " -- - r ""','':" ;l" "" ..... a VUu. , : ::

;i ..!, tL !.. I

......ui. uiuvn ..vuv u 4 JUIir lUillLO,

Wanted at Pasadona."Considerable mpRRurn wan hrnii-rh- t

to boar to got us conioup there for a tournament commencing,icorunry We wore particularlyanxious not to piny Canada before thofirst tournament gamo, ns wo

.be- -

ItPVPM thnt thPtr wniilH i aoio to rrnfmore out of our of play than wo.could benefit through playing them.T in P.lBnclnnnB TOnrn- offeringmatches in which Hawaii would be ellgiblc to ploy nnd as soon ns wo werosatisfied the would not bo ,0e-"a'f-

-

logs, we docidodlthere Jurat play thooxperienco

matchctl play.Scoring for Fun,

"Major Itoes, secretary of tho Coro-nado Club mnnager ofpolo hero, arranged with Malcolm Stev-enso- n

and Perry Beadlcston to comoand play on tSio Coronado

in tho March tournaments. Mr.Walter Dupee has a string of fortypolo ponies at Coronado, which hohas been collecting ovor a period ot7ears and which aro good and apoedy,would show well with any ponios intho world. Mr. Dunce agreed to mountthese two Easterners, who,

Hobs and would mako thoCoronado Mr. Stovonson is aseven-goa- l man and ueadleston a livo- -

fore we'were duo leave for PasadenaI""1 Jt was arranged that fVirnnailn'team was to play a practiicoLramo with1"''.. m I".. '. ":. Ti' ii" ,t""uV '""""". ""iury ii,

'not, several hundred people wereup along tho boards when wo

iro '.'--"; i.L .""? ": ."."".

mainland by tho iip goal man. They played andto March 17, has been received Har- - on Cooperatown team, wonold Dillingham from Capt. Walter Dil-- I Eastern championshiplingham local plaicrs. forms Stevenson substitute on the

interesting reading, bcingl A"1"'c"'ln tcan'writtnn "These a fow days be- -

nrttliinrv Imirn

work

como

has beentrip.

beenCalifornia.

match

to

better

"This match

and visitinggamo

ourfirst

struckBy

motions rather

inter-islan-

etforttho

etc. Ilannon,

could

thoplayers.

"Thetho

fieldlong,

on tlm

seo

"Two

tho

liuwiif,

TmfMagkiHM

"l,r

ot

tho World

..i...

horo

in Cor-l- y

Immediately on

inakn

Canadinnsplayers

here, piito

Frankour

Pasadena to

15.

big

stylo

two

Country

California

togetherwith himself,

which

us'

tliceo upagainst

"nwaiian

B..u.K,i,eatMajor Boss and Dupee showed com-bined handicap of eighteen goals.

"It shaino to tho money.Wo only played o

periods, but we ran up a score of thir-teen goals to four, and bad our

good band every minuto. Wo hadanother game them the day beforewo left for Pasadena. Played thom

periods, ran up a of nine tonothing. was whoro wo mado atactical mistake, as you will later,

Games at Fasaaena."Our, ponies were sent to Pasadena

by express very comfortablo standcare and arrived without mis-

hap. The first match at Pasadena wasbetween Santa Barbara and Pasadena

Hogan Cup. Santa Barbarahad best of tho match up totime of an accident tbo sixth period,when tbey lost man, and again intno seventh period, wnen taey loBt another man, through painful, but not

serious accidents. Tho Pasadenateam won out tbo eighth neriod.

"We played the Boise, Idaho, teamon Monday afternoon and tho first hnltof the game we found great difficultyin bitting the ball on the dirt field, asour snots traveled artnor than wepeetcd on tho passes and it scorned irnposuihlo to hit the ball fair the face,

"In tho last half, however, thingsbegan to go better wo made some-thing like twelve goMs in perird),making the final score eighteen to four.This left and Pasadenaplay off the finals for tho Hogan Cupand match was scheduled for thofollowing Hatiirday. Tho Junior Tour-nament commenced the day,

"This tournament was limited toteams of ten goal handicap. Our regularteam counts up eleven goals, I with-drew from tbo team, Baldwin tak-ing my place, which brought tbo team

ten goal, A man was taken elf thoamdina ami tbo lourr grnl man

miboliluted bring tlmm within thehandicap. Hawaii and I'atadona Jmi-lurt- f

then and llawuil nun with acore uf )1 to 4, rUnta lUriwtn ttiu

plavrd lloite, and llolie won, ivlijgItolio and Hawaii lay for the Juu-iu- r

uj,"On arruwBt of rainy day !'

iIvim, till match was m lo lw ily4off at Coruatdu owl JloUe ilWtMrtW busntih !'iu mnyim"n m nty.'fie Ml HMjlw Uim f mlr pftfcfliJrli iuj Unwm, WW latef- -

Ml $.tmlpr wiurn VtUtn (ftM M U Ut WWW m twi

lfMW.

Hard Lock for Hawaii.leted tt Irani eate, tat M

w'TlsTtith lrktllt of baby, the 111In, fet llto fltal iwtintl. At

il. ...i il,. ....il :i,i i. i.."ir '"" "" it:.""j " ..BUnvrfM III plV Willi 111 IMm nd III

ttlfr wftn referred to the referee, anilrrritiUnn drnled. The game went on,

Hmm-aI- playing itcmnritlUotlgame, not properly mounted, ami not In.tho proper places lo Jo the brt as ntram; It sccnied lmKJible for them togri together until tlie icvcntli pcilod,when tho score stood live to one.

"Here, iinwati nraecd ami in mil no- -

nml the last, rnn tho score up tolarco ami inrre nunners, wnen umcwnnrnllral. nfiil llin llnpnli I nit urna t tin l,v"

."It was hard luck lor Hawaii ns thoy

deserved to win and wltn tno regularformation, or with tlmo to have pro- -

red tho junior team for tho match,wo eoM hnvo won it l.nnila down. I amfj tlmt r'cna Ima reRrctlcd the nr- -

Ii trnrv nctlon in clunvinil llnwnll ac!,!,nco J !'' first team, nmler all,

out of dnnircr. tho followlni? Thurs.I camo to Coronado to aoin tho

(mm Ml l,nv. In lli mnvnr m, nnlh!. ": ", - 1we but the coming match. Tho inter- -fP I, C iSZrVan7o to do or diel

"Hawaii, in spito of the fact that,, , , defeated bv Pasadena.

to one on Hawaii. Wo went nfter them i

iroin mu murk turn jiuvur jusi uur uumon the camo from tho first period totho finish. Frank Haldwih and HaroldCnstlo played particularly well, and itw8 fortunate for mo that Frank was on

lol' OI "1B K"",ui LV"-- l"uof. worry ami lack of exercise, so was,mf?nl) B"" wiiun mo gumo ovur,

it wnu whin nttil amir tun fnr oiv": ;; -- ""-' .; iot " "G"1. Pc",0', , a first- - rato gamebllt WU8 not Up to his best lorm. ilow- -

over, we didn't need any moro goalsas tho score was ten nnd three-quarter- s

usFirst

Cavalry or Boise. Coronado playedPasadena defeated them bylargo scoro in most uninterestinggame. The Army beat Boibo by clososcoro. Coronado played tbo Army,beating them by 14 to 8, playing WalterDupee at No. 1. Tho following Satur-day, Hawaii was scheduled to play Cor-onado in tho finals for CaliforniaTrophy As a result of tho beat-ing which Coronado roceived in our lit-tle practiso game, thoy decidedthey would hot havo chance againstus unless they had somo one totho plaqe of Dupee. Accordingly, hostepped out and Captain Bcsloy took thoplace at No. 1. The handicaps of thisCoronado team, with Bcslcy on it, putup twenty goals to our cloven.

A Great Game."There was great speculation as

the outcome of this match and while thosympathizers for Hawaii wero largo innumbers, betting was two and three

? ""e' a,g.anft.us- - V,lil wo "Mired

Tho laurels ri goblets nst avorites-becom- injr

and tbat. S!""??"'' tho and thotho

tho

since

what

came

tbo

leru

by

dirt field to,""r. andruinous to our horses' out of tbo way, put

to winner of theto for tbo

and tho

to

team

hero

team.

totho

'ned;;

thethe

tloil

cups.

' '"' " "a" VU'J iB aBK"-'Ki"-""- i

"",nst l ,tnow tllat oveiy onotlie team felt that if wo

"". i i 'ui ii them in tho last half. To our1Y..U, itu.Hurrg- - wo ran aipad oal, froma

wns a takosoven

teamin

with

four scoroThis

see

ining stall

for thetho the

ina

veryin

l ox

in

andfour

Hawaii to

tho

next

Bam

lo1 tram

to

met

lo

a alI

r

f I"

wui, a

I

nndday.

,f ?

" l"u

'nu fnr -- v

and a verya

athen

tho

thata

tako

to

the

"

a

d

that

" "o

5ll

Q togPtIler onr tcal wor). d

iBiiiio ovor. as wo 11 cured it out andtatp(1 to mlr Byt,, it cnull

nijyhore near hold tho Coronado teamtlieir first half of tho game, we would

tho first and at one timo, tho scoro wasnvo goals to ono and threo-quarter- Intbo fourth period, our ponies failed u$and a run on the part ot tho Coronado 'sbrought tho scoro 5 to 4 in favor ofCoronado. Tho paco was somethingfrightful. I havo never seen bettercombination play or harder riding thanin moso iirsi iour periods, it was anEastern combination as against a West-ern combination, and it was an ovenstand-off- .

"Hnrold Castlo bad Stevenson run-ning for bis life and tho battle waslargely Stevenson and Bcadleston asagainst Castlo nnd Dillingham. Castlebud the harder man of tho two, and weBtoppcd practically all of tho combina-tion play that mado them so brilliantagainst Pasadena and tho Army. Ourpasses wero very much more successfulthan theirs, and Arthur Rico had MajorBoss over the boards and back out oftho game. When bo got a chance tobit, ho wnB so hurried that thoro waano distance to his back-han- d shots, andho askod Itico not to rido him any hard-er than he had to, as ho was all in.Major Ross, incidentally, is a big pow-erful man, weighing 100 and over.Frank was a towor of strength in hisback-ban- d shots and was ablo to gotaway from Captain Bosley whenevernecessary for him to do so.

Baldwin Crippled.

"Wo camo lato tho fifth period con-fide-

of pulling tho gamo out, and tlioball was no sooner thrown in than woall flew at It, and In ono of tho firstrushes, Frank collided with Stevenson,and his leg received a fearful twist andbrulio, which In spite of his bard phy-sical condition, was so painful that hoscreamed out In agony, Tho gamostopped and after examination, FrankMid that bo mod Id try lo go on anddid manage to finish tbo period, al-

though )iu stopped onco anil uikoilbo taken out. Ono goal was registeredon ut in Ibis period, With a ttrn ofII to Hi, Ham Jlrtlilwln eauio In, and anil our pmiltw bad been pluyml uutu, amiwuri) mi the rqitwit, I eoulil nut pluka pony for Hum from the dlffereM immui.ber f Ihx Imi Mud I mm M him fnr

forward ikmIUuu, wlitJt kg kluMfrrly play, but I put bit In enhVaak'n py' i m4 deeJdwl thai

ur imly hintre wa tar im Ui lm tuliars mi Mtr4 tlel wt mm lata) tut

Mtf ttf Ui Uk u iMitb a imilbli,'fttlt twbMM UMtm tfl tigLX gaitt4 tw wti, ut tU mniMi iti''-- . immiM, mmt im mMffiii, mYi4 p m fVMHk) m mi

-- HRMI WRKICLY.

ttk iMtr, wlhhlng thn nume tylettj a OH

. Warm rrtlM tUrtiNt."Tli lt wf emild say was that II

waa mighty bard ImcV, nnd It hart hiIn tt the nipt) gn In Ihe other loam '

when w frll Hint with oar fall liwmtie rould havn lurneil tho Irlek. Thegame was, I know, a Wry ciewl snrprlixito the Hntrrner nnd In dltetiMlng Dipmatter nfterwatd, with Mr. Hteienson,!he jMild that ho would have given nny--

Ihlng lo have had Harry Payne Whl'thn Nnnlaln af IV.m All ArilM Immh. I

- ,T , "' ...... ... 1,11- - 41, ,tllli,l,l, imilll.hero to bale recn the mnlch He altlIt wa ono of the hardest games thathe had ever played In nnd thnt thespeed which the Hawaiian maintainedthroughout tho game, wns fir and awayfaster than bo hnd any idea we eoulilplav. Frank Baldwin wa taken homebeforo tbo gamo waa over nnd when woreached the hotel, wo found him hi (To-ting great pain with his leg swollen Intwice Its natural slr.e. The poor fellowwas all shot to pieces over tho idea thathis dropping out of tho gnmo had dis-organized ii' to tho point of losing thematch, which be felt wo had la bandfor victory. A largo dinner was giventhnt evening by some polo enthuMnMshoro at tho hotel nnd tbo Hnwaiiattteam were among tho guests. Soveralspeeches wero made, of most compl-imentary character to tho defeated teamnnd tho talk on nil sides was to the ef-

fect that the match was tho best overplayed on these grounds.

All Amorican Trophy,"Tho following afternoon, Pniadena

nnd the Canadians played tbo openinggnmo for tho All Amorican Polo Tro-phy. This is tho big $4000 cup put upby Mr. Snreckels nnd which is playedfor annually. It has been won by ting-lan-

Hurlingamo nnd other teams intho past, and wo wero anxious to takotho cup to Hawaii. Only tho four betteams in tho previous tournnment weroeligible to compoto for this trophy, viz.,Canada, Hawaii, Pasadona nnd Coro-nnd-

Tho Canadian team lost HarryltobiiKon as the result of nn accidentin a previous gamo and Mr. Huston ofDenver substituted. The match was aclose One, won by Pasadena in the ninthperiod.

On Monday, tbo first match for thoJunior Championship cups was playedbetween tho Army nnd tho Snn MntcoJuniors. This was not by nny meanshigh-clas- s polo, and any of our juniortennis nt homo could hnvo won handily,as against the Army, Boiso or tho SanMntco Juniors.

Ladies' Nomination."Tuesday, there waa a cut-i- n

mntcb, 'ladies' nomination' teams.Threo teams wero mado up and playedin tho name of tbroo different ladies,wives of playing members. Tho yellowplayed the blues full periods, Ihen thoblues played tno wliitca lull periods;then the whites played tho yollows fullperiods; tho team making tho mostgoals wero declared tho winners in thotriangle mntch. Sam Baldwin playedon Mrs. Lemp's team and this team wonthe match. Jyich member of tho teamroceived gold cuff buttons with tho Cor-onado Club crest enameled on tho samennd Mrs. Lcnip received a silver cup.

ut Crowd for Hawaii."Wednesday afternoon, wo woro

again lined up against tho Coronadoteam, this timo to play for tho AllAmerican trophy. As Frank was outof tho game, wo played with Sam Baldwin in his place. Tho sontiment horont. tho hotol was so strong in favor of,tho crippled Hawaiian team that groatprcssuro was brought to bear by polofans hero to induco us to socuro ono oftbo best men from Northern California,to piny in Frank Baldwin's place. Onogentloman came to mo Sunday nightnnu said tnat it l would get Mr. Dris-eo- ll

to como down from San Franciscomid play with us ,thnt ho would pay allthe expenses of bringing Driscoll nndbis ponies from Snn Francisco horo andreturn, and bring them on a specialtrain if necessary- - to get them hero intime for tliQ Wednesday match. Thonrguments wero used that tho Coronadoteam bud been organized as an all-sta- r

aggregation to bent tho HnwaiinnB andwe wero entitled to uso tho samo tac.tics to get bock at them in this secondbig tournament.

Stand or Fall."Wo discussed tho matter at great

length, and thou I decided that Hawaiiwould stand or fall ns an Hawaiianteam: that with our junior team boing nono other than tho Oahu team oflast year, wo would go at them in truointcrisland stylo. Wo rearranged ourteam to best meet tbo positions of ouropponents and consequently did not linoup in tno oruer tnat tuo uauu teamliacd uii last August. Wo played Artbur Rico at ono; Sam Baldwin nt two;Harold Castlo at threo and I playedback. We put Sam on tbo handiest po-nies wo had aad ho was cautioned andinstructed to prevent Stovenson fromplaying bis fancy shots. Tho bettingodd's were five to ono against us andfrankly, it did not seom to me possiblothat wo could hold this aggregationdown with our junior formation. Justbefore tho gamo started, ono of the Coronado men walked across tbo field, lead,ing a gent and my attention was directod to tho episode with the remark,"that they bad Hawaii's goat inband."

"Tho gamo had no sooner started,thnu it was evident to mo that Coronado bad not received from the fearfulstrain of tho Saturday match. Monnnd horses wero lacking in tho snapwhich characterized the play of tboprevious gamo. Hon ever, thero waslots of polo left and their defense andours was tbo feature of tbo gamo. Woscored tho first goal nnd held tbo gamoin hand until tho scoro was in thosixth period, S'j to 3, Coronado leadIng.

A Bad Spill."In tho nlxtb period on a run along

the boards, Star tripped and wentiluvwi heavily, fortuuatuly throwingArthur clear. Major lions' pony,crondjng on behind, tripped ovur filar,made a complete somuivrsault throw-ing liii major Hut nn his bark. J'ortun niliiuiiw tho niiijor ways In a ilniilfaint and it looked ut If tlm ond oftlm ituiim bud roum, and mv wtim allIfinlli'd 4t thu tirrlduul ywve falal.Ailbir IumI tlrulneil bU rlht hand amibruUid mt uuu elbow, bttdils umIUukm . urful twk. Aflur tty inlnulaari, built pltir tivrtfj iv no tm wllbtU metah. Vrom the ImI half f I beaislb, IliriMlub lb t talk, a4 tflfbUi,tlm play was pranirally all ia rolt4w'f IfciTllurf, M ii, ha Mtublh)nyi4 lliti ball did tint ywl up lu tl.taslrfdl. bnv Mu lui ami bul tuirll l.iiw Iftfa, billi (ul uil ll.i

I f uii. ut th ) ufub lulu 'lm,iaW bit, M mot wrtaut lXM

it ail.jgAJti.aiJ,at. . u,.ii j U,t !&iniftMcM..tt-l'- .&J&J?lst,

t mm n eie. tid dfntltitf thn muchretried goal and the final Kf, twandest with the bsll within a hanilrrxi fretttf Coronado 'a goal 11 wa gnmonf fearful sttaln and Ian dl.appolnl-tnrn- l

at nal wthniag thin match rancmlr 1m npprrrinlrd by thou whorhrred for us alone the side line, I

lllevr il a rnnoervntlta putlmnte Hintnlnclynlne mil of Uio Imndred sperta-lo- r

were yelling Iheir head ofT forHawaii.

"No more ardent rooters could bofound than John I). HprrckeU, nnd Ibomanagement of tho hotel. I understandthnt over ybrlt boy and groom nndtho grandstand filled with Ban Diegopeople, wero loud In their support ofllnwnll. Sam Baldwin played tho stnrgamo for tin and his courage and daaliIn breaking up the piny of Stevensonwas the mnrel of tho tournament. Ifeel that every man on our tenm playedfor all thero was in him nnd gavogood account of himself; consequently,wo have nn regrets except I lint Ibofates wero not ns kintl as thoy mightbao been. For scvornl days, it wanhard to bcllovo thnt wo bod not boontho victors of tho contest, ns hundredsof congratulatory messages were ro-

ceived from spectators and any numberof strangers introduced themselves tomembers of tho tenm and expressedtheir enthusiasm over our efforts.

Junior Touraamont."With ono dny's rest, wo woro call-

ed on to play against tho Corooadojunior team, composed of Major Ross,Mr. Snowdcn, nnd Mr. Carlo, tho Cann-di- n

fonlnrds, nnd Mr. Huston, for ourfirst match in tho Junior Tournnmont.This team, until tho r Coronadowas put on tbo field bore, was concod-e- d

to bo tho strongest aggregationof playora in tbo South. Wo foundgront difficulty in koylng ourselves upto this match, as Wednesday's matchhnd tnken tho snnp out of both monnnd horses. I know my best ponies,Boy Blue. Dandy, Puulon and Carrytho News all had to bo whippod tohold tholr paco against tbo Canadianponies. Knowing theso horses, you willreadily understand what their condition was to roquiro anything to makothem move.

Wo rnn tho scoro un fivo to ono.nnu in tuo sixin pctiod substitutedsomo mnlto-shif- t mounts, to onso offon our tired horses as n result thoCoronados ran threo goals on us in lessthan threo minutes, bringing tbo scorofivo to four. Portunntely, wo woroablo to hold tho scoro thero until thosovonth poriod, whoa wo camo out hotter mounted and added three moro toour tally, aud n fourth in tbo olgbtbporiod, losing in thoso two periods,only ono goal. This gavo us tho match.wit n a scoro ot nlno to live. It wnsnot a good exhibition of polo, but wasa good fight on ncrvo.

"Saturday, tho First Cavalry playedBoiso for tho consolation cups nnd asuotn oi theso teams como from Boiso,Idaho, wbcro they havo bad tho samosort of rivalry, which exists nt homobotween tho Fifth Cavalry and Onhu,tho gamo wnB a most interesting con-test, although not an exhibition ofvery classy polo. Tho Boiso mon bavobeen loyal in their support to Hawaiiia Ml tbo matches in which wo hadplayod and wo wero glad to bolp thomout with ponies nnd do all wo couldto cheer thom on to victory. Thoywon tho match by tbo narrow marginof ono goal.

Big Cup Finals,"Sunday, tbo finals for tbo big cup

wero played between Coronado nndPnsadcna, nnd as all tho horses werogotting played out, it was decided thattho matches for tho two handicap cups,as well as tbo Trophyshould bo decided by this ono gamo.Coronado was obliged to givo l'nsa-den-

eight goals handicap and it wnsthought by a good many that Pnsa-dcna might win tho handicap cups, butin all probability would loso tho All- -

America scratch match. There wasnothing of interest in this gnme,

tho beautiful stick work of Mal-colm Stovenson, who being loft alone,demonstrated that there practically nrono impossible shots oft a pony's backIf ono has time to slow up, to makothem. In thu first half of tho seventhperiod, by blocking ono of tho Pasa-dona-

sticks, Stovonson wns hit acrosstho back of tho right hand, nnd hissecond finger wns cut to tho bono.This looked as if Pnsndona wouldagain havo n chance to como in andwin out as they did in tho Hogan Cup,through a piece of misfortunto to thoopposing team. After Stovenson 's handwax bound up, ho decided to play posi-tion ono on Coronado 's team, and with-out a stick gave tho best exhibition ofriding that I have over seen. Ho puttho PasadcnaH' back out of tho gamoby bis Bupcrior judgment in anticipat-ing plays, coupled with his superbhorsemanship. I wish overy man athome, who aspires or feols himselfrolcgatcil to tho position of No. 1,might uavo seen now much could uomade of that position by bead work,and horsemanship. With throe malletsagainst four, Coronado proceeded toincrcaso tho lead against Pasadena bymaking four goals, Pasadona scoringonly onco in the whole match, and thatin tho last minuto of play. Tbo finalscoro of the match was twelve to ono

adding tho eight goal handicap, thoofficial score would be 12 to 0.

"Oa Monday, Canada played thoArmy in tho handicap games, giviagthem seven goals. Tbo gamo""was veryone-side- from tho start; tho Cavalrynot being ablo to bold control at anytime. Tho Army only scored oncowhllo Canada ran up a score of clovengoals.

Combination Good,"On Tuesday mornlnir. wo nlavod Pa- -

sudona for tho finals in tho CoronadoJunior Championship. As 1'nsudeiianan won uio Jiogan uiip from un bytbo margin of a quarter of a goal,ho wero anxious to get back nt themwith a dcclslvn victory, Pasadena, nnIbo oilier baud, having been badlybeaten by Coronado, wero anxious tomako up with a good showing nguln.tllanaii. In tho flmt neriod. Hawaiimade fivo goal.--. Our little combination workud like u clonk, and it wasibo cleane.t, onesided bit of play Iha vii pvar mii. Wo iiukI our goodponi the first four piiriud auil rantbt) .Wm up (4i II to Ki Hum vk mount

! tbil lautllM HbUb H llMt wot UMulIn Iks filf iiialrktMi Mild triad on tlimolur lo ruu lb tstti up Ui tttautyyiiHla, but lb nm WW mImmI t(Urmi i. mi whim axvaiittwii Tlir mm I

n.fi Milli imwsIIImi dudurUd, l.rluu.Ul.in si,, thm uf(r It us winin.Ur iubi4d list b Hawaii I4H.MIwas t!l milling, llmt ir bUi funusu m better prr(d twr um

Iwe played Ai a result of accldeaU

la lbs I'AMilena Onrntisdo Bme, MaJrHen nnd Plarenten were bolh eat e(rrntlttnn to play, thrlf malrti gainstCanada so defaulted for tha two haa-dirn- p

tnp.Courteously Defaulted.

"t'nder our rating, Canada withIheir substitute tram, wan obliged togive in one goat In tha finals tor thet'lrrull Cup and tho Shrove Cup, aawo bad beaten their strongest teamby twclvo goals to four or thereabouts)they conceited that there was not ahope for them against us, in this, andrry courteously defaulted for the

finnls In theso cup matches. We werevery glad not to put our horses ovortho road again, ns wo ar now doing;our best to get them In shape to plsy,against Burllngnino on tbo thirtieth ofthis month nt San Mateo.

Last night, tho Major and Mrs. Rosafor tho Coronndo Country Club, ontor-taine- d

all of tho polo pooplo nt a din-ner dnnco. Tbo fivo big trophies andnil the individual cups wero nrrangodalong tho tablo, and theso woro formal-ly presontcd nfter dlnnnr. Whllo wowould hnvo liked very much to havehnd ono of tha trophies In tho majorevents, nil things considered, we feltthnt in making oft with throo out offivo, wo bad our sharo. Tho nsual bor-ing speochos woro ondurod nnd thentho llnwnll team broke training fortho first tlmo slnco their arrival.

Trip a Success,

"In viow ot tho fact that Hawaiicnine ovor this yetr. to fed Us warinto tho nolo world of tho mainland,I think that in spito of our defonta,wo havo reason to fool that tho triphas bcon a success. It has boon acruel blow to us to loso Frank Bald-win from our team, as you, who knowhis play at back, will npprecinto, butwo aro hoping that ho will bo ablo totako bis plnro on tho team againstBurlinguma on tho 30th. Ho in doingeverything In Ms power to fit himselfto play, but tho terrible wrench whichhe received requires timo to mond, nndwo nro just waiting and hoping for thobest.

"Aside from tbo recognition wohnvo roceived nn polo players, you willno ginu to Know that Hnrold nndArthur havo mado their reputation astho champion dnncors of tho rng, andtho instructions wo nro taking homofrom tbo good looking girls hero nt thohotel, nro to tho ofTcct thnt tho noxtITnwniian toam must bo composod ofHnwniiau bacbolors."

GAYNOR LIKE3 PLAN OFCANADIAN JTrVENtLE COURT

NBW YORK, March IS. Mayor Gay-no- rwna so impressed by a talk bo had

with Judgo F. X. Choquot of Montreal,Canada, yesterday, that ho Bont this lot-t-

to .Tustico Robert I. Wilkin of thochildren's court in Brooklyn:

Dear Judgo Wilkin: I had a visit to-

day from Judgo F. X. Choquot of thoJuvenile Court of Montreal. Ho visitodtho children 'h courts horo. Ho says thathe thinks it is a mistake to boar thesochildren's cases in tho public court-room. In Montreal thoy aro hoard onoby ono in tbo judgo's privato room. Honets in tho capacity' of a father, as itworo. Ho says that in tbo public court-room tho children nro excited, and donot know what tbo judgo says to thom,whoreaa if takon into tho judgo's pri-vate room and dcnlt with privately thoyunderstand him nnd havo confidence inhim. It socms to ma that Judgo Cho-qu-

is probably right about this. Atnil events, I desiro to lay tho suggestionbeforo you nnd your associates of thochildren's court. Sincerely yours,

W. J. OAYNOU.-l ;

TIIE WEEK'S DOINGSON THE BALLFIELD

He if:(PAOIFIO COAST LEAGUE.) '

April 0 Portland va. SanFrancisco, at San Francisco.

April 0 Oakland va. Sacra- -

incnto, at Sacramento.April 0 Venice vs. Los Ango- -

les, at Lo Angeles,(NATIONAL LEAGUE.)

April 1C-1-2 Boston at NowYork, Brooklyn at Philadelphia,Pittsburgh at Cincinnati, St. Louoat Chicago.

(AMERICAN LEAGUE.)April 10-1- Chicago at Clevo.

lend, Detroit at St. Louis, Phlla.dolpbla at Boston, New York atWashington.

IT

Yon Will Mako No Mistake If YouFoUow This Advice.

Never neglect your kidneys.If you bavo pain in tho back, urinarydisorders, dizzlni-s- u.l n..nn -

it's time to net and no time to expert- -

'"" '"" " common symptoms ofkidney trouble, and you should seek aremedy which la recommended for thekidneys.

Doan's Backache Kidney Pills is theremedy to use. It lm nr,i n,.nstubborn cases.

Can Honolulu rpHlilnnt ilmTwi rv.thor proof than the following test!.muniuiT

Mrs. Conrnd Tllirknr. 3R Ptn..,.Square, Jamaica, Plains, Boston, Mat).,savs: "I will nevAr Im ul,l in r,.l..Doan's Backache Kidney Pills too"iK"' in return jor mo benefit t oybrOUirht mo. I lUfToro.I 'intamalv fmmklllnnv.. Itnmnlnlnt fnr u .. -- ..- VW......M.W mj jvmt uuuthough I tried almost everything, Iiiiunu uo Touei nun i i used JJuun'sBackache Kldnnv I'IIIh. Mv l,nb !

bead aahed intensely and I had suchlorribicd dizzy spells that I often hailto give up my housework and llodown. Thu kidney secretions woro Inbad shape uud my nppetlto was poor.When Doan's ilaekuobe ICidnoy Pillswro rMommunditd to mo, I used tlioniuud H was not long beforo limy complainly rturinl inn. I bavii nuvcr bad ureturnMiae uf Hldnsy umplulul,"

Duaii'i lUckaek Kidney J'IH aruab by all ilriitftfiiti am) niiirkeprI M seats per tins, (six Lasts (Von,

ut trill be mailed u rsaW.pl uf pureby lb llulltstnf UiUU Co., llMtwluluWUilall Mit1 f lljp fitrUill J

Ikua'aJL'u.uibr the uum liiisu' imI

ti.t Ull ulMutiAiM

MiihmmM

Page 6: ft?;COLUMBUS, Ohio, March 31. (Spo-cia-l to Tho AdvertiBOr) Sixty-fou-r bodies of flood victims wcro in tho morgue hero today, but only threo of them havo been identified. Tho waters

g(p

lr

0.--.n .j .in '. 1!SL!!SJ J Msay '"

I t ui i i in mmw t--tt r M" 'Mwu'W,

r i . m a ii i s mv i

hmfii m njii i i' ,iiil. n mi iai i

if f?

A Kamchamcha's Prediction.

The fart that .ludgo Son ford 1). Dolo

men of Hawaii who ollicintcd last Sundnylato dolm A. Cummins, recalls the earlyeach of whom bcrami? a leailer, nnd an earlybv his Kinii concerning tho futuro of Mr.

by Our

Mr. nftcr Dolo had been elected tho first of tlio

of Hawaii.

Interview Knpiolani.

Misplaced Sympathy.

Shopping Honolulu.

Advertised Friends.

Cummins President Republic

Near the close of tho reign of Kamehamcha with whom Mr. Cummins

was an intimate friend, nn entertainment was being given in tho Opera House.

Tho various parts wero being played by tho young people of Honolulu. Among

those who took part wore Sanford B. Dolo and Princess Lilinokalnni. In one

part of tho play nomo maidens werethiB part being, played by Dole. Tho

With

wand, touched the woman that was to becomo tho ruler tho theatrical nation.Polo touched Lilluoknlnni. Kamehamcha had gono incog to the theater nnd

' waa sitting in tho rear portion of tho place. As soon ns Dolo touched tho young

1'rinrcss, as if by n suddon inspiration, Kamehamcha Bhoutcd, "Ins, tho rulerhas been found."

Tlio incident caused no comment atCummins spoke, of it to tho King, tho"John, you and I may not live to seo it,

In

Loving

of

man Dolo will bo tho King of theso Islands."Subsequently Mr. Cummins related tho occurrcnco nnd prophecy to Kala'

' kaun. It was in ono of tho Merry Monarch's gayest momonts. paused in

rot

ru--

tim

m

,ytm

An

V,

Ho

wns one of the Hcver.il distiirguishcdpallbearers iho funeral of tho

acquaintanceship of two men

prediction mndo to the high chiefPolo. used to lio by

supposod to beforo tho high priest,high priest, with tlio aid of some magic

tho time, hut subsequently, when Mr,

admitted his Identity and said:but tirao is coming when that young

tuuut Ih tor auiograpli ultoia, wrungauditor MtftillHat ad crwwUng liw

was MWItiatM U dsdv.11 Majeair tto tto 4y

uu4 mm Mwi ur )uraiur irtl toi two ku.

' MfhMgMiml Wy mwUmm m4 kw m

ralfw, m4 wklte mh ii Ui Mm imUmIIi m M km$ Mi

amm, m m u $m pm w

4iir(f Ito UUrvivw, tMtfffc

an instant and said, deeply moved by tlio story: "Tho King was Tight. Dolo

will rulo theso Islands soma day. I would liavo snid tho snmo thing if Kamohn-mch- a

had not."It was but a few years after Knlaknua had died that Dolo assisted in the

overthrow of tho King's Bister, Liliuoknlan1 nnd becamo tho head of tho Ha-

waiian Itcpublic, and continued ns such under tJo territorial government thefirst Governor.

Jt J & J

Every resident of Hawaii nnd many who aro not residents know whatMark Twain has had to say tho funny line concerning Hawaii nnd Ha-

waii's kings and queens and other institutions, but not ninny know that HillNyo had. his little say, in tho form of an interview with tho good QueenKnpiolani. Nyo, twenty-fiv- e years ngo, was contributing to tho columns oftho Now York World, and under the caption of "Queen of tho Cannibal Is-

lands. William Nyo visits Itoynlty from tho Homo of tho Ham Sandwich,"ho wrote:

"Tho sun was just slipping out tho back door of tho West nnd huntingfor tho timlicr of Now Jersoy ns Queen Knpiolani, nt her rooms in tho Vic-

toria Hotel, received a plain, rcctnngulnr card, printed in two kinds of inkat the owner's steam job oflice, containing tho following briof but logicalstatement:

"T l l I 1" t f t t P P P 1 I

Wilholm Von Nyj,Litterateur and Dnnseuse. '

1 f T T T l6 f T T' t T C P

"On the hick of tho enrd tho Von Nyj arms had been emblazoned witha rubber stamp. Downstairs, near tho dais of tho night dork, stood n gaylycaparisoned cultivated cuss, pouring o.er a lato volume of tho City Di-

rectory. Ho was tho nuthor of theso lines."Scarcely an hour had elapsed when n tinted octavo pngo who waits on

tho Queen slid down tho stair-rai- l and told mo thnt Her Hoynl Highness wouldrcccivo mo in stnto ns soon ns sho could change her dress.

"Later on I was ushorcd into tho presenco of Queen Knpiolani, who wasat the time accompanied by her suito nnd another gentlcmnn whoso nnnio T

did not"Sho is a distinguished-lookin- woman of inlddlo ngo, but in nppnrent

good health, and with a constitution which I think would easily enduro thoXatigne of reigning ovor n much larger country than her own.

"As I entered tho room nnd made n low, grovelling obeisance, nn net thntis wholly foreign to my naturo, tho Queen mndo n rapid movement towardstho bell, but I held her hack nnd nssurod her thnt I did not drink.

"Wo then chatted gayly for some time in relation to tho Sandwich busi-ness Court mattein, Including tho Sharp trial.

"For a long timo tho Queen seemed constrnined nnd ovidently could notthink of anything to say, but sho soon saw that I was not haughty or re-

served, whon nt last sho reluctantly showed mo out nnd locked tho doorI felt amply repaid for tho annoynnco that ono naturally feels oil visiting aperfect stranger.

"From what sho said regarding her dynasty I gather thnt it consists ofa covey of half-grow- n islands in tho Pacific, Inhabited by pooplo who weroonco benighted and carnivorous, but happy. Now they aro well informod nndbilious, whilo they ravel in suspenders and rum, with nil tho blessings oflate hours, civilization nnd suicide.

"Tho better classes of tho Sandwich Islands hnvo tho snmo customs whichprevail here, and tho swallow-tai- l coat is qulto prevalent thero. Tho low-nec- k

and short-sleev- coBtumo is oven carried to n greater oxcess perhaps, andall tickets read:

Admit tho Hearer and Ilarcr.

c

"In answer to a question of my own, tho Queen ald that crops in thoSandwich Islands were looking well and that garden truck win far in advanceof what (ho saw here.

"Klio wild that they had plo plant In her gnrden big enough to vat e

enuin uwuy, and now potatoes wero ui big as Still, sho Isenjoying herrolf hero tint rate and uiy she bom many plmaslng feature aboutNew York whith will MVr dinorntu the tablet of uiuiMory,

"I thanked !ir far thin neat Utthj twijillmtint hu4 told her I ahouldalways rwnl tor In tto mnm mut.

"I (ton Utile ImpromptuHer MftJMrly'n 1wm4 mm) retired wliunhltii lMiiied 0WIU tllrit, but

"I tort Ito lltorty Ait isi 'I mImm tor tu miI uur jr.,i,to m njmut ( wiltiM Mpii .ii tin- -

"I MkM tor ! mm hi tnitut i kMw tow lifdy utnUti) u iu

B9 fWMPM m W VOUWHry IMIMr.

"II Owm it mM fM un towm tor fiM4t 'My

! mm mi m' m Mr"fftf to t utoUtUIM il iUt

na attheso

Tho story told

pass

lattertho

itmUmwm4

hn m4 ftl HwtU

I m

as

in

yet

learn.

and

nnd

opera

bho waluuti,

liur

HAWAIIAN OA.KTTE, TURSDAV. Al'Iltl. J, tPIJ.-SB- MI WEUKLY.m

Small Talks.

- - -

A. r. TAVAItCS. The mrrwo ef tlio IrgUlntite in orentlng the office

nf rnnrhet otftntsaleit to entirely failed of reallaatlon.DU, VICTOR 8. OLAUK. Ym, I tppre tWit ot troubles will begin

tomorrow, when the steamer Wllle.en nrrtve. It's n rncntley shame.

OKOHOB R. OAItTEU, True enlhuslnim Is tmroly found among the gent-

ler sox when they are Interoeted. That, mass rntetlng of ladtea yesterday wasb. hummer.

D, II. QILMORE. Imllenliona of travel on the Oeoonlc lino show that Itwill lie henvy until Into In the season this year and that long paseengnr listsenn bo expected in and out.

' GEOnaE LYOUKQUB. Well, I'm mighty sorry to see Tho Advertiser mov-in- g

nwny, nnd I'll mim nil tho buys on tho paper, too. Tho Advertiser hasbeen my neighbor for many, many years.

HONORABLE J. M. TOEPOE. I hnvo not tho cloquenco of Demosthenes,nor hnvo I the logic of Cicero, but I think Mr. Wlckershnm understood my

short speech in rosponso to his beautiful address.

REP. E. J. M'OANDLESS, If other members passed cigars around thohomo with more frequency they would liavo better luck with their bills. Seo

tho stunt I pulled ofT when tho house panted my McCnndless Park 1)111 1

LIEUT. W. V. KOLB, N.G.H. Tho company smoker Tiiesdny nlglit nt thoHungnlow will bring n class of chaps together thnt hns novcr been bottercdin tho nntionnl guard. Company II is n husky infant nnd doing flue, thankyou,

SHERIFF JARRETT. These habeas corpus proceedings aro old friendsof mine. Kery timo nn enterprising lawyer serves mo with ono I thinkof tho duo Yuen Mow caso and groan. Thnt ono lasted thrco months nndwent through three courts.

REPRESENTATIVE O. P. COOKE.-W- hat do you think of my motionto Iny on the tnblo n motion to tnko n recess! It succeeded, but I am notsuro ono to lay on tho tahlo a motion to adjourn would. I'll hnvo to conferwith Speaker Holstcin. Ho ought to know.

CHIEF M'DTJFFIE. Tnlking about habeas corpus, and extradition, Ican testify to tho difficulty of tho latter, but praiso be, thero is no habeascorpus in .Tnpan to compllcnto matters. Perhaps tho nllcgcd embezzler Iwent after would not bo hero now if thoro were.

A. F. COOKE. I haven't snid much lately about tho character of tho films

shown in tho motion picture theaters. As a rulo they aro pretty good andtho tone of them nil is improving. Thoso shown this weok at tho Liberty wcri!excellent, especially tho Wilson inauguration series.

CHAIRMAN WATKINS. I might just as well nsk for n lot of monoyfor Honolulu and Oahu, tlio outsido members nro doing it for their islnndsevery dny. Still, I do not run nwny with tho idea I will get anything, as Iexpect to be treated liko pu tho other members of tho house

SPEAKER HOLSTEm. Last Sundny's Advortiser had a complaint fromSenator Wirtz to the effect that I alludo to him as a German whilo ho isDutch. I novcr thought for ono momont thnt ho was German; in fact (nndho bears mo out in his extraction), my claim has been that ho was a Minno-sotn- n

Dutchman.

"BIRD" JOSEPH. This is my firstnot bo my last. This is an ideal birdmnny more here than nro to be seen.

to it

on tho of govorament to import n thousand parrotsnnd They should

trip but hope

pnrt your few lovebirds turn them loose.added attraction for tourists. Just think how nico it would bo to havo yourbeautiful trees filled with beautifully plumagcd birds. I understand, ofcourse, that you would not want to import nny .bird that might provo harm-ful, but there aro several specimens with which no chance would bo taken.Singing bird's could also bo secured at very small expense.

tho Queen snid something as I tamo outwhich I did not quito cntch.

"I did say, however, just boforo

Honolulu, I will

nnd

eeroly tho unfortunate timo of tho year nt which Her Majesty had decidedto visit us, it being rather between hay nnd grass, ns it were, for ns thoro was

of

climate and I you havo notI would bo a movo

do wonderfully hero nnd bo a great

of tho room, cscortod by tho janitor,

leaving tho room, that sin- -

tho big Pacific Mail liner for

nnd nil tho waiters seemed nice,

r in tho month wns, a littlo too lato for missionnries and a little too earlyfor watormolons.

"It was only instant later thnt I tho janitor at tho foot oftho stairs."

Jl Ji J Jl JAll this alleged to have taken place Tuesday morning, tho ocension

being tho departure from HonoluluSan Francisco with Rear-Admir- Cowlcs, formerly in command of tlio localnavnl station, ns honored passenger.

wonderbelievo it good

I

so

no it

nn joined

is

Two young nnd linmUomo officers in whito wero stnnding on tho wharfwntching tlio vessel pull into tho strenm after tho last "Good. Byes" hadbeen snid and tho last parting tears Bhed. An elderly lady, stnnding ucnrby nnd noticing their look, tupped one on tho shoulder nnd with:i quiet oico said:

"So jour Bhip has gono nnd loft you Too bad! Too bad! My daughter nnd I cniuo down on tho Wilhelmina

rcgrotted

Manchuria

dibcousolato

I nm suro you must bo too. I am staying nt tho Young Hotel and I willseo tho management nnd find something for you to do. I'm suro "

At this juncture, tho stunning daughter nrrived on tho sccno nnd muchto tho gratification of the embarrassed officers led her mother away.

M 5 w 5 oTho Lady of Fashion wns tryjng tho effect of a beautiful, filmy, lnco

over delicate shndes of satin, whon tho clerk who Wns waiting upon herwas interrupted by ono of her fellow-worker- accompanied by a diminutiveChiuesa maiden of about six Honolulu summers. Ono did not havo to secher face, nor yet bo acquainted with tho pnntaloon-and-shlr- t stylo of dress,to know thnt tho youngster wns Chinese. Her thick braid ofblack hair told tho nationality.

"I can't understand her," said Clerk Number Two."What did you sayf" asked Number One."I said, 'I wnnt some hair gloves,' enunciutcd tho Chinese maiden,

speaking slowly for tho benefit of tho benighted clerks.Tho grown-up- s looked nt oach other to seo if nny ono understood, sud-

denly an expression of comprehension flushed over tho face of Clerk Num-ber One. "O, sho wants kid hair curlers,," sho said.

And sho did.

w O 0 O w

Some of our good booster friends on tho mainland nppoar to mo to ovordoIt. For instance, I have just received "a clipping from tho Ilornld, of FallRiver, Massachusetts, which Honolulans will agree with mo is overdrawn.It says:

Our Hawaiian friend speaks of tho peculiarity nfHawaii, In thnt tlioy havo no mosquitoes in nny part of tho Islnnds.Ho tells of n man with a spirit so menn that he tried io import someof tho pestiferous insects, nnd brought n dozen or ro "tlonts," ns thospawn nro called, neroi--i tho ocean. Whon they hatched out theygot busy, but not having any opposition tlioy over-at- e themselvesand burd. And pence (till relgni In tho Islands.The "friend" to whom tho HernM refer ii n venntllo chap. In addi-

tion to the meulto I loin he nuppllcn the Fall IIIveritM with soma Inttannffof tto way wm ijirtwd the nwt in nml nrouml Honolulu Mutornlng tho atatenf the wator fur swimming. Ways bm

Here U a wpy ef a nrcvlm wk,Uli ttoy pott on Urn Willtoordtand tto frunU ef tto trolley tare '"ton tto surf on tto liaatii f ran-Hl-

Mil.. Bur rt4il l tto grMt rjMit of tto I'arlis Uim4, mmIour aatlv hrotton arc tin rhawpiont of tint fonn nf .prl. MMtrf rou m (Mstttar with ito MtoH ! Ito mm tot few of w tortoppM to MMtr tint it I mrijr m rrruia 4t itoi tto mW b

toavr Mi0 to mmmn04I tito MriwiMrr. Wto Ugh wirt mrMh wMttof MHtar m fHrutrfiMtily toavy rrf t rua ia m itotoai-to- , ttoy 4ltiUr (Ms ntm til ito flri

MJWVV ttltir A Til MUeitfMmikp titw itirvrtii rut inNnnmi vtAttm it hjfm Mf fwnMlar Mrtlb Ito lMl rm M IHatliM tto HMH

rirt lHr ito ,(..., ii, ,mm, u it rtoltof it fi, t4 lbtrrrM tto skj ,ur4 ie lltll

15

T OF

(Pram Sunday Aiirertlier)Wdlle In revnlar slon, the house of

reprMHtnUitlves was the scene of a pbniK and Interesting yntenlny

morning, when former Attorney Cen-tral Ocorge VV. n'lekeriham imis theenoat of the legislature, through tho in-

itiative and Invitation of tho house.The speaker npointed licprotenln-tl-

Watklns and Knwenehi us n com-mittee tu niinit on the senate nnd es-

cort the motnbers of tho upper house toseats which had tioen provided for themIn the midst of tho houso members.Shortly niter the sonntors wero seatedMr. Wickorslmin, ncrompnnied by Oov-cmo- r

Frenr and Secretary of the Ter-ritory Mott-Siuit- arrived.

Mr. Wlckershnm was introduced toIterirosentntlvo Sheldon by Mr. Mott-Smit- h

and by Mr. Sheldon to SpcakorHolstcin. Mr. Wlckcrsham sat on thot'nis to tho right nnd Governor Frenr tothe left of tho speaker.

Speakor Holstoin then opened thoproceedings.

Speaker Opens Proceedings."There is no provision in tho rules

of tlio house," remarked Mr. Holstcin,"for whnt tho speaker is about to sayor do, but I am certain that everymember of tlio houso will ondorso it.

"There is prcsont on tho floor of thohouse n distinguished gontloman whoheld high oilico during tho lato adminis-tration of President Taft.

"Ho comes from tho great Stato ofNew York nnd is with us for a fowdays, coming to our hospitable shoroswhore Hawaiian aloha is proverbial. Hois Hawaii's friond and has kindly consented to nccopt your invitation to bewith yon. T nm certain tho mombers ofthe legislature will bo glad to wolcomolam.

"I tnko great pleasuro in introduc-ing to you, our distinguished guest andfriend, Hon. Goorgo W. Wickorsham."

Wlckcrsham Replies.Mr. Wickershnm responded as fol-

lows :

"Mr. Speaker. Your Excollcncy, Gentlemen of the Hawaiian Legislature:I have often lingered with great pleas-ure over that matchless description oftho power of Great Britain written byDaniel Webster, in which ho describosGreat Britain ns a powor, to which forpurposes of loroign conquest and subjugation, Ttoino in tho height of herglory cannot bo compared; a poworwhich has dotted every surfaco of thewhole globe with tier possessions anamilitary nosts, whoso morning drumbeat, following the sun, and keepingcompany with tho hours, circles thoearth with one continuous nnd unbroken strnin of tho martial airs of Eng-

land.' ,

"It depicts nn ideal of conquest, sub-jugation, military powor. A numbor ofyears after it was written, Knglandcelebrated with extraordinary pomp thodiamond jubilee of her great Queen.There was no plnco made for science,nrt, litcraturo or religion, but her armiesnnd navies wero gathered for the pur-pose of Impressing the world with thopower of tho military nnd naval es-

tablishment of Groat Britain. And atn moment when this exhibition of pow-er wns nt its height, thero was heardtlio voice of England's grentest poetsounding a note of warning against:

' heathen lienrt that puts hor trust'In reeking tubo nnd iron shard.'And guarding, calls not theso to guard'Tor fimitie boast and foolish word.'"and crying 'God of the nntion, spareus yet, lest we forget.'

Recognition of Principles."A very short time afterwards, the

timeliness" of tho warning was madomanifest as that great nation w.13diagrd through tho valley of humilia-tion iu i!- - contest with tho littlo hillcount"- - in Soutli Africa, and nil theresources of tho Fmplro weio called up-

on in the struggle wrh a small handfulof determined Dutchmen in its contestwith Great Britain, nnd when at Inst,nftcr blood had been poured out lavish-ly, the mastery wns finally nehioved byGreat Hritnin,sho organised a new com-monwealth in Soutli Africa based upontlio pnncipio tiint gave to JJutcumonmid Englishmen nliko a share in thogovernment of tho new commonwealthof South Africa. It was a belatedrecognition of tho principlo which hasover been the ideal of America.

"Tho thirteen colonics, in declaring I

their independonco of Great Britain,bused it upon tho principlo that all monnro entitled to certain inalienablorights, among which nro life, libertynnd the pursuit of happiness, and thatto securo these rights governments nroinstituted nniong mon deriving theirjust powers from tho consent of thogovernment. And from that hour theideal of American progress has ovorbeen the establishment of a governmentresting upon tho consent of tho govern,meat, nnd in which all men should havothe iust share commonsurato with thopublic interest.

"We acquired Florida and tho GreatTerritory of Louisiana by purchaso andwo divided them into territories andsintes of tho Union nnd oxtondod tothem tho snmo principles of governmentupon which wo hnvo been originallyiounded. As a result of tho war withMexico, we havo tho great territory nowdivided into Arizona, Now Mexico nndCalifornia that wo took In nnd mado aeommon beritngo with onrs of the Miniprinciple. Texas, a slsteT republic,enme to us by trenty. Hnwail In likomanner. Wo purchased Alaska.

Government by the People."Tho war with Spuin, undertaken

tor tho purposo of ending a conditionlu Cuba, Mhlrh had becomo Intolerable,left n with tho Territory of Cuba, andan oan ns it was powlblu to organize agoverniiHiA which could bo called

wo turned the possesion oftho Territory over to tliottf pnoplo forwtoe f readmit h hail fought. Wetov Millport tlituii with uafalliiiL' t

from ttot hour, alivays twklngla iMd i torn oaward anil upward Into path of eif goiriniul"It irf i us with tto iios arlw4 f

'rin Kb (i h ruualry Utday wkini iKU'ii'l tVrritory of tto UiU4

tftelM, wuduiiing tor attain wilhftlM I. iliau tto power thnt ymj

M't but s. .ii. ., l.n,t a iMurw u(l" iivmuim ... U t 4,ii bv, u

to 4to prMi p it!! l!trUlt U h

mm u v i. I i AuMU'fc uri, ,. i. I ' i'i-l- j .

.1 I , tll.Ml , liU I ') i I lit WP UVIt i I. .. I. (. Ii 1., ll, fiii Infill al

i'

- i

) InlftM with the I'ImI formutulMof ni fitltoti In Ito ursat

f iHtlirwiidmee, never truting on mc'eltot thinjr to Initii, ,r.lo the!

mlna of tbe wto hare never known!the bMner I telf government tholmeibwli nf eontlaeUng goemmcnt on J

inai uani.Oardlnat Principles.

"And tho cardinal principles ofAmerican covernment ns nihihite,! inthe State and Jn those instances, havoneen that Ikn laws should bo mado,moneys should bo raised, nnd their expcndlturo directed by roprxscntntlvcs oftho people met In deliberative ussomblrnnu roaelitng their conclusions nftcr fulluiseusjionj that the lnw should bo adnitnistcrod by courts oil cored br competent nnd Independent judges, nndthnt tho executive nower should b di.reetcd In tho States by mon chosen bytho pcoploj in tho Territories by thodesignated roproscntntivo of tho ChlofExecutive of tho American peoplo.inuiuuy preserving tuo uircct connce- -uon'ijctwcen tho central governmentaim us own Territory for whoso

It is directly responsible.I think It safe to say that in tho

history of tho government, no institu-tion has over been devised wHich hasaccomplished more for tho public woalthan that principlo which has obtainedin Angio-aaxo- institutions for a thou-sand years and which has boon tho cor- -or slono of American politicnl tnought

tho legislative assomblloB. No groatorcruciblo for trying out the varioustheories of public necessity has ovorucun uuvisoa man tno aeiiuerativo leg-islative body.

'In all govornmonts questions ariseaffoeting ono part of tho community oranothor; tho covornment fails in its imr.peso; it does not accomplish tho idealsof thoso depondont on. it; and thooriooand romodios nro dovisod, and in thogroat cruciblo of thought which tho do--""' i" wo icgisiaruro lurmsnos, thesotheorios nro tried out, tho public is odu-cato- d

in them, and finally results aroobtained which aro formulated into lawor find expression in action.

Nominations Important. vi"Whoro a legislative govorament haa

railed in tho 8tate9 nnd in thoso casoawhoro just complaint has arisen, it haa,in my opinion, boon largely becauso,first, tho character of tho nominatingmachinery has bcon debased and thomembers of tho legislative bodies havonot boon truly roprosontatlve of thopeople, and second, becauso tho pooploin tho communities who havo tho great-est amount at stako havo boon least at-tending to tho discharge thoir public,duties.

"I hcliovo that if wo address our at-tention to theso two points, if wo en-deavor to correct tho abuses of thonominating machinory and if wo insistupon the performance by ovcry man en-titled to a vote of his duty to his fel-low citizens to exercise thnt voto, wowill bo far moro npt to correct thesofaults than wo would bo striking outtlio vital principlo of government by thorcprescntntives of tho peoplo, and los-ing that great moans of reaching thobest result for tho greatest numbor ofthe people which comes from discussionin an nction by deliberative representa-tive legislative assembles.

His Congratulations."Gentlemen of the Hawaiian legisla-

ture, I congratulate you upon the rec-ord of your work since the organizationof this Territory. Tho laws enacted byyou bear comparison with thoso of nnyState of tho Union. You have been ani-mated by a spirit of patriotic devotionto your Islands nnd with a recognitionof the value to you of your intimatoassociation with tho American Union.

"You occupy a peculiarly importantand conspicuous position. You stand attho cross-wav- s of tho Pacific. You aroreally the outmost post of tho AmericanUnion, for tho Philippine Islands donot constitute, ns do you, a part of thoAmerican Union.

"Aecorling as you discharge tho du-

ties imposed upon you, so do youcredit or discredit upon tho ideals

of tho Amorirnn people, nnd if yourwork be performed well and if the government ot your Territory continue toattract tho admiration of thoso whocome here, if your domestic institutionsnrft wnll mnnnndil vniir lnu-- a nlan !

ndininistrntion of your revenues honest-ly dovoted to tho public intorcst, youwill nttrnct tho nttention of tho na-tions of the earth nnd lead them toturn from the ideal of conquest nnd sub-jugation to tho better ideal of a gov-ernment based upon tho suffrages ofthe peoplo, representative of its bestnpimtions nnd lend their footsteps intho path of fruitfulncss and ways ofpeace.

Souvenir Calabash.Itoprcsentativo Poepoo, accompanied

by Sergeant-nt-nrm- s Parker, then pre-sented Mr. Wickershnm with tho cala-bash. With a few words of thanks bythe distinguished visitor, tho pleasing,though informal, coremony was broughtto a closo, whilo Speaker Holstcin in-

troduced tho members of the legislaturennd other visitors, ns tlioy filed past thoformer attorney general of the UnitedStates.

The calabash is mado of kou wood,one of tho rarest today in nawaii. itis some twenty inches in diameter andhighly polished. On ono side of tlMbowl is n silver medallion on which Uinscribed:

"Presented by tho Houso of Repre-sentatives of Hawaii to Hon, GeorgeW. Wickershnm, March 31st, 1013. Alo-

ha."On the oppoaito side of the calabash

Is nn Hawaiian in enameland colors, with the motto "Ha man keon o l;a nlna i ka pono," Hawaiian for"Tho life of the land is established inrighteousness,"

-- T-

DIED,lOKlA In ITonolulu, March 30, 1013,

.Mlw Lewa Kalni lokni, aged thirty-righ- t

yean. Funcrul service atKunchainidia Ohnpel, today, at threeo'tloek. Interment nt Kawslalisorauietury,

PKRSIHTBin' OOLDfl,

Ttorc is no raaaoB why u mil milltotitf mi fur rub, or until soma ihronif Ihroai or luax troubi is qvv.i.. I'd,kniI it will ot 1 yiiy Ukr ''limlrIain's I uugl, llui4r. liv il rnuiarkMill .nii nt ..In Ibai rritio.lv III' ! ' (..HtntMii IMJi'lll II a

.fill M Ii ..,, l I U Vi'u iiiavI.,... 1 ,

.I II I

I ii. .1. ...

' .i I litivu.tal

Li i . I ii In, rui si ibli I .i.ulU f,.r f

, mi-- r limn rlirarnlflii tin tun Hulls.4W fur Hii A I

Page 7: ft?;COLUMBUS, Ohio, March 31. (Spo-cia-l to Tho AdvertiBOr) Sixty-fou-r bodies of flood victims wcro in tho morgue hero today, but only threo of them havo been identified. Tho waters

mmwhffrvwTwmmmrf

I R J

SENATOR J. T. SHAFROTII OF COLORADOSelected as chairman on the senate committco on Pacific Isl.mds nml

Porto Rico, which handles Hawaiian business In the upper house atWashington. ,

By Ernest O. Walker.(Mail Special to The Advertiser.)

WASHINGTON. March 17. Democrats liavo innilo up a good committcoon Pacific Islands ana rorto jhco,which handles Hawaiian business intiio senate. With the reorganizationjust announced, Senator John 1 Shaf- -

roth, or Uoiorauo, uccomes cumnuuuthere. As an old and seasoned legislator who served several years in tnohouse and has kept more or lessfamiliar with public questions, SenatorShafroth, until recently governor ofhis home State, tnoul-- l oo awe to provuhimself an acceptable legislator forHawaii.

There are son.o radical Dcra&erats onthat committco, men like SenatorJames of Kentucky, and Senator Var- -

damau of Mississippi, but tnese arcbalanced by moro careful Democrats,like Senator Fletcher of Florida, andSenators Fittsman and baulsbury orDelaware. It will bo noticed thnt near-ly all nro new Democrats in tho sen-

ate. Senator Fletcher is an exception.The Republican membership of thecommittco is aitogetncr goon, inciuuiiigClaim of Minnesota, tall of JNcw .Mexico, Burleigh of Maine, and Golf of West"Virginia. Tho last two can bo countedupon as conservative men, niceiy 10 uofriendlv to the Islands.

There is no immedinto prospect oflegislation in congress aflecting Hawaii, outside of tno tariit. xnero ismuch discussion about taking up othertopics but tho policy with reference tothat will be determined later on whensome of tho troubles about tho tariffbil have been disposed of.

Nominations in April.

the

thosix

for

court

recent comes about of plca of comrmit,ationtho

havo ROl(1 jd, broughtalong Nominations can hard- - Allen, was not to him.ly till after extra InC(ni inscription "Forsession assembles. jjmveTy Defending Father."

policy is to with- - Tho thQ thathold till after has nail Bhootingdisposed some that ho in nuisvillo courthouse until

not neccssarnj was to so his do- -

apply to Hawaii, because hasno votes in eitiier urancn oi congress.

Well Under Way.While President been set

ting his official house in likeproceedings navo been unuer way onCapitol Hill. Tho President is wellunder way. remarkabletactfully accomplished, is a tliemo onevery political in Washington.He has much yet to however, forit waB n big undertaking. But theroare yet soveral days beforo ho encoun-ters legislative responsibilities asextra session or congress nssemuies.

Capitol Hill has been anticipatingits Organization andreorganization is important in tnat con-

nection. Tho new Sixty-thir- d Congressmot theso responsibilities promptly

and. from all outward signs, hasdono wisely. Of courso thohouse had less to do. iiut its JJemocratic members caucusBed tho very dayafter inauguration, renominated apeak'er designated members of ways nnd means, and adjourned.Theso selections and others, which neednot bo mentioned, will be speedilyfied tho firt day of tho extra session,

tho ways and means Democrats havo gone ahead industriouslywith framing tariff bill, so thatwith no appreciable the housocan take up tariff revision. This shouldglVQ the country an example ot o

expedition, which, however,will not bo without ample deliberation.

Organization Complete.Thero will bo no wrangles over or-

ganization to distract houso inApril. It will bo likewise with

the senate. Organization there was not.mall undertaking, as tho Democraticparty was taking over control or thopenntc. Instead of interjectingquarrels, incident to that work, intothe regular seision, the senate Demo-

crats havo now nut it all behind them,Their organization is now complete.Officers huve been and install't-- committee assignments havo beenmade. The now chairmen will havemoved in and taken poetciilon and sen-atar- i,

who did not get what they wantrd, will have had time to forget their

In all 1U general aspects a betterplanned program could not have been,)vrrylMiir I" fn readlneii for tdo workpf (he eilra tvtilou nud that applies toboth omit of the Capitol, MeanwhileDi'inormli in font'rm have been

to IU Junior problem, whichmust he gmpi'lod with later on. Hutn buiiNuwi Jtauun rumu( there is fftxlpw horn Jlltlu

nd ull wn proe4 to do

imr nry batt.:intiy uhhMll llMl ft gDrl

tt mi ut uejmnUw prtttili 4 all iri i u Hf l wm ii ittjM'.iu.

it is swiiUiUin br iti ,,,, is vitmi WUtM

HAWAIIAN OAZETTS, TI'I-'MUY- . APRIL I. WS -- 5KMI WttllKLY 7

PACIFIO ISLAND COMMITTEE WELL CHOSEN jjf

responsibilities.

on

L0;vn nlly to yield fromJ o.k. position and view mat- -

-- S.- t, mo)- - x(By Associated Press Cab apeai Senate re- -

awni wnnoso , jbrit nil(1ball their first game , claims oftodav St. Mary's and wonTho score stood tvvclv-- runseleven in favor of the visitors.Tito nindo Ionand got off with three errors.Mary's got nine hits and wentinto tho error column lor

-- tMir Fulcrnl VTIrrlrM TclreMph 1

RICHMOND, Virginia, March 28.

(Special to Tho Advertiser) FloydAllen, leader of outlaw band of Car-roll county, electrocuted in thostate pTiton today. Tho aged outlaw,entirely unnerved by excitement in-

cident to tho delay of hours In thoplans of tho execution, went to thodenth chair at twenty minutes afterone. Ho was pronounced doad sixminutes later.

Tho prison guards next broughtClaude Allen, son of Floyd, intodeath chamber at half past and hewas electrocuted at

Just before ho left tho city yostor-da- y

afternoon for Trenton, New Jer-sey, Governor Mann, declined to com-mute the death sentence of FloydAllen. Tho crime which tho Aliens

killed was tho murder of JudgeMnssie in tho Hillsvillo houso onMarch 14, 1912. Friends of tho Allonsmade desperate efforts havo tno uov-erno- r

extend mercy to younger mannnd tliev even asked that a commissionh fmnmYitiwl in Yiintic.ft

No word filling 1h0Hawaiian federal offices, but pro- - Tjnacr Govornor Mann's orders

sumably these will consideration mcQaj been forApril. presented

bo expected now lTll0 carries thoof congress Tho in His

President's clearly claim of llofensopatronage congress Ciau,ie Aucn not begun

of legislation t0 howants, but that need forceii do in father's

Hawaii

Wilson hasorder,

His progress,

tonguodo,

tho

hastho

Democraticfar

Clark, Democratic

rati,

Meanwhilo

thodelay

thoearly

petty

selected

giviPifthouuM

mor mjHt.i

Hulwmlly ttifn arersntnUUJ

viiuiuumi'imIAmi

tho

were

iTofnrminn

the

(jnm1etho

fensc.t

(By Fedirl Wlrflfiw TrifrrsntiNEW YORK, Mnrch (Special

Tho Advertiser) Justice Henry Bis- -

clioff, of the New York supremo court,plunged eleven stories down nn clova-to- r

shaft to death this afternoon,in the Immigrant Savings Bank build-ing, where ho has offices

4FREE LOVE MEETS

WITH DISAPPROVAL

(By Federal Wirelua TelCTph )

PARIS, March 28. (Special to ThoAdvertiser) Mllo, Ana Ly, famousFrench suffragette, with her mother wasdriven irom ivstarvielle by tho inhabitants who were lepIOttBed ly '

used. Tho peoplo simDly made ittoo unpleasant for tho woman to re-

main. Mile. Ly deprecates marriagoas a form or slavery women.

i

TWO DEAD MEN SAT IN ATJTO.

Minnosota, MarchO. Hoglund, forty-si- years old,

and Nels Larson wero found doad sit-ting in nn automobile their auto-inohil- o

repair shop today. Gas fumesfrom engine in which tbo men hadbeen riding late last night aro bolioved

have caused death. Hoglund, whoat the steering wheel, was sitting

almost upright, while larson was reclin-ing in the rear seat.

HPAINTINGS BY MB8. WILSON NOT

IN DEMAND AT ART GALLERY

March Thotwenty-fiv- e paintings by Mrs. WoodrowWilson, wife of tbo Presldont, whichnave been on tale in tho gallory of thoArts nnd Crafts Guild in this cityseveral weeks, were boxed today ondsent tt Washington, no offers for theirpurchase having been receiveu..rUBSIDnNT WILSON BARS

MADE-U- P

March J3. A inunwalked into tbo White Houm ofticos thisafternoon and e&ld that totno photographers on avenue weremulling spurious photographs iltuwlng

III ton the capital slmkiiiu huwlwith J'nildent Wilton or (howlng themwith the I'rreldrnt'i arm about then'I'M) limn that l lueugbl thin wiit

Wuti tf, it ku mti MmHi 4 W H nmmmwt

INDIGUE

S THE SENATE

Mr.T?.anii's eloquent wordsWOULD MAKE BOOK

rOtt TOURISTS.

Monitor MutitRor is living to tho

nrlv prophesies of his friends, for witha rc'oluto nmjorlty of tho land com-

mittee ntfiiUnt him and an IndilToreHtn.l pi .odont-boun- fonnto nil butlodged In opposition, he won his fight

tlio nuopuon oi in iiumiiij ni-uii- .

Mcnato BM r4, providing for anptoprlatlon of $12,000 for tho buildingof n road Into NS'uipio Valley, Hawaii.

Hts report is ot tho masterpiecesof the present session. As promotionliteratures for tho wnllod-l- pnradlso ofllnmnkun It is without doubt a g- c- ofthe first wator. It is posiblo tho docu-

ment will bo given to tho promotioncommittco with a recommendation thatit bo printed and distributed to thoworld at largo.

T maintain that the strength of amnlnrltv rests nud should only bopreserved by, its just treatment andconsideration of the claims and

of tho minority," says tho"Tho undersigned, it appears,

.has been tho minority In tho matter ntIssuo from tho Btnrt a respectamominority it Is tmo but despite this

nt no tlmo during thodeliberations ot your committco on thisbill, even under tho weight ot an irro- -

futablo argument, has tho majority"disposition its

jRlintolornblo thor.i.PKANUblO, of oul justico) thorcforo to tho to

The I an All unse- - fav.nine ployed 13V. .on,Aornionl pv0

withto

hitsSt.

six.

thewas

ono

totho

thn

naain

y,M

2S. to

his

arti

MINNEAPOLIS,

in

tho

to

PHILADELPHIA,

PHOTOORAPHB

WA81UN0T0N,

Pennsylvania

to

said

up

fornp

ono

In.

reason, justico and humanity, and givorelief to an oppressed pcop.o, throughtho passngo of this bill.

"Waipio is a settlement of soveralhundred persons, nearly all of whomaro citizens of this Territory, lawabiding, tnxpaying, industrious people. Many of tho scores otiamilies located thero havo lived inthis valley for generation 'on genera-tion, their fnthcrs, nnd fathers beforothem, drank from tho samo springs,tilled tho samo fields and rested underthe samo shado trees. Tho placo hassuch a natural charm in tho grandeurof its scenery and tho healthfulness o

Its climato that desiiito tho neglect ofjuist legislatures to provido tho greatlyneeded medium for ingress and egress,the residents of tho valley aro loath tolorsako it for an easier life in tho sec-

tions moro favored by legislative appro-priations, but less favored by nature

"Of the hundreds who havo lived inthis valley and later sought to livo olso-whe-

on account of tho intolerable oppression put upon its residents by legis-lative Tcprosontativcs in not providinga public wagon road into it, few seemable to remain away for any longtb oftimo, for tho beauty of crescent bayand sandy boacn, tho inspiring water-falls, pouring from surrounding cliffsnt holghts of a thousand feet or moro,tho exhilarating, oiono-lnjie- broozos,tho sylvan wildwoods fringing tho baseof its cliffs, tho fertile fields and boun-tiful streams haunt them in theirdreams and irresistably call them back.

"Tho only means of getting in or outof this productivo and populous valleyat tho present day is over a steep andperilous trail, extremely dangerous tolife nnd limb, especially during wetweather. This is said to bo tho samotrail that was used by Kamchnmchathe Great's grandparents when theylived in tho Kohala mountains, but ithas sinco been much worn by time andtho elements. Many long stretches nroon inclines of ono hundred cent.grade, and, indeed, some stretches aroeven perpendicular. This trail shouldbo preserved as a landmark, and as anexample or the adversities and hard-ships endured by tho inhabitants of thoIslands in the dark ages, boforo thoreign of prosperity, sugar kings and en-

lightened legislatures.""In addition to this sound economic

reason why an appropriation should bemade and the road built, tho humani-tarian aspect should appeal strongly toany normal person in this ago of re-

fined and delicate sensibilities," con-tinues the appeal. "All about us heTOin tho Territory we see our fellow-ma- n

the workingman traveling intnnrlprn rnnvnvniHPR? rrenrr in nml frnm

clcs published in her paper. No force j,;, work nnd recreations in case nndwas

lor

12. M.

was

15.

for

its

nor

comfort, on swift traveling automobiles, electric cars, bicycles andhomo-draw- n vehicles. Now, draw amental picture of tho poor workingmanat Waipio: laboriously, patiently nndBlowly climbing up that tortuous anddangerous trail out of tho valloy, bur-dened near to tho brenking strain ofhuman muscnlar flber with a paltry do-llar's worth of tare rootB strapped onhis backj carefully clinging to tho g

ledges of rock ho struggles up-ward; thick bends of perspirationstand out on his ngony-furrowe- brow,his hot breath comes in short, sharpgatps, his nostrils aro dilated, thooords in his throat nro swollen nnd Mbtonguo is thick with the heat of boilingblood throbbing through his arteries,his back scourged by the knotty andgalline burden strapped upon it.

"This, Senators, is n picturo of thoWaipio farmer taking hit prodtico tomarket, to exchange for the necessariesof life for his fnmily. It rivals a pic-ture of tho gallcv slnve of medievaltimes. Will yon, Senators, nllnw tuchnn everyday condition to continuo toexist In civilised, prosperous Hawaii fThese conditions ran bo remedied by nnnet of tho lcgltlnture, by the pntingnof tlilt Mil. nnd in nn other wny,

"Blmll thn poor Wnlplo farmerto rnrry hi produce nut over the

Pall on his hack, v.i.llo Dm legltlntiironrmiolrt tniMlnii after tetiinn over theliroiioillloiit of raiting Hi,) Income lax(lemptlnii nml voting tliuuMiniU amitliouMimU nf funds for proiHotlaut

"Mlinll (hi HMUistinii ripply to oui'SJau's iulmiiwully t wan hut wuilt)couhIIum thousand raaurn'l"

Tltiil mtKurilv riHiit idlu tim

u)t). mi 1. 1' Ii, build t fund TuMiinil. tin. mii ilitiuu aa4 hilii utt iMd

It vmi nmd I wfll eU ht HINMMHU M tf HtN

Legislative Appeal to CongressWhrn-m- , it npi 11 whii nT th etitris nf th Palled (Mate h

Iwn mil- -I l.v the rriHiiihiii tnr tin- - piiriHWP of rdirlnn tariff iltillm; andWlwr the enmmrrrtal Hff nf U Tfftilonr of Hawaii, and it piiIIip

pntmlmioii. In rioprtiilcnt n 'he mi(nr InduntrT in mid Tenltnr.t. in ithlchImluntr.r tliin I t pmvnt ImrM.nl mr lh ow hnndrrt and Bft mllltximof dollim, mt

Wbm. the lillliiiii .t matcrlRl rwlttetlna of Hie tariff duty on mRrwill wnrk ihcalciilabk" hnrm to thnt iii.litfy, nllrt tonporerhh thf th.mjndhm ihg ntv leRitlinatrljr imptl thordfl, t whvm Initlnea or

is thtnetidvnt thrmiHn; nmlWiienw. tit the lt 'lht vciins Iti HtMltlflti t the iimount deHvod

from txi. If an la neeriiKiry to borrow timtwy Mixtti Imtid of the Terti-tor- j

to the amount of fflxi.ooo. in ordor to prmfd fund for nreewar-Improvemen-

andWhereas, out of tlie totl minimi tatwi ned upon rol nd i'tniil

protiertv and uihiii Infoim, tho roeelpt from Oileh for Ilio year 1012

aiiHHinti-- to $2,70a,8S!l.0r, the mim of Jl.inSI 1.80 wb imld directly by

nignr ostates a shown bv the returns on file, being idxty-fh- per ecnt ofmid laxiH, and there ns paid by the indlixlrio dlreetly depondont uponsugar nn estimated nmoiint of twenty per cent of the wiine, making anaggregate of oigbty-H- e lr cent nf the entlro receipt of the Territoryderived from the souices nle specified; nnd

Whereas, any subMantial tarllT change would deprle tliit Territory ofsaid portion of In roxenue. which could not be replaced from other sources,

and the Territory would bo unable to meet Its current necessary expenxx;now, therefore, bo it

Resolved, by tho Hmie of lteprcwntntie of tho Territory of Hawaii,tho Senate concurring!

That no do respectfully petition tho Congress not to reduco tho presentduty on sugar; and

. Itcsohed, Further, that copies of thii Resolution be forwarded to tho

President and to both Houses of Congress.

This resolution, presented by Representative NormanWntklns, was adopted in tho houso jesterdny by a oto of twenty-nin- e to

one. The one dissenting vote was recorded by Representative W. U. Ktnslca,of tho Onhu delegation.

COKE'S SLANT ONTHE CHARTER QUESTION

From Saturday Advertiser.

Unoxpccted and forceful oppositionfrom Senators Coko and Mnkokaucaused a flurry in tho ranks of tho sup-

porters of Senato Bill 8S yesterday.This is tho nicasuro providing lor theelection of a charter commission forHonolulu, tho commission to preparo acharter, subject to approval by thopeople. Proiion is nindo for holdinga series of elections if uoccssary, dur-

ing tho noxt two yenrs until a charterapproved by tho people is selected. Thisin turn will bo submitted to tho noxtlegislature.

Senator Mukoknu declared that hebolioved tho people should rulo, that

moasuro sought force of tho a wholea charter tho pcoplo and for all1 oC tij0 OXocutivo as areason ho would voto against it. Ho'was followed by Senator Coko.

"I do not know of any uarticulnrlcall from tho pooplo of Honolulu fora now charter," said Senator Coko.

"I believe this is legislation tho pco-

plo do not want and though I admitI havo not given tho mcasuro muchthought, I am proud to tako a Btandin opposition to its passage It is ai

When

A.

attempt forco tho peoplo to adopt aio Bryannow charter, n people oi jorBon

thoV a changO in ITunn ntof then I woro

iur ii, uui uiivu uu oiocteu memoers oiforco tnom uy , Kdgar Wood, A. P. Paul Supor,

voters to every A j and William Kwai Vong.thirty days or to express tho piaco ofchoice on a charter until finally bocom- - Bryan, on motioning tired and they submitto might bo offorod.I repeat, it is not to pass thisbill at this timo; ask pcoplo firstand if they approvo thoact."

.Tudd pointed out that thodid not wait to hear from tho peoploin 1007 in tho chnrtor underwhich tho affairs of aro now

Blow at Blind Pigs.Senator introduced ono of tho (jooko, C. H.

six measures offeredis to regulate tho salo of

liquor. It is bolioved it willprovo a great aid officers intheir fight against blind pigs in

As it is now, comparativelyfovv dealers attempt to ovade tno

liquor law, whilo in many in-

stances local laws aro almost oponlyUnder tho Bill post-

ing of a liquor taxwill in itsolf constitute prima facio

thnt tho hearer is cngagod intho laws of tho un-

less ho also possesses a liq-uor license.

Officers.Tho health submitted an

report on tho rcconttrip to paying a

to tbo manner in whichis managod and to tho abil-

ity of tho who are in chargom

mu ofto

but

incs ,.!aro The

to tho means com-mittco.

Senator Brown's relating to tholaws of the Ter

was until next Monnay. ino

nut jholuu uuiinjii uiiu uiuur liiliiuniri nil up

to discuss itsfinal Is

tntho

.,inlink

".Z

f,nmtnliu If the becomoji a lawThe of the net

or inontlm Inor b"th and

'J'lm theJllll and the

Ilananu Claims Jllll.WirU'n bill Hie fowl

tulfi "ft be HiimmiIuii

tlw iff tl fifl.v vitit lb

..!. Ul.. iualt I., ,- -&

tltt ti.i w OW uTf . Mt wit ..ma W !'

ae Ubl lm Ix'Mi IM III uf m

l,Ui,.. jMmlb mm rw

M Ilk

ANNEAL BRINGS OUTPLAIN

AND A

tho executive theclvio held its postponed unmini mooting in the public rooms

thero was somo

ns well ns some

criticism regarding tho lack ottho proposed to activities ns

upon that

Q. Smithnnd also uctcd us upon tho

Prof. W. Uryau,was regretfully

as was that of M. Andorson asn membor of tho oxocutivo committeeThoro woro five now members of tho

two vacancies mado by tho resignationsto TrofCS80r and Attoruoy An

tno xionoiuiudcBlrO tho thn nomt.

present form government, nnti0n committco tho followingam vu n,"v tno comramoo:

this legislation upon Cooko,compelling tho

moro thoiri.,, fin in th0 committooj.rofessor the of Dr.

indifferent,anything which

justtholegislature enn

logislaturo

preparingHonolulu

conducted.

now

to thotho

tho

tho

for

for

&

jrMfur

tho of H.was

Mr. that allof tho who didnot bonow men and upon DoctorClark's ato to tako tnoof tho

NowTho now oflicors for tho year cloctod

nrn M- - nrrtlldnnt- - A.Haker Dickoy,

j'esterdny.intended in-

toxicating

Territory.gov-

ernment

dolled. Bakorgovernment receipt

o

violating Territory,territorial

Complimont Settlementcommittco

interesting investi-gation Molokai, com-pliment

physicians

fiduciary

election

insisted mombors

placoa

Officers.

MpPhnRnnv- -

-- - II. Illlllll IIIL'r Kcr.nuiii v.-- . ... w 0 yJ. unoKo right up

stating that tho old oxecutivohad not what

was expected of it and was opencriticism. He bolioved that tho resolu-tions and mado to tho com-mittco by tho 170 members of tho federation moro attention.

President replied that borealized thnt thero was much that couldbo rcmodied in this respect thoof tho had worked JiaTd anddono all that was tho

that while a dealhad been in

to parks and vico conditionsthrough tho

in tho fact romainodthat it was hard to get a quorum.

Few Had Burden.called attention to tho

fact that tho work of tho federationof troatlng tho sufferers Tho ro-- , hml tivn nrrind nn n wnll nnuilhlnport described tho Bay Viow Homo, by just a few mon, who had borm thowuero uivbi BuBucoucai uro uu-- 1 and much tho expense, givingiuK toiu. ""i jumimhi vu.ot their timo and energy do whatbo nnd A WJW that they could notstrong for now build. by

is mado and nil lmir .(Tnrta wm,l,i ,

for tho care of tho sottlo-- ! backed by tho full oxocutivourged. roport was ro-- , and members of tho federation.

ferred ways and

billand

ritory, UeferrM

officers

sugarspeak

work

mcasuro carries a lnyorauio terosting joining withciorrca B, mittco a discussion

portunity merits beforeaction taken.

"" committcoChineHO

Maui

nntufe irBibusiness. Raffles, .V'induce.'

.,:.,..,.. .,,,...lln..'MEASLB CASES

measurepenalty violation

pbireil tix jail

(loviuiior ruporlnl tigniiiir(.'iimiiiittlon

rellufprobably mmm-ur- t

bruugbt diirlwi; hitii(iniiH(,

IllVlljtUuil

tluuiu Imlola adwuril- -

-- &." fc;T.. .... &.7ltMil i'.LoUib nnlni M' Uf Irif,

MH jiraillsf, fut "ifWiiniiam

MM MM:

tWmtM IHMMt.

00

MEETINGSOME REMARKS

DEFENSE.

committcofederation

Thursday afternoon,plain speaking wholo-BOin- o

federationcotnmittoo

settlement

body.Presidout prosid'M

sccroUiryresignation whosoresignation nccoptod,

Robbins

executivo committco elect, boaido tho

rvnmmnmlntlnnu

respond MacKaye

banking

Victor Clark,Uooding-Piol- d mado unanimous.

MacKayooxecutivo committco

attend moctihgs dropped and

motion committco was namedmako nominations

delinquents.

lrancitJ Qrccnomeeting,committee

suggestions

shouldSmith

federationpossible

groatespecially re-

gardcommittees having thoso

matters charge,

BornoMr. MacKayo

there.

burden

insanitary uninhabitable possible,accomplish overything themselves

nmplo appropriations nniiiAmimaintenance unless

mittcoChairman Georgo R. CartOT, of tho

protection committee, wan invitcd to boforo tho committco oa tbo

under way thotoo sugar tarin, ho an

talk, tho comreport, action was in of best meaa- -

urea to pursueLater tho committco decided to

to certain tho civic federations on""'7,, ;,"""-- " mulnland, where tho representatives

e of . ..' ...... Ti'i"by introducing n bill which will "

," "J '" ?",i"" " " ,'V" "'T

e tho onoratloii of gift cnternrlses ?...:".."'' 7. '.Vr'.a'."nof any In the Territory n l.aurd. iniiiai wiVhYiTa. f "' ' ,"ous charitable ba- -' "n.clv'c 'offers,' ltnatig"ulraam, premium couponmentH to thuutcr patrons and similar i" ....I. ...,. ,.... I., f... '

. . ', ..1,' I TITTY

a'. at $1000

fine liiiprltonincut.

llimsil Audit

uf tiewill first

up lk I

U) MMii. lb" Mtttr Mirny

i.iinii iUMlur IiIihi wmoIiim3 I uwffhtiM BlZ,Td uS af ta.rwi, Ahmruu

'""il. I H th liHi' ttl ,,, ,,, wurU wvun4

' i larkni,l

"

I Mil

wbTnmut

CIVIC FEDERATION

WILL BETTER

of

servico

Arthur

of

to

S.

olected

.T 1''

,. j , .

m

accomplishedto

rcccivowhilo

undercircumstances,

accomplished,

recommendation

com-mo-

for preservationor ana maao in

to

sendof

i

?"..'..?i

MM,'

ON B. O. WILLEBDEN

(J'rom Baturday Advertltcr)The board of iinmlgrntlon received a

wirclets vetturduy from the raptulu oftliu llrltfth Immigrant teuiner WilM'den thnt thero wero forty-si- eniwi ntmiohiIm on lioiird among the HiiunlthiuimlKrtiiiit mnl four Hinong the I'urtuKumo. 'l'U uenurHl liwillh nl)iurwiot Ihv H0O (mmituntt aUwrd It m

iurlK Ihu vuvmkv uJuIiUhmiunit 4id Thn vimJ Kill rmu hrMua4y wurwIiiH.

mm cunm m o 70 h mavh.smoimum? k mu-- i.i

; ' 'w y em ai lu&iw ItUwt,

'JJSISSSntMm' - ms irtH m&mvMB mii.amu w(A

y

mk ron Tim

Gaviota Brand

UK

FertilizersBIRD MARK

GIVE THE FERTILIZER A SHOW

AND IT WILL SHOW YOU.

You nocd to givo our FERTILIZERSbut ono opportunity to mako good.

Thoy nro carefully compounded ofHigh Qrado Material, and aro sold onMerit. Wo lonvo it to you to bo thoJudgo.

Pacific Guano & Fertilizer Co.Honolulu and IIUo, Hawaii

SAN FRANOISOO, CAL.

CANADIAN PACIFIC RAILWAY

"EMPRESS LINE OP STEAMERS"PROM QUEBEC TO LIVERPOOL .

via thoCANADIAN PACUFIO RAILWAY

tho Famous Tourist Routo of tho World

In connection with thoCnnndinn-Austrnlasia- n Roynl Mail Lino

Por tickets and gonornl information

apply to

THEO.H. DAVIES&GO., LTD

Oonernl Agents

Canndinn Pacific Rly. Co.

Castle 8c Cooke Co., LtdHonolulu T. IL

Commission Merchants

Sugar Factors

Ewa Plantation Co.Waialua Agricultural Oo., Ltd.Apokaa Sugar Co., Ltd.Pulton Iron Works of St. Lonla.Blake Steam Pumps.Western's Centrifugals.Babcock & Wilcox. BoiUn.Qreen's Fuel Economixer.Marsh Steam Pumps.Matson Navigation Co.Planters' Line Shipping Oo.Kohala Sugar Co.

Bank of HawaiiT.TMTTTHV

Incorporated Under tho Laws of theTerritory of Hawaii.

PAID-TJ-P CAPITAL JOOO.000.00

SURPLUS 100,000.00UNDIVIDED PROFITS ... 157,692.9a

OFFICERS:O. H. Cooko PresidentE. D. Tenneyt B. Damon Cashier(3. O. Fuller Assistant CasbiorR. McCorriston Assistant Cashier

DIRECTORS: C. 1L Cooko, E. D.Tennov. A. Lewis. Jr.. E. F. Bishop,F. W. Mocfarlane, J. A. Mctnnuira,C. H. Athorton, Ooo. R. Carter, F. B.Damon, F. C. Athorton, R. A. Cooko.COMMERCIAL AND BAVINGS DB--

DBPABTMENTS.Strict attontlon given to all branches

of Banking.JTJDD BLDO., FORT BT.

Castle & Cooke Co., Ltd

Life and FireInsuranceAgents

General insnrrance AgcnU, repreoaUnffNew England Mutual Life Insuronea

Company of Boston.Aetna Fire Insurance 'Co.

ATTENTIONWe have just accepted the Agency

for theand

The Protector Underwriter of thoPhoenix of Hartford.

These are also among tho Boll or

QUICK BESULTaAn ordinary attack of diarrhoea may

bo cured by a slnglo doso of ChamberIain's Colic, Cholera, and DiarrhoeaRemedy. Only in tho mott sovoro easesis a second or third dote required. Tryit. For sale by Ronton, Smith & Co.,Ltd., agents for Hawaii, Advertisement.

"ONLY ONE TATALITY

IN 30,083 VACCINATIONSHAf'RAMENTO, California, March

15, In order to learn how nffoctlvo hs.itbeen thn pretenl vaccination law Dr,W. V. Hnow, soeretnry of the tUtoboard of IimiIHi. hut guthurai ntutlntlrs(torn Inciil health authorltlm all overHi ii slate. The flgiirM thow that rampIlKiiliuut folliiwxd I he vtuninuUnii ofbut dim shll.l out nf 0,0S!l In the lastttt yean Hd lfct lh" ulilld subtaiM(ly ilM- -

'IhMu Uv U.m DM U,7i7 ulillriUim ef cuntciuut wbJeUl t V(i-- 'l

utmu, ?, lis" MI4lt Hi i4m4 WAM Uv immt vurimUM

Al iJw awIW6W

HTJITfimH MtMMll. Itoili'i

II- - 4iMMiMir Wmum

uut u luHi IImW

Isit hdluHImr Mlillli

biliuHi.!- - - ItkM IHtfUft ibatr

vtliil ii l t ur t 'i hem)'t tin ki.UiltJ m Wm4

tlir ia nemmmttr ihfftttiM t mim w lw

"9mA

Page 8: ft?;COLUMBUS, Ohio, March 31. (Spo-cia-l to Tho AdvertiBOr) Sixty-fou-r bodies of flood victims wcro in tho morgue hero today, but only threo of them havo been identified. Tho waters

fc

8HiKiuii iiiBwr rrffl"i"i'''aiB!!iffiaim

COOfflr jSM

Q. What is gooil for my cough?

A. AVer's Cherry Pectoral.

Q. How long has it been used?A. Seventy years.

Q. Do doctors endorse it?A. If not,we would not make it.

Q. Do you publish the formula?A. Yes. Or. every bottle.

Q. Any alcohol in it?A. Not a single drop.

Q. Howmaylleammorcofthis?A. Ask your doctor. He knows.

Ayer's Cherry Pectoral

tntuii b Dr. J. C. A)ir U C., LwA Un.. U. S. A.

Advt.

IN THE OIROUXT COUr.T, THIRDOIROOTT, TERRITORY OF' HA-

WAII IN PROBATE ATCHAMBERS.

IN THE MATTER OP THE ESTATEOF WILLIAM DOMES, DE-

CEASED.

Order of Notice of Petition for Allow.anco of Accounts, Determining Trustanil Distributing; tho Estate.

On reading and filing tho petition andarrounlH of Prank domes, Kxecutor oftho Kstato of William Gomes, Deceased,wherein petitioner nsks to bo allowed $121X0 and charged with $314.00,and asks that tho same bo examinedand approved, nnd that a final order bomndn or Distribution ot tlio romamingproperty to tho persons thereto entitledand discharging petitioner and sure-tic- s

from all further responsibilityherein.

It is ordered, thnt Saturday, tho 19thday of April, A. 1). 1013, at 10 o'clockA. M. boforo tho .Tmlgo pressing atChambers of tai,l Court at his CourtRoom in Kfiilua, North Kona, Hawaii,T. H., be and the samo hereby is ap-

pointed tho time nnd p'aco for hearingsaid Petition ami Accounts, and that allpersons interested may then and thereappear and show cause, if any theyhave, why tho samo should not bogranted, and may present .ovide.iice asto who aro entitled to tho said prop-rty- .

And that notico of this Order,he published in tho Hawaiian Gazette,newspaper printed and publ!shed in saulHonolulu, for three successive weeks,tho last publication to bo not less thantwo weeks previous to tho tinio thereinappointed for said hearing. '

Dated the 12th day of March, A. D.,1013.

JOHN ALBERT MATTIIKWMAN,Judge of the Circuit Court

of tho Third Circuit.Attest:

K. M. MULLEll.Clerk of the Circuit Court of the

Third Circuit,(foal, Third Circuit Court.)

Mch. IS, 23, A pi. 1, 8.Advt.

IN THE OIUOUIT COURT OF THETHIRD CIRCUIT, TERRITORY OFHAWAII.AT CHAMBERS IN PROBATE.

In tho Matter of tho Estate of WilliamJ-- tVVh0 NOrtN'B''t;TI.LilHe,irRoth,LeoYou;j

nrrlvf- - fnr Vnllrn nf ITcarinff "Pnt.it onAknno,

Dunn,A

servant,m nim

25th of March. A. D. 1913, beenpresented to said Probate Court, anda for the Probate thereof,

lor the of Letters Testa-niantiir-

to John I). Paris. Prank R.(Irecnwell and Robert Wallace, havingbeen filed by them;

It is Herebv Ordered, That Wednes-day, the 30th "day of April, A. 1013,at 10 o'clock a. in., of said day, atthe Court Honm nf suiil Court, at Killlua, North Hawaii, II., bonnd tho wiine Is appointed thotun ii ami place lor proving salil willand liearuii; said

It is Portlier Ordered, Thnt noticothereof bo given, by publication, oncoa week for three succetslvo weeks, inthe iluwauaa Gazette, u newspaper

ihlicl in Honolulu, T. 11. , listpublication to bo not les than ten days

to therein Uppointcdfor hearing.

Dated Kukulohiwal, North Kona,Hawaii, Marcli 2Sth. 1013.JOHN ALHEHT MATT HEW MA

Judge, Third Circuit Court.Attest!

K M. Ml'LI.KR,Clerk, Third cireuit Court.

(KEA I'. Third Circuit Court )O. II. Mclliid". JIolunloN, T. 11., at-

torney fur pBtitiimrrii.April 1,8. 18

DUfllKRHB OAUDB.

or

Advt.

'IQNOMH.U 1H0K WORKS CO-- M

jinneryorder,

vtiry dmirlptlou ma4i to

mm TIDIN3S,

) i Mmi'Ii 1i Uni, till N,

I

SSRES BHHAWAIIAN GAZETTE, TUESDAY, 1, 1913. -SEM- I-WEEKLY.

MIMI) pUjlW '!PHilo Arrived, Marts Sb, Mboeittr A.

)' i;ol(, Hum Mirer.Monday, Mareh H. 1UU.

MnhHhittM Hailttl, March io, wur.Anme .Itihhsen, lor San Pmh-1-o- .

Perl Allen Arrived, Mareh IT, (p..U.rristihlll, Irani Kahului.

Mn'.k It. I.41. ...l .......

Advt,

Mahukonn. Mareh 'Mm P. K. linker, fl. J. Meeker, Mr. ami IIIIHIHi-- l IIIII.I.ILU i iiiluxjlirill, IIUIII .loft (Iambic Arrived, March SO,

h'Ipt. Cuius mi, Irom Hilo Alnrrh IS.Tacoiim Hailed, March 80, srhr. 8.

T Alexander, lor .Mnhukoiin.Han Kraneiiico Arrived

S. Mnnehnrin atMarch ST.

APRIL

Columbia

March 31,' Cilia, nnd Mr. Theo. Kn--

e'e, Mm. Kpplngcr, Mrs. J.Master

1'ort Tnwnsend Arrived. .March 31,tip. Jutcopolis, heneo March 8.

,

OF

ARRIVED.Friday. .March 2S, 1013.

K. K. 8. 8. Shlnyo llnru, fromSum Francisco, u. m.

M. N. S. S. jlonolultm, from0:30 a. in.

Saturday, March 20.Manna Kca, irom IiUo,

Mahukonn, Knwnihne,Gregor's anil I,nliaina, a. m.

MI""iPIWgMMlWtiMMMMliMMMMtiWMMWW

Winifred Dr.m., ,,,nnpM w.Verguson,

PORT

Lnupa-lioeho-

Mc

... t l, r ,r tl . - n .iiiiwuii iiun-s- ... .". O. ott. MUs M.K8.r from Hawaii Ore,,,

il.nttnn. from Moil. 7:30 II. Rtophcns, Miss K. Thornaglo,

a. in.' " '

Sunday, March .10.

Sir. W. Hall, from Kauai, 1 a.Str Maui, from Aliukini, b a.Str. Miliaiiala, from Wuiau, Polo-kiin-

TCiilnmmna. I'ukoo. Kamalo. Ka.i- -

napali. Ltihaina, Mnkena, i,

Kilici, McOrccor's, Kawcakapuami Kaunakakni, 2:40 a. in.

Mr. and

11.30

Str.

8tr. K,.,nu Klcolo Maknwcll,Hanapepe, a i X?, A. Ross ami wile,

from Gibraltar, Tholll iIrgiP. 111.

M,

8. p.

I,. C.

O. in.in.

C. 1).8. b.

Monday, March 31.O. S. 8. Sierra, from San Francisco,

7.31) n.T. IC. K. S. S. Chiyo Mam, from

Hongkong, Shanghai, Nagasaki, Koboand Ydkohama, 3::15 p. 111.

Str. C'laudinc, from Kahului, 5:1.1m.

Hebr. Mary E. from PortLudlow, 8 a. 111.

DEPARTED.Str. Claudino, for Lahaina and Ka-

hului, S p. m.T. K. K, S. S. Sliiuyo Maru, for

Yokohama, Kobe, Nagasaki,and Hotigknng, 13 p. m.

u. s. a. J. JJix, lor nremenon, u:jup. in..

Str. Kilanca, for Ko'ya Knnports, 12 m. -- - -

Str. Mnuna Kca, fd'r" laljaina nndIlilo, 3 p. in,

S. S. Karnak, for Soattlo, 3:30 d. m.Str. Kniulani, Hawaii ports, 4

p. m.Str. Claudino, for Kahului,

liana, .Nnluku nml Kcanno, 5 p. in.Str. W. G. Hnll, for Alnj(ni,,5. p. in:M. N. S. S. Honolulanfor-Sa- h' IVan--Cisc-

C p. in.

I'or str. Malinn Kea, from Hilo viaway ports, Mar. 29. Hon. G. W. Wick- -

crshnni, B. P. Moore, Miss M. Bowors,Miss I Noycs, E. A. Mott-Smit- Capt.Win. Howe, T. J. Hcuey, Miss Ward,capt. i'ruuen nnd wile, .Miss L. M. Rich'wald, Mrs. W. Richwald, P. W. Richardsou and wife, G. w. Richardson,Miss V. Nuss, Mrs. ,T. B. Nuss, MissM. k. .Mills, .1. .1. null, A. JI. Taftha-gen- ,

Thco. Richards, F. S. Pay andwife, N. II. Pay and wife, Mrs. Clarko,Mrs. Sumner, Miss Cogsniff, T. Cogs-nif- f

and wife, 11. W. Ureckous, B. vonDamm, M. A. Niccol, S. Spitzor, J.Taylor, W. T. Prost, II. O. Harwell,Mrs. Mrs. L. Self nnd daughter,O. A. Hermit and wifo, C. II. Siebert,Miss Stupplcbeen, E. B. Anderson nndwifo, Y. Okino, T. Ozawa, J. Han, R.(juinu, J. C. Sims, M. Grahnm, W.W. Malloy, S. G. Noda, C. Daniels, E.l.ishinan, T. Carpenter, A. Fraser, P.MoFcetcrs, E. do Coitc, Mr. Lockwoodnml wile, S. Rickard, Miss M. Hoi

.Mrs. T. Van,. 11

I-- f Kal"alU'i u. u. noitci, i". sciimiut, U. Duncan,

7 - ll- - "aval, A. U. II. Farns- -

for Probate ofWUl. wortll( Mr8- - L 1IennlnR aml cWla Mr8.,,.,l- - Oco. H. Jr., R. R.

document purporting to bo Craik Mig8 w,t,I8r, A. Palm or, Dr.Last Will and Testament of ilbumK Nngima nnd R. C. Bowman,P. .1. Hoy, deceased, on tlio

day

Petitionand Issuance

D.

Kona, T.hereby

application.

pi.bl the

previous tho time,

at

IUU

T.

Kahului,

Lanai,

111.

Poster,

Shanghai

for

Laluiina,

Arrived.

A.

Neecc,

Per Htr. Kinau, from Kauai ports,Marcli 30. Mrs. .links and infant, MrsII. H. Brodie, Mrs. G. Hnggcrly, Mis.A. Rice, Mrs. B. Rice, infant and t,

Mrs. F. A. Alexander, Mr. nndMrs. S. B. Home, C. C. Potter, A. Ja-cobs, George W. Lishmnn,Kawasaki, Wusakl, Yokohamo, R.

Ed. Mrs. I'rossor, S. C.Lucas, II. Iluuhes. B, Cathcart.II. R. Zane, B. Lickers, T. O'Brien,J. Cohen, '. Fernandez, 11. Christian,Hong Jiing, iwigirawn, .Murrain, Wil-kinson.

Str. Miknhala from .Maul andMoloknl ports, Marcli 30. A. .1' Tait,P. C. Thomson, A. Jones, Henry Davis,William Knott, Miss- - M. Meyors.

Per T. K. K. S. S. Chiyo Mnru fromOrient ports, for San Francisco, MarcliHI. W. Chase. H. C. Cobtirn, Mrs. Unt-ile M. Strohccker, Mrs, T. Tomnl, MissS, Tomnl, Mnster Y. Tomni, Master S.Tomni, Mrs. M. Webster. For San Fran-ciw- o

Miss C, Aitken, Miss J. Alikeny,E, 8. Brown, Dr. E. C, Burnett, JudgeA. Borromeu, It, N. Barton. Mnior ,1. J,Rourke, Miss A. M, Cornelius, Mm. II.C. and Maater Neutoti Coburn,lumes Dunrnii, Miss II. I. Dudley, It.

.1. r. Forger, Mrs. J. V, For-ge- r,

J. H. II. rrnnk, Miss 1'. Puller, Dr..1. II. (Hum. Mm. . II. CIhm, It. (lal- -

luglu'r, Mr. ('. E. Harrell, .1. T. Ham-lltoi-

(h-o- . V. HaytM, Mrs. Geo, V.UHVtM, Win. liny, lv. Iliililnn, Mid, .M.1. llvile. J. lUrrk A. T. Hownr.l, ll-wi-

T. iKlvlmrt. Mr. E.lwln T. lgb-hr- l,

iUilcr lglelujrt, MIm M lglimri, Mm x, ),iiiri, niw k. mm-har-

U'ut. V. .letiklui, K. UNWMMii4 Mimut Mr. Kondo, JU4r T.

Kottd", n II I iiMirili, if, Uaww.Mf. Al 1..l'-- , Mr.. H, LMtW. 'urv Lorn..- M I, MMtlMU.Vii.v Mi. T Mu, A. &Imri i , ii.tfiunilri i NaauM, frrlllMr. lv alt ,! wrtL Miff T.flWi

..ii, v irttM.ii. Wk V. OluMMiA,iiriMMM. I'aiitiiMiu i.tmy

lMi. HI. I MM)t't A nI fciMi.. 1....1 w aMm ! I' W 4.

NMbW. MfiInlMlMMi,

A. I), Wllllnmn, Mr. A. I). William,A. Williams, Mm. A. Wllllim, MImK. a. Welsh. O. WlndnRcr, V. II.

Winter, Itov. 0. M. Williams, Hev. II.Wood, Mrs. II. Wood. Mim A. I..Wood.

IV r n. S. H Hifrm from fun I ran

nunMrs. .T. IHillev Mlnford. Louis II, lllnfont, Mrs. II. E. Moiling, MIm Alice

Mr. N. A. tapton, Mlsa M. Chit-tendo-

.1. tr. O. C. Curtis. MiM

henro II.

Ferguson, Mr. I.. .1. nsse, .Mr. amiMrs. Bam. Goldstein, Mm. Louisa Oo-n- i

MIm U draco, It. V. Hmlborg,Mm. Martha Hnnscom, Mr. ami Mm. P.II. Hall, W. F. Hovcy, Mrs. Wm. Kcl-lor-

MIm T)nrntliy Kellogg, Mrs. H.Kilcy, Henry Klmlrcr, Mr. nnd Mm.Otto Knuth, E. L. LniiRlioln, I'liillfI.orhr, Mr. and Mm. S. .1. l.owfTitlml,U T.uclcr, Mm. Mary l'crklni Icllvnin,Mr. anil Mrs. Tom Mapnlrc, A. V. Mas-so-

Mrs. .T, Malonoy, Master DesmondMnlnncv, W. .1. iiooro, .Mr. ami .Mrs. n.H. Xncel, Minn N'nrton, Miss M. R Nor.in,, !r II T.. 1'errv. Miss Alice I'ortor, Miss llanmna HndclllTc, MIm Pearllticc, J. ltoss, Mr. and Mrs. K. O. Itnss,Mr. ami Mrs. .). if. ssaiuos ami iwo cnu

nir. jwuiiim, arumports, H.

"s A. Mrs. A.Mrs. Trov. K. I). Wilson, Mrs.I.. Winter, Mr. Yonker, Mrs. Yonkcr.

Departed.

a.

A.

Per T. K. K. S. S. Shinyo Mnru, forOrlmit norts. Mnrcli US. .Mrs. h. aWnterhousc, MitB M. Watorliousc, Mrs.I. Stnlibs anil child. .Miss D.dron Clin. Lain, Mrs. K. A. Ueam-lcrk- ,

Miss V. BcaucIcrK, II. v. eaufrom i, ito,,!Wmmra and 4:3.-- ! m K.

WillCHden, 4. j3BBtlnlln( MlM k. LnngUon,

a.

nnd

PASSENGERS.

M.

H.

Bucholtz,

Mr. M.

In.

I). Wal- -

Miss';

.Miss Douulas. Miss L. Washburn, K,

ltd, Prcdk. Muir, Mrs. A. It. Hntlield,C. A. Gllmore, Mrs. K. W. Oilmore,Miss B. McDonald, Mrs. .1. C. Sims, C.

C. White nml wifr Mrs. S. K. Mur-dock- ,

A. P. Gray, B. .. Murdock, Ueo.C. Prussing and wife, P. .1. Dewcs andwife, Mr. Loose nml wifo, W. .1. Uor-ma-

Mrs. M. Tareoka, I. Yoslimaga,wife and family, (i), .1. Rock.

Per str. Kilauoa, for Kona and Kauports, Jlarch 28 C. W. Ashford, E. C.

Smith, Miss C. Case, Miss S. Iloogs,Miss D. Hoocs. Miss I. Gibb. Miss E.Gibb, R. Gny, H. Gay, Wm. Paris, ElsioGay, May Gay, Miss M. Ronton, MissE. Ronton, A. W. Soulo, E. L. Steele,A. M. IMowcIl, Miss Alion, jurs. straw-bridge- ,

Mrs. P. L. Steelo, Mrs.Miss Macoon, Mrs. E. P. Low,

Miss Mngoon, Mrs. J. A. Mngoon andmaid, .Tno. IC. Knikaka. Miss Smith,Mrs. B. Smith, Miss Mabel Taylor,Miss Myrtle Taylor, Miss L. Athcrton,Miss V. Athcrton, Miss M,Miss JL Oilman, Miss V. Iloogs, MissA. O. Iloogs, Miss M. McChcsnoy, MissR. MeChesnev, Miss M. Howntt, P. L.Steele, Mrs. P. L. Steelo D. Wadsworth,.T. C. Wino, .T. Hind, Miss L. K. Poa-bod-

Mrs. H. II. Webb, Mrs. L.Miss F. Mnguire. Mr. and Mrs.

.1. A. Maeguire, Chas. Sutton, E. R.Hendry, M. G. Zimmcrmnnn.

Per str. Claudino, for Kahului , andLahaina ports, March 28 Miss M. Tay-lor, Miss Myrtlo Tnylor, Miss O. Lind-say, A. M. Brown, Wm. Hitchcock,Master Brown, Mrs. A. M. Brown andmaid, Henry B. Poguc, Miss E.

Miss G. Mcinoekc, D. Withing- -

ton, Jr., J. Meinccko, Mrs. C. C. Jamesnnd two infants, Roso Carabra, C. C.

.Tames, Y. C. Toiler, Miss D. Wood, Mrs.George Weight and child. Miss K. Cor-nell, Mr. Lamont, Miss D. Cooke, MissM. Cooke, Miss A. Cooke.

IVr str. Manna Kea, for Hilo via wayports, March 28. A. Gartloy, Wm.Booth Jr.. and wife, A. W. Lawrence,Mr. and Mrs. G. W. Foote, Mrs. E. P.Low. Mrs. A. C. Farlcv, Mr. and Mrs.P. JT. Swanzy, W. W. G. Moir, Mrs.M. M. Given, Miss X. C. Cleacer, Robt.Hind, Master Richardson, Mr. and Mrs.W. Richardson, Mr. and Mrs. Swanzy,Mr. and Mrs. II. Johnson, Miss E. Gil-Us- .

Miss McGillis, Mrs. J. C. Carter andtwo children, Mr. aim --Mrs. Jtass, air.

stein, W. Knpo, G. BiiBtard, II. and Mrs. Wezol, J. J. Cardan, .1.

Thompson. Frederick JiarnnrU,

Cockctt,

having

(lordlier,

F.

Per

Cobiirn

Ijirnnliaw,

Wndman,

Moln-coke- .

G. Pluiiimcr, Miss Helco McLean, MissCnrrie McLean, Mr. and Mrs. Jas. McLean, II. Ii. Holbush.

Per M. N. S. S. Honolulnn, for SnnFrancisco, March 31. Mr. and Mrs. E.Ti. llowen, Mrs. H. 11. Brodio, MissBrock, A. M. Boswoll, R. 1. Carson, A.L. Comstock. Mrs. W. Davis. Mrs. S. M.llenshiiw, Mr. and Mrs. Hnrpor, Mr.and Mrs. W. 11. Lee, Miss MnrgnrotLeo, Mr. nnd Mrs. F. V, Lewis, Mr. nndMrs. .Ins. M. Mnirhead, W. L. Miller,Mrs. (!. McMillan, Mr. and Mrs. O. E.Perkins. Jr., Miss Margaret Roddick,Mr. and 'Mrs. H. S. Russell nnd maid,Muster II. Russell, M. E. Rose. A.-J- .

Scott. .1. W. Smith, Mrs. W. Savory,Mrs. J. B. Thompson and two children,Mr. and Mrs. S. B. Thome, E. Tlmmons,Ueo. Webb.

Per str. Claudino. for Lahaina andKahului ports, Marcli 31. Miss C.Daniels, E. 11. Forbes. Miss L. Kunn-kan- ,

Miss M. L. Cnrr, Miss G. Schrader,Mrs. O. 1). Schrader, Rev. C. 8. Kim,Mrs. S. Knlolio, M. Wntanahc. Row J.K. Knhonpil. J. Mitchell, P. J Ton-tnin-

Mrs. Geo. Weight nml child.

TAFT SENDS FOR T, R.'sPICTURES AT WHITE HOUSE

WASHINGTON, March 20. FormorPresident Taft has mimed one personalbelonging which ho left when lie quittho W'lilto Hoiis ii picture of Theodore Ilooseyclt, which liiing on tho eastwall of hit private ofhee, Kuvernl days

limit took down the only other picturein iu tiiiiniuii, nun oi nm mtiier,

Tuft, but Die llnonovelt pictureInu been hnhgltiK Ihsm hIoiio klneePrtxiideiil Wilson mwuinnd olNci. ToilllJ'H latter to llin While lli)Ue nfllciWrMUtliitf llmt tliti m takenilotui mill Mtut til III Ksw llm-a- Lot id.

a PI.' p.... mutt, plMMIItlv iMsatuiMuii uumMMWI Wsllilki htMW

Uu i .mt!nt i n lu i... 1

in, i .lui 4 iIh lr I .i it, .,

In b p lllll fc.U.1- -"

Commercial News

stfs&szj: WINS FIRST

HONOLULU.

Singeton,

IS FIRM fil CLOSE!

DEATH OF J. P. MORGAN ATFEOTS. VI0BFINANCIAL CinCLEB ONLY

IN SLiailT DEQREE.

Illr Prlral Wlrfltm TIetv1i.)Ni:w YORK, March ecial to

como

Tho tho n this thoby tuo 10l0 and its vico

shuck by tho death of .T. P.

did not upset thotoilnv. Tho effect of the pass

ing of tho v:ih pnrtinllyby that tho

roads.

IN DISTRICT

WATEBIIOUSECOMPANY RECEIVES

onco to thoin commercial circles

Advertiser) OnliiK support; ,vor(i, case through Waterextended blinking interests Compa-- , Limited,

occasionedMorgan market

financierreports intcrstato

coniincrct- - commissifreight advances

Hawaii

president, Harold T. Haysoldcn. l'hocompany is tho agent the

Cash Register Company,Ohio, and Mr. Havsclden is

Ion hail sanctioned : personal reprcsontatlvo handling thisof transcontinental cnd , 1)u,,ncs8 Tho company won

. it . .... .- -Tim r,i,11iio... nf thn market on tho "" "i I'"" rcciuu lor snics inr

Ilrst drop in pri'co impresuctl the boars this company.ami short covering played a considor-- ; Mr. yesterday receivedable p.'irt in rally, which quickly from TolU H patter90n prcsidont off.'l.rriV.,;r,,S1 "IV. ''f' law tho National Cash Register Company, a0VC4 handsome leather containing a

Tlio opening rate for call monoy ot beautiful gold watch and chain by Au- -

five and ono-bal- f per cent and governor jcrton & gon 0f Dayton, a gold handledHiilasr-- j niinrovBi ' ; ,.nifo am, ft gold pencil case,ranroau mil nan a iiurt'ssuig tutu

CHAIN.

all oil'

It. reported that Merlin craved with his initials, in recognition Haw. Ter. A p (Fire. . .... . t . . .. .i.:.i.i:M d;ni.i n tin rnr m 111c twnfir nmi no tnn nrivn ! '

coat in this market for thirty-da- y tho fifth district of tho world. In oth- -

loans. . er WOrds tho soles through thoBonds easy. '

The tone of the market became louso Company cash registers ofsteadier after midday and thoro was a high grndo havo oxcooded thnt in anyslight recovery all round. Business di- - other Bection of tho world contained inminishod steadily, speculation boing af- - t,js district.fectod by an advance in pioney to Ti,0 wora outBido tho United Statesseven per cent, tho highest llguro ot)ias hccn divided into flvo districts bythe year. ' tho big compaay whoso president

lowWhile prices ruled in somo cases be- - Ie.cntiy to ono year ia prison

last week's closo tho general list pn niegeu- violation tho trust laws,aintainod a show stability and ,)lt )msl aiipoaled. Four of tho districts

displayed an inclinntion to respond constitute Latin America, Australia,readily to favorable developments. Kew Zealand and South Africa, all tho..TTt.1... .!.. AtntB khtrtlhl InfitDAn ,tiiiHiier jinues miuw inuiiii i,..uv.- - ot lno Worm is cnibrnced in thoBorne strength into tho copper shares. flfth district in which Hawaii is

Tho market closed firm. . eu, and it is against all this largo sec- --- - j tion of tho world that Hawaii has had

'f mtl compete and in Mr. Hayscl- -II lllnl 1 1 1 don has won tho first prizo.

U LUVl UIU I Tho lottcr Mr. Haysoldcn receivedwith the prize is as follows:

UN blinul LAullflllut "Mr- - H- - T. Haysolilon,aVico Presidentj Tho Wnterhouso Co., Ltd., Hono- -

I lulu, Hawaii."Dear Sir: As you aro tho leading

(By Federal WlreIe.iTel.tT.ph.) x Ci salesman for 1912 in your dis- -

SAN FRANCISCO, March 31. (bpo- - tricti t llavo Bcnt to you ono of thocinl to Tho Advcrt'scr) Closing quo-- , gold watches and chains which wore of- -

tations: Xcred as a prizo to tho district IoadorsSUGAR STOCKS. last year.

Hawaiian Commercial .... 32V4

Hawaiian Sugar 32'Honokna . x...: 4ViHutchinson "10Kllaucn .:..i;. 12Onomca not quoted.PaanhaiiUnion

OIL STOCKS.Amaltmmntod S614Associated 43

LOCAL STOCK MARKET

Bid Asked """a 'c u iny urarij ran- -

H, MARCH SALES

In spite of tho dividends paid yester-day by n number of sugar and othercompanies tho local stock market wasexceedingly weak. There was only onotransaction nt the session of tho ex-

change, when ten shares of Oaliu Sugar.mi, nf lSfiH.1: Tt,it,i'inn l.nnrrltt Hinrn

were three reported sales. Fifty Bhares i ccnsten cents;

" .Com"point low -- """" .reported ,

'tho lastTho for tho month

Mnrcli, tho high and low figuresot is as follows:

110 shares, highestprice, 25.75, lowest price, 23.50; Haw'n.C. S. sharps, 35.125, 33.025;Hawaiian Sugar 285 shares, 34.75,firm; Honokna Sugar sharea,0.75, firm; Haiku 00 Bhares,

Itcuaiia tvo., ju Buarcs,50,

CHICAGO, Manned

hrC'Ji'Zy '&u"mELl;3rcrr.:7r...

WORLD

PRESIDENT

AND

morofront tho

local Na-

tional Day-

ton,

wore

call

which

wntuncratulations your success.closed the with tho highest rocord

;..'r vour district honor whichproud.

makowatch constant companion

keep fresh mindvnluo necessity im-

proving moment what im-

portant factor your success.know appreciate this, other-

wise record would havopossible.

"Wishing greater successtruly yours,

(Sgd.) "JOHN PATTEI1SON."

DIVIDENDS PAID OUT.There great distribution div-

idends yesterday onlycompanies show diminutionamount disbursed com-panies nuiiied. Following amountopposite companies:Brewer Company, $1,150 share;

Plantation, fifteen cents; Waima-nalo- ,

$2.00; Ilawn. Electric, seventy-liv- e

cents: twentyBovcnty-fiv- o

Taniong Olok Rubber went 37.50,1 Knbuku Sucarwhich half-poin- t Twenty-fiv- e Hwn. Pino. twciity-fiv- a cents;shares Olaa 3.00, (Quarterly) $2.00;

fiftv sharesu.,.......,,,

went 0.75, twenty-fiv- e cents.rculbterinc 7.025,

stock saleswith

eacli stock,Ewa Plantation,

Co., 1S25Co.,

Co.,Sugar Co.,

130, 120; sugar

JAPANESE AND CHINESE

CONTRIBUTING LIBERALLY

firm; Mcllrydo Sugar nmlmrhares, , tor

:- l....-nc- , linn nion " "

Mfl

the

'for

tho

tho

caso

rest

havoyear

well fee)trust that yoiiyour

yourtime

this

1012been

rule

names

Ewn

Co.,

Co., 388!

Co.,Co.,

Co., lion,sold half

than salo.

(Continued One,)liberal donations

4.00. 3.50; Oahu Sugar Co., liM) "tll0 rcliof fum, victimshares. 19.S75. IC.SiO: Onomca Sugar .,.,, other

Co., shares, 3.75, 3.00; Paau- - ' ,mmIi rwfu,.,. "" ,'. namest w n . iiin ji . n a i 'n bi

each

Hon.

who voluutarilytheir donations",or'nnshares, 125.00, Pioneer Mill Co., du, , ,TjBh

shares, 24.2u .,5; Walalua Agrl- -

UnaMlo Amcri'can peoplecultural shares, 00.00, 88.00; , . caia'mity. which

unit iiiui

friend

FRANCISCO EXPOSITION

SO.

utlrmliilwW,,

uuul uuil nViUIUil...,.;:

WATCH

in is an of

44

Honokna

of

50

no.

- -

u

mi

inu ilk- "-- ?...... .

ll,Im

We

of

of

of

ofof

yaw may"I this

it willservo in tho

of and tho forand an

is inT you as

your not

you inam. verv

II- -

was a ofand ono or two

of thoas by the

is thoot u.

& per

B. & M.I.-- S. N.

of atis off.of at or a f- - C

er last Also i" ""of nt

bhIa

&

.... to-

tho.,, ..., nhin nml

0C 11 n.gar 712 ;(1 ovcr to you tho list otnun ............ ..,

to

of'"' """" sent in to this ouico to

h f t to905 2: to u

Co., 193 nlI. nwn

ii

"- -', '

KiiburlpUoiu

"www ,.,. ,,, n. huh "' ' "'I4I. lb. , ;

' -; ."'". !iaril Hui.Tm,

1 '

i

.

I 1

i .

'

i

..

,.i I

I

-. ,

. ,

!, mid hl. .

I' ,iii i

Jl.,i.,il i

. . i, i it it .

i , ,

m tftl H , l It 1 I

i I1,

GOLD

1 r .

Water- -

includ- -

uponjiu,

1013. I

anya

a

from raceith

thoso havo

firm; rcca,

U

tjiJ

I HONOLULU STOCK EXCHAHQEjl

Honolulu, Monday, Xtir'h 31. 101 J. I

NAMRbP STOCK

MlKAKTtli

CDrcwtrit Co... ...Sooa

Ew...Miw. Alticultural ....

iw. Com. Sui. Co.Hiw. Sat. CoIlonomuIlonoknlaiku ,.

Mulchlnion Smar I'Un- -Iition Co

KihukuKekaha Sugir Co ... .

KoloaMcllrrile Sue. Co, Lid.0huSutirCoOnomcaOI Suiar Co. Ltd ...Paiuhau Suz. Co.Pacillcpaia. :;.I'fncckcoPioneerWiialiuAsr. CoWailuku Act.WalmanaloWalmca Sutar Mill..,.

Misceoancouj

Inter-Isla- S. N. Co..Haw. Electric CoH. R. T. & L. Co. Ptd..II. R. T. S L. Co. Com.Mutual Tel. CoO.K. SUCo...,IliloR. R.Co. PldHlloR. R.Co. Com....Honolulu Brewing &

MallineCo LtdHaw. IrT. Co. LtdHaw. Pineapple Co....Tanione Olok Rub. CotPihans Rub. CoHon. On Co. PldHon. UasCp. Com

Bonds

mis besnn cLiaimsi.! ntm.iiti r

of

was

1

n.

l.ui:

To

tlio

Co.

Haw. Ter. 4 p c (Returning JWO)

IJaw.Ter. 4 p c PubHaw. Ter. i'i p cHaw. Ter. 4 X p cHaw. Ter. 314 pcCaL Beet Sug.o: Refin-

ing 6sHon. OaiCo., Ltd 5s..Haw. Com. S Sugar5pc

Hilo R. R. 63 (hsue olHilo R."R;"Co."Re't'."i

Extn. Con. 6Honokaa Sup Cn lin.Hon.RT.iSLCo. 6pciiuai nj t,o. osKohaJa Ditch C(..!....Natomas Con. isMcBrrde Suear Co., 5mutual ci. 09O.R.SUCo.5pc...fOahu Sutar 5 p c .Olaa Surar Cn. fi r-

Pacific Sutar Mill Co.6a

Pioneer Mill 6 pc.Walalua Act. Co. 5 pc.Hawaiian Irr C061Hamakua Ditch Cn 6s .

iumiinn nuii!(iB)H

T.

I

w

CAntAt raa .,ur j VL -- - I

1.2a).000i

ionrionntooaooo

IO,Trjn,ntloJ.UM.00IJ

7M,mnZ.UJU.UU100,000

2J00.(W1i.ooo.ono

8nn,trxSO0.WIU

isnaoao5.000.0001,000,0003,000,00115,000.000

7SO0fJ02.2M.000

750,000000,000

4.PO0.1O03,000,000

IZ5.0tO

2,250,000750.00

1,207,5W

350.0005,000,000

164.B402.800,000

500.000I.250.0U0

Amt. Out- -

I lOOl

a. 3331

I0OIIUU

..,.

lh

15

135

3M18W

JJS

tl

190

5

89M

94K

I03H

Ail

23

5H

9S

91too

too

'Jtoo

Between Boaras.CO Tanjong Rub., 37.50; Olaa,

50 Honokaa,Session

10 18.0216.Quotations.

88 Analysis Beets, 9s HV&d; par-ity, 00

Dividends.1,

Haiku, Paia, Pioneer,Kekaha, Waimoa,

5,& S. Onomea,

Ilonomu,10,

Wailuku, Hutchinson, .20.March 15,

.10: O. R. & L. Co.. .05: Poneekeo.Waialua,

20,Pahang Rubbor,

C. Brower &

Electric.II. & M. I. I. N. .75;

Ii. T. & L. Co. (quar.),Tel. Co. (quar.), .25.

T, Ah Moi 5.00Ching 5.00Quong Choiig 5.00

Kee 5.00Leo 5.00Ynt Co 5.00

Cluing 5.00Wo Co 5.00

Yat 5.00Kwong , 5.00

5.004.00

Wo 3.00

Lo.vOn Tai

ApingChoySun WoChang

,..v.....,u. .-,-.".--, always remember. looi strongly .i00 o80

jkiin

500.000300,000300,000

itaname110,000

600,0001,500.000t.000,0001.000,0001,244,000

800,000300.000

1.240.000

l.ooaooo

1,673,000600.000621000500.000500.000

11,500,0002,000.000

2iaooo2.000,000

901000Z.S0O.0UU

500.0001,250,000

918.500800.000310,000

IOOI65

.'

46"

iooii

ij.j

22X'-

19K

103X

Olok.3.00; 0.75.

Sales.Oaliu Sug. Co.,

Sugardog.4.09; dcg. 3.48.

March 1913..50; .50; .20;

1.00; 1.00.March 1913.

Haw. Co., .25; .30;1.00.

March 1913.1.00;

1913.Haw. Co., .30; Oahu Sug. Co.,

1.00:.50.

March 1913.Haw. Ag. Co., 1.50;

.10.March 31, 1913.

Co., 1.50; Ewa, .15;2.00; Haw. .75; Hon.

Co., .20; Co.,.10; Haw. Pino Co., .25;

Com. 2.00; Mut.

SongLung

HongTomaLoy

SangSing

Wuh YuonSheu HungSing ChanChco Tong

You Houg 2.002.002.00

Hou Fook Sing 2.00

DanYin

Lau Slice

,.,,....,...

2.00

Lcong Hop , 1.00Hong Poo .' 1.00

W. Ahnna 1.00

Totaln Subscriptions,

Tho subscriptions received throughtho Star-Bulleti-n yesterday aro as

Fred Harrison $ 10.00J. It. Dogget 25.00Two Ohiaiis a.00

SA'Sa ST'fflT.M.iS.iTIS that wo are nil brothers, and in time r, victor S. Clark...., 5,

r"S ,V "?m. "":?" in i," of woe tho heart is speaking. Cn.h 1.,,-

-.' A" . "Mo .i"! -- ..I nSos'ifii "Very sincerely yours, Mrs. 8. M. Lack 5,

Vv ,,'.".: "V? ,, r, Vo.'.i:.::::' nVnn (Signed) "8. BHBIA." Hanamalu.Kchool (Knual) 1,i,.,,i,A.",V;..,....,"'. ,A..r !'" nV tV, I.tt of donations sent to lluwnll o. O. Yee Hon 4 Co 71

I'uii'ii

05

shares.. 40.50. 40.25; TnnJong Olok """

,00

.00c 1 rnnf ,, ,'

00

Hull, Co., ,10 snares, 37.0U, firm; ra- - uunnimru '7 ,,,' .",.' '. ,VhrniL' Rub. Co.. 10 shares. 19.S75, firm.1 M. Knwnhara dorks 5.00 Mr. W'fitervelt to send LutAlot Y. l.l.li 30.00 today another in.tolUnt of the toilet:....... yr tl.l.l.. 11101 riiml ,,, rif.,.nr,trip f,v.urn iiiiriiiL, iiiiioii. ir. it. iiiii "", "- -

a 3.00'before ho stnrted for Augusta tho Prest-- OOLUMHUB SHIPS FOR Buinida 10.00 DIVINING BOD

BAN Cldueso Aro Oeueroua,

Mnrcli by I'ollDwinu tho Hit

WUH

Knbuku,

2.002.002.00

Lui

$501.00

fol-lows:

STUDYFBENOH ACADEMY AIM

J'AltiH, March Acting thecrew of Harvard gra'luiitna mihI rtil- - tram the uiiulir the Wall quait of ft number of penous who

cuts of the Viiliwailv of Chle80 tlio MrfUaiili' A0lUoii tnlvriMto.1 In occult umtlur. thaIhrmi model of Coluuibua' Ww liUl "laia!? Juh 50,00 Adoiy of Bimiei has appointed

inui

Mr .ruio liv.

www iiftfttwwf BAII

i

has

Centrifugals,

lUl'IU

10.00 tpoaitil boiiiniImiioii inquire intouinninu

niKe-..' , I ... . ,

ifiMMli "" UH mm l tiaiuta oi uio, who proremY( " fffi ," mot uiujrurouBi

....... ., U '""

.u. t, ion '.r ....

ut

to

iivor

Uirwa iara

rn..iiH,

ii

t9 "'iii,l.,l. I.

Mil

.as

tuo

of

'." -"K

Plin.

....

1m

Co.

Co.

Co.n

Co.

Sug.

Sing

Clungoiuir

Leo

FAID

I 'I

21

22H

t

205

"87

;

25

C.

I

S.II.

Co

.,

o

" r,00

80

V..'., ..1.

. :

,.

T.

ul

10. ouOf sio

h toill ins ran-

mi eilmuillve...

v

P

lit "''" '

...

I

..." v

w ,n I'T .w H..HH Ititw IT ,yMtrl4ftllbtf blbr Ilia iiovmi olmui- -

,00 4 br "4uwMtn" ma aulliaulie. aail.Ijfi.uo if hi what ,.irutilf iluipl are m81 valvaj

'WK I ''in ,.,,,,,, Kii'Ki i uKidrrnlila lntHlllaiiM U klUMKHli. ' ., i a,,... ,.,. IJU'iU H' 'i, mi lb Mil ui ilia

' fci'lui.. i i, tLalftrf lima lal baJri..

38

re

H

'"

li....!..,.... tit.hu, I it., ul tMiMlk

i 4 i '(. au talun ittlp wi.(. , ftp.

! I' tiMHtl, W. flvaHL W.VftW -'- -

4irliHla i (wul flawt M u ' I

Mlwilr ' II liru .i (di, II ll ,iw r,it,4 I, ' Mmb'wlu Iri inn fKaMrm al ulWr i 4 ' II. Vi Vtut V..,.. ' . i i jl i Mr

l'lul I ' . Ul Ulv, .i ., ' ,, .i,i.