ROAD MONEY AM) ORGAN JAPANESE TEMPORARILY …

10
U. S WEATHER BUREAU, November 13. Lart 24 hours' rainfall, .00. SUGAR-- 96 Degree Test Centrifugals, 3.81625c.: Per Ten, $76,325. Temperature, Max. 83; Min. 73. Weather, fair. 88 Analysis Beets, 8s. 10 Per Ton, 77.00. ESTABUSMED JULY 2. 5 VOL, XLIV., NO. 7572. HONOLULU, HAWAII TERRITORY, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBR 14, 1906. PRICE FIVE CENTS JAPANESE ARE flfi ROAD WORK IS TEMPORARILY ORGAN 10 MONEY AM) THE BAND ORGAN? SUSTAINED BY SECY. METCALF PUT A STOP TO Democratic Paper Is Is Fidelity Company Being Pressed for Funds. He Thinks the California Discrimination Law Is Unconstitutional Cuban Planters Want Field Labor-Del- mas Defends lhaw. Slim Finances Cause Supervisors to Call Halt Proposition to Materially Cut Police Department's Monthly Expenses. Not Yet in Sight. The germ of the Democratic news- paper does not seem to come out into the sunlight some. There is a hank- ering for the smell of the ink and for a bite of the roller composition on the part of the Democratic writers hut the angels fail to mateeialize so the change of getting a new sheet in Honolulu seems to be fading. (Associated Press Cablegrams.) SAN FRANCISCO, November 14. Secretary Metcalf favors the Japanese side of the school controversy here and believes the State law, under which the local Board of Education excluded Japanese pupils from one of the public schools, to be The first meeting of the Board of 'Supervisors since the election, was held last night. Usually the meetings of the board are but sparsely attended, but last night native Democrats were much in evidence and filled all the spare chairs. They came to see the show, some with shoes on and others without. One of the visitors seemed to be disappointed because a quintet club was not in Cohen wants $3000 to bring the Ha- waiian band back to Honolulu from Salt Lake City. Governor Carter says '"No," and promptly wired Captain Berger to ca- ble his estimate of the cost of the trip. Here is the cable correspondence, commencing with Governor Carter's inquiry on Monday. Cohen's answer yesterday afternoon and the Govern- or's additional query to Berger: "Honolulu, November 12. "Cohen, Hawaiian Band, Salt Lake City. "How much assistance do you need to rush band home by Sierra Thursday fifteenth? Answer paid. "CARTER." WHAT SHARES ARE WORTH. "Shares in the company are par $250 A NEW BOMB TRICK. ST. PETERSBURG, November 14. It is said that the alleged bomb-throwin- g at Major Rheinbot was part of a scheme to keep him from being retired from the army. DELIAS DEFENDS THAW. with a market price of a dollar," said Deacon Trent yesterday, "and voir may have as many as you wish. There has been nothing donfj though we would like to have a good Democratic sheet in the Territory. The Republican was started with no particular object in view, unless it was to close out the Advertiser, and in that it failed. There may be a field for a Democratic paper here but there has been nothing done toward organizing a company and I do not know that there will be one." WHAT IS LACKING. Considering the fact that it is quite improbable that the new paper could have the Associated Press franchise. "SALT LAKE, November 13. "Carter, Honolulu. "S3000 required for my departure di- rect Honolulu from here. "COHEN." attendant . The feature of the evening's business was the discussion of the estimates for the n:onth. The supervisors were one and all in favor of leaving no legacy of debt to the new board and cut their coat according to their cloth. As a result all road work has been temporarily stopped and action was taken to reduce the police department's appropriation two thousand dollars. Among those present were: Chairman Smith, Supervisors Lucas, Cox, Moore, Archer, Dwight; Clerks Kalauokalani, Hanale and Buffandeau, Capt. Sam Johnson, County Engineer Gere, Frank Harvey. Horace Crabbe, Stenog- rapher Aea, H. C. Mossman, Kahalepuna and representatives of the press. Clerk Kalauokalani said that on account of election work the minutes of the last meeting were ot in order. Chairman Smith directed the clerk to extend an invitation to the newly elected members of the board to attend the meetings and see how it is done. BILLS. ones to keep track of inherited busi- - "Captain Berger. Salt Lake. "Want my question answered. How much assistance does Cohen need to rush band home by Sierra? Reply paid. "CARTER." Up to last evening no reply had been NEW YORK, November 14. D. M. Delmas of San Francisco will defend Harry Thaw, for a reported fee of $100,000. CUBA WANTS FIELD HANDS. received from Captain Berger. The $3000 estimate given by Cohen is considered much too high, in view i of the fact that there are supposed to i be but forty-fou- r people with the band. 1 Counting $1100 for steamer passage and $800 for railroad fares to San Fran- - cisco and $250 for four or five days' j stay in San Francisco awaiting a ness. ROCK CRUSHER LOANED, j The following letter was read and its contents favored by the board: Honolulu, T. of H., November 9. 19C6. Mr. D. Kalauokalani, Jr., Clerk, Coun HAVANA, November 14. Cuban planters are urging labor immigration to handle the large sugar crop. .. NEGRO RUNS AMUCK. and the delay in getting a sufficient number of linotypes, it does seem pos- sible that the newspaper chrysalis will take on wings very soon. W. A. Kin- ney, the Democratic war horse, does not think much of the prospect for such a venture. "You may have all you want for nothing, take the whole thing." he said to a reporter for the Advertiser in an- swer to a query as to the selling price of the. shares." There is nothing In it, not enough to be worth even a mention ty of Oahu, Honolulu. Sir: The Territory is about to con- - j struct a masonry dam in Makiki val-- ! ley, and would like to obtain the use I of one of the crushers which were ; turned over to the County last year. ASHEVIL-LE- , November 14. A negro ran amuck here killing two policemen and a negro. steamer, the sum ot fZZW is uiougnt i" be sufficient at the outside. DELAYED BY WRECK. The misfortunes of the band appear to multiply according to letters re- ceived from that organization. One received yesterday was dated from Salt Lake, where the band had just ar- - Mr. Johnson states that the crusher at Pauoa valley is not at the present time in use and will not be required A GARTERED KING. in the paper. It is only talk and will probably not amount to anything more." Asked relative to the reported re- - by the County for at least two months. Will you kindly present this matter at the next meeting of the County Su- - not recount the count he said: 'Why j pervisors and advise me as to whether j they are willing to allow the Territory to take this crusher, with the under- standing that it will be returned in good condition? Yours respectfully. C. S. HOLLO WAY, The following appropriations were rmade: County office rent, $120. Koolauloa road district. No. 2, $299.25. Koolauloa road district. No. 2, $499.82. Fire department, 757.11. Kapiolani Park, $343.22. Election expenses. $410.85. County Clerk, $16.60. bounty Attorney. $29.40. County Treasurer, $3.15. County Auditor, $9-2- County Engineer, $67.10. Premium on bonds, $10. Ewa road district, $716.69. Waianae road district. $53.05. Com. collecting road tax, 9.70. Koolaupoko road district, $406.45. Garbage department, $438.54. Keepers oi parks, 4.95. Electric light department, $694.39. Police and fire alarm system. $143.39. Waialua road district. $921.49. YVaialua road district (special), $200. Waialua road district, $450.51. Police department, $1434.17. Road department, $4736.04. The Treasurer's report for the month of October was read and placed on file. CONTIN DOTJS GOVERNMENT. The following opinion was read and filed: Honolulu, Nov. 13, 1906. D. Kalauokalani, Jr., Esq.. County Clerk, County of Oahu. Ex Officio Clerk, Board of Supervisors. t ! Dear Sir: In response to the com-munic;U- of Supervisor H. T. Moore, dated the 12th tost., requesting my opinion on Section 64. Chapter 14, of xhe County Act. I beg to say as fol- - , LONDON, November 14. King Haakon of Norway has been invested with the order of the Garter. AN ADVERTISER REPORTER BREAKS UP GAMBLING GAME rived. The writer stated that the band whole thing as long as they are to count the vote for Sheriff? We shall was to have played at Provo, Utah, certainlv ask for a recount of the Sen-abo- ut miles south of Salt forty Ik.Jate RepresentHtlve ballots for the A matinee and an evening performance reason tnat if there can be a mistake had been arranged for and both houses in a count where fourteen is the ma-we- re sold out. The matinee receipts jority there might be a mistake in the count where eight and eleven is the totaled about (800. But when within a fail- - d,ffprence between SUCcess and Superintendent of Public Works. STREETS FOR COUNTY. The following letter was read and re few hours or' Provo en route Irom ure. ACTION REGRETTED. A busines man said he regretted the action of Sheriff Brown as it prove! conclusively that he cared really very little for the good of the community. The chance of losing a Representative Grand Junction, there was a wreck, whether of the train on which the band was traveling, or one in advance, the writer does not state. At any rate, the band did not reach Provo until night and the matinee receipts were ferred to the County Engineer for his opinion: I Honolulu. T. H., November 13, 1906 Mr. John Lucas, Chairman, Road Com- mittee. Honolulu. I Dear Sir: The owners of the land The biggest Chinese gambling game running in Honolulu was broken up last night at 10:50 by an Advertiser reporter. The game is. or was, conducted in the basement of the two.story-- f rame and a Senator to the Democrats seem J structure on the Ewa side of Achi lane running off mauka from Beretania lost. The writer stated that the band ed very certain and yet there is only j I street. A high board fence lines the Kwa side of the alleyway. Near the expected to leave for Los Angeles on one chance in a thousand or more that November 9. According to Cohen's ca- - Brown would get more votes than were end of the house the fence is entered by a swing gate. The lane is lighted; . . . . 1 . . '' f . 1 . . . r At the end of the house and reporieu oy me 7r the premise jnst within the fence are dark he said, "it looks to me as though ; Last Brown would be beaten worse than opening into the cellar is a door which forms part of the lattice-wor- k of Pilipili. in Manoa valley, Oahu, are about to subdivide the tract and offer it for sale in house lots. The tract contains 54 acres, and out of this, something like 7 or 8 acres will be given over in streets. The streets have been carefully located with a view of obtaining grades under 6 per cent, and to connect up the various resi-- 1 dence tracts in a manner that will per- fect an extended street system that might be said to be in line for desir- - a dim light burned in this room. A solid partition divided the room ever and I do not see how the Ke- - nijlt DUblican narty can take him up again from an inner one. Through the lattice-wor- k could be seen a crowd of Chi- - after the recount, even if he should win, which is quite improbable. To me ; nese in the inner room which extends out to the sidewalk, but is entirely below annoaro thru he has been the vie-- I lows: The section in question reads as fol lows: it ble received yesterday, the band is still in Salt Bake. TO SUE ON BOND. When the band left Honolulu a bond of S30u0 was furnished by the United States Fidelity and Surety Company, through the Henry Waterhouse Trust Company, to ensure the safe return of the instruments. The band instru- ments are the property of the United States War Department and were loan- ed through Col. Jones, commanding the First Regiment, N. G. H., to Cohen and his sureties for the tour. The agreement in the bond was that the The click-clic- k of dominoes, the chink-chin- k of coins .!. r .1. o,r, aril foil Mm l"C jevci ui ur uiiiii. lllll Ol poor iiuusna ..... in the end they thought it would come tou, easily be beard from the side and rear of the building. Bright lights burned in the den proper and made the place almost as light out the other way." SUPERVISOR RUMORS. The hoard shall not, for any pur- - aDe future permanent improvements, pose, contract debts or liabilities whlcU A biue print showing the street sys- - exceed in any fiscal year the income tem for pnipili was submitted to the and revenue provided for such year." Superintendent of Public "Works yes- - I understand the communication of terday and received his approval as to Supervisor Moore to mean that the location. SiviVH) in ouestion will be the balance it wm be seen on the duplicate print The supervisor talk continues on the as da-v-sa- lines as yesterday. Wilson Sitting on a bench at the rear of the building were two Chinese, one of seems to be growing a trifle stronger j fc js sai(J tQ n,,(.UJ)V a government position. The reporter stationed himself while Johnson is not a whit weaker, than he was on Saturday last. He has near the door. Now and then it opened and a Chinaman came out. The door the advantage of being in the office aiwavs fell too and snapped on a Yale loik. Waiting for a Cuinaman to come 30 due and payable to the County of Oahu furnished herewith that if Metcalf and i tour should terminate on September and the instruments be returned here. Attornev General Peters states tnat the bond matter has now been brought JUsi as iiens. iictu un " i out the reporter held the door open and went inside to the inner room, to his attention and demand has been Fred- - Waterhouse for the same reason before him were three tables at which crowds of Cbimwe were within the first fifteen days of Janu- - Maile street extensions and one of tne arv. 1907, as provided by Act 93 of the cross streets are acquired by the gov- - Sesfdon Laws of 1 ;"(.".. The amount in eminent, it will at once give the valley Question is. in my opinion, such an the much desired circuit connections, amount a;- - is ' provided for" the year and at the same time do much toward r-nr ,.,.tomr,i.1ri hi- - Section 64 of obtaining the connecting drive to the made on Joel C. Cohen and the Fidelity It is understood tnai a.u,,. r ,h ...-- ,. o, in.' kev to the situation, figuratively he has staking their money. Dominoes, little white buttons and the inevitable in- verted bowl and small ebony stick were in evidence to show the nature of the plav. Stacks of money were on the tables. Japanned tin boxes were f Honolulu by moments. In fact a demand letter the Republican party which is re- - 1 . rn. .w ; i ... v . . ,- - - . j - - 14 of the Conntv Act, but not Waikikl-Kaimu-ki section the neck and the plum will go to any- - Mulford Robin- - from CoL Jones to the Fidelitv Com- - .., itii i:nn;irv 1907. commended by Mr. J. Henrv Water- - one ne swecw. panv was sent to tne "The party treated Ar. ner oauiy oe- - The present Board of Supervisors son as desirable, These streets are now being sub- - will not go out of office until the day of January, 1907. at noon, graded, and if the County of Oahu will has the macadamize and agree to maintain and until that time the board will deed to the Ter- - them, the owners power of disbursing public moneys where the dealers sat. This inner room had ramifications. In the room proper were three tables. In an L adjoining were three more tables. As the reporter went ahead the gamesters drew away and the dealer elosed their hands upon the money in sight. The Ij kept on (laying until the gamesters saw ti;e straDger. Then began lively travel toward the floor until the reporter called to the doorkeeper ami told him to close it and another request was made that the gamesters house Trust Company on Monday even- ing. Mr. Farwell of the insurance de- partment of the trust company visited the Attorney General yesterday to get some information. It was given him. and if the cash is not put up, the At- torney General will bring suit. The bond is a surety in the penal sum of $3000. so the government feels that it fore the convention, said a rtepuoncan yesterday, "read him out of it and tried to mortify him in a number of ways. In this supervisor affair he has not promised anyone and he is favorable to Sam Johnson but he wi'.l do nothing until he confers with the Governor. He Viae tho nnrtv hv the neck and if he which have alr.adv been "proviaea ruorj ior me tvuu.v . Application has been made tor water f-- r" for the year IMS. I can see no main's, arm it is nopeu lw uar mroc pi Immediately after the grading pla Is completed. These general improvements will I has a cinch in the matter. reason why the present Board of Su- pervisors could not contract debts or ..migrations to b.- - paid out of this re- serve fund which it payable within the first fifteen days of January. 1907. Otherwise it would simply mean that ;i rrnnr5-T-:ihl- e amount Of necessary of the j will act on my suggestion he will hold ! his peace until the first of January and then show his preference. It is a sure thing that he worked with Moore in mean much to the development valley, and I trust that in view of in- creased tax returns and convenience to remain where they were. At one of the tables in the I the gamekeeper bad a tall stack of coids before him, much of it Mexican. Still fuither inside was a lone table at which a larger game was in evi- dence. From this table came a fat Chinaman with a ropy mustache, who gSS an order that immediately stopped all gambling and the tables were cleared in an instant. Gaming materials were hidden promptly. Then a rush was made for the door and the reporter barred the way. An i , i . i ii i.i i. r . ..-- . . modi, ff, hrimh Supervisors ,j i , the nnbtic that the County If the authorities wished, a cable- gram could be sent to the commanding officer at Fort Douglas, Utah, the mil- itary post just outside Salt Lake City, requesting him to take possession of the instruments. From the statements made as to the methods by "which the band has been traveling lately, the worn, wouiu ivr to ' j.uom- - ... . .ntino. this win reel junuwu some tnings ana agamsi uuu m vlhio and it is true, also, that Moore worked with Archer in the fight put up against i that gentleman by Jim Low. Wheth r Archer will rejiprocate now is another matter: nobody knows but Archer and j he won't tell." j Moore in the meantime is ly'ng low I and will tell no one his hopes and i nmsnPft?. The-- e is no suspicion that other rusii was maue t'Ui tne uoor uetu. huwuku cuui mi " - "'"' - The him aside. The reporter then opened it and went to the outer door. an mn.ip il.mr wnq slum med and a rush of feet coul I be heard from within the lack of funds, a condition which wm never contemplated by the Legis- lature when the Act in question was framed. Respectfully yours. E. A. DOUTHITT. County Attorney. County of Oahu. The chair remarked that the gov- ernment of the county was intended to bo a continuous one and that it was not intended tar everything should Come to a standstill and all bills be paid when a new bard come into of- fice. Moore said that the three old mem- bers of the Doard would help the new proposition. I might add that there is an abun- dance of stone over the premises that can be easily worked through a port- able crusher, thus making construction decidedly cheap. Aside from the foregoing reasons, it will be seen that the road system as laid out will srive the public land of Puahia extensive frontage. Very respectfully yours, WALTER E. WALL. CONVEYANCE OF TITLE. The following correspondence was (Continued on Page Seven.) local military authorities feel that the instruments may have been subjected to considerable battering. Col. Jones does not believe that the band boys would "hock" their instruments. They prise them too highly and. in addition, they know the penalty for loss of in- struments. COHEN'S BACKERS. When Cohen left Honolulu with the band he had a sum of S50C0 at his (Continued on Page Three.) effort being made to gain the upstairs through an inner staircase. In trying the re-ope- n the inner door the reporter found it fast. The lock was sprung from its fastenings and the Chinese within remained where they were. After the reporter left the place, a run was made through the store up stairs, the front, or street door, was opened, and a rush was made to the street. By this time quite a crowd had collected in the street to watch proesedsi and was amused to see the flight of the gamesters as they fled from every conceivable opening in the place. he will allow the grass to grow under his feet between now and the t me the job is handed out. He saya he is not given a chance to show what he can do in the matter of building ro'.d? and f he is awarded the pla e he will get busy all risht. (Continued on Page Three.)

Transcript of ROAD MONEY AM) ORGAN JAPANESE TEMPORARILY …

U. S WEATHER BUREAU, November 13. Lart 24 hours' rainfall, .00. SUGAR-- 96 Degree Test Centrifugals, 3.81625c.: Per Ten, $76,325.
Temperature, Max. 83; Min. 73. Weather, fair. 88 Analysis Beets, 8s. 10 Per Ton, 77.00.
ESTABUSMED JULY 2. 5
VOL, XLIV., NO. 7572. HONOLULU, HAWAII TERRITORY, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBR 14, 1906. PRICE FIVE CENTS
JAPANESE AREflfiROAD WORK IS
SECY. METCALFPUT A STOP TO Democratic Paper IsIsFidelity Company
Being Pressed for Funds. He Thinks the California Discrimination Law Is
Unconstitutional Cuban Planters Want Field Labor-Del- mas Defends lhaw.
Slim Finances Cause Supervisors to Call
Halt Proposition to Materially Cut Police Department's Monthly Expenses.
Not Yet in
Sight.
The germ of the Democratic news- paper does not seem to come out into the sunlight some. There is a hank- ering for the smell of the ink and for a bite of the roller composition on the part of the Democratic writers hut the angels fail to mateeialize so the change of getting a new sheet in Honolulu seems to be fading.
(Associated Press Cablegrams.)
SAN FRANCISCO, November 14. Secretary Metcalf favors the Japanese side of the school controversy here and believes the State law, under which the local Board of Education excluded Japanese pupils from one of the public schools, to be
The first meeting of the Board of 'Supervisors since the election, was held
last night. Usually the meetings of the board are but sparsely attended, but last
night native Democrats were much in evidence and filled all the spare chairs. They came to see the show, some with shoes on and others without. One
of the visitors seemed to be disappointed because a quintet club was not in
Cohen wants $3000 to bring the Ha-
waiian band back to Honolulu from Salt Lake City.
Governor Carter says '"No," and promptly wired Captain Berger to ca-
ble his estimate of the cost of the trip. Here is the cable correspondence,
commencing with Governor Carter's inquiry on Monday. Cohen's answer yesterday afternoon and the Govern-
or's additional query to Berger: "Honolulu, November 12.
"Cohen, Hawaiian Band, Salt Lake City.
"How much assistance do you need to rush band home by Sierra Thursday fifteenth? Answer paid.
"CARTER."
WHAT SHARES ARE WORTH. "Shares in the company are par $250
A NEW BOMB TRICK.
ST. PETERSBURG, November 14. It is said that the alleged bomb-throwin- g at Major Rheinbot was part of a scheme to keep him from being retired from the army.
DELIAS DEFENDS THAW.
with a market price of a dollar," said Deacon Trent yesterday, "and voir may have as many as you wish. There has been nothing donfj though we would like to have a good Democratic sheet in the Territory. The Republican was started with no particular object in view, unless it was to close out the Advertiser, and in that it failed. There may be a field for a Democratic paper here but there has been nothing done toward organizing a company and I do not know that there will be one."
WHAT IS LACKING. Considering the fact that it is quite
improbable that the new paper could have the Associated Press franchise.
"SALT LAKE, November 13.
rect Honolulu from here. "COHEN."
attendant .
The feature of the evening's business was the discussion of the estimates
for the n:onth.
The supervisors were one and all in favor of leaving no legacy of debt to
the new board and cut their coat according to their cloth.
As a result all road work has been temporarily stopped and action was
taken to reduce the police department's appropriation two thousand dollars.
Among those present were: Chairman Smith, Supervisors Lucas, Cox,
Moore, Archer, Dwight; Clerks Kalauokalani, Hanale and Buffandeau, Capt.
Sam Johnson, County Engineer Gere, Frank Harvey. Horace Crabbe, Stenog-
rapher Aea, H. C. Mossman, Kahalepuna and representatives of the press.
Clerk Kalauokalani said that on account of election work the minutes of
the last meeting were ot in order.
Chairman Smith directed the clerk to extend an invitation to the newly
elected members of the board to attend the meetings and see how it is done.
BILLS. ones to keep track of inherited busi- -
"Captain Berger. Salt Lake. "Want my question answered. How
much assistance does Cohen need to rush band home by Sierra? Reply paid. "CARTER."
Up to last evening no reply had been
NEW YORK, November 14. D. M. Delmas of San Francisco will defend Harry Thaw, for a reported fee of $100,000.
CUBA WANTS FIELD HANDS.received from Captain Berger. The $3000 estimate given by Cohen
is considered much too high, in view i
of the fact that there are supposed to i
be but forty-fou- r people with the band. 1
Counting $1100 for steamer passage and $800 for railroad fares to San Fran- -
cisco and $250 for four or five days' j
stay in San Francisco awaiting a
ness. ROCK CRUSHER LOANED,
j The following letter was read and its contents favored by the board:
Honolulu, T. of H., November 9. 19C6.
Mr. D. Kalauokalani, Jr., Clerk, Coun
..
NEGRO RUNS AMUCK.
and the delay in getting a sufficient number of linotypes, it does seem pos-
sible that the newspaper chrysalis will take on wings very soon. W. A. Kin- ney, the Democratic war horse, does not think much of the prospect for such a venture.
"You may have all you want for nothing, take the whole thing." he said to a reporter for the Advertiser in an-
swer to a query as to the selling price of the. shares." There is nothing In it, not enough to be worth even a mention
ty of Oahu, Honolulu. Sir: The Territory is about to con- -
j struct a masonry dam in Makiki val-- ! ley, and would like to obtain the use
I of one of the crushers which were ; turned over to the County last year.
ASHEVIL-LE- , November 14. A negro ran amuck here killing two policemen and a negro.
steamer, the sum ot fZZW is uiougnt i" be sufficient at the outside.
DELAYED BY WRECK.
The misfortunes of the band appear to multiply according to letters re-
ceived from that organization. One received yesterday was dated from Salt Lake, where the band had just ar- -
Mr. Johnson states that the crusher at Pauoa valley is not at the present time in use and will not be required A GARTERED KING.in the paper. It is only talk and will
probably not amount to anything more."
Asked relative to the reported re- - by the County for at least two months.
Will you kindly present this matter at the next meeting of the County Su-- not recount thecount he said: 'Why
j pervisors and advise me as to whether j they are willing to allow the Territory to take this crusher, with the under- standing that it will be returned in good condition?
Yours respectfully. C. S. HOLLO WAY,
The following appropriations were rmade:
County office rent, $120.
County Auditor, $9-2-
County Engineer, $67.10.
Garbage department, $438.54.
Waialua road district. $921.49.
Waialua road district, $450.51.
Police department, $1434.17.
Road department, $4736.04.
The Treasurer's report for the month of October was read and placed on file.
CONTIN DOTJS GOVERNMENT.
filed: Honolulu, Nov. 13, 1906.
D. Kalauokalani, Jr., Esq.. County Clerk, County of Oahu. Ex Officio Clerk, Board of Supervisors. t!
Dear Sir: In response to the com-munic;U-
of Supervisor H. T. Moore, dated the 12th tost., requesting my
,
LONDON, November 14. King Haakon of Norway has been invested with the order of the Garter.
AN ADVERTISER REPORTER BREAKS UP GAMBLING GAME
rived. The writer stated that the band whole thing as long as they are to count the vote for Sheriff? We shallwas to have played at Provo, Utah, certainlv ask for a recount of the Sen-abo- ut
miles south of Saltforty Ik.Jate RepresentHtlve ballots for the A matinee and an evening performance reason tnat if there can be a mistake had been arranged for and both houses in a count where fourteen is the ma-we- re
sold out. The matinee receipts jority there might be a mistake in the count where eight and eleven is the
totaled about (800. But when within a fail- -d,ffprence between SUCcess and Superintendent of Public Works.
STREETS FOR COUNTY. The following letter was read and re few hours or' Provo en route Irom ure.
ACTION REGRETTED. A busines man said he regretted the
action of Sheriff Brown as it prove! conclusively that he cared really very little for the good of the community. The chance of losing a Representative
Grand Junction, there was a wreck, whether of the train on which the band was traveling, or one in advance, the writer does not state. At any rate, the band did not reach Provo until night and the matinee receipts were
ferred to the County Engineer for his opinion:
I Honolulu. T. H., November 13, 1906 Mr. John Lucas, Chairman, Road Com-
mittee. Honolulu. I Dear Sir: The owners of the land
The biggest Chinese gambling game running in Honolulu was broken up
last night at 10:50 by an Advertiser reporter. The game is. or was, conducted in the basement of the two.story-- f rame
and a Senator to the Democrats seem J structure on the Ewa side of Achi lane running off mauka from Beretania lost. The writer stated that the band ed very certain and yet there is only j
I street. A high board fence lines the Kwa side of the alleyway. Near the expected to leave for Los Angeles on one chance in a thousand or more that November 9. According to Cohen's ca- - Brown would get more votes than were end of the house the fence is entered by a swing gate. The lane is lighted;
. . . . 1 . . ' ' f . 1 . . . r
At the end of the house andreporieu oy me 7r the premise jnst within the fence are dark he said, "it looks to me as though ;
LastBrown would be beaten worse than opening into the cellar is a door which forms part of the lattice-wor- k
of Pilipili. in Manoa valley, Oahu, are about to subdivide the tract and offer it for sale in house lots.
The tract contains 54 acres, and out of this, something like 7 or 8 acres will be given over in streets. The streets have been carefully located with a view of obtaining grades under 6 per cent, and to connect up the various resi-- 1
dence tracts in a manner that will per- fect an extended street system that might be said to be in line for desir- -
a dim light burned in this room. A solid partition divided the roomever and I do not see how the Ke- - nijlt DUblican narty can take him up again
from an inner one. Through the lattice-wor- k could be seen a crowd of Chi- - after the recount, even if he should win, which is quite improbable. To me ; nese in the inner room which extends out to the sidewalk, but is entirely below
annoaro thru he has been the vie-- I lows:
The section in question reads as fol
lows: it
ble received yesterday, the band is still in Salt Bake.
TO SUE ON BOND. When the band left Honolulu a bond
of S30u0 was furnished by the United States Fidelity and Surety Company, through the Henry Waterhouse Trust Company, to ensure the safe return of the instruments. The band instru- ments are the property of the United States War Department and were loan- ed through Col. Jones, commanding the First Regiment, N. G. H., to Cohen and his sureties for the tour. The agreement in the bond was that the
The click-clic- k of dominoes, the chink-chin- k of coins.!. r .1. o,r, aril foil Mm l"C jevci ui ur uiiiii.lllll Ol poor iiuusna ..... in the end they thought it would come tou, easily be beard from the side and rear of the building.
Bright lights burned in the den proper and made the place almost as lightout the other way." SUPERVISOR RUMORS.
The hoard shall not, for any pur- - aDe future permanent improvements, pose, contract debts or liabilities whlcU A biue print showing the street sys- -
exceed in any fiscal year the income tem for pnipili was submitted to the and revenue provided for such year." Superintendent of Public "Works yes- -
I understand the communication of terday and received his approval as to Supervisor Moore to mean that the location. SiviVH) in ouestion will be the balance it wm be seen on the duplicate print
The supervisor talk continues on the as da-v-sa-
lines as yesterday. Wilson Sitting on a bench at the rear of the building were two Chinese, one of seems to be growing a trifle stronger j fc js sai(J tQ n,,(.UJ)V a government position. The reporter stationed himself while Johnson is not a whit weaker, than he was on Saturday last. He has near the door. Now and then it opened and a Chinaman came out. The door
the advantage of being in the office aiwavs fell too and snapped on a Yale loik. Waiting for a Cuinaman to come
30due and payable to the County of Oahu furnished herewith that if Metcalf and i tour should terminate on September and the instruments be returned here.
Attornev General Peters states tnat the bond matter has now been brought JUsi as iiens. iictu un " i out the reporter held the door open and went inside to the inner room, to his attention and demand has been Fred- - Waterhouse for the same reason
before him were three tables at which crowds of Cbimwe were
within the first fifteen days of Janu- - Maile street extensions and one of tne arv. 1907, as provided by Act 93 of the cross streets are acquired by the gov- -
Sesfdon Laws of 1 ;"(.".. The amount in eminent, it will at once give the valley Question is. in my opinion, such an the much desired circuit connections,
amount a;- - is ' provided for" the year and at the same time do much toward r-nr ,.,.tomr,i.1ri hi-- Section 64 of obtaining the connecting drive to the
made on Joel C. Cohen and the Fidelity It is understood tnai a.u,,. r ,h ...--,. o, in.' kev to the situation, figuratively he has staking their money. Dominoes, little white buttons and the inevitable in-
verted bowl and small ebony stick were in evidence to show the nature of
the plav. Stacks of money were on the tables. Japanned tin boxes were f Honolulu bymoments. In fact a demand letter the Republican partywhich is re- -1 . rn. .w ; i ... v . . ,- - - . j - -
14 of the Conntv Act, but not Waikikl-Kaimu-ki section the neck and the plum will go to any- -
Mulford Robin- - from CoL Jones to the Fidelitv Com- -.., itii i:nn;irv 1907. commended by Mr. J. Henrv Water- - one ne swecw.panv was sent to tne
"The party treated Ar. ner oauiy oe- -The present Board of Supervisors son as desirable, These streets are now being sub--will not go out of office until the
day of January, 1907. at noon, graded, and if the County of Oahu will
has the macadamize and agree to maintainand until that time the board will deed to the Ter- -them, the ownerspower of disbursing public moneys
where the dealers sat. This inner room had ramifications. In the room proper were three tables.
In an L adjoining were three more tables. As the reporter went ahead the gamesters drew away and the dealer elosed their hands upon the money in
sight. The Ij kept on (laying until the gamesters saw ti;e straDger. Then
began lively travel toward the floor until the reporter called to the doorkeeper ami told him to close it and another request was made that the gamesters
house Trust Company on Monday even- ing. Mr. Farwell of the insurance de-
partment of the trust company visited the Attorney General yesterday to get some information. It was given him. and if the cash is not put up, the At-
torney General will bring suit. The bond is a surety in the penal sum of $3000. so the government feels that it
fore the convention, said a rtepuoncan yesterday, "read him out of it and tried to mortify him in a number of ways. In this supervisor affair he has not promised anyone and he is favorable to Sam Johnson but he wi'.l do nothing until he confers with the Governor. He Viae tho nnrtv hv the neck and if he
which have alr.adv been "proviaea ruorj ior me tvuu.v .
Application has been made tor water f-- r" for the year IMS. I can see no
main's, arm it is nopeu lw uar mroc pi Immediately after the gradingpla
Is completed. These general improvements will I has a cinch in the matter.
reason why the present Board of Su-
pervisors could not contract debts or ..migrations to b.- - paid out of this re-
serve fund which it payable within the first fifteen days of January. 1907.
Otherwise it would simply mean that ;i rrnnr5-T-:ihl- e amount Of necessary
of the j will act on my suggestion he will hold ! his peace until the first of January and then show his preference. It is a sure thing that he worked with Moore in
mean much to the development valley, and I trust that in view of in-
creased tax returns and convenience to
remain where they were. At one of the tables in the I the gamekeeper bad a tall stack of coids
before him, much of it Mexican. Still fuither inside was a lone table at which a larger game was in evi-
dence. From this table came a fat Chinaman with a ropy mustache, who gSS an order that immediately stopped all gambling and the tables were cleared in
an instant. Gaming materials were hidden promptly. Then a rush was made for the door and the reporter barred the way. An
i , i . i ii i.i i. r . ..-- . . modi, ff, hrimh
Supervisors,j i , the nnbtic that the County
If the authorities wished, a cable- gram could be sent to the commanding officer at Fort Douglas, Utah, the mil-
itary post just outside Salt Lake City, requesting him to take possession of the instruments. From the statements made as to the methods by "which the band has been traveling lately, the
worn, wouiu ivr to 'j.uom-- ... . .ntino. thiswin reel junuwu some tnings ana agamsi uuu m vlhio and it is true, also, that Moore worked with Archer in the fight put up against
i that gentleman by Jim Low. Wheth r Archer will rejiprocate now is another matter: nobody knows but Archer and
j he won't tell." j Moore in the meantime is ly'ng low I and will tell no one his hopes and i nmsnPft?. The-- e is no suspicion that
other rusii was maue t'Ui tne uoor uetu. huwuku cuui mi " - "'"' - Thehim aside. The reporter then opened it and went to the outer door.
anmn.ip il.mr wnq slum med and a rush of feet coul I be heard from within
the lack of funds, a condition which wm never contemplated by the Legis- lature when the Act in question was framed. Respectfully yours.
E. A. DOUTHITT. County Attorney. County of Oahu.
The chair remarked that the gov-
ernment of the county was intended to bo a continuous one and that it was not intended tar everything should Come to a standstill and all bills be paid when a new bard come into of-
fice. Moore said that the three old mem-
bers of the Doard would help the new
proposition. I might add that there is an abun-
dance of stone over the premises that can be easily worked through a port-
able crusher, thus making construction decidedly cheap.
Aside from the foregoing reasons, it will be seen that the road system as laid out will srive the public land of Puahia extensive frontage.
Very respectfully yours, WALTER E. WALL.
CONVEYANCE OF TITLE.
The following correspondence was (Continued on Page Seven.)
local military authorities feel that the instruments may have been subjected to considerable battering. Col. Jones does not believe that the band boys would "hock" their instruments. They prise them too highly and. in addition, they know the penalty for loss of in-
struments. COHEN'S BACKERS.
When Cohen left Honolulu with the band he had a sum of S50C0 at his
(Continued on Page Three.)
effort being made to gain the upstairs through an inner staircase. In trying
the re-ope- n the inner door the reporter found it fast. The lock was sprung
from its fastenings and the Chinese within remained where they were.
After the reporter left the place, a run was made through the store up
stairs, the front, or street door, was opened, and a rush was made to the street.
By this time quite a crowd had collected in the street to watch proesedsi and was amused to see the flight of the gamesters as they fled from every
conceivable opening in the place.
he will allow the grass to grow under his feet between now and the t me the job is handed out. He saya he is not given a chance to show what he can do in the matter of building ro'.d? and f he is awarded the pla e he will get
busy all risht. (Continued on Page Three.)
THE PACIFIC COMMERCIAL ADVERTISER, HONOLULU, NOVEMBER 14, 1906.
because rum don't have no 'feeted.
TG DRINK
Hats Are Here OF
on me at all no more. I hain't oeen able f git pickled right f'r more'n two year, an' you don't know how hard I've tried, neither. I can git kind o' a edge on. but as f'r goin' down an out, nix, it hain't in th' kag f'r me no more. Tou try me an' see. You may have a lot o' booze aroun' here, but you can't git me soused. Betcha anythin' you can't. Dare you t' git me soused!''
Dr. Wiley didn't take the dare. I am very busy," he said, crackling
some papers that lay on his desk, "and if you'll be good enough tc. excuse
"me "Well, say, Doc." wheedlingly sug-
gested the man with the glass lining, leaning over the desk, "if y' hain't
t' take me on, can't y' stake me t' two bits or somethin' fr me trouble in comin' all th' way up here?"
Dr. Wiley couldn't see any other way
Thirsty Men for Service SALEon Wiley's Alcohol
Squad.at Last When our doors close tonight it means the last of our three days of special bargains.
WASHINGTON, Oct. 27. Probably vouDr. Harvey W. Wiley, chief chemist of Come today, if you wish to. save money on goods,
must use every day.the Department of Agriculture, did not know that hoboes, stationary and peri patetie, read the newspapers. He knows it now.
Dr. Wiley, an urbane though not MODEL BLOCK, Fort Street.A. 8LOM,
of getting rid of that one except by giving up the two bits.
A 300 pound brewery wagon driver out of a job wanted to have the quan- tity thing all straightened out and put on record before he'd commit himself as on out and out applicant for mem- bership in the booze squad.
"I hear y"r goin' t' serve out beer t y'r bunch." he said to the chemist as he leaned buigingly over the latter's desk. "How much beer do they git apiece a day?"
"Well, I should suppose that seven
cautious man. announced about ten davs that he was about to enter upon
a series or experiments to ascertain the exact effects of alcohol upon the human stomach. Last vear lie tried boracic acid and other food preserva
They were a long time coming, but the splendid assort-
ment makes up for any delays.
Our NEW STRAW HAT STOCK is complete and excels
any we have before carried.
Two stylish new shapes in PANAMAS. All the standard
shapes too. COME AND SEE.
When you buy a new straw why not leave the old one here to be cleaned? We can put it in shape to give you much longer service.
or eight bottles apiece a day would beI tive upon a husky bunch of young fel
GARLAND STOVESlows, who came to be known as the poison squad, and who wore willing- to
sufficient to enable me to carry on the investigation," replied the chemist.
"Seven or eight scuttles!" exclaimedtake a chance on any old kind of acid the candidate, his face the picture of j
properly mingled up with food that nsfonishment and chagrin. "Well. I'm j
they weren't required to pay for or. me way, and he started oft. y, i
that wouldn't be enough for me tDr. Wiley had tc do a bit of hunting brush me teef wit! W'en I hnd me;around last year to organize his poison
squad, but he isn't going to have any bother in assembling his poison squad
job at th' malt works I never covered up less'n a hunnered shells a day an' on hot days it 'd take two hunnered high hats t' keep me tonsils from dry-i- n'
up an' blowin' away. Six or teeven this year, with alcohol as the bait.
In announcing; his contemplated ex periments he allowed it to be under. or eight bottles a day, hey. says you? 4stood that he would trv on his victims W'y, say, I could lick up that much all of the standard brands of whiskies, paregoric without feelin' it an' eat .otM. Mclnerny, Ltd
MERCHANT AND FORT STREETS.
Dranaies, gins, rums, cordials, wines gingerbread Htop of it." and that ona I beers and ales. In less than two days lumbered out of the chemist's office after this announcement was printed in with disappointment placarded all overthe newspapers, the t got out all over him.hoboland that Washington was going One of the applicants was a nervous j
to be a pretty sott place in which to little man who appeared to be flickerput in the approaching winter ing close o the invisible line of deHoboes at once began to drop in on Dr. Wilev at his office. Dr. Wiley is marcation between hallucinations and
the out and out jimjams.
Compare any Garland in use with any other stove in use. !ote how less likely the Garland is to rust. That's because aluminum is mixt with the iron from which these stoves and ranges are made, giving superior fineness, strength and toughness.
We carry 25 different styles; some with reservoirs; some without. For wood or coal.
E. O. Hall & Son, Ltd. FORT and KING STS.
polite almost to the point of oleaginous-ness- .
For two days running Le received X I 1 ' 1 i iV t 1 - . T
"Of course I'll serve on your com-- j1 mittee. sir," he said generously to Dri lie caiuuuaies ior ine aiconoi test, lie s Wiley before the chemist had a chance! quit it now, though. to state that he wasn't organizing his corps just yet. "but I'd like to have your promise as to one thing."
I m m
I 1
"What's that?" asked the chemist. "This isn't any cure thing, is it?" in
quired the nervous little man, looking furtively around the office. "It's not 6. R. eOLLINSSjust a put up job to cure people of the liquor habit, I hope? After reading about this thing last evening I dream ed last night that the whole business
STABLE SUPPLIES Whips, Tie-rope- s, Harness Oil, Dressing, Soap,. Sponges, Washers, Chamois Skins, Hoof Oil, Gall Cure, Etc., Etc.
LOW PRICE REPAIRS to Harness, Saddles, Trunks, Suit Cases and Bags. 82-8- 4 KING ST. NEAR FORT. P. O. Box 507 Tel. Main 427.
was just a scheme of the Government's
1 m m B is
B
1
Blended Whiskeys are considered by connoisseurs to be superior to what is known to the trade as two stamp goods. The I. W. Harper whiskey stands at the head of this class of liquor and it is becoming the favor- ite of the men who know the best points in whiskey.
; . WE HAVE the celebrated Harper Premium AAA put up in imported amber bottles five to a gallon. And the equally famous Old Continental, hand-mad- e sour mash, in full quart flint glass con-
tainers. Each bottle is covered with wire mesh.
We feel that we can recommend these goods as superior products, something you may offer to your friends. For bar trade it is the best whiskey and a trade bringer.
W. C. Peacock & Co., Ltd.
to stop folka from drinking liquor, and dreamed that the liquor you intended
to serve out would be doped with some
There's a messenger armed with a heavy curtain roller stationed outside of Dr. Wiley 's door now, and the only way anybody can get to see the chief government chemist is first to send the doctor a photograph by mail. The photograph is turned over to the mes- senger on guard, and if the messenger recognizes yon as the original of the photograph he'll let you in. Otherwise he'll wave the heavy curtain roller at you, and then you'll go away from there.
When Dr. Wiley reached his office in the Department of Agriculture on the morning following the announcement of the investigation he found one of the candidates for a martyr's tomb wait- ing for him if the hall. This one had the general exterior of Roaming Riley, the Traveling Thirst, ami he shuffled right into tr office in the chemist's footsteps.
"Hey, Doc," he inquired, hoarsely, "is dis boose gag o' your'n on de level?"
"Please make your question a little clearer," suggested the chemist, who is something of a precisian and shy on colloquialisms. "What do you wisli to know?"
Of the cure stuff, and " Don't worry it will all be doped
38 iwith the k'll stuff, certain enough," put in the chemist reassuringly, and then
S the nervous little man insisted that X his name and address be taken down so that he could be sent for just as
K. ISOSHIMA TWO BIG STORES
soon as the rum squad was in process s of organization.
1 I"You wouldn't care to be cured of
the drinking habit, then?" suggested Lr. Wiley as the nervous little man was about to pass out. s
Well, you see," replied the eandi-lsi- p
late with all the solemnity in the world ft and without even the symptom of a ' f smile, "I've alreadv been cured four-- ! sa
teen times in the last nine vears. and 39 ' 4 Dis suds t 'ing, ' '
chemist 's red nosed frame up I'm after where you're goin' t bunch o' rum eaters.
t I ff ft
elaborated the visitor. "Dis readin' about try t' pickle a How 'bout it?
is between the cures and the booze I '11 take the booze. Anyhow, J haven't 5
got much left now except my thirst and $ it 1 were to lose that where M be the SR
FORT and BERETANIA and KING and BETHEL STS.
Will open in the former November 10 with the largest stock of handsome Japanese ware every put on sale here. Odd Cups and Saucers as well as small sets. Odd Lanterns, Bronze Candle Sticks.
Some pretty and inexpensive Christmas gifts, both useful and ornamental. Your choice now.
fun and what 'd be the use?" Decorative Art In ,
Sectional Bookcases Dr. Wiley ' was compelled to stand W.
mute under such nrofound philosophy.
Does it go?" Dr. Wiley started some evasive reply,
to the effect that he had considered something of that sort, but that he hadn't entirely arranged the details, and that
"Oh, Doc, let's begin now." put in the visitor, with an ingratiating grin on his face, and the chemist had to
nd the nervous thirst cherisher went his way. S
It was toward the finish of the sec- -
ond day that Dr. Wiley concluded to IK
? ft ft ft ft
station the messenger outside of hisback into his private office and close loor. A man whose face was the color
5of a Paraguayan flamingo shambled in
Quality in the Food- -
Macey Sectional Bookcases for home libraries are made in grades suited for every place and purse from the richly finished and elegantly made Golden or Weath- ered Oak with Bird's-ey- e Maple interiors, and the All Mahogany grade, which harmonize with the furnishings of the most elaborate library, to the inexpensive Plain Oak for more modest surroundings. All grades are made in sections, half sections, inside and outside cor- ner brackets, so that absolute harmony with any interior is assured, whether the treatment be elaborate or plain.
H. Hackfeld & Company, Ltd. AGENTS
to the chemist s office late in the after, noon, and this is the way he addressed Dr. Wiley, starting off andante and
and win. ling up allegro and crescendo:
"I am a fish. I was a little bit of a shrimp swimming in a brackish creek, but now I am a fish. A great fish. I am the biggest fish in the seas, the seven seas. But all the seas, the seven seas, have now dried up, and I am stranded on the miry ocean bed. I am a fish raying with thirst. 1 am the ragingest and thirstiest mighty fish ever stranded on the ocean's miry bed. I
the door before that candidate would take the hint ami his departure.
An hour or so later another applicant for enlistment in the new poison squad shambled into the chemist 's office. He was a thin, peaked one of the shabby genteel variety, albeit the sawdust of the last barrel house in which he had reclined still clung to parts of his raiment.
" Kr have I the distinction of ad- dressing the famous Dr. Wiley?" he inquired as he shuffled up to the chem- ist s desk and rested his hands on the edge of it.
Dr. vv'iley blushed and confessed to his name.
" Kr ah hum am I to suppose," grandiloquently went on the peaked one.
Exeellence In the service. The highest standard in everything at the
PALM RESTAURANT The business man, with particular ideas regarding cooking, and fastidi-
ous people, who make the table service of first importance, find no fault with any of our features; we cater to their needs and supply them satisfac- torily. The same people lunch or dine here day after day, and they do so regardless of the fact that our meals are inexpensive: it is because we meet their ideas of cooking and service.
LUDWIGSON & JUNGCLAUS, PROPRIETORS.
116 Hotel Street, around the corner fr om Fort Street.
could drink up eight octillion Bays of Hoinbav anil still be athirst. 1 am a
impaling the wriggling chemist with iish fish fish! A fish that needs drink, his fishy ye that the reports which Wheel Wow! Now I'm becoming a have reached me with reference to shark. A tiger shark! Don 't wave that, your projected experimentation with al- - blade at me, you swordfish! Don't ink
in its application to the human up my ocean for me, you devil fish! system er ah hum am 1 to Buppose Don 't spout at me, whale! Fishy-fish-th- at
these reports are accurate, or mere-- fish fishy-fish-fi- sh that's me? Whee-l-y
another specimen of the meretricious owl 1 am a " vaporings of a lying press?" i The man had 'em. The chemist saw
Dr. Wiley stated that he himself had ' that (dearly, or thought he saw it. Be given out the printed statement, and ' rushed to his cabinet, pulled out a bot- -
BOSS OF THE ROAD OVERALLS PORUSKNIT UNDERSHIRTS DRESS SUIT CASESDepot for
him cor-.ti- e and staked his visitor to a long.the newspapers had quoted I on 2 drink.rectly.
4 . 'e 1. , ' i : 1 t 3WXW JuINE OF SHIRTS, TIES. HATS AND CAPS. SEE The mightiest fish of the seven seasi neii. euj , iini lie iriiM'ii nut; t
DISPLAY IN OUR WINDOW. Btreet Odd Fellows Building.
The Hawaiian
Forester and Agriculturist is a monthly magazine devoted to the interests of AGRICLTL-TUR- E,
FORESTRY, ENTOMOLOGY and ANIMAL IN- DUSTRY in Hawaii.
ONLY $1 A YEAR.
It contains accounts of the current work, rules and reports of the different departments of the Hawaiian Board of Agri- culture and Forestry, which includes AGRICULTURE, FORESTRY, ENTOMOLOGY and ANIMAL INDUS- TRY; and also special articles by experts on these several subjects. No one can keep posted on the progress of Hawaii in those connections, without reading the FORESTER AND AGRICULTURIST.
with a flourish and a toss of his mane, came to suddenly after gulping the "I am with you heart and soul in your drink, wiped off his mouth with his generous and praiseworthy effort to- - coat sleeve, grinned affably, and start-war- d
the advancement of the cause of ed out. At the door he halted and turn-humanit-
Heedless of the advice, nay, ed to the chemist, still grinning ami-th- e
tears of my relatives and friends, ably. I resign my self into your hamls, well j "Pretty soft for me. Doc. I call it assured, as 1 am. that " ! pretty demmed soft,'' and then he went
"What part do you propose taking away, in the experiment I have in mind?'') Dr. Wiley thought it over for a long somewhat dryly inquired the ehemist. I while, and then he concluded that he
"The most difficult part of all, sir," had been worked. It was when he was promptly replied the peaked one. forced to this conclusion that he put part of one .if the voluntary absorbers the messenger outside of his office door. if the noxious and deadly drugs which -
Noiseless - Easily Repaired
"NEW DOriE" Siphon jet low down closet, embossed bowl, bent oai,
piano finish and paper lined tank. Natural oak, never splits eat, and Douglas siphon valve.
Sample in our show window. men take into their systems, and- - LAME BACK.
"Well, I shouldn't think you'd find that very hard work." put in the chem- - I
ist. but his visitor took the observa- - ' This ailment is usually caused byTOH1T The Plumber.
UOTT 85 King Street. Leopold G. Blackman,Rates $1 per year. Foreign $1.25.
Editor. P. O. Box 59.
tion so keenly to heart and threatened rheumatism of the muscles and may be to become so resentful over it that Dr. cured by applying Chamberlain's Pain Wiley had to duck back into his pri- - Balm two or three times a day and vat- - office to tret rid of that one. too. ! rubbing the parts vigorously at eachAfter that the candidates slid along every half hour or so. One of them application. If this does not afford re-w- as
a cheerful and chipper drunk Who Iif-f-. bind on a piece of flannel sligtly announced that bis entire internal dampened with Pain Balm, and quick economy was composed of malleable relief is almost sure to follow. For and indestructible glass. Sale by Benson, Smith & Co., Ltd..
It must be that. Doc," h xplain- - agents for Hawaii.
Co--Advertising and Subscriptions, Hawaiian Gazette Ltd., Publishers, P. O. Box 208, Honolulu, T. H.READ THE ADVERTISER
ooooa 3h1..
THE PACIFIC COMMERCIAL ADVERTISER, HONOLULU, NOVEMBER 14, 1906. Tm 1m
THE NOONDAY MONEY AND THE BANDHit IlllLl Tri
was such a tremendous success that there were nearly twice as many seats sold as there wen chairs in th house. Those who bought tickets before and who were unable to ge: acconunoda-tloo- s
will present them to Mrs. Charles H. Clarke to bo exchanged.
WHY NOTI9 HI fl ' Iri MEETING buy the best ?
Telephone' Main 424 SHERIFF-ELF.C- T TO
STUDY UP ON LAW 4
Treasurer Trent on
the Subject of Dividends. PRIMO BEER
(Continued from Page One.) command furnished by a hui of ten Honolulans who wished to share in the big profits which Cohen promised. Each one has probably lost forever the $500 put up toward the fund. Those who are said to have been in th- - hui are F. H. Lewis, Cushman Carter. C. J. Hvtchins, J. f. Morgan. Harry Armitage. Henry Roth, M. Brasch. William Love. A. N. Campbell and G. L. Bigelow.
The money was placed in the hands of Mr. Shingle as trustee and a portion was given to Mr. Cohen on his depar- ture and the remainder when he left Berkeley. The agreement that Cohen
THIS DAY! 1 will remain on Hawaii for at least three weeks unless called back to Ho-
nolulu sooner in case there should be a recount of the votes for Sheriff," said Sheriff-elec- t Iaukea yesterdayThe Sheriff-elec- t and Mrs. Iaukea departed on the Kinau for Hawaii and will be guests at the Maguire ranch. Col. Iau
At the noonday Y. M. C. A. men's is the best beer.meeting held in the vac-an- t store in the
Mrluc rny block, on r ort street, yes IAt Auction terday, Mr. T. dive Davies presided kea feels the need of a rest and the should report regularly to Mr. Shingleat the piano, prayer was offered bv
has never been carried out.opportunity to recuperate, as he enKev. Mr. turner, and a goodly com pany of men listened to a short talk by County Treasurer Trent on the sub- ject of "Dividends." Mr. Trent said in part:WEDNESDAY, NOV. 14. 1006
tcred the late campaign a very sick man. Incidentally he will study up the laws while away and acquaint him-
self with those with which a sheriff comes in contact most frequently in the discharge of his official duties.
The laukcas were decorated with leis and were given a cordial send-of- f by numerous friends.
'Perhaps a number of my auditors 1
enjoy the experience every month of
STRONG
MULESI will sell at my salesroom, corner drawing fat dividends from fortunate investments in sugar stocks, and yet others are busied semi-annuall- y in clip
Fort and Queen streets
ALSO
PHELAN WANTS THE FUND. After all that has been said about
the San Francisco relief fund, or the balance of $9000. being used toward getting the band back here, all argu- ments have come to a dead stop by a cablegram received from James D. Phelan in response to the cable in- quiry of the Chamber of Commerce as follows:
San Francisco, November 12. Chamber of Commerce, Honolulu, T.H.
Have written to Morgan, Honolulu. Committee has planned use of all out- standing funds for benefit of sufferers of disaster. Will gratefully receive your balance. If you desire specific use of part, advise us.
(Signed) JAMES D. PHELAN. Another cablegram relative to the
band was also received from J. F. Mor- gan as follows:
San Francisco. 6:30 p. rn. L. Tenney Peck, Honolulu.
ping coupons from sugar bonds. This happy privilege of drawing money- - I forSUNDAY SCHOOL
SPECIALIST COMING
dividends may come to us in two ways viz., by inheritance from our fathersL A Dfl E S SHIRTWAIST PAT Plantation Workor as the result of our own industry and economy, followed by sound judg ment in making investments. But don '
let us get the idea that money dividends are the only kind of dividends worth
We are receiving a large number of fine, strong mules in the Nevadan.
Schuman Carriage Co,, Ltd. Alexander Young Building.
seeking after. Only one little letter
TERNS, CROCKERY, BOOKS, DOORS, SASHES, SHINGLE STAIN, Etc., etc.
WILL E. FISHER, AGENT.
appears in both the words ' ' Money- -
The Relief Committee has cabled toana tue c ess, and money is a very small part of the best success in fact
On the next Korea, due in Hono-
lulu from the Coast, Monday morning, November 26, there will be one of the greatest Sunday school experts in the United States.
Mr. Frank L. Brown is the super- intendent of the Bushwick Ave. M. E. Sunday school in Brooklyn. This Sun-
day school has 3800 members and is the largest in America. Mr. Brown has
it is no necessary part of the most the Chamber of Commerce. I am get- ting particulars of band situation.
(Signed) JAMES F. MORGAN. Mr. Peck wrote Mr. Morgan by the
America Maru as follows:
lasting and commendable success. "The greatest dividends come from
correct character building. What we New GoodsHonolulu, November 12. 1906 sow, we reatj, is a literal truth. If you been commissioned by the executive James F. Morgan, san Francisco, Cal.l, I sell a
CANVAS
At 10 a. r
EUREKA see man coming down the street with a long face and a frowning brow, and you watch closely, you'll fine! that he meets with long faces and frowning brows every where he goes. On the other hand, watch a cheerful, smiling
Dear Sir: I wired you today as fol- lows: "Ascertain band situation. Do committees favor our using relief money to return band."
I also sent the following dispatch to James D. Phelan on Saturday last:
"Does committee require further out- -
committee of the International Sunday School Association to go to Japan and to bring all of the Sunday schools of tiie sunrise kingdom Into line with the world 's organization. In this organiza. tion there are more than twenty mil- lion of scholars studvinor the Bible.
Folding Boat with oars, paddles, etc.
Al condition.
jt j s FINE EMBROIDERED GRASS LINEN. CREPE AND SILK
SHIRT WAIST PATTERNS.
New designs in Cotton Crepe Kimonos from $1.50 and up at
in fellow as he passes along, and you 11
find happy smiles and cheerful words in relieving distress?At the convention held in Kawaiahao side assistance
Answer fully.coming to him from all directions. Like surely begets likes.
"Let us remember yesterday's mis church last May, the Sunday School As- sociation of Hawaii was organized and brought into touch with the world move- ment.
An hour and a half before the Korea
WILL E. FISHER. AUCTIONEER.
The public feeling is strong for hav- ing the Relief Committee divert a por- tion of the money for the purpose of bringing back the stranded Hawaiian
takes only to avoid them today. In bathing our faces in the morning, let us wash away the doubts and misgiv- ings and hurts of the day before, and S yegusaface the new day with courage and good cheer. Speak a little more kindly to mother and father, or to wife and H20 Nuuanu street near Hotel. children; as you go out, pat the dog
sails for the Orient on Monday the Band. 1 he Chamber of Commerce and 20th, presumably at 3:30 p. m., a meet- - the Merchants' Association seem to en- - ing will be held "in Central Union church dorse that position. in the interests of Sunday school work. The Relief Committee, however, re--It
is hoped that each Sunday school of gards itself strictly as a trustee for the the different nationalities will attend sufferers by fire and earthquake in San in a body, as well as all of the teachers Francisco. Every subsc ription paper of t he city. bore a caption to that effect. However,
Mr. Brown will make the address of it is very important that the financial the afternoon. He will tell how he con- - and physical situation of the band be
That Thirst
on the head and see how happy he will be, and cheer the cat with a kindly stroke instead of a kick; have a smile and a good word for the first fellow you meet, and for the next, and the next and soon the dividends will begin to pour in. The dog will wag his tail more happily as vou pass, the
New goods by every steamer from the Orient.
FRENCH LAUNDRY TOURISTS' WORK PROMPTLY ATTENDED TO.
Gentlemen's Clothes Cleaned, preesed and Repaired.
J. ABADIE, PROP. Goods Called for and Delivered
158 Beretania Street. Phone Blue 3552 Opposite Hawaiian Hotel.
ducts a Sunday school of 3S00 members; what the International Sunday School Association is doinir, and what it prowith the warmthat comes poses to do for the Sunday school of Japan.
Let every one remember the date ft
be
soda
weather can best
onenched with the and turn out to hear one of the fore- most Sunday school experts in the Unit ed States.
cat will purr more joyfully, and smiles and good words will meet you on every hand. Try it once, just for a day, and you'll find that it pays.
"The meanest miser is the man who i tries to get everything he can out of the world without giving anything
, to the world. We've all seen the fellow who joined the lodge for what he could get out of it, with no thought of what he could contribute to it; and the fel- low who joined the church in order to benefit his position socially, or be thrown in contact with business men
BAINIEB WORKS OAS
fountain. 'We have the
only genuine Hobron brew;
nothing- - more sparkling was
ever made. Seventy flavors.
ascertained and the Relief Committee of San Francisco should signify at least what their attitude would be should any of this relief money be diverted.
Personally I am in favor of a new subscription and an immediate one to bring back the band if it is found necessary. I am also in favor of hav- ing the War Department furnish trans- portation to the band on one of Its transports. The band is an integral part of the First Regiment of the Na- tional Guard which is subject to call to the national defence.
" have not been able to see Cap-
tain Heidt. the local quartermaster, but will take the matter up with him immediately. It may be found that the band is not in extreme "pilikia:" It may be that it will earn good money when it returns to San Francisco but I trust that you will have fully posted me on these matters before this letter reaches you. Yours very truly,
(Signed) L. T. PECK, Of Committee Chamber of Commerce.
DOCK MEN TO HELP.
in th
HawaiiTe Hawaiian' who might be of benefit to him, with no thought of ever being of any benelit
I to anything or anybody himself. And
Benson. Smith S Go. Ltd.
Gazette Cof Ltd. Chas. A. Nelson of Seattle, Wash.,
recently arrived in Honolulu to take the management of the Seattle Brew- ing & Malting Co.'s interests here, re-
lieving E. T. Herrick, who has been promoted to a larger field with head- quarters in Reno, Nev.
The Rainier Bottling Works here, which is a branch of the Seattle con
The receipt of yesterday's cablegrams indicates that a separate fund must be ;
raised to meet the expenses of the cern, has been growing steadily more band's trip home. Already there is j
'PRINTERS, PUBLISHERS,
received some beautiful suitings
an good men naturally noiu sucn a iei-lo-
in contempt. But the fellow who goes into the lodge or into the church for the good he can do, rather than for the good he can get, wins the ad- miration of others and draws the dividends of good will.
"The man who gets most does not always give most; but the man who gives most is almost sure to get most in affection, and love and confidence, and esteem, and in a quiet and happy conscience. Dividends follow invest- ments good investments. And if a man invests his time and talents in unsel- fish service, in encouraging the dis- couraged, in helping the helpless, in cheering the faint-hearte- d, and in hon- estly and sincerely endeavoring to make the world a little brighter for every one with whom he comes in contact, he needn't worry about the results. The dividends will come all right, and they'll be better dividends than will ever be derived from any investments in sugar stocks or other securities.
"And after all is said, I believe you will agree with me that the most satis- fying dividends are to be found in the love and esteem and friendship of our fellows and these dividends may be
about $400 in sight. In addition the Hawaiian dockmen's association, which has a large sinking fund, it is said, is anxious to contribute and will contri- -
bute liberally. The Hui Kaahumanu Society and Kamehameha Lodge have both asked for the opportunity of ad- -
important during the past two years under the management of Mr. Herrick and his promotion comes as a recogni- tion of his services in this Territory.
Mr. Nelson, the new manager, is considered one of the most capable men in thp emnlnv 1 f tha mt-t- Urt.w- -
Then a benefit balling & Malting Co. In sending one of din? 1the!r mitef; will h. Friday evening at me
PublishesAlexander Young hotel with the Nai-no- a
orchestras in attendance, which will undoubtedly bring in a large sum. Ernest Kaai is planning a concert at
which we will
their best managers here the company shows the importance they attach to this branch and Is indicative of the strong effort they will make to keep their full share of the island trade.
Mr. Nelson is rapidly making friends and will undoubtedly enjoy the same success as has followed the retiring manager, Mr. Herrick.
and trouserings. Pacific Commercial Advertiser ( Daily ) Sunday Advertiser
Hawaiian Gazette ( Semi-Week- ly ) Kuokoa ( Hawaiian Weekly J
Official and Commercial 'Record (Semi-Week-ly ) Planters' SMonthty
Hawaiian Forester and clgriculturist ( SMon&ty )
enjoyed hy every one ot us who win order his life as to earn them." N0TLEY TO RAISE
HAMAKUA TOBACCO
ing of representatives of the Hui Ka-
ahumanu and Kamehameha Lodge. , The former was represented by Miss i Peabody, Mrs. Nawahi and Mrs. George Beckley and the lodge by Prince Ku-hi- o.
John Lane and George Smithies. The heads of the two organizations are to confer with Governor Carter to
ascertain just what amount the whole fund is to be so that they may shape their energies accordingly to rasing the money.
Prince Kuhlo is authority for the statement that the societies ?an furn- ish between $S00 and $900.
BAND BENEFIT. The Hawaii Ponoi Society has de-
cided to repeat the performance given on the 2Sth of October at the Opera House on the -- Sth inst. for the benefit of the Hawaiian Band fund. The affair We are now equipped for the manufacture o
LOOSE-LEA-F LEDGER CASES AND SHEETS
make up promptly, in the latest
style, and guarantee a fit.
f. f. A 14 HA 4 CO, LTD.
Opposite Advertiser Office.
TEL. BLUE 2741.
PAIRING SEWING MACHINES.
P. J. BENNY Is still doing business at the old stand., in spite of reports to the contrary, and has a fine new stock of all the leading SEWING MA-
CHINES, including the celebrated WILCOX and GIBBS, ADMITTED THE ONLY RELIABLE AUTOMATIC ON THE MARKET.
All machines on easy payments. F. J. BENNY,
1266 and 1268 Fort St. Tel. Main 4S8.
"I intend to start a tobacco planta- tion in Hamakua," said Charles Not-le- y
yesterday. " Hamakua 's experi- ments with tobacco have shown that the finest Sumatra leaf may be grown. Even the native Hawaiian tobacco under cul- tivation and scientific development be- comes a fine product.
''Tobacco raising in Hamakua will be a profitable industry I am sure."
"r--
ORGAN OR NO ORGAN ?
HONOLULU, HA WAIT
tAddress all communications to the Company.
Cable Address: "Gazette, Honolulu" 'A jCodesl cA. B C 5th Edition, Western Union, Liber's.'PIANO
Established iSg Whooping Cough, Croap, Bronchitis
Cough, Grip, Asthma, Diphtheria
Cresolene is a boon to Asthmatics eTectiv- - to breathe In at nvreDoes it n seem
remedy to cure disease of the breathing organ.,
than to take the remedy iv.-.- th stomach 1
It cures because the a:r rendered strongly anti-
septic is carried over the diseased surlace with
(Continued from Page One.) It was rumored yesterday that Wil-
son had the call for the reason thit he is a Democrat and competent. He has been a contractor for ten years or more and has the business at his fin- -j
ger ends. He is strongly ba kel by the even,- - breath, g vmg prolongs . u .
.h ssnai. Hawaiians of all faiths.ment. It is invaiuaDle to miners A fine Vose & Sons PIANO for sale
cheap.
Cast or liStalmeit
Mr. Kinney says a member of his party has suggested that the "Demo-- 1
cratic party in Hawaii might be in Read the Advertiser THK ART POTTERY OF THE EAST. Exquisite shapes. Just the thing for A'mas. Tapas, Mats,
Brasses.
YOUNG BUILDING.
tendency find immediate relief from coughs or
conditions of toe throat.
CO.,
i c o
corporated and when asked where the' capital was to come from an 1 what they would capitalize on the man an-
swered that it could be done on their reputation. The new papjr might be started on something of the sanio sort. World's News Daily.COYNE FURNITURE CO.
Hotel and L nion Street.
THE PACIFIC COMMERCIAL ADVERTISER, HONOLULU, NOVEMBER 14, 1906.
THE PACIFIC Immam COMMERCIAL ADVERTISER.
THE RIGHTS OF JAPANESE. Jn connection with the Japanese school question, not only, but with various
local attempts to deprive the Japanese of rights freely enjoyed by white for-
eigners, the publication of Clanse 3 of Article 1 of the Japanese-America- n
treaty of commerce and navigation, may be of value: In whatever relates to rights of residence and travel; toEDITORWALTES Q. SMITH
WEDNESDAY, : : : : NOVEMBER 14.
Burglars shun dwellings
equipped with electricity An electric switch at your bedside
is worth more than a dozen revolvers. Burglars do not care to work where there's electric light.
Besides, it is the softest and best light for reading.
No expense when not in use; but al-
ways ready.
it is. ,iifn...iit t, ux ihv PortumeM settlers, who like Hawaii ami would should ignore thebe clal to stav in it if thev could get g homes
..1 ,i,:.,i. I'jtii i nffi,.,. dffi-r- s. to acauire small larins. Some mile nine 1 a 11 (. v nun 11 j ...... - - - j 1
the possession of gools and effects of any kind; to the succes- sion to personal estate, by will and otherwise, and the dis-
posal of property of any sort and in any manner whatsoever which they may lawfully acquire, the citizens or subjects of each contracting party shall enjoy in the territories of the other the snte privileges, liberties, and rights, and shall be subject to no higher imposts or charges in these respects than native citi-
zens dr subjects or citizens or subjects of the most favored nation. The citizens or subjects of each of the contracting parties shall enjoy in the territories of the other entire liberty of conscience, and. subject to the laws, ordinances and regula- tions, shall enjoy the right of private or public exercise of their worship, and also the right of burying 'their respective country- men, according to their religions customs, in such suitable and convenient places as may be established and maintained for that purpose. I
on tbe authority of Land oniinissioner Pratt, thatago, this paper annonnc u ,.,.rtniti- - in I.Httpr form, won d l e iriven to anv Mum nue
Hawaiian Electric Go..
l lit- - .ji f ujjiwivuiinf - r
Settlement Assoeiation that might seek it. Vet, so far as we can learn, there are no applicants in sight. Instead, frugal, industrious Portuguese, long resident
here, are going away to seek homes in California, and other white farmers are not coming in.
This negleet of a good ehance in life is perhaps due to lack of knowledge
of what the government offers. Not many of the middle-age- d Portuguese read English papers nor is it eertaia that many of them read Portuguese local
journals, or that, if they do, the vernacular press tells them much about land
.conditions. It should be a labor of love to some of the leading Portuguese to take up this important matter, organize .Settlement Associations and plant them on public land where anything profitable could be raised. Portuguese are natural farmers, fruit-raiser- s and vineyardists and we have a soil and
climate suitable to their needs. It is a shame not to bring all these factors of
Ai treaties are defined by Clause 2 of Article VI of the Constitution as part of the supreme law of the land, overruling the constitution or laws of any LIMITED,
Phone Maim 3 ind binding State iiideres. the least that is said here or in CaliforniaState
about defvinir the Japanese treatv bv nolice ordinances, the wiser for all -" A . 'A i
concerned.
Herr Berber wants $1,100 to briny the band home. Herr Cohen wants $3000. It' T ii or; vi letrn were mil nti :it miction the loll michl come cheaper. But let s- - I - I I u o see first what Jimmy Morgan can bring the band home for.
Jiuhe Gout snvs there vi 1 be a recount but he doesn t quite know on 0 -
what ground. Why not put it on the ground of chagrin at being defeated? Most Women Are Interested InThat is the true one and all others are infringements.
prosperity together; a greater shame to leave xne lanu kmc ami 10 ii wiumg bands leave the country.
What a place Hawaii would be if half as much labor were done to stake people on the soil not only to keep our own agriculturists but to colonize
others here as is done to induce tourists to visit the Territory for a few weeks
in the year. Take the island of Lanai. for example, which is to be the prize
of some one of a very few rich applicants. In a healthy state of public opinion and business a dozen land and development companies and perhaps as many Settlement Associations would be bidding for it today. So they would
lor other great public areas, and out of it we should have a strong, rich, potent, Americanized Hawaii, fit to hold its own, and enriching itself beyond any other Territory and many other States of the Union, from the varied resources of its soil. This Territory could, by an enlightened system of land.eplonization,
Sam Johnson is proving himself stronger than the Republican machine and the question now is whether he won't prove- - himself too strong for the Demo crats.
with attentive Chinks, who seemed to
daintily-devise- d footwear. Our N. 562 turn sole, patent colt pump, l 3- -4
inch wood Cuban heel, is the great- est winner for the season.
PRICE $4.50 Same style in white, blue, pink
and gray. Note. Nc slipping at the heel.
be getting their money's worth inMil ve all its problems and support, without crowding, a population ot Halt a watching the lawyers disagree with
'each Other.
, Wl GGS TO
BAVE SPECIAL SCENERY
million people. And yet it is letting industrious white men leave it. without protest, for the sake of opportunities which might be easily given here.
(JnlV UnC f Manufacturers' Shoe Co., Ltd.FREE TRADE WITH CANADA. The sentiments of James J. Hill, the railroad builder, have changed very
& V 1051 Port Mreet. Tel. Mainmaterially during the past few years regarding the value to the United States
:oo? Rehearsals for "Mrs. Wiggs of tbe
Cabbage Patch" will be held at the Opera House the latter part of this week. They have, heretofore, been held at Elks' Hall, but there is now need of the--cas- t getting acquainted w ith the stage.
'Some elaborate scenery is being painted for thia production. One drop scene in particular will be familiar to the readers of "Mrs. Wiggs." That is the section of the cabbage patch
Grade of
DRUGS, CHEMICALS,
The Best Our prices are right.
THAT ROOSTER was a Democratic rooster, mind you, and was not to be sold ; he was thrown on the screen on elec-
tion night merely as a flyer. We have more and of a better quality, tender and juicy, for Thanks-
giving- or Christmas.
of the trade of the Dominion of Canada. He is now advocating a doctrine of free trade with that country, into which he has lately extended several lines as feeders for the Great Northern and he is already behind several of the other new lines now building in the Canadian wheat belt and the mining sections of East and West Kootenay.
Four years ago, in a number of addresses delivered by him at various functions and assemblies, he referred to the possibilities of Western Canada in every deprecatory words, ridiculing the contentions of the Canadians that their West would ever be a serious rival in the world's grain markets with the American West, referring to the districts in which he is at prjseiit building op a great railroad system as a barren, unfertile and frozen land.
But already since that time the period has come when the mills of Min-
neapolis are bidding for Canadian wheat, when the smelters of Idaho and Montana need Canadian ores, when the paper mills of Illinois and Michigan must import pulp and logs from the Canadian spruc forests or go out of business. And the carrying of this wheat, lumber, pulp and other imports would as the present railroad conditions exist be done to a very large extent hj the Jim Hill lines. And he is just as anxious to carry exports over his systems to the hundreds of thousands of American settlers in the Canadian West, who would turn eagerly td: the manufacturers they know on the American side of the line in preference to those of Eastern Canada which the existing tariff protects, and to whom they must at present turn their trade.
It is doubtful, however, that the matter of free trade would be accepted with any degree of eagerness by the Canadians. They have been sharing with the United States the prosperity of the past ten years and there no longer exists the desire for free trade or commercial union with the United" States which was the policy of the Liberal party during their time of opposition. Until recently, for the past thirty years, ever since the reciprocity treaty was abrogated by the Americans, the Canadians had been asking for another such
showing the railroad tracks, a freight car and some of the rude landscapes so closely identified with Mrs. Wiggs' philosophy.
Xo pains are being spared by Lei Aloha Chapter, Order of the Eastern Star, to make this presentation suc-
cessful in every way. They have no fear that the play will be amateurish, for the roles are so natural thflt the participants in the play take to' them readily. Miss .Mowbery as Miss Hazy s in complete accord with her role and Metropolitan Meat Co.
LIMITED.
KEEP YOUR EYE ON
is certain to make a hit. Mr. W. D. Adams as the Grand Army veteran will have a capital makeup and will be a rollicking old campaigner. Mr. Warren as Billy Wiggs is making much of his role as the growing and poverty-
-stricken son of Mrs. Wiggs. His former success in a juvenile role in "The College Widow" indicates ah
equal success in the coming play. Interest centers largely, of course, in
Mrs. Wiggs. her homely ways, illiter- ate expressions and wholesome, if rough, philosophy. Mrs. W. Li. How- ard is working hard over this role and rehearsals show that she will do It full justice.
A corps of young people is being trained especially in dances for the entertainment which is given in Mrs.
treaty and for free trade from the United States. Year after year Canadian premiers went to Washington to make their appeals, being in every case re-
fused. The present premier, Sir Wilfrid Laurier, made one such excursion to Washington, meeting with no more success than" had the Conservative leaders. Then Laurier announced that any further advances in the way of establishing better trade relations must come from Washington and the Canadian people applauded the sentiment.
The Canadian premier meant what he said, for he repeated it to Vice President Fairbanks two years ago in answer to a request that the Canadian government send representatives to Washington to discuss a possible trade treaty. Fairbanks was told in diplomatic language that the United States must seod its representatives to Ottawa if it had anything to offer.
In the meanwhile the great American manufacturers are establishing branches all over the Dominion, a fact pointed to by Canadian protectionists as an evidence of the value of the protective tariff. The former free trade party of the country, which is now in power, will discuss at the coming session of Parliament the advisability of raising the taritf on British imports, whirl now enjoy a one-thir- d preference in tariff rates. Canadian sentiment has been weaned from its free trade ideas and to bring it back will necessitate offers in which the people can see the advantages to themselves.
LATEST in MILLINERY CORRECT HEADWEAR for AUT-OIST- S
combining beauty with utility AT
Miss Power's MILLINERY PARLORS, BOSTON
BUILDING, FORT STREET.
For Thanksgiving DayWiirers' house uract.ieallv :i nprfnrm- - I
ance within a performance. The Cen- ter girls, trained in special dances by Mrs. Mary Gunn. and Master Ronald McGrew and others will appear in this part of the play.
"Mrs. Wiggs" will be presented at the Opera House on November 22 and 24 next week.
Highland Park
The New Subdivision Adjoining beautiful College Hills on the Diamond Head side.
Lots 70x200 feet
Send a rase of Mrs. Reams' assorted island preserves to your friends at home? for their table on Thanksgiving Day. rders sent by the Alameda on the 14th will arrive in good season. Order from factory, 184 Hotel street.
o
0 0 0
t 0 o s
0 0 0 s
PRESIDENTIAL SPELLING. The President's message will make a sensation this year by its spoiling if
by nothing else. Mr. Koosevelt. true to his ideal of clipped English, may be trusted to use the wide circulation of his message to advance the cause. ITis private correspondence does what it can, as witness this letter to his friend Jacob Riis; . . ... -
T E DAY IN THE
DISTRICT COURT Remnants!
-'
Will be sold for from
j My Dear Kns: May I thru you send a very warm welcome to the children of the East Side? 1 wish I could be with you at the opening of the gymnasium in the Henry Street ment. As 1 can not, may I thru you extend my heartiest good wishes to the boys and girls of the settlement? That they may thoroly enjoy themselves while young and grow into useful men and women and true American citizens is the earnest wish of their friend, THEODORE ROOSEVELT.
It is creditable to Mr. Riis' sense of humor which does not always over- come his awe and reverence for his friend in the White House that he replied to the President saying his sentiments were fine but his spelling vile. Beth low also countered well when he said in an address which followed the reading of both letters: "I think Mr. Riis agrees with the President in every- thing except spelling. Mr. Riis does not believe in spelling badly any more than in doing anything else badly."
$500 to $800 each.
Thursday, November 15,
AT 8 O'CLOCK
We will place on sale. THOU- SANDS OF REMNANTS OF SILKS. WOOLEN GOODS, FLA XX ELS AND FLAX-NELKTT- FS.
the accumulation of the past six months of heavy selling, so you may be sure that the lot contains something that you want at a price that will compel you to take it.
0 Terms: 1-- 4 Cash, 1-- 4 in 8 Months, 1-- 4 in 16 Months and
J. Dower was sentenced yesterday to two months on the reef for drunk- enness. Dower is a well-know- n man around town whose downfall is due altogether to drink. He has been be-
fore the court on other occasions and the jail sentence was given to enable him to sober up thoroughly and per- haps turn over a new leaf. This was the only sentenced imposed during the session, five cases being nol-pross- ed
and two continued. The latter case is that of Ching Lam
and Lan Shee, being tried together for an assault arising out of the Boycott fund. There was an imposing array of counsel in the case yesterday, w. O. Smith and D. L. Withington appearing for the Territory and Judge G. D. Gear and J. Lightfoot for the defense. The case has been in the courts since Sep- tember and promises to keep going for some time yet. Slow progress was made yesterday. Attorney Withington would ask his witness a question. Then each of the four counsel would explain with many references to the volumes piled around them just why the ques- tion was pertinent to the case or not and save reasons why the evidence should or should not b admitted, ac- cording to which one of the four wa speaking. After one of the?e lengthy arguments the court ruled trat the question could b asked, and the an- swer of the witness was that he did not know. The court room was filled
It may not be desirable advertising to have a police judge denounce a "cafe" for furnishing too large a grist of drunk and disorderly cases. There is a remedy. Disorderly places can be deprived of their licenses. Seattle Post Intelligencer.
Well, well! After that, Honolulu need not feel so lonesome in its iniquity.
1-- 4 in 2 Years at 6 per cent interest. Road are now in course of construction. Water pipes are
now being laid. Superb Marine and Valley views. Only one short block from the Manoa Valley Cars.
afe
It isn't every shipload of immigrants that can expect to be met at the wharf by a personal representative of the President of the United States. A few of the many arc display- - a
Further information will be given byed in our makai windows. f VIt is said that Birbe is out for a job on the police force. Evidently Birbe
has not come to y-- t ami imagines the election went the other way.
John Hughes is not out for speaker of the next House butthe Republicans would have to look far to rind a better one. LERslChas. S. Dcsky
TelephneMain48- - : : : : Campbell BlockARE
EH The power that wants to put the Dreadnausrhts out of commission hasonly to invent a dependable flying machine.
WHOSE SALES SALES.
rhj ihb ii a ran
Cook With CjtSIS "Iho Cities Burn
The Queen Pays" This has been adopted by th
gi'KKN isn:.v('E ro.
1 5s?5?: sion could be procured to his feast of
Begin to think about
old or young I
it will give you a wide va- - j
riety to choose from, and it i
not too early to make a selec- tion. Order now and we will lay the Instrument aside for you, it y. wish, for Christmas de- livery.
Pboto-Snpp- ly Co. FORT STREET,
"EVERYTHING PHOTOGRAPHIC."
the merits of the fine, tender MEATS
we sell.
DO GIVE, both VALUE and QUAL
ITY.
Election Ballots
could be counted and ma- jorities figured with great- er ease on a BURROUGHS ADDING MACHINE than by any other way. It is a well-kno- wn fact that the only accomplishment In which a Burroughs is lack- ing is the power of speech
it doe? its work silently.
HAWAIIAN OFFICE
SPECIALTY CO.
Bc Minutes From San Francisco Tiburon Fcriy.
Now the HAWAIIAN HEADQUARTERS.
Cleanli-
case delivered by your grocer.
Honolulu shod works ct.
F. L- - WALDRON, Agent.
Harrison Mutual Itunai flssoci"- - a help. ft relieves expensesgreat I -
that are often times a great. t""u"" JOIN NOW.
J H TOWN SEND. Secy. Kapiolani BMji., Alakea St.
as a motto The Queen stands today second to no company In popularity.
Tin- - Queen has paid dollar for dollar on all San Francisco losses.
it's the kind of Eire Insurance von 2c
I should have.
HOP 11 MM LIMITED.
MONEY TO LOAN. LONG TIME LOANS. REAL ESTATE LOANS. LOANS ON LISTED COLLA-
TERAL.
Oahu Railway TIME TABlE.
OUTWARD. For Waianae, WaiaJua, Kahukn ulWay Stations "9:15 a. m., 3:20 p. m. For PearJ City, Ewa Mill and Way
Stations 17:30 a. m., 9:15 a. m., 11:05 a. m., '2:15 p. m., 3:20 p. 5:15 p. m., 19:30 p. m., tll:00 p. m. For Wahiawa 9:15 a. m. and "S:lf m.
INWARD. Arrive Honolulu from Kahuku, WaJ-alu- a
and Waianae 8:36 a. m., "5:31 p. m.
Arrive Honolulu from Ewa Mill and Pearl City 1 7:46 a. m., 8:36 a. m., '10:38 a. m., 1:40 p. ni., M-.3- p. 5:31 p. m., 7:30 p. m.
Arrive Honolulu from Wabiawa 8:36 a. m. and 5:31 p. m. Daily, t Ex. Sunday. 1 Sunday Onlj The Haleiwa Limited, a two-ho- n
train (only first-clas- s tickets bonore l
leaves Honolulu every Sunday at 8 ?J a. m.; returning, arrives in Honolnhj at 10:10 p. m. The Limited stops only it Pearl Citv and Waianae. G. P. DENISON, F. C. SMTTH,
Supt. G. P. & T. A.
WM. G. IRVv'IN & CO., LTD.
Wm. G. Trwin President and Manager John D. Spreckela First Viee-PreBide-
W. M. Oiffard ... Second Vice-Preside-
IT. M. Whitney Treasurer Richard Tvers Secretary W. F. Wilson Auditor SUGAR FACTORS AND
COMMISSION AGENTS. AGENTS FOR
Baldwin Locomotive Works, Pfcila- - delphia, Pa.
. ewa u i niversai Mill ;o., Manu- facturers of National Cane Shreder, New York, N. Y.
Pacific Oil Transportation 0., San Francisco, Cal.
WM. G. IRWIN & CO., LTD.
AGENTS FOR THE Royal Insurance Co., of Liverpool,
England. Alliance Assurance Co., of London
England. Scottish Union & Nation il Insuranea
Co., of Edinburgh, Scotland. Fire Association of Philadelphia. Alliance Insurance Corporation, Ltd Wilheima of Magdeburg eneraJ 1ST
mraaee Co.
Hoepatotlns Paperhantfn. Oraln- -
ing, KalFonrning Brick. Cerr.ent and Btone Work.
Shop with Whittle, the sipn painter, comer Hotel and Union streets.
PHONE MAIN UL
'.a DIES' AND GENTS' CLOTHHWI CLEANED AT LOWEST
PRICES, mt J1MM
THE PAUCITY
OF YELLS
Improvement.
The football season is here again and with it the college yell.
The yells this year are about the same as heretofore, no better and no worse. The game is improved by modified rules but the football yen changes not for the better.
Yell-maste- rs and yell-lead- ers are ap-- pointed at the schools and colleges J
and also Yet the American football yell remains a nam- -
r.f tHw ,h i . M ..."vu luuico ui iiiuiuci ui'uoc loom up as inspired Hassles.
Surely new and effective yells can '
be devised which will at the same time! give the rooters room for the exercise of all their lung power.
i
'
O w sky - w o w - w o w , We esky-wee-w- ee,
Ha-ha-h- a, Itah-rah-ra- h, Give-'em-t- he-
axe, w nat sdematterwidsoandso class of vocal abomination.
Ten years ago a Wisconsin team dus up and adopted an Indian yell that was a winner from the word go. It ran something like this:
Zulikan, zulikan, Highaway ho, Tamarack, tamarack, Siss boom bo, Lagador, lagador, Ha ha ha, Keno, keno, Kenosha! Kenosha was the team's home town.
The effect of this yell when given by from fifty to a hundred trained rooters was almost terrifying in its intensity.
The All Blacks, New Zealand's vic- torious team of Rugby football play- ers, who passed through on their way home last February, had a yell which was a wonder and the fame of which spread round the world.
Imagine the fifteen of the team standing in the center of the ground just before the game commenced, massed close together, fists rising to heaven, other fists going through the motion of handling imaginary war-club- s,
feet pawing the ground with metrical beat, and the fifteen voices yelling rancorously raucously:
Kamate, kamate, kaura, kaura, Kamate, kamate, kaura. kaura, Tenai te tangata puhuru huru. Ne ne ne waka whitu tera, Hoo-oo-pan- e. kan-an-pan- e,
Hoo-oo-pan- e, krn-an-p.i-
Hupane. kanoane, wititira! And on the campus of Oahu College j
and that of Kamehameha schools one still hears the wretched, insipid and al -
together miserable Owsny-wow-wo- w.
Weesky-wee-we- e thing. It seems a pity that the students
ran t write yells as well as they play football, since yells seem to be neces- sary to the game.
Queen street sk'itimr rink open every evening, also Wednesday and Saturday afternoons.
Eleotro-V'go- rStrongt Ki Here is the way to et back your visor,
to pure the "come and go" pains and arhi'S in your k and hnultlers. to rcaKe yourself strong and active, full of life and coarJN
Eleotr vVi-o- r cures while you sleep. Ton feel file glowing current carrying
. : ..'-- . ur.Mii. Ii eaves doctors' bills and makes a man feel like a man t
oogtil to. i Send for vir 100 page book, niusrrd r
with photographs of fully developed men I
and women. U' free if you will inclose I
this ad. I
1439 FIIXMOKE STEEET, SAN TKAKCISCO. .
THE MAD
Family.
Ashton Stevens has the following to say of Vasco, the Mad Musician," who recently performed in Honolulu:
My onef best bet at the Orpheum opening yesterday was "Vasco, the Mad Musician." He is a truly comic torturer of brass, reed and percussion instruments. Like his brother, Bosco, he fairly eats 'em alive.
Hut for a long time his nationality was a puzzle to me. He couldn't be either American. Indian or Welch, or yet Manx. He lisped neither in Italian nor Irish; there was no token of Yid-
dish, no thing of Magyar, and he spoke no dialect such as Ade or Dooley or Hobart. Yet there was something foreign in his speech, something un- -
like both the northern and southern side of our Market street.
of a sodden it caught me. "The Mad Vasco" was from Cheapside. Lon-- don. Eng. Lord save the King!
Well, bless his old English heart, the madman is a startler and no mistake! Unlike most comical musicians, who are comical oniy when they are serious, this cockney madman couldn't be serious with a pipe organ and Beetho- ven's funeral march. After the Em-
pire City Quartet's hardest horseplay, you reckon them as an escaped church choir beside the hectic antics of Vasco.
Vasco's power extends even beyond the spell in which he holds the public and the box office. He actually has a "pull" with the Orpheum circuit. For appearing in another part of this week's bill are Mile. Alexander and lions. Bertie in their "refined aerial act" entitled. "After the Ball." This consists of a ladder safe'.y see-saw- ed
over a trapeze, on which M'le. Alexan- der and Mens. Bertie, hastely disrobe, disclosing the innocent pink tights of commerce. Why do they do it? The answer to this brilliant conundrum is
"Vasco let 'em." They are relations of his. But, if the Orpheum values its reputation, why not pay Mile, and Mons. for work of such a nature as not to draw on fifteen minutes valuable time of the audience?
RAPID TRANSITS
TO PLAY BALL
On Saturday afternoon at Aala Park, commencing at 1:36 o'clock, the base-
ball nine of Theo. H. Davies & Co..
will play a game with the newly form-
ed Rapid Transit nine. This will be the second game played
by the Davies nine. In the first they gave the E. O. Haiis such a drubbing that they haven't recovered from the effects of it yet.
Archie Robertson will capta'n the Davies crowd and he says that if they win on Saturday he will challenge the
nine to a game for thejHackfeld championship.
VOLCANO MARSHALL
Volcano Mar.-ha'.- l recently got up a
benefit for himself in Shanghai. He was, as he quaintly expressed I'.
suffering from the effects of an acc!- - , ,,,,,r;-.-- n r,f t nurse.
F rst he eng.igel the Lyceum thea-
ter, then he arranged a humorous and literary program containing twenty-thre- e
choice numbers by Marshall, and finally h bTel the town with paper bearing the announcement that admis- -
FOREIGN SPORTS
The closing standings of the Pacific Coast League teams are as follows: Portland, .657: Seattle. .544: Los Ange- les. .522: San Francisco, .520; Oakland. .411; Fresno, .353.
The raetracks have lost their fight with the New York pool-roo- ms.
The American Leigue will advocate a shorter season of baseball.
Champion Foley lost the bay counties tennis championship to George Janes.
Jack Munroe and Marvin Hart are matched to fight early next month.
Jos Thomas is the most sought after I boxer now befc re the public.
.
Harvard will send a lacrosse team to England next season.
Jockey Radtke has been suspended In "VeW York
Frankie Neil has challenged Abe AttelL
4- -
A recent sensation of the English turf was the defeat of Slieve Galiion by Sal- - vjn.
R. L. Rogers, John Wilson and the horse Samish have been ruled off the turf.
CHICKENS TO
BE EXHIBITED
The next show of the Hawaiian Poultry Association will be held on De-
cember 20, 21 and 22.
Secretary Seabury stated yesterday that a very large entry is expected.
A judge will be brought from the Coast.
"I expect that most of the birds shown will be home-bred- ," said Sea-bur- y,
"and that not more than twenty imported birds will be shown. By en gaging a mainland judge we shall be able to get a line on the standard of our birds, which we could not obtain by any other means."
SOCKER STARTS
ON SATURDAY
The "socker" league season starts on Saturday afternoon next at the t ill park.
The first game will be between the Y. M. C. A. and the Mailes. The Dia- mond Heads and Infantry play the second game.
The Punahous will nut be seen out till the following Saturday,
All the league teams are putting In ;good practise licks and prospects are bright for a successful season
HAWAII NINE
WONT VISIT
The proposed trip of the All-Haw- aii
baseball team to Honolulu to play a series of games, has fallen through.
The arrangement was that the visit- ors shoultl arrive here last Saturday and the games take place this week.
They cannot get here before next Sat- urday, however, on which day the "i-rlrr- . n r commences And the last sad rites will be performed over the dead baseball season.
HARD TIMES
MASQUERADE
The Diamond Heal Athletic Club will give a Hard Times Masquerade ball on December 1st in Progress huK.
The costumes wi not be of an 1
Lpensive or fancy o but wsh range i
from sackcloth to ashes. Prizes will be given to the mst orig-
inally costume 1 lady an i gim'l man. The proceeds of the ball will go to-
ward securing a sui:ab!e storage place for the valuable assortment of silver- ware won by the Diamond Heads in the way of trophies.
reason and flow of soul for from $5 to $1 (Mex.)
Every ticket was sold and Marshall's enterprise netted him a snug sum.
"Volcano's" first number was a dis sertation on "My Pecuiiar Difficulties." It consumed an hour and nineteen minutes of actual time. The number was rich in American humor, but un-
fortunately the audience was for the major part of British extraction, and the mirth created was of a very silent nature.
At the conclusion of the number Marshall's friends insisted that, in the interests of his impaired health, he should desist from further entertain ing the company present. He reluc tantly followed their advice.
,' Volunteers from the audience came forward with vocal and instrumental selections and a pleasant evening was enjoyed, notwithstanding that "Vol- cano" footlight stunts were curtailed from twenty-thre- e to one.
PA-- U RIDERS
WILL DANCE
The Naniola Pa-- u Riding Club, the ariH ht wniMtion of its
kln1' v,m glt d holoku dance at Progress Hall on Saturday evening. Noy 24 Among the attractions will be refreshments and singing.
prini. Theru Wilcox president of thp Nanioa Pa-- u Club expresses herself as gratified with the season's work and expects to arrange a number of big rides next year, notably on Washington's birthday, when the Flor- al Parade will take place.
CARMEN TO
GIVE DANCE
The Rapid Transit boys are going to give one of their enjoyable dances in
Progress hall on Saturday evening next.
This dance will, it is confidently pre-
dicted, completely e lipse the last one given by the carmen in point of suc-
cess, highly successful as that event was.
The best music obtainable will be on tap and all the prettiest girls in Ho-
nolulu will grace the dance with their presence.
The grand march and the Scotch reel will be enlivened by the sweet strains of the bagpipes and a .number of terp-sichore- an
novelties will be numbered on the program.
Extra cars will be run so everybody will be able to enjoy a good time to the limit and then some.
NEW YEAR'S
DAY SHOOT
The Hawaiian Rifle Association is nlnnninir to eive a bil prize shoot on ;
New Year's Day. Already riflemen are getting their
sights adjusted in readiness for what promises to be the biggest event of the kind which has ever taken place In the islands.
BARGAINS IN MEDICINE.
A woman once wrote us that she was not going to buy Scott's Emulsion any more because it cost too much. Said she could get some other emulsion for less
lmoney. renny wise ana pound foolish