if hk txt om t3...3- if you news, want toilny to-day's the hk txt aha om 75: t3 is the tlio...

12
3 - If You News, want toilny to- day's THE HK TXT AHA om 75: T3 Is The tlio Hawaiian paper Star that Into the best you 11 ml It In goes THE STAll SrML AMJfJLr homes of Ilonolnlu I Classified Ads, Three Times, 25 Cents I T VOL. XIII. HONOLULU, HAWAII, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1905. No. 4221 STARTS AFTER " BEEF TRUST" BRECKONS ABOUT TO BRING A SUIT AGAINST THE METROPOLITAN MEAT COMPANY AND ABOUT SEVENTY O THE It DEPENDANTS, TO ENJOIN THEM FROM CARRYING ON AN ALLEGED COMBI NATION TO PROTECT PRICES. Tho federal government has declared war on tho Hawaiian "beef trust." District Attorney Brcckons will In tho near future file an Injunction suit In tho United States Court, against the Metropolitan Meat Company and about seventy other .defendants, Including nearly all the cattle men In the Islands also, It Is stated, the officers of the Ha- waiian Live Stock Breeders' tlon, The complaints are to bo printed and Brcckons' has been after bids for printing them. Though he declines to discuss the matter, It is known that the printing job on which he is at work, is tho voluminous complaint ngalnst the meat market and tho live stock men. It Is known that Brcckons some timo ago submitted tho matter to the United States Attorney General. An investi- gation was made here, and the case was submitted to Washington about three months ago. The procedure now Indi- cates that orders have come from Washington to break up the alleged combination. The existing state of af- fairs is evidently regarded In Washing- ton as a violation of the anti-tru- st law. ATTORNEY all The suit is to be based little, abstain from competing with on an alleged agreement whereby one another in supplying the local mar cattle and meat men have combined to ket. They send reports to the Metro-forc- e up the price of meat prevent polltan Meat Company of how many all competition in the sale of cattle. It cattle they have ready for killing. Then Is alleged that the agreement Is be- - .the meat company makes up an order 'tween the meat company on the one for whatever number it can use and ihand and the cattle men on the other. Axes the price and apportions the or vvaiurun, me cusiunis uruKer, a. cauiuuiuui J til nSf, !? ID years has befallen the imil the an the He his ply and sale of "meat the Island of the number of cattle ordered. Testl-'S- - the favorite local boat that plies between Honolulu and dried fruit house him the Alameda was on Oahu. San The vessel went ashore inside the Golden Gate to- - the rocks and nskinn- - whether the firm should dunlicate orders of The agreement, It Is stated, Is one by TO Recent rumored efforts to compromise the Parker ranch litigation were In Judge Lindsay's court this morning, when Fred Wundenberg told f tho propostlon made, was Introduced showing how the proposals failed-- A plan to manage tho Parker ranch by a board of direc- tors was proposed,, b.ut Trustee Carter It appears, would not listen to any ,'propos)tlon to compromise the suit making charges against him and de- manding his removal, tho manage- ment plan was held by his attorneys to bo illegal. Hence, as Wundenberg put it, he the Impression from At- torney Kinney, that it must be a "light to a finish." Wundenberg said he wrote to A. W. Carter guardian for Annie T. Par- ker, on July 5 last, suggesting that It would bo better for all If the cases could be He suggested disposing, of the ranch question by placing tho direction of Its affairs In the hands of a board of three, consist ing of Wundenberg as trustee for Sam Rest Assured that flro can your valuablo they In a box our safo deposit Tho cost Is only per year and up, TRUSTGO.LTD Street, Honolulu DISTRICT B RECKONS. which the ranchmen, big- understood the that (Contlnuod on page Ave.) and and aisu and and got were to appoint a manager, who was to have full charge of the ranch. Sam Parker, A. W. Carter, and their agents were to have full to visit tho and make as to Its management to tho board, but they must not interfere otherwise. All money, except what was needed at the ranch, was to bo on deposit to bo drawn only by a majority of tho board. said that If this plan was accepted, the partition suit would bo withdrawn, and he would uso his endeavors to have J. S. Low withdraws- - his suit to Carter as guardfan. Magoon asked what was re- ceived, and Wundenberg produced a letter July from Kinney, and Ballou, attorneys for A. W. Carter. Ho was reading it when Kinney Interrupted, and wanted to know if that was the first answer re- ceived. The was .to the that the plan would be a delegation by Guardian Carter of his powers as an officer of tho court, and vould not be Parker, A. W. Carter as guardian of allowed by the court, though tho T. K. Parker, and some third torneys expressed themselves ready to party to be selected. Ho named J. O. discuss It. '.RIBBS Carter as his choice. These "I think that. Is tho only answer I neither nor burglar harm belongings when repose In vaults. $5 Fort power ranch suggestions letter remove answer dated letter effect three BY THE Tho largest consignment of freight from the Orient by the Manchuria was for K. Yamamoto. wholesale dealer In Japanese provisions a-- d general 'mer chandise. UTILIZE (To Make Vie Of) This Is what I should do with that wall space that I have. How well It would look to have It filled In with nice set of QLOBE-WERNICK- E book cases; and It would certainly keep my books In better shape. I think I will lake ten minutes and go and see them at. The J, A, Mi Johnson Co, LIMITED 931 Fort Phone Main 14), Street. P, O, Fox 514. Specializes In Modern Office and Store Methods, BE STRUCK SAME EFFORTS COMPROMISE MAY TOTAL LOSS WHERE TH E WAS LOST. SPOT RIO First Dispatch to JYlarire Exchange. SAN FRANCISCO, Sep- tember 30, 2:11 m. The S. S. Alameda is ashore de as There Jittle from t',e assistM!ce of e Yt7l tugs are now to vessel , she win prove a total loss. t T was received in this city by the Marine Exchange. The cable t io the Exchange was as given above. .7 fu T rcccivcu tin- - After without a mlsftrtune S. to vessel. received cablegram from a oM Alameda, notifying his K. 15, a day while en route to News of the to the RANCH CASE ex- plained corres-ppnden- compromised. Wundenberg's MANCHURIA. p. at Honolulu. accident vessel Fred Wundenberg never want- ed litigation and favored efforts to settle the matter by proposing a Board of Trustees to handle the ranch. A letter from a law- yer gave him to understand ..nat there would be "a fight to a finish." received," said Wundenberg. Kinney said there was a previous let- ter and that he wanted all the cor- respondence in. Magoon said ho also wanted It all, and Wundenberg said (Continued on page five.) ALAMEDA BUILT IN PHILADELPHIA WAS 22 YEARS OLD BUT HAD BEEN REFITTED AND OVER- HAULED FOUR YEARS AGO. The Alameda was built by W. Cramp & Sons at Philadelphia In 1883. Her gross tonnage was 3158, tonnage under decks was 293G, and net tonnage 1939. She was 314 feet In length, 41.0 feet beam and 17.3 in depth. The vessel has a single screw. The vessel was put out or commis- sion four years ago and given a thor- ough overhauling by the Rlsdon Iron Works. She was converted Into an oil burner and has proved highly success ful. She ha3 never had an accident through the burning of oil. Her speed was nlso Increased The vessel was formerly on the Colonial run, but af ter the advent of tho new steamers was put on tho local run, replacing the S S. Austral'a. Tho Alameda has been famous for Its excellent service and Is one of the most popular vossels that comes Into Honolulu despite the fact that she Is the smallest passengor boat now In service out of this port. Cap tain Thomas Dowdoll, was her master, her other officers were: Chief Officer, Anderson, chief engineer, Owens, and Purser, Thomas Smith. She was due hero nex't Friday. The probabilities are that tho mall will not bo lost and will be sent on a subsequent vessol, Evon t I ; - . , - . , , , ., ' . , ' . THE LATEST NOVELTIES. Trt crpt nnnimlnfpil with tlir vprv Inf RHEUMATISM. Chamberlain's PERILS THE GOLDEN GATE Second Dispacth flarine Exchange SAN FRANCISCO, Sept. 30.-T- he S. S. Alameda struck on a rock fifty feet from Fort Point at the same spot where Pacific Mail S. S. City of Rio Janeiro struck on February 22, 1901, and was lost. It appears the rock had punctured the hull of the Alameda amidships. A dense fog prevailed at time the Alameda struck. was excitement time accident. The passengers trans- ferred Alameda tugs which went Fort Point at the entrance'0 trying V('sse!' Th? ot the narbor Particulars prohabiy later :rocA-cv- . M:.:.c.e v"r single-mishap- , commission Francisco. IN PARKER the the sent Alameda. While particulars been the cablegram Waldron the tion the dangerous, she the rocks. Certainly she time before novelties from fashion's centers, 1,er run. , visit Dry and inspect vessel evidently got aground a fog. cable the Marine goods selected Mr. Sachs Exchange earlier morning announced her departure from San on recent eastern trip, they ar- - nearly time and j f Honolulu. She evidently got awav rived S. S. Alameda. . ' , .ran the rocks Point a fog. Tort Ppmt marks the tumbelin. 'southern side the narrowest point the Golden Gate. Lime Point Tumbeiin is the game which the northern side. The bay between these points not much threatens to prove a success, over a width and would be therefore easy for a vessel than ping-pon- g ever did. Dally pCt out her course and into danger the fog were very heavy. Un- - nlTf'VnlnT,"11, N'C"l3 C" sole,til further details will have , . received , from the Marine .t Exchange i t INDICATIONS OF Soro and swollen Joints, sharp, shoot- ing pains, torturing muscles, no rest, no sleep that means rheumatism. It Is a stubborn diseaso to fight, but Pain Balm has conquer- ed ' It thousands of times. One appli- cation gives relief. Sold deal- - presumably Irwin mail ers, Benson. Smith & agents nassenrer3 information been local rose known that H. P. secretary Promotion Eddie Giffard, The nowest Douglas wiggln at Arieigh & Tho Aiameua. Sunset A. H. Lewis. OF no to of 'if est Co. in A to the now by in his on the on to at of of now on is in to do- - 0f by all of for of of by by HANG SPLENDID had for re- - A. of WITH' Wells and MARINER. Thoso passed through the Golden 011 a bright morn- ing, tho flecked clouds, wonder It a big ship, full - equip- ped as to machinery and officered by thoroughly capable possi- bly go ashoro anywhere unless through carelessness. Those whoso lot It has watch at the Golden Gate when tho dense tho notorious fog of San Frantcsco poring In,, when tho 0110 and the tho other, will not for a minute think was anything of carelessness In tho mis- hap which has deprived Honolulu ot her It fell to tho lot of the writer to a watch for somo at on flvc if the Alameda Is saved months are likely to ellipse boforo she will bo to resume her run. Automobiles night at Stubles, of Street. the if at the of the were the to firsl misl goods that been the have given it is evident from that posi vessel must be as is on is gotten off, it be some is able to resume Sachs' Goods The p by lort in is greater mile it if been to ready anu tne ssociaieu I ress u is suie iu assume nun mc vussti aground in a fog. Captain Dowdell, her master, who in command of her trip, is an experienced navigator is acquainted with San Francisco bay. Up to 12:30 o'clock this afternoon W. G. & Company, the agents Oceanic S. S. Company, had not received any cable- gram apprising them of mishap to the vessel. The company is usually advised in advance bv of th6 freight shipments and Co., booked, but this .has not received at the Hawaii. i m agency. 0''the river ' II is Wood, the new of the book Kate Committee, and Spreckels' Bank, those Co's. Also who were to take passage oy tne Trail n PETERSON DEAD D. P. Peterson, the known sep- tuagenarian had friends in TTnnnliiln died this afternoon at his 'residence, 22fi Emma Square. Ho had 111 a and no definite FOGS OVER hopes been entertained his Peterson, AND TIDES WORK JcTTupeHntenuent Oahu insane WINDS TO FIGHT THE Asylum, E. Peterson A. who have Gato summer blue sky, with fleecy overhead, may woll how happons that men, could gross been times fog, Bay comes nnd tldos set way wind that thero favorite ship. present time Fort "'ontlnued ptcs some can bo Club hired day Fort to had by will she the gut was this and well the the the were some p well who many been for long time THE Mrs. keep V, Gear are his offspring. A MATTER OF HEALTH POWDER Absolutely Pure HAS HO SUBSTITUTE THE CHIEF AMBITION. with every well dressed man Is to make his feet look drossy and to wear shoes which set oft his general ap- pearance to advantage. Our new consignment of Charles Caso's shoes for men Is certainly un- surpassed for Ideality of conception, stylo and wear. I Shoo critics are unanimous In their opinion that these shoes aro tho best 1 value for tho money of any on tho market. The shoo figured opposite Is a flno patent colt Oxford mado on tho Plcadll-l- y last with now Cuban heels. Tho prlco Is $6 and tho shoo will substan- tiate all wo have said In Its favor. LIMITED 1051 FORT SRGET

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Page 1: If HK TXT om T3...3- If You News, want toilny to-day's THE HK TXT AHA om 75: T3 Is The tlio Hawaiian paper Star that you 11 ml It In goes Into the best THE STAll SrML AMJfJLr homes

3 -

If YouNews,

wanttoilny

to-

day's THE HK TXT AHA om 75: T3 IsThe

tlioHawaiian

paperStarthat

Into the bestyou 11 ml It In goesTHE STAll SrML AMJfJLr homes of Ilonolnlu

I Classified Ads, Three Times, 25 Cents I

TVOL. XIII. HONOLULU, HAWAII, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1905. No. 4221

STARTS AFTER

" BEEF TRUST"

BRECKONS ABOUT TO BRING A SUIT AGAINST THE METROPOLITAN

MEAT COMPANY AND ABOUT SEVENTY O THE It DEPENDANTS,

TO ENJOIN THEM FROM CARRYING ON AN ALLEGED COMBI

NATION TO PROTECT PRICES.

Tho federal government has declaredwar on tho Hawaiian "beef trust."District Attorney Brcckons will In thonear future file an Injunction suit Intho United States Court, against theMetropolitan Meat Company and aboutseventy other .defendants, Includingnearly all the cattle men In the Islandsalso, It Is stated, the officers of the Ha-

waiian Live Stock Breeders'tlon, The complaints are to bo printedand Brcckons' has been after bids forprinting them. Though he declines todiscuss the matter, It is known that theprinting job on which he is at work, istho voluminous complaint ngalnst themeat market and tho live stock men.

It Is known that Brcckons some timoago submitted tho matter to the UnitedStates Attorney General. An investi-gation was made here, and the case wassubmitted to Washington about threemonths ago. The procedure now Indi-cates that orders have come fromWashington to break up the allegedcombination. The existing state of af-

fairs is evidently regarded In Washing-ton as a violation of the anti-tru- st law.

ATTORNEY

allThe suit is to be based little, abstain from competing with

on an alleged agreement whereby one another in supplying the local marcattle and meat men have combined to ket. They send reports to the Metro-forc- e

up the price of meat prevent polltan Meat Company of how manyall competition in the sale of cattle. It cattle they have ready for killing. ThenIs alleged that the agreement Is be- - .the meat company makes up an order

'tween the meat company on the one for whatever number it can use andihand and the cattle men on the other. Axes the price and apportions the or

vvaiurun, me cusiunis uruKer, a. cauiuuiuuiJ tilnSf, !? ID years has befallen the imil the an the He his

ply and sale of "meat the Island of the number of cattle ordered. Testl-'S- - the favorite local boat that plies between Honolulu and dried fruit house him the Alameda was onOahu. San The vessel went ashore inside the Golden Gate to- - the rocks and nskinn- - whether the firm should dunlicate orders of

The agreement, It Is stated, Is one by

TO

Recent rumored efforts to compromisethe Parker ranch litigation were

In Judge Lindsay's court thismorning, when Fred Wundenberg told

f tho propostlon made,was Introduced showing how

the proposals failed-- A plan to managetho Parker ranch by a board of direc-tors was proposed,, b.ut Trustee CarterIt appears, would not listen to any

,'propos)tlon to compromise the suitmaking charges against him and de-

manding his removal, tho manage-ment plan was held by his attorneys tobo illegal. Hence, as Wundenbergput it, he the Impression from At-

torney Kinney, that it must be a "lightto a finish."

Wundenberg said he wrote to A. W.Carter guardian for Annie T. Par-ker, on July 5 last, suggesting that Itwould bo better for all If the casescould be He suggesteddisposing, of the ranch question byplacing tho direction of Its affairs Inthe hands of a board of three, consisting of Wundenberg as trustee for Sam

RestAssured

that flro can

your valuablo

they In a box our

safo deposit Tho cost

Is only per year and up,

TRUSTGO.LTD

Street,Honolulu

DISTRICT B RECKONS.

which the ranchmen, big-

understoodthe

that

(Contlnuod on page Ave.)

and

and

aisu

and

and

got

were to appoint a manager, who wasto have full charge of the ranch. SamParker, A. W. Carter, and their agentswere to have full to visit tho

and make as to Itsmanagement to tho board, but theymust not interfere otherwise. Allmoney, except what was needed atthe ranch, was to bo on deposit to bodrawn only by a majority of tho board.

said that If thisplan was accepted, the partition suitwould bo withdrawn, and he woulduso his endeavors to have J. S. Lowwithdraws- - his suit to Carter asguardfan.

Magoon asked what was re-

ceived, and Wundenberg produced aletter July from Kinney,

and Ballou, attorneys for A.W. Carter. Ho was reading it whenKinney Interrupted, and wanted toknow if that was the first answer re-

ceived. The was .to thethat the plan would be a delegation byGuardian Carter of his powers as anofficer of tho court, and vould not be

Parker, A. W. Carter as guardian of allowed by the court, though thoT. K. Parker, and some third torneys expressed themselves ready to

party to be selected. Ho named J. O. discuss It. '.RIBBSCarter as his choice. These "I think that. Is tho only answer I

neither nor burglar

harm belongings

when repose In

vaults.

$5

Fort

powerranch suggestions

letter

remove

answer

dated

letter effect

three

BY THETho largest consignment of freight

from the Orient by the Manchuria wasfor K. Yamamoto. wholesale dealer InJapanese provisions a--d general 'merchandise.

UTILIZE(To Make Vie Of)

This Is what I should do with thatwall space that I have. How well Itwould look to have It filled In withnice set of QLOBE-WERNICK- E bookcases; and It would certainly keep mybooks In better shape. I think I willlake ten minutes and go and see themat.

The J, A, Mi Johnson Co,

LIMITED

931 FortPhone Main 14),

Street.

P, O, Fox 514.

Specializes In Modern Office and StoreMethods,

BE

STRUCK SAME

EFFORTS COMPROMISE

MAY

TOTAL LOSS

WHERE TH EWAS LOST.

SPOTRIO

First Dispatch to JYlarire Exchange.

SAN FRANCISCO, Sep-tember 30, 2:11 m. TheS. S. Alameda is ashore

de

as

There Jittle

fromt',e assistM!ce of e Yt7ltugs are now to vessel,

she win prove a total loss.tT was received in this city by the Marine Exchange. The cablet io the Exchange was as given above.

.7 fu T rcccivcu tin- -After without a mlsftrtune S. to vessel. received cablegram from a

oM Alameda, notifyinghis

K.15,

a

day while en route to News of the to the

RANCH CASEex-

plained

corres-ppnden-

compromised.

Wundenberg's

MANCHURIA.

p.at

Honolulu. accident vessel

Fred Wundenberg never want-ed litigation and favored effortsto settle the matter by proposinga Board of Trustees to handlethe ranch. A letter from a law-yer gave him to understand ..natthere would be "a fight to afinish."

received," said Wundenberg.Kinney said there was a previous let-

ter and that he wanted all the cor-respondence in. Magoon said ho alsowanted It all, and Wundenberg said

(Continued on page five.)

ALAMEDA BUILT

IN PHILADELPHIA

WAS 22 YEARS OLD BUT HADBEEN REFITTED AND OVER-

HAULED FOUR YEARS AGO.

The Alameda was built by W. Cramp& Sons at Philadelphia In 1883. Hergross tonnage was 3158, tonnage underdecks was 293G, and net tonnage 1939.She was 314 feet In length, 41.0 feetbeam and 17.3 in depth. The vessel hasa single screw.

The vessel was put out or commis-sion four years ago and given a thor-ough overhauling by the Rlsdon IronWorks. She was converted Into an oilburner and has proved highly successful. She ha3 never had an accidentthrough the burning of oil. Her speedwas nlso Increased The vessel wasformerly on the Colonial run, but after the advent of tho new steamers wasput on tho local run, replacing the SS. Austral'a. Tho Alameda has beenfamous for Its excellent service and Isone of the most popular vossels thatcomes Into Honolulu despite the factthat she Is the smallest passengor boatnow In service out of this port. Captain Thomas Dowdoll, was her master,her other officers were: Chief Officer,Anderson, chief engineer, Owens, andPurser, Thomas Smith. She was duehero nex't Friday. The probabilities arethat tho mall will not bo lost and willbe sent on a subsequent vessol, Evon

t

I ;

-.

,

- . , , , .,

'

.

,

'

.

THE LATEST NOVELTIES.Trt crpt nnnimlnfpil with tlir vprv Inf

RHEUMATISM.

Chamberlain's

PERILS THE

GOLDEN GATE

Second Dispacth flarine Exchange

SAN FRANCISCO, Sept.30.-T- he S. S. Alameda struckon a rock fifty feet from FortPoint at the same spot where

Pacific Mail S. S. City ofRio Janeiro struck onFebruary 22, 1901, and waslost.

It appears the rockhad punctured the hull ofthe Alameda amidships. Adense fog prevailed attime the Alameda struck.

was excitement timeaccident. The passengers trans-

ferred Alameda tugs which went

Fort Point at the entrance'0 tryingV('sse!'

Th?

ot the narbor Particulars prohabiylater :rocA-cv- . M:.:.c.e

v"r single-mishap- ,

commissionFrancisco.

IN PARKER

the

the

sent Alameda. While particularsbeen the cablegram Waldron thetion the dangerous, she the rocks. Certainly

she time beforenovelties from fashion's centers, 1,er run. ,

visit Dry and inspect vessel evidently got aground a fog. cable the Marinegoods selected Mr. Sachs Exchange earlier morning announced her departure from San

on recent eastern trip, they ar- - nearly time andj f Honolulu. She evidently got awavrived S. S. Alameda. . ', .ran the rocks Point a fog. Tort Ppmt marks the

tumbelin. 'southern side the narrowest point the Golden Gate. Lime PointTumbeiin is the game which the northern side. The bay between these points not much

threatens to prove a success, over a width and would be therefore easy for a vesselthan ping-pon- g ever did. Dally pCt out her course and into danger the fog were very heavy. Un- -nlTf'VnlnT,"11, N'C"l3 C" sole,til further details will have

, .received,

from the Marine.t

Exchangei t

INDICATIONS OFSoro and swollen Joints, sharp, shoot-

ing pains, torturing muscles, no rest,no sleep that means rheumatism. ItIs a stubborn diseaso to fight, but

Pain Balm has conquer-ed ' It thousands of times. One appli-cation gives relief. Sold deal- -

presumably

Irwin

mailers, Benson. Smith & agents nassenrer3 information been

localrose known that H. P. secretary Promotion

Eddie Giffard,The nowest Douglaswiggln at Arieigh & Tho Aiameua.Sunset A. H. Lewis.

OF

noto

of'if

estCo. in A to

the now by inhis on

theon to at

of ofnow on is

in todo-- 0f

by all

of

for

of ofby

by

HANG SPLENDID had for re- -A.of

WITH' Wells and

MARINER.

Thoso passed through theGolden 011 a bright morn-ing, tho fleckedclouds, wonderIt a big ship, full - equip-ped as to machinery and officered bythoroughly capable possi-bly go ashoro anywhere unless through

carelessness. Those whoso lotIt has watch at theGolden Gate when tho dense thonotorious fog of San Frantcsco

poring In,, when tho0110 and the tho other, willnot for a minute think wasanything of carelessness In tho mis-hap which has deprived Honolulu other

It fell to tho lot of the writerto a watch for somo at

on flvc

if the Alameda Is saved monthsare likely to ellipse boforo she will bo

to resume her run.

Automobilesnight at Stubles,

ofStreet.

the

if

at theof the were

the to

firsl

misl

goods that been the havegiven it is evident from that posi

vessel must be as is onis gotten off, it be some is able to resume

Sachs' Goods The

pby lort in

isgreater mile it

ifbeen

to

ready

anu tne ssociaieu I ress u is suie iu assume nun mc vusstiaground in a fog. Captain Dowdell, her master, whoin command of her trip, is an experienced navigator isacquainted with San Francisco bay.

Up to 12:30 o'clock this afternoon W. G. & Company, theagents Oceanic S. S. Company, had not received any cable-

gram apprising them of mishap to the vessel. The company isusually advised in advance bv of th6 freight shipments and

Co., booked, but this .has not received at theHawaii. i

m agency.0''the river ' II is Wood, the new of the

book Kate Committee, and Spreckels' Bank, thoseCo's. Also who were to take passage oy tne

Trail

n PETERSON DEAD

D. P. Peterson, the known sep-

tuagenarian had friends inTTnnnliiln died this afternoon at his

'residence, 22fi Emma Square. Ho had111 a and no definite

FOGS OVER hopes been entertained hisPeterson,

AND TIDES WORK JcTTupeHntenuent Oahu insaneWINDS TO FIGHT THE Asylum, E. Peterson A.

who haveGato summer

blue sky, with fleecyoverhead, may woll how

happons that

men, could

grossbeen times

fog,Bay

comes nnd tldos setway wind

that thero

favorite ship.presenttime Fort

"'ontlnued ptcs

some

can boClub

hired dayFort

to

had by

will she

the

gutwas

this and well

thethe

the

were some

p

wellwho many

been for long timeTHE

Mrs.

keep

V, Gear are his offspring.

A MATTER OFHEALTH

POWDERAbsolutely Pure

HAS HO SUBSTITUTE

THE CHIEF AMBITION.

with every well dressed man Is tomake his feet look drossy and to wearshoes which set oft his general ap-pearance to advantage.

Our new consignment of CharlesCaso's shoes for men Is certainly un-surpassed for Ideality of conception,stylo and wear.

I Shoo critics are unanimous In theiropinion that these shoes aro tho best

1 value for tho money of any on thomarket.

The shoo figured opposite Is a flnopatent colt Oxford mado on tho Plcadll-l- y

last with now Cuban heels. Thoprlco Is $6 and tho shoo will substan-tiate all wo have said In Its favor.

LIMITED

1051 FORT SRGET

Page 2: If HK TXT om T3...3- If You News, want toilny to-day's THE HK TXT AHA om 75: T3 Is The tlio Hawaiian paper Star that you 11 ml It In goes Into the best THE STAll SrML AMJfJLr homes

.'V

'HIVTWO. THH HAWAIIAN STAR, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1005.

Steamship Company. P I(For additional and later shipping seo

pages 4, 5 or 8.) From Kaiser's Country...TIDES. SUN AND MOON.Tho flno Passonger Steamers of this lino will arrlvo at and leave this portaa hereunder: Last Quarter of tho Moon Sept. 21st.

tnFROM SAN FRANCISCO. FOR SAN FRANCISCO. c Bto

a aALAMEDA SEPTEMDER 15 SIERRA SEPTEMBER 5 P.3 I

SEPTEMBER 27 SEPTEMBER 20SIERRA ALAMEDA ? : h : t? S rsALAMEDA OCTOBER 6 SONOMA SEPTEMBER 26 : 8 : : : " 8" asSONOMA OCTOBER 18 ALAMEDA OCTOBER 11 : : re : : : U re

ALAMEDA OCTOBER 27 OCTOBER 17VENTURA a.m. ft. p. m. p.m. RisesVENTURA NOVEMBER 8 ALAMEDA NOVEMBER 1 18 C.22 1.3 C.12 12.3G 5.48 G.00 9.29ALAMEDA.. ..NOVEMBER 17 SIERRA NOVEMBER 7 a.m.

SIERRA NOVEMBER 29 ALAMEDA NOVEMBER 22 19 7.10 1.4 7.00 0.13 1.43 5.48 5.59 10.11 WOODENAXiAMEDA DECEMBER 8 SONOMA NOVEMBER 28 20 8.10 1.4 8.0S 1.00 3.05 6.48 5.58 10.57SONOMA DECEMBER 20 ALAMEDA DECEMBER 13 21 9.20 1.4 9.50 1.62 4.40 6.48 5.57 11.45ALAMEDA DECEMBER 29 VENTURA DECEMBER 19 22 10.30 1.4 11.25 3.05 C.55 5.49 5.56

p.m. a.m.23 11.35 1.5 6.45 4.30 5.49 6.53 0.37

Local Boat.

In connection with tho sailing of tho abovo steamers, tho Agents aro pre-

pared to Issue to Intending passengers coupon through tickets by any rail-

road from San to all points In tho United States, and from NewYork by steamship lino to all Europca n Ports.

For further particulars apply to

S3 rm

(LL ITED)

Qeaeral Agete Oceanic S. S. Company.- '" """""" '"

-- Australian

fteamers of the above line, running In connection with CANADIAN-PACIFI- C

RAILWAY COMPANY between Vancouver, B. C, and Sydney, N.

O. W., and calling at Vlctc a, B .C, Honolulu and Brisbane, Q.

Duo at Honolulu on or about tho dates below stated, viz:FOR USTRALIA.

MANUKA AUG. 2G

AORANGI SEPT. 23

MIOWERA OCT 21

MOANA NOV. 18

CALLING AT SUVA, FIJI, ON BOTH UP AND DOWNVOYAGES.

THEO. H. DAVIES & CO.. Ltd,, Gen'l Agts.

AMERICAN HAWAIIAN STEAMSHIP COMPANY.

AND VIA

S. S. To sailS, S. To

S. S.S. S. To sail

S. S. sailS". S. To sail

S. S. To sailS. S. To sail

XsC. P.

of the abovepert on or about the dates below men

FOR ANDSIBERIA AUG. 3

SEPT. 2

SEPT. 13SEPT. 27

OCT. 419

OCT. 28SIBERIA NOV. 11

NOV. 22

DEC. 2DEC. 16

DEC. 23190G.

6

or apply to

FOR VANCOUVER.AORANGI AUG. 23

MIOWERA SEPT. 20

MOANA OCT 18

MIOWERA DEC. 13

will call at Honolulu and leave thistloned:

FOR SANAUG. 18

SEPT. 1MANCHURIA SEPT. 8

SEPT. 27

OCT. 3

SIBERIA OCT. 17

,. OCT. 27

T..NOV 7

NOV. 21

NOV. 28

DEC. 12

DEC. 221906.

SIBERIA JAN. E

JDIRECT MONTHLY SERVICE BETWEEN NEWYORK PACIFIC COAST.

FROM NEW YORK TO HONOLULU."ALASKAN" October 3rd, 1905"TEXAN" sail November . . .

FROM FRANCISCO TO HONOLULU DIRECT."NEVADAN" To sail October 7th, 1905"NEBRASKAN" October 26th, 1905

FROM HONOLULU TO SAN FRANCISCO."NEBRASKAN" To September 26th,"NEVADAN" October 17th, 1905

FROM SEATTLE TACOMA VIA SAN FRANCISCO."NEBRASKAN" October 15th, 1905"NEVADAN" November 5th, 1905

EI. Haolrield Co.MORSE, General Freight Agent.

Mail Co,& S. S. Co

Steamers Companies

CHINA JAPAN.

MONGOLIACHINADORIC

OCT.COPTIC

MONGOLIACHINADORICMANCHURIA

KOREA JAN.

general ln...matlon

H Hackfe

FRANCISCO.CHINADORIC

KOREACOPTIC

MONGOLIACHINADORICMANCHURIAKOREACOPTIC

HONOLULU,

SAN

1905

AND

Agents.

MANCHURIAKOREA

IdDon't drink any old beer or you aro

apt to form an erroneous opinion of. thebrewer's product.

-Ililill JSqf- lll -

AND

Beer

recommend themselves on trial aspeerless brows of extraordinary

Eli B. Woodford, of Woodbury county, Iowa, glories in being al-

most the homeliest man in that section. Yet about 24 years ago hewon a silver cup for being the handspmest baby in the county.

' jrMPt!''HnHiHHBBB fliB 'raFr

Oceanic IEUHSthe

WAKE

Canadian Royal Mai

STEAEV33HSP COMPANY

Pacific SteamshipOccidental Oriental

8c Co

Wurzburger

p.m. a.m.24 12.30 1.5 0.27 7.27 5.45 5.49 5.54 1.3325 1.18 1.6 1.20 S.10 6.45 6.49 6.53 2.30

Times of the tide ure tnken from theU. S. Coast and Geodetic Survey ta-bles. The tides at Kahulul and Hllooccur about one hour earlier than atHonolulu, Hawaiian sta dard time Is10 hours 30 minutes slower than Green-wich time, being that of the meridianof 157 degrees 30 minutes. The timewhistle blows at 1:30 p. m., which Isthe same as Greenwich, 0 hours, 0 min-utes. The Sun and Moon are for localtime for the whole group.

METEOROLOGY OF OCTOBER.Local OHlce, U. S. Weather Bureau.Tho following data, covering a period

of 29 years, linvo boon compiled fromtlie Weather Bureau and McKibbln re-

cords nt Honolulu, T. II. They aro Is-

sued to show tho conditions that haveprevailed, during tho month in ques-

tion, for tho abovo period of years,but must not be construed as a fore-

cast of tho weather conditions for thocoming month.

Month October for 29 years.TEMPERATURE, (1890-1904- .)

Mean or normal temperature, 77

Tho warmest month was that of 189G,

with an average of 77

Tho coldest month was that of 1903,

with an average of 75

Tho highest temperature was 90 onOctober 10, 1891.

Tho lowest temperaturo was 63 onOctober 30, 1S92.

PRECIPITATION ((rain) (1S77-1S-

and 1904.)Avcrago for tho month 1.76 Inches.Average number of days with .01

of an Inch or more, 13.

Tho greatest monthly precipitationwas 4.32 Inches in 1S84.

Tho least monthly precipitation was0.44 inches In 1SS5.

Tho greatest amount of precipitationrecorded In any 24 consecutive hourswas 2.3G Inches on Ootobcr 29, 1SS2.

CLOUDS AND WEATHER.(1S90-1904- .)

Averago number of clear days, 10;

partly cloudy days, 17; clotuly days.WIND.

Tho prevailing winds have been fromtho northeast.

The average hourly velocity of thewind during October 1904, was 8.1.

Tho highest velocity of the windduring October 1901, was 28 miles fromtho northeast o ntho 26th.

Station: Honolulu, T. H.Dato of Issue: September 29, 1903.

ALEX. McC. ASHLEY,Section Director, Weather Bureau.

ARRIVING.Friday, September 29.

Am. bktn. Irmgard, Schmidt, 13 daysfrom San Francisco at 2 p. m.

Sunday, October 1.

Stmr. W. G. Hall, S. Thompson, fromKauai ports, duo early In morning.

Stmr. Likellke, Naopaln, from MoIq-k- al

Maul and Lanal ports, due.Tuesday, October 3.

S. 8. Coptic, Finch, from the Orient,duo In afternoon.

S. S. Manchuria .from San Franciscoduo in morning.

DEPARTING.Tuesday, October 3.

S. S. Coptic, Finch, for San Francisco,probably sail In afternoon.

S. S. Manchuria, for tho Orient, prob-ably sail In evening.

PASSENGERS.Departing.

Per stmr. Maul, September 29, forMaul ports Thomas H. Kennedy, C.L. Kookoo, Rev. J. E. Kekipl, Miss J.Correa, Mr. and Mrs. Joe Correa, Mrs.Alnpal, Mrs. W. Nawahl Jr., Miss A.Batlge, Dr. W. D. Baldwin family andservants, J. X. S. Williams and wife,II. T. McCrubbc, D. C. Murdock, andservuut, Mrs. Hideout, Mrs. J. Kuae,C. Gay.

TO LEAVE HAWAII

SECRETARY W. F. ERVING OFtheir

withREMOVE TO SAN FRANCISCO.

committee,

of

physicians distributed,

withwill represent MetropolitanCompany at Francisco, Manager G.

Waller having him thatmission. Ervlng one of

of employees of com-pany, having been cashier forfour

been very prominent localDemocratic politics and splen-did servlco in helping to un

in islands. His voice willbe missed councils of party,as he distinctively a ofprogressive radical ofdemocracy.

W. W. DinOND

WUNDENBURG

OPPOSED

SAM PARKER'S TRUSTEE WIT-

NESS YESTERDAY IN THE PAR-

KER RANCH CASE.

Fred Wundenburg on the witnessstand In the Parker case In

Judge Lindsay's court yesterday afternoon, succeeding Samuel Parker, Jr.Wundenburg stated that he had oppos

ed tho starting of suit, also thatMagoon advised against It and hadnot wanted to bring It. Magoon at firstrefused It, later took It up,witness did know why.

Wundenburg declined to testify aboutthe of cattle ranch,stating that he was an expert. Asto sale of Humuula, which defendants charge there effort to getfrom Sam Parker by Wundenburgsaid that he had always advised against

sale, holding that propertyshould be kept for Jr.

THE GHOST WALKED

illCOUNTY EMPLOYEES PAID OFF

THIS MORNING AND MUCH MON-

EY DISTRIBUTED.

This was one of happy days forCounty employees, though It doubt-ful if It brought any particular happi-ness to Janitor of the Melntyreblock In which County offices arosituated. Tho rich rain of last nighthad caused a very fine and sticky linenf .TYIII.1 trt.J r ...v nlnni. 1. ol.nAto UIIUo .1 ias lne employees of Oahu trooped up

sections of County which de-posited neatly on the floor as they went

s. An enterprising real estato

called, without discount and thennway again to make glad tho

of other peonlo to whom some, thing might be coming.

OLYMPIC TOOK SUGAR BALLASTTho bark Olympic sailed last Thurs-

day San Francisco with a cargo of2,040 bags of sugar. She to'ok consider-able honey and empty barrels.

MANCHURIA DUE TUESDAYTho S. S. Manchuria Is duo on Tues-

day morning from San Francisco. Shewill llo outside of harbor.

stairs to get warrants fromCOMMITTEE WILL tor Bunnell they carried them

W. F. Ervlng, secretary of tho agent might have made moneyterritorial will ting Imported sections Into town

leave Honolulu shortly to reside on lots.mainland. Erving's change residence The County ofllces were naturallyIs made necessary by the poor health, crowded for today pay the lat-- of

his wife. Tho have oT tor 1'"" of the month wasdercd her to reside In San Francisco The warrant holders trooped toand he will leave about October II by Trent's office, turned their warrantstho Alameda his family. Ervlng, Into tho exact amount which they

the MeatSan

J. given com- -is tho most

trusted the thethe last

years.has In

has donebuild the

party theseIn the

was member thoand wing the

A

wasrnnch

thehad

but thenot

care the on thenot

thewas an

Low,

the theSam,

WAS

theIs

thetho

the they

anytroopedhearts

for

ON

tho

tho bytho

the

tho for

across

for

Ho

the

A recent invoice of Germany's finest wooden ware at hand. Theseparticular articles are offered to Honolulu's Mistresses of DomesticScience, who are assured that they will get values that surpass any-thing that has ever appeared on the local market.

One of the best and most useful things of this lot is a potatomasher, made out of one piece, and turned until there is not a crackor crevice to mar its hard surface. It is guaranteed to last a life-tim- e.

Other notable articles arc Rolling Pins, Basting and SkimmingSpoons, Butter Spades, Salt and Knife Boxes, Wine Cooler, Fruit andFlour Sieves, Chopping Blocks hand carved Bread and Ham Boards.

Elat andFluted,

RoundWoodenPiePlates

In Crates or by theDozen

What do we claim for this line? Simply that they will give entiresatisfaction, and that they are made with the greatest care by highlyskilled men, using selected material only, and that by virtue of thesefeatures, both dealer and user will be

SONG

& CO., LTD.,"ALWAYS IN THE LEAD."

BILIOUS COLIC PKEVENTED.Take a double doso of Chamberlain's

Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedyas soon as the first indication of thodisease appears and a threatened at-tack may bo warded off. Hundreds ofpeople who aro subject to attacks 'ofbilious colic uso tho remedy In thisway with perfect success. For saleby all dealers, Benson, Smith & Co.,agents for Hawaii.

Want Ads in The Star bring quickresults. Three lines three times for 25

cents.

THE RAILWAY

OFPOUCH ( MAILS

VIA THE O. R. & L. CO.

Two Sizes

OvalWooden,ButterDishes

Crates or

gratified.

GSS-fSG-S- Street,Honolulu,

HONOLULU, TERRITORY HAWAII.DISPATCH .LOSED

T Be I"cluded- -

Closed malls Pouch Service R. R.-St- a.

to Postofflces. For Ofllces. Days of Week Dispatch Train No. Delivery at

Alea 9 Aiea ,

Pearl City... Wahlawa.. Dally-Ex-Su- n 3 Pearl C;ty...Walpahu " Walpahu.Waipahu Sat-only.- ... 0- - Walpahu ,

Ewa 9 Ewa Mill....Halelwa 3- - Wa anaeWalalee.. ., 9 PuulklWalanae 9 Halelwa (flagWalalua 3- - Walalee (flag)

Lale ).. Tues-lluirs- .'. 9 KahukuKahuku Hauula ).. Sat. (Alter

Walkane).. 9:00 a. m.)..

Pouch to Wnlalua Postofflce b?Train 9. Dally except Sunday, return-ed empty by Train 12. Dally exceptSunday.

Pouch to Walpahu Postofflce, Satur-day only by Train 9.

Noto (1) When mall steamer fromSan Francisco arrives In time to connect Train No. 17 due fo leave 7:30 a,

a.p.

&

be

For ofLalo Mon-Wed--

(after.

rp.)Sat. (At

a. m.)Walalee....Halelwa...,Walalua..

Walanae...

Walpahu..Tues-Frl-(1:-

p. m.)

Pouch dispatched 9.

via12.

:

In by the

KinsT. M.

The Atchisoni TopekaAND

Santa Railway System

For of freight for East or Westbound merchandise to

THEO, H. DAVIES & CO., LTD.,

Freight Agents for the ofHawaii.

MAIL SERVICE.

I

) BY THE HONOLULU POSTOFFICBRAILROAD

No. 9 Dispatch to WalpahuWalanue, Walalee,

When mall steamer from SanFrancisco In time to connect

9 due to leave at 9:15 a. m.,and 3:20 . m., respectively, on Sun-days: Dispatch to all on line.

(4) When mall steamers from SanFrancisco In time to connect

Pouch Servlco DeliveryDispatch No. at

R. R.

Honolulu.

12- - Honolulu4.12 Honolulu12-- Honolulu...,.4-- Honolulu

4- - HonoluluHonolulu

Honolulu.

JPouch dispatched Train 9 Saturdayonly, returned via Train 4 Mon- -

flay. '

m., dally Sunday; dispatch to Train due to leavo dally at 11:05Aiea, P-a- rl Walpahu, Ewa. m., and 5:15 m., respectively: DIs- -

When mall steamer from San patch to Alea, Pearl City, Walpahu,Francisco In tlmo to connect Ewa.

HONOLULU, TERRITORY HAWAII.Pouch' Dispatch (Closed to the

Honolulu Postofflce.From Postofflces Route 180001.

Via tho O. R. L. Co. Railroad Service.

Closed Malls To Includedfrom

Postofflces.Ofllces. Days Week

)..Kahuku. Hauula ).. 0:20)

Walkane)

(5:30

Ewa

Pearl City. Wahlawa.

Alea.

Train Dalljexcept Sunday, returnedTraln Dally except Sunday.

Dozen

Fe

Ratesapply

Territory

SERVICE.

Train daily:additional.

(3)arrives

Train

offices

arrives

TrainStation

Honolulu

empty

exceptCity,

'(2)arrives

Malls)

empty

i i

i

i

Page 3: If HK TXT om T3...3- If You News, want toilny to-day's THE HK TXT AHA om 75: T3 Is The tlio Hawaiian paper Star that you 11 ml It In goes Into the best THE STAll SrML AMJfJLr homes

"A

1'

ISIn

Hobron Drug Cos Offer for a IName ac& Drawing

COriPETITION CLOSES OCTOBER 1ST

Briefly told, our proposition is this. We want to get, if possible, a catchy and more appropriatename for our Anti-Grip- pe Tablets. They arc going to be put on markets of the mainland. Wewant start right by having an attractive, name, and we believe there arc people inHawaii who could submit something unique in this line. Will you try? If the name you submit suitsus we will send you a check for $15.

Then we want a good drawing, something that suggests some one afflicted with a cold, grip,dengue, etc., and the little white tablet coming to their relief. If you can draw, send us your idea, andif we can use it as a trade-mar- k, you will receive a check for $10.

Put the names you submit, or the drawings, in an envelope, mark 'Anti-Gripp- e Tablets NameCompetition," and either leave at store or mail to us. Don't forget to sign your name and address.Yr.u are limited to number of names or drawings. They will all receive our careful considerationanl the ones selected which we believe will bring us best advertising results. Competition closesOctober 1st.

ANTI-GRIPP- E TABLETS HAVE, A PHENOMENAL SALE IT HAWAII. AND ALSO A

CROWING DEMAND FOR THEM ON THE MAINLAND. THEY POSSESS GREAT MERIT

A CURE FOR COLDS AND GRIP. THEY ARE WORTH

FOR THE FAMILY FOR ANYONE. THEY WILL BREAK

FEW HOURS. SAFE AND EASY TO TAKE. NO ONE CAN

ANTI-GRIPP- E TABLETS. DON'T ACCEPT SOMETHING "JUST GOOD" BUT INSIST

.ON HAVING THE GENUINE.

Price 25 cents.

SOLE MANUFACTURERS.

ElxleT-i5i-' Block - Fort Street.LONDON TIES TO

Correspondent's Blunders in Handling the Peace Negotiations toCost Him His Place.

NEW YORK, September 19 A cable to the World from London'

says: It is understood here that George W. Smalley, the Americancorrespondent of the London Timns, will be replaced by Dr. George,Ernest Morrison, correspondent of the Times at Peking.

Dissatisfaction has existed in the Times office over the handling of

the peace negotiations at Portsmouth by Smalley. Morrison was as-

sisting Smalley, and, while he furnished him with the information hegathered, Smalley wrote and signed all of the dispatches. Morrison is

said to have known twenty-fou- r hours in advance of the intention of

the Japanese Government to waive the claim for indemnity, whichvirtually meant the acceptance of the Russian conditions. He notified

. Smalley of this, but, as he declined to reveal the source of his informa-

tion, Smalley refused to send it to the Times.Atinflmi- - ennen for fnmtllnint IS S."l!d .TfnillSt Smallev IS that.vuliuv . ' ww.a.j'.u.. .,

despite the protests of Morrison, hecontrary to the policy of the Times.

Ii I GUI'S IRISIn

Notices for thts column should becent in not later than a o'clock Satur-day morning.

GERMAN LUTHERAN CHURCH.Deuthsche Lutherlscho KIrche Bere-tanl- a

Ave. riaho der Punchbowl street.Telephone White 2C91. Pastor Wllll-bal- d

Felmy. Residence Haalelea Lawncorner Hotel and Richard streets.

The Celebrated Ncrre Vltnllzer andTonic (Julckly Transformed This

Itun Down Woman She 4Can-no- tSoy Too Much" for

PIE'S JOHN

IT GIVES ALMOST INSTANT EFFECT

DENVER, Col. "After a Ions season with the'Silver Slipper' Company, I went to Galesburff tovisit ray brother and rest up for the comintr season.A professional who is compelled to ko through ahard season without any rest is totally run downbefore the season Is over. This was my caseexactly. Jly nerves were all unstrunirand I wasvery much in need of a Rood nerve tonic. A friendsuRRested that I Rive Paine's Celery Compound atrial, and 1 did. The Improvement was wonderful.When I received my call for rehearsal I left forNew York feeling like another person. I cannotsay too for l'alne's Celery Compound. Itdid me a world of good." Miss WiunifredGerard.

"Ilraced Invicorated-Cure- d" this Is the toneof thousands of letters sent In by men and womenof every calling and every station in life; gratefulfor the almost instant strength and health they getfrom l'aines Celery Compound. It feeds nature'sown nerve-foo- d Celery-dir- ect to the starvingnerve centers, and lo this way gives strength toevery organ of the body.

Mailed to any part of the world on

OUST SMALLEY

- - . Q jassumed a pro-Russi- an attitude,

Sonnagsscnuie, iu unr; uouesaionsiMorgens U Uhr; und Abends 7:30.

Services at 11 In the morning and 7:30the evening;

Sunday School at 10 a. m.

CHRISTIAN SCIENCE.Honolulu Christian Sclenco Associa-

tion, Room 1, Elite building. Sundayservices 11 a. m. Wednesday eveningmeetings 7:30. Subject of Lesson Ser-

mon October 1, "Aro Sin, Disease andDeath, Real."

Fine Job Printing. Star Office.

DENVER, COLO.

II

Miss WINIFRED QERARD.

LIKE ANOTHER PERSON

THE HAWAIIAN STAR, SATURDAY, SEPTEMOEII 30, 1003.

Prizes

theto

not

AS

AS

much

A WHOLE MEDICINE CASE

UP A SEVERE COLD IN A

AFFORD TO BE WITHOUT

receipt of price.

(WILL OVERHAUL

BUOY SYSTEM

LEHUA WILL START ON TUESDAYFOR OTHER ISLANDS CAPTAINNIBLACK WILL FORCE WORK.

Now that Captain Nlblack has re-

turned from his cruise to Midway, hewill start at once to have the buoy sys.tern of these Islands overhauled. Therehas not been much work done sinceJuly. The steamer Lehua will leaveTuesday for a cruise about the Islandsto overhaul the buoys. She will go toKamalo, Hllo and ah other ports wherethe government maintains buoys. Thocontract for laying the new can buoysat Pearl Harbor has not been let, butwill be In the course of a few weeks.

LIKE RUSSIA.Wandering Willie Dey tells me you

kicked like a mule wen dey tried terbathe yer at do jail do udder day.

Sweltering Samuel Dat'a right. I'mlike Russia, opposed ter given' up anyterritory whatever .New OrleansTimes-Democr-

Fine Job Printing, ar Office.

Avoid HeatAnd Worry!

AGasRange

will go a long way towardsecuring a comfortablehome

Miss Tracy's cooking demonstratlons are free.

Gas Co.,1

Ltd,

Office) Alexander Youns Uulldlng

Why Drinkluddy Water?

Imiv mnMi mnrn n' '"b " i'"'"-- ..-- ......spring when you have a real good thirst than the muddy prod-uct of a source you suspect can easily become contaminated.

auerbrunnenis the finest tabic water known. It is agreeable to the taste,refreshing, pure and healthful. It should be on every table atevery meal and should be always available between meals. Itmakes delicious lemonades. We will deliver to your home acase of 50 full size bottles for $4.50.

H. HACKFELD & CO.,Ltd.,''V: GROCERY DEPARTMENT.

Rays from...Wisdom's Lantern

Electricity in the house is a short cut to cheerfulness; elec-tricity in the office is a short cut to success; electricity in streetand avenue is a short cut to reform.

Electricity is an aid-de-ca- to beauty, for it reveals ugli-ness, an inspiration for exactness for it reveals slovenliness;a suggestion for happiness, because it reveals discontent andselfish melancholy.

Electricity is the coolest brilliant light, and so the ideal lightfor summer evenings.

Hawaiian Electric Co., Ltd.Office, King and Alakea Streets.

SCHOOL

fnmnitR

'Phone,

SUPPLIES

1,135

Time to send tho children to school has como round agann and oncomoro the question of where to get tho best and school sup-plies confronts parents. Wo are prepared to furnish everything need-ed in tho lino of school supplies at prices which surprisingly rea-sonable when the quality of the goods Is taken into consideration. Ourstock Includes BOOKS, PAPER, TABLETS, PENS, PENCILS, INKS,ERASERS, RULERS, COPYBOOKS, DRAWING MATERIALS,

ETC., ETC.

HAWAIIAN NEWS CO., LTDYOUNG BUILDING STORE.

OJEiOXO GOODSLadles' Silk Kimonos IIChildren's Silk Kimonos 2,75Silk Short Kimonos g2i

Silks (In all colors) per yard j0Silk Cushion Covers with Coat of A rms, Silk Linen and Cotton Hand

kerchiefs, Furses for ladles, J apancse Screens and styleat very low prices.

IC FUKUKODA,28 and 32 Hote Robinson Block

Hawaiian Office Specially Co,

72 King St., Waity Block.

Tel. Main 15.

P. O. Box

AGENTS FOR

Remingtont ex. 11 X ex. x X

TTlf pewhitb t

Burroughs Adding Machine,Union CoshBerger Steel Cabinets,Wabash Cabinets,Edison Mimeographs,Oscillators and Rotarles,Mimeograph Supplies,Typewriter Supplies,McMillan Loose Leaf LedgersEdison & BatesNumbering Machines,Victor Safes & Vault FixturesSpecial Manganese Safes andVault Fixtures for BanksLeopold,Derby,Macey,Remington andG. II. Ful er'sDesks,Swinging Typewriter Stands,Monarch Telephone Desks,Pelouze Scales,Telephone Brackets,Offlco SuppliesOf every DescriptionREPAIRING and ADJUSTINGOf Automatic MachineryA 'Specialty.

John A cxandor Dowlo is ono of thefortunate men who havo in

a great deal of other people'smoney with out with an Investigation. Washington Star .

cnnrL-liii- o wntot from n

Main 390.

I s asTHAN

cheapest

aro

SLATES,

IS.

Japanese

Japanese latestVases

St.

304

Register,

succeededhandling

colliding

Tliroo Fast TtVIA

Daily. The Luxurious Train

Ag 617

Atlas Assurance CompanyAssurance Company

New Agency.Insurant

Company.

B. F. LIMITED

Oeneral Agents for Hawaii.Floor, Building.

Street.H. NOLTO, PROP-R- .

First-Cla- ss served teaginger ale

THREES- -

TO ARRIVE.Date. Name. From.Oct. 3 Coptic

4 Manchuria San FranciscoC Alameda San Francisco

Nevadan San FranciscoVentura Colonics

San FranciscoMoana ColoniesKoroa San FranciscoMlowera VictoriaMongolia YokohamaAlnniedn.. San FranciscoCoptic San Francisco

3 Nebraskan San Francisco7 Sierra Colonies7 China YokohamaS Ventura San Francisco

f...San FranciscoColonies

Alameda San FranciscoMoana VictoriaDoric YokohamaMongolia San FranciscoNevadan San FranciscoManchuria YokohamaSonoma ColonicsSierra San Francisco

Dae. 2 China San FranciscoS Alameda San Francisco

Korea YokohamaColonies

Aorangl VictoriaDoric San FranciscoVentura ColonicsSonoma San FranciscoCoptic YokohamaManchuria San FranciscoAlameda San Francisco

STEAMERS TO DEI-AR-

Date. Name. For.Oct. 3 San Francisco

4 Manchuria YokohamaAlameda San FranciscoNevadan FranciscoVentura San FranciscoSonoma ColoniesMoana VictoriaKorea YokohamaMlowera ColoniesMongolia San FranciscoCoptic 'Yokohama

Nov. 1 Alameda San Francisco5 Nebraskan fSan Francisco7 Sierra San Francisco7 China San Francisco8 Ventura Colonies

Siberia YokohamaAorangl VictoriaMoanaDoric San FranciscoMongolia YokohamaAlameda San FranciscoNevadan fSan FranciscoManchuria San FranciscoSonoma San FranciscoSierra

Dec. 2 China 'Yokohama,Korea San FranciscoAlameda San FranciscoMlowera VictoriaAorangl ColoniesDoric YokohamaVentura San FranciscoSonoma ColoniesCoptic San FranciscoManchuria Yokohama

U. A. Transports will for SanFrancisco and Manila, and will arrlvofrom same ports irregular intervals.

Manila.departuro via Kahulul.

AN EASY ONE.prisoner," said the great de-

tective "is a married man.""How do you know that?" asked his

"Thnt's easy," replied the great de-tective. "Tho buttons his coat aronot sewed straight." Chicago News

Want Ads The tar bring quickresults, Three lines times forcents.

txn.t

CO,ihe World. .iwtnn T.ioht t,.v

A. P. C.

and The Only Double-Trac- k Railway beween the Missouri River anChicago.

SOUTHERN PACIFIC, UNION PACIFIC ANDCHICAGO NORTHWESTERN RAILWAYS.

Overland Limited. Vestibulcd. San Francisco at 11:00 a.most In

out. Double Drawing-Roo- Sleeping Cars, Composite, Observation, BulMSmoking and Library Car. Dining Cars, Meals a I Carte. Less ttr-da- ys

to Chicago without change.Eastern Express. Vestibuled. Leaves San Francisco COO m. DallThrough Pullman Palace and Tourist Sleeping Ccrs Chicago. Dlntajj

Cars. Free Reclining Chair Cars.Atlantic Express. Vestibuled. Leaves San Francisco 9:00 a, m. Dally.

Standard and Tourist Sleepers.PERSONALLY CONDUCTED EXCURSIONS

Wednesdays. Thursday and Fridays. Th nt

Cliioago & Northwesternr n niTCum nS P Company's at

Fire Insurance!of Londtfc

Phoenix of Lon-don.

York UnderwritersProvidence Washington

ME DILLINGHAM CO.,

Fourth Stangenwald

BEAYER LUNCH 1100M,Fort Opposite Wilder & O

J.

Lunches withcoffee, soda water, or mill.

Smokers Requisites a Specialty.

STEAMERS

Yokohama

15

17

IS SonomaIS

19

21

27

27 .;38

Nov.

11 Siberia15 Aorangl17

18

21

22212S2329

1213 Mlowera161019

20222329

Coptic

11

v .fSan17

ISIS1921

2728

11

1518 Colonies2122

222G

2S

2S

29 Colonies

121313

161619

202223

S. leave

atCalling at

t Dato of

"The

friend.

ofon

Inthree 25

Xcxlly

oyer

&

Leaves

than

at p.to

at

or

17

Ularket St. (Palace Hotel) San Franclscfc

CH011TED SODA WATER W0BK8

COMPANY LTD.Esplanade, cor. Allen and Fort Sta.

Manufacturers of Soda Water. Ginger Alo, Sarsaparilla, Root Beer, Creamboda, Strawberry, Etc., Etc.

K. UYEDA1028 Nuuan-- j Street, Honolulu, T. H.Between King and Hotel Street.

Straw Hat Manufactory. Any Stylaof Straw Hat made to order. Panamaand Felt Hat Cleaned.

T. HAYASHI,TAILOR,

Clothes Cleaned, Dyed and Itepalrefi6S7 Boretanla Street

Opposite Queen's HosjIUL

f!

fa 1

i

1

Page 4: If HK TXT om T3...3- If You News, want toilny to-day's THE HK TXT AHA om 75: T3 Is The tlio Hawaiian paper Star that you 11 ml It In goes Into the best THE STAll SrML AMJfJLr homes

TFOUlt. THE HAWAIIAN STAR, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1003.

ICl'iiB 3rIo.w-iiiiM- i Star,DAILY AND SEMI-WEEKL- Y. RUBBER GOODS ! v.

Eublishcd every afternoon (except Sunday) by the Hawaiian Star Did you ever on a DAVISON Hot Water Bag An Artfef Newspaper Association, Limited. and it's combinations? BargainIf not try one next time you arc in need of one.

SUBSCRIPTION RATES.local, per annum '. t . $ 8.00 ffafc Best Hade !!

Foreign, "" 12.00 A rare opportuut y toPayable in advance. Beautify Your-Hom- es

FRANK L. HOOGS MANAGER

SATURDAY SEPTEMBER 30, i95 FORT STREET - - --,

HONOLULU Pictures at a Great Reduction !

Docs it not seem rather strangeX rinmPtfSrtn. tnat a protected gambling game. UamOling UameS j smuA bc guaned by iron bolted5& And The Remedy 'k doors with watchmen on the inside&! $ peeping through portholes at thoset.f t u.10 approach? If the police don't

raid the game, if the Advertiser'sinsinuations arc correct that the games are run with police protection,why these heavily bolted doors, opening only from the inside? Why!llic peepholes through them? Why the man on guard to prevent any-- )one from entering? According to the Advertiser's description thismorning, the entrance to the Moore gambling place is through an'alley or a store, up a flight of stairs at the head of which is a door,four or five inches thick, with iron bars inside and a guard peepingtl rough portholes at those who approach and refusing admittance to'any except those who are allowed by the proprietor to enter. j

All this almost proves that something illegal is going on within.But so far is it from proving that it is with the consent of the police, '

that it is the clearest evidence of constant dread of a police raid. Itis the farthest extreme from "wide-open- " gambling. The game, ifir.erc is one, and it is reasonable to suppose that there is, should bestopped. But everyone who has had any experience in such mattersknows that it is next to impossible to stop gambling that is carriedon in this way. among a limited circle of persons, behind barred andbolted doors. which "open only from the inside." This is a problemthat has troubled police all over the world whenever gambling is anoffense against the law, and it has been recognized in Honolulu foryears. The game in question did not stop during the Henry admin-istration, it was visited and described by a Star representative duringHenry's administration.

As for the problem itself, it will be found discussed in High SheriffBrown's own reports. Years ago Attorney General E. P. Dole maderecommendations, based upon reports from Brown, that laws be fram-ed to give the police more authority forcibly to enter houses wherewrongdoing was suspected. The Moore place is just such an estab-lishment. Much harm may be done to such places by newspaper ex-posure, and it is gratifying to note that the Advertiser has followedThe Star's suggestion of some days ago, and exposed the place insteadof merely hinting that there was such an establishment in town.

0

T

I

Three SenatorsAnd The Governor

The debt proposition wasdiscussed from financier's pointof view by L. I. Spalding yester-- iday, before the Promotion Com- - j

mittee. He is well qualified to,speak on such subject, though ap- -Dnrentlv not so v(ll infnrmprl tn '

the political experience of the past in the discussion of the same prob- - $lem, as is indicated by his remark that County Sfovcmments have air-- H

gravatcd the disposition to go into debt by "starting up an emulationbetween the different to get as much money as each one of !

its neighbors." The fact is that there was exactly the same sort ofcompetition among the different islands and districts, before the County system began, and it usually caused the Territorial legislature toappropriate far more than it had.

Regarding the policy of spending loan money, Spalding says: 'Weare not in position to incur any large expenditures," and he thinkstnat "the governor's policy" should be sunnorted. This i n viW

dead.'the

noliev

would

TZISXX

o oKalmukl

children parents

Bi'sldes collec-

tion of animalsare delights numerous

Music Kawnlhau

CENTS.and hands

Outang.

What to bathewhen have allWater want.

The onlyinstall Rapid

Bath Heater.ready

with

STORE.King Street,

61.

referring gamblingplaces haa

"Sheriffclasses

public gamblingformidable High

ought- - Henry1, . . t .any migiu or reject as him, as to the' Sheriff Brown." sort ofexpenditurcs.beforc legislature acted, but after verIest cant. star showed,

it acted governor is not supposed to have "policy" excent' aml showed conclusively that cho fa

nf carding the laws makes. Ihe time without lot .hlnilrance..High Sheriff Henryto state ins policy, and to try to have it adopted by all proper means,is when legislature is in If the legislature rejects the gov-ernors policy, as in case it did, that is supposed to beIn case the governor is simply making laws again for

Those who think the is wisi slinnl1

TV.

to tho at 19

toalike.

tho wonderfulbirds there

tooto

by thoClub.

ADMISSIONwith

tho

you theyou

youit is to

It'sand

sale

E. P. BATH, AentOUR

165 S.Main

IMI1IIIIII1

In) to certainthe

the morning paper says:Is to by the

to stopthe

not too forIt not be forriff

LU1.L-I- iaie it This ismaking the tho

has thethat flourished orit for the under

thethis

this over

For

the toan entrance to the outside of

Advertiser paused.

excellentiho made to Chairman of thelegislature, tailing m it :is to be presumed that the collective '

commltee by a citizen towisdom of disagrees with them. 'I here ofwas minority the effect be possible, attnree who with the wise of the gover- - 6,111111 expense to have Huwaii's tem-no- r.

Is it rather queer spectacle to see an executive receiving Perature records sent forward to thethe congratulations of minority three senators on his deci- - Zns puWteTevS' Unit"s.on to what they were voted down so emphatically in attempting Stc. Fancy the resuU of ato have done? the governor and the three may be wiser than the shivering New Yorker, when the ther-Hou- se

the remaining twelve senators, but the latter may be par- - mometer 18 at zero- - walking up Broad-done- d

if they fail to realize it. Wly noting, If only for an instant,

i Target Practice tOff Hawaii Coast t

publica

ne

counties

a

and

and

Cet a

a

ON

thisThe

iviiii.ii talkof, The

outand

J

a

aa

do

a,ltlthat hero In Hawaii was at

Acting Secretary of the The Russians have made De aDarling gives as a possible excuse count a"a trom a11 appearances, thefor want to mako Komura nc"a squadron not S'eBeto make a cruise to the Hawaiian -

this winter that the witte's boasting.swells off the islands do make The becomes vr aideal conditions for target practice, smaller unit, In which each part

a matter of fact the swells winch exist off these in the win- - G,lces more immediately every other.ter exist lartreiv 111 the mind of the Actum-- Sc-n-inr- ,. r,f ti, m e onitrthe Periods When they do nrevnil nr, nnrC'U. fA.-- " . the

.beneflt f

4 - j , j44..4,vliiu.i lujig uuiciiiuu. mpldly she tookMit there is one very significant feature about the rntiiiinmiivii-ir- ninnner from .Tnnnn

wouia

the Secretary and tins is his reference to "ideal coiu'li- - lllffi ,lfter tlie Portsmouthtions for target practice." Ideal conditions" for tariret ire ill harshly withvery-wel-

l their way, but it does not. follow that "ideal SSSwSr7conditions target "ideal marksmen" , 4V.OV.W444nnntiv v one. In nttn .. .1 .4., e ti , . . t

v.; iu ,mui,i ,1 uiii oi.ui; ui pruucicucy wnen practicing,i.iiv.v.1 Hicu tumiuiuub wnicn means a clear sky and a smooth seabut what the same outfit of marksmen would do in a sea whenthe conditions were not ideal is problematical. The probabilities are erthat the percentage of hits d eereasp in n stnrtliti ln- -

is

THE

zoopnjoyablo

other

10

a

can

always

A match anda Rapid.

by

AT

Advertiser "dis-covered"

reputable In

was Sheand to

pleasedwisdom

governor

session.policy

himself.

luxury

Telephone

cidentally was

the

suggestion hasMcCandless

promotionpeople

senators agreed present policy

joyful of

74

Navy

being ordered

Islands heavyworld nvPrv

islands

in

Acting settlement,practice contrtlsted the brilliantly

because ofpractice

heavy over

COULD NOT BEIt Is that

$100,000 changed In thogame on a steamer coming back

Europe recently. Coming back

SS5ihSBh Pr0fi.-ien-t R"Tle ShOUl(1 hC SK'C 'tt-om- eprp,

an ' and otlifrwisn

II 4) II

1.

just seems to bo noe's

When Togo fight against Rojestven'sky in the Sea ofJpan last May no "ideal conditions" nrevailed. Tn 1- ,- nnn.iinnB BUT making pHogress,the very reverse, for the sea high. Nevertheless lth y.eUo ,ever ,'n tnls nnd

"leJaP In Europe It la evidentwere so nroficient 'in nnrtminclii.,Ml , P n ,ha.t WCre a.ble. to anm- - medical and sanitary science has not .... MimN vii,n wuum ue iiKCiy to if American yet made complete conquest of diseaseKuiii.cis wiiusi; uirgci practice ncen limited to ideal us most dangerousever became on paired Tnmnn mmiin 1 .1 4. American.with heavy running? The Americans would probably get lickedIt time to stop this of "ideal conditions." The only ideal con- -

shakoOrang

day night.

which

looked

which

would

"ene.countries,

trom

reportedhands

money.- - Indlana- -

YES'very

choleraarcse tIlC'

forms. Baltl

talk

games.

NEW SCHOOL(Talking about Presidentuu.unb ior target tliose make gunner able to Roosevelt Is at head, form-sho- ot

under conditions at whether "ideal" or otherwise" When 6(1 a Bcno01 of diplomacy, where itbattles fought nobody waits "ideal conditions" Is taught, first, to know

The excuse Acting Secretary is ' ToZZVZZ Pom.WnlS

. . .(tacrine li,e in(npmnl,Mi i iw.uv-- s 4.., uuuiiMuuuH is nut tuutci. mere not 'ueavy swellsconstantly funning about these islands during winter and during

trip

mention.Glee

Come

Hot

bath

EXHIBITION

Browncity

task

any

Star able effecthouse

An been

the that

not

Wltte

not

geisympathy moro

some lessonsWIHe'a hnnnl.

infor

AMERICANS.circumstantially

pok- -

from

began hisfnnt

were was Inndthat

Happennad conditions"

with more

seasOF DIPLOSIACY.

diplomats,practice are that will the the and has

all sea neware for what you want,

offered by the of the Navy puerile.are

the

way

this

and

DUMMIES,u.c y.can-- . im.i ui me wine me .sea is smootli and the conditions are The Insurance companies under ln-- hi

every way up to the "ideal" that the Acting Secretary seemed to veatsatlon evidently believe that eventhink are necessary. mce bys ought to be trained for high

finance. Chicago Record-Heral- d.

jdlMllW I.'.. . 44-45- 4. -- I

A

IM

it

It

ir

i'

Classified Ads in Star.

Foi Salo

Building lot corner King and Kame-hama- ha

road. Palatna terminus ofRapid Tronsl road. Apply at Star

M. PHILLIPS & CO.,Wholesale Impo'teraAnd Jobbers of

AMERICAN AND EUROPEAN DRY GOODS

Corner of 5Tort and Queer. Stfl.

Contractor and BuilderHouse Paintor

ewalo, tilierldan Sireet. near Kim.Honolulu H. L

Telephone Whltq 601.

- 14KS.

Is to carry In etock complete lines ofevery thing desirable In

OPTICA'GOODS

We carry tho"SHUR ON"

and know how to adjun them. NothingIn the way "f Glasses or Frames tooJllllcult for us.

Fifteen Years' Ex Hence gives usthe right to talk.

With 11. V. Wicinnnii &Co., LidFORT STREET.

Telephone MainP. O. Box CS3.

101

MARRYStoolc tmd J3otxClQrolcor.,.,

Members of Honolulu Stock and BondExchange.

Few shares of following stocks forsale: Pioneer Mill Co., Oahu SugarCo., Ewa Plantation Co., HawaiianSugar Co., Waialua Agricultural Co.,is;c

t'llle?, Campbell Block.. ..Merchant St,Honolulu, T. H.

II PIG

K1

ARMITAGE

HUBARRIVING.Saturday, September 30.

Stmr. Kinau, Freeman, from Hllo andway ports, at 10:30 a.m.

Stmr. Noeau. Bruhn. from Makenaand Hawaii ports at 3:10 a. m.

DEPARTING.Saturday, September 30.

Stmr. Nihau, W. Thompson, forEleele at 3 p. ni.

PASSENGERS.Arriving.

Per stmr. Kinau, September 30, fromHllo and way ports: Senator PalmerP. Woods, .Mrs. Palmer P. Woods, Sam- -

uel P. Woods, Rev. J. W. Wadman,Rev. C. H. Nlnl, Major John MilsapsMrs. A. E. Shaw. DISJ. v. Magulre, A. G. Kullberg, SingSong, N. G. Campion, Miss Alice Dav- -Idson, A. Guild, Miss - . Stothard, R. S.Hosmer, Mrs. G. H. Hosmer, Rev. Y.Imamura, S. Saglma, H. Howell, j. T.Wilder. Mrs. C. T. Wilder, F. Klamp,H. iMcCubbln, S. E. Lucas, Mrs. S. E.Lucas and 2 children, John Lindsay.

Per bktn. Irmgard, September 29,from San Francisco Miss A. M. BrooksCharles Sarky, Qeorge

., ,. LONDON BEETS.SAN FRANCISCO. September i9.

The price In London today of 88 analy-sis, beets is 8 shillings and 6 pence. Thelast quotation, .September was 8shillings, pence.

OPEN LETTER.

Few Words to tho Public thePastor of tho Christian Church.

Although in a special way identifiedwith the Interests of a single congrega-tion in Honolulu, yet I am here for thoreligious and moral good of the wholocommunity. Not as a dictator wouldI come but as a servant to be used Inthe helping forward of every goodcause. I hoar that a number of peo-ple have been seeking mo withoutknowing where to find I am attho public's command and, llko every

UNFRAMED PICTURES.Former price 10c. to $3.00Reduced price 5C-- to 50c.

FRAMED PICTURES.Former price ...$i.oo to $10.00Reduced price 50c. to $3.50EASELS, ENAMEL AND IMITATION OAK.Former price $1.50 $3.50Reduced price 50c. $1.00

Pacific HardwareART XfcQOM

Honolulu Iron Works,

STEAM ENGINES, SUGAR MILLS.BOILERS, COOLERS. IRON, BRASS

AND LEAD (JaSTINGS.

Macnlnery if Every Description Madeto order. Particular attention paid toShip's ' lack Inni. Job Work Exe-

cuted on Sbort Notice.

inOUEEN STREET

Firewood, Stove,Steam and Blacksmith

WHOLESALE AND RETAIL.

Special f ftention Given toDKAYrXG

ALSO, WHITE AND BLACK SAND.

TO SHIP OWNERS, SHIP CAPTAINSAND SHIP AGENTS.

Until further notice we will deliversoft ballast at 40 cents per ton andhard ballast, at 60 cents per ton.

LORD & BELSER.

Telephone Main 19S.

South and Kawaiahab Streets.

1

W. G. Irwin & Go.

AGENTS FOR THE

Royal Insurance Co., of Liverpool, Eng.Alliance Assurance Co., of London, Eng.Scottish Union & National Ins. Co., of

Edlnburg, Scotland.Fire Association of Philadelphia.Alliance Insurance Ltd.Wilhelma of Magdeburg General Ins.

Company.

Want ads In The Sui bring quick re-

sults. Three lines three times for 25

cents.

THE PROGRAM

FOR COL BRYAN

W. Richardson. W. PLANo TO ENTERTAIN THE

Claborough.

28,7V&

by

me.

WHITEtoto

Corporation

TINGUISHED DEMOCRAT DUR-

ING HIS DAY HERE .

Complete crrangements have beenmade for the entertainment of tho Hon.William Jennings Bryan, who Is toarrive here next week on his way tothe Orient. A completo schedule forthe day lias been arranged, and Bryanwill see about all that oun be seen bya visltoi who is hero only one day.

The programme for tho day Is asfollows:

7:30. Leave Oceanic Dock.8:15. Arrive at Pall.8:45. Leave Pall.9:15. Arrive at O. R. & L. Station.

found when wanted, My home Is at1123 Keeaumoku streot corner of Bere-tanl- a.

My Phono number Is Blue 2541.As a rule my forenoons will be spent

In my study at home. Those wishingto see mo during the morning hoursmay do so there. From 12:30 p. m.to 2 p. m .1 shall bo at tho church tosee any one who may wish to call onme for any purpose whatsoever .After2 p. m. I shall bo a( liberty to callwherever wanted, or to go on any mis-sion that may promise good, I shalltake pleasure In helping to the oxtentof my ability either from my pulpit or

(II l Ml IfComnilBslon Merchants8ugar Factors.

AGENTS FOR

ThewEwa Plantation Company, j

The Waialua Agricultural Co., LttThe Kohala Sugar Company.The Walmea Sugar Mill Company.Thu Fulton Iron Works, St. Louis, Mo.The Standard OH Company.The George F. Blake Steam Pumps.Weston's Centrifugals.The New England Mutual Life Insur-

ance Company of Boston.The Aetna Fire Insurance Company ot

Hartford, Conn.The Alliance Assurance Company ot

London.

Monopole(RED TOP)

Extra DryPints and Quarts.

From Honolulu Hotel Manager:"Wo have tried other Champagnes

and since placing your Dry Monopolebefore our guests, they will use nonoother."

ALSO

Monopole Brut.'' (CLUB DRY)

The perfection of Champagne thatyou don't feel' next morning.

LEWIS & CO., LTDGROCERS & WltfE' MERCH ANT3 .

1GD King Street. Telephone 210.

THE UAWA11AN REALTYAND MATURITY CO. Ltd. .

Real Estate, Mortgages, Loans andInvestment Securities. Homes built 00the Installment plan.Home Office: Mclntyre Building., T. H.

L. K KENTWELL, Generul Manater,

9.45. Arrive at Honolulu Plantation.10:45. Arrive at Moanalua.11:30. Arrive at Museum.12:00. Arrive at Hawaiian Hotel.Public Reception from 12 to 1.

1:30. Private lunch at Young Hotel.2:45. Call on Governor of Territory.3:00. Arrive at Aquarium.3:15. Arrive at Moana Hotel.Boating and surf riding.5:30. Arrive at Oceanic Dock.30 minutes at Pali.40 minutes at Honolulu Plantation.30 minutes at Moanalua.60 minutes at Hawaiian hotel.60 minutes for lunch. .

' ;

15 minutes at Aquarium .V& hours at beach. .k

NO ZOO VAUDEVILLE TONIGHT.There will be no vaudeville at the

Zoo tonight. The clever aggregation ofartists who have been furnishing entertainment ror the past few monthsare now taking a vacation and whentho Zoo vaudeville opens again veryshortly It will be with entirely freshmaterial and new stunts.

Meanwhile bring the children toshake hands' with tho orangoutang andsee the wonderful collection of animalsand birds.

The Kawaihnu Glee Club will furnishmusic from 2:30 to 6 tomorrow

'

DEPARTING.Thursday, September 28.

Amt brig Galilee, Pratt, for cruise atP. m.

Thirty-nin- e years ago todav n ro.markable event hnppened. FredChurch, manager of tho Royal Hawaiian Hotel, wnn linm an ii..

; elsewhere, alt sorts and conditions of happened, that ho was the recipient ofother preacher seeking to extend his ment, If only I am given tho privilege. many congratulations todayInfluence for good, I wish the public to Very respectfully, tertalned a number of frinn" . i!?.know my whereabouts that; may be' a. p, EDWARDS. e0n Im honor of. the oooaslm

' r "nit 'T i'iI'mHi- - " "' . .....a.tnt.tl. . .. 4.. ,i..i. n- f- j..':.... .. .

1

a

a

I

Page 5: If HK TXT om T3...3- If You News, want toilny to-day's THE HK TXT AHA om 75: T3 Is The tlio Hawaiian paper Star that you 11 ml It In goes Into the best THE STAll SrML AMJfJLr homes

The Wery Latest Moveitics

Tlic S. S. Alameda brought us a quantity of new goods forUi which Were personally selected by Mr. Sachs during hisrecent eastern trip, Among the assortment arc:

TRIMMINGS,.in Appliques in white, cream, blacK and thncy colors. In silk -- .

and cotton. J w-- .

"LACES. '

. A beautiful line in cream; white and black, with insertionsand allovcrs to match in the popular rose point effects.. Thesegoods must be seen' to bd 'fully appreciated.

EMBROIDERY. ... .

The new evelct style in silk and cotton..PERSIAN BAND TRIMMING v

in navy, cadet, green and "brown.EYELET ALLOVER EMBROIDERY. ,

A novelty and strikingly attractive. Vi""LADIES' BERTHAS.

Rose point designs in cream color, white and black.FANCY JEWELED BERTHAS .

in white and black. .:.

LADIES' NECKWEAR.An exceptionally fine assortment.

RAINBOW SILK BELTSand a fine selection of girdles.

GROUNDED(Associated Press

SAN FRANCISCO, September 30.-to-

the S. S. Alameda grounded inwere landed. Efforts aro being madecargo Is valued at $100,000.

DE WITTEST. PETERSBURG, September 30.

Bloner at Portsmouth ,has been mado

TEDDY

Beretania

HONORED

OYSTER BAY, September 30. President Roosevelt has gone to Washing- -ton.

CURZON TO

SIMLA, September 30. The departure of Lord Curzon has been post-poned. Tlie Klng,xlesires thatJ ho remain to officially welcome the Princeand Princess o'fWaies on their contemplated visit. . . ' -.

O ' "

CANAL TO

PORT SAID, September 30. The

ANOTHER AMERICAN

PHILADELPHIA, September 20. The battleship Mississippi wastoday at Cramps ship building yards.

DAILY STOCK REPORT

Between Boards: 23 Ewa $27.50.

. Session Sales: 10 Klhel $8.00; 50 Mc-

Bryde $6.00;' Hl McBryde., $6.oV

Dividends:. September .30.: C, ,Brewer& Co., 3 per cent;-Ew- a 2 per cent;Honomu 2 per cent; Kahuku 1 per,cent;..Walmanalo 2 per cent; Walluku4 per cent; Hawaiian Electric, percent; Olowulu 1 per cent: Hon. B. & M.

.Co., 1 per cent; Hon .R. T. & L. Co.,com 1 per cent; I. I. S. N. Co., 2 percent; Pacific ' Sugar Mill, 5 per centOctober 1: Haiku 1 per cent; Pala, IViper cent; Plonecr'2 per Cent; Honokaa

per cent. 0IOctober 5:' Hawaiian C.& S. 'Co., 65' cents share; Onomea (S.F.), 2per cent: -- Paauhnu (S. F.), 1 percent.

'Stocks. Bid. Asked.Ewa 26.75 27.23Haw. Agr. Co 103.00Hawaiian Com 85.00 86.00Hawaiian Sugar 33.50 34.50Honomu Sugar 145oaHonokaa 14.50 15.00

'

Haiku Sugar Co W.QO

Kahuku 29.50' 30.50Klhel i -- 5 8 5U

Klpahulu Sugar Co." 3000jjjlo., 1V..0JPioneer Mill Co 150.00 155.00McBryde Sugar Co 6.00 6. 23

Oahu Sugar Co 105.00 110.00McBryde Sugar Co 6,00 C.50Olowalu 80.00Paauhau 23.00Olaa Sugar Co 4.00 5.50PrtClll'rt Mill 240.00Paifl.-.l'- . 175.00Pepeekeo Sugar Co. 140.00 160.00Pioneer 150.00 155.00Wnialua Agii 70.00 72.00Walmanalo 150.00Walmea 57.50 65.00Inter-Islan- d 110.00 115.00Haw. Electric Co 103.00Hon. R. T. PfJ 101.00Walalua Agr. Co 67.50 70 00

Mutual Telephone 950Oahu Railway 89.00Hon. B. & M. Go........ 23.50 24.50Haw. Ter. 4g 100.00Haw. Govt. Es 100.00Cal. & Haw. Ref Co. 6s 103.00Haiku Sugar Co. 6s., 104.50Haw, Com. Es ;. 105.00Haw. Sugar 6s 102.00Hllo R. R, Co. 6s 50.00 60.00Hon. R. T. & L. Co 107.60Kahuku 6s..,.., 100.00Oahu Railway. 6s 105.00.Oahu Sugar 6s 102.00:,Qlaa Sugar Co, 6a 100.25

r. Pala CsM,... ,,).,....,! ,. 101,50

lMSBllKTiafl02M6iHKNmM

Cor Fort andSts.

IN A FOG

Cable to The Star).While leaving this port for Honolulua fog off Fort Point. The passengersto pull the vessel oft the rooks. Her

jr. De Witte, Russian PeacaCommls-- a

Count.

ATWORK

REMAIN.

REOPEN.

Suez Canal will reopen on October 8.

oBATTLESHIP LAUNCHED.

PERILS OF THE

GOLDEN GATE

(Continued from page one).

Point, for a purpose which has no In-

terest now, but the manner In whichthe tide surged In and in which It surg-ed out again was so impressive that Itwill not be soon forgotten. Here wheroan Inbound torrent poured at an easyeight miles an hour at one tlmo, afew hours later an even worse torrent

t would rush madly out to the embraceof the vast Pacific.

True It Is that every possible safe-guard so far devised by science hasbeen placed about the picturesque en-

trance of San Francisco's magnificentharbor, there are light-hous- es and bell-buo- ys

and marks on 'charts whichwould make It seem Impossible thatmistakes couiu oe made or mat misnapshould come, but eliminating tho persotral equation, there are tmos Inwnlcn ne elements seem to conspire"gainst human enueavor.

Strange as It may seem to tho casualobserver the fog that pours Into thoOol(3on Gllte very ofton ?overs ",y the.sea surface itself. It Is a of

I'ersonai experience inav u.e ueuaemist will hang over the surface of an.Incoming tide while all of the landabout tho Presidio and tho furthershoro Is bright In tho sunshine. Peo-ple who study those things explain Iteasily enough; the cold water rushingIn, condenses tho moisture held In sus-pense, and the fog of course occurs"

' whllo tfio heat of the sun keep thomolsturo In suspense over tho land.

Scientific explanations aro always In-

teresting of course .but onco seen, thoeffect will never bo forgotton of watch-ing from tho Presidio heights, on aglorious summer day, the Golden Gate'sportals' wrapped In the densest of fogsover tno top of which could be seenthe highest spars of a few vessels drlft-- Ilug In a seemingly aimless mannerwhile the sirens hooted their dread ofcollision.

Doubtless It was In such a fog as thisthat the good ship Alnmoda met horfate.

CHRISTIAN CHURCH.All the regular services will be held

tomorrpw at the Christian Church:Jun. C. E., 9 a, m.; Sunday school, 9:45a. m., nnd C. E., 6:30 p. m, Preach-ing, 11 n. m. and 7:30 p. m. Morning

subject: "Am I My Brother's --veeper?"In the evening, ,"God'B Whole Creation.

vMmfflmjil!mthaEe:

THE HAWAIIAN STAR, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1905.

E. A. P. NEWG

TELLS NEW ENGLAND

ABOUT HAWAII

AN INTERESTING INTERVIEW FROM A WELL KNOWN ISLANDERPUBLISHED IN THE LEAfflNa AFTERNOON DAILY OF'' MAN-

CHESTER NEW' HAMPSHIRE MANY TLEASING THINGS SAID

ABOUT OUR.CLIMA'Tp --ANruirPEoTMJE. '

- 4jt)ijLi '

Tho following Interview with E. A. devoned to .that pursuit; or In theNowcomb well known in Honolulu! gar mills, whirh are the largest of any

is irom me uauy Mirror anu Americanof Manchester, New Hampshire. Mr;Newcomb left Honolulu In April to 'goto Manchester to design one ojtwiresidences there for clients of his. Hewas accompanied by his sister, MissNowcomb.

The Dally Mirror and American says:The average American has put little

authentic Information regarding, hopeople and prevailing conditions Ingeneral In the Hawaiian Islands, whichwere acquired by the United States It would bo a great thing for tho plant-I- n

1S9S. Yet, according to the state- - ers."ments of Mr. E. A. P. Newcomb, who Mr. NewComb's sidelights upon thoIs staying for a new months In this characteristics of the Chinese are y,

the Islunds are enchanting and terestlng, his Ideas being somewhat Inquite as Interesting as any place thatcould bo pointed out on the map.

Mr. Newcomb, although formerly aBoston man has claimed residenco InHonolulu for the past Ave years andIs thus In a position to discuss thosituation Intelligently. The present Isthe second time that ho has been Inth'e states since going to Honolulu, hismission to this city! being to direct theconstruction of the residence at RayBrook for the occupancy of Mr. andMrs. Charles Bartlett Manning. Mr.Nowcomb being the same architect whoplanned the beautiful Frank P. Car-penter residence on North Elm streetsome years ago.

CLIMATIC CONDITIONS IDEAL. ,"The climatic conditions In the Ha-

waiian islands," says Mr. Newcomb,"are ideal, It being without exceptionthe llnest climate in tho world, for nolulu Is situated, we have seventy-ther- e

you can be comfortable the year nve mnt.s uf steam railroad.round. -- Tho conditions of sanitation In Ho- -

"It is a rare day that the tempera- - nolulu are all that could be desired, theture soars above 85 degrees and never system of drainage being one of thegoes below 60. In fact ono may en- - finest In the world. At tho presentjoy a dip In 'the ocean every day In the tlmo Honolulu Is the only place in thoyear." Islands that enjoys the advantages of

There are other reasons, however, a good shipping port, the government,according to Mr. Newcomb, why resl- - It will be recalled, having made an ap- -dence in the Islands Is desirable, and propriatlon for the deepening of theduring tho course of an Interview hnrbfir there so that the large vesselsgranted a representative of the Mirror can dock. Passpncers tn mnnv nlnnes

were

whom he received at his hotel. Mi;., are obliged to make novel lundlngs, the whole proceedings and tried to do upNowcomb out many point's small boats going in as near tb the Carter, and that after levelling a gunwhich enlightening and which cliffs as 'possible, the top of Which, Carter he couldn't plead the babvbe found of interest by those prone ascent is made in cage? !! down by aml sa' llis pockets were empty,to think of the islands out of tho pulleys, foi: accommodation." Parker, on Magoon's advice, had start-wa- y

places, of little or no consequence. Asked regarding the educational con- - p1 tho row with pockets. Kinney"The City of Honolulu has a popula- - ditlons, Mr. Newcomb stated that tho Intlmnted. and he must tho con-tlo- n

approximately the Amer- - there are as good as any be' sequences. answer to the chargelean colony being comparatively small, found in the United States, nnd it is thnt Carter was not caring for theWe have besides the Hawallans that every child be. sent to minor properly asking partition, horepresentative English many school. It was proper show that shefrom the states, among whom NewEngland Is well represented, represen-tatives from France .Germany, togeth-er many Japanese. Chinese, Por-tuguese; In fact, people from nearlyevery country, all living In the Islandcommunity In nerfect harmonv.NO POOR PEOPLE OR BEGGARS."The foreigners who go the Islands

aro unlike those who come to thiscountry being for the most part of thobetter class. They are an educated, cut- -

tured people, with the exception per- -

be

court

have

nil

color,our blocks are as

as you find In

Boston New York. Whllo every- . . . . . . . - .

lumoer, every in iucieverything tno oia. Is the statesfho rnftt of Is but In' ex- -

cess of It here. aremany pub! c

etc, Includingof in particular iwould St.

........ ,,,wi., ,,nn...r, v...it anu is utmost

stollu Insldo out."On hlB to Honolulu

eomb will undertake tho extend-- ,

ln that edifice.REPRESENTED.- -

"While Romnn do notpredominate, sect has a

they vUlu- -

. rriielr cathedral to. .

IS llio uiivum uistands in center

'city."The of -

ZxTXJotorder, about everyIts The have

. . ... . . ....nnil tile Clllnnse OSS

there are forms

religious thoro rarelyfound In tho due, Ipose, to

livingdo in nn Island community.

of aroI . 1. I . r.

liicthuA CHINAMAN.

Newcomb the fact thatthe Is denied

If they could haveit ns before It would be agreat boon to "If there could besome passed whereby couldhave labor, say for a term

years, and at tho expirationthe tlmo, unless the was

could be sent back,

to thoso quite generally en- -entertained.

"We hnvo 30,000 In the Isl-

ands and they are a g,

conscientious You cantrust a Chinaman.

"Tho workingmnn Is well paid thereIn many better than In thestates.

tourist to Honolulu flndbaccommodations which are un- -

our hotel being onoof the linest be anywhere.

"Electricity is foralthough at the

the Is being piped for gas,which will be used for

house in Honolulu Isby

"We a tine andon the island of unon which Ho- -

'Ti,.. i,...,... ,.v., mted by a In their not found'to any extent in the states, for In thoprimary they have thefrom all nationalities, all of coursospeaking a language, whomust first be tnuirht a common tnncrup."

Again referring to tho climatic condl- -Hons Sir. said: "We anoccasional which to dropfrom a sky, the bathed Inliquid sunshine, allthe A queer thing aboutthem Is that rnln la mm

witn a feather protrudes someInches snout, and arethoBO as as heavens,

.!,!, ,.,,...n.,' .,.n.,.l.,Mr..l....,.. u ..11 ...r.t

- fiuutiuiii"T1'e Island set aside

lr the and there on a peninsula.

J" w,nlch'" ",uu" I

"Pooplo aVe In the Islands'to watch lepers andO nerBOn Is' nt hnv MIT thp ll 9.-- -

. . ., V"-- - mm cm io me Hia- -whero he In

for. the of his unless heto They have comfortable hous- -

.od and

.T"5.""" " ." iumcJ" "1,u,""iw- - '

"Throughout the aged '

the the nnd the unfor--tnnni. n,. ni .i i,tl J""want to a place up to

spect you have got to get upearty tno

Is a great deal of so.y ' Honolulu, tho are ,.

cllne(1 to be In tastes.women-ent- er little Into club

nltlinilM, ihn W r T TT l at,-n-......w- - " .o,they are much Interested in

The men, too, onjoy

we of Elks, andtho usual secret In

and meet moreof lstlnctIon tnn wouM ,

or New York "M Neweomb . thH hlho.t

henrpoormost Interest- -

strangestbeautiful

beautiful Enquirer.

not to that have have seen, thereHonolulu six and those showing

high, ele- - ings of pencock's neck. Therevators conveniences, also peculiar

businesswell equipped

constructionbuilding, brought from

little

residences, bu.iu- -

worship; thismention Andrew' E.scoPal

Htructlonentlrely

ALLCatholics

thelowing some veryable '...wnieu

Heart, veryof

portion

thut religionfollowing Japanese

tnmnlnhouses,

worship. science

States,largely

largoly

LWAYS TRUSTdeplores

country Chinesethat

annexation

wecontract

contract re-

newed, Chinese

variance

Chinesefaithful,

people.always

lnstnnces

coming

surpassed largest

entirely light-ing purposes, present

Nearlyconnected

telephone.have trolley system,

problem

schools children

different

Newcombshower,

heavensrainbows

mountains.

together

Moloknllepers,

8"w'' Including

employed

siisnpntii

supported comfortprefers

)vork- -

schools, churches places

"5'v,y,,v

islandsinfirm, orphans

morning."While

peopledomestic

there,

societies. society

;,vo3 countrypeoplaBoston

Informedbusiness tint-sev-

equippedmodern

elegant

advocates, Mor- - ho,,ne llf although- - Hono-ma- n

w hn olaconverts with all others. T"There Is ,ln state c' ' J3'" -- n

Then havethat

fact thatInto

.. I

snys

used

time cityfuel.

toni,Q

haveseems

with

blue

-

rest

"J

more datelhat

The life,'

and.more

very

with

iu jvo.ia . rou coraiauy inviisu i i juu v " terms of llvas a

lulu In the summer nnd taking up renl-den-

at Washington, C, the win-ter. She Is cultured, literary Intastes, and a lady, he ssys, of whosoacquaintance anyone might well beproud.

Hawaiian are extravagantlyfond of political life, but take defeatvery gracefully. They are a lovablerace of people never more

broughtare will to at

"clas their

emptytake

of 40,000, schools to In

there, compulsory inpeople, said. to

with

to

wiu

no

as

to

oUt-fo- r as as

is

work.

In

barbarous, I believe, than theEnglish the days of Elizabeth."

, Summed up In a nutshell, New- -(como oeiiovcs there is no place on. earth more Ideal for permanentthan Honolulu, and there he Intends toremain.

EFFORTS TO

COMPROMISE(Continued from page one).

he remembered no other letter. Honot Intended to keep any letter

back. He not swear that therewas not another letter but no re-

collection it Kinney sent to hisofllco for with the understandingthat It should go Into evidence later.

Tho absent letter was onoagreed to discuss tho compromiseplan to settle management,but absolutely declined to listen toproposal to compromise tho suit to

A. W. ns guardian.Wundenberg was on tho stand all

the morning, part of the time beingdevoted to cross examination by Kin-ney. There numerousu accusa-tions on both of attempts to "do

the other, times tho dis-

cussions between counsel were verylively. Wundenberg refused to an-swer some questions regarding SnmParker's answered whenordered to do so by court.

Kinney if Sam Parker was notbetter able now buy the ranch. Ifn sale In partition should be orderedthnn he hnd been nt many times duringthe period of Carter's management. Ho

asked If Parker not beenhard up times during Carter's

term and If he was not better off"I decline to answer that question,"

said Wundenberg. "It Is not relevantto this enso and Is an unwarranted In-

quiry Into Mr. Parker's private affairs"There was a long argument. Mogoon

referred to efforts to do up Sam Par-ker, declaring that tho crossexamination was devoted to showingthnt Parker was not able to buy hishalf of the ranch and thereforethe other side should force a partitionsale. Ho sold such a proposition wasmonstrous nnd that It was beneaththe dignity of the court to allow suchreasons for portltlon to be broughtforward.

Kinney this the "baby act."Hp said that Parker had begun the

"'as in snane to uuy hnm smlf lf "nrtlllon were forced, and that

ho could not buy her out.,Iii'ii?o Ltndsnv overruled objec-

tion to the question."I decline to answer,' said Wunden-

berg again, "unless the courttw"

"Yo" wl" lmvo "HWpr." thoiu'lRo- -

Wutidenburg then "SamParker is not ns well off now as howns slx or during theCarter management.

SUGAR ON HAWAII.Admiral Beckley of the steamer Kl- -

nnu reports the following sugar onhand at various Hawaii plantationsready for shipment: Olaa, 53S1 bags;wnlnaku 3000 H 500u Honokaa. i, Kuku,,,soo ,,I1(?S. Honunpo, 3093 bags.

DR. BELL'S LECTURE.

wm T(ke p,nC(j nt Q(1(, Hall01l Wednesdaly Night.

Tno vg of Dr."Preuw,c He comos

. ...opportune time, for.. attmc- -,

tions in tno entertainment arennd far between thoso days

tho public In for a laugh.Dr. Boll comes hero with a

reputation from the

ZmuuZ 2 Zt ZTsrepertoire

b.v7ho

fords.... ,, ,"'B ', '1" Jim.ti"0."Midnight Scones Inof Now Vrlr Pltv nn1 with';s'um?

"Ubject tho doctor more than J

"l -upon several personal experienceas m,dnlght. missionary In darkest New

orK- -

Dr. Bolls' stylo has been described as"ctnHllnir...... ...... ......nml hrllllnrr" and 1,loVinllfof calling a spado a spado figures anevonlng's amusemont distinctly out ofthe common.

Other lectures will bo given on Oc-

tober 10 and 17.

Dr. Boll regnrds his work as bolngJn a largo eduontlonnl andfor this rooson tho low admission feeof 25 will bo charged.should gunranteo n full wheneveran entertainment Is given.

Fine Job Printing, Star Office.

are of the lower classes. The liihab- - like a heavy mist, will ofttimo fall-- 1 Tlu" cross examination of Wunden-ltant- s

of the Islands are a progressive Ing on one side of the street while not ,)er& Promises to bo lengthy. Judgepeople. Every body works, and there even a suspicion of It is to be seen on Lindsay Is holding till safternoon

the opposite side." I to 1,10 case- -nro practicully no people and Hota beggar In the place. Air. Newcomb has tho

"The city of Honolulu Is modem ajul Ing stories to tell, but state that' WILL BE ENTHUSIASTIC,up to date In particular. Like they are backed up by the sights to be' Even Washington Is giving evidencemost cities the old part Is Irregularly seen In the aquarium at Honolulu, in that It will regard President Rooseveltlaid out, but the newer part Is In which are sights of the and as one of Its prominent citizens whensquares, tho streets running north most known. 1'Somo of he returns to spend the there.nnd south, east and west. them coloring more than Philadelphia

"It Is a surprise to tho tourist who the most gorgeous butterfly that youis find we ever and again areIn blocks the iridescent

stories the isand all a fish of an orange

In fact,any will

or bitor uncK ami

useu in

imllillnirwhat is There

ings, magnificent houseaand

Imni,

ror yearsof andreturn Mr,. New- -

work

RELIGIONSthe

largo fol- -

and ownproperty.

aiiucneuSacred tho

thegreater the Hawn

Inn

buthastlinlr tnoir

although ofancient Christian

closethoy

world."

lubor,only

ofthree of

"Thehotel

every

work

clear

from"the there

of

t'0".

w,..

their

Its and there nro thnn here, n

together th '"f: nnfact a of fraternal "h'ohth?

feeling IsUnited sup

the the poo- -

Plo are brought touch

"Tho people tho Islands

Mr.

and

them.law

tho

found

Oahu.

over

the

which

the

Is

the

soon

umm

life

tho

findM

inthere

has

i uooa,"' ,ara-- most w'BHhw in&nfb the who

D.her

"The

nndwere

inMr.

a home

hadwould

hadofIt,

which

the ranchany

remove Carter

weresides

up' and nt

affairs, buttho

askedto

also hadvery at

now.

wholo

that

called

out

the

orders

tn said

nnswered:

months ago,

siS f tFe,Iow(,

linofew und

Is line goodsplendid

mainland

V,"

I

Is

years'

moosuro

cents Thishouse

Ilshevery

llsh winter

KM.iNtuMNar Aetna..'

1

WHY NOT RENT ASAFE DEPOSIT" BOX JIn a modern steel vault )

and feel that your valu-

ables are secure?

FIVE DOLLARS &

year pays for one. Cait

and see us about It,

UNCLE SAM SOES

(Continued fiom iwige one).

inony explaining the system was giv-en recently by E. P. Low In the Parkerranch litigation, and this testimony Issaid to form part of the evldencoagainst the "Trust." The Parker ranchis ono of the defendants In tho suitabout to be brought.

An agreement of this sort, accordlncto the complaint, Is one to fix the pricesnnd control the supply of meat or thoHonolulu market. It Is therefore claim-ed to be a violation of the anti-tru- st

laws, and the court will be asked toIssue a perpetual injunction against tnoseventy odd parties alleged to be In It,restraining them from carrying It outany further.

It is said that the investigation whieliIs now resulting in an injunction suithas had Its origin in a complaint lodg-ed against the combination. The coif-pla- lnt

nnd evidence were sent to Wash-ington.

The list of defendants includeslareg number of prominent citizens otall the Islands. The Live Stock Breed-ers' Association is said to be a defend-ant because It took part In the forma-tion of the alleged objectionable agree-ment.

Inquiry of Breckons as to tho casoand as to whether it means proceedingsagainst other alleged local truste failedto illicit any information. He declinedto discuss the matter at all or even toadmit that he was going after the boettrust at all. All that Breckons wouldadmit wns that he was getting somabids on a printing Job.

The beef case, however. Is a certain-ty, and it whl be filrd some tlme dur-ing the .vming term of the Tederalcourt. It s likely to be followed bysonic other cases against trusts. Otheralleged local combinations were Inves-tigated by Breckons at the same time-tha- t

the nn-a- t growers were and re-ports about them were also sent toWashington. Whether the same In-

struction wi.l result or not is notknown.

GOOD-BY- E. CENTRAL!The glrlless telephone Is coming and

the horseless carriage Is going at n.tremendous rate. New York Tribune. .

HALEIW-- v

The Halelwa Hotel, Honolulu's la-mo-us

country resort, on tho line of thtOahu Railway, contains every modernimprovement and affords Its guests anopportunity to enjoy nil amusementsgolf, tennis, billiards, fresh and saltwater bathing, shooting, fishing, rldlnaand driving. Tickets, including rail-way fare nnd one full day's room ,:rulboard, are sold at the Honolulu Stationand Trsnt & Company for $3. For de-parture of trains, consult time tnblf.

On Sundays, the Halelwa Limited, atwo hour troln, leaves at 8:22 n. in..iciurnliiR, rtinvts In Honolulu atp. m.

Fine Job Printing, Star Office.

NEW ADV PTISKMENT S

NOTICP..

On nnd nfter Monday, October 2, 1905fho rates for Inter-Islan- d TelegraphCompany, Ltd., messages will bo 15cper word. Minimum charge for mos-sa- ge

$1.C0.By order of tho Board of Directors,

J. M. RIGGS,Treasurer.

STOCKHOLDERS' MEETING- - )

WAIALUA AGRICULTURAL CO,,LTD.

A special meeting of the stockholdersof the Walalua Agricultural Company,Ltd., will bo held nt the ofllce of Custlo& Cooko, Ltd., on the first floor of thoStangenwald Building, Merchantstreet, In the city of Honolulu, II. T.,on Thursday, Octobor 19th, 1906, at 10o clock a, m., to consider and net upontho authorization of nn issue of bondsIn tho sum of One Million Flvo HundredThousand Dollars ($1,500,000.00). to re-

fund tho existing bonded lndobtednoottof tho Company and for othor purposeand tho execution of a trust deed ormortgages to secure tho same, nnd thotransaction of bucIi other businosa hmay proporly bo brought boforo saidmooting.

OIIAS. II. ATHERTON,Seorotnry Wnialua Agricultural Com-

pany, Ltd.

Hgnglulu, H, avgpnt,. 2?4 ,1901, .

Page 6: If HK TXT om T3...3- If You News, want toilny to-day's THE HK TXT AHA om 75: T3 Is The tlio Hawaiian paper Star that you 11 ml It In goes Into the best THE STAll SrML AMJfJLr homes

A Summer Proposition.Well, now, there's the

ICE QUESTION !

Ytm know you'll need ice, you knowIt 1 a. necessity In hot weather. We

bll you are anxious to get that Ice

Khtafc will give you satisfaction, andwe'd like to supply you. Order from

IBVcphonp 1151 Uluo, rostofneo Box 006,

f. G. MIH & CO., LTD ,

iWa G. Irwin.. President and Manager3oim D. Spreckels. First nt

w. s. rtlffard.... Second Vlce-rreslde- nt

H. M. Whitney TreasurerKlcbwrd I vers SecretaryEL r. Spalding. .Auditor

SUGAR FACTORS, COMMISSION AGENTS

AGENTS FOR

twmic Steamship Co., San Francisco,

SVssrn Sugar Refining Co., San Francs, Cal.

Baldwin Locomotive Works, Phlladel

Ke-ws- "otl'vorsal Mill Co., Manufac-iwwr- s

of National Cane Shredder,

fneme. Oil Transportation Co., SanEVi Cisco, Cal.

HART & CO., LTD?he illto Ice Cream Parlor.

C&ocolates and ConfecUoaaToe Cream and Water IcesBakery Lunch.

m m ram m the city

union Pacific

RailroadSUGGESTS

ieed axxdComfort

Mfette trains aally through cars, firstC cond class to all points. Re- -

A ratea take effect soon. Write

. S. F. Booth,General Acent

Ko. 1 Montgomery Street,San Francisco.

Travellers Agree

THAT

ft Owlai,XirMLitocl

IS

Quickest, Finest, Best

A Train that SuppliesAll Demands

To St. Louis or Chicago

IN 3 DAYSfrom San Francisco.

ELECTRIC LIGHT?READING LAMPS,CLUB ARSALL GOOD ' .TINGS

Southern PacificInformation BureauSl Market 8tret,San Francisco.

MHO RAILWAY AHD LAND CD'S

TIMED TABLE

OCTOBER 6, 1904.

OUTWARD.

(Tor' Walanae, Walalua, Kahuku andWow Stations 0:15 a. m., 3:20 p. m.

Tor- - IPearl City, Ewa Mill and WayStaoUo a 17:30 a m., 9:x5 a. m.,mtioe a. m., 2:15 p. m., 3:20 p. m.,

5:1T5 p. m., t9:30 p. m., tll:15 p. m.

INW RD.

arrlw Honolulu from Kahuku, Walalum and Walanae 8:36 a. m., 5:31

p tra.Ilniwe Honolulu Irom Ewa 7.1111 and

Pmittl City 17:46 a. m.. 8:36 a. m.,I0jf38 a. m.. 1:40 p. m., J:31 p. m.,5:2. ip. m., 7:30 p. m.Didlly.

tSinnday Excepted.tSiunday only.

tTtor Halelwa Limited, a two hourIr&lro, Heaves Honolulu every Sunday at1:30, te. m. returning arrives m Hono-

lulu. iut 10:10 v. m. The Limited stopsBnlyruit 'Pearl City and Walanae.

X3. E.'.TENNISON,Supt

F. C. SMITH,a. p. & t. a.

i.When your vitality i3 low, you

are miserable all the time.You aro languid and depressed, your

nervea are weak, and your appetite is poor.Head what

Ayer 9 sSarsapariila I

did for the invalid daughter of a gratofulmother:

"My daughter had for a long time beentroumcu witu violent licailariies aim Bleeplesjnes. Sliow.is nale. lud lioiinnctito. andwas losing Hesh i ipidly. She tried variousremedies, but reeei,e.l no benefit until shocommenced using i,',Siiaiutiih. Aftertaking lull a ijottle sua began to icei nctter.Iiy a continued use of tills medicine lierappetite returned, her cheeks began to 1111

out and show color, she gained in strength,her headaches disappeared, sho slept better,and now says bho feeU liko n new person."

There are many imitationSarsapariilas.

Be sure you get "AYER'S."Preptrcd by Dr. J. C. A) er & Co., Lowell, Mass., U. S. A.

Castle &,Cooke, Ltd

AQENT8 ITOF

New EnglandMutual LiftInsurance Co

OF BOSTON.

iEtna FireInsurance Co.,O-- HARTFORD. CONN.

c, & CO,, L

QUEEN STREET,HONOLULU, H. T

AGENTS FORHawaiian Agricultural Company, Ono--mea Sugar Company, ITonomu SugarCompany, alluku Sugar Company,Ookala Sugar Plantation Company,Ilaleakala Ranch Company, KapapalaRanch.

Planters' Line Shipping Company.Charles Brewer & Co's Line of Bos

ton Packets.

LIST OP OFPICEHS.Charles M. Cooke PresidentGeo. H. Robertson.. & Mgr.E. Faxon Blsl.op....Treas. & Secy.F. W. Macfarlane AuditorP. C. Jones DirectorC. H. Cooke DirectorJ. R. Gait DirectorAll of the above named constitute

the Board of Director-- .

GlassIs an important factor In the buildingand furnishing of a house. Nothingbeautifies a homo so much at so slighta cost as plate glass windows built InChina closets, etc. Wo have glasa forevery purpose, including;

China Closets.

Glass for picture frames.

Passo parout glass.

Colored glass for decorative purposes,blue, red, yellow and orange.

Figured rolled glass, in white andcolors.

Ground glass for artists' use,

Circular glass cut to order.

Skylight glass with wire.

Skylight glass with asbestos wire.

Florentine glass, (whlto and wlnocolors.

LEWERS & COOKE, LTD

177 S. KING STREET

Want Ads ln The Star bring quick

Town Talklly The Man About Town.

I would like to get an explanation about Davis, and now not a line is glv-o- f

the position of the County treasurer en and I fear that ho Is dumped." Thison the blanket warrant proposition. Notthat I have nny warrants, blnnket or story late Judgeotherwise, but tho proposition hns be- - Campbell, of San Francisco. Cutnp-gu- n

to affect me like pigs In clover, or bell was n police court Judge; he didthe famous fifteen puzzle. 1 cannot Una not know much law, but ho kept him-n- ut

where the treasurer "Is at." I un- - self In tho public eye through the manyder.-uoo- at Ilrst, mil right, that he was newspaper stories that were publishedopposed to blanket warrants and refus- - him. Finally, the different citycil to pay them. Out ho suddenly de- - editors of the San Francisco papers de-veloped a peculiar admiration for the elded to drop Campbell and passedAndrew Adams blanket warrant and word When tho newspa-thoug- h

the County attorney, who had pennen told the Judge, who was thenndvlsed blm to pay other blanket war- - running for olllce, ho said: "Don't drop'rants, said that it should not be paid, mo boys; If you do It, I'm dumped."ho announced his Intention to pay It. 4 .

This gave Attorney McClanahan, who Tho promoton Committee Is fond ofmerely happens to bo of the same poll- - quoting Mark TwnlnSs "prose poem"

,1108 as tho treasurer, a chance to bring abolU Hawaii. It might also made usea suit to enjoin Treasurer Trent from oC the foiiowlnB from hla innocentspaying It. Then tho Hoard of Supor- -visors passed a resolution recalling It.Trent's private counsel advised him not1 l'ay it 13ut Trent was determinedNothing short of an explicit preventionwns going to stop him paying this... . - .uuuiKci warrant, ui course it cannotbo that he Is anxious to be told by thecourt not to. So I admit that I don'tunderstand tho case at all. Here Is nclient in open court announced to beIntending to act contrary to adviceof the counsel who sits beside him, inthe very matter before the court, andstill the case goes on. It can't be' poll- -Una nf tnitcca 1,. I ,.o tt iJui uai i til lcrlvp It un. Thoro la r,nH. n,i twish to do, and that Is to commend thepublic splr't of Attorney McClanahan.As n public spirited taxpayer ho hasgiven days of time to stopping pay- -ment or this warrant for $141. And hedetermined to stop It In his own way.When as a result of his suit the Boardof Supervisors passed resolution stop- -pmg it, did lie rest satisfied? Not atnll. Ho knocked out the resolution andproceeded to stop payment In his ownway. It is beautiful civic patriotism,but hard to understand, quite as hardas it Is to understand what sort ofblanket warrants Trent will pay andwhy he pays them.

4"Charlie Uellina," remarked Eugene

Sullivan "is one of the latest of theseautomobile cranks. Everybody whoknows Charlie knows that Cliorilnknows all about horses but ho has gotuie cnug-cnu- g craze and Is industrious-ly building up a reputation as an ex-pert choffer."

"A What?" I asked."Choffer" repeated Sullivan "Choffer

Is the word. He has it vorv hmllv

philosopher

accordingly.

Indeed. I'm told that this week generally recognized as applying to aThursday, I think it was one of his small and simple word in commonmen came to him and said 'you know use. It Is "veal," which has mean-Mist- er

Uelllna that black Eh? Ing altogether different from Its dlc-We- ll

I theenk he's very tlonary definitions, Just as "yellow" has"All right, says Bellina 'I guess I come to have a new significance. I was

can fix him all and he went talking with an'attorney the dayback to tho house. Tho boys thought about the lapsed term proposition andof course that he was to get ne voiced strenuous objections to somesome medicine .but Instead of that ho stnr editorials on the subject. He dls-ca-

back to look nt the horse with aBreed very emphatically with thea kit of automobile tools instead. That of the and finally, by way-show-

s

what the chug-chu- g habit will apparently of showing utter contemptdo." ho declared that they were veal and

. . . . said ho was surprised to see veal In theTho olllco of supervisor is not tho stflr"

snap many people Imagine. The mem- -bers of tho have much to do Inlooking after county affairs; but look- -lng after county affairs, according toa member, Is the easiest portion of tho

standing off job chasers Is thohardest. supervisor is besiegedwith men looking for positions and itis difficult to make them understandthat jobs are scarce and that thero aro

the chiefbeing "I

ingood

It is hard for him to refuse a request.When tho Hawaiians to him, hesays "Why, of course; I can fix that foryou." Then he sits down writesa note Jack Lucas; tho

This request Isin a the ap-

plicant goes on his way to find Super-visor Jack. One dny, recently, Lucaswas of tho officialenvelopes and he became very tired ofSecretary s way thobuck, so up Atkinson on thetelephone saying: "If you havo anymore of those d--d just..

thethe

thethe

irrom wnat i can learn it was noi ai- -ways harmonious thethe reason that Col. somoof the thought that tho crowd

in camp not gothe to

see the In fact tho Colonelissued that the men havo

bo in camp at hour Insteadof coming by tho Owl Tholate said nothing but

they have theirthe test camo it wasfound that tho fellows who had beenstaying out late at mad thebest scores while themen who stuck thecamp wero outclassed.

!

millionaire on theAnd he pale and sad,

He said: "Y.u may not know It"I am bad,

"I gave editor pome"Which had been writ by me,

the editor did publish It"Ah I is

"I not like the way tho newspa-pers are creating my George

, mused S. Martin, tho other

observation the tailorrecalls n about the

about

tho

the

the

dallya

horse?seeck."

right' other

going

views editor

board

work;Every

apply

Job."large official

called

bunch

others

orders

actual

Abroad: "The Vesuvius of today Is aVfir.. .,,,. nrfll, ,,.,, , , ,.l.cnno K,.lUoa, ni tho IsI.nnds." Alexander Young give usth. ...

J" in lllccnult ,s lore,the cable is,

' '

J' 1 J,ron stood on tne corner orFort street, of tho activeMwsboy. "I never saw such a townfor newsboys," he said. "I've been

hero n few moments waitingfor n car nnvo been struck aboutfollr times already, ("Paper, sir," saida smtlll " ' "W Whv.... .llnsame bov will nsk vou tn n nnnorthree or four times In five minutes,I,vo 'em shout at me ("Star, sir,)

o, I don't want any paper. I've'iad shout at me I was go- -

lnff eight miles an hour In adon't seem use any Judgment.

NO Judgment. NO. And nocnl ' the number of them. In othercities they seem to have some under- -standing and yell about theirpapers let you get one If youwant. Here ("Plenty neews,") Herethoy shove a paper right at you andkeep on shoving it NO, boy, I've gotil Star. They oven tackle a man ridingquickly on a bicycle., See here, young- -ster, I'vo you times I didn'twnnt a paper. That's a sample thown" they do." Hrown's car wascoming and he stepped towards It.Instantly the whole crowd of young- -sters advanced upon him Hashing pa--pers In the sun. He moved resignedly through them and took a seat, andI count of the number of times hosaid "No" before ho got Walklkl.

4A new meaning Is slowly coming to be

Honolulu Is actually sending money1 the Coast for Investment, yet thereIs none In circulation here. It can be1snId on the best of authority thatmen of money hnve investing idlecoln ,n street railway securities of j

Francisco. seems to be nothing j

he,-- to Invest in, and yet tho islandsare undeveloped as regards their'

ative II. A. of Kauai, while on avisit here the other "It finally

back l me a" nln8tered ovorIt hud passed through

six different local firms before it was

ter with Honolulu. During tho pastfew days I have been doing some buy-ing nnd find that to many large housesmoney is no object at all, they would-n't make any terms whenI offered spot cash for a discount. ThenT Wpnt lltl tllP fllroflt in nrtrttVtAr. Iinitaa

for tne gake of u, ho,d SQmeco, sold me a ,ot stuff gxactIv Thpv shmV(v, mft thn' i7 VJVOlCeS ana ngureu OUt. ThOy had

nea, wav ",

.Dialogue between a Ha- -walan scnool teacher COme to tell hertroubles the of the Tcr- -

Secretary Jack- -

The Teacher- -I havo 34 children an- d-Tho Secretary Madam, I congratu- -

jate you.

,, , ,x nave some ' who do,rr,,00 , .,'papers not so very long ago one ofthem who was away for a trip and

a particularly good man to fillhis place asked me to look thework for him" said a truthful journalistto me a few ago,

"It happons" ho continued "that Iam not particularly well up ln tho sail-ings of the but I did know thatthero was a Canadian Australian linerleaving for Victoria one particularnight Just between mall times. I wrotemy news letter saw that It wassent, figuring it out that by being

not enough to satisfy all. Hnwallans sugar-prouuei- capacity, and Honoluluare applicants; a number of wlth banks teeming with gold,

after unsuccessful with rlenc'ng a money famine. recentlysupervisors, have called on Secretary slned a check for settlementAtkinson; "Jack" is a fellow and of an nccunt," remarked

andto Supervisor

note usually reads this way "The bear- - tnkf" ,to Tth,e Vf"k nnd a?.heir de-e- r

is a friend of mine; give him a good PsI I' Idn,t. the mat- -

laconic encasedenvelope nnd

handed several large

Jack of "passinghe

envelopes: keep

should remainabout surrounding neighborhood

sights.would

homo car.comers

revenge,shooting

nightssupposed steady

closely

street,

feeling

Woe Ah

do

Davis."

of SnndwloIl

,,"

complaining

standing

Pnrtllinipsn.l

buggy

there's

simply

several

local'been

There

except

Jaegerday.

wlthendorsements.

difference

complaining

Secretaryrltory,

neededafter

evenings

vessels

Is'expe-the-

$10,000

"Thore was an of gloat--results. Three linos threo for 25 day. one timo could not pick betweon other cor-cent- s.

up a without reading respondents in office It

CLOSING OUT

200 DOZEN OVERSIIIRTS WILL BE SOLDAT GREAT REDUCTIONS AND REGARD-LESS OF COST.

Sale Begins September 2. Two Weeks Only

Trade

Back astRound Trip

Chicago ? 72.St. Louis 67.50Memphis C7.50New Orleans 07.50Kansas City GO. 00

Omaha CO. 00

St. Paul 70.00'

. - Washington, D. C.

Ori sale SeptemberDenver and Return $o5.00. Good forThese tickets are all honored on THE

Passenger Agent, W.

until the letter gone that thereason became apparent.

" 'Did you send your stuff by wayof Victoria?' they asked.

" 'Sure' I said, then they chortledIn unison. As soon as they got reason-able they explained that they Wouldbe days ahead of me because they hadsent their letters over to Kahululwhence one of the American-Hawaiia- n

liners would land It in San Franciscodays ahead of my Victoria-boun- d copy.

"It certainly looked bad." continuedmy veracious Journalistic ,friend, "thatIs It until the next morning whenby an odd chance one the other

asked the Portuguese boy If hehad their letters on the shipKahulul all right. He seemed a bitrattled finally, under questioning.It developed that he had put the let-ters on a sailing ship, bound round theHorn for New York. They allspecial delivery stamps on ofcourse should be delivered promptlybut that occurred four months ago andneither tho other fellows have heardof their since,

"Thus" soliloquized my journalisticfriend, somewhat aimlessly "virtue Is

itsSr

IST SHOOT III

SMOOTH WATER

PROMOTION COMMITTEE LEARNS

ONE REASON WHY A SQUADRON

CANNOT COME OUT HERE.

There was a full attendance atyesterday afternoon's meeting of theHawaii Promotion Committee, J. A.

McCandless occupying chair.iSecretary Boyd presented a letter

form for passing to tho Chamberu;clr.f rVimmornn nnrt Mornhnntfl Assn.

In the discussion which followedChairman McCandless took tho viewthat oiled dirt roads were a failure inthis climate. He believed In oiled roadsso long as they were on a macadamizedbase.

E. I. Spalding made a statement Inconnection with territorial finances lnwhich he counselled tho necessity ofeconomy.

In connection with the constructionof proposed Oahu Belt road, Itwas agreed that when the work was

afoot It should bo dono by contract.A letter from Charles H. Darling,

assistant secrotnry of the Navy De-

partment, was read. He stated thatIt would not bo possible for a squadronto bo sent mentioning amongother reasons, that tho "heavy swellson coasts of Islands preventedgood target practice.

J. A. M. Johnson promised thathe reached Orient ho would sco

Stirling and ascertain his viewson 'the subject. Tho statement was

After a genoral discussion on thoquestion of the cutting out of Hono- - J

lulu by going Pacific Mall liners

have money. AVe are all right on j elation regarding the need of new roadsK,aUal bU,1 U S6e?,S me' after a lonk 'n and about Honolulu for re-rlf- ieI was clad to see that our .rallant

team returned safely from the fT"? I? Honolulu. that tn city paIr ot ex,st,ng roads. The Walklklm 8n Honolulu will solve r0ad nnd Moannlua road werecompetition With a couple Ot tn in k'nrol5lern tho Iand a trunkful of excuses. fid, suppose, ferrea to and improvements requlr-meua- is

l3 ln poor condltIon now m a ,,usl. ed were marked.with for

Jones and

and

to an early

obeyed;but for when

had to

The stoodwas

but

an a

"AndWoo me."

friendJ.

of

Let

nnd

Imv

lul(1

'em when

They to

and

toldof

lostto

San

In

nndth

toand

nnd

and

didof

for

of

own

sot

t0

mailed from Victoria It would roach , ,naao that three out of tho Amerl-Sa- n

Francisco a dny or so ahond of cnn warships on the station wero dls-th- e

noxt regular mall. fluled or un.uncanny sort

times "At you lug going on thepaper something tho was not

DO

had

and

fel-

lows

and

hadand

news

reward."

the

the

here,

the tho

whentho Ad-

miral

homo

and

Bhe

flvo

iam

but

put

SOSHIMA

Mark

ExcursionsTickets To

Minneapolis 70.00Duluth 72.50Fort Worth 60.00New York 103.50Boston 109.50Philadelphia 107.60Baltimore r 107.00

107.00

Good for 90 ,ys.40 days.

CALIFORNIA LIMITED.

G. Irwin & Co., Office

and on tho proposed yacht race fromSan Francisco to Hawaii, after whichCommodore Hobron is now looking, thomeeting adjourned until October 3.

HILO NEWS NOTES. r

(From Hawaii Herald.)The editor of the Sunday News, a

Japanese newspaper published in HHowas arrested o ntwo charges of crim-inal libel last week.

Tho Hawaii Democrats have takenanother step ln the direction of secur-ing a newspaper plant. This time It Isnn estimate of cost.

"Mr. Grlble has succeeded J. Willcockas engineer at Papaaloa. Tho latter hasgone to tho coast.

The Laupahoehoo Sugar Co, Is mak-ing excavations for a new nine rollermill to bo Installed there.

Tho roads between Ookala and Hono-ka- a

are almost Impassable owing tothe heavy rains of the past few weeks.

A peculiar plant growing In a Churchstreet garden emits a puff of smokewhen its blossoms open.

Sixty Porto Rican laborers left Olaaplantation last week to work at Naa-leh- u.

LAVINIA SAILS ON MONDAY.Captain Max Schlemmer will depart

on Monday for Laysan Island on theschooner Lavlnla. Any person hav-ing old papers would confer a favoron Captain Schlemmer by sendingthem to the Lavlnla at the Railwaywharf No. 2 as he will tako the papersto tho people living at Laysan. TheLavlnla will return with a cargo ofguano.

CUTS, BRUISES AND BURNSQUICKLY HEALED.

Chamberlain's Pain Balm Is an an-tiseptic liniment and when applied tocuts, bruises and burns, causes themto heal without maturation and muchmoro quickly than by tho usual treat-ment. It allays the pain of a burn orscald almost Instantly. Unless theInjury Is very severe It does not leavea scar. For sale by all dealers, Ben-son Smith & Co., agents for Hawaii.

J. P. Cooke, Manager.

OFFICUR8:H. y, Baldwin PresidentJ. B. Castle First Vice-Preside- nt

W. A. Alexander.Second Vice-Preside- nt

L.l T. Peck Third Vice-Preside- nt

J, Waterhouse Treasurerla. M. Rolph SecretaryW. O Smith Auditor

Sugar Factors andCommissionHerchants

AOENfS FOR I

Hawaiian Commercial SugarCompany,

Haiku Sugar Company,Pala Plantation,Maui Agricultural Company,Klltel Plantation Company,Hawaiian Sugar Company,Kahuku Plantation Company,Kahulul Railroad Company,Haleakala Ranch Company.

v.

Page 7: If HK TXT om T3...3- If You News, want toilny to-day's THE HK TXT AHA om 75: T3 Is The tlio Hawaiian paper Star that you 11 ml It In goes Into the best THE STAll SrML AMJfJLr homes

THE

Bank ofJJawaiiLIMITED.

Incorporated Under the Laws ol theTerritory of Hawaii.

PAID-U- P CAPITAL $600,000.00

SURPLUS 300,000.00

UNDIVIDED PROFITS 48,255.47

i sAOFFICERS.

Charles II Cooke PresidentP. C. Jones Vice-Preside- nt

F. W. Macfarlnne...2nd Vice-Preside- nt

C. H. Cooke CashierC. Hustaco Jr .Assistant CashierF. B. Damon "Assistant CashierF. B. Damon Secretary

DIRECTORS: Chas. M. Cooke, P. C.

Jones ,F. W. Macfarlane, E. F. Bishop,E. D. Tenney, J. A. McCandless, C. H.Atherton, C. H. Cooke.

COMMERCIAL AND SAVINGS DEPARTMENTS.

Strict attention given to all branchesof Banking

JUDD BUILDING. FORT STREET,

Claus Spreckels. Wm. Q. Irwin.

CMsSpn&CoBANKERS

HONOLULU, n. i.

San Francisco Agents The NevadaNational Bank of San Francisco.

DRAW EXCHANGE ONBAN FRANCISCO The Nevada Na

tional Ba A of San Francisco.ONDON Union of London & Smith'sBank, Ltd.

NEW YORK American Exchange Na.tlonal Bank.

CHICAGO Corn Exchange NationalBank.

PARIS Credit Lyonnals.BERLIN Dresdner Bank.HONGKONG AND YOKOHAMA The

Hongkong and Shanghai BankingCorporation.

NEW ZEALAND AND AUSTRALIABank of New Zeu nd, and Bank of

Australasia.VICTORIA AND VANCOUVER Bank

of British North America,

TRANSACT A GEITERAL BANKINGAND EXCHANGE BUSINESS.

Deposits Received. Lorn tndi "rApproved Security. Commercial and

ravellers' Credits issued. Bills of Ex-

change Bought and Sold.

COLLECTION PROMPTLYFOR.

ESTABLISHED IN 1S38.

BISHOP &

BANKERS

CO.

BANKING DEPARTMENT.

Transact business In all departmentsof banking .

Collections carefully attended to.Exchange bought and sold.

Commercial and Travelers' Lettersof Credit issued on the Bank of

California and N. Al. Rothschilds &

Sons, London.Correspondents for the American

Express Company, and Thos. Cook

& Son.Interest allowed on term and Savings

Bank Deposits.TRUST DEPARTMENT.

Act as Trustees, collect Rents andDividends.

Safety Deposit Vault.

ACCOUNTANT DEPARTMENT, 928

Bethel street.Auditors and Trustees In BankruptcyBooks examined and reported on.INSURANCE DEPARTMENT, 924

Bethel Street.Agents for Five, Marine, Life, Acci-

dent and Employers Liability Insur-ance Companies.

THE 1

Limited.ESTABLISHED 18S0.

Capital Subscribed Yen 24,000,000

Capital Paid Up 18.000.000

Reserve Fund 9.72O.C00

HEAD OFFICE, YOKOHAMA.

Branches:Honolulu, New York, San Francisco,

London, Lyons, Bombay, Hongkong,Newchwang, Pekln, Shanghai, Tientsin,Kobe, Nagasaki, Toklo.

The Banks buys and receives for col-

lection Bills of Exchange, Issue Draftsand Letters of Credit, and transacts agenral banking business.

Honolulu Branch 67 King Street

FERNANDEZ CONTEST.A. Fernandez has amended his elec-

tion contest petition In the SupremoCourt by adding to it a statement thatIf ho had received tho votes which hoclaims wero miscounted, ho would

have been elected over Supervisor atlarge Adams. Fernandez prays for arecount of ballots, and, after hearingof proofs, for a decree that tho returnof Adams to tho ofllco was false, andthat petitioner was duly elected there-to and should have Icon so returned.W. S. Edlngs, C. W. Ashford and E.M .Watson are his attorneys.

"COPTIC MAY ARRIVE MONDAY.Tho S. S. Coptlo may arrive hero

Mpnday from tho Orient on routo to

j,.jan Francisco.

THE STAR, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 30,

WALT HAM WATCHESSTEM WINDING, LEVER.

WALTHAM WATCHES ARE THEMOST DURABLE AND ACCURATE

POCKET TIMEPIECES IT IS

FOREIGN NEW

nan Ms

POSSIBLE TO CONSTRUCT.

TWELVE MILLION IN USE.

ALL GUARANTEED BYAMERICAN WALTHAM

COMPANY,WALTHAM, MASS., U.S. A.

S BY GABLE

THE LIFE INSURANCE SCANDAL.

NEW YORK, September 30. Testimony was given today that theNew York Life, Equitable Life and Mutual Life Insurance Companiesformed a pool to attend to desired legislation in various States.

oANOTHER VOLCANO HAS STIRRED INTO ACTIVITY.

MAZATLAN, Mexico, September 30. Santiago a volcano in Nic-

aragua is active, throwing out water and ashes. The outbursthas destroyed millions of coffee trees.

HARPER IS ILL AGAIN.

CHICAGO, September 30. Another heroic operation is necessaryto save the life of President Harper of Chicago University.

President V. R. of Chicago University has long been a suf--

ferer from cancer. Less than a year ago he submitted to anoperation which was nearly fatal. His recovery was said to have beendue to the use of radium.

. oBENGALESE TRY BOYCOTT AGAINST BRITISH GOODS.

CALCUTTA, September 30. Fifty thousand Bengalese havepledged themselves to a boycott of British goods as a protest againstthe partition of Bengal.

nMAIL STEAMER OVERDUE.

HAWAIIAN 1905.

WATCH

boiling

Harper

intestinal

MANILA, September 30. The British steamer Chengsha fromHongkong with the American mails aboard is overdue. It is fearedshe may have gone down in the recent typhoon.

oCARNEGIE WANTS PEACE.

PARIS, September 30. Andrew Carnegie has published an articleadvocating a 'triple alliance between America, France and Great Britain to safeguard the world's peace.

KKVHN,

NOTED ASTRONOMER.Prof. Simon 'Newcomb, the famous American astronomer, has just

completed his seventieth birthday. He has received more degrees andsimilar honors abroad than any other American man of science, and is

'the first American member of the French Institute since BenjaminFranklin.

I

A FRIENDS' SCHOOL.Mrs. John Cox, wife of a New York architect is to become the prin-

cipal of the Chappakua Institute, in Westchester, N. Y., a notedFriends' School.

erlxermeilvere isiliafc --willrecuperate

orce moreixickly 'trtart

; REALTY Til ANSFEUS J

4

Entered for Record September 20, 1905.

From 9 a. m. to 4 p. m.

TELLS NEEDS

OF

Lau Len to Wong Kim B S AVAIALAB, KAIMUKI AND PALOLOKiineoho Ranch Co Ltd to C Unite.... D iMPnnVKMKXT n.un OETS GOODKaneoho Ranch Co Ltd to C BoIte....DHarriet G Beckwlth to Joao Costu..HLoo Hong ot nl Adv Wong Who

Chen i JMnrla Cnrrelra and hsb to Miinucl

Currolrn Dthe

Mnrla Cnrrelra anil hsb to ' meeting last nt the roomsCarrolro D 0f tno Builders nnd Traders' Exchange!

Koon Sing to Lau Shun.... P A ,i the Elite The following,W C Peacock & Co to W C Peacock Were chosen for the

& Co Ltd 15 S year by ucclamatlon:Alice M Way ct al to John G Roth-we- ll

P A

E II F Wolter Tr to Oahu Railway& Lund Co D

--J I

Recorded September 21, 1903.

E A Douthltt and wf to William OSmith, M; lot 3 blk 01, Wnlalae tract i

$800. 11 p 2S0 dent, Burn's Rat OldSept 20, 1903.' 011 the club's work or tho past year, with A

Rosalie O by Rogr, He made the aof decree of title In Land Reg Courtcase No 40. B 274, p 271. Dated Sept.21, 1905.

Isunc S Kalu to Chow Yuen, L;land and bldgs; Nnwlllwlli, 8

yrs at 1S0 per yr. G 273, p 278. DatedMar 27,

September 22, 1905.

Nancy K Louis to Joo Andrnde, D;

Hawaii

Schmidt.tract,

3C7.

Notice;Court

272. Sept

Jens,

3C9. Sept

HonoluluLevcnson

DatedAlbert Keahl

par WKallhi .Oahu.

Plantn

Hllea-ik- i,

Agrctl Grazing

FROM CLARK.

There a good attendancemembers of Wnlalae, KultnuklTnlnln tmnrovoment Club nt annual

Francisco held evening

Young building.olllcers

Zeno Myers,B. lngalls,

A. It. Gurrey, Jr.,C. M.""V. Forster, treasurer.Dr. W. G. Rogers, A. F. Clark, W. T.

Royal Mead andBrown,

Albion F. Clark, the retiring presl

preventing

Knpuhulu.

president.

(iiilrementsadjourned.

Odd Fellows' HalllfoNOi.ru'

Wkdnkmuy Niuiit, Oct.

I fil 11AMERICA'S LECTURER,

Deliver and

Midnight Scenes in Slums

iimFrom experience

ensuing Missionary.

andLECTURE:

Thedescribed.

Power

Honolulu, Oahu. 271, submitted report, Pit. Old. Story,Dated Motley Crowd.

Phillips Notice; recommenda- - Supper. How tall younfe

Kauai.

1905.

Recorded

tlona: ji'reacnor mistooit caning. unaTo owners along Wife. The Man

Wnlalae road have frontages New York Saved. Can the Fallenfenced to keep-- ! large Reclaimed?,

lug with the Problem2. have the Transit Co. Solved Bell, &c, &c.

provide waiting station nt the end "Every the Parktho With convenience fiom stage occupied

people would the locality evening, wheif Dr. abecome so charmed climate lecture on sunject, .Miunignt scenes

pur R P kills 5210, wou,a becomo resldentSiOahu. ,H. B 2.0, pwaemi. 3 To work for the wat363. Dated 21 lo,,i i,ti, win nopilml with more his dramatic dlsrourse." "Boston Dull v

..-l tr ,1.1,.. ... , Tlnlnn i.tx..iviinuimiu ( ; ui 11. U10DC '

D; Int I npc land. Walkele, 4 To tftko u Ule comntion ofEwa, Oahu. $1. B 2T0, p 304. Dated roads.July 21, 190.--

1.

5. To take measuresJ. Kalll et al to Mrs. C A Drummond depositing of rubbish along thenl 4- share In R 43SS liul land, ' s(les of the ronu-

-

Muolea Hana, Maul. $120. B 270, a wQ tn. wjth th0 Government, 10th nnd of October. See3G0. Dated Sept 18, 190j. tho matter of a hose cart or kind

P Beamer to M de F Splnoln, PA; flre to bo stationed atgeneral powers. B 274, p 271. Dated junction of Walnlae road and KalulanlJuno I, 1905. I avenue. There two fires the

C Beamer by nty to J J Dulut- - district the year, a total loss re- -jer, Rel; lot 3, Olaa Homestead Reser-- suiting each case.vntlon, Puna, Hawaii. $4000. B 2G7, p 7. Induco owners clear32. Dated Sept 18 and improve

First Am Savs & Co of There was a discussion on recom- -

Ltd to WM Mlnton. Par Rel; lots 1 In which the views of theand 2 blk 61, Wnlalae tract, retiring heartilyOahu. 271, p 2S3. Dated Sept. eu nnu alter a general lane over re-2- 1

of the sections represent- -... ... . . .vm JU .Minion ana wi Ainrgarci

B D; lots 1 and blk 61, Walo-lu- e

Honolulu, Oahu. $1200. B270, p Dated 21 1905.

Bathsheba M Allen by Regr,of decree of In Land Regcase No 33. B 274. p Dated22, 1905.

Harold Jeffs to Minnie u u;Int III lot 0 blk 3, Honolulu,Oallll. $1. B 270, p Dated21, 1905.

Tobacco Ltd to JumesD L; room etc on 2nd lloor

bldg. Fort St, Honolulu. On.hu. 3 yrs at $25 per mo. B 27.3, p

Feb 16.

A d'ArauJo to (w) ltd;ap 2 It P 2509 kul 6150 and R

Honolulu $250. B 200.

p 15S. Dated Sept 22,Hutchinson Sug Co by atty

to Christina Knpulanl, Rel; intin R P 7621 kul 7715. Kau,Hawaii. $100. B 259, n 353. DatedSept 22 1905.

Christina M and hsb (W P)to Wniohinu Co D;

Int In R P 7021 kul 7715 Hllea-ik- l

ADVICE

was of theand

its

K.A.

secretary.

Schmidt, D. E. C.directors.

nis itt1. God's

and so our Cities beThe

To by Dr.in

this top was111010 visit nnd last Bell

Its tno,3579

the

fortho

D; P17th

someC the

werePeter

inTo

the

$1. B me

10

of.

M

car

Tr

Co

ed, the

ENGINEERS ON AThe tho

Engineering Association willbe this evening theHotel, The special train willleave the station at andwill leave Halelwa at 12:30 tomorrow

That the will hayea time goes without saying. Theyalways do. An program hasbeen both for going, stayingand

Kau. Hawaii. B 270, p 369. Dat-ed Sept 22,

K Smithies and hsb (GE) Charles E E King, D; R P )

Hakuheo 2, Molokal. B270 .p 371. Dated May 1 1905 )

Wniluu et al to Hawn Land& Co Ltd D; lot 1 blk 12

Pearl City Oahu. $110. B 270,

372. Dated Sept 15,

K Kekaula et al to& Land Co.. D; Int In streets or aven-ues. Pearl City. Ewa, Oahu. $1. B 270

p 374. Dated Sept 15, 1905.

4

SONGWill Ills Siar

ling Entitled

ii the

ui

fourns Midnight

at

to

The Doctor will sing five or six otthe songs ho used to King in the dens

atSYNOPSIS OFSlums of New York graphlcnlljr.

How I became aHow to reach tho masses,of Song A Short Life and a!

Merry Olio. A Desperate Gang. Kltian exhaustive The

A!

Midnight

pn

have property Wickedest latheir Wo-clear- ed

as bo In men ofhighway when Improved. A Man

Rapida seat Theater,

of line. to .gallery,delivered

with5304, Walklkl.-

Honolulu, Increased

Knhlklnn,

apparatus

propertyholdings.

mendatlonsHonolulu, president

Kapulanl

meeting

JAUNT.semi-annu- al gathering

HonoluluHalelwa'

Waialua.returning

morning. engineers

excellentarranged

returning.

Elizabeth

Hnlawn,

(widow)Improvmt

Oahu Railway

ThrillingLecture,

buypersonal

dance-hous- e midnight.

Singingrreacher.

variations.following

Overboard.

nonulntion.

the Slums City. Hohis hearers nearly two hours with

Sept 1905. imui

et

of

Inpast

to1905. their

were

1905.

Sept

title

1905.

1905.

&

of

held

good

$300.1905.

M2391,

$100.

Ewu1905.

The

In of New Yorkheld

General admission to all parts of thoHouse, 25 cents.

Tickets for sale nt Wall, Nichols Co,Lecture commences nt 8 o'clock.N.B. Dr. Bell will also lecture on tho

p further

endors-- j

5

pJ

notices.

THE SEVENTH ANNUAL

St. Clements

Church

Fairwill be held Friday and Satur-

day, October 13th and 11th.

Admission 25c.

Children 10c.

IRMGARD MADE FAST PASSAGE.The barkentlne Irmgurd arrived yes-

terday afternoon from San FranciscoIn 13 days. She had .in uneventfulpassage. Tho vessel brouRtit fourpassengers and had a full cargo.

Wantresults,cents.

newyears'

Ads In The Star bring qulckrThree lines three times for 25

Wt IHKB9HB9EBS9 MBBPBPBHPPBBOHBHBBMMXBTBffwH

g Mscmii iiiimii man n maa H

NOW5c

See that the name OWL is stamped on every cigar.

GunstEakin Cigar Co.,THE HOUSE OF STAPLES

DDI IMfcllB TJX OK S

k

'is

f

95

"3

i

Page 8: If HK TXT om T3...3- If You News, want toilny to-day's THE HK TXT AHA om 75: T3 Is The tlio Hawaiian paper Star that you 11 ml It In goes Into the best THE STAll SrML AMJfJLr homes

JBHM1T.

6o.moan.GoodNw Mno Just received Including nil

Binds oC curios.OrOfcra taken for Infants socks, shoes

fa--

WOHAN'S EXCHANGEHotel Street near Fort.

-- tiiil

It is Well toRemember

Tbtt Dandruff cannot be removed"With, at .brush nor cuss words.

Baeo's Dandruff Killer Is the mostgeil.ftljftt remedy for this pugposo try It.

Sam ly nil Druggists and at theXTbTmi Barber .Shop. Telephono Main2S v

Crystal SpringsButter

Capricious appetites abound1 the hot weather. One doesnot want much butter, but extraKckmI butter. Crystal SpringsButter Is extra good. We re-

ceived a choico shipment by tholtet steamer. This lino butterJ deservedly a favorite withHonolulu people who know aKood thing when they taste It.lis flavor Is .exquisite and Ispreserves Intact by the card-tmar- S

cartons In which tho butcomes packed.

limited

Telephone ftlaln 45

LShooling Notice.' TEDnrlng assigned our InterestsBjJootHns game at or on the land: ofMaumalua .to D. P. P.. Isenberg, Esq., uas

next,tthoaiftag Maunalua frequent

penalty transport- -jiormits heretofore condition

fcecnTsrr revokedMAUNALUA RANCH CO.,

rBy S. Damon,v Seiptember 22ml, "1S03.

JAMES F, MORGAN

THE PURCHASER

fiOIimiT THE RAILS OF

XUSnAI.A n

JllMDBABLY FOUND A BUYER.

Railway. Commissionermdvlces the Matson Navigation

Campwjiy recelvetj notificationchip. fne rails ln the steamer EnterpriseorigSmally theprojiHiK which went

TIitp'Bve-yea- r contract Inter-JShix- ua

iSteamshlp Company theplanttutloiis have blocked theliulltliitig road the being

rinero was an Immediate prospect3Iaji!ifilnK tho rails on the coast,

was taken the situation.TMmre-ar- e rails

XLtbme.of angle Irons, plates,axKtl UhIHs. The arrived on theECllllie a yearAumuot and since been stored a

tnear Walakea river wherethejy rwere protected the weather.

Ihisu Interview Philipdone much father

plani building the road, thatsaw prospect disposing the

railfli the Territory and that as thosteel gone twenty-fiv- e

per-nm- t it was a good tlmo to ontbc-cxans- The between San

aclljy ithe rail, andUrautfht that had probably boughtderm.

A LITTLE MIXED,"'llniotlce that Henry Wattorson

I that a hisy)Hntfer

Well! ought pub-Kw- hi

anonymously. anonymousnovuH ifrom a writer as welj. knpwn asWnUterson ought to a mighty good

Cleveland Plain

GROWING UP.has your girl ceased to

ptfcjy dolls?" InquiredIrrmuTLoulsvlllo.

'Gl)h, long ago," replied lady"Why, longer

niUWB.j 'Dlstorlcal novels." LouisvilleCouiflor-Journa- l.

NEWS IN A NUTSHELL

Paragraphs Tliut (Hro CondensedNews (lie Day.

WEATHER REPORT.

Local OIllco U. S. Weather Bureau,Honolulu, T. H., Sept. 29, 190r.

on. m i; s a. friiore wis Interested attendance10 a. m ,V. Morning mini- - at Morgan's auction rooms this after-mui- n,

noon when u number of different blocksBarometer, S n. m., 29.9.1: ab?oluto 8tocl.nnd bonds were .offered for

humidity, S a. m., 7.950 grains per cubicrelative humidity, 8 a. m., 75 per Tne nral 0rrrei wng a block

cent; dew point, 8 a. m., n000 iuin tyonds, sixes, which opened atvelocity, 0 a. 2, 8 a. m.ios.60 closed nt $101.60, Mc

3, 1 in., 8, S.; noon, S. Stocker being the buyer, 'order.Rainfall timing 24 Hours s a. Harry Armltnge bought GOOO Olaa 03

m., Inches.Total wind movement during 21

hours ended at, noon, 11(3 miles.ALEX. McC. ASHLEY,

Section Director.

The executive chambers wore not $4.today. Carter being. l following which had

away, according his cus- - for were '' withdrawntorn. before the auction: Ookula1 bonds",

Wlld ducks are beginning Plantation bonds, 10 sharesappearance In the Kahului ponds Agricultural 5 shares Oahu.

nnd hunters anticipate somo good sport The foreclosures were sold:this season. William Tell mortgage,

S. Holloway superintendent pub- - on King street, MonHlng, $fiOO.

works on appointed GVfc acres I'auoa valley, to Holmes,W. Marshall poundmaster of the trustee, $1000.

government pound Kahakuloa,Maul.

John J. Fernandez of Maul tholuippy father triplets

then TheodoreGeorge Carter and Edith MOO. to Georgenandoz.

Tho Pnla extension tho Kaliululrailroad Is about half completed and

management expect to have Itfinished by the beginning the sugarseason.

The Klnau, from Hilo, wag sightedearly l 'arnlng.

The steamer W. Is duo to-

morrow morning from Kauai ports.Halelwa will a lively place tonight

while the "engineering" jinks is progress.

Wllllnm Irwin expects to forFrancisco during the month Oc- -

tober.j S. Kldson, formerly chief officer

transport has boen rein-stated In tho service.

The supreme justices have filed wrlt-- jten transcripts their remarks Inholding that tho September termhad been le.tally drawn.

class tickets to ontho Oahu Railroad and Halelwa cou-pon on sale tho

of Trent oi Co.. street.If you to become acquainted

with very latest novelties fromfashion's centers you will do well tovisit S. Sachs' Dry Goods Co.

Smokers Owl cigars warnedagainst fraud substitution. See

j that tho name "Owl" is stamped onwrapper. Gunst-Eaki- n Cigar

Co., agents.The Hilo Herald says: The Herald

it on reliable authority theall- piersons are hereby warned that coast that after January 1 there

or hunting on tho wm more steam communt-J&and- a

(Koko Head) Is strictly prohibit- - cntion between Hilo and San Frnncls-r- L

mader f of the law. 'co unj that' bananas will beAlli granted e,i ln better than at present.

M.

Intended railroadpieces.

spjkes

Starbuck

Blldj,

prico,

they

days.'"Vll!

etllwr."

lady

fiiaitautapolls.

named

stations

tickets

McClanahanamended petition, making Andrew

'Adams a party mat-!t- er

his effort to enjoin Trent'

paying the Andrew Adams warrant..This is the case which Judge Robln-Iso- n

yesterday withheld his decision be-

cause Adams was not the"Radium Discovery Proper-ties- "

subject addressdelivered by Brigham be-

fore the Research Friday eveningOctober n.Bishop Preparatory

lecture illustrated by

RAILROAD AND HAS serlcs electricallantern ivs isladles' night the publicgeneral is invited attend.

.Timnoa V. Monran. the well-know- n me Iirsi complete aim uuuuiuib iiis In Francis- - public lands the islands to bo

o purchased rails made up for about fifteen years Is

Jlilo According to! completed by LandXnicu

to

forto

withwith

eeems toof for time

us ofof

ofln all 800 tons and

steel all33. last

have innlietli

fromrecent Peck of

twiho has tostated

ho of of

cof had

road

same class of he

adml to he wrote novel In

Say, tolit An

beDoalor.

HttlowIth

fromno

of

m., m, an.,S;

70.

or

lot of70.

Wind m., K.K; Oa. 13, 911

.11

lie been

Oa- -to

16tC. of to

lie H.ti.

at

isof

R.

of

of

G.

boIn

of

A. of

all

are atS30 Fort

N.are

of

In

at

t,e

ullare

;inup

ho

,B.

E. B. has illed an

to the case. In theof from

in

beforeIts and

will be the of anProf W. T.

Clubat 7:45 m.. at the B. P.

schoolTIIE hou. This will bo

of

no

Roosevelt.

snues. mis uuuuuiof the Club In

to

who now San of ln

hm the of the Ko- -'

lng

has

the

the

offish

ago

the

thoffor

sellnew

G.

the

of

theof

the

Pratt. It shows all tho lands, asare In recent surveys, giving the va-

rious leases ln ' existence listingwhich are not under lease.

A small strike of Japanese at Kaa-napa- ll

occurred some ago, themen demanding fifteen minutes moretlmo for luncheon. The plantationgranted them the time asked for, andtho strike was soon settled, tho labor-ers returning to work.

Captain Harry Copp of the Wallukupolice force, who has been confinedto his in Makawao with a badfoot caused by stepping on ono of themany spring boards of Walluku's notoriously bad sidewalks was taken toPuunone Hospital last Saturday, wheroupon examination, it was found thofoot was seriously fractured.

Last Wednesday Pioneer another strike. Some of' Japs atLahalna struckA demanding hlgheiwages. On the next day all the laborers left tho fields. They aro saidot urged tho Koreans to strike,offering money. Tho strike con- -

Iftarmiisso and Santa Cruz needed ex- - tnued Q dny Fr,day at Iast ac

tho

thosho

now

the

tho

counts was still unsettled. No actsof violence committed, and thereis believed to be a prospect of speedysettlement.

CHOICE A.LGAR0BA.

' SAWED AND SPLITOR IN 4 FEET LENGTHS

D

DELIVERED TO ANY THECITY. LEAVE ORDERS WITH

W. W. DIMOND CO.Agents for Klu Ranch.

oc

THE HAWAIIAN STAR, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1001.

BONDS

SOLDJTJUCTIOfl

A GOOD LOT OP SALES

THE NOON AUCTION BY MOR-

GAN'S TODAY.

Temperatures,noon,

foot;

NK; nnd

eiuietl

tho

Cth.

OF

AT

at $99, bidding up from $97.60.

Ten shares of Kthel were sold toGeorge Sell at $S, the opening being at$7.

Harry Armltage bought 12 share oMellryde ut $G and also 25 Olua ut

open Governor lots,to Saturday advertised sale,

makejhu 'Wul- -

llioir alua Co.,following

and store

July 18th, J.

Hall

Sherman,

experiments

House and two lots, Kullhi road, toJ. J. Byrne, $1200.

John D. Holt foreclosure, KaalawaiHe hals ' Waiklki, to A. W. Carter, trustee, $1500

Acre and a half, Haiea, Koalaupoko,Alice Fer- - Sea.

this

leaveSan

jury

First

officewish

every

court.

hall, Puna- -'

and

they

nndthose

days

their

home

had

havethem

atJ(J

wero

PART

&East

MADE

THE KJNAU HAD

WELL KNOWN PEOPLE

STEAMER ARRIVKD ON TIME THIS

MORNING FROM HILO AKD WAY

PORTSJ.

The steamer Klnau nrrlvetX thismorning from Hilo and way portw. Shebrought a small sized list of passen-gers but among those who did arrivewere somo well known, people. Sen-

ator Palmer P. Woods of Ha wait ar-rived accompanied by hLs wife andbrother Samuel P. Woods. SemitorWoods came down to participate Inthe reception to WlUlain JenningsBryan, as the senator la tlio Democtia-tl- c

national committeeman.Rev. J. W. Wadman returned fr i

a. tour of the other Islands. He wis.accompanied by Uev. C. H.- Mini.

Maj. John Mllsaps the SlalvatloaArmy leader .rot'irned from. a. tour o

Inspection of the other Islands.VC S. Hosmer tile government fores-

ter returned from a trip to Hawaii.C. T. Wilder andT wife returned fi'pnr

a trip to Hawaii.A. G. Kullberg the koa lumbor deal-

er arrived on a business trip.F.. Klamp returned from a business-tri-

to tho other islands.The Klnau brought a goftd sized

amount of freight Including 252' headof sheep. She had 20 bags sf coffee:.

HOME

PALOLOJESTROYED

KARLY MORNING BLAZE STARTS

AND BURNS UP A NEW HOUSE

AND ALL ITS CONTENTS.

The new Palolo residence of Mr.and Mrs. Charles L. Rhodes was en-

tirely destroyed by fire last nigjir, withall its contents. How the fire origin-ated Is not known . Mrs. Rhodes wasalone at tho time, Mr. Rhodes Being Intown to attend the meeting of thoPalolo, Kalmuki and Walalae Improve-ment Club, and remaining down, townfor the night, and their Japanese ser-

vant who had been given leave of ab-

sence for tho afternoon, not returningthat evening.

Although Mr. Rhodes was not ex-

pected to return after the' meeting ofthe improvement club, Mrs. Rhodesseems to have thought he might possi-

bly do so, and had left a light burningfor him.

She awoke some time after 2 o'clockto find tho house ln ilames. Sho triedto extinguish the Are all the time callIng for help. Seeing her efforts futileshe hastened to the nearest neighbor,Thomas Dunn, about 300 yards awayNeither Mr. Dunn or any member ofhis family was there, but Robert Whitewho has been taking care of the place.and two Japaneso were there. Theyresponded to Mrs. Rhodes' alarm.

By tills time the flro had made suchheadway that nothing could bo donoto extinguish tho blaze, nor to savotho contents of the house.

The houso was entirely destroyed together with tho contents, not ovenchango of clothing being saved. Amongtho contents wero nil the householdgoods and furnishings, clothing, libraryMrs. Rhodes' collection of calabashesand Hawaiian curios, a collection otIndian baskets, silverware, table andbed linen, clothing, pictures everythingIn tho house ln fact,

Tho houso was a new ono and by fartho largest and handsomest In PaloloValloy.

Mr. and Mrs, Rhodes had llvqd therejust two months.

There was Insurance on bpth thehouses and Its contents.

JIVs. Rhodes waj prostrated." Mrvvntte intellect un nor bueev andbrought hqr to town to her hus,pamf,who was at tho Mllvorton, on Richardsstreet.

Fine Job Printing, Star Office.

James JF. Morgan,AUCTIONrjSU ANDBROKER.

7 Kiuhumanu SU Tel. Muia 12.P. O Bos m.

SALE

Extraordinary

OX WEDNESDAY, OCT. 4,AT 10 O'CLOCK A. M.,

At tho residence occupied by LorrluAndrew,- Ksq, College Hills,Comprising

VERY ELEGANT

Furniture,Curley Golden Kon Sette, valued $150;Refol-'Kbon- Stand,

' 1" Manchu Large Rocker, elegantly.carved;

LnrgeRound 1- -4 Sawed PolishedDining Table,

Leh'thor Seat, diners to match;Very Elegant China Closet, 2 round

Blusis sides.Beautiful 1- -4 Sawed Rockers and

Upright Chairs;Handsome New 1- -t Sawed Buffffct,Chblco Rugs, large'and small;Brass and Onyx Table,Fancy Pictures,Pretty Jardlnerles,

A

L6t of American Cut Glass,Solid 1- -4 Sawed Tables,Handsome China, .Steins, Placqucs, Cloisonne Vases',.Hawallon Mats .Double Sets of Mousscllna Curtains,Table Linen, Bed Linen,AVeathor Oak Chair, handpainted;Ladles' Pretty Oak Table,Oak Tnborottos,Hammered Iron Tnborettes,Wicker Rockers,The Choicest of New Iron Bod's,Mattresses (hair), Springs,Wicker Rockers, Wicker Chairs,Mosquito Nets (newest styles).Gentlemen's Elegant 4 Sawed Chef-foni- or,

Handsome Mirrors,1 Edison Phonograph .complete;Fancy Pillows, In silk and rep.;Foathor Pillows,Blrdseye Maple Chair and Table.Old English Rush Bottom 1- -4 Sawed'

Chairs and Rockers,Very Choice Ladles' Dressing Table.Bureau, heavy French plate glass;,

large;Blrdseye Maple Bureau, plato glass;Austrian Carlsbad Dinner Set,Handsome Glassware, Toilet Sets,Chllds' Iron Bed, Box Couch,Walnut- - Bookcase Bureaus,Washstands, Enameled Bureau,Step-Ladd- Garden Tools,Grass Cutter, Hammocks,Buckets, Brooms, Hose,Firewood .Axes, etc.,Card to View.Apply to

MEN

AUCTION

Hew

JAS. Y. MOKPtAN,AUCTIONEER.

APPLYING

PLANTATION WORK

THE NEWSPAPER ADVERTISING

BRINGS" FORTH IT MEN WILL-

ING TO DO FIELD- WORK.

The advertisement of the HawaiianSugar Planters' Association for unskilled laborers, whteh. has been published?a couple of times; has already producedseventeen men, only on of whom was.an Asiatic, who have applied for andhavo biMii giver jobs.

tThe advertisement calls for able-bodie-

men at wages of from $18 to $20per month, with- - house, water, fuel and'medical attendance free.

"I have had seventeen applicants: sofar," said Secretary H. B. Mead thismorning "and" all have been accepted.Only ono was a Japanese the othersbeing Amerlirans, Portuguese and

Those who wished to workOn Oahu have been put to work alreadyand the others will leave for Hawaiion Tuesday. The advertisement meansalt that it says nnd able bodied1 menwho apply for work at the terms willbe given It."

ST. CLEMENT'S FAIR.Ab )i)io date of the opening of St.

Clement's church fair approaches' thelist of attractions grows In length andhardly a day passes without somofresh novelty being arranged for.

The numerous sons and daughtersof the golden state of California' willbe Interested In a special booth ar-ranged for their benefit wherein willbe displayed souvenirs of the state.This feature Is being very enthusiastically worked up and promises to be agreat attraction. In connection withtho California booth there will be asalo of, fancy work! which ln Itself willoo wqii, worm lnspocnou,

IN CASE OF DOUBT.

If yoli aro doubtful whoro to go forK roal good glass of beer, the Criterionwill fill the bill every time.

1 OHIO'S RIOTS.Rioting in Toklo is very much like

pnow-ballln- g In hades Memphis CommercIal-Appeal- ..

Fine Job Printing, Star Office.

FLAM -:- - LIGHT

251

10

m

251

We have just received a fresh1 stock those handy Vest Pocket

Elb'fctric Flash Lights and 'ha'vevalSo just opened ttp a ncv'io't"of

for all sizes of Flash Lirrhts. We'L ,have in stock Dry Batteries for

'Tr' Atifffr Tnlotli rtirf Trrf l?rlfc,h.

. . . etc., and have the best Gas EngineBattery made.

E. U HALL & SON. LTD

251

NOW IT IS

-- 251

SUNRISEThis butter Is the product of California's finest Jersey Cows,

tho same being regularly inspected by the State Dairy Inspectors.Scrupulous Cleanliness Is observed In Its manufacture, Insuringfreshness, delicacy of flavor and keeping quality.

1

of

C. Q. YEE HOP &KA.HIKINU1 MEAT

251

Vvmsfctemk war,' k?ixisi

w

MARKET

HEN the gost,. turns to WallPaper, Decorations and Paint

261

ing, we're at the top of the heap, If, you have in mind the changing over

co

miof room in house, talk it bver with, us ourexperience is valuable.

Stanley StephensonPAlVrtR AND PAPhR HANGER

Phone 426. King Street.

Today, tomorrow and every day,S. S. Signs, look well and will repay.

o

drink It? Guardand irom im

pure water by using a

removes all germs and

- :: 'I

any the

'137

'

LIQUOR DEALERS.

Corner Queen mid Alakea-Street- s

Orders DeliveredAll rfcjrts of t:le City

Phone Main 492

WHY against

Germ Proof Water FilterPositively Impurities.

H.

I

poison

It Is simple, compact, cleans in a minute anddoes not require frequent renewal.CALL. AT THE STORE FOR

W, & M.1 it i DISTRIBUTORS T. H.m

n

251

tc01

01

toen

251

1 II

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vol. xiii. HONOLULU, HAWAII, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1905. PAGES NINE TO TWELVE.

BY AUTHORITYRevised School Laws

AND

llLUUUI

OF THE

Department of Public InstructionOF THE TERRITORY OF HAWAII.

1905

SCHOOL LAWS.

CHAPTER 17.

T

SEC. 184. DEPARTMENT. There shall be an executivedepartment to be known as the department of public instruc-

tion, which shall consist of a superintendent of public instruc-

tion and six commissioners.SEC. 185. SUPERINTENDENT; CHIEF OFFICER. The

superintendent of public instruction shall be the chief adminis-

trative officer of the department, and shall keep an office at the

seat of government. The superintendent of public instructionmay be referred to in this chapter as the superintendent.

SEC. 186. COMMISSIONERS, APPOINTMENT, TEN-

URE. The governor, in the manner prescribed in Section 80

of the Organic Act, shall appoint six competent persons to actas commissioners. They shall be divided into three classes of

two commissioners in each class, who shall be commissionedfor terms of three years, so that there shall be a continual suc-

cession of such classes, one class going out of office each year.In case of a vacancy among the commissioners from any causeother than the expiration of the tenure of office, such vacancyshall be filled by appointment, and the term of office of suchcommissioners, shall be the remainder of the term to which his

predecessor was appointed.SEC. 187. WHO ELIGIBLE. No person in holy orders

or a minister of religion shall be eligible as a commissioner.Women shall be eligible to be appointed as commissioners;PROVIDED, however, that not more than two shall hold com-

missions at any one time. All commissioners shall serve with-

out pay. . 1

S.EClSS QUORUM. The superintendent and. three com-

missioners or, T11 the .absence of the superintendent, four com-

missioners shall constitute a quorum for the transaction of

business.SEC. 189. SUPERINTENDENT PRESIDES. The super-

intendent shall preside at all meetings at which he may be pres-

ent, and in his absence the commissioners may choose. one of

their number to act as chairman of the meeting.

SEC. 190. SIGNS DRAFTS, ETC.; MAKES REPORTS.Except as otherwise provided, the superintendent shall sign all

drafts for the payment of moneys, all commissions and appoint- -

ments, all deeds, official acts or other documents of the depart-ment. He shall, not later than the last Wednesday of Februaryin each year, present to the governor a full report of the prin-

cipal transactions within, his department during the year endingDecember 31 last preceding, together with such recommenda-tions as he may think proper.

SEC. 191. RULES, REGULATIONS. The departmentmay adopt rules and regulations not contrary to existing law,for the government of all teachers and pupils, and its officers,agents and servants; and for the . carrying out the generalscheme of education and for the transaction of its business,which, when approved by the governor and published, shallhave the force and effect of law. i'

SEC. 192. OFFICE. The department shall maintain an '

office at the seat of government, which shall be open for thetransaction of business, every day, excepting Sundays and holi-days.

SEC. 193. SEAL. The department shall adopt a seal," theimpression of which shall be' necessary to authenticate all ofits appointments, commissions, final acts of the nature of record;and all oilier documents issued by it.

SEC. 194. RECORDS, EVIDENCE. The department shallcause all its proceedings, doings and acts to be recorded, andsuch records shall from time to time be filed in the archives ofthe department. A certified copy of such record or any portionthereof, when signed by the superintendent and attested by 'thesecretary under the seal of the department, shall be competentevidence of all it contains in any court.

OFFICERS, AGENTS, TEACHERS, SERVANTS.

SEC. 195. APPOINTMENT, REMOVAL. The depart-ment may, from time to. time, appoint and remove such officers,agents and servants as may be necessary for carrying out thepurposes of this chapter, and regulate their duties, powers andresponsibilities, when not otherwise provided by law.

SEC. 196. SALARIES. The salary of the various schoolagents, teachers, servants and officers not especially providedby law, shall be such as may be from time to time allowed1 by ,rthe department.

SEC. 197. INSPECTOR GENERAL. For the purpose ofsupervision and inspection, the department shall appoint an in-

spector general of schopjs, to hold office during its pleasure;PROVIDED, however, that no person in holy orders or a min "ister of religion, shall be eligible to fill such office.

SEC. 198. DUTIES. It shall be the special duty of' he I

inspector general of schools to make frequent tours of therespective islands and .district; to examine into the conditionof the public schools; to inform school officers and teachers oftheir several duties; and .to foster generally an interest in thecause of education, The inspector general may, in lie discre-tion of the department, have the power Of appointment and dis-missal of school teaclTefsf tile arranging and of '

studies to be pursued and' the prominence to be given to anyparticular branch, of lenrning: to examine the books, vouchersand accounts of the various school agents and local school com-mittees; to hold examinations for the purpose of determiningthe qualifications of persons desiring to serve as school teach-ers; to give certificates oi approval to, those found competent;

and to do and perform all other matters and things intrustedto his care by the department. He shall report in writing a dis-

tinct statement to the department of all acts and duties per-formed by him; all of which shall be subject to be approved or 'disapproved by the department.

SEC. 199. SECRETARY, DUTIES. The department shallappoint a secretary to hold office during its pleasure. He shallrecord the doings and transactions of the department, take min-utes of all its meetings, noting the same in a book of record;keep the minutes of the meetings of the various committees, ifso requested; carry on the necessary correspondence; and keepa true and accurate account of all the financial transactions ofthe department; and do and perform all other acts and thingsas may be required of him by the department. He shall havethe custody of and be responsible for the safe-keepi- of allbooks, records, vouchers and other documents, and all otherproperty of the department kept at its general office at the scatof government.

SEC. 200. SCHOOL AGENTS. The department shall ap-point a school agent for each school district, to serve during itspleasure, who shall be intrusted with the execution of all acts,orders, instructions and regulations of the department and ofthe inspector general. All of his acts and doings shall be sub-ject to the final approval of the department.

SEC. 201. CARE FOR SCHOOL PROPERTY. The vari-o- ut

school agents shall, under the direction of the department,have charge and control of all property of the department intheir respective districts; they shall attend to the preservationand care of all buildings in order that the same may be pre-served from injury and decay, and when occasion requires shallcall the attention of the superintendent or inspector general to,such steps as seem necessary to that object.

SEC. 202. SUSPEND TEACHERS. Whenever the parentsor guardians of children attending any public school shall deemthemselves aggrieved on account of the conduct of the teacher,they shall have the right to present their petition in writing tothe school agent, who shall then appoint a time for the hearingof the case; and if, in his opinion, the case of the petitioner shallhave been proved by good and sufficient testimony, such teachermay be suspended by him and another appointed, subject tothe final approval of the department.

SEC. 203. PRINCIPALS, TEACHERS. All schools shallbe presided over by qualified teachers. If there shall be more.than one teacher in any public school, one of them shall be de-

signated by the department as principal. ,SEC. 204. PUNISHMENT OF PUPILS. Any teacher

shall have power to administer necessary and reasonable pun-ishment upon any pupil while in attendance at school, and shallnot in any way be held responsible therefor.

SEC. 205. TEACHERS' CONVENTIONS. The depart-ment may establish and maintain one or more teachers' conven-tions or institutes, or it may authorize and permit their estab-lishment by and among its teachers, and may direct and author-ize the attendance of teachers thereat, as a part of their duties,and may permit the closing of schools at specified limited times,in order to permit their attendance at such conventions or in-

stitutes.SCHOOLS.

SEC. 206. PUBLIC, PRIVATE. All schools establishedand maintained by the department in accordance with Jaw, arepublic schools. All other schools are private schools.

SEC. 207. DEPARTMENT, POWERS AND DUTIES.The department shall have entire charge and control and beresponsible for the conduct of all affairs appertaining to publicinstruction. The department is authorized to establish and'maintain schools for secular instruction, at such places and forsuch terms as in its discretion it may deem advisable and thefunds at its disposal may permit. The department shall regu-late the course of study to be pursued in all grades of publicschools, and classify them by such methods as it shall deemproper. Such schools may include normal schools, highschools, kindergarten schools, schools for technical instruction,boarding schools, evening as well as day schools. The depart-ment may also maintain classes for normal, technical and otherinstruction in any school where there may not be pupils suffi-

cient in number to justify the establishment of separate schoolsfor such purposes.

SEC. 208. TUITION. There shall be no charge for tuitionin any public school; PROVIDED, 'however, that the depart-ment may in its discretion establish, maintain and discontinueselect schools, taught in the English language, at a charge ofsuch tuition fees for attendance as it may deem proper; PRO-VIDED, however, that such select schools shall be establishedonly in places where free schools of the same grade for pupils'within the compulsory age arc readily accessible to the childrenof such district.

SEC. 209. PRIVATE, HOW ESTABLISHED. Any per-son .desiring to establish a private school, shall make an appli-cation in writing to that effect to the school agent of the dis-

trict in .which it is desired to establish such school, which appli-cation shall be accompanied by a memorial from the parentsor guardians of the children intending to attend such school,stating that the applicant is the person of their choice for ateacher of their children. If the applicant possesses the neces-sary qualifications to become a teacher of the school proposed,the department shall issue a permit authorizing the establish-ment of such school.

SEC. 210. SUPERVISED BY DEPARTMENT. Everyprivate school shall be subject to the supervision of the depart-ment. It shall be the duty of the department to require thattdaciiers of private schools be persons of good moral character;'and that 'the premises of such schools comply with the rulesand regulations of the department, as from time to time pro-mulgated with reirard to sanitary conditions and hvgienc.

SFC. 211. ENGLISH LANGUAGE, BASIS INSTRUC-TION. The English language shall be the medium, and basisof instruction in all public and private schools; PROVIDED,thatSvherc it is desired that anpther language shall be taught inaddition to the English language, such instruction may be au-thorized bv the department, either by its rules, the curriculumof the school, or bv direct order in any particular instance.Anv schools that shall not conform to the provisions of thissection shall not be recognized by the department.

PUPILS; ATTENDANCE. PUNISHMENT.

SFC. 2. ATTENDANCE COMPULSORY; EXCEP-TIONS Thf attendance of all children between six and fifteenvcars of age, both inclusive, at cither a public or private schoolis obligatory. And it shall be incumbent upon all parents, gitar-'dia- ns

and others having the responsibility and care of childrenof such ages, to send them fo some such school ERO.VIDED!

that such attendance shall not be compulsory in the followingcases, but in no others:

First. Where there is no school in the school district wheresuch child resides and the distance to the nearest school exceedsfour miles.

Second. When such child shall be physically or mentally un-

able to attend school, of which fact the certificate of a dulyqualified physician shall be evidence.

Third. When competent person is employed as tutor in thefamily wherein such child resides, and proper instruction isthereby imparted.

Fourth. Where any child of not less than the age of thirteenyears shall have passed the required examinations of both pri-

mary and grammar school grades, as such requirements shallfrom time to time exist.

SEC. 213. PENALTY. If any child of school age shall per-

sist in absenting himself from school, any district magistrateshall, upon proper complaint being made by the school teacher,or any other officer or agent of the department, cause the fatheror the mother,' guardian or other person having the charge ofsuch child, to be summoned to appear before such magistrate,and upon its being proved that the person responsible for thechild had not used proper diligence to enforce the child's regu-lar attendance at school, such responsible party shall be finedby the magistrate in a sum not exceeding five dollars, and indefault of payment thereof, such person shall be imprisoned athard labor for. a term not to exceed ten days. In case the childshall prove the offending party, the magistrate shall send himto a reformatory or industrial school for a term not less thansix months or more than two years, or otherwise sentence himto a fine not exceeding two dollars, or imprisonment for a termnot exceeding five days; PROVIDED, however, that the pro-visions of this section shall not apply to any child not liable tocompulsory attendance at school.

SEC. 214. ATTENDANCE, PRIVATE SCHOOLS. Noperson within school age shall be considered as complying withthe law as to attendance, who shall attend a private school whichdoes not comply with the requirements of this chapter.

SEC. 215. SCHOOL DISTRICTS. For the better controland management of the public schools, the department is au-thorized to designate school districts, to establish their bound-aries, and to alter the same from time to time as in its discretionit deems most advisable. These districts shall be so arrangedthat there shall be no unassigned locality.

SEC. 216. ATTEND SCHOOL IN WHAT DISTRICT.All persons of school age shall be required to attend the schoolof the district in which they reside, unless it shall appear to thedepartment to be desirable to allow the attendance of pupils ata school in some other district, in which case the department orschool agent of that district may grant such permission.

SEC. 217. RECORD OF PUPILS. The teachers of all

schools, either public or private, shall keep a correct register ofthe names, sex, age and nationality, as far as ascertainable,date of entering the school, and the places of residence of thechildren attending their respective schools, and no teacher ofany school shall grdnt a release to any child under fifteen yearsof age, who shall be registered as attending his school, for thepurpose of attending another school, unless the consent andapproval of the parents or guardians of such child shall be givenin writing to the teacher, or unless authorized to grant suchrelease by the school agent of the district for good reasonsshown to his satisfaction. In every such case a certificate inwriting shall be granted to the teacher setting forth the facts inthe case. The register shall be carefully preserved, and as,

often as the department shall direct, the register or a true copythereof shall be filed in the office of the department.

SEC. 218. TRANSFER TO ANOTHER SCHOOL. No .

teacher of any school, either public or private, shall receive intohis school any child under fifteen years of age, who shall havoattended another school of the same class in the same district,unless such child shall produce to the teacher of the school tobe entered, a certificate of release signed by the teacher of theschool last attended by the child. If such child apply to attenda school of higher grade, a certificate of proficiency shall berequired or a lawful excuse for its absence; PROVIDED, thatthe children from one district desiring to enter a school in an-

other district, may be received or admitted upon producingcertificate of release from the school last attended in such otherdistrict. The teacher of any such school who shall violate anyof the provisions of this or of Section 217 shall, upon convictionthereof, be subject to a fine not exceeding ten dollars for each

'offense.BOOKS AND STATIONERY. " '

SEC. 219. FURNISHED AT COST. The department shallfurnish all necessary books and stationery required foi the useof pupils in their respective grades, charging therefor their costprice. All pupils must be supplied by their parents or guar-dians, or other persons having the custody or care of suchpupils, with books and stationery requisite for their use. Andin case pupils shall not be so supplied, the teacher of the schoolmay furnish such books and stationery, and require the parentsor guardians to make payment therefor. If such payment shallnot be promptly made he shall notify the tax assessor of thedistrict in which the school is located, who shall enter theamount due as a portion of the tax to be collected of such par--ents or guardians, and the payment of such amount, togetherwith interest and costs, shall be enforced as in the case of de-linquent taxes. In cases of extreme poverty, the cost of allbooks and stationery may be remitted by the department; PRO-VIDED, that in such cases the use only of such books shall beauthorized, and when the pupils shall have finished the use ofthe same, the books shall be returned to the teacher.

SEC. 220. FOR PRIVATE SCHOOLS. The departmentmay furnish books, stationery and other school supplies at aprice sufficient to cover cost, including interest, to privateschools or pupils therein, or to other persons for educationalpurposes.

SEC. 221. PROCEEDS TO TREASURER. All moneys-receive-

for the sale of books, stationery and supplies shall fromtime to time be paid over to the treasurer with a definite state-ment of what they represent.

SCHOOL SITES. BUILDINGS. FURNITURE, ETC.SEC. 222. MAY TRANSFER TO GOVERNMENT. Au- - ,

thority is hereby granted to the department to transfer to thegeneral government all its property, real, personal or. mixed, --

reserving, however, the management and control of all churchsites, school sites and school buildings, furniture and appliances.

All rights, duties and powers belonging to the board of edu-cation prior to June 8, 1896, are to ho exercised and performedby the department.

SEC. 223. SITES ON EUBLIC LANDS, Whenever sita

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TEN, TJIH HAWAIIAN STAR, SATUrtD'AY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1005.

for a school house or land for other educational purposes, as' provided by law, shall be required, and the same can be located

upon public land, the commissioner of public lands, upon therecommendation of the department and approval of the gov-

ernor, may set apart sufficient land for such purpose withoutcompensation; and thereupon the commissioner of public landsshall be relieved from all further responsibility or liability in

regard to the premises so set apart.

CHAPTER 18.

AGRICULTURAL AND INDUSTRIAL PURSUITS IN

SCHOOLS.

SEC. 224. TAUGHT IN PUBLIC SCHOOLS. It shall belawful for the department of public instruction to include agri-

cultural and industrial pursuits among the branches of instruc-

tion taught by the public schools of the Territory.SEC. 225. AS PRESCRIBED BY DEPARTMENT. The

department of public instruction shall have power to prescribethe manner and designate the places in which such pursuits shallbe conducted, and also to determine the extent to which theyshall be followed, either generally or to suit particular cases.

SEC. 226. USING PUBLIC LANDS. For the purpose of

this chapter it shall be lawful for the department of public in-

struction after due notice to the commissioner of public landsor superintendent of public works, as the case may be, to usefree of rent as much of any government land, not otherwiseemployed, as shall be advantageously cultivated by the teachersand pupils of anv public school, and the teachers and pupilsaforesaid shall have the right to continue to cultivate such gov-

ernment land so long as the same shall not be otherwise dis-

posed of by the commissioner of public lands, or superintendentof public works, as the case may be, or otherwise ordered by

the department of public instruction; and in case of disposal of

the same by the commissioner of public lands or superintendentof public woiks, as the case may be, sufficient notice shall begiven to enable the removal of improvements, and the gatheringof growing crops, without loss to the owners thereof.

SEC. 227. OTHER LANDS. Whenever it shall deem thesame desirable the department of public instruction may alsoacquire, on such terms as may be agreed upon, land other thangovernment, that may be advantageously employed for the pur-

poses herein stated.SEC. 228. PROFITS TO TEACHERS AND PUPILS.

All net profits arising from agricultural and industrial pursuits,under this chapter, shall belong to the teachers and pupils actu-

ally engaged in such pursuits, and shall be divided among thesame in such proportions as the department of public instruc-

tion shall deem proper; but the provisions of this section shall

not be deemed applicable to schools otherwise regulated by law.

SEC. 229. PUBLIC SCHOOL LAWS RELATE TO THISCHAPTER. All laws for the government, discipline and wel-

fare of the public schools of the Territory, shall in their opera-

tion be construed to include the enforcement of the provisionsof this chapter in relation to agricultural and industrial pur-

suits in said schools.CHAPTER 19.

INDUSTRIAL AND REFORMATORY SCHOOLS.

SEC. 230. KAI'ALAMA SCHOOL CONTINUED. Thedepartment of public instruction may continue the industrial andreformatory school established in March, A. D. 1865, at Keo-neul- a,

Kapalama, Oahu, Under the act of December 30th, 1864,

authorizing the same; to be conducted under the direction andsupervision of the department of public instruction.

SEC. 231. OTHER SCHOOLS. It shall be lawful for thedepartment of public instruction to institute and establish indus-

trial and reformatory schools in any part of the Territory, whenthe same shall be deemed necessary, and when funds shall beavailable by legislative appropriation, for that object. All suchschools shall' be conducted under the direction and supervisionof the department of public instruction.

SEC. 232. RULES AND REGULATIONS. The depart-ment of public instruction shall have full authority to prescriberules and regulations, not contrary to law, for the government,discipline and care of all industrial and reformatory schools,continued, established, or instituted under this chapter.

SEC, 233. RECORDS. The depaYtment of public instruc-tion shall cause to be kept in every industrial and reformatoryschool a journal, in which shall be regularly entered the recep-tion, discharge, release, escape or death of each of the inmates,together with all the particulars relating to such as shall beapprenticed, adopted or put out to work. An exact accountshall also be kept by the principal of each of the said schools, ofall moneys and other avails received for work performed by thechildren, as well as of the expenditure of such moneys andavails as shall be authorized from time to time by the depart-ment of public instruction.

SEC. 234. OBJECT. The only object: of the said industrialand reformatory schools shall be the detention, management,education, employment, reformation and maintenance of suchchildren as shall be committed thereto, as orphans, vagrants,truants, living an idle or dissolute life, who shall be duly con-victed of any crime or misdemeanor, who shall be surrendered,to the department of public instruction as guardians thereof, forthe term of their minority, or who shall be received at suchschools as by law provided.

COMMITMENT, ETC.

SEC. 235. OFFENDERS UNDER FIFTEEN YEARS.The district magistrates, circuit courts and circuit judges maycommit all offenders duly convicted before them, under fifteenyears of age, to said industrial and reformatory schools, in allcases where they shall deem such sentence to be more suitablethan the punishment otherwise authorized by law.

SEC. 236. IDLE OR DISSOLUTE CHILDREN UNDERFIFTEEN. The said district magistrates, circuit courts andcircuit judges, on the representation of any member of the de-

partment of public instruction, its agents, the attorney generalor his authorized deputy, the high sheriff or his deputy, or asheriff or deputy sheriff, shall have power to hear and deter-mine any case, and to sentence for any term within their minor-ity to some industrial and reformatory school, any child underfifteen years of age, who lives an idle or dissolute life, whoseparents are dead, or if living, from drunkenness or other vicesor causes, shall neglect to provide suitable employment for, orexercise salutary control over such child.

SEC. 237. SURRENDER OF CHILD TO DEPART-MENT. The department of public instruction, or its agents, ifauthorized by the said department, shall have power to acceptfrom the parents or guardian of any child, the surrender of suchchild for the term of his or her minority, to be entered at someindustrial and reformatory school; and all the rights of parentsor guardians, to keep, control, educate, employ, indenture ordischarge such child, shall vest solely in the department of pub-lic instruction.

SEC. 238. FEES CHARGED WHEN. It shall be lawfulfor the department of public instruction, in its discretion, toreceive into such industrial and reformatory schools the chil-dren under fifteen years of age of parents, guardians or adoptive

. parents, who shall desire the same; and the said department is

hereby authorized to charge fees, or remit the same in special

cases, for the children so admitted, as in the judgment of the

said department shall seem proper.SEC 239. COMMITMENTS DIRECTED TO DEPART-

MENT. All commitments to industrial and reformatory schoolsshall be directed to the department of public instruction or its

authorized agents in the respective districts, but the high sheriffof the Territory or his deputies shall be charged by such com-

mitments with the execution of all orders for the custody and

safe keeping of the children committed to the said industrialand reformatory schools, until delivered over to the principal of

the school to which such children shall have been committed,and shall defray all expenses attending the conveyance of suchchildren to their place of destination, from the funds under his

Jr their control available for such purposes.SEC. 240. DUTIES OF PRINCIPALS. The principals of

said schools shall receive and detain at said industrial and re-

formatory schools all children who shall be committed thereto,or placed therein, as provided in Sections 235-23- 8, and they shallbe charged with the detention and custody of all children socommitted or admitted, and with the execution of all orders,as well as process of court, respecting such children.

LABOR BY CHILDREN.

SEC. 241. APPRENTICED, WHEN. It shall be lawful forthe department of public instruction, or its agents, if authorizedby said department, to bind out as apprentices, with their con-

sent, all children over ten years of age, who shall be committedor surrendered for their minority, and who shall have been ad-

mitted at any industrial and reformatory school, to such use-

ful trades, employments, or occupations as shall be suitable totheir years and capacity, and as in the judgment of the saiddepartment will tend to the future benefit and advantage of suchchildren.

SEC. 242. PUT OUT TO LABOR, WHEN. Whenever itcan be found that apprenticeships cannot be obtained, or suit-Ab- le

employment be provided at any industrial and reformatoryschool, for children over fifteen years of age, who shalj havebeen committed or surrendered thereto for their minority, orsentenced for a shorter time, for any crime or misdemeanor, thedepartment of public instruction, or its agents, if authorized bythe said department, shall have authority to put them out tolabor to families, or other suitable persons, upon such termsand conditions as in the opinion of the said department shallbe deemed proper.

ABDUCTION, DESERTION.

SEC. 243. ABDUCTION, PENALTY. Any person whoshall secretly or illegally abduct, or who shall be accessory tothe secret or illegal abduction of any child from an industrialand reformatory school, shall be fined not exceeding one hun-

dred dollars, or imprisoned at hard labor not exceeding oneyear.

SEC. 244. ENTICING, ETC.,' PENALTY. Any personwho shall knowingly or intentionally entice away any child fromany industrial and reformatory school, or who shall knowinglyharbor or secrete any child who shall have been enticed away,or who shall have deserted from any such school, or who shallhave left or forsaken his guardian or employer without permis-sion, shall be fined not exceeding one hundred dollars.

SEC. 245. HIGH SHERIFF TO ASSIST. It shall be in-

cumbent on the high sheriff or any of his deputies to assist, asfar as in their power lies, in the apprehension and recovery ofdeserters from any industrial and reformatory school, whenrequested to do so by the department of public instruction, itsagents, or the principal of any such school; and likewise toassist, as far as possible, in enforcing order and maintainingdiscipline therein, should circumstances at any time arise neces-

sitating the exercise of such authority.

DISCHARGE, TRANSFER, ETC.

SEC. 246. DISCHARGE, BY WHOM. The department ofpublic instruction shall have power, for good reasons shown toits satisfaction, to discharge or temporarily release any childcommitted to or admitted at any industrial and reformatoryschool, who shall not have been bound out as an apprentice oradopted. And the district magistrates shall also have power todischarge from such schools children committed from theirrespective districts, who shall not have been bound out as ap-

prentices or adopted, if, upon the hearing of any application forthe same, said magistrate shall consider that such discharge isexpedient. But it shall be incumbent on said district magis-trates, before granting any discharge that shall be applied for,to give thirty days' notice of the same in writing to the depart-ment of public instruction.

SEC. 247. TRANSFER TO JAIL. Whenever it shall befound that the continued detention or custody of any inmate ofany industrial and reformatory school at such school shall besubversive of the order and discipline of the school, or injuri-ous in any way to the other inmates of the institution, it shallbe lawful for any district magistrate, on representation to thateffect being made by any member of the department of publicinstruction, its authorized agents, or the principal teacher ofany such school, to hear and determine any such case, and ifproved to his satisfaction, said magistrate is hereby authorized,in the place of further detention or custody at such school, toorder that such minor be imprisoned, with or without hardlabor, at some public jail for any term not exceeding the unex-pired residue of the time for which such inmate shall have beeniast committed to such industrial and reformatory school.

SEC. 248. TRANSFER BACK OR DISCHARGE. If atany time after the commitment or transfer, as in Section 247authorized, of any inmate of an industrial and reformatoryschool to a public jail, it shall be found that such minor by hisconduct gives reasonable proof of reformation, or for othergood reason that shall be made to appear, it shall be lawful forany district magistrate, after receiving satisfactory evidencethereof, to order the discharge of such minor from jail, or toreturn him to the custody of the department of public instruc-tion at some industrial and reformatory school, whenever re-quested so to do by a member of the department of public in-

struction, or by its authorized agents.SEC. 249. COSTS. All costs incurred under the provisions

of Section 247. 248, shall be paid by the department of' publicinstruction out of any funds appropriated for industrial andreformatory schools.

REVISEDRULES AND REGULATIONS

Department of Public! Instruction

REVISED LAWS, SECTION 191. The department mayadopt rules and regulations not contrary existing laws, forthe government of all teachers and pupils, and its officers, agentsand servants, and for the carrying out the general scheme ofeducation and for the transaction of business, which, when

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approved by the Governor and published, shall have the forceand effect of law.

COMMISSIONERS AND DEPARTMENT.

(1) The Commissioners of Public Instruction shall be six innumber, of whom not more than two at any one time may bewomen.

(2) They shall be appointed by the Governor in the mannerprescribed in Section 80 of the Organic Act, and shall be dividedinto three classes of two each, one class going out of office eachyear.

(3) No person in holy orders or a minister of religion shallbe eligible as a commissioner. 1

(4) The Department of Public Instruction shall have statedtimes for meeting and shall meet at any other time when call-

ed by the Superintendent, provided, however, that such meet-ings be not less frequent than twice each month.

(5) The Superintendent and three Commissioners, or in theabsence of the Superintendent, four Commissioners shall con-stitute a quorum for the transaction of business.

(6) The Commissioners with the Superintendent shall con-stitute the Department of Public Instruction.

(7) The Department shall have charge and control of, andshall 15c responsible for the conduct of the public schools of theTerritory, and of all matters appertaining and necessary thereto.

(8) The Department shall :

(a) Maintain an office at the seat of government ;

(b) Adopt and use a seal for the authentication of its offcialacts;

(c) Cause a proper record to be kept of its proceedings, do-

ings and acts ;

(d) Prescribe from time to time courses of study to be fol-

lowed in the public schools;(e) Provide for examination of applicants for positions in

the public schools and persons already teaching;(f) Grant, issue and give certificates and diplomas not other-

wise provided for by law ;

(g) Enforce the law as to compulsory attendance at school ;

(h) Prescribe, adopt and enforce the use of a uniform seriesof text books in the public schools, provided that no series shallbe changed till four years after its adoption ;

(i) Rent, lease, buy and sell such land or lands, repair orbuild such building or buildings as may be necessary to the pro-per conduct and also the development of the school system ofthe Territory ;

(j) Furnish at cost books and stationery to pupils for use inpublic schools.

(k) Fix dates of the opening and closing of the publicschools ;

(I) Make and keep in the office of the Department an in-

ventory of all property, real and personal, belonging to the De-partment, said inventory to be made annually, and to include theuse being made of the property ;

(m) The Department shall have power to appoint, suspendor remove such officers, agents and servants as may be neces-

sary for tiie proper and efficient conduct of its business, to as-sign their duties and to fix their compensation when not other-wise provided for by law ;

(II) The Department may establish and maintain, or may au-thorize the establishment by and among the teachers of teachers'conventions or institutes ,and may direct the attendance of

teachers thereat as a part of their duties, and many permit theclosing of schools at specified limited times, in order to make itpossible for teachers to attend such gatherings;

(o) And do any and all things not hereinbefore mentionednecessary to the welfare of the public school system of the Ter-ritory and according to rules and regulations hereinafter men-tioned, provided, however, that all such things are not incon-sistent with the law of the Territory.

PRIVATE SCHOOLS.

The Department shall authorize the establishment and havegeneral oversight of the private schools in the Territory. Itshall be its duty to see that the teachers in the private schoolsare of good moral character and capable of giving proper in-

struction, and that the school houses and premises are kept inproper condition with regard to sanitary conditions and hygiene.

ORDER OF BUSINESS.1. Roll Call.2. Reading minutes of last meetings.3. Reports of Committees, standing and special.4. Unfinished business. '

5. New Business. ';'

6. Suggestions from the Superintendent, '

i

STANDING COMMITTEES,

Committtee on Teachers.Committee on Lands and' Buildings. ";

Committee on Finance.Conimittee on Girls' Reform SchoolCommittee on Boys' Reform SchoolCommittee on Lace Work. '

Committee on Lahainaluna.

DUTIES OF THE SUPERINTENDENT.

1. The Superintendent shall preside at all meetings at whichhe may be present.

2. He shall cast the deciding vote, in case of a tie, upon allmatters requiring a vote of the Commissioners.

3. He shall sign all drafts for payment of moneys, all com-missions and appointments, all deeds, official acts or other docu-ments of the Departmeit except otherwise provided.

4. He shall not later than the last Wednesday of Februarypresent to the Governor and to the Department a full report ofthe principal transactions of his Department during the year

ending December 31st last preceding, together with suhc rec-ommendations as he may think necessary.

5. He shall affix the seal of the Department to all appoint-ments, commissions, final acts of the nature of record, and allother documents requiring the impression of said seal to provetheir authenticity.

6. He shall cause to be recorded and to be kept on record inthe office all proceedings, doings and acts of the Department.

7. He shall do all things, between meetings, necessary to theproper conduct of the Department subject, however, to the ap-

proval of the Department.

DUTIES OF THE SECRETARY.

1. To record all the doings and transactions of the Depart-ment ; to take minutes of all meetings and to transcribe the samein a book of record.

2. To take and keep the minutes of the various committeesif requested to do so by the Chairman of the committee or theSuperintendent of Public Instruction.

3. To carry on the necessary correspondence as directed bythe Superintendent of Public Instruction.

4. To keep a true and accurate account of all the financialtransactions of the Department and to render to the Depart-ment a monthly statement of the same.

,VaA.:

Page 11: If HK TXT om T3...3- If You News, want toilny to-day's THE HK TXT AHA om 75: T3 Is The tlio Hawaiian paper Star that you 11 ml It In goes Into the best THE STAll SrML AMJfJLr homes

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ma

5. To do and perform all other acts and things as may be re-

quired by the Department.6. To have custody of and be responsible for the safe-keepi-

of all moneys, books, records, vouchers and other documentsand all other property of the Department kept at its generaloffice at the seat of Government.

DUTIES OF ASSISTANT SECRETARY AND SCHOOLAGENT.

1. To assist the secretary as directed by the Departmentfrom time to time.

2. To act as the purchasing agent of the Department.3. To have charge of all school supplies of the Department.4. To exercise all the duties of School Agent in the district

of Honolulu, except the right of suspending teachers.

DUTIES OF STENOGRAPHER AND BOOK CLERK.

1. To have charge of the sale of books.2. To keep a record of all books received, take stock of the

same, as often as the Department may require, and deliver sameto the Secretary, and to deliver to the Secretary lists of booksneeded from time to time.

3. To keep a record of all books sold and the price of thesame.

4. To have the selling price marked in each book.5. To be responsible for. the proper conduct of the book

room.G. To report daily all sales of books and deliver all cash re-

ceipts to the secretary of the department at the close of eachday's business.

7. To have book room open for sale of books from 8 to 8:45a, m. and from 2:15 to 4 p. m. of each day of school year.

8. To take stenographic notes as requested by the Supcr-Tntende- nl

of Public Instruction.

DUTIES OF INSPECTORS.

1. To visit and examine into the condition of the schools ofhis district ; to inform school officers and teachers of their sev-

eral duties and to foster generally an interest in the cause ofeducation.

2. To suspend teachers for cause, after consulting the SchoolAgent, and to appoint a substitute pending the action of theDepartment.

3. To assist in the conduct of examinations as directed bythe. Department of Public Instruction.

4. To report to the Department in writing, at least once aweek, a statement of all acts and duties performed by him, ofthe condition of schools, buildings, and grounds, and of thework of each teacher, inspected during the week.

5. To require each teacher to carry out the requirements ofthe course of study and the rules and regulations of the Depart-ment made from time to time.

6. To instruct teachers, when necessary, iiv the methods ofteaching, discipline, proper conduct of their classes.

DUTIES OF SCHOOL AGENTS.

1. To carry out all acts, orders, instructions and regulationsof the Department.

2. To have charge, under the direction of the Department ofall property of the Department in their respective districts, andwhen occasion requires to call the attention of the Departmentto needed improvements.

3. In the absence of the inspector, to suspend according tothe school law, a teacher for cause and to appoint a substitutesubject to the approval of the Department.

4. To engage and dismiss janitors and truant officers.5. To act as the financial agents of the Department in their

respective districts.

TRUANT OFFICERS.

Truant officers may be appointed by the school agent in anydistrict, subject to the approval of the Department, and theircompensation determined in the same manner.

Truant officers shall visit the several school assigned them asoften as the School Agent may direct ; shall obtain lists of ab-

sentees and look the pupils up, endeavoring to secure their at-

tendance at school, and shall report to the school agents at suchtimes as may be required. -

(

DUTIES OF PRINCIPALS.

1. To classify the pupils of his schools and to assign hisassistants to the different rooms or grades.

2. To outline the work of the term for his assistants in ac-

cordance with the course of study.

3. To make rules and regulations for his assistants and pu-

pils necessary to the proper conduct of the school to be in con-

formity with the rules and regulations of the Department.4. To admit and release pupils according to the school law

and regulations of the Department.5. To assume and exercise general and frequent supervision

over the teaching and discipline of the entire school.f. Each principal shall be responsible for the proper care of

ill school property in his charge, and he shall make such rulesand regulations in accordance with the school law, as are neces-sary for his teachers to assist him in the same.

7. To see that all registers and records of the school arepronerlv kept, and that all reports as required by the Depart- -

ment are correctly made and promptly transmitted to proper authorities.

8. To make reasonable rules for the conduct of pupils in thechool grounds and on their way to and from school.

. N,p. . jJp 1 incipal shall admit to any public or privatcschoolif, any chiu 10 does not produce a certificate of vaccination or

show sign of successful vaccination.i 10. Any principal who violates the foregoing section shall

be dgalhwith according to law.rrl "No principal shall admit into any public school or pri-

vate school any child afflicted with anv infectious or contagious' disease, or retain in the above named schools any child found;'ito be afflicted with any infectious or contagious disease.

! At the end of each term to make and transmit to theDepartment an inventory of all property in his charge belongingto the Department.

13. To hold himself responsible to the Department for theproper conduct of his school in all respects.

DUTIES OF ASSISTANT TEACHERS.

' ifTo prepare, with the assistance of the principal, and tov place on file at the beginning of the term a daily program, an' ''outline of the term's work, and at the close of each term a list

of all work done.iyav ' To teach tlic subjects of the course of study as outlinedby the; principal.

3. 'Tctkeep a correct record as indicated by the school re-

gister sfnd t6 make reports of the same as directed by the-

1.. .

r.". . .

THE HAWAIIAN STAR, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1905. ELEVEN'.

4. To care for the school property and to assist in the super-vision of the pupils during intermission as indicated by the De-partment through the principal of. the school.

5. To be present at school every day at least fifteen minutesbefore nine o'clock a. m.

6. To hold school from 9 a. m. to 2 p. m. all school days ex-

cept on the last day of the school year, on which day the schoolsmay.be closed at noon.

7. And at the end of each term to make and transmit to thePrincipal an inventory of all property in his charge belongingto the Department.

PUPILS.

1. All children between the ages of six and fifteen, both in-

clusive, shall attend regularly either a public or private school,provided, however, that compulsory attendance be not requiredunder the following conditions:

(a) Where the distance to the nearest school is more thanfour miles.

(b) When the child is, according to physician's certificate,physically or mentally unable to attend school.

(c) When the child is under tutelage of a competent person.(d) When the child, not under age of thirteen, shall have

passed the required examination of both the primary and gram-mar grades such examinations to be fixed by the Department.

2. No child shall be considered as complying with the lawas to attendance at school who shall attend any school not es-

tablished and conducted according to law.3. Any child who shall persistently absent himself from

school without lawful reasons shall be dealt with according tolaw. See Sec. 33 Revised Laws.

4. Each child shall Ik required to attend school in his owndistrict ujiless it shall appear desirable to the Department tolllow him to attend in some other district, in which case theDepartment or School Agent may grant permission.

5. No child within school age shall be granted a release fromthe school he is attending for the purpose of going to another

school without first presenting the written approval of his par-ents or guardians which approval shall set forth good and suff-icient reasons for such release.

6. Any teacher who shall violate the preceding section, shallbe dealt with according to law.

REFORMATORY SCHOOLS.

1. By section 230 and 231 Revised Laws, the Department ofPublic Instruction is authorized to establish and maintain In-

dustrial and Reformatory Schools in any part of the Territorywhen such schools shall be deemed necessary and funds arcavailable for the same.

2. All such schools shall be conducted under the directionand supervision of the Department of Public Instruction.

3. The Department of Public Instruction shall appoint amatron for the Reform School for Girls and a Superintendentfor the Reform School for Boys.

4. The Matron of the Reform School for Girls and the Sup-erintendent of the Reform Schools for Boys shall make suchrules and regulations as are necessary to the control and man- -

. agement of their respective schools such rules and regulationsto be subject to the approval of the Department of Public In-struction.

5. The Matron and the Superintendent of the two abovenamed reform schools shall keep a journal in which shall beregularly entered the reception, discharge, release, escape ordeath of each inmate, together with all the particulars relatingto such as shall be apprenticed, adopted or put out to work.See Sec. 233, Revised Laws.

6. . The Matron and the Superintendent of the above namedschools shall report daily to the Department of Public Instru-ctionform of such report to be determined by the Departmentel Public Instruction.

7. The Department of Public Instruction shall appoint astanding committee of two members of the Department to inves-tigate and report upon the Reform School for Girls such in-

vestigations and reports to be made and sent in not less thanonce each month.

8. The Department of Public Instruction .shall appoint acommittee of two members of the Department to investigate andreport upon the Reform School for Boys such reports to bemade and sent in not less than once each month.

PROMOTION OF TEACHERS.

SCHEDULE OF TEACHERS SALARIES.

1. This schedule is not to be considered in the nature of acontract between the Department and the teacehrs; it may bealtered and suspended at any time if it be deemed necessary.

2. Schools will be classified and salaries fixed at the begin-ning of each school year. Satisfactory services only will en-title a teacher to a rise of salary.

3. Teachers obtaining Normal Certificates will be allowed forone year's experience. Half the time taught in the United

States or Canada will be allowed.4. A teacher promoted to a higher position will begin at the

lowest salary of that position, and if for one year his serviceshave been satisfactory, all previous experience may be allowed.

5. Competent teachers in undesirable locations, or whereliving is unusually expensive, may be paid above the schedule.

Schools shall be classified as Elementary Schools and Highand Normal Training Schools.

The salaries of teachers in the Elementary Schools shall.beregulated according to the following schedule based on certifi-cate held and length of satisfactory service.Elcmentarv

Schools.

First Year

Sixth Year.

1st. Class 2nd. Class 3rd. Class$600 00 $480 00 $360 00

Third Year , 660 00. . . , ,lOCl m

Ninth Year 78000Twelfth Year , 840 00Fifteenth Year 900 00

540 00

600.00660 00

720 00

Holders of Normal School Diplomas will begin at a salary of$55 per month and receive the maximum salary in twelve years.

Substitute teachers shall be paid at the rate of $2.00 per dayfor less than five days of continuous service, and at two-thir- ofthe salary of the position for a period not to exceed three monthsof school year.

The salaries of principals in the Elementary Schools shall beregulated according to the following schedule based on enroll-ment of the school, length of satisfactory service and grade ofcertificate held.

Hereafter all persons appointed as principals of ElementarySchools with an enrollment of 200 or more must have, a gram-mar grade certificate or its equivalent.

CLASS OF SCHOOL.

1 v n 4 5 c 7 1 t) iu

1st yr 1 ?r- 2 ' 3 yr- 4 'r' 5 " 10 yr 11 f 20 yt"

500-60- 0 2000 2400 ,

400-50- 0 1800 2COO300-40- 0 1200 1800 ......200-30- 0 IOOO I200 1500 ,,,150-20- 0 IOOO I200 1500,.,,,,125-15- 0 1000 1200 1500IOO-12- 5 goo IOOO I200 1500

75-IO- O 720 840 90O IOOO I20045' 75 660 720 840 900 ......

NORMAL AND PRACTICE SCHOOL.

Teachers of Normal and Training School shall be paid accord-ing to the following schedule :

First Year , ? 900 00Second Year 960 00Third Year 1,020 00Fourth Year 1,080 00Fifth Year 1,200 00

The High School and Normal Training School are herebyrecognized as of equal class, the Principal of which will receivenot less than $2,400 00 a year without regard to length of ser-

vice.Note. The above schedule embodies the views of this De-

partment and its practice until 1904. It will be carried out asnearly as the funds placed at the disposal of the Department willadmit. Tr

SATISFACTORY SERVICE.

All teachers and principals of Elementary Schools claimingincrease of salary on the basis of the salary schedule must pro-

duce evidence that the pupils under their instruction in the.g.ade or school are proficient in the subjects of the course ofstudy as required by the grade or school.

The following may be accepted as satisfactory service:(a) Assistant Teachers.1. Proficiency of the pupils of the grade in the subjects of

the course of study for that grade to be determined by an ex-

amination given under the direction of the Department of Pub-lic Instruction.

2. The favorable report of the Inspector may be accepted incases where it is not possible to give an examination.

(b) Principals.1. Proficiency of pupils of the school in subjects of the

course of study, to be determined by an examination of the high-est grade of the school and the grade taught by the principal;the examination to be gjven under the direction of the Depart-ment of Public Instruction.

2. The favorable report of the Inspector of the district maybe accepted in,cases where it is not possible to give an exam-ination.

' VACATION SALARIES.

1. By Section 4 of the Act appropriating salaries of em-

ployees of the Territory, it is provided that "the Auditor shallnot draw a warrant for any sum on account of any bill for sala-ries and pay rolls in this Act in excess of the due proportion ofthe amount appropriated for such item for the time elapsed."Hence the salaries of all teachers in Government service arepaid in twelve monthly installments, although the work of theschool year is accomplished in ten months.

2. For the purpose of the following rules, the school yearshall be considered as consisting of ten months of teaching andtwo months of vacation, viz: July and August.

3. All teachers who are in the service of the Department atthe close of the summer term shall be entitled to as many tenthsof their respective salaries for July and August as they havetaught months.

But teachers whose connection with the Department has beensevered before the close of the Summer term, shall not be en-

titled to any salary for July and August, unless they have taughtat lcast'two terms of the current year.

4 Teachers who have taught two terms or more and .whosevonnection with the Department is severed before the close ofthe Summer term, shall be entitled to as many tenths of theirrespective salaries for July and August as they have taughtmonths.

Provided, however, that no teacher's name appear on the payroll at the opening of the school year unless said teacher shallactually begin service at that time. Nor shall any teacher re-ceive any compensation in that school year until he or she actu-ally begin service.

DISMISSAL. AND TRANSFER OF TEACHERS.

1. A teacher may be dismissed for cause after a fair and im-

partial hearing of the case before the Department or authorizedagent of the Department. The following may be considered assufficient causes for dismissal:

(a) Immoral conduct.(b) Insubordination. . j(c)(d)(02.

Inefficiency.Conviction under the Penal Code.Incurable disease.

No teacher shall be dismissed for inefficiency in schoolwork until he has been formally notified in writing and has beengiven a sufficient time to make answer.

3. A teacher may be transferred from one school to anotherwhen it shall seem that the efficiency of the Department will bepromoted thereby.

4. Salaries may be withheld until reports, health certificatesand term plans are in the hands of the Department.

5. A teacher may bg reduced in salary for failure to carryout the provisions of the course of study or for violation of therules and regulations of the Department. All reductions mustbe similar for similar offences.

LEAVE OF ABSENCE.

A teacher may, for good and sufficient reason, such'as illness,death in the family, etc., be granted a leave of absence for notmore than three months. In such cases the name of the teacherto whom such leave is granted may remain on the pay roll, heor she drawing the salary and paying a substitute to be appoint-ed by the Department, the substitute receiving two-thir- of theregular pay. Should the absence of the regular teacher be pro-longed beyond the three months, his or her name shall go offthe pay roll.

EXAMINATION OF TEACHERS.

1. An examination of teachers must be held at least once ayear.

2. Certificates shall be of two classes, Grammar Grade andPrimary Grade.

4.

3S

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VTVELVE.

,3. Grammar Grade Certificates of the 1st, 2nd and 3rd class

entitle the holder to teach for the term of five, four and threeyears respectively in the schools of the Territory.- 4.V Primary Grade Certificates of the 1st, 2nd and 3rd classentitle the: holder to teach for the term of three, two and oneyear respectively in the schools of the Territory.

5. An average of 85 entitles the candidate to a first class,

75 to a second class and 65 to a third class Grammar orPrimary Grade Certificate.

6. A candidate who makes less than 65 on the subjects ofthe Grammar Grade examination shall have 10 added to theavdragc''riiade and' receive the equivalent Primary Grade Certi-ficate. '

i Candidates for Primary Grade Certificates shall be cxairi-in'c'd'i-

' ''the following':Subject matter of the epu'rse pf study, except manual

training'a'nd calisthenicsj(b) " School management.(c) .Methods of teaching' the subjects 'of lhi Public School

Course. ""' '

8. Candidates for Grammar Grade Certificates shall be ex-amined in the following:

(a) 'Subject matter of the course of study, except manualtraining'atul calisthenics.' (b) Geometry Bk. I to IV. Algebra to Quadratics.

(c) Universal History.' lP "(d) School management and methods of leaching.

: RULES GOVERNING EXAMINATIONS.

The following rules shall be read and explained to all candi-

dates at the beginning of each examination:

1. Each candidate shall be furnished with a numbered card,on which he shall write his name. The number on this card heshajj' write,, On the headline of the first cover of the blankbookgiven him for the examinations. No candidate shall write hisname in this book or otherwise call the attention of those who

tare to examine and credit his work to any means of identifyinghis or any other book. All cards shall be scaled immediatelyand not be opened until all papers have been examined and allwork, has been finally credited.

2,. .Candidates shall communicate with no one except the per-sont

in charge of the room. All communication relative to theexamination shall be in a tone of voice sufficiently loud to beh'eard by all candidates in the room.

3. Examiners shall not enter into conversation with othersthan candidates or leave the room of which they have chargewhile the examinations are going on.

4. Candidates shall not leave the room after receiving apaper and before having finished their work on the same.

5: Local examiners shall report any necessary deviationsfrom these rules..6;-!'-Th- Grammar Grade examinations are open to those holding-fi-

rst-class primary certificates or equivalents, credited by theDepartment. Normal Certificates and Diplomas from our ownformal School and Diplomas from State Normal Schools aresuch equivalents.

7. The primary grade examinations arc open to persons sev-

enteen years of age who possess any one of the following quali-fications:

(a) One year of professional training.- (b) One year of successful teaching,

(c) A High School diploma or its equivalent.

LIFE CERTIFICATES.. : .

Persons of ten years successful teaching while holding a 1st.Class Primary Grade Certificate or Normal School Certificate,with an average of 85 or more, shall be entitled to a LifeCertificate.

u5Holders'' of the following are, after five years of successfulteaching, entitled to a Life Diploma:

(a) A Grammar Grade Certificate with an average of,90.(b) A Normal School Diploma with an average of 90.tf(c) A Honolulu Normal School Diploma granted since 1902.

HONORARY.

,.,f.To teachers who have rendered not less than fifteen years.satisfactory service in the public schools of the Territory there.may be granted by the Department in special cases, withoutexamination, Honorary Life Certificates of the Primary Grade.

-- Diplomas and Certificates of other States or Territories willbe received as equivalent to Hawaiian Certificates as follows:--

(a) University degree Grammar Grade Certificate.(b) Normal Diplomas Grammar Grade Certificate.(?) .s,te or Territorial Grammar Grade Certificates Gram-

mar Grade Certificate.'. (d) County Certificates, 1st. Class First Class Primary.

(e) 'State Life Certificates Life Diploma,,. Provided, however, that no one shall receive a -- Life Certificateor Life Diploma who has not taught at least five vears in thepublic schools of Hawaii.

RELIGIOUS INSTRUCTIONS.

,"

'.,'T person in holy orders or ministers of religion shall be

eligible to fill the office of Superintendent, Inspector, or Com-imissid'n- er

bf Public Instruction."2. religious instruction shall be given, in any public

schools: This is not to be construed as to interfere with thepractice1 'Uf 'Opening school with devotional exercises or to re-

strict in, any way the Sunday services as conducted in the Publ-ic- Boarding Schodls.'' Industrial Schools or ReformatorySchools'.:

(LII. scj00l I r..p1arPS (1ml "'rill. n1iln. if 1, i.rmi- -riioh sc'hools supported bv the Government is to instruct the'chilctretl'bf.the jiation in good morals," which includes honestytnithTii1nri;4 nlipflioni'. ''m --....1 tr..1.., . i.

, Ipupcriors in age and position, patriotism, kindness, benevole;helpfulness-t- tile weak and the (tnfortunate, humanity to ani- -

-- 'mais, cleanliness, modesty, chastity, temperance' and othervirtues, which should be taught bv precept, illustration, and ex-

amples at' all times.- -

No profane or indecent language should be allowed in theschool premises or on the way to or from school.

.Special instructions shall 'be arivnn on the avil oAecfs nf thpuse oft alcoholic drinks and narcotics.

SCHOOL HOLIDAYS, '

. - November First Friday Arbor Day. "'''( "November Last Thursday Thanksgiving Day. j

l.

for

TIH3 HAWAIIAN STAB, SATURDAY, SKPTKMDUIl 30, 1005.

February 12 Lincoln's Birthday.

February 22 Washington's Birthday,Good Friday, '.,''May 1st May Day. .

May 30 Decoration Day.

June 11 Kamchamcha Day. ,

June 14 Flag Day.

The above school holidays will be observed and any othersthat may be, from time to time, adopted by the Department.

It is the desire of the Department that these holidays b"e cele-

brated on the school premises with appropriate exercises oii'thcdays on which they occur. Where this is not feasible the holi-

day may be celebrated, with appropriate exercises, on the daybefore the holiday, and the parents be invited to attend. ' Thisis necessary in order that the pupils mav get the true meaningof the holiday, and that patriotism, knowledge and lbvc of coun-try the true purpose of the holiday may be inculcated.

Read and adopted in full this 19th day of June, 1905.

,. . : J. C. DAVIS,

,'.; Superintendent Public Instruction.

, I".'".' . :'

'

.. C. T. RODGERS,T Secretary.

N,;;i . . H.' M. von HOLT,ALICE C. JORDAN, "

I ' V - MAY AVILCOX,"

, ' W. D. ' ALEXANDER,WALLACE R. FARRlNGTON, .

DAVID L. AI,

CommissionersApproved:

A. L. C. ATKINSON,Acting Governor.

Iolis:li.1bf-d- l

. We have just received a fine assortment of Lyons' Califor-nia Fruit Syrups which have won such universal favor on ac-

count of their purity and fine flavor. These syrups make bev-erages which are ideal for consumption at society and otherfunctions. PINEAPPLE, ORANGE, STRAWBERRY,RASPBERRY, LEMON, VANILLA, ORGEAT, A,

ROSE, GRENADINE.

Henry,May. & Co., Ltd.,

BOSTON BLOCK

RETAIL 22 TELEPHONES WHOLESALE 92.

TO THE ARMY., Unless there is some member of the Woman's Christian Teinnerance

. . . . . . . . . .Union lurking around to hear, perhaps it would be lust as well to ad

unit that abolishing the army canteen has not brought that reform inthe morale of the army that its advocates predicted would result.Denver Republican.

HURTFUL

o

'!

MUST BE TRULY ARTISTICexchange. tr!'"k,8.and, ";,,?ka1Be1s'

Thcn monument from many yhich have been reared in honor of distinguished men. Otherwise should owe htm an apology.'Providence Bulletin.

Mexico's President

--DIAZ'S J& fcjf

lb

1 .

REPORT BYLYDECKER

SECRETARY OF THE BOAIID OF ARCHIVES OF HIS WORK

AMONG I'UBLIC DOCUMENTS A HUNDRED AND THIRTY-TW- O

TltUNKS FULL, OF THEM itf THECLASSIFYING THEM.

Secretary Lydcckcr ' yesterday.submitted the following report to thoHoard of Archives which approved It:

"Tho Board of Cainrqfifsloncrs ofPublic Archives: I havo the honor tosubmit tho following report of thowork accomplished to date In connection with the public archives.

"I entered on my duties May 11, 1903

and began by making a general examination and Inventory of tho trunksand other containers, and putting upin packages such material as was foundloose, Inventorying those also. Thoprincipal part I found stored In thoattic of tho Capitol building. Herethere aro trunks, consisting mostlyof Foreign Ofllco ahd legislative documents. In addition I found two roomsIn tho basement containing tho docu-ments of tho Interior department, one,thoso of tho Post ofllco and customshouso and another, tho Chinese bureauarchives. In addition to tho aboveI found n largo quantity of material intho vault of tho land and that of thotnx ofllco.

"After cettinc a general knowledgeof the material to bo handled I firstturned my atcptlon to assorting andplacing In trunks the contents of twolargo chests I found In tho maukatower room. These documents had1 ,i.,. i ..nnl fn meiit no seven

l o atntn ftf t uul""s luui ninesui uci 11111 n w - .1. vm. n " J

fusion. They were all foreign olllcepapers, some or tnem very oiuvaluable. After completing Iwas next engaged In one of the base-

ment rooms whlchconta!ned a massof Interior department books and pa-

pers in a loose and disordered state.Theso were put into packages whichwere numbered, labeled and InventoriedThe samo was done with tho Chlnesobureau material, tho contents of thotwo rooms making In tho neighborhoodof 250 packages. With tho exceptionof moving several trunks containingforeign ofllco documents from the vaultof the tax ofllco to my office thomauka tower of the Executive build-ing ,1 have left undisturbed the pa-

pers and books In this, and the landolllce vault, to remain until the hallof records Is completed, as they aroIn good places and my time being takenup with other worn, 1 win De unanioto glvo them attention for some timeto come. Dqcuments were removedfrom the closet the chief clerk's office and others will when Mr. B.uekland, returns from the coast. Onecloset In tho governor's office has beencleared of such papers as were wantedand at a convenient opportunity thepapers and books In another willremoved. Tho contents of a numberof boxes consisting of old postofflcopapers of absolutely no value as records or otherwise were, directionof tho secretary of the Territory, takento the dump nnd burned, undersupervision."

fter caring for the loose materialof the Chinese Bureau and InteriorDepartment, I began a systematic examination of tho foreign office and exe-

cutive documents. These papers andbooks aro at present contained In 49

"At last we have paid our debt to Ethan Allen," says an 81 which beadded of tho do- -

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cuments in tho governor's and ChiefClerk's offices aro removed.

Thn naekatres havo been numberedand inventories made of their contentsEach trunk has been thoroughly ex- -

ttmlned duplicato Inventories made ofthe contents, ono of which was placedin the trunk with tho documents andthe other filed in my office, by referenceto which I can toll nqt only the generalcontents of the trunk but also the clasfe

of documents In the different packu'geptherein, their dates etc.

"For tho purpose of facilitating thj?work of segregation and Indexing Inventories made others In which aregrouped together nil the documents olany ono year. These Inventories glvotho number of tho trunk and of thepackage In which the papers of anyyear may be found. I found It necessary to tnis as me uocuinenistho foielgu office aio badly scattered,they having been packed In the various trunks, In most cases, without regard to chronological order, and It willgreatly facilitate tho Haul work, aswill enable mo to place my hand onany package 1 may desire. All thishas been somewhat of ft task but Itnow Hearing completion and I havo a

very good working Ideu of the materialof the foreign and executive otllcosand can start on the unal work olseggregatlon, tiasslliuatlon and Index-

ing with degree of Intelligence asto the documents I will have to banditand form my plaim accordingly.

"It is my purpose, after finishingwith the- - Executive Foreign officedocuments to make jup tho legislative,This I do notantielpato will bo a yokof such an arduous character as In

most cusos the jwpers of the differentLt'sslons aro ouch In one contalnor,there are a few of the trunks howeverin which several sessions are- lnixea,-thes-

I will sort out lirst and placethem whore they belong. I shall thenmake Inventories of tho contents oftho dlfforont trunks in tho same man-ner as those of tlie executive nnd foreign offices with tho exception of .thoyearly Inventories which can be omitted."Tho documents that havo been placed

In camphor trunkB I have found as arule, In a very fair state of preservationbut thoso in small koa trunks and thearchives of the British commission, Ina small koa box. are not li such goodshape, tho papers and books In somoiT.

I Instances fcelng badly, eaten by, worms,!

jCAriTpkr-TU-E PLANS, FOR

, "I havo visited $10, Bishop Museum '

uhd Investigated their "method of des-troying these pests, and of the preser-vation of documents. I havo also In-

terview Mr. Smith, of 'Benson, Smith& Co.i nnd have learned from him of apreparation for this uso that I thinkwill answer our pifnoe', and as far nsthe method of treatment Is concerned,will bo better for us' than that of thomuseum. By their method It wouldtake a year or more to treat all thomaterial we havo to Mr. Smlth'Hmethod would tako comparatively llt-tl- o

time and ho clnlms would bo justas effective. But whatever method Ischosen, the papers will have to bo euro-ful- ly

watched and treated from time totime.

"A report has been made to the gov-ernor, for use In his unnual report totho Secretary of tho Interior, of thowork heretofore done on tho archivesIn years past, what tho commissionIs now doing and what It Is proposedto do. In this report 1 havo alsotouched on tho sentimental, historicaland practlpal ya'ues of the work, sight- - .

Ing a caso In rcferoncq, to the lattojj'In yvhlch, though the commission hasonly been In cxlstenco but a fewmonUis document has been foundthat will cause a saving to the ndl'

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the Commission has at Its disposal for.;':tho next two years), and as time goeson ine practical value 01 ineso uocuments will doUbt ess bo further emphasized to the government's or thoindividual's benefit as the case may be.

From the appropriation expiringJuno 30, 1903, I purchased , office sup- - .

piles enough to last us until wo hnvnanother available, also ten thousandmanlla envelopes, these envelopes hadto be made to order to meet our re-- ,'

qui'roments, but ttio house makingthem will hereafter carrythem Instock so that future suupplles of thiskind can be obtained at a .cheaperrate. They are to be used as containers for tho documqnts when filedIn tho cases. A Bates numbering J!"

machine of seven wheels was procud. v

"I respectfully submit for the Boanlapproval and criticism the plan I havelaid out In reference to the seggrega- - T

tlon, classification and, Indexing undertho following general' heads. ; , A

1st. Form of Government.2nd. Departments under the dlfferengovernments. '

3rd. Bureaus of tho departments(with subdivisions, us" may be foundnecessary.) .

4th.' Miscellaneous documents thatwill not como under the"headlngJof Veither the 2nd or 3rd Items. '

, ,

Gth. A seggregatlon as to years as ,far as practicable.

A collecting together of all do- -, "

cumerits relating to anyf .lmpojtanW'--'event In the history of tho country, 'fori'Mfexample .those pertaining to the com-'- fi

plications with France England,cases like that of Charlton, LUdd & Co. ibark Harvest, tho trials of polItlcal,'fJprisoners In 1893 and others too num- - )erous to mention. Tho object being '!that In looking up an Important event,, ;or an"y document bearing' on the same,me papers m connection inercwiiu .vm.bo together .as far'as It ifi possible,'have them.

"After having been seggregatud.classllled as above, to niako. what- - '

might bo called a summary Index-un- j

der these different headings, one fl yrwhich any class of documents could boreadily turned td and. the particular;.papers wanted found with Httlo or no

trouble In searching."After tills summary Index Is com"

pleted tho building could bo opened totho public but not until then.

"Tho archives having been put It

such slulpo as to bo readily referred trjIt would then bo well to make a moredetailed index of an alphabetical nature, which will necessarily bo ir longtask and ono on which It would be vtuto ask tho next legislature to providefor clerical help.

"Respectfully submitted,"It. C. IVDEOKl'Vt.

"Secretary, Board of Archives."

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