it f ran - university of hawaii upon the walls.of jila depart--menl ''i.-"...

6
6: I.AIL3 frtm tin Francises , Eoaoma, Jul j 21, For Can Francisco Peril Minx. July 30 From Vancouver: . " lrakura, Aug. fcr Vancouver: Niagara, An$. ltV " ' ' ' Hawaiian Star, Vol. XXIV; No. 7ST9 v - - - - ',r ' ' ' y: ; i ..' . ' - Borxd .of: Health Objects To .Ruling Rendered By U. S. Body: FURTHER ACTION IS; . . " NOT DECIDED UPON Protect Was Entered After Meeting Which Was Held v 'Last month, Covers' AH "Certainly we are opposed to it," said Dr. John S. B. Pratt, president of the territorial board of health, this morning when asked for a statement as to tow the board takes the action of the U. 8. Public Health Service in ordering the discontinuance of med- ical inspection of Vessels coming here from the mainland, :" , 'We havo not yet received notifica- tion of the removal of inspection re- ported la yesterday's Associated Press news," said the president of the board. "Until we are notified formally I can-ne- t tell what course we . shall maa . .. 0cL. ;, .v Dr. Pratt authorized the Etar-Bull- e tin to make public action taken by the bc3rd at its monthly meeting June 23, wl'.ca a resolution was unanimously carrI;J rrvjcstlsg Dr. C. Trotter, cllcf quarantine officer of the Terri- tory cf Hawaii, to write Washington pretesting against discontinuing of vcssels from the" main-i- . ... .. "The president stated." say the min-ttr- s cf the board's meeting June 23, "tv t he had advlco from Surpeon F. i:. Vrcttcr. U. S. Public Health Ser tvet Jt'tad tcca proposed .to C r.U-u- e ie.Ji'ection of vessels and I r ers from mainland 'ports. " :t:r d.':cr-?!"- n on this matter it w re : r f e e. led, and unanimous-tha- t lr Curccn Trotter be in- - f ti:et t!:3 territorial beard ot vie- - v !th epprehr:-- - "t the .1... ...:,e..2't:i..: ;ccl!e-e- i tr.el .rasscr.'-er- s : rrlv'r.g i'r t'..tl t.te;bo c .:ea wlta the : i ; tea U. C Public i: ... l tre.nsittlns the' re-- L r." cf t:e t.e.rd that the regula-i- a t fer'3 ta not rescinded, and u. tha rre.'.Iient give in detaiksuch tr :ts ts ta can in support of this rr ecntly Dr. Pratt appeared before A I -- e rr.ee'. a Committee and made a -- 3 r re test alnst "letting down A V i" iz c r.ecrns medical inspec- - 112 -- !i teiay that the board t .... -- r;tv un(jer the law with ti-.- r. r . ; ; "Health Service here, ts c: s i ;' rtloa of vessels com- - ;v : ?t ': '. : it V ' C 3 ..rl: 1 toiay from several r: the! th8 tcard of health may t:-.- . lee to its own hands and tee ' dent inspections of ves- - se' c err. Irs frceei the mainland when-i- t cv: Ceerr.3 tueh action . best for - l -- e!th. ' .' tee ": v r .iiXUl, .. .. ,.:;:ciiinY (Ar settled rresi by FderI Nlrlei) ' 'r,t ' f '' :'.:-':- : FA!? nUNCISCO. Cal., July f 27. Whether- the Hill liner 4 Greet Ncrttcrn, leaTing here No- - venter 7 ta begin the Coftstr-- f f Hawaii fall and winter echedule, 4- - will centime on the run per- - 4- - r e . tly depends upon the busl- - ncea rceliecl, it was announced 4- - by Great Northern Pacific 4- - ttcahlp Company officials to-- day. t ; . " : ', , ' J 4 44 4 44 4 V f't a.. n.nr: ATEBILL knr ' T F4rf 'J1' WASHINGTON, D. Cv July S.--T- he three ranking members of tne Jiouse coererrlttce on naval affairs to- day, conferred vita President Wilson upon- - the naval appropriation bill, now in conference between the two houses of Congress. . President Wilson told Ccnsressraan Padgett of Tennessee, chairman; Talbott of Maryland and Estoptnal of Louisiana; that he . be- lieves it vital the Jiouse should adopt . the senate naval program.. -- : Never eat heartily . when tired or excited; It Is far better to eat very i:ttl3 tlowly. .; " v PU2LIC ACCESS ran TO SE ASSURED Plan for 8ig : Army Reserve : Does Not Include All the! -- ; ; - v Available : Lands BEACH AND CANE FIELDS: LIKELY TO BE RETAINED Proximity of Site . to Proposed Military Road Will -- be Large a'vj.- Asset Hv'- - ..:-.-v- ;.H j ' Public lands at Walmanalo, Oaho, m-- not onlv crovlde a great military reservation but will furnish revenue to the. territory roughly, estimated as reaching close to half a mmion aoi-la- r annually before the end of five years. This is the result of investi- gation by territorial' officials, who are that the visit bv themselves end Hawaiian Department officera a few days ago will result in an agree- ment by which the federal govern-ron- t will 'ret desired land for mili tary purposes, while the territory will still retain Its mcome-peari- ng cane-O- n of -- the birr features of the plan Is that the military belt-roa- d now con templated from Honolulu' ; starting at icalmukf. runs to Koko . Head, around Mupakuu Point, and thence to Walmanalo," connecting there witn the' present road to . Walmanalo via the Pali and the windward side, of the island, and making ;k belt-roa- d from Honolulu to Walmanalo and re turn ', - .; -- r, ; -- It is: said, the plan or' U. S. army officers ( is j not- - to make the military reservation one In which a-- thousand or two thousand .soldiers will be sta tioned all the year, put to; have the ;'-(Ccntidcei on pasa two)1-- , ' Seth f.loy!2 Cables That A!;ha Film Company Will Leavr3 V Los Angeles August If ' , "ifonolulii will welcome ' the first moving picture colony early in August when the members of the Aiona um Company arrive to begin work for the first "Made In Hawaii" pictures. A cable from Seth Moyle, who was In Honolulu recently, states that be will leave Los Angeles August 1 roniiooo-lulu- . accompanied .by, a .number, of moving picture 'actors. It is announced by local people in- terested in the Aloha Film . Company that the first picture produced la Ha- waii will be a color picture. It is thourht that this, film will bring out much of, the beautiful scenery of the Islands.' '. ."; . ".. : ' - Since leaving "..Honolulu, Moyle has been actively engaged in arranging plans "to begin viork : on the ' produc- tion of Hawaiian films, and : locally there baa been much interest In the company. Further word of the devel- opments -- are expected in the near ' future. :. " v''. NEW YORK STOCK i 4 UARKET TODAY Follcmtng are tha closing prloea af stocks en the New Ycfk marekt to- day, sent by the Associated Press ever the Feaeral Wireless. - .y, t :ry r:-- ; Yestar- - '.;..' . ' - y Today, day. Alaska Gold . .......... 17U 174 American Smelter ..... 92'i American Sujar Rfg. 108 . 109 American Tel. & Tel... "123 129'4 Anaconda Copper ...... 78 y i nva Atchison , 104 .: 104'2 Baldwin Loco. ' 89 Baltimora & Ohio...:... '85 8Sft Bethlehem Steel; . . 440 CaJIf. Petroleum ....... If'i' 18 Canadian Pacific . .. .. . . 178'A . 177Vi CM. & SJLi P. (St. Paul) 954 . 88 Colo. Fuel & Iron...... 43H ;43'a Crucible Steel . . .. i... 67 67'4 Erie Common ...... .i.. 34 34 General Electrie v. ..... 1.67U 167a Ge ne ral M oto ri 1 . . . . i . . X . Great Northern JPfd....-11- 7 118',4 inter. Harv-.- N. 4.... ..'11 n Kennecott Copper...... 45 i:45 Lehigh R. R... ........ ma 77 New York Central.... 102 103: Pennsylvania ......... 56 J..... Ray Consot. .22 . 23; Southern Pacific. 97 ra Studebaker 128 J28 Tennessee Copper 23 f 23 Union Pacific1 ........v 135 138J4 U;: S. Steel. V.. .... .... fc8U ' 881 U. S. Steel Pfd. . .... .'. i 1 17 1 17 Utah . .e.. 75V ; TV Western Union 83- - 83H Weatlnghouse : . 65 55; ; Cid. fExhldend. $Unquotd.. y: t: lltrf Nlrll'r Uvlli It I flzTf .wt jf-;.-- Vttf- - 171 Tm T '; It 1 v ' f r FV f I ?Xvr 1 1 m lit I - I MMr M. M LJL M; AklpWI I mr ; -- J : W . - . II DETEDED TO SEE STUART OUT Attorney-Genera- l; Taking Ac- tion on Jurist's "Personal" Letter to President ' RESIGN ATloFWAf : BUT NOT YET CERTAIN Apparent Doubt in Washington Whether Judge Will Step :y Out August1;; ; vyi'y- By C. S. ALBERT, ! (8pcW 8tBuUitio Cvtntpenlnet) y WASHINGTON, D. C July 13. Attorney General Gregory haa buck- led on his armor and' prepared for warfare; This doe not mean that he wDI hasten to the Mexican 1 border or of f er his services to one " of . the European belligerents. On the con- trary, he will devote his activities to trailing Judge T. B. Stuart and mak- ing sure that- - bis official scalp Is dis- played upon the walls .of Jila depart- - menL ''i . - " ": - ', ; ' r a aa ; AS a preinnmary uie axiorney-seu-er- al has started to run down, locata and bring in the resignation of Judge Stuart. : This elusive- - documents has been permeating the atmosphere here for many' months. It oscillated be tween the judge and Senator Shafroth until, a specific: statement wraa made that It had been transmitted to the bresIdenLV'alonz with his ' charges against Secretary, Lane, Attorney-Gen- . eral "Gregory and Governor Tnnjtnam, with a ! few burning ;observalipna re- lating to the president thrown in for good measure; :.;' y It developed that 'the resignation, an ad vertispd. d !f nbt at)Dear lh - the comxnunication ; rflled r with- - thp ;presi-- . fCcstl-.se- d ci'Tr3 two)'- t - 1 y iLiu HiL Advice to' Lo'cal Transporta- - - tion Man Forecast Mucn Trouble on Mainland ' V cne of V: the ; most extensiye and demoralizing ? railroad strikes the world has ever known may be canea on the mainland on or about August i j .K .Butler, freight traffic man ager of the Oahu railway, haa received information from California interesia tndicatlna that there will bo no settle ment between operators and .employes and that ' practically'' every : railroad man in the unitea statea wm v p called out :"r-'y-,- ; f;- '- ; S'Rnfh a fitrTkft itV onlv-woul- d orac- - tlcally stop business in the; states but would also tie uj IJawail tighter tnan a snare dnxnV says Butler,' y . The local railway; man came to Ho- nolulu a; few month ago from the coast, where , he has been connected with many of the - large railway sy t terns and cognizant ot the. growing difficulties. .. He haa expected the big strike 1 for some 5 time but had hoped It would be settled by. arbitration. ' ;The effects of such a .wide sweep- ing walk-ou- t are inestimable. Every Industry in the country would be tem- porarily crippled and railway men here believe over half a million men would be affected. It ts said that the employes demands mean a $100,000,-00- 0 increase In. the various railway pay. rolls. : ; . y.yZ .. yy '. I Butlef says that, the Santa .Fe, the Southern Pacific, and many pther ol the prominent companies have antici- pated the strike and are advertising now for strike breakers in advent of a walkout, indicating a fight to the finish, HONOLULU'S: NAVY TO . i i Honolnla has a. nav ! - altliougli you n Deute .; 4 VJ . I Jl I y ' 1 r: - '7 . y ;f t; lyZmK -;- -; : y;-"r;:."- ; ;-- i j - 'T ? ' i nd D:" v ;ra tayaf ahowlna .where tha German iubmirlnt ' ' J r -- :t;c t f ::;s t tha; eptn .asa... Thera- - hat tesn tsmt it: . ty;U rr.' . ; r.-- .i rsvat r rn vthxt- - th tlj aufcrsri-- i W. ;.t ?!fi;va-'.'.rcv- i J'"V;CV-- ' jr- - .' !)'rv.-- - c-- -l f i tu"r? "f .t c t t) aea.i-Th- ; ar." -- - jraVlnChaaa pika'.Xi-- . .itrala fit' aaid to be wiJtiirj-Hin- d ihua perhapa menacing U, J3.tiw;.liiy--il4.:.jv,- 7i ' ; 4on tha map tbove.., '.rr-'?;- i if 4 .:4 y ..-..- iUndsrsen Craft Canncl -- rubmerge in Bays Until ietrjhree-K:SF.1il3UmitvExperttf- ay ;,;:,.V;r;f;y. v ':yi :y--.- - iyyy:y:i 4 BUFORJ N,C4 4uiy.27-- A fortl-- n cruiser Is -- reported to be standing ff tha Inlet. It la- - believed that; aha Ja there prevent the entrance of -- tha submarine f rtighter y Bramen,? aistei ship to the Deutachland, now in Balti- more, y"' y ,y-- v ':.- -'' (iMoeUted Prss hj Ttiml WiraUw) i :. i WASH I NGTO N, D. C Juy 27-T- he Germair conaiH! Ii Baltimore last night announced that tta Deutschland, will net leave for another week. - Ha detlined 'positively to make any addi- tions to his statement or to give any reasona for the further delay of the steamer. ; I ; - :y: ' ".'-- rthat ha: had cleared for "Bremen or any other1 German, port,' and added that the time of hia iepartura la In- definite. ?- - 8o far. aa could be ascer-falne- d laat nlaht he had notarranged for a pilot but tb tug which towed him up tha bay to sammora nas coaica ano la standing by, apparently ready to tow him back to deep wttf.-.- .' shown by- - navy department" charts show that it r will be Impossible for the Deutschland on hef return ; trip to completely submerge until .she is nearly a mils off tha Virginia Capes. The channel depth - between Capes Charles and Henry Is between 25 feet 6 inches and feety -- y This" will be sufileient for", her, sur- face 'draught. In the .opinion' f wal oficers,- - but It will r.Uke., more .than sixty feet to safely, ; submerge. her over-a- U ' draught of thirty-ftv- e feet. She will not reach, this depth until she is about a mile off shored From this point sb; will: have plenty of room to""cbmpletely hide herself until she can pass the y three-mil- e limit where there is moro than fifty feet bf .water. '; - i-- f ": - Considerable curiosity is expressed among construction oflicers as to what BE LAUNCHED TUESDAY nna yDtxrseii viwuy mici m uuj r-- "r b A brand new, effidentfup-to-the-secon- d navy! " y y".;r '4. ''-- : ;V One that in ' iint . of .'nuhtbefs;: at least; compares favorably wth some of the very best navies on the market. .iv vyy'-'yV- - Furthermore, wemderturneet, it rB tne pnvaic propcn ui u;u-f- " r :s -- . . - vtt ' i. 4...' It., j I-.: T.-.c-- ...UK liii rerpmon : and will ; it win ue jaunt wcu icai. . - - , commenced at-on- ce, lone of the most daring and spectecuUrypyages evet laid out by a board of -- strategy. ; v ' i ' . x y v - y y V 1 v ,v Thirty-fiv- e ocean-goin- g submarines and forty speedy cruisers will comprise the'fleet, andfthey represent the last. word in naval-constnic-tio- embodying all the very latest ideas' to be gleaned from the great war. '. '':-- '; ''-- ' : r .. y 4:'--- . '' 'i-y'''t--- 4 ; Where they .sail and wliat they.-d- should, prove-- a source .oi speculation to every Honolulan; and the StaT-BuUet- ia mil Akeep. .tU ' " readers well-inform- ed from day to day. regarding its every move. t Keep your "eyes open for news of this fleet may mean money trochrr'pocket; for iheudd axruiset strike a rock" or one of the tbr ottering a1 huge rewards for desired ;mfornuticai. - r y .r ::.' -- La !r- - Jo r )ix yy fv T:v;:';V:-:.:..-- - : y "A ' ... ' " : ' - wfll linnnAt) If ttin . TtAiitarlilanii - la forced to Creep along' the bed pt the ocean; This ia composed of fine white sand and broken shell, and' the" only 4anger to the boat ia that her pro- pellers may. strike the sand ridges. tit Is not expected the sand will affect uiem mucn as- - ane prooaoiy nas sucn buoyancy that she .will spring -- over any bumps . she, may-encounter- .y , " :.: f (Continued on page two) it UPBY SEiJMS . ' .i ., -- ; . - v i' ' :' ' .'s . Foreign Relations Committee ' Opposes Resolutions cell-- ; r- - ;ing On U..S. T0, Intercede . : (Aft02tl- - Prtr fcr Ttitnt WirIi) : WASHINGTON. D. (X. July 27 Tha aenata foreign relations committee to- - aay reporteo aaveraeiy upon resolu- tions which had been , Introduced la the aerate at the behest of Irish synv patnizers. proposing intercession in behalf of Sir Roger Caaement.; LONDON. -- Without hearln r the at- - torneys for . the - crown, the - court of criminal appeal dismissed Sir Roger Casement's appeal from the verdict of the lower court, which round him anil tv of treason : fnr whipJi Viifioant Reading, the lord chief justice sen- tenced him to death.-- 1 lyyyi (t. Tot a dav and a. halfAIerandar Sul livan, Sir Roger's counsel, argued be--. fnr turn court.' onotlnr manv. autnon- - 4 ties -- in ; favor of ' his contention that the offense of treason depended upon Whether the-accus- dwelt under the nrolectlon of the; kinr.t and that the crime could not be committed without the . realm. He abandoned : his other points in regard to the lord chief jus- tice's definition of the offense. -- y:r-; As soon as Mr. Sullivan bad con- cluded his argument the court retired to consider whether the attorneys for the crown would be called on to reply. It soon decided to the contrary, which indicated that the appeal ' had - gone against; Sir Roger, .whorwaa': present during the argument and when Judg- ment ' waa , given. :. - -- ' ' . A . further appeal . to . the house . of lords is possible only if the attorney-gener- al gives ' a certificate, that the decision of the court of .criminal ap- peal involves a point of law so excep- tionally, important that' it is desirable in the. public Interest that a still hlgh-e- r, court should deal with i This has beeh' done only twice since the court of erimlnal: appeal was established eight rears. ao. i pK y: "1 BRITISH ON WEST CONTINUE TO PRESS GERMANS HARD ; HAND-TO-HAN- D ENCOUNTERS AT MANY FOKITS 1 IRISH NATIONALISTS CREATE SCENE IN HOUSE OF COMMONS ANGLO-RUSSIA- N 'SUBMARINE BASE SHOT, ' v '.; i ; t " , '' y V ; .r MMWMMHMMM- - - " :y'y":::';"':.:: '(iiwdtM htM 8rrk ay f4ttU WirtUu) ",' ; 1 WASHINGTON; D. Cv July 27. Uncle Sain answer to thc blacklisting of American finns by the British povcrnmcnt is a sharply worded protest which Ambassador Walter H. Page is directed to con- vey ta the British foreign office. ' . ' . ; 1 Tlie note of protest has been drawn up, after conference between President Wilson, Counsellor Polk of the state department and other administration advisersVand lias already been cabled to London. It will be jrade public in full here Monday, according to announcement, time being given for the British government to receive it. . . ;yyy. Heavy Fislitinj onTecf; G:riz?r . " LONDON, Eng.. July 27. Heavy fighting is again the order of the day on tlie west fronts particularly that portion held by the British troops and where Sir Douglas Haig is endeavoring to move fonvard. Throughtout all last niglit the British continued to press the Germans and at various points of the Somme sector there was severe lund-to- - hand fighting, in which the Brittsli claim some successes, vy , ; . The enemy on this point of the front is using gas shells, which irritate the eyes of the rrlen in the trenches so much that they are tcui-pprari- ly blinded. ; These ishells have .been caned;,carrsliclU0.- because of their effect' on the optics. y .." .' - y y y V TiKRLtN. Hermanv. Iulv'27. number, of attacks with hand-grenad- es in the region around Pozicrrs W wri invariahlv. rernilsed. South of the Somme tlie, I' rench ir.a;.: a'n attack today in considerable force " .ti-:- .i I ' ' v'i BERLIN, Germany, July 27. barded a naval base used jointly by tne untisn ana Kuss:ans at ianc-- ; hamm,- - onthe Russian Baltic coast. The German -- flyer returned un- scathed after several hits scored on the buijdings which constitute tha base. - Prom lariehamm; the British submarines have been operating; in the. Baltic, l ;' : - ; '; -- y 44 " 'LONIX)N, Eng;July 27.The Norwegian sailing vessels Bams. Siebrid and Juno have . been torpedoed in the North; Sea. . It is an- nounced that in none of the cases, is any, casualty reported. y"yy: : ; ' lr in at in on on oT us on of is of r T a Germans ' "' - A A .LuLj . able y y in an that withdrawing ; v on Iriali Nationalist Slirs Com: - . ; : :- ; - - - ' ; ' - y LONDON, Eng., July 27. Lawrence Ginnell, a known Irish Nationalist the House of Commons, opposition to government aggressive since Irish insurrection, caus- ed a short of House when he refus- ed to withdraw from the chamber when to so. Finally he obeyed the of the speaker leave and go. While to get him to witlidraw, the house given a temporary ' recess. y s ;.- -;' v - Riiscian Hordes Do In Galicia, Drive Hard cn .u:. :.'(AKU4'frrMS lttttX Wlrl) PETTtOGRAD, , Russia. tJuly 27. Six thousand two and fifty Teutona were a sharp- - battle Tuesday one portion of the western (Riga-Carpathia- n) front. -- . Vy : In the Caucasus region the pursuit of Turks continues unabated. At Erzlngan, the Turk stronghold on , l)NDON, Eng., July 27. Announce- ment was made by the official bureau todaythat during the three weeks of ' GERMAN V July 26. Great British bastion canal and Ypre8 together with occu-pant- s by German " mine blastings.. The British after violent fignting . took small of Po-slere- a. . Farther .near Foure-au- x wood and Longueval the enemy's alight .attacks were repulsed. Near Trones wood, enemy's Intended r at- tack was recognized and v waa 'frus- trated ' -'. -- ' T ' by our fire. We maintained ourselves, against French attempts at reconquest ter- rain gained by night of July 23, southwest Farm Zamalson-neU- e - '.:,:-:;;- South of Estrees, lively hand-to-han- d fighting going on. On the height Fallemorte, the French oc- cupied mine crater blasted out by them, hut soon after were buried by German counter mines. . - 1 " v lem the day the British nude bit the 'trained machine- - :v-:- ; ;V-':i-- "' An aeroplane has successfully bom- - ' feat m Armenlv jast captured, the Russiaas have found a depot with much vxla- - war materiel. - BERLIN, - Germany,- - July 27. Vienna, officiai announcement today, says the Auatriaas ars before the : Russians north of Brody, Galicia. - July just past British casualties the west front were 1108 officers killed, 2334 wounded and 431 mls&izz. Den : Up - well member of whose the has been more the suspension the sitting of the today. ordered do demand that he his seat outside. trying was hundred taken the Oritisb Olficerc Lost Te:i Germaby Officially HEADQUARTERS,; the destroyed remainder eastward, the y'v the Durintr the ies.Lc:::3 West of Meuse, Germans progressed near Height 303. East of Meuse, L'ght.: artillery duels la the vicinity cf Fort- ress of Thiaumont At many places on the front, enemy patrols were re- pulsed. .. , V . ':. ;,-- ,' . i - Niorth of Somme, j two enemy aero planes were brought down within our . lines by Infantry machine gun fire.. Another after an air combat was pre- - clpltated aflame in the district , ' of Luvevllle. 'j- - On July 24, German; anti-ai- r craft gun 'shot, down ' a French blplaaa, ' which was. traveling in-th- e direction of Fortress Souville. yy -- " y : ' HInden burg's army front; West of Riga," German reconaoitaring detach- - ment entered and destroyed Russian advanced positions..-- ' Enemy patrols: were lively fa many places. Cennaa . (Continued oa pass two)

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6:

I.AIL3

frtm tin Francises, Eoaoma, Julj 21,

For Can FranciscoPeril Minx. July 30

From Vancouver: ." lrakura, Aug.fcr Vancouver:

Niagara, An$. ltV

" ' ''

Hawaiian Star, Vol. XXIV; No. 7ST9 v - - - - ',r ' ' '

y: ; i..'

.' -

Borxd .of: Health Objects To.Ruling Rendered By U. S.

Body:

FURTHER ACTION IS; . ."

NOT DECIDED UPON

Protect Was Entered AfterMeeting Which Was Held

v 'Last month, Covers' AH

"Certainly we are opposed to it,"said Dr. John S. B. Pratt, president ofthe territorial board of health, thismorning when asked for a statementas to tow the board takes the actionof the U. 8. Public Health Servicein ordering the discontinuance of med-ical inspection of Vessels coming herefrom the mainland, :"

,

'We havo not yet received notifica-tion of the removal of inspection re-

ported la yesterday's Associated Pressnews," said the president of the board."Until we are notified formally I can-ne- t

tell what course we . shall maa. ..0cL. ;, .vDr. Pratt authorized the Etar-Bull- e

tin to make public action taken bythe bc3rd at its monthly meeting June23, wl'.ca a resolution was unanimouslycarrI;J rrvjcstlsg Dr. C. Trotter,cllcf quarantine officer of the Terri-tory cf Hawaii, to write Washingtonpretesting against discontinuing

of vcssels from the" main-i- .... ..

"The president stated." say the min-ttr- s

cf the board's meeting June 23,"tv t he had advlco from Surpeon F.i:. Vrcttcr. U. S. Public Health Ser

tvet Jt'tad tcca proposed .toC r.U-u- e ie.Ji'ection of vessels andI r ers from mainland 'ports. "

:t:r d.':cr-?!"- n on this matter itw re : r f e e. led, and unanimous-tha- t

lr Curccn Trotter be in- -

f ti:et t!:3 territorial beard otvie- - v !th epprehr:-- - "t the

.1... ...:,e..2't:i..: ;ccl!e-e-i

tr.el .rasscr.'-er- s : rrlv'r.gi'r t'..tl t.te;bo

c .:ea wlta the: i ; tea U. C Public

i: ... l tre.nsittlns the' re--L

r." cf t:e t.e.rd that the regula-i- a

t fer'3 ta not rescinded, andu. tha rre.'.Iient give in detaiksuchtr :ts ts ta can in support of thisrr

ecntly Dr. Pratt appeared beforeA I -- e rr.ee'. a Committee and made a

--3 r re test alnst "letting down

A V i" iz c r.ecrns medical inspec--112 -- !i teiay that the board

t .... -- r;tv un(jer the law withti-.- r. r .

; ; "Health Service here,ts c: s i ;' rtloa of vessels com- -

;v : ?t ':'. :

it V ' C 3 ..rl: 1 toiay from severalr: the! th8 tcard of health mayt:-.-

. lee to its own hands andtee ' dent inspections of ves- -

se' c err. Irs frceei the mainland when-i- t

cv: Ceerr.3 tueh action . best for- l -- e!th. ' .'tee ": v

r

.iiXUl,.. ..

,.:;:ciiinY(Ar settled rresi by FderI Nlrlei) '

'r,t 'f '' :'.:-':-

: FA!? nUNCISCO. Cal., Julyf 27. Whether- the Hill liner4 Greet Ncrttcrn, leaTing here No--

venter 7 ta begin the Coftstr-- f

f Hawaii fall and winter echedule, 4- -

will centime on the run per- -

4-- r e . tly depends upon the busl--

ncea rceliecl, it was announced4-- by Great Northern Pacific4-- ttcahlp Company officials to--

day.t ; .

" : ', ,

' J4 4 4 4 4 4 4 V f't

a..n.nr: ATEBILL

knr ' T F4rf 'J1'WASHINGTON, D. Cv July S.--T- he

three ranking members of tneJiouse coererrlttce on naval affairs to-

day, conferred vita President Wilsonupon-- the naval appropriation bill, nowin conference between the two housesof Congress. . President Wilson toldCcnsressraan Padgett of Tennessee,chairman; Talbott of Maryland andEstoptnal of Louisiana; that he . be-

lieves it vital the Jiouse should adopt. the senate naval program.. --

:

Never eat heartily . when tired orexcited; It Is far better to eat veryi:ttl3 tlowly. .;

"

v

PU2LIC ACCESS

ranTO SE ASSURED

Plan for 8ig : Army Reserve: Does Not Include All the!

-- ; ; - v Available : Lands

BEACH AND CANE FIELDS:LIKELY TO BE RETAINED

Proximity of Site . to ProposedMilitary Road Will --be Large

a'vj.- Asset Hv'--..:-.-v-

;.H j' Public lands at Walmanalo, Oaho,m-- not onlv crovlde a great militaryreservation but will furnish revenueto the. territory roughly, estimated asreaching close to half a mmion aoi-la- r

annually before the end of fiveyears. This is the result of investi-gation by territorial' officials, who are

that the visit bv themselvesend Hawaiian Department officera afew days ago will result in an agree-ment by which the federal govern-ron- t

will 'ret desired land for military purposes, while the territory willstill retain Its mcome-peari-ng cane-O-n

of --the birr features of the planIs that the military belt-roa- d now contemplated from Honolulu' ; startingat icalmukf. runs to Koko . Head,around Mupakuu Point, and thenceto Walmanalo," connecting there witnthe' present road to . Walmanalo viathe Pali and the windward side, ofthe island, and making ;k belt-roa- d

from Honolulu to Walmanalo and return ', - .; --r,; --It is: said, the plan or' U. S. armyofficers ( is j not- - to make the militaryreservation one In which a-- thousandor two thousand .soldiers will be stationed all the year, put to; have the

;'-(Ccntidcei on pasa two)1-- , '

Seth f.loy!2 Cables That A!;haFilm Company Will Leavr3

V Los Angeles August If ' ,

"ifonolulii will welcome' the first

moving picture colony early in Augustwhen the members of the Aiona umCompany arrive to begin work for thefirst "Made In Hawaii" pictures. Acable from Seth Moyle, who was InHonolulu recently, states that be willleave Los Angeles August 1 roniiooo-lulu-.

accompanied .by, a .number, ofmoving picture 'actors.

It is announced by local people in-

terested in the Aloha Film . Companythat the first picture produced la Ha-

waii will be a color picture. It isthourht that this, film will bring outmuch of, the beautiful scenery of theIslands.' '. ."; . ".. : ' -

Since leaving "..Honolulu, Moyle hasbeen actively engaged in arrangingplans "to begin viork : on the ' produc-tion of Hawaiian films, and : locallythere baa been much interest In thecompany. Further word of the devel-opments -- are expected in the near

'future. :. " v''.

NEW YORK STOCK i

4 UARKET TODAY

Follcmtng are tha closing prloea afstocks en the New Ycfk marekt to-

day, sent by the Associated Press everthe Feaeral Wireless.

- .y, t :ry r:-- ; Yestar--

'.;..' .' - y Today, day.

Alaska Gold . .......... 17U 174American Smelter ..... 92'iAmerican Sujar Rfg. 108 . 109American Tel. & Tel... "123 129'4Anaconda Copper ...... 78 y i nvaAtchison , 104 .: 104'2Baldwin Loco. ' 89Baltimora & Ohio...:... '85 8SftBethlehem Steel; . . 440CaJIf. Petroleum ....... If'i' 18Canadian Pacific . . . .. . . 178'A . 177ViCM. & SJLi P. (St. Paul) 954 . 88Colo. Fuel & Iron...... 43H ;43'aCrucible Steel . . .. i... 67 67'4Erie Common ...... .i.. 34 34General Electrie v. ..... 1.67U 167aGe ne ral M oto ri 1 . . . . i . . X .

Great Northern JPfd....-11- 7 118',4inter. Harv-.- N. 4.... ..'11 nKennecott Copper...... 45 i:45Lehigh R. R... ........ ma 77New York Central.... 102 103:Pennsylvania ......... 56 J.....Ray Consot. .22 . 23;Southern Pacific. 97 raStudebaker 128 J28Tennessee Copper 23 f23Union Pacific1 ........v 135 138J4U;: S. Steel. V.. .... .... fc8U ' 881U. S. Steel Pfd. . .... .'. i 1 17 1 17

Utah . .e.. 75V ; TVWestern Union 83- - 83HWeatlnghouse : . 65 55; ;

Cid. fExhldend. $Unquotd.. y:

t: lltrf Nlrll'r Uvlli It I flzTf .wt jf-;.-- Vttf-- 171 Tm T '; It 1 v ' f r FV f I ?Xvr1 1 m lit I - I MMr M. M LJL M; AklpWI I mr ; -- J : W . - . II

DETEDED TO

SEE STUART OUT

Attorney-Genera- l; Taking Ac-

tion on Jurist's "Personal"Letter to President '

RESIGN ATloFWAf :

BUT NOT YET CERTAIN

Apparent Doubt in WashingtonWhether Judge Will Step

:y Out August1;; ;

vyi'y- By C. S. ALBERT, !

(8pcW 8tBuUitio Cvtntpenlnet) yWASHINGTON, D. C July 13.

Attorney General Gregory haa buck-led on his armor and' prepared forwarfare; This doe not mean that hewDI hasten to the Mexican 1 borderor offer his services to one " of . theEuropean belligerents. On the con-

trary, he will devote his activities totrailing Judge T. B. Stuart and mak-ing sure that- - bis official scalp Is dis-

played upon the walls .of Jila depart- -

menL ''i . -"

": - ', ;'

ra a a; AS a preinnmary uie axiorney-seu-er- al

has started to run down, locataand bring in the resignation of JudgeStuart. : This elusive-- documents hasbeen permeating the atmosphere herefor many' months. It oscillated between the judge and Senator Shafrothuntil, a specific: statement wraa madethat It had been transmitted to thebresIdenLV'alonz with his ' chargesagainst Secretary, Lane, Attorney-Gen- .

eral "Gregory and Governor Tnnjtnam,with a ! few burning ;observalipna re-lating to the president thrown in forgood measure; :.;' y

It developed that 'the resignation,an ad vertispd. d !f nbt at)Dear lh - thecomxnunication ; rflled r with- - thp ;presi-- .

fCcstl-.se- d ci'Tr3 two)'-t -

1 y iLiu

HiL

Advice to' Lo'cal Transporta- -- tion Man Forecast Mucn

Trouble on Mainland ' V

cne of V: the ; most extensiye anddemoralizing ? railroad strikes theworld has ever known may be caneaon the mainland on or about Augusti j .K .Butler, freight traffic manager of the Oahu railway, haa receivedinformation from California interesiatndicatlna that there will bo no settlement between operators and .employesand that ' practically'' every : railroadman in the unitea statea wm v p

called out :"r-'y-,- ; f;- '- ;S'Rnfh a fitrTkft itV onlv-woul- d orac- -

tlcally stop business in the; states butwould also tie uj IJawail tighter tnana snare dnxnV says Butler,' y .

The local railway; man came to Ho-

nolulu a; few month ago from thecoast, where , he has been connectedwith many of the - large railway sytterns and cognizant ot the. growingdifficulties. .. He haa expected the bigstrike 1 for some 5 time but had hopedIt would be settled by. arbitration. '

;The effects of such a .wide sweep-ing walk-ou- t are inestimable. EveryIndustry in the country would be tem-porarily crippled and railway menhere believe over half a million menwould be affected. It ts said that theemployes demands mean a $100,000,-00- 0

increase In. the various railwaypay. rolls. : ; .

y.yZ .. y y '. I

Butlef says that, the Santa .Fe, theSouthern Pacific, and many pther olthe prominent companies have antici-pated the strike and are advertisingnow for strike breakers in advent ofa walkout, indicating a fight to thefinish,

HONOLULU'S: NAVY TO

. i i Honolnla has a. nav ! -

altliougli you n

Deute

.;

4 VJ .

I Jl I

y '

1

r: - '7 .

y;f t;

lyZmK -;- -; : y;-"r;:."- ; ;-- i j - 'T ?

' i nd D:" v ;ra tayaf ahowlna .where tha German iubmirlnt'

' J r -- :t;c t f ::;s t tha; eptn .asa... Thera- - hat tesn tsmtit: . ty;U rr.' . ; r.--.i rsvat r rn vthxt- - th tlj aufcrsri-- i W. ;.t?!fi;va-'.'.rcv- i J'"V;CV-- ' jr- - .' !)'rv.--- c-- -l f i tu"r? "f .t c t t)

aea.i-Th- ; ar." -- - jraVlnChaaa pika'.Xi-- . .itrala fit'aaid to be wiJtiirj-Hin- d ihua perhapa menacing U, J3.tiw;.liiy--il4.:.jv,- 7i

'; 4on thamap tbove.., '.rr-'?;- i if 4 .:4 y ..-..-

iUndsrsen Craft Canncl -- rubmerge in Bays Until ietrjhree-K:SF.1il3UmitvExperttf- ay

;,;:,.V;r;f;y. v ':yi :y--.-- iyyy:y:i

4 BUFORJ N,C4 4uiy.27-- A fortl-- n

cruiser Is -- reported to be standing fftha Inlet. It la- - believed that; aha Jathere prevent the entrance of -- thasubmarine frtighter y Bramen,? aisteiship to the Deutachland, now in Balti-more, y"' y ,y-- v ':.- -''

(iMoeUted Prss hj Ttiml WiraUw) i:.

i WASH I NGTO N, D. C Juy 27-T- he

Germair conaiH! Ii Baltimore lastnight announced that tta Deutschland,will net leave for another week. - Hadetlined 'positively to make any addi-tions to his statement or to give anyreasona for the further delay of thesteamer. ; I ; - :y: ' ".'--

rthat ha: had cleared for "Bremen orany other1 German, port,' and addedthat the time of hia iepartura la In-

definite. ?-- 8o far. aa could be ascer-falne- d

laat nlaht he had notarrangedfor a pilot but tb tug which towed himup tha bay to sammora nas coaica anola standing by, apparently ready to towhim back to deep wttf.-.- .'

shown by- - navy department" chartsshow that it r will be Impossible forthe Deutschland on hef return ; tripto completely submerge until .she isnearly a mils off tha Virginia Capes.The channel depth - between CapesCharles and Henry Is between 25 feet6 inches and feety -- y

This" will be sufileient for", her, sur-

face 'draught. In the .opinion' f waloficers,- - but It will r.Uke., more .thansixty feet to safely, ; submerge. herover-a- U

' draught of thirty-ftv- e feet.She will not reach, this depth untilshe is about a mile off shored Fromthis point sb; will: have plenty ofroom to""cbmpletely hide herself untilshe can pass the y three-mil- e limitwhere there is moro than fifty feet bf.water. ';

-i-- f ": -

Considerable curiosity is expressedamong construction oflicers as to what

BE LAUNCHED TUESDAY

nna yDtxrseii viwuy mici m uuj

r-- "r b A brand new, effidentfup-to-the-secon- d navy! " y y".;r '4. ''--:

;V One that in ' iint . of.'nuhtbefs;: at least; compares favorably wthsome of the very best navies on the market. .iv vyy'-'yV- -

Furthermore,wemderturneet, it rB tne pnvaic propcn ui u;u-f- " r:s -- . . - vtt ' i. 4...' It., j I-.: T.-.c-- ...UK liii rerpmon : and will

; it win ue jaunt wcu icai. .- -,

commenced at-on- ce, lone of the most daring and spectecuUrypyagesevet laid out by a board of -- strategy. ; v

' i ' . x yv - y y V 1v ,v Thirty-fiv- e ocean-goin- g submarines and forty speedy cruisers will

comprise the'fleet, andfthey represent the last. word in naval-constnic-tio-

embodying all the very latest ideas' to be gleaned from the greatwar. '. '':-- '; ''--

' : r .. y 4:'--- .'' 'i-y'''t---

4

; Where they .sail and wliat they.-d- should, prove-- a source .oi

speculation to every Honolulan; and the StaT-BuUet- ia mil Akeep. .tU' "

readers well-inform- ed from day to day. regarding its every move.t Keep your "eyes open for news of this fleet may mean money

trochrr'pocket; for iheudd axruiset strike a rock" or one of the tbr

ottering a1 huge rewards for desired ;mfornuticai. - r y .r ::.'

-- La

!r- -

Jo

r )ix yy fv

T:v;:';V:-:.:..-- -

: y "A ' ... ' " :

' -

wfll linnnAt) If ttin . TtAiitarlilanii - laforced to Creep along' the bed pt theocean; This ia composed of fine whitesand and broken shell, and' the" only4anger to the boat ia that her pro-pellers may. strike the sand ridges.

tit Is not expected the sand will affectuiem mucn as-- ane prooaoiy nas sucnbuoyancy that she .will spring -- overany bumps . she, may-encounter- .y ,

" :.: f (Continued on page two)

it

UPBY SEiJMS.

' .i ., -- ; . - v i' ' :'' .'s .

Foreign Relations Committee' Opposes Resolutions cell-- ;

r- - ;ing On U..S. T0, Intercede .

: (Aft02tl- - Prtr fcr Ttitnt WirIi) :

WASHINGTON. D. (X. July 27 Thaaenata foreign relations committee to--aay reporteo aaveraeiy upon resolu-tions which had been , Introduced lathe aerate at the behest of Irish synvpatnizers. proposing intercession inbehalf of Sir Roger Caaement.;

LONDON. --Without hearln r the at--

torneys for . the - crown, the - court ofcriminal appeal dismissed Sir RogerCasement's appeal from the verdictof the lower court, which round himanil tv of treason : fnr whipJi ViifioantReading, the lord chief justice sen-tenced him to death.-- 1 lyyyi (t.

Tot a dav and a. halfAIerandar Sullivan, Sir Roger's counsel, argued be--.fnr turn court.' onotlnr manv. autnon- -

4 ties --in ; favor of ' his contention thatthe offense of treason depended uponWhether the-accus- dwelt under thenrolectlon of the; kinr.t and that thecrime could not be committed withoutthe . realm. He abandoned : his otherpoints in regard to the lord chief jus-

tice's definition of the offense. --y:r-;As soon as Mr. Sullivan bad con-

cluded his argument the court retiredto consider whether the attorneys forthe crown would be called on to reply.It soon decided to the contrary, whichindicated that the appeal ' had - goneagainst; Sir Roger, .whorwaa': presentduring the argument and when Judg-ment ' waa , given. :.

- -- ' '. A . further appeal . to . the house . oflords is possible only if the attorney-gener- al

gives ' a certificate, that thedecision of the court of .criminal ap-

peal involves a point of law so excep-tionally, important that' it is desirablein the. public Interest that a still hlgh-e- r,

court should deal with i This hasbeeh' done only twice since the courtof erimlnal: appeal was establishedeight rears. ao.

i pK y: "1

BRITISH ON WEST CONTINUE TO PRESS GERMANS HARD

; HAND-TO-HAN- D ENCOUNTERS AT MANY FOKITS1

IRISH NATIONALISTS CREATE SCENE IN HOUSE OF

COMMONS ANGLO-RUSSIA- N 'SUBMARINE BASE SHOT,' v '.; i ; t" , ''y V ; .r MMWMMHMMM- - - "

:y'y":::';"':.:: '(iiwdtM htM 8rrk ay f4ttU WirtUu) ",'; 1 WASHINGTON; D. Cv July 27. Uncle Sain answer to thc

blacklisting of American finns by the British povcrnmcnt is a sharplyworded protest which Ambassador Walter H. Page is directed to con-

vey ta the British foreign office. '.

'. ; 1

Tlie note of protest has been drawn up, after conference betweenPresident Wilson, Counsellor Polk of the state department and otheradministration advisersVand lias already been cabled to London. It will

be jrade public in full here Monday, according to announcement, timebeing given for the British government to receive it. . . ;yyy.

Heavy Fislitinj onTecf; G:riz?r

." LONDON, Eng.. July 27. Heavy fighting is again the order of

the day on tlie west fronts particularly that portion held by the Britishtroops and where Sir Douglas Haig is endeavoring to move fonvard.

Throughtout all last niglit the British continued to press the Germans

and at various points of the Somme sector there was severe lund-to- -

hand fighting, in which the Brittsli claim some successes, vy , ;. The enemy on this point of the front is using gas shells, which

irritate the eyes of the rrlen in the trenches so much that they are tcui-pprari- ly

blinded. ; These ishells have .been caned;,carrsliclU0.- because of

their effect' on the optics. y .." .' - y y y

V TiKRLtN. Hermanv. Iulv'27.number, of attacks with hand-grenad- es in the region around PozicrrsW wri invariahlv. rernilsed. South of the Somme tlie, I' rench ir.a;.:a'n attack today in considerable force

".ti-:-.i I ' '

v'i BERLIN, Germany, July 27.barded a naval base used jointly by tne untisn ana Kuss:ans at ianc-- ;hamm,- - onthe Russian Baltic coast. The German -- flyer returned un-

scathed after several hits scored on the buijdings which constitute thabase. - Prom lariehamm; the British submarines have been operating;in the. Baltic, l ;' : - ; '; --y 44 "

'LONIX)N, Eng;July 27.The Norwegian sailing vessels Bams.Siebrid and Juno have . been torpedoed in the North; Sea. . It is an-

nounced that in none of the cases, is any, casualty reported. y"yy: : ; '

lr

inat

in

onon

oTus on

of

isof

r T

a

Germans

' "' -

A

A .LuLj .

able y y

in anthat

withdrawing;

v

on

Iriali Nationalist Slirs Com:-

. ; : :- ; - - - ' ; ' -

y LONDON, Eng., July 27. Lawrence Ginnell, a known IrishNationalist the House of Commons, opposition togovernment aggressive since Irish insurrection, caus-

ed a short of House when he refus-

ed to withdraw from the chamber when to so. Finally heobeyed the of the speaker leave and go.

While to get him to witlidraw, the house given a temporary'recess. y s ;.- -;' v -

Riiscian Hordes Do

In Galicia, Drive Hard cn .u:.:.'(AKU4'frrMS lttttX Wlrl)

PETTtOGRAD, , Russia. tJuly 27.Six thousand two and fiftyTeutona were a sharp-- battleTuesday one portion of the western(Riga-Carpathia-n) front. -- . Vy: In the Caucasus region the pursuit

of Turks continues unabated.At Erzlngan, the Turk stronghold

on, l)NDON, Eng., July 27. Announce-

ment was made by the official bureautodaythat during the three weeks of

'GERMAN V July

26. Great British bastion canaland Ypre8 together with occu-pant- s

by German " mineblastings.. The British after violentfignting . took small of Po-slere- a.

. Farther .near Foure-au- x

wood and Longueval the enemy'salight .attacks were repulsed. NearTrones wood, enemy's Intended r at-

tack was recognized and v waa 'frus-trated

'-'. -- ' T 'by our fire.

We maintained ourselves, againstFrench attempts at reconquest ter-rain gained by night ofJuly 23, southwest Farm Zamalson-neU- e

- '.:,:-:;;-

South of Estrees, lively hand-to-han- d

fighting going on. On theheight Fallemorte, the French oc-

cupied mine crater blasted out bythem, hut soon after were buried byGerman counter mines. . -

1 "

v

lem

the day the British nude

bit the 'trained machine- -

:v-:- ; ;V-':i-- "'

An aeroplane has successfully bom- -

'

featm

Armenlv jast captured, the Russiaashave found a depot with much vxla- -

war materiel. -

BERLIN, - Germany,- - July 27.Vienna, officiai announcementtoday, says the Auatriaas ars

before the : Russiansnorth of Brody, Galicia. -

July just past British casualtiesthe west front were 1108 officers

killed, 2334 wounded and 431 mls&izz.

Den :

Up-

wellmember of whose thehas been more the

suspension the sitting of the today.ordered do

demand that he his seat outside.trying was

hundredtaken

the

Oritisb Olficerc Lost Te:i

Germaby OfficiallyHEADQUARTERS,;

thedestroyed

remaindereastward,

the

y'v

the

Durintr

the

ies.Lc:::3West of Meuse, Germans progressed

near Height 303. East of Meuse, L'ght.:artillery duels la the vicinity cf Fort-ress of Thiaumont At many placeson the front, enemy patrols were re-pulsed. .. , V . ':. ;,-- ,' . i- Niorth of Somme, j two enemy aeroplanes were brought down within our .

lines by Infantry machine gun fire..Another after an air combat was pre- -clpltated aflame in the district ,

' ofLuvevllle. 'j- -

On July 24, German; anti-ai- r craftgun 'shot, down ' a French blplaaa, '

which was. traveling in-th- e directionof Fortress Souville. yy --

" y : '

HInden burg's army front; West ofRiga," German reconaoitaring detach--ment entered and destroyed Russianadvanced positions..-- ' Enemy patrols:were lively fa many places. Cennaa

. (Continued oa pass two)

i4

t 27, 1916.two V.

Iv 1 - ; HONOLE

ELAY OFJ COAST .i.iUuuuuUiulU UllLm LARD res

smarmw DEIEKlO TO: SHIM?Pilist fea 'f iioi

Increaccd Demand Here AndFreight Congestion on Main- -.

"

- land Reasons Given ; v;

llonclcla's demand for telephone In-

struments Is cne .of the latest - andmost novel Indicatioca of: tills. ctty'aprosperity and rtpli growth. Severalreagents end business and profession-alrae- n

ate dexaacUng tHe Uttl dialthat clicks but for two reasons.- - therut'--i cf business and the 'freight con--,pestloa dae to lie' San Francisco long:shoremen's stride. they must be ra-tien-t;

The Mutual Telephone peopleexpect 600 Instruments on the. nextsteamer, which would-reliev- e the presure tot soine tine. " -

,. jyfcca Jc:.tnjAEalch; treasurer otthe liutcal Telephone Cbmfcany, wasasked by the iar-BuIle- If there wasany ihusual' t-sl-

aes Increase,; hecalled' sxd ' said It was quite - true,"there was a little." He wanted "Itdistinctly understood, ' however, thatthe coir.rany can "supply, any demandwhich" la rcade on It here If mainlandfirr--s Vill, teal apparatus. - :. i.

re-crick Q: Hummel,4 manager of'the -- corr T7 1Te ,few te?r ,tJiatX, tre a !.. uiing.' ''; :'.'-;- : ,'""r.- -

"V,'e have always considered' an. In-

ert 3 cf i : 0 ' telephones ' a year asqui. .aatlF'-'-lcry- ," he said, "but thisyea: it will Quite likely be Over 1&00.

Thi jain i3 far above any made befere and Is due directly to Honolulu's

ly ; 1" crc ?.s!ns . population. and;'

rsllr t -- "rrcTC-s businesses."Ac-crc- L r t: Hummel... there- - are

r 7:) individual phones oper--rv u, which includes all btfil-- ,

professional offices and' '. o-m- exchanges.- - Of this

rr; approximately 35,00:.-- rc:I:-c;- s. Y

ccrr: any people say; r:l tf this year

-.t who can pcssltly. instrument to get into

;.. Its lens-passe- the:t is, now an absc-Jut-

. . 3 cf the interesting

C ti Francisco wharf are 5C0

II t i u -- 1 rvces for the local com---- r.

Alz-- t 200 of these are for the-

" ' ; z Id the 2'oana hotel andr --

: i : r HI be used for ladivid- -

i. Tl.cre is now a' waiting' f. : ; r ? to in rccrle. the. rr(9- -

r ' : ' 3 tcra Ear:s-hz-t re--

1 Ly tllllLlas phones discontinued- r few r.:-.h- 3 by the lara nuaher

: ; r : .-- 3 v. 1. d left this week la the

i 1' ' " zJ.: '' .'

ritus c ; rcuto wl.ich will increase,v r- - ' "e at Kcimuki and the' c ;y a tctal cf ECO in- -

: i.;.:3 u installed as aoca. :': r::;r.'. trrives

-''' trz tied, cp ty

;; trcut'.cs. 'tendudsd' "7 r ; 7 f

r "5

-- 1 ns

V

W

mi&mr Support wCl be, given oy' the BarAssociation of Hawaii to the appoint-ment by the department of justice ofSenator James U Coke as third Judge

the local' circuit Court to succeedThomas B. Stuart, 'and tqfthe appointmeat of Judie Lyle VA.V Dickey ofKauai to succeed himself. ' This de-

cision was -- reached at a meeting ofthe association Wednesday afternoon.

Senator Coke recently told the Star--Bulletin that. If offered tha Judgeship,h would Accent. He added that, ac- -

cordln,? to the ; best authorlUe. ;he

i'

would not jte. Gis"(juaiuiea.-D- reason oihla being senator, la Ma's recem"nerMiiRi letter. Judge . Stuart toldhm oresldent that he would tender

hi yeslgnaOon "Augnat ;I, .tq;;UlceTfect one montA later,

Although Judge' Dlckey'a term, --

plred on. July: 2. ht i4atllJ holdjng of-

fice and will continue to 4o so untilreappointed' or unUl his .aaccetsor isnamsdX. ,

. BUILDING PERMITS1 tt i. DoWett.v' owners Lbcation,Fenlntola,1 Pfart 0$ty; Oahu.vsnii' ; - ouartera. i. i aisut.buflder. ' Estimated cotc; ?22S. .

' '

'-- TJHtiftkaJanl Trust Company, owner.iiocatioa, matika-V'aiki- m ,corner " ofPlikoi and young streets.. - it. iv uor- -

telmann, . builder. jwunKBa.cwi,

Paragon Meat Market, owner. :Lo-cttlo- n,

manta w ilde . of - .BeretaniiBtreet,; 10 fact 'VV'aikiil from Emm a

street. - Bepaim to butcher "shop. T

T.Char. architect. :- -. Chun Sua. Mee,builder. Estimated .cost, $53.f

H. A. Somers, owner. Locatloajtranna '' HalTueixx tract. --LotNo. Dwelliag. H. Knaack & ?Otbuilders.' - Estimated cost; I2880.";.- -

-- 'Xee.Chu, owner. Location, makafrf Lane A. ICO feet.Ewa from

Alaral lane, ralama.- - Two dwelUnss.Lam King, architect. 'Lee Cho, bulla- -

er. Estimated cot, xuuw, r y-- r--.

' Dr." It." WY Anderson, owner.1 Lbcatloh; ;7aiklki side of ' Alatea' street,ICO feet .nakal f rom-- 'Hotel . streetGalvanized rocf.':v Von - Ilaam-Youn- g

ComDany. builder. " Estimated J cost.1200. - -

40 m K

CER2N0WITZ OFFCHCD V;; " A

RUMANIA A3 PrtlZEr- - vi

- ; . JOOjri THE al'MM

'J ROME,' Italy. it is reported iromCucharest that- - Rusi&t has oirereaCiernowita .to nur.tnia If she wlUjola -- tha - Allies.' Humanlaa - oplaioaIs said to be' favorable to the firo- -

tlow ca account fcf the war. We onceret action on orders in 60 Uays. Nowit tahes atout twice' as lcsg.; Machln- -

rn'.and netal are worth considerably-- -J

.

of

CIV3 OU TOD

I T

.

j

v -

- J

i ; SHE-3TUAQT0- UT

' .:. ; , : r r '? -

(Continued iron page onei ; .

dent- - It did. not go beyond the pointof promising to resign on August a

and retiring from the bench oh Sep-

tember l. No publicity "whatever wasgiven this letter. The president didnot rerer n oeci-cwr--

.

cr - the attoraey-geaeni- i.- mwhw

of the contents reached doui : toeaecfficlals and they awaited receipt ofthe .communication., ......tWhen M. Gregory, took to thy war;

patb hla first hostile act was ta urgethe president to-sen- him . the Stuartletter. He : desired to ascertain ek-- .

actly- - what the Jurist said about him--,

self and other public officials. It issurmised that iie also tfeslred to Interview the Judge : and make - anre thathis promised resignation would comealong-o-n schedule time, August '1." Itwas fully realized In beginning, thissearch for the resignation that noth-ing ;could be done ; to . make JudgeStuart keep his ; written promiae . un-

less do He? mayhe -- elected -- to' so.change his mind and wnclude to re-main on the bench.' Even a formalrequest for ; his resignation could beIgnored, although it is cnstomry - tohand the position over untfer such-ci-r

cumstances. :v.;;; ; -;

: The activity 6f Attorney-Genera- l

Gregcry. has led hla friends to believethat he waging war. onJudge Stuart. - one step, lris.-inougac-

,

would bo to mbmlt a peremptory demand for hla resignation; making iteffective at . once, v- The other1: wouiabe, 'If the Judged

, Indicated , a : refusal.ror some memoer or tne Texas ueiega.tion; in. the house to denounce JudgeStuart and offer a resolution callingupon the Judiciary committee of'.thatbody to undertake the impeachmentof the Hawaiian Jurist. 1 This 'wouldbe an extreme measure. .. o ? :

The next step will not be takenbV i the attorney-genera- l until he hasrea4 and digested the letter handedin By Judge Stuart to the presidentThat will be made the foundation forsubsequent actions, supplemented bypreceding- communications and documents.; . i v -

SAMF0RD SEEKS7IN LAND

ri HE

Born an": American citizen, thenswearing . aJIcglahca to5 the king 5 ofGreat Britain, Sanford B. Moore, localcbntractqr, will . have to wait at ; leasttwo years before-- he can .jpetiupaUA'cle 'Sad' for permissions to again secure . the. privll?"es accorded tof . citizens of the country which he.; renounced. Moore today filed-i- federaconrt a 'declaration 'of intention tpe- -

come an Amencaa ciuteu. tueycu--

tton shows that he was born in Massachusetts 'and became a subject ofGreat Britain In Canafia.-:- 4 v

'E:J Esn" ia tolling midnight in LoriddhTheaterfdsrh are back the last

act in: 1 ler vUv!iS-Mr- .

Business; mea haveIct cQurcci their eyeitingFrancisco

1 A'-

j"?' - v v-.;- . ' v' iw";Mr2

:tiiat;s TTIT-7- i:

contemplates

MOORECITIZENSHIP:

1 '.

WHICH RENOUNCED

sitBnjl forYor:c--r;-- v

S.k.:,''ris

11

in

:;rw:LJ;:-"i- i v -- :''',vr..v-;.u;T

J

i'

(Conilnned from pag one)' ' City TfeaSuTCr States Hfi El- -

The neutrality board advised Acting DeCtS to Swear Ollt 200 MOfB

cialreporta of treamrr offlciala and I - Tr'to be .peaceful merchant ship. enU- - im 'lir .nTrtied to all srlvilesesf aa'anch:'--';'-''':'- i worB tonight

v? .vr ' - barbers.' automobile drivers, and oth- -

imposed, by the treasnry uWf f0department der. tha.ciutoma.law, pt paid ...Jwof the country. , Any questions whld. iy"; f:255ft nV&Sconnection with the Deuuchland wUl tobe such aa the. British, French or Ita! fi0 Jlllan 'gwrernmwta'may raise through! story of the arrests to b niade,.t..uiM.H. ..uit...' yesterday aiternoou so soon after thej; of the ummona were awom to got me

allies have-an- y aerioua thought of es- - - - T"T,wfirr which sell nickel, copper or oth Ltd, d P01 n, .S?-- Pf

t i vi n, vl their fees within a shortI-- ' - ,' k- -1 Star-Bulleti- n wa on the street and

5t!2TJ2..;vri:fc7" .v fiatora the warrants could he'served.yvuuy .ww wv. v f, " ... i9rt h.frt thev were turnednave oeen not xo aavwe me -- -- -over to the sheriff and at 3:30 the j

T rrrt - ' T.T Rt.nniieMii wa on the street witniWAY8 DEUTSCMLAND CAN

EUUOE LURKING WARSHIPS

;? :

mlsUke

1 j Honolulu ContWction &Draylng Co..NORrOLK.- - With a thirty H've-fo-ot

channel at mean low" tide Baltl- - "jorn to ywwamore to Cape Henry the Deutschland arrest of X Belser, man'..v I rharr of elline merciandlse with--

w.n have, been oneratlng a dray without avr. UflWm. . nonklinr declares

- w.f that the old warrant be destroy- -

Outside the capea and within the ed and a new one made out today. TheiTU Pm TOtr oonstructlon company haa procured

....-r4;- ti. t'Wh a mHn I ita merchandise license. - v

i.j tnarrninuthe Deutschiana crewu "l , " 7 7f;Mup he coast almost to lined np to W Ml

Martha's on; the surface 1: look8 aS . lf 1. .Sf.-J--

.!. 4 im ,i deiinauents in wiinm w

Tb, ubsea Uner; could easily go vonai iL--4. ..Y..but 'the Virginia Capea with her decks hadawash and probably escape neing . rirTTX te ftvGidaeep i wwuSghvS --

' payment Uwnsef he replied In

PUDLIC ACCESS

T0"L0Ifl SEASSURED

(ContinupCrfTOjrfpage,,bneV

reservation :'aa,,4i summer Acarap,. thedestination of ' - practise hikes andmaneuvers; i Probabbr not more than

- a'n 'hf Vioiilfl im' would be sta--

the: :

for'

i

? :-

irum vum--

id Suitable "aa for theare

ia' '

have seen -

theof

be ;

The thisand

--befeasible. -

to ery the

day . are v Into the;

f

I.

tC. 4p t

i

fivers' bygun Russian1TmCK. uuenauurg anq

.v--. -

gian eiyiaions -- v

Jn one ,

one men one

air

t.

of ; ;

-

: ? --.

In - sector, by,

in:the of. which.

Tne in thein In

'

AtTour !if 5Cc tf -

was by j

one of the summons, that for the

J.

I

will

njithk

tfaia

tne jiegauv.'-iA-iiuiu- vwho had summons on

thatthe were waiting --the-

the thinned tint before feeslike- - to standing In line.

KT arm An July andM he itld date

ofthe and .ray onty enioreIt; lenient, waiting

the end of theI am to

doing has Jtp

;

to'tloned there permanently' to take care j ara astonished at INSTANT

h unit' reservation. 1 of buckthorn bark, gly--

is" room a' good4lzed cerlne,' ss mlxedln AdleI-ka- . Be-Ur- y

re6erVa'Uonv on the Walmanalo It acts on BOTH lower up-

lands, r find 'also number T of V9T bowel.DHE SPOONFUL A41er-l-k- a

beach It 'frthoughV Gov reUeves constipa- -

PlnEham will xne sour stomaca or gas. reuw-- w

ias a IJubIic asset In 'fest 8Upn aurprialng foul matter that a fewthe pWn will be of a of relieve or prevent appendl--

u nrfr with nwitnmme and fishing eitis.'A treatment chronicprivileges sS8Ured;r public stomach trouble. --The- Holster Drugforall timet 3.. Company.AdTV -

rne iana.iyin$ dc wioa site army bar..

racks or buhgalqwswbichtrt linnse soidiefs usineBummer There is room fbrV thousandhouse-lot-s Recording "tot those

visited the' lease and theunused land available near beach.

T bnly four miles new road wouldnecessary to make Dvrpaa

complete from.! Honolulu to"route from to

Koko'Head, Makapud, Pointmanalo is rdeclsred -- to absolutely

Enburh water is also-avai- l

f domestic populationIt" is estimated ihatl3.OOQ,00ft: gallonsa flowing valleyfrom Btrtam:and rtvaely-owne-d

Bnrfacev'WepAcV Y

'GEflMAN OFFICIALCABLEGJIAUS

(Continued page, one)

halted and, machine'lire .transport trains at

rwuwMaisk."

Prmce' Leopold's Three

southeast of Gbrodistshe but' failed;A allnrevious. under heavy": losses.German counter-attae- k Placbrought In offlceiv8ft andmachine' gun.:.

German squadrons successfullybombed railway stations, la Pogorjel-an- d

Horodzieja, filled with trana-nort-s'

aswelifaat troot camps? nearbyUrialhen'a4'. I Northwest .of

Luck, enemy's- - reeonholterlngments Northwest

-- BeresteszkoT strong Russian' attacks were repulsed partly through

and partly through ounterattacks. YOpe tundreji 'prisoners;.' tfo

Bofhmer'a ?army.; Cdropiec"small engagements advance

--Among:; nature's freaks a tree;Iruit oil arid.tallow

areeitrctedYr tree growsAiores, Sumatri, Algeria and-i-

JyrtUevedbyr-- r

Ur.r1. Ju.tl Eye Cdmfort.0a Cottle. l'3 CjS

PAY uce

th news.-- :'. V- -

it

SES

cen-TS- ff

C"1,UWomatlc.representaUvea

.rfmenVaharfcrt.--

A made Conkllngin

from

--""v"""iv "1V1

couldH?rSeedVineyard

:LTAvisu8b.rgT:enUrely,

planned:

V-

from'

m4ms

served themWednesday- - afternoon declared

until crowds intreasnrer'a ofScepaying their as tney oia no

wasteIiniiA L should

before that said Conk--,

Hnt when informed this. JThat Islaw it is toI have been until

riear month before tak-

ing action. Now going makearreats-KYerv-d- ar until every firm

buslnef paiij Ucenaef ee1.?

HONOLULU PEOPLEGET. INSTANT ACTION

Vftioid who have ;usedx it Hono- -

lulu.HiiHinM itrtion simnle

Ther mill etc.,cause and

Urgetots. thar almost ANY CASE

ernor reserve beacn tjon,itself thisure; that pub- - doses ten.

short helpsthe' there

the' camp

who

tne;

cityWal--

able

'"'v

from

bombs

army; Rus--

army:detach

flreY

y-c-u'

TJrTZ

time

TTTTT ;;rYiv!;'i,

... ,

' , - . I

"

-

i

i

,

- .

.

-

.

WE rrORE EVERYTHING CITY TRANSFER CCUPAHY

V JAMES H. LOVE

.4

v

e

L

f

-

TJrapr:ocl ami Czlozl -'

; . , .i- . - s - . v : p

i Y-

tv

Made Clean Sold Clean Delivered Cleaaa.;: ;i '

to

so it .

the the late

the

anyft."-V- i

this Lib- -

erty

--r

y:;

? - ;::.: r?

phone W3l? ?-- nr

CiocniS and Drod'cJ. Co.

are pre

rp; Underwood pro

left mtliingtmdone merit theconfidence which the public hps

obviously

The Co.;Ltd.i.Asents,- - et---- r

Owing to death of J. Ared tla-jro-oi

president of Consolidated Annssaent

Company there be pcrfcmar.ccrr

today or evening at Bijou. Empiret

or Hawaii Theater.

..'. ifct

Baredtolaiixtraiqui"i;' Y

Y" 'r'-- v;-.i:-

!7

JVaicrhctiss

ervicin making ias cprinections ;m ;cases

where ah imiiiediate corihection is

necessary Usually, our meters areinstalled within 36 hours a ter theorders tyenv here the hjoju seisalready connected to the main. ''Incase'lthere' has been no previous con-

nection, gas will Tisually be in theliouse within three

BUT IF YOU ITEEP vTHE OAS AT ONCE

call up 3421" We will arrange to rnsli the' in--

--stallation tor you.?

, t.

i

IAD

Louo'o'

W

typifies

reposed in

-- Clahe

:-- :. .V-

vV-

" ' I . j

will, not

the

U Y

' v :'" ' ' '' ' ' '"";ts;(:i Y"V-- - i;. ;; 'r '''

.;Wr,v;::5rf :: Y,' i'; (- - r V 1' '. ;Y-.; ' '- - -

, .V.--. ' -- ;' '''-:- j ''"' '

-" v: --

- -:- ..:-V . : 5.. .1

' r-V- .S,' '""' Y-- Y v' '.

' ' ' ' ' ; ' "t, . J - '.' t - V V " ''. ' '

;w;::iimKs-

Y;j-'..'.v;' - . .

. .. v r '.- - i ' ' - - ;

n rhj: im : '' : .' - ': - --- u

f

i

Y. E Filing Systems

r' - (I .r Introduce

; Ls-JL-iJ Mil,

' tl"- - fP?- - durability,'

; :T if iUJ- -- beauty

fi T"" efficiency

(ft 1 wfTTX ; officii.

; iX Itc --- Sit. vUnitsfor anycombina-

tion.

Jlcwcilan Hows Co., Ltd.J BISHOP STREET ,

. j ; ; SPECIAL SALE' r Grata Llnsa and Pongee Waist

-- V Patterns"

A COCerner King and - Bethel Streets

. FOR ALL' PURPOSES - PPaper" Bags, Cups, Plates,. 'TUplilna and Towels etc Aaiavhaw. PAPER CO, Ltd. P

... - Phcns 1410, E"JUhman BeaVeni, Mgr.

.y-- Qmenhagen's 'Blue Ribbon

CiiobolatCG; HAWAIIAN DRUG CO.

; Hotel'asd Bethel Streets

JsIIAlTAIT'S BEST SH0E3

'mriERNY' SHOE STORE- ; Fert sbovs King St ,

"

' D. J. CASHMAH;', TENT8 AND AWNINGS '

V Luxu Tenta & Canoptea for Rent... Thirty Years Experience -

Fart 6U near Allen . upstair.

BAILEY:. Furniture Co. -I Lett' nii3114Xi6 Fortt 8t.

K 'y. Collean Clothes;V 'a.:-- tor

Particular PeopleV ' At THE CLARION

Eouvealf Novelties Employing the

W HAWAIIAN COaT.OF.ARMS.Fine' Bsorttaent ;

;H. CULM AN, LTDTsrst St

A. S. CcnnirSKam, Mgr.4- -

Tcr, Privet 3 Detectives 7ho:pttiia'RestsC.;

i C:v;::GM!i)rchnt PatrolXtszis X515 .1079 Alskea

- mmGO

IF YOU WISH TO ADVERTISE INNEWSPAPERS ,

At3irEr t Any Time, Call on or- '."V

',

' ,wriu . ; ; v

THE DAKE ADVERTISING AGENCI,24jSansomejtreei

ilc rnoval" CJoticoCanj Yuen Kee, formeriy of Nuuanu,

Atif King, IS now located at 165 8.Klr.i St. obo. V. HwY. Generalhardware, and. household, utensils;

!umblng and tinning. Phone 4727.

fAP.lFlfr ENGINEERING - .

C0 WPAMY, LIMITED'A. Consulting Designing and Con--"

...,.-strutting-

. Engineers.1 Briages,' Buildings, Concrete

" Structurei. Steel Ctructurea. Sanitary 8ystes, Reports and Estimates on Proects. ' Phone 104S.-- - '

.- 5 au tk n A C - '

' 83 North King Street- (Lttween Maunakea and Smith) ,

iCall and see our brand new CHOPV SUF HOUSE Everything Neat.ik t. . and Clean' .. .

.Tables may be reserved oy pnona,; . No. 1711 vr. ;

We Pack;, ;

y!win v'iTiStamer','Baskets , :To Order.

v Krhon

ID WILL

BE SECRETARY OF

STOCK EXCHANGE

That the Honolulu Stock Exchangewill have a paid secretary commencing

ugust 1 waa the report that was current about Merchant street today. TVreport further said that D. L. Conklinghad accepted the position tendered tohim recently. Seen by a Star-Bulleti- n

representative. Conkling declined tocomment on the report . For sometime past the' directors ct the stockexchange hare been contemplating, theengaging of secretary -- who wouldbe compensated for giving the timeand attention to the , work , that ItsIncrease In volume appeared to themto demand. Conkling was their choiceand the position was offered --to hraaa .was exclusively published in theStar-Bulleti- n. He took the offer under Advisement and the. report todaywas of his favorable decision.

It was pointed but today that Conkling Is thoroughly fitted, for the po- -

sttlon:apd the fact, that he acceptsH 'ed 'hat" bearing whatever

j on-hi- s continuing as city aid .countyj treasurer since others have filled that

office and tended to their own busi-nessI' affaire at the same time, andIn so doing have filled the office withcredit and success and that Conkling

r will do the same. , ;;

INVESTIGATION OF I',..;.COMPLAINT AGAINST

CAPT. FREEMAN HELD

Investigation of the complaint' ofCapt Troel K. Smith of the .Lurlineagainst Capt Wo. M. Freeman mas-ter of the Mauna Kea, for alleged dis-regard of signals waa had Wednesdayafternoon in the office of the i". S.Inspectors of steam vessels j beforeCapt.T. Heeney and Capt J, Meanf,The testimony has been taken underadvisement by the inspectors to as-

certain whether ; there Is "sufficientevidence to warrant a trial. '

.K

The- - following men were called, totestify. Capt T." K, Smith, First Of-

ficer James P. Rasmussen, Third Of-ficer Julian Humphrey, all frorn theLurline; Capt Wm. K. Freeman, FirstOfficer Henry Beese from the MaunaKea, and Assistant Harbor MasterWm. H. Curtis. ;

v : ?

I . DAILY'REfalNpERS I

l Round . the . Island in,' auto, '$4.00.Lewis Etsablet. Phone 2141. Adv.

- You are invited to hea" Or. BrooksSunday night at the Ogera House.V delusive "corset 'sKop, . "The Good-win,' raa. 21-2- 2, Pantheon bldiAdvr: Ally cdmpetent private teacher whowill advertise can find pupils at thistime of the season. : i ; v ; i V i , 1

Safeguard your .'family's health 'bydemanding - Love's - Cream Bread,wrapped; and freshly, baked.: It a r

For Distilled NYaterV; Hlr:rRpotBeer and , all other "Popular Drinkstry the Con. Soda Water Works Co,

Adv., l :':v;--When a housewife becomes a sys-

tematic ad reader1 a long - step hasbeen taken toward "financial .peace''

4 A

Flat rate , charges for water - andsewer senice will be delinquent onAugust J.A Why - pay 10 per centrealty dv. .. i:;: -'t'' ... ' T - "...

The Holland-America- n Line steamerRyndam arrived . at Rotterdam fromNew York with-- a hole In her fore-pea- k,

caused by hitting a rock nearKirkwalL : . ?

OrientalSilk Goods

Odo ShdtehHotel, near Nuuanu

A purse containing sum ofmoney. Owner maty have

: same by calling at Ben-

son, " Smith & Co. ; and ;'proving property. -

I -

k'hiii'ffliar,-,-,

vrriT t-t7-7Tj T717

mmCoralGarrjens Hotel

Dally passenger auto service leavesHawaii Tours Company 9:30 a. m.Leaves Gardens 3 p. m. foK Honolulu.

J Reservations Hawaii Tours Company,- phone 1923; our. phone, Blua 612 v

HONOLULU STAR-BULLETI- N, THURSDAY, JULY 27, 191 6. THRK3

: .: . , : . ;. . ...WHEN YOU DO NOT GET i

YOUR PAPERf

.Call Phone 49 ' ask for the 4

Circulation Department, and 4make the complaint :

4- - Serving so many thousands ofhomes every afternoon , makes

f occasional lapses possible.'f - The Star-Bulleti- n maintains 4--

until C:30 p. m. each day, a4- - special city service for any cuss 4

the carrier may - have4-- missed. '

4 4

Phoenix Ixdge meets at 7:30 to--

night,

You are invited to near Or. BrooksSunday night at the Opera House.

Loyal Order of Moose has regular"meeting tonight In Pythian Halt .

Mr. --and Mrs. Herbert M. Dowsettof the Peninsula welcomed a babjdaughter Wednesday.'

Honolulu Chapter, Royal Arch Masons, confers the mark master degreeat special meeting tonight

A baby daughter was born Wednesday to Mr. and Mrs. F'rancls Pa-kala- n

Foster at their home 'In Kalibl-kai- .

The fjaneral services of the lateMrs. Clinton G. Owen are at 3 o'clockthis afternoon in St. Andrew s Cathe-dral. : , s.'-'- ;

A successor to Sidney M. Baliou,as delegate to the National Chamberof Commerce will be picked at ther.ext meeting of the local organization.

Pacific 'Rebekah Lodge, I. O.- - O. Fnhsts regular meeting .tonight for initiation of candidates. . All Rebekahs arecordially, invited and to the socialsession which follows. . C '

Cooke: library will be closed' fromnoon Saturday, July 29, until Friday,September 1. . .The vacation privilegeof drawing more than two books willbe. extended for this period. , ; ;

Miss Marr Ann Peahl and JosephJames Kapepa weVe married by Rev.Wilitam Ramauu Tuesday .at - PearlCity f. The wltpesses were P. K.

and L. J.'Kamauu:

MrsLenore BronsOn and John Nor--

ihan were .united In . marriage in theMiss on memorial building Wednesdayby Rey, HenrW Pratt Judd, secretaryof the Hawaiian Evangelical Assocla- -

"The Locatlon of ' UndergroundWatersT will b the topic of Qarl B.Andrews, who Is. to. speak at a' meeting - of the ' Hawallaa EngineeringAgsoclatihv ta.be held In--' the librarythia evenlngt . . ';V;;

Miss Elizabeth Werner, ' elderdaughter; of Deputy Sheriff WilliamWerner; , of Kauai, and Edward

of Honolulu were marriedLa week 'ago at the Hanalel church, according to the Garden Lsland

Elizabeth Kaeo, wife of County At-- .torney S. 'K." Kaeo, died TueSday,

to the. Garden Island ef thatdate. Impres'sive funeral serviceswere held Wednesday by ,Rev. . R.Puuki of ' Kapaa and Rev. Kapu ofLlhue, I. . X; "v;:v'Vl'l -:

- Two large new slabs of concretesidewalk are being put bv In, front ofthe National Guard armory to replacepieces which had; sunkand cracked.The work Is being done. by workmenof the, public works department ; .

At"least 100 delegates fromt Oahnshould attend the civic convention atHilo, Raymond C. Brown, secretary ofthe Chamber of Commerce, believes.He is making up a list of those 'whowill attend. the September affair andhopes to" have It grow to the three-figu-re

mark.'-

-' :".'; ..

: Governor Lucius E.' Pinkham todayYigned the reappointment for a one--year term of. worth o. Aiken as Mawmember of the' Hawaii r PromotionCommittee. , Aiken's - reappointmenthas been recommended both by. theboard of supervisors of the , countyof Maui and commercial organizationsof the Valley Island.

Funeral 'services of Charles M. Nealof 725 Quarry street who died Wed-nesday, are this afternoon at 3 o'clockIn the Masonic Temple. : Burial willh. In tha Mitnnlr nlftt Th rlftre&sed

'.was born in South Carolina 54 years ,ago.; wss one. of the oldest And most jpopular offlclaU In the local customsservice; ; is survived by a widow andtwo sons; has been here for 20 yearsand was a ' member: of the MasonicOdd Fellows and Knights of Pythiaslodges of Honolulu. . ; ; ' ' ' v

... ' A

tam Tn Vfiiettfnt TnvsrRon nd

1 cictk 01 jue ivsaat circourt ana ine Drwe in tne

Hanamaula school there.

Rodman Wanamaker.and New York, establish in

New York - hydroaeroplaneIn the country, soon as a

BERLIN ASSERTS UNITED SIMS ;

TWO HITS TJADE RAILROADS ARE

ON EPJBlYiSHIPi PAID A TRIBUTE

The offlcisl German statement onthe torpedoing of a British ' dread-nought on July came bjr cable to-day. The Associated Press despatchfrom Londcu yesterday saVl that theBritish admiralty denied tbe warshiphad been touched, j The re-port says:

A German submarine off Jjaly 2rt.eff the British naval point d'Appuland Scipa, Orkney- - Islands, attackeda British dreadnought and obtainedtwo torpedo hits.

MA German air squadron on July2f attack and bombed "Russian aerostation of Oerel on the Island ofOeseU . Air garajes and ; aeroplanewhich were ready to start were hitThough, heavily shelled by .theenemy's, torpedo hoats,; ,and battleplanes. German attack was method-ically outcarHed.; all our flyers returned unharmed.

ERITISH STATESMEN SEESNEW WORLD AFTER WAR

Lord Rosebery in discoursing ofprobable conditions in Great Britainafter the war speaks of the armythus: "Our millions of men will return with a newt spirit and new viewo( the world. They will be supermen,and they must Inevitably control thefuture this country. They willbring back self-respe- ct and respect forthers. Character is another Inestimable asset that hey will . bring us."The suffragettes and the feministsgenerally hare been dreaming fond-ly of a post-bellu- m England whichshall be under their control, but it isprobable Rosebery has the V clearervision; least he. has the authorityof history. Ordinarily the nation thatcomes out of a desperate war witheven a moderate degree of success isessentially masculine in Its ideas fora good while afterward. Great Brit-ain is likely to be distinctly a man'scountry when' it gets through Itsfights a country,that will be run withsmall patience frr feministic . fads.And what will pe true in Great Brit-- ,

ain will' be true r in other. Europeancountries; only f the: change from former conditional van be less, marked.Detroit "Free Press; . .

LANSDOWNE Defends views.'ij " :. .' ' : i," w-- .'

, LONDON Eng. July '13. The Marquis of Iansdowte, repbingr in a written, statement tfday? ht Joha Redmonds charge tpat.hls speech In .theHouse of Lords recently a declaration of waxlagain8t Ireland, an-nounced ' that ,th speech was madeafter consultation Premier As-qui- th

and other 'members of the gov-- ,; ' 'ernment :

In ' maklne Tnv " statement. ' hewrites, 'I did not Intend to ' go and

do : not consider that I, did go, be-- .yond . the declaration fmade " by . theprime minister in the House of. Commons that the union . of six countieswith the rest . Ireland could . Onlybe ' brought with, and . could ,

never be brought', about without the:free will and consent of the excluded

'areas. J

hi -- My statement represGteofrtnutTTbelieve to be views of the - govern-ment : anjj were made after consulta-tion with the prime minister and oth-

ers of my colleagues.1 . j.,n'- i : -

. THE TRAMP'S SOLILOQUY. ;

Geel'I wish't I was a rockYonder on hilt - k

nothm' all day long, ,

: Only settin- - sUll; . .

Jest sollllqulstn'jike , t.: For a Century,.- - ..

On the tips and downs of life,. Chumps these mortals be I

Human beta's work an toll,i Fuss, an fume, an fret ; ;

Then they die; but there's that rockJest th same,; you. bet f : v

Rocks dont have no discontent;They don't notice things .

Which would make 'em like mankind,Full of sufferings; . 1 ,

They jest set an, set an setSoakin' in the: sun;

That's the kind o job I like!Work Uke that la, fen! -

Trampln's all right in Its way-S- till,

rd rather be :Like a rock thar in a trance

Restln. constantly. ."

Lacy? Jfe? W'elL I don't know!I'm too strong to work!

Like a rock, I seldom moveHurts me jest to shirk. , . :

F I could have my way on earth,I'd be like a rock: .

Wouldn't eat nor sleep, nor stirWouldn't walk-i-or talk;

Wouldn't even dream or breatheDarned ef 1 wouia wasn:

I'd jest lay still a thousand yearsAn rest myself, b'gosh!

"r H. S. S.'

."STICKY'' WEATHER COMES

Today 8 weath e bis been of the.varietv. best described as sticky.

J M j

PILES CURED III 6 TO 14 DAYSPAZO OINTMENT is guaranteed tocure blind, bleeding, itchr or pro-trndi- ng

is 6 to U day s ormoney refunded. Manufactured, by

k the PARIS MEDICINE COr.tSt.IrOoi

Daniel William Dean were married The reiauve nummur o oeen "is--Wedne- sday

morning in : the Central j It was : 77 per centat 8 o clock thisUnion church by Rev. Raymond C. I morning, and 65 per cent at noon.

Brooks. . acting minister there. Mre.(Tbis s afternoon's . temperature wasMargaret A. Dean, the bride's mother, t about 80. It was 78 this morning, ac-an- d

A. G. Kanlukou, a Kauai ; at-- , cording to the U. S. Weather Bureau sattended the bride and groont toca ffice. j --" '

and, several intimate friends were " -present- - The couple went to the Pensacola, Fls. was TecentiyIsolat-mainlan- d

in the Matsonia for the jed by a wind and rain storm, with thehoneymoon snd will return to their wnd reaching a velocity of 80 mileshome in Lihce, Kaui. In September, j an hour. .

urn fcruumcuit taugnt

government

of Philadel-phia i will

the largest, school as

20

German

of

at

was

ofabout

the

PILES

torney.

Conservative - Yet Progressive-- Part In Upbuilding Country

: Told Rotarians "

Responsibilities of railroads not onlyto the public but to their stockholders,and the value of raikoads in buildingup communities and commonwealths,were dmphasized lu an Interestingpaper read before tbe Rotary Club atlunch today by H. E. Vernon, generalagent here of the Santa Fe system.Tbe paper touched not only on the gen-eral principles of railroading, particu-larly rate-makin- g, but also on thepublic welfare problems involved. Inclosing he paid, a strong tribute totbe railroads of tbe United States inlooking after the comfort safety andconvenience of passengers. ;..'-- ;;

E. A. Bernut chairman of the club'sriew dvlc affairs committee,' reportedon the committee's. first attendance at,a meeting of the board of supervisors.Hereafter one member of the commit-tee will attend each board meeting, re--porting in his turn to the club.

H. ,W. Gibson, a Rotarian "visitorfrom Muskogee, Oklahoma,' gaver Ok-

lahoma's cordial greetings to the localclub. .

. ..v .

'

The attendance was' large today andseveral plans were made for partici-pation In public affairs.-.- . The. clubprobably will take' some part in theforthcoming Kalakaua Day celebra-tion.

'

. ,

UNIFORM INSTRUCTIONFOR BLIND PEOPLE

HALIFAX N. S. Action fdr theadoption of uniform type for the blindin America and England lias been tak-en here by the convention of theAmerican Association of Instructorsfor the Blind. The convention votedto adopt the style of type known asRevised Braille, grades and .2, nowused In Ehgland. - ,

v

LONGWORTH. BETS HATS..'

WASHINGTON. RepresentativeNlck" LongWorth of Ohio,' son-in-la- w

of Colonel Roosevelt! predicted in thehouse Thursday afternoon while dis-cussing the new Democratic revenueand tax bill, that for this and other"sins of omission and commission' theDemocratic party would be . defeatednext fall. '' r'- .;."

Longworth said he ' would provideeacl surviving Democratic ; memberof the ways and. means committeewith a new hat if the. Republican ma-

jority in the next house falls below100.; ; r- - I'i: t: ,: ' ,:

Comptroller of tbe Currency -- Williams,

issued a call to national banksfor reports of their condition as; ofJune 30.' ; .: .;--.-'.

mix the we sell.

UOl-- O

Makes Some MightyI But

Backed by in

the thebest that theKight Men will jjet intothe Right Bed.

i Paid Publicity tnrnthe. White Light 011 allthe Bed Fellows andgives t he ' InquiringPeople a full knowl

Queer Fellows

edge of sort of Politics are doing.-Pai- d

is Public Power. . '.

a

The- - One Really Good. Steel''

.". Kltch en Cabinet

Sold on Easy Payments ;

':'v:'.--:'- ;;

ei

what they

Dimond Co;, Ltd.

BEAUTIFUL ORIENTAL

FQNGiJNN

CEBITS PER riDNTH

that raising ducks,r' areJ unusual manufacturers

Honolulu

PAID

Quality,candidatesGuarantee

Publicity

On

''Vi:.17. 17.

HOUSEWARES"

conditions poultry.mainland

So strongly, recommend to you speciallydlings, Bran Ground Oats, Meal, etc. ; ,

Phone 4121Califoirma' Feed Co.,

Nuuanu SL,

STAR-BULLETI- W 75

, -:--

f.-

Phone

The best pie-cru-st

that you've ever tasted may be

Centennial's BESTFlour

An Plburj.goes fur-

ther ; : contains", more'; ; . - '

.. ;,.; i' .'V : v

sine you see the label

Distributors

n

Publicity

MAIL - METHODSMr. Ilvrmaa niiUal. 4r--

th aimWn t U AriaM AdOkUt t k awrhwlt by wkWhthat rmpii7 ewod4 it tr4.'Hti i4i v - ';- -

W ft r wfc

It U W rd, ott wtftwvaivr from I1 I

ronatrv T1lr U Bt ft MOTr'ay rn(ua is wr tt territory tbt r Dra mtn ou suTfcU burfa loolu r th p- -

whir th iThBt r Mt 4vrrtUinx im tk torsi ptpor, w

toot thl writorjwit onr litrfktarf . It lybrinf ru)t far ia ira of tfam ffort pat forth In Urritorf

mher the kxal arbanta ail taaia tM thir loral papr." ..

0;

near Pauahi St.

5prepared mash of Hid

' ' '; ; -

"TH E HOUSE OF 5M5 KING ST, HONOLULU

G00D3

&

The; affect 1 the of as well as otherso in Hawaii that we trust very few to

foods

C:

we can ourPish

1-2--

made with

all round

ment." ,;Be

ORDER

41?th-tr- y

tmB4it!y

Ltd

''"'.:.-',.- ; :: ';

" "- - .. , ..

FOUR

RILEY H. ALLEN - -.- - - v .- -;

: TRAXSPORTATIOK. JlOTm .fiOADS,

Honolulu will do well to "paste in its bat" whatJames Woods,4 St. Francis manAgerv said .before sailing for San Francisco vestenlay:

Tint: ; Furnish ...more and better transportation'faclliflt than : now txiit between the csatt awd the--

islands.!'' --eetcntf : Fumlth more

r:more hotel aecom- -

modaiion thai now. eclats. '

"Third: .Improve );uf. automobJU roads. v ;;The fact that otifcrptopjs '.ha wi; sanl the amc thing

does not detract irfthe slightest iromtlie foroe of thisstilled hotel man's comment.

. '4Not at all. On the contrary, the number of visitorsH'Ijo have made precisely these remarks is conclusiveproof that Honolulu s needs from Uie tourist.standjpoint are maihlv jliese tlireer, 1 - fr--

5 Other facilities for erite'rtaiiiuig the visitdf will, fol-

low, naturally and logically.

nvxlatioui: aro consideraWv increased, "the hotef rrieri

and tours-- companies: Avill ser that entertainment-- i

provided.. (

' , ; ; ' '

rXi to fiwt:ci:: roads, ypu pertaps do not w&eU,tar $ dow7icr?- - tc-.- f Hheldem&nlvlQT antomobll

roac' has - if ria tbe last t-- o or three ream- -all ver tfro: i I --

ftrP'i'- r...fee ar'that r:whf : 'r -- I

let

(::'13 !

iJ I

i.:t.rt

far

I l f . "tea-- ; AutcrJcUIci have baBsed. ry,t.T a, fjgitive.r'HcatitT. .There"It : .'.Cf T t. ra-- Lvndred? rf miles of per j

.11 'ros Jg rart-r.q- av&I'.ille. to- - tamiitk '

rs !mr'r v!i tot to, to any;phc. .I rt , . I. .

-i- -: " t i; ':ceer day The raid .' rrfet: .On the wind. ;

t."? i'' '. i'v-- ;; .net fo t"d as Its repu-'- -

r -f ' - t!r.c. itvn tiOt' what it oughtTt :ci iovx'T!d tie; Moau" bpteif.':

e, lir ..: vr.-cri.ta- nd howao. v- ' :t,it-- exist Ialits'

- Tl. 1 -- ::t v.hich Mr. AVoodstis understoodto lu.v iii'i.w.id vvill, if carried out, provide an indus-

try m Hawaii secoiid only to the siiprar industry. Thati tlie tov.ri-t-itKiustr- y ;:It yi!b.nieatinoi.:oiiyt "fetcat

u K --ment- of- - hotel. accom?Tiodalions,; lit-- the-pxos- r

i ;a u la. iiusi oi. smaii. uus;ncss' . U. will, meanr t only' hi trsiHc for; the Ueshi.VaOTprjieX'.tRwK- -

- n a:--. 1 int d,. but marked, stimulus, .in Aixtt .1! y." all retail mercantile--'line- s Only-- (jccasionally; w one ha r. in ; thev' ed

te:::.;:t tl.t V.z tcinist t;uness pr6f,ts, pnj yr a-'-f tw;'i e l.cvl of a 1 trust: brrfany . told. tho Sa'ivBulit. i the other day that. the tourist business .'in ''theKnexti y; - rs will he the: t:;Vtr'-co:rJnefcai-

1 ' ft ' , M in I :. . ;i his If tin lisye. ' 'Apd haadd- -. .: i i..cc: :cli;h!e thitllie Lumess leaders of

1. . ill'niuch lc::-er.-ai- dure liad roadsl : lf the

s 1... n't the.' money,; the; htsmess-'cornrnnriUy.i.wil- l

.'

' ' ' ; ' "cr. I ; r--vhli ilidr.cr.cy f.c:;ieAvay;

; tl ; rial lotion strikes home tint the. tourist indus- -

irpn tremendous tmsmess liere, ' he de--

:'s,'n, in the business

, conimuuity, --'comment, oF this.t i J.'ccrd more and more frequently,'. the ,

doctrine; 'promotion pays" is vindicated triumphantly, 'j

V ' i'

" ; ;; '' ",;,

A RECORD YEAR FOR .UCCLE'rSi

It

a.

; rt.-- . ; r ihe fo.cal-.yea- just ended. with. June; ' v no4j,UUj,l)UU and the imports nwere

'. : . 2,11 0,000,000. makir a total foreign tradeyear cf over six-- ; and' i: half.' billion dollars;

: .tnv.cli Lrcr thm any previojis total iiuthef Ainvrican commerce These figures; were

. I by the Rureatt of l oreign and ;Domeslic: rce of-th- Department of Commerce, with the

.'on that the figures included for juncv are an. .c based on the final May-statistic- v ;

wrA'in 1872 that our foreign trade first exceedede L'I'.icn dollars. Ry 1900.'it had crossed the 1 billion

(' :':r .mark, by 1907 had exceeded 3 billion;:and byl.r.d' risen aben-- e 4 billion, remainmcr around that

L . l; tl:e.:ycar.. just:.er:ded:.rwh'cnr the- - 6. Hl"cnir.: I: vcs exceeded. ImportJ? firrt exceeded one billionth.LTi," value in 1903 'and ' are' now 'a 1 Jttle more thaftt wice as much as at tint , time.. , Exports first rose: h(. c j F billion dollars, value in 1892 arid are nowfour times as mttcli as in that year. ' : , V

"

; Siv .n groups of articles represent about one-ha- lf

tlie entire, value of ur import trade, . each of themexcelling 100 million dollars hi the fiscal year 1916.S.vtatcd in order of magnitude, they are : Sugar, esti-rhvt- ld

it 205 million in 1916, againj't 174 and J01 mil-

lion., ore end two)ar$earKer.' rubber andVsubstr-tutes- h.

refer. 1S9 - million'ighiVl 87 and 76 million,rtspecti. Jy t "hides and skins 157 milliob, against, 104and; 120: "raw wool, 145, against ci4 and 53; raw silk,122; amst SFand 98; corTee, lit against 107 'and1 IX; an I chemicaUdrugsetc., iOBmillion against84 and r;v'iriiUl6n'f .refpcetivelf.., (.tr leading importsare thus" factors ina'teriais au'dTofxMuffsl--

Rotary' Odt fhemUers are' setting a good' exampleto local bisineismm m.nu!6ng;it thfr business to at-ttn- d..

regularly in:U:r. 'ofahe boartPof supervisors.They hive undertaken the work throui a special com-mittee; wl !ch starts ufSviih the awiled intention ofeooperatin with the city; officials iii eery way posslie.: A'h: t he.R ct a rirrts u tslf to dof i to get a"-- pers. ral und : r turidmg''nf city nrobUiri.s.' Tf situationscri e whi-V.t'fyljsl-

wiM;

HOXOLTJLU STAn-BULLETi- y, THFKSDAY, JULY 27, 1916.

EDITOR

I -- ' ." ' ; x ' '5 ::.

ana u iacre are uevxiopipcnx5,jn puuuc joustm? waitiappeal to them as 'worthy of praisethe club commit

tecmcn will report to the body of Rotarfans cogTmend... -

.. . . '- r tr t t ' - ,- ' Vjnj 7ucn uevciorsncnis.

, : Xealv every city has a' UUincssmen s. committeewatching citv busfness closclv. The Qiamber of. CommerceCs municipal affajrs committee considers: city

business; nie .Rotariajis. however.-ar- jjoing a "step

further by their; plin. pf personal attendance at thejneetinffs, Honolulu's- - municipal problenu would be

sblveil much 'more easily, and quicklv than thev aresoiveu u every taxpayer acvptca a icw, minutes eacliaV or even.once.a; week to nersonaV investigation a

inc cuy nau 01 inc snujFeis in wnicn ne is panicuiany1IUV1 V .LVU. i

.,".3ft.j

r ; TR EPARED? ESS PARADES. -

'J JXot- - sjnc the .Civl AVar lias i tlie spiritof 76. beenabroad' in the land as. now1 'Hie great parades in oiirlarge' cities . were needed, to show, the , world, and noless, ourselves. tltat our. patriotism; is ohfy sleeping fox

; warn; ox. an. occasion so awaKen i. .ine young manvisiting Chicago ai the la' of the parade and not intemllng to particijpite, on; seeing the great?demonstra'tlon fell'in line and marciied:the;entiTe'distance. iiHeremarked to me, 4l felt I: must d6ciare mv patriotismarid came-ottro- f the parade" vtthn4.eTitirery hewandenlarged conception of what my country lias done forme,, " " wic.rcaMcu. apprctiaiivftv my. .uuiy 10 u.The "sjrhple) fact t that ;sjnce- - theretirejiient of oiirFourth of July, ofators, now a good many years re--

mote, mere naa actuauy. peen notnmgjtr.nis aairy nnto arouse patriotism Tlie Spanish War 4id to somiextent,, but: this young Tn'an'bf' 25' today' was only asmall bov then.' rvy: ' ." 1 -

t. . To many the most impressive; featu re m v the preparedness, parade m' Chicago,was noV the; great num-ber'n- or

the la rge' 'representation ;of ; vOmeiv.bothyoung and middle-age- d, but rather, the splendid marching "For- - ten hours these civilians, thousands pf i'vyrjom

had never before marched ''puib'UcJ.$rocesfeh,s wung past with even lines' and correct step j and withviiiy a,, jcw. nans in au iiiai anu inc!c ui.uuiy aiew;sexxtnds' duration. ;Tnat theuntrairiexl thousandsveer able, to do this; is at least eiicotiragirtg as to what

these men and women could do in case of emergencyand under; the instructioh;6f a; drillmaster. .

-

More6veT,'the demonstration was thoroughly demo-crati- c,

as presidents of 'banks;andrcaptan& of. industrywnosc names are Known m everv-siaiemarcne- a snoui- -

de, to shbiifder.-wit- t

expressing, an equal ioyaity,io a.common oanse ,nuevery, rriarcheVj carried; Tjift Flaj.--'H- .t II.- Windsor; intlie? AugusPopular

' R- - is now' ricwv' thing to fuidi that "the' busy ' Britishwar censors nave lamperea wun entirely neutral man.Soon after the war 'opened mail began to be receivedhere showing evidence that the official busybodies ofmore; tlian bne' belHgerent-gOYernmeri- t: were, opening,1tl;o mail;ol.icutralsr? jyht&this part of the price 6f war the. interference-wit- h individual rights on the cool principle of "military neces5,Uy.;-- . .X6 protest agaipst jhJ; increclible stupidity ofthe i?ntisr "ccnsbrshi ;.cohaT5et mdrek: bitter; than" that

ice'iri Ihie Ehgiishrcssthat,; mainland newspapers ; and magarmc are beginning to commerif upon the censorship imposed by Uncle Sarnie military authorhiesalofig the Mexican bor--ner; . v nine- - lKJWcr; mav. noi ciim uc ianiieruus uiu'lndicrous . '.v'; ".;p::C Vvti- - v; ;-- ;

1

. President Wilion is determined to , stay ' in Washington untiLCongress adjourns.; lie is aLso determined that. CoiTgreiss shall not adjourn until the administratioh s favored bills arc. passed.'. As usual with.tiepresent administrations the , Democratic majority willidb I his?. bidding exejtrhaps. . op the ; governmentshipping bilL . Seldom in .American history has therebeuv.a president? who came- - so neanta constituttnghe1

t;s, ppHdei which, were!iuenacted into. lay bnt: theWilson policies..- - ;

:. .'-; - :" ;

; Baseball has at last obtained a flrnr footing in .Eng--

:iami, jiavin ueen popuiarrzen. uy-- uie uanaaian soi- -

"Oiersr: : uie great American game? ongnt; to serve tnei;vjJii iurise-ia.uxsai..jHju- ji otncipmg ine jKropietQ forget their troubles.Newburgri' Jouraal." ; ;.;;

WhatAvould d free vote on the continuation of thewar by all soldiers . on both fides show ? What's theuse asking? v Their governments would never let themhave it-.- Philadelphia Evening Ledger.; ; : ; ;

We thought the ultimate'limif had beenreached by the4 federal building plan but it seems thatthe'Manoa'panng is going' to -- drag txi a close, second.

"i First the Al lie 'campaigned hv attrition." ; Then

they nibbleil, then gnawed, and now they arc workingwnar tnscittii lansKnows uie squeeze play: ;

r;.Ay-v-;-- f ..... .t , ;; kThere have been innumerable, boosters for Hawaii,

but none, surpass in exuberance r ahci eloquence the?renial W. H.Xrarie. v ;;t ;v

Sari Francisco" bomb-plante- r was alson note-write-r! j.vV::- - ;.' .".;.- - :;

prrn nr nil QimnTAnc -U.LlJ.,UUiUf U1L U...LSLUL 111

i fffi KL.::iS SEGKETARY LAIHead pi Interjqr pepiment

.uaii$ nqnoiwu .Uif:" 'Decision Correct

.That there i no daagec of an oHshcr Uge . in , I V. S. Nary,. , wu re-cent- ly

stated by Secretary of the Iatertor , "TrantlLn K. Laoe. nccordiag to

. despatch from Waahiostoo to theCnristian Science Ionitor. The secre-tary also adds that be believes thele&al decision JU the 't Hoaolalu OilCow paar case, is correct . ; .

4ln, an. Interviev. relative., to. the so--called,Jhelaa' amendment, to the oilleaslar bill. Secretary, Lane said hedid not favor , the amendment; butwculd advocate - an oil-leasi- billtLbng the Hnee of the Ferris bilL Thedifference between the Pa elan amendment ana tne. rerrts . our. ne says, isone ; of ' liberality In ' treatmentclaimants.

mi

of

".My position- - is a matter of record.'said tbe secretary, '"and can. he foundby evarainlng my reports upon: themeasure before Congress and my annual reports, jn my last annual reportt expressly stated that I would not as- -

surne to. say, what policy, should befollowed as to the navat reserve lands.There is no danger, of the navy beingshort ol oiL for there are nearly.

acres: .of public oil lands now

:iMtlpCttv;-- WILLIAM U CREED: I believe

the send-of- f alone, which visitors receive when they leave Honolulu .bringsas many, back here. as anything else.Jt'is . the prettiest an4 ,most uniquecustom 1 have ever. seen. and I wagcxif expressions -- frohv the departingtourists could be obtained, they wouldbe fuil.of praise, for the band and theleis;and the crowd, that' stands at thewharf-- to say, goodby, many biddingfarewell to no one in particular but.merely entering, into the spirit of thewhole entertainmnw.. At . tne Mat- -

soiiia yesterday .1. believe. : was . thelargest

'

and,. . prettiest .crawd. yet. andthe .most sincere and. tear-aocompa- n

ed. farewells. .'-. ;- - v.

AfiisUAL REPORT! OF -

; BOARD (DFftEALTH; ;V NEARSl COMPLETION

v After doing considerable work ont daily for. the, last two weeks. Dr.

John,: S. ;EU Pratt, president of ; theiward of health,, and Jiis - assistants,Ok-- e, to. day completing, the annualfennrf nf thn hnarH and ' will send It

--t Governor Mi'cius E.,,Pinkham .latetoday j. :. .. ;

Tlie report .covers 40 dQubJe-widt- h

typewritten pagesr; making practical- -

y 80 pages of - typewritten matter.t. covers . the- - range of; the- - board s

' the fiscal from.vork during - yearJuly V. 1915 touneO, 1916. '

ASHFORD.BETS' DATESvv i'c VT(T HEAR MANY CASES

Definite dates' far. the Rearing:" of thefoilowinff cases1 were decided upon inCircuit Judge Ashford's court today:

D. 'Smith ts..' Henry- - Smith, admin- -

strator.'.S 'o'clock tomorrow morning;oda vs Sakani oideiT to show cause,

Toeaday morning- - August. l,,--, at-- j9'clock; Emma .

F.V Rumsey, xs NewYork Life Insurance Company, near- -

ng on, denwrrer;'Vedqesday;mornlng,lAugust 1 V at 3 : Zk. o'clock : Mary M.Brown vs. Morikatani petition .for,confirmation of sale, Monday morning.August 31, at 8. o'iclock. - ;

FOUR MORE FILIPINOS -SECURE FiRST' PAPERS

! v. .- -- m... .' ..... ;

Four more.. FUipinoa .'today filed lafederal court their' declarations of .intention to, become American cltliens.Filipinos now; .are.-.-; taking, oat theirfirst papers?;at .the rate of, from four

Jto. six each day; 'Those, who today- - declared their, inteationa are Peter B.Serrano, laborer and ; native ofTaya--

bas; ForUmato Ortiz., laborer,, nativeof Santa Cruz; PalahJo-Franko- laborer, native of; Occidental. Negros;-- . Dor;mingo ; Flores;:.; laJbioterii jjative ofCapio. Vibincio Omiga, also a nativeof the-Philippi- nes, tiled his . declaration late Wednesday) afternoon.,

ARTIST SWINDLERw . -. TO PJNSON

BERLIN; Germany.;--- - LudwigLehmann, ' of painting .andselling. . more, than two hundred pictures, representing then as, the workof noted! .maalersy. and con-victed at has been sentencedto four : years'; imprisonment I Hiswife, convicted as his accomplice, wassentenced tte a term of three years; -- ;

NMuanu

Tel. 3683

SENT..

accused

GermanMunich

withdrawn. Included therein are twof special naval reserves which are practically free from - adverse claims.

U

The Outdoor Circle.Hawaii.

These contain approximately 120.000 j Rditor Honoluln Star-Uallett-

COO barrels of oil.. And more of this Sir: Your editorial in Wednesdaviarea can be withdrawn for the navy at J paper in regard to the dissraceful

uy tune- - uy me presiaem. wnenever i spau on tvaiaxau avenue lives . mehe-- desires to do sa ; -- ;- Ithe opportunity, to state Just what the

1 have tried to. deal with these I Outdoor Circle'has tried to uVo in re- -p repositions without regard to politiog rd to the little, old, tumble-dow- n

and have had the rapport of ; such red shanty on Kalakaua avenue. Manyeminent conservationists as Mr. Len- - months aso w? went to the promhroot aad Air. Kent,, whose views have Inent citizen who represents the own- -always been the same as mjne, that to r (absent) and asked him to havekeep 3.000,000 acres of oil lands this property pnt in order, I. e., gar-iccke-d

up Indefinitely, while gasoline den cleaned up; trees trimmed, rub--is: climbing higher, is not jrood sense I bfsn bunted, broken glass: in lanat re--

and plays right into the hands-- of raoa-- l moved; We were informed that he -

opcly. if Congress can. at this time I Prominent cltiafn had no authorityof great pressure, deal with the mat-- to clean up the property nor wouldter of leasing legislation. I have no he give the circle the authority to putdoubt sane and conservative leeisla-- the place in good order, though wetitn ; will result that will, help everyreal developer and . consumer interested In oil ; nnd' gasoline and whichwill prevent waste and monopoly.TThe only difference that has arisenbetween Mr. Gregory. Mr. Daniels- - andmyself has been over the soundnessof a legal decision ! (the- - Honolulucase); rendered by, tbe : commissionerof the general land office touchinga private claim within a withdrawnarea which I am so certain Is corre-

ct-that I have offered to submit thematter to the courts for . decision."- -

aZJ 1 on-- parking and now itstock today. M;iitlon ; demand were heard rirZ "

rtimnr. that : h . i uus?t - ,- . -- r j f .. - , when Itto make a;declaraOon XTrilSvf Sf? Mr. thisivr lius rumor h ouir . f

1 . . ... . - . . I il XVI UO-- . ' MC-f i i ri i mtuv-vi- i in a nnr w ii'a u r rrm m 1111

talk ,that ."whenr returns from ship-ments are. in" Waialua will be in goodposition to declare an extra disburse

to. stockholders., vof bonds were another feature

10,000-o- f McBryde- - 5s- - selling at 100,and.SpOOOlaa 6s at 103. .

Walalua; stood, at; $37 daring themarket Oahn $36.25, Olaa $19.- -

50, Pioneer $35.25. . Hawaiian SugarHawaiian Commercial $53, Ono- -

mea $56 Hawaiian Pineapple $46, Ho--1

nokaa. at . $12 and Dindmgsessable at $&

Of t unlisted - seentitles? . Mineral I

Products sold at $1.C5 for 2000 shares.Oil was $3.15 bid, Engefs Copper $25and Haw. Cal. 9- - cents.' .MountainRing war 8- - to 1 0 --cents.

I VITAL STATISTICS

:v::X,'-:rr''- "nZ BORN. ' ' .SOARES-rT- a Mr. and . Mrs-- Antone

;M, Soarea of Puuowalna-Drve- ,

14. 1916. a Gilbert. i ; -- ;;

CHING -- Honolulu, . 12.1 1916,': tpt Mr. and Mrs. Ching Kwal of Ku--

kui street near. Nwuanu, a daughterChing Gum Woiw. ' . .

:

RODRIGUES ln Honoluhi,; July. 22,. iny - to - - ana Mrs. xanaorte

. Julio Jtodrigues of .1421 Lusitanastreet, a son-r-Edwar- - k

'

MORCK-I- n Honolula, July 26,' to Mr: and ' Mrs.-.T-

. Sr Morck of 1025Fifth avenue, Kaimuki, a daughte-r-Charlotte Elida. - :;;

YAM AMOTTj In Honojnlu,; ,12,191S, tofr. and Mrs. Yoshioimote of 3 Cunha lane, a daughterTamae.

KTJJUIJ1 In Honolulu, July 16; 1916,; to Mr. and - Tokusaburo- - Ku- -

of Beretania and Smith; a daughterSiixuyo;':;;

SAKAMOTO . Honolulu. . 3,1916;...to JMr.-,an- , Mrs..; KanhfchiSakamoto of Pahoa; avenue,. :

mukl.a sonHlroshiy, , . vVr-KANAGUSJJKU-I- ai Honolulu, , July

15, 1916, to-M- r. and Kamado; Kanagusuku a:. : daughter Masao. v; ;,:

LAI In Honolulu, 20,: 6,-- toMrand MrsjiLal Chu of. Pauoa.Vat

-- ley a Lai. , . ;;

i ;'-;- , ..DIED ,.-- v --

QUARES In Honolulu, July 1816.Anthony Gouvea Quares of 935r

: meluth lane, a native of Li-hu-e,

Kauai, a window cleaner, aged; 33 yearsi 6 months and 4 days; Body

burfed today in. the- - Catholic ceme-tery, King, street';'-- : A-V-- . r: ;

lav Honolulu. 26,. 1916. at. the Queen's Hospital, Chin; Kim,male, a native of . China 52

: years.-s- ; Body buried todayr in theLoch-Vie-

w cemetery. --- :. . ; ..

IM oi 40,953 sq. for sale; '207.9 ft, frontage

Judtl Street. Beautiful view of the ocean; ;

::. :':;- - ; Brice only $5,500; -;--:

iah Trust Co., Ltd, r" :lv- Stangenwald Bld.

KALAKAUA AVENUE OUTDOOR CIRCLE EFFORTS.

'; Honolulu.

offered to pay. all charges from fundsof the circle. - Is it possible that thepeople of Honolulu have no way ofprotecting themselves against a nulsance to the eye because there fa noowner ; of the property here? ; If thenuisance were one against the nosesomething . might be done by theBoard Cannei other nuisances be;, reached- - Jn some way. ifthere is no law now-und- er which thepublic can, protect Itself against, aaabsentee- - landlord, there should . beone. Can it be that tbe taxes on thisproperty. are-no- t collected because theowner is. not living here?. If so, itmight be well for the' government tosell it for taxes some . onewho would care. for. itl and send thebalance to the owners :

While on the subject of; Kalakauaavenue it might be well to refer to acon'ersation overheard a memberof tlw Outdoor; Circle on; a RapidTransit car as it approached the newparking now' being torn up. One manremarked to his' neighbor: ."Therenow. look, at tnat. , Tnose women. winruin Honolulu yet. They, spent $8000

rvnilunZi w that, there naslocal market In eonnec- - 'l i

,wlth the hthfa KMiMnt mM ewa wv.i.w..u onvhnilT clo

the. next, of

e"l Now. Editor, please, stateexisiea wgj n,. rf.UCdt VtWW

mentSales

whole

$46.

sold As

ohJuly son

In June

Mn

1916,

JuneYama--

Mrs.'juiji streets.

In -- July

Mrs.lane,

July 191

son Chu.

26En

single,;

KIM July

aged

ft. on

(to

by

mi

AND

back

i

A.

ii i4 f 5 ti '1u ;

rarkin? of K.lakana avenue that'stretch ?s frora the John Ena road toKapiohinl rark. We sre responsible

'

for , the planting of the mahoganytrees m the c-n- tral rarklng of this;avenue from King street to the Joha iEna ro:td. Aha for the planting ofthe oleapdert an1 coconuts along said v.road. We have learned lately that ;many of these well established plants' r

mint jvimA nnt fjx!inui nf thA fhnn. . .1 ., ' .All...courage will live through this. Thecircle pais a man who takea care oftht first mile of Darkln. and of the -

oleanders and coconuts. .'- - - -- i CHEK1LIJW L. LOWRKV. -

President. Outdoor Circle. :- " '9 e t - -

I JOHN'-A- M ATT 1 1 EWM A N, formerNtest Hawaii circtilt ; Judge. ha ' be-

come associated with the law firm of :

Thompson. Milverto:& CathcarV

REV. FATHER OTTO of Pahoa.Hawaii, who attended the annual re-

heat at the Catholhr cathedra tc--tur- ned

to his home on the Dig. Island .

oa the Mauna Kea Wednesday.: Hewaa accompimied by Rev Father ;

Itieodore of Kohala and Rev. Father :

Hubert of Hana, Maui. ' T.

i WILLIAM P. JARRETT. sheriff of ;the Territory of Hawaii,- - -- is- at the-Stew-art,

and Charlee I LJtoae. . shertCf ,

of Honolulu, la at, the Hotel St. , ;

Francis. They are" on their way home ;

after, two months of InvestigatiacAmerican penal systems and institu- -

tlons. As a result; they expeet to In-- jaugurate change in th Islaad8.San .

Francisco Examiner;

Total receipts for - automobile '

drivers licensee In-Ne-w Jersey for the

first half of 1916 amounted to $1,125.-00- 0,

compared with $1,062,000 for theentire year 1915.,. i v i' r

i' wgMggaBBg'll llll IIIM f I'i I' ' I

t." : i

a trifle over y

forCane418 acres ideally situated on. Windward Hawaii,nearly all cane now; and leased at a yearly rent

'that nets - - -

.

, , .- t

' -

if

612 intereston thb Sale Price of $301000"

'

,

3477

con new be any too nice. Tne patteras. we carry; well as Heavy Plate will appeal to your good taste.

VIEIRA JEWELRX CO. ;

X:

ia Silver as

113 Hotel St.

Have you ever seen' our inagnificent twenty-fiv- e acre ;tract in Manoa right in th0 heart of the valley 7 - Its allready for your inspection now improvements are all in-a-

nd

many fine houses have already been built or are now"building. ' TV v ' " : v.-- ; ;.'

Can't you arrange to see this choice subdivisionRoonf If if3 inconvenient for you to go out there throughthe week with one of bur salesmen, why not-g- o out Sat-urday afternoon or Sunday T You will find it at the end-o- f

the car line on your right." : - - '.

;

'. Lots -- average about 13 cents per sq. ft. and range

in price from $1100 to $2500. V,. , v..'- -

: REMriMBEIt that; WE; are pledged to "pay the 2cents per sq. ft assessment that is 'to be levied against "

Manoa property. :ft'

.XS-vlcS-v'?-;-"-:- '''"'

Henry vaterhbuse

Phone

Trust Co.,lt(I.Fort and Merchant ; ; ; : ; -- v.'

'? I

i

At TonShouldAppear

'free from facial blemishes and witha dear, oft, pearly-whit- e appearancethat will be covy ef .your friends.

uouruuas -

Onaifeivreainldncs fI fx yo ImtfmUr. It tfltrt kIJoB-gTcaa- y 68 ytMrt t mc.

S4 !. tar trM !

FERD.T. HOPKINS SQ&JJ Great Joan Strt Nw Totk City

Parasol'

with handsome "embroid-

ery or; lined with green

silk. ,All prices V

Japan ocavowFcrt Street ;;: ;

Opposite Catholic Church

FOR THE NO Oil DAY

LUITCII EAT. ! C v iv is n w --3

i -

At the Soda Fountain or HaveIt Delivered, to Your Home-'- "

15 12. w PHONES 4676

iio;;glulu

Bazaar

; Selling Agents -; Ilannfacturcrs v ;

JobbersWholesalers- -

tP. O. Box 395'; ; I

Cca 12; Firet: HUO ' r "

KENNETH ALEXANDER

Portrait.Eltilngt by appolnlmtnt IS2.

. 424 Btretania 8L ,

ir 2-- Jfr"a

FALL FROM BRIDGE IW BALTIMORE

Widow and Daughter of LateAttorney Hastening to

otulijIVith Remains r

Up to prcis tlm todar o furtherdetails bad ieen rAeelred here regard-ing ihe death la Baltimore, ltd, at 9o'clock Wednesday eTenlng of JohnAlfred .Magoon.' welJ-know- n. attorney,following fair from-- a' bridge la theeastera city. Newg of Attorney Ma-goo- n's

death 'irai received late lastnight' In a cablegram to J. Henry Ma-goo- n

from hia slater, Mrs. Tyler, wifeof Capt OrrtlleN. Tyler. 4th Car-alry-..

. r .rr. :.;v: j '" The cablegram contains but meagerdetails cf . the' fanse of Attorney Ma-goon- 's

death, taring that he fell froma bridge and died at 9 o'clock Wed-nesday erening. - It instructs that thelaw office- - in Honolulu be closed andadds that Mra. , TyIrr and Mrs. Ma-fioo- n,

thej widow, will leave' at oncefor Honolulu. Alfred K.' Magoon toldthe Star-Balletl- n today , that a wire-lea-k

marsase' la to be sent to Balti-more requesting full details of theaccident ?v ;. .' It s believed that Mrs. Tyler andher mother will leave for the Pacificcoast as soon as possible and cometo iionoium on me iim steamer tothe Islands, bringing with them theremains of the late attorney. No arrangements have been made for thefuneral. , These will be perfected uponthe arrival of the remains. rMany Express Regret.

Expressions of sincere regret at thedeath of Attorney Masoon were broad-ca- st

in Honolulu today. A resident ofthe territory for nearly 35 yeaia. hisloss will ' be keenly felj . by tyundreaa'wno'were counted among nis menas

The three divisions of circuit courtclosed this morning out of respect tothe lata attorney. Circuit Jnage C. W.

fAabfortf paid him the following tribute: - - :

Aahfort PaVa Kind Tribufe. ?

"He was a remarkable combinationof shrewdness md simplicity. . Hisshrewdness In ' . business, as dlstin.gnlthed from legal practise, frequentsly suDjected mm to criticism oy tnosewho, for lack of more Intimate acquaintance, did not understand ana appreciate . the almost childlike slmplicltj of mind which, in reality, dom-inated lits entiro, professional and Busi-ness career. ' ;; 1:

, : - ','- -

"He was, acctrdfn, to my expert-e'd- c

'cad tseryationr dfiring anabout n third of a cen

tury, ahaolutaly honest ia his businessdealings, and his word, once pledged,

rHhl' '" 'vna entirely '.."But the . predominating ; simplicity

of mini and seutlment which stood asa foil 4ohisAlert' shrewdness not Infrequently resulted to his taking positiona that have been criticized as unwarranted In business ethics. If thecriticisms ..were just In any case, theyshould, I think, be attributed to thatpeculiar mental condition which refused to see wrong in either his ownor his neighbors' dealings. , Jv. .

"He was, as I have always believed,absolutely pure-minde- d in his busi-ness and professional dealings and'to the pure all things are pure.',

"No man ever responded with weat-- 'er alacrity to the calls' of' friendship'misfortune or charity than, did our.Brother - Magoon. His - friendshipswere of the utterly sterling type thatneither admit nor see any fjtult In4 4friend. No vain appeal was' evermade to his charitable or friendly ts

'by' the rpfJor;vf the fcrifdrtuaat.- "As a husband and father of a family he was . most affectionate and in-

dulgent and, not only in his domesticcircles, but also In the business andprt fcsdlonal circles ln-whi- he movedfoi so"aany years, I believe that hisloss is virtually irreparable and hieuntimely departure will be lamented.1Left Here in May. v"-- .

J Accompanied by the widow, Mrs.Tyler and the latter's husband. Attor-ney Magoon left Honolulu on May

ch a combined pleasure and!17 trip. After "traveling In Califor- -

Hi iuj hlt Ljr wepv to ntsuiugiuu, XJ.

Where Attorney Magoon had busi-ness In the supreme court of theUnited State Prior to leaving Hono-lulu he expressed the intention of go-

ing to the national capital and, as"representative of .tfhe people of . theterritory," protesting against the pro-posed new charter for the HonoluluRapid Transit & ' Land Company. .

Large fmy Survlvee.Aside from the widow, one of the

well-know- n Afong , family whom, hemarried la l?87r"Mr. Magoon la sur--

vived by seven sops and daughters.They are John Henry Magoon, mana- -

;er.of he , Consolidated Amusementcompany; an. Kamaxia Kipling, Al-

fred K- - Magoon, Eton H. Magoon, Mrs.Catherine Hustace, Mannioa M. Ma-goon 0d Mrs. TylBT. .- Eton left for themainland In the Matsonia Wednesdaymornlnr," ;;' . 'v'": :'

Yesterdays mall brought to, the lo-

cal members ot the Magoon familynews that, tbo party In' the East wshaving. a delightful time, and that atleast two months' more would be spenton the mainland. s

. A . 'Pr6 m rrtenri rT Affairs. ? f ' ; t'- -'

In politics Mr.' Magoon as ac Re-publican, but he Aook more ' than aparlfsan Interest in1 enmmunity wel-fare. v His recent active participationIn ' the - public discusajen- - of" the . pro-posed new' charter of the Rapid Tran- -

' ' ' ' "' ' 'X-- SL ''in i"

wmmmmmmDrive up Sunday, jind enjoy the wonderful. view and

?'coct.Jipdktatplrd''A real site for a real kome.:

ffi

.,:. "i "? 4" ; 'f'v";

ri"

sit Company la an instance. He tookstrong ground, in addresses before lo-

cal prganiaaUons, on the question oftemperanee, deAlaring himself in" fa-vor Of abolition of theMlqnor traffic.He waa an enterprislnar businessmanOBtside of his law - practise. Amongother: industrial enterprises in whichhe shared he was one of the pioneersin the steam laundry indust'rj of Ho-nolulu. .v:--- . i;VV;- - - '

-- Appointed a circuit 'judge' of ' thefirst circuit in-189- under the Repub-lic, he made a good record on Chebench, but' soot voluntarily retiredand did not seek the position under theterritory. Besides thia the only publicoffice he ever- - held waa that of clerkto the legislature la the special ses-sion of .1887 and the regular sessionof 1888. --

' 'V, : ' v

Stood High: in 'Profession, --y'c -' Magoon 'a reputation as an attorney

waa an excellent one and some of thebiggest criminal and civil litigationsla the territory, were handled by him.Land and estate matters, however,were, hlf , speclaltlea. IJe was an ac-tive member of Harmony Lodge fs'o. 3,L O..O. Pv being affiliated with thatorganization for pearly 25 years. Hewaa well known throughout the ter-ritory end leaves a host of friends whowill mourn his death.Hia Earlier Mtmolraw- - ;

la a local sketch published in 1892,Mr. Magoon was described In --part asfollows:. . .".This sentlemaa ' ia a ris-ing: . young t attorney of Honoluluwhose atahding . In - the communityand' amonar the legal fraternity, is dueto his -- pwn ambition, : determinationnd perseyertog, efforts. ; Mr, Magoon

comes from the stock In whom thesecharacteristics are frequently noticeable. His' father comes of a good oiaPuritan family of Maine, and has --bya life of tndutfry and frugality accumulate! a cqmronawe compeiencWhich he la now, in the, decliningveara of his HfeV enjoying in a'quietand unpretentious' way in ' Honolulu.

The traits : of-h- ls v fathef are inherited by th? subject Of tbis'Pketcn,who Is, In the' strictest dense.' a self-mad- e

man. He waa orn in Algoni,ICpssutb county, Iowai'6hv the; 22 daydf July," 1858. While still an 'Ihfaht,hia pkrefits returned to thf ir home'InMaine, where ' they lived . nntil' theboy was nine years Qf : age, when thefather emigrated to California, ' andwas subsejjiieiltly joined by his" wifeahdon: Mr.' uragooa's; early youthwas' passed 4 In California, ' where hereceived a good education; and gradu-ated from HealdVBusines$ College in1874. ; ; He theii' followed: Tarious.

,tprincipally that of book-keepe- r,

and '. spent . om e time' in theOfflctf of the Santa Rosa Democrat,and ! learned", the 'printer'a trade Heitas also 'engaged'lor'a while in thelumber ' region of Mendocino county.John Magoon and his wife, principallyon account of the foriner'a' failinghealth, came to Honolulu in 1876; ahdupon the signing of the - reciprocitytreaty between the United States andHawaii, the subject pf this BketcDJoined hit parents la Honolulu." Sqinafter his arrival he secured the position of bookkeeper? on' pie W'alaluaplantation;" and, having already decided "tfpon thevlaw a profession,'ne occupiea' njs leisure tune jn vrc-limina-

ry

readings. '. At the expiratibhof a year, young Magoon returned toHonolulu, and entered the law officeOf ' Benjamin ' W' ;Austin1 ' afterwardsassociate justice . of the. 'eupremacourt, wnere ne remained about aJear .when'' h?a finances being- - de-pressed, he look; it position as'dpatysheriff at Makawao, Maui. As suchOe had a rcpgh and exciting experi-ence, and .finally rethrne to ils posi-tion at the Pala plgntftion. Maul. Mr.Magoon had meanwhile continued hislegal studies; , and In 1!J8I be left Ha-wail'- 1

lor Ann Harbor "Mich, wl-er- e

be devoted his entire" - time thereto;and in 1885 was graduated from thatInstltutijon-- He then returned to Ho-nolulu, and was admitted ta the bar.

"Here he at first met With the dlscouragement which - often attends ayovng ' lawyer's firff efforts ; but, byperseverance and- - energy, .ie finallysucceeded' in building up a Batlsfsc-tor- y

criminal business, - wnici hasContinued to grow, and "he is n.'itvdoing 'a 'goocTgeneral ofTlce: practise.Mrl Magot)h Ties accumulate-!- - consid-erable In 'his prbfesslbn vari.l by u

Investments; and he lias - thusbeen freed from tls financial annoy-ances to which youhg" attorney bnr:n- -

ninff life without cabiM arte usually

Odd Fellowe Mouni' Active MemberMr. Magoon'a death Is-- mourned by

the ' local . Odd" yellows, r He was 4member of Harmony lodge and ofPolynesia EncampmenL and for iearsla'credited with having kept hia' OddFellow - orgahizitlon active when Ithad" a $mall :':nefiiirshJii. ' " Ke "hadexpress ed the "wish . to be burled under

Uy a coincidence. Grand !5eretaryGoodria'.'or.';tfib;:: Odd . FellDwa'ls- - aresident of Baltimore, This' morn-n- g

District Deputy; Grand --Sire ' feJvineT, .'Simcnton'Ventrthe followiu jt cable--

k Coffdrv Grind 'Secretary,wOs'O: F; Baltimore: Vj Alfred Ma- -

?Cfn:Bietf "Baltlmortf yesterday. OddFeMpw,- - floeii atandlno. Attention fam."y appreciated." r .' : :vy::'??-Fourts'Show Relpcct.. ;.! ; ":.. ' every case; on the ponce conrtrtocket this" mornine ras continuedfine-to- ; the 'death pf. iAlfred Ma-feopna-

when the calendar had beencleared.' Attorney E. A. Douthitt; repfcsentlng the ;Bar, Association 11a- -

wair, aoaresred tne tjonrtpeakiog orthe;deep regret' pf the assoelaUon.forthe "onM mcly deattt pf one ef Us ' mottprominent members and a?king, thattonreOjowriied, tcr :the"fiay-- . oytot;!regpecf; forTthe - departed - attbr-- 1

laeklf rauewa by JInrto f ? Hit - ", !;&rtinr, lutt Sfiut tt A-t-w Dm. va

or by mail. BUe v ttl. - For Book U the iKye tree, xtk Murine Zj Iteaxatr ConQUcigo. '

llfl STREM1 IS

SOON TO CEASE

New Machinery Being Piitv In

m Enable City to Handler Overflow ' ::

' Sewage will soon cease to overflowInto Nuuanu streaui' and down to thefiarbor. aa the 12,000,000 'gallon.: con-denser ordered for the "Kakaako sewer'station, months' ago ;has arrived andwill be ia, operation within, two weeks,according, to Harry Murray, managerof. the sewer department., Z

The three old pumps now In useare not able to take care of the peaktoad and at : time the sewage backsep and overflows at the Knknl streetoutlet." he ald this morning. "Withthe arrival of the-condens- we sh&tybe able to operate thejaew steam pumpand keep the teweru plear,"

The steam pnmp will be used onlyfor emergencies as soon as motors forthe new-electri- c pump' arrive, Murraysaid. There Is . a strike pa ; at thefactory and it may be months beforethey get here. 1 1, hope the HMebrandGlen project get$ started tr thattime! for the city, win be able to savebetween $501)0 ahd"l50DP'a year whenIt- - is able Jcf ret powej from 1

13y . . , b

There's no need to limp around thissummer with sere, aching;, feet, comaor bunions ; whea 'Dr: Ryan at Mc-foem-

: Shoe Store can quickly re-

lieve you of all that misery. Adr.

ARIZONA: DESERTER

t V FLEES ACROS& LINECAPTURED.i PUT-I-

DOUGLAS, Ark United States sol-

diers of the border patrol ' here madtheir first crossing into Mexico ter-ritory the other day, 1 but" returnedto the Ariiona-srd- la a few minutes.The soldiers crossed"the line'ln pur- -

suit of Private Edward Stone,' a de-Fserf- er

from the Arizona mflitia i

' Stone escaped from the jmard- housof the : Arl2ona militia camp, a shortdistance north of the boundary' Heran" toward 'Agtai s?retai the ;Mexicantciwti opposite here; a number-o- f sol-

diers- in pursuit: he crossed theinternational line . soldiers on patrolJoined the chasev" it number of shotswere fired at St3ne ad Jje-'wa- s cap,turei"''' ? o.."- - fXj.w-6ii-v;-

k&g Qeorge. o? Ehglftnd ia wearinga small gun metal watch .of the 1.60

t variety. :: h,,- ,; :

Fire la the business rectjoH ctBrpckLvnie, lOnt: caiiijwj, fl0OvO00?dah- -

Tf I ID

t

'''

Accredited tq CbHeseslEaSt'and :Grammar ' and . Primary': Departments. '' Send for illustrated catakgue. v

ineipali ': Mary V Lockeyv A.' B.r

'

PALO ALTO. CAI.IF.V ", .1

: W 1

nvn

TOOHAIDSGIVB

Chinese 'ChargerJWilhiGarpb- -

ling are Represented By- Counsel and Hearings Set

The names of hlf a hundred Chi-nese arrested 'on chargea cf gamblingWednesday night were called la policecourt thia morning. Thirteen takenat Aala lane will be tried August 1.and 37 found on Maunakea street areto be heard Friday. The arrests weremade by Acting City Attorney Wil-

liam T." Garden. Prosecuting AttorneyCharles F. ChilUngworth and Detec-tive Harry lake of the city and coun-ty attorney's office, It is said theChinese played pal : kau and. that anInterested., "outsider led the officersto, the alleged gambling denal-- .

All the Chinese are out on ball of10. each and are represented by coua- -

" The Chinese that furnished the ballmoney whimsically, complained at theJail today that Carden came to theirparty drank their drinka and ate theireat? and then showed his gratitude

by grrestlng the lot, according to astory told by one of the police.Places Lately Raided by Police :

? Accbrding to records at the policestation, the placea raided last nighthave been frequently raided by thedeteettve department, but the raidsdo not seem to deter the adventurousChinese from gambling- - whea .theplrit moves; On July: 4, according to

the records. at tneMaunaKeasetreetresort 33 Chinese were nabbed byCapt of DetectivesT McDuffle and hismen, and when the Chinese came Intocourt they pleaded guilty and werefined an aggregate of 1224 with $32costs. The detective bureau say8 thatmen have been watching the Aalalane resort for some- - time, - trying toget sufficient to --

r make araid with reasonable hope of secur-ing conviction before Police JudgeMonsarraV ' DetecUve' Kellett - saysthat the Aala lane game is' one ofthose broken up again and again butthat Chinese are ihveterate gamblersAnd are pot deterred' by the amountof fines imposed in court, - i-

$50,000 IS i LEFT NURSE '

:r " EECAUSe SHE WAS KIND

DOUGLAS, Ariz. Miss , EuniceWingo, a nurse of Phoenix, Ariz,, willreceive half of the $100,00 estate oftlje late Mrs. llarry E Kirk f Doug-las. According;: to friends , thq legacy

f waa intended - aa- - an. expression r ofgratitude ; to' Miss wingo- - for caregiven ;Mrsr Kirk's husband during, hislast illness several years ago. - ' r--

.

BUCKHORN, $1500 - 'i HORSE, IS; DESTROYED

5 'CHICAGO, HL-'-- At the finish Jof ahalf-mil- e race at Hawthorne, Buek-hdr-n,

owned by Jack Atkih. Lexington,Ky suffered a rupture of a blood ves-

sel in the cerebrum and J later waskilled by the state veterinarian. ; --

' ' puckborn was the holder of eight

; Last fall Atkln refused $15,000 forthe animal :.'--.;- ': .

.

'S.

f

prettyknit silk Sport Suits

being now displayed on tho gecond

floor are not merely an echo of the

I New York Styles they're the real

, things. Beautiful color combina

tions.

" '"

mmwPctel, near Tort

Fndzy'Spzzbk ;d! Roxcdl

liggett's grape jujce ;t ,sSparkling; pure delicious rich, red juice of thomatured, eun-ripen- ed fruit I; Nothing can oquit it fortaste or healthfulness.' f Ordej a case from U3 now. Itadds a touch of color to your table. V, . f r$ ,

Pints, regular 25c, Frjdayrr. . C03 :Quarts, regular 50c, Friday. . . . .... .... 40c ;

i : DODSON'Q UVEE T01H3 ; ; -A vegetable compound vwhich livens the' liver without

the-systc- m; Pleasant to the taste. Regular

; i HEWTplI'S ROACH POWDER - c -

HFbir ixtermlnatfcgr roathea, Sntai ftc Regular 25e Friday 20c

THE RTIT ALT; STOREy I MCarvic Every Czzzzl".

PCTt"i2l' Hotel '' y 'VU..';; ,:' tizzs: :

opeii Tjirru 11:15 p.n. r

EDWARD B. McLEAN ; ;: COMMENCES, SUIT TO---

. BREAK FATHER'S WILL

WASHINGTON, D. C Edward aMcLean has started suit la the Dis-

trict of Columbia supreme court tobreak the will of his father, John R.McLean, publisher of the WashingtonPost and the Cincinnati Enquirer. The

Why You Wit ClothesYou Gan Bc? On

of

; f

V'

younger McLean Is 'the sole heir, butthe property, estimated at from $!.000,000 to $:o,000.000r wai held intrust for him. Former, Secretary ofState Elihu Root U chief counsel forthe plaintiff. McLean charges4 that,hia father was unduly influenced and

unsound mind when making hiawill Edward McLean married MissEvelyn-Walsh- , Colorado girt.

You about got trgcoff when the 'triggerJi Yoii'vegot to be abk to depend

wani'tQ wear a business dress suit :

materials:' - :.:: 7 .v--- ':.v. : . Hits -

- ": 'h ir- i --i'et --.... . ,' ' yifSUtt?i xou get, vie aepenaapiet;jiu tn mcinerny v: -

(Clothes. Suppose yqifvisit its and see our individual suitings

f v:: -'--.

'J7ie House Courtesy

Store

upsetting

of

v; A rl ' " 'Fort and Merchant Streetsr

--

.5-

6

-

a

y

vi

f'

" "tr

UwiJCQ

A ! HOHOLTJLU COHSTEUCTIOK & DEATOTQ CO LTD.PHOinS 4S31 'vV:-r;:.;Uvr.:'- v'v'- J. J; BELSER, Uaaagcr. -

ST. LOUIS WILL SEEVICE FIESl . . CTORAQE ; 65 TO 71 SOUTH QUEEN ST.

a day will enable you to protect your home

against loss by fire. See

CASTLE & COOKE, LTD.INSURANCE AGENTS

Reasonsfor using a letter ot credit whenyou travel. There are plentymore, but these two good rea-

sons should appeal to you.'First, its convenience. Second,

Us safety. You can get money

without any-troub- le and a let-

ter of credit Is susceptibleneither to forgery nor theftInvestigate further before you

take that rip.

Bank of Hawaii, Ltd.Cor. Fort and Merchant

&

BaldwinLimited.

Sugar FactorsCommission Merchantsand Insurance Agents

Afitnts for

Hawaiian Commercial k SugarCompany. .

- Haiku Sugar Company.

Tala Plantation.Maul Agricultural Company.

Ilawallan Sugar Company.

Kahuku Plantation Company.McBryde Sugar "Company.

Kabulul Railroad Company,

v Kauai Railway Company.. Kauai Fruit & Land Co., Ltd.

Honolua Ranch.

N. W. HALSEY & CO.New York, San Francisco.

Chicago.

Wa Own, Offer and Recommend

INVESTMENT BONDSAt Prices to Net 3.50 to 6.00

H.A.BRUCE, 200 Bank of Hawaii Bldg.

Telephone 1819Honolulu Representative

MEAT MARKET & GROCERY

PHONE 345!C. Q. YEE HOP A CO.

J. F. MORGAN CO., LTD.STOCK BROKERS

Information Furnished and LoansMade.

Merchant Street Star Building.Phone 1572

FOR RENTElectricity, gas. FcreenB In all bouses

" N eat room house; $14 .

bouse; fin location; $25.taou?e; fine location; $35-Larg-

e

4 bedroom house; fSO.

J. H. SCHNACK'842 Kaahumanu St.. Opp. Bishop Bnk

.79 Merchant 5t

; CITY MILL COMPANY, LTD..Importers of hepi .imf.ior t1 h'ii'.1i"materials. friers Tow. nnl we cmyour ordfT prompt Hrnn'n wtrthprlarge or small. bx hm't h

dreds of ho'iseK fn tin? ciy mfh y.rV

feet satisfaction. If you v. ant to Li,.i'd

consult i

HE

Bants ofLimited

issues K. N. & K. ettersof Credit and Travelers'Checks available through-

out the world.

CABLE TRANSFERSAT LOWEST RATES

C. BREWER & CO.(LIMITED)

SUGAR FACTORSCOMMISSION MERCHANTS

SHIPPPING AND INSURANCEAGENTS

FORT ST., HONOLULU, T. H.

List of Officers and Directors:

E. F. BISHOP PresidentG. H. ROBERTSON...

Vice-Preside- nt and ManagerR. IVERS...

Vice-Preside- and SecretaryA. GARTLEY... Vice-Preside- nt

E. A. R. ROSS TreasurerGEO. R. CARTER .DirectorC. H. COOKE.. DirectorJ. R. GALT DirectorR. A. COOKE DirectorD. G. MAY...... Auditor

BISHOP & CO.BANKERS

Pay 4 yearly on Savlnns Da-posi- ts,

compounded twlcAnnually.

THE YOKOHAMA SPECIEBANK, LIMITED.

Ten.Capital subscribed.... 48,000.000Capital paid up 30,000,000Reserve fund 20,400,000

S. AWOKI, Local Manager.

FOR GOOD MEALS

The Palace of Sweets i

STEIN WAYHALL

Thayer Piano Co., Ltd.148-15- 0 Hotel St. Phone 2313

In soir aniceB. F. DILLINGHAM CO LTD.

PHONE 4915Fire, Life,

.Accident,

.Compensation

n &i M A

FOR SALEJlfio-Lo- ts 50x1 no 10th ave., Talolo.

fio down. $3 per mo.j.-s- Lots 75x200, 4th ave., neat

car.jison T,ot In Terry Tract, nr.

School and Emma, 9586 sq. feet

P. E. R. STRAUCHWanly BMl. 1 S. King St

HAWAIIAN TRUSTCO, LTD.

Carries on a Truar-Busines- s

In all Its''

branches.

SHELL FLAKES r ,

for inlaying Ds LuxeUKULELES

HAWAII A SOUTH SEAScurio CO. v

4j n..lf .jtMAnd at All Hotel News

Stands. '

Agents WantedHOME INSURANTS. CU.Vf nAWAII

LTD.tl king STREET. CORNER FORI

mmwMFEW GENTS

HereAreTwo

Alexander

Honolulu

Hawaii's First War Vessel IsHeard From; Lieut.-Cmd- r.

Houston Commanding

Some time Saturday morning, prob-ably about 9 o'clock, the U. S. first-cla- ss

cruiser St. Louis, Hawaii's firstnaval vessel assigned here for per-manent station, will reach Honolulufrom Bremerton navy yard, near Seat-tle, Washington, says a radio messagereceived last night from the cruiserand delivered this morning to the com-mandant of Pearl Harbor. Rear-Admi- r

al Clifford J. Bonsh. The St. Louislleft Bremerton Saturday.

The message says the St. Louis willcome to Honolulu first, and will be atthis port several days coaling and tak-ing on supplies before leaving for herpermanent station at Pearl Harbor asflagship of Admiral Boush, who iscommandant of the 14th Naval Dis-tric- t,

with headquarters atPearl Har-bor. She will dock here at the navalKlip.

Lieut-Comd- r. Victor S. Houstonsigned the message. This proves he Isin command of the cruiser and will beher permanent commander at PearlHarbor. The lieutenant-commande- r Iswell known in Honolulu, having beenIn charge of the U. S. lighthouse ser-vice of Hawaii before it was turnedover to civilian management

NEW KIND OF MUSIC

IS BIG ATTRACTION

AT SATURDAY DANCES

So successful was last Saturdaynight's National Guard , dance in thearmory, when Hawaiian music exclu-sively was xued, that the manage-ment has decided to retain the Islandmusicians the remainder of the sum-

mer. ; ".

Saturday evening the second of thedances with Hawaiian music will beheld. Attendance at these affairs isshowing a steady gain, and the bigarmory floor is thronged once a weekwith devotees of Terrslchore. Danc-ing begins at 8 o'clock and continuesuntil midnight .

ENLISTED MEN WILL

BE GIVEN EDUCATION

Vocational and special trainingschools for. enlisted men of Oahu aresoon to be established by the Hawai-

ian Department under- - the require-- "

ments of the national Defense Act ofJune 3.

It is expected the schools will beopened at four, or more "army, postson this island, as unofficial estimatesplace the number of men who havevolunteered for the courses at closeto 2000. - : ''''

Training has previously been givenenlisted men m various unes ui w- -

tioual Instruction, but cniy to nv memtnr fuuttinna in thm army, and not incivil life.- The new law provides fortraining which will fit enlisted men

for various trades and professionsafter discharge from service. r

FIRST NIGHT DRILL TO ,

BE HELD BY WA1K1K1 CO.

Tfci tint OJ A C. Hawaii Na- -

tlonal Guard, has its first night drillwith the 60-lnc- h searchlight and , thebig guns at Fort De Russy this evening, beginning at 1 : is. uapi. u.Larrlson will be In charge and LieuttYinU n Ponln of Fort De Russy willassist in superintending the practise.Other. C. - A; C Nauonai uuarasmeuhave been invited. Evening drill willbe on the last Thursday, of every

' '

month. ' ;v-- ; V n r-

PAG0-PAG- 0 MAN AND m-- GIRL MARRIED HERE

Walton 3 N. Hancock' of the U. S.naval station, Pago Pago, AmericanSamoa, -- and Miss Elizabeth ranter,.ian ef peo. PaeoJ arrived on theSierra Tuesday morning, were married here a few nours iacr .oy ne.Henry Pratt Judd and left that after-nnn-n

M Mr.'and Mrs. Hancock on thesame Bteamer for the mainland.

Lemonade or any acid drink willMirdia the mllk II it pui mw ux

refrigerator with It , ' 'f ,

IfIlliff

4 I

Asfisntht fou&a7

4 pmmrt tm wm4

25c, 50c, SI

NATIONAL GUARD ORDERS

July 25. 1916.Special Orders No. 56,

1. The following oromotion in theinfantrr arm of the National Guard ofHawaii is announced for the information of all concerned;

1st Lieut JoseDh P. Teves. 2nd Infantry, to be captain, with rank fromJuly 19, 1916.

CaDtain Teves is assigned to the2nd Infantry, and will report in, per-son or to writing to his regimentalcommander for assignment to duty.

CiiotAin Teves is oromoted subjectto future examination In accordancewith Section 75. National Defense Actof June 3, 1916. -

2 Pvt' A. J. Soares. Co. F. 2nd Infantry, will be honorably discharged,to accept a commission in the National Guard of Hawaii.

2. The folio wine appointment inthe National Guard of Hawaii is an-

nounced for. the information of allconcerned:

A J Soares to b second lieutenant of Infantry, with rank from July21, 1916.

T.tent. Soares is assigned to tbe znaInfantry, and will report in person orin writing to his regimental comman-

der for assignment to duty.Lieut Soares Is awointed subject

to future examination in accordancewith Section 75. National Defense Actof June 3, lil. .

4. Pvt. M. G. Lord, Co. B. 1st y.

is. granted furlough of 21 daysfmm Jnir 28. 1916. : with permissionto travel beyond the limits of the territory.

e nn the recommendation of thesurgeon-genera- l, the following promo-

tions in the Medical pepartment De-

tachment, 4th XnLantry, are announcedfor the information of all concerned.

twmi RorereanL with rank from July15, lvI6, Pvt John B. Fernandes.

To be corporal, wiin ran iruu14, 1916, Pvt Henry, Thielman.

To be corporal, with rank from July15, 1916, Pvt Hulbert Christian.

. P18SESGEBS EXPECTED

poi. Mntstnn . steamer Wilhelminafmtn San Francisco. AUEUSt 1 i. Mr.

and .Sirs. icClintock, Miss DorothyMarr, Mrs. Philip Frear," St ClairMorton, Dr: O. W. liewke, JosephSexton, Mr.: and Mrs. Tlorace Sexton,Mr, and Mrs. w. R. Cross, Mr. ananrr - t T Dovlel Master Doyle. MissDe Temple, 1 Mrs. "M. " J. . Hughes, Missr uri,mat in Tr.- - J Clark "Mrs.J. H. . Hughes, Miss.SOyer, Mrs. ' TL

Hyde. 'Miss Cripf. -- KatherineSchumm, Miss JL McOalre,. Miss BelleAmes.-M- r, and JIrs. tt."R. McCaslin,T. Brown, A. M. Webster, Mr. Cock?burn, Miss Alice Day,: Miss F; Rober-so- n.

Miss Dolly Kohler, Mr. and Mrs.Maunseir, Mrs. W, B. ,Cheatham, Mrs.J. B. Rogers, M iss Gladys G. Ritchie,Mr. and . Mrs. W. Brpwn, Miss Kath-ery- n

Maxwell, Mrs. J. H. Balsdon.Judge and Mrs. V B Lymer, Mr. andMrs. 'A. Stevenson., Mr. and Mrs. E.nr rt j AMt nM,l?Hfrw : f ' Hire.Mr and Mrs Geo. D.""Me&dell, ; Mr.and "Mrs. ; James . Wakefield, Mrs.Senni and maid,, nanesi uay, Mr.Mrs. G. D. -- Bell, Jack Ryan; HenryLund, Mtes . Mariette, Sexton,- - MissMarie Manar. Mrs. J. ' McCorriston,Mrs. C. W. Hudson and two children,Dr and Mrs. F ' MI Rlttenhouse, MissMary Wood Rittenhouse, Miss Frances ; Herie, ; Miss v, Gertrude Yancey,Miaa n. Mad sen. 'Mr.' and ' Mrs. P. T.Brunsing and two : children, H. T.Arnold.. C. H --Rose, w. v.. jarreuKenneth Day. J: . "Dillon: J. M.Adams. Dr. TV H." Adams. Miss LillieA. . Cecil, Miss Diana Cecil. SamuelCecil, Miss Dorothy Prosser. Mrs. ; A.L.' BushnelL Mrs." Gea Prosser,' Mr.and Mrs. E. ' P. Leonard, Miss - VeraDay, Mrs. E. H. Mweli, miss umanrtncnnA H Rlf. Jmrn Doolan. J " H.Balsdon, J.', E.': Kennedy, Harold Baaon, ivir. ana ;wrs. K.-,-r. uovi&n, wr.p. H. waigomat, MWW'Manan uooian,Miss M nodsll.' Mfsa L. "McCandlessiMrs. L. E. McCandless, Sherman DiThatdier, Mr. and Mrs. J. S. ThatcherMr. 1 and .Mrs. Ellis Lyle, John S.Thatcher,' Jr., E. Podmore, Mr. andMrs. Harold .V. Gear, ; U j

HOTEL WILL SERVEMOVIESk WIT" DINNER

NEW YORK, N. X A large hotelhere is the first -- to 'give motion . pic-tures with" dinners. A large screenhas been erected, on the roof ot-th- e

dancing pavilion and on Sunday nightsthe diners, are to have their thrillsserved. in five reels.'. :

TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY

HELP WANTED

Wanted Competent stenographer; forsubstitute work; szd per wee;experience and references. Address

' Box office.: - : ;6538-r-3t V -

Experienced Japanese salesman want- -

cd by. commission firm; good man,good ' salary." Apply Bor 395. Star-Bulleti- n.

. 1 6538 3t

FOR SALE

. - REAL ESTATE ;

New bungalow, 16x4,' with lanal 6x20;electric UghtSv patent, toilet etc:lot 65x100;, $750, $555 cash;, balance$5 per mo. . 3420r &, Palolo road,next to S. L Shaw dairy. 6538 3t

FOUND

Collie '. do&' - Owner; Inquire at 1314- Cullck iTfcv:-,- ' 6538 3t

Honolulu Stock ExcHangs

- ':f'-- : Thursday,- - Jniy-27.- .

lfEROAJNTILB- - ' Bid. AskedAlexander & Baldwin... V '

C Brewtr tt Co.. ...vSTJOAR '

Ewa Plantation Co. . -- 36 37Haiku 8ogar Co.,... . .Hawaiian Agr. Co.......Hawaiian C tt S. Co...; '52. .Hawaiian Sugar Co.'..... 43 46

Honokaa. Sugar Co. . 12Honomu Sugar Co.; 200Hutchinson S. Plant Co. .Kahuku Plantation. Co. . . 21 23Kekaha Sugar Co. ...... 220Koloa Sugar Co......... 250McBryde Sugar Co., Ltd. 12 12Oahu Sugar Co... .... ... 36 36Olaa Sugar Co., Lt . .. . . . 19 19

Onomea Sugar Co....... 55 56Paauhan S. Plant Co , . 26 30Pacific Sugar Mill, ..... . 21 22Pala Plantation Co. .... .Pepeekeo Sugax Co. . . . .Pioneer Mill Co. ... . .... 55 ....San Carlos "MUL Co Ltd. 16 . . .Waialua Agr. Co.....: . .. 36! 37Walluku Sugar Co

MISCELLANEOUSHaiku F ft P. Co, Ptd..Haiku F. ft P.' Co, Com.Hawaiian Electric1 Co. . . .Hawaiian Pineapple Co.. 45 46Hon. B. ft M. Co., Ltd. .. 21Hon. Gas Co, Ltd....... 125 ....Hon. R. T. & L. Co...... 160 ....Inter-Islan- d S. N. Co..;.. 195 200Mutual Telephone Co.).. .... 20Oahu R. & It. Co.....;.. .... 161Pahang Rubber Co. . . .Selma - Dindings Planta-

tion Ltd., Pd..... M4Selma Dindings Planta-

tion, Ltd. (49 Pd)...Tanjong Olok Rubber Co.

BONDSHamakua Ditch Co. 6s...Hawaiian Irr. Co. 6s.....Haw Ter. A refund. 1905Haw. Ter, 4 Pub. Imps.Haw. Ter. Pub. Imp,

series 1912-191- 3 .....Haw. Terv4...Haw.' Ter. 4,..,;.......Haw,:Ter. Zft:..:..Honokaa Sugar Co, 6. . 95 99 v

Hon. Gas L(;' Ltd, 5s. . .Hon. R. T. ft L. Co. 6. . 100 ....Kauai Ry. Co. 6s........ 100 ....McBryde Sugar ,Ca 5s. .. .... 100Mutual Telephone 5s. . .. 106- -

Oahu, R. ft L. Co. 6...: 105: 106Oahu S. Co. 6 (redeem-abl- e

at 103 at maturity) 108 109 ;

Olaa Sugar Co. 6 . .. . 103 ....Pacific G. ftFert Co. 6s 100 ;

Pacific Sugar Mill Co. 6s iooSan Carlos MllL'Co. 6.. 100 101

' Between Boards: Sales: 50, 30, 5,40, 40,' 300 Olaa, 19; 50, 50, 10, 25,20,:20; 20, 5, .170, 80. 100, 100,140, 10Waialua, 37; 5, 56. 208, 180, 14 OahuSugar Co, 36 ; 100 Pioneer, :55 ;110,000 McBryde 5s, 100; 35 Hawaiian.Sugar Co, 46; 15 HL O. ft S. Co, 53;12000 Olaa 6s, 103; $10,000 Olaa 6s,103; $5000 Olaa 6s, 103.c Session Sales: 23, 5 Hawaiian Pineapple Co, 46; 25, 25 Dindings Assess-ment, 8; 20 H. C. & S. Co, 53; 50Honokaa, 11; 50 Honokaa, 12; 5, 15Onomea, 56. , ;r .

test, 6.14 cents, or $122.80 per ton.

Sugar 6.14ctsHenry Waterhbuse Trust eo.

Wembsra Honolulu Stock and Bonds Exchange -

v Fort and Merchant Streets . .. i Teltphene 12C8 i

BRITISH FLA Q WORN , '

BY AM ERICANS FO R

. 8AFETY IN MEXICO

; COLUMBUS, lit rlcans llv:ing la Chihuahua and other cities innorthern Mexico; are wearing smallBritish . flags - to ward off Insults tothemselves and their' nationality, ac-

cording to a report brought here fromf -Mexico. -

BY AU i HORITY

FOREST RESERVE HEARING,t;-.v,- .:y.v- r-OlSTRICT OF HONOLULU, ISLAND

OF OAHU

Notice is hereby giren that underthe proTlslons of Chapter 37 of Uie

Rerised Laws of Hawaii of 1915, i apublic hearing will be held by the Gov.ernor of the Territory and the ' Boardof Commissioners of Agriculture abdForestry on Thursday, the loth, day ofAugust, 1916. at 10 o'clock . m., inthe office of the Board at the Gov-

ernment' Nurse'ry. King Street, to thecity and County of Honolulu, to con-

sider the setting apart as a forest re-

serve, to be known as the Round TopForest Reserve, of a portion of thogovernment, land of Maklki, Districtof Honolulu, Island cf Oahu, havinga4ie area of 115 miles, more or less.

.A map and "description of the saidland to, bo set apart as a forest re-

serve are on file In the office of theSnnerifitendent of Forestry, wherethey are open to the Inspection of thepublic . "'. '."-';- .

; At thA said time and place all persons who so desire will be given fullopportunity, to be heard upon the sub-ject matter of this notice and to pre-

sent evidence and arguments in per-son; by proxy,, or by letter, either foror against the setting : apart of sawland as a forest reserve. - .

LUCIUS Ew PINKHAM'",-.- t j Governor of HawaiL

Tlie Capitol. Honolulu, July 26. 1916. 6538 It

Serve Armour's Grape 'Jnlce with every meal. Itaids the digestion,' gives you a better appetite and

puts vim and vigor into the day's work. After a' day's work there is nothing more refreshing and cool-in- g

than a glass of ;;" j ; ;'

v. ,

m"....

BOTTLED WHERE. THE BEST GRAPES, GROW

v Served at all.fountains, clubsand buffets, v

Order a bottle or acase trom yourGrocer or Drnmst

JustCall

feme JMce

When help.

When sell.

When wantWhen to rent.When wantWhen to work.When or find."

When WANT,

BILLY VAN, FAMOUSF

;

MINSTREL OIES

1 NEW YORK. N. Y. Billy. Van,man; died recently in Belle-u- e

;hospitaL He 'was taken to thefrtum; his home after he had

been stricken with apoplexy, Mr. Van

was born to Cincinnati years; '- : :

COLDS CAUSE HEADACHES

LAXATIVE BROMO QUININE re-

moves the cause." Used world over

to cure cold in one day. The signa-

ture of E. W. GROVt is on each box.Manufactured by the PARIS MEDI-

CINE CO., St. Louis, U. S. A.

-- GRAPE JUICE 'CORNSTARCH

Bring two cups of ? Armour'sGrape Juice and one cup ofwater to boil slowly, addthree tablespoons of sugar and

' tablespoons of cornstarch(previously stirred smooth tocold water). Boll four

' pour into individual dishes.sliced fruits and nut meats

as desired.

.

"i.

you 'needyou want toyou to buy. :

you want :;

you to exchange.you wantyou loseyou have a v

vMAN,

theminstrel

hospital

Sfty-tw- o

ago. lr

thea

a

two

minutesand

The Continental Passenger Railwaycompany neciareoiine usuaj bbiuju-nu-al

dividend of $3 a share. V

i(S(c(olUlCn' V