rj fiicr SxxlrMte i · 2015-06-01 · Notice is herchy given that the under-slgnc-d has been...

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Mf v fjlipfi :r;..-r.r.-; w rj ui: P im i Wliut HAWAII 1h Bent lor fiicr SxxlrMte What HILO 1h Best for Is LJewL for Milo 1h I3et for U w ' T f r Vol. 9. HILO, HAWAII, HAWAIIAN ISLANDS, FRIDAY, MAY 27, 1904. No. 30. I)C gUo (frvUuutC I'tJDUSItltl) KVHRV FRIDAY Oppick, Kinii Strrkt, lltui, Hawaii. Tkihunr IH.ock. , ' IIUp Tribune Publishing Company, Ltd. 'l'ulillnhcr and Proprietor. President C.C. Kknxkdv , H. E. KiciiAHiir lecretary'l'renniiter.. W. C. CitbK Auditor A. K. Sutton Director I. M. Thompson, 1. W. Mahbh j Ailvcrtitcmi-il- t jnaccomiianleil by ueclfic uniructluiiH Ititcrtcd until uulerctl out. AdvcrtleturnlsdlicoHtlmiid before expiration I of specified period will be charged an If con-- 1 llnued for lull term. -- . Address all communication) either to the lMitorialorlluMticM Department' of Tint IIilo ' 1'RlnUNK PUIILIfllllNO COMPANV. I Tnecolumnsol Tmc IIilo Thihunk are nlwn o,ien to commuuicatious 911 nubjccts within the cope of the paper. To receive proper attention, each article mint be nlgncd by Its author. The name, when desired, will be held confidential, i TUB HILO TKIiiUNIi is not rvconsuie ior me opinions or statements of correspondents. ATTOllXKYS-AT-L-A- Wise & Ross, ATTORNKYS-AT-LA- Will practice In oil Courts of the Territory, and the Supreme Court of the United States. Office: Tridunk Bijildino, BrldKeStieet, HILO, HAWAII c. M. LKnLONIl W. II. SMITH LeBlond & Smith ATTORNEYS-AT-LA- Hawaiian, Japanese, and Chinese IntcrpitUrs, and Notary Public in Office. Office: Shvkranck Building, Opposite Cour House. HILO, HAWAII J. CASTLK Ridoway Thos. C. Ridoway Ridgway & Ridgway ATTORNHYS-AT-LA- tollcllors or Patents CJeneral Law Practice HILO, HAWAII. Notary Public in Office. UI'l'ICK : Walanuenue and nrlilge Streets HEAL ESTATE, ETC. I. JE. RAY ATTORNKY AT -- LAW an NOTARY PUBLIC Waiauuetiue St. HIlo, Hawaii DENTISTS. M. Wachs, D. D. S DENTIST Office Hours: 9 to ia, I to 4. HILO, HAWAII Geo. H. Williams NOTARY PUBLIC CONVEYANCING In Laud Office Walanuenue Street, HHo IS A H. JACKSON FIRE AND -- LIFE INSURANCE AGENT FOR NEW YORK LIFE WAIANUENUE STREET. - HILO S. GRACE. Agent for PACIFIC MUTUAL LIFE, FIRE AND ACCIDENT INSURANCE CO'Y OF CALIFORNIA IIILO, HAWAII. 9.tf W. H. BEERS INTERPRETER and TRANSLATOR (English and Hawaiian) poininissiou and Business Agent. Will Act as Administrator, Guardion and Executor. Rents and Hills Collected.. Office with I. E. Ra. Telephone 146 9 1CHTAHM8H1CO 183H. BISHOP & CO. Bankers. Honolulu - .,,,.,, Transact a General Hanking nud Ex- change busbies. Commercial and Traveller's Letters of j Creditissued, available In all the principal cities of the world. Special attention given to the business entrusted to us by our friends of the other Islauds, either us Deposits, Collections Iusurauce or requests tor Exchange, Notice to Creditors. United Stntca of America, ) , Territory of Ilnwnii, )',, In the Citcitit Court oftlie fourth Circuit. AT ClIAMIIHRS IN PROIJATK. Ill the tuntter of the Hstnle of JOHN D. KRAWEHANO, deceased. Notice is herchy given that the under-slgnc- d has been appointed Administra- trix oftlie estate of John D. Keawehano, nf IIilo, Hawaii, deceased. All creditors of said deceased arc here by .notified to present their claims, whether secured or unsecured, dulv verl ficd and with proper vouchers, if anv, to the undersigned, IU IIilo, Hawaii, within six months from the date of this notice. or such claims, if any, will be forever barred. MRS. GRACH DLACK PA, Administratrix IIilo, Hawaii, T. II.. May 3, 1904. F. S. Lymak & R. A. Lyman, Attorneys. 37-- 4 Hiio Railroad Co. Short Route to Volcano TIME TABLE In effect July 13, 1903. Passenger Trains, Except Sunday. A.M. P.M STATIONS A.M. P.M. 73: 3:00 11110 ar 9:30 6:00 7:SO 3:20 ..Olaa Mill...ar 9UO 5:30 8:00 3M Keaau ar 9:00 5:i5 4:00 .. Fcrndale...ar 845 5:00 8!3! 4:30 .Mount. V'w..lv 8:301 445 A.M. P.M. SUNDAY. A.M P.M. 8:00 3:30I lv, Hllp loyo 5:30 S:ao 3!5oar, ..Ulna Allll...ar IOHO 5HO 8:30; 4:oo!nr Keaau ar lOlOO 5:00 8:45 4:i5nr, .. I'crndnlc.ar 945 4:45 9:00 4:3o,ar. .Mount. V'w-l- v 9:30 4:30 A.M. FOR PUNA P.M. 10:30. lv IIilo ar 3:50 10:50;. nr...01aa Mill...ar 3:30 Ii:2o'.. ar..Pahoa 'linear 3:00 HMO.. ar Pahoa ar 3:40 I2:oo nr..lthou Jutic.ar 2:20 I2'.20 ar l'ttua lv 2:00 A.M Sunday. P.M. 9:00 lv IIilo ar 4:50 9:20 nr...Ulaa Mill...ar 4:3 10:05 ar..Pahoa June. 4:00 10:25 ar... rnlioa ar 3:40 IOI45 ar..Pahoa Juncar 0 arx Puna lv, Excursion tickets between all points are sold on Saturdays and Sundays, good returning, until th'e following' Monday noon. Commutation tickets, good for twenty-fiv- e rides between any two points, and thousand mile tickets are sold at very low rates. W. II. LAMBERT, Superintendent. WH, 6. IRWIN & CO., Ltd. Sugar Factors, Commission Agents. Sole Agents for National Cane Shredders, Baldwin Locomotives, Alex. Cross & Sons' Sugar Cane and Coffee Fertilizers. CRESCENT CITY BARBER SHOP CAItVALHO BROS;, Propriotors. The Old Reliable Stand is still doing WORK Razors honed, .Scissors and all edged tools perfectly ground. Satisfac- tion Guaranteed, iwoN'r TRENT & CO. HONOLULU. COMMISSION MERCHANTS ACENTS AND BROKERS Correspondence Solicited. ROBERT INNES LILLIE WHOLESALE COMMISSION MERCHANT AND BROKER. Exporter of Island Produce. liooks Kept and Audited. Room 1, Sprcckels' Block, IIilo Notick Neither the Musters nor Agent of vessels of the "Matsou Line" will be responsible for auv ' debts con- tracted by the crew. R. I GUARD, Agent. Hllb, April 16, 1901. J4- - LEGAL NOTICES. United States of America ) Territory of Hawaii J ss. In the Circuit Court of the Fourth Circuit. In Bankruptcy At Chamuuks, In the matter oftlie Estate of GEORGE M. DEACON. The etltiou of Finnic A. Medcalf, assignee of the nbove estate having been filed, wherein he asks that the Court may set a clay.for Hie hearing of this petition, that n notice may be published notifying all persons interested herein to appearand show cause, if any they hnve, why this petitioner should not he all further liability from his obligation as assignee nf the said estate, that your petitioner's accounts may be examined and approved. And that he may be discharged from further duties and that his bond maybe declared cancelled. Notice Is hereby given that Monday the 13th day of June, A. I). 1904, at 9 o'clock a. in. be and hereby is appoint- ed for bearing said petition "in the Court- room of this Court at IIilo, Hawaii. At which time and place nit persons con- cerned may appear and show cause, If any they hnve, why said petition should not be granted. IIilo, Hawaii, May 17, 1904, By the Court: 29.3 DANIEL PORTER, Clerk. Mortgagee's Notice of In- tention to Foreclose ami Sale. Notice is hereby given that under and by virtue of a power of sale contained in a certain mortgage made by Y. Hnuiadn, 01 IIilo, in Hie Island and Territory of Hawaii, to J. Iwasaki and II. Tnuetuoto of Olaa, Island mid Territory of Hawaii, dated December 17th. 1903, and recorded in the office of the Registrar of Convey- ances in Honolulu, T. IL. on the 21st day of December, 1903, iu volume 252 at pages 257 and 253 lliercol. and the said J. Iwasaki and II. Tnnemoto intend to fore- close snid mortgage for a breach of coudi-lio- n in said mortgage contained, t: The non payment of the principal sum nud interest, thereby secured, when the same became due nud payable. Notice is hereby also given that all and singular the property covered by s.iid mortgage will be sold nt public nuctiou at the front door of the Court House In the town of Hiio, Island nud Territory of Hawaii, on Tuesday, June 14th, 1904, at 11 o'ciocica. in. The property described in said mort gage nud which will be sold nt said time and place is described as follows: 1st. mat certain indenture or lease executed by the HIlo Sugar Company to said Y. Hatnada, bearing date June 9th, 109a, ior lot 11 l'uuauou, containing 1.20 ncrcs, together with the crop growing upon said lot. and. That certain indenture of lease executed by the Hiio Sugar Company to Fukuda Salkichi on the 16th day of June. 1898, for six ncres of lot I, and 2 J acres of lot 3 Puuahoa. Together with the crop growing upon said lot. 3rd. That certain indenture of lease executed by the IIilo Sugar Company to said Y. Hamndn on the nth day of No- vember, 1903, for lot 38 Punahoa 2nd, containing six acres, more or less, to- gether with the crop growing thereon. 4th. One hack, number 335. 5th. One black horse, 7 years old. 6th. One black horse, ten years old. Terms of sale, Cash. S. IWASAKI. II. TANEMOTO, Mortgagees. Wisk & Ross, Attorneys IIilo, May IS, 1904. 29.3 Hooliilm Hoopnii Molaki. Ke hoolaha ia oku nei, e like me kn matin kuai i hoike ia mnloko o kekahi molaki i haua ia e V. Haiuada o IIilo, Mokupuui ame Tcrctori o Hawaii ia J. Iwasaki ame H. Tnnemoto o Olaa, Moku,-pun- i ame Teretori o Hawaii, haua ia ma ka la 17 o Dekemnba, 1903, a i hookomo ia ma kc kecun o kn men kope Palnpala ma Honolulu, T. II. , ma ka In 21 o 1903, buke 352 ma ka aoao 257 ame 258. Nolaila, o J. Iwasaki ame II. Tanemoto kc uianao uci c lioopaa i ua molaki nei, no ka tihaki in o tin aclike iloko o ua mo- laki nei, oin hoi, kn uku ole ia mm o kc kumtt pan ame kn uku Pnuee i ka wn o kn uku ana. Nolniln, ke. hoolaha in nku uci o ua waiwai npau iloko o tin molaki uci c ku-dn- ia ana 111:1 ka puka mamunoka Hale Hookolokolo, tun ke town o IIilo, Moku- puui nine Teretori o Hawaii, ma ka Poa-iu- a, June 14, 1904, ma ka horn 11 o ke kitkahiakanui. O kn waiwai iloko o tin molaki nei n e kuai ia nku ana hoi peuei 110 ia: (1) Ke la palnpala hoolimalima i linun in e ka IIilo Sugnr Co. ia Y. Ilmnada, liana in ma kn In 9 o June, 1898, npann niiia helu 11 Puuahoa, noun ua Ekn he 1.20, me na ko c 11I11 nun maliiun o ua aiua nla. (2) Kc la palapaln hoolimalima i haua ia e ka IIilo .Sugar Co. ia l'ukuda Sal. kichi ma kn la 16 o June, 1898, npaun nir.u helu 1, noun na Ekn he6,atneapaun ainn helu 3, Punnhon 2, noun ua Ekn he 2 if, me na ko e itlu nun mnlunao ua man ainn nla, (3) Ke la palapaln hoolimaliiuui liaiut in c kn Hiio Sugar Co, iu V. llnmadn, ma ka la 11 o November, 1903, npana alun helu 38, Punnhon 2, noun ua Ekn he 6, oi nku paha cm! mai palm, me 1111 ko c tilu ana malunn o ua ainn ala, Hooknhi kun pio helu 235, Hookah! lio cleelc, 7 makahiki. Hooknhi Ho, eleele. 10 makuhiki. Me ke Dala kuike ke kuai. J. IWASAKI, II. TANEMOTO. Na Men Pan Molukl, Wish & Ross, Nn Loio. IIilo, May 18, 1903, UKANII .IUKV ItKI'OltT. Hn.o, Hawaii, May 24 1 904. Hon. Gilbert F. Little, Judge of 4U1 Judicial Circuit, Territory of Hawaii. Sir: We, the Grand Jury sc- - lected to serve during this May tenu 01 court, alter carelully con sidcring and thoroughly investigate ing the various cases brought to our attention, herewith submit our final report. In addition to the ten indict- ments already handed in, we find three others presented herewith. We investigated one case in which we found 110 bill. We believe that certain matters brought before us demand more than passing notice; we, therefore, present them under appropriate headings. LAND OPPICK. In.our investigation of the Land Department, we, ns Grand Jury- men, cannot too strongly condemn the methods iu vogue respecting the maimer in which that depart- ment has transacted public business, and with this end in view, we en- deavor to present such evidence to the public as will result iu n thor- ough overhauling of that depart- ment, and an entirely new system put in operation by which public funds will be deposited or held as such and not on personal deposit or hehi personally as in the past; also, that government laud patents iu which the applicant has complied with all conditions and made full payment will he issued more promptly; also that all government land agents handling public funds be $&.!u under bonds. We most severely censure the main office, located in Honolulu, for their lax methods itn the past, which will be .shown by a few of the cases and copies of two letters enumerated below. MONIES TAID ON RIGHT OP PUR- CHASE I.KASKS. On investigation, we find that Mr. R. D. Baldwin paid over the following amounts: April 11, 1904, $318 was paid over to G. H. Wil; liams, Sub-agei- 011 April 28, 1904, the sum of $4371.51 was paid to J. W. Pratt, Commissioner of Pub- lic Lands; on May 6th, the sum of $6.00 was paid to G. II. Williams, sub-age- making a total of $4695. 51. l liese amounts were paul to Ii. I D. Baldwin by twenty-fou- r individ uals as purchase price on Right of Purchase leases and dated as far back as September 28, 1900, and have beeri in his possession for over I three years and six months, it being j the custom to hold such monies as special deposits as shown in letters of Commissioner of Public Lands. On examination of witnesses and various applicants, we find, though 'several had deposited the amount of purchase price and had paid the rents at regular times for some reason or other, they had not fulfilled all conditions and iu some instances had done so very re- cently. Here the Grand Jury cite numer- - ous cases coining before them where monies were held on deposit for years and the applicants had complied with all requirements. Patents had not been issued and the 'money! never returned to rightful owners. One homesteader, having no advice to the contrary, believed-- ( he had title to his land and deeded tmrt of his lnf in rfion in flip Hnnrrl I of Kducatf on.! Continuiiur the f . m. adjusted immediately and that j new system adopted 111 the future as to the leases. IIALDWIN We find that he has accounted to the government for every dollar re- ceived. As per attached letter from his superior, he was personally responsible for any monies he may J have received for land patents, but his system of keeping records of these transactions has been very ir- - , regular and is certainly deserving 'of censure, although we are firmly ' convinced that the evil originated in the Honolulu office. ' Honolulu, Dec. 19, 1002 Mr. E. I). Ilnldwiii, Hiio, Hdwnii. Dear Sir: Mr. II. L. Shnw has ad- dressed me n letter iu re bis patent on urove up No. 164, Olna Lots. On your list you have n note ' "nothing paid" made it's hold the patent buck from sub- mission to the Governor. I beg to inform you that the land patent on same has been1 issued nud nwnils the information of payment due the government. Hold same oil personal deposit until you actually receive patent. Do this in all other cases, when you receive notice that patents have issued 011 any prove up application, then inform this oflice of thnt fact: upon rceeint of which we will submit same to Governor. You arc to be personally responsible for the deposit. Yours respectfully, E. S. 110YD, Commissioner of Public Lands. T WILLIAMS. The books of Chas. Williams, second laud district, show that he has kept a careful record and the attached letter shows his position regarding monies on deposit. Honolulu, Dec. 23, 1902. Chas. Williams, Est., Honokna, Hauiakua, Hawaii, Dear Sir- :- I beg to say that by direc- tion of the Commissioner of Public Lauds, you are respectfully requested not to col- lect nny purchase prices on Right of Pur- chase leases, until you hear from this office ns to whether the patents nre issued, and before we submit them to the Gover- nor you nre to first inform us that the lesseeof such has paid iu the put chase price iu full 011 deposit. You are to hold some on personal de- posit until you actually receive signed land patents before you remit same ns re- ceipts to this office. Respectfully youih, (Signed) SAM'L K. KAMAIOPILI. Clerk. If the Attorney General's De- partment iu Honolulu had taken, or will take, the same pains to ferret out evidence against offenders as has been done iu this instance by their representative here, the ring leaders would beassuredly punished. LIQUOR. There is no doubt in the minds oftlie members of this Grand Jury as to the extensive practice of sell- ing liquor without license and the great difficulty is in securing evi- dence. Therefore, we would re- commend to the proper authorities to renew'their efforts iu putting a stop to the illicit sale of liquors. There is yet 'another phase to this question, viz: retail liquor dealers who pay an annual license of $1,000 have a legal right to be protected. RAPE CASKS. Two cases in which indictments were brought relate to a most heinous crime. We believe severest punishment should be meted out to those beasts in human form who are guilty of rape or attempts there at, especially where the victims are yet children. JURY ROOM. We find that as far back as January, 1901, a report was made by a grand jury recommending the acquirement of suitable quarters for the use of grand ajid petit juries. As 110 no.tice, however, was taken of this recommendation, we would now bring this matter again to the attention of this Fourth Circuit Court. The present quarters, being situated on the principal thorough fare of the town, are conspicuous proper quarters be addedd the! "i "0US,e the sl,ecIal flitlinii ,.(nl l.rm.f l.l,W.7 llli.lV;ik Grand Jury sav- - Juncs- - We feel that great has)" $ "n been done these people and would Deputy Hint l,oS l.n,l ,,. has performed applicants the (Signed) K. N. HOMES, Foreman, and members of the Jury. KMIIKXXI.KSir.NT UAMl'ANT. Former Commissioner lloyd nutl Ills' Uhlor Clork Arrested. Honolulu, May 20. Edward S. Boyd, former Commissioner ofTub- - Lands, and Stcpiien Mahaulu. chief clerk of the Public Lauds partment, were arrested for em- bezzlement of public moneys. The shortage for which they are held accountable is from $10,000 to $20, 000, and possibly more. Mahaulu when confronted ad- mitted theie was shortage, saying it dated back from the time J. I. Brown was when K. S. waschief clerk and handled the receipts. The shortage ut that time was three thousand dollars, which he declared Boyd had taken, accord- ing to Malta ulu's statement, Boyd was constantly drawing on the funds giving his I. O. U.s and in- structing Mahaulu to pay his pri- vate bills, which the clerk said he did. Mahaulu turned over to the At- torney General vast number of I. O. U.s from Boyd and some from others, alsoa large number of Boyd's receipted private bills. These evi- dences, the clerk said, were of moneys which Boyd had never re- funded. Having admitted that the moneys given to Boyd were taken from Land office funds Mahaulu was placed under arrest. admitted that, he had taken money from time to time, but as- serted that he had always returned it. On the strength of his ad- mission, Mahaulu's statement and the Lnrrd office rccoids, Boyd was arrested. Attorney General Andrews swore out the warrants of arrest in both cases. Bail was fixed at $Io,ooo each ami they were released under bonds Cheyenne, Wyo., May 21. The loss from the floods in Wyoming and Colorado will reach millions of dollars. Liaoyang, May 24. The Rus- sians are preparing to retreat and threaten to burn Liaoyang and Mukden before retiring. Seoul, May 24. The Russians have burned five hundred houses at Hamheuug. Marauding bands are harrassing the rural population. Manila, P. I., May 23. The Moros at Malaberg attacked and massacred 53 Filipino employes who were working for the military government. London, May 22. It is reported that Viceroy Alexeiff hns tendered his resignation, giving ill health as his reason. The Czar has graci- ously declined the proffered resign- ation. Newchwang, May 20. Twenty thousand Japanese retreated on encountering 32,000 Russians 60 miles west of There have been minor clashes. Thej Cossacks are harassing the Japanese. St. Petersburg, May 23. The blowing up of the Russian cruiser St. Petersburg, Russia, May 21. General Stoessel,iu command oftlie Port Arthur garrison, made gal- - lant sortie against the Japanese forces. The Japanese were defeat- ed and driven back with loss of Russian loss was 16. The Russian soldiers bore' themselves with splen- did gallantry, the Japanese being unable to withstand the ami no secrecy can prevail as to Bogatyr of the Vladivostok squad-investigatio- or proceedings when; ro ,s Il0W ndmltedi The - witnesses are seen to go and comei ' from the quarters iu question. srlled and it was impossible to Furthermore, bedroom exists jnlsuveher. The guns were taken same, occupied by public officer, j from the ship before it was de-I- n view oftlie above conditions, we!stroyed. cannot too strontjly suggest that I to ! of"ilfr 1,, n ,, n.wl - (III IIJIU CA i ' l g " 1,em a injustice v' JZ-T- l ,,.. nil . Attoriiey-Geiiera- l' a be ,,, lie De a a i ' a a 1 a a ,1, peditious manner and has lelt 110,1,000 killed and wounded. The Wttzrs&&- - Grand Commissioner, Boyd Boyd Fengwangcheng.

Transcript of rj fiicr SxxlrMte i · 2015-06-01 · Notice is herchy given that the under-slgnc-d has been...

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v

fjlipfi

:r;..-r.r.-; w rj ui: P im iWliutHAWAII

1h Bent lor fiicr SxxlrMte WhatHILO

1h Best for

Is LJewL for Milo 1h I3et for Uw ' T f r

Vol. 9. HILO, HAWAII, HAWAIIAN ISLANDS, FRIDAY, MAY 27, 1904. No. 30.

I)C gUo (frvUuutCI'tJDUSItltl) KVHRV FRIDAY

Oppick, Kinii Strrkt, lltui, Hawaii.

Tkihunr IH.ock. ,

'

IIUp Tribune Publishing Company, Ltd.'l'ulillnhcr and Proprietor.

President C.C. Kknxkdv ,

H. E. KiciiAHiirlecretary'l'renniiter.. W. C. CitbK

Auditor A. K. SuttonDirector I. M. Thompson, 1. W. Mahbh

j

Ailvcrtitcmi-il- t jnaccomiianleil by ueclficuniructluiiH Ititcrtcd until uulerctl out.

AdvcrtleturnlsdlicoHtlmiid before expiration I

of specified period will be charged an If con-- 1

llnued for lull term. -- .

Address all communication) either to thelMitorialorlluMticM Department' of Tint IIilo '

1'RlnUNK PUIILIfllllNO COMPANV. I

Tnecolumnsol Tmc IIilo Thihunk are nlwno,ien to commuuicatious 911 nubjccts within thecope of the paper. To receive proper attention,each article mint be nlgncd by Its author. Thename, when desired, will be held confidential, i

TUB HILO TKIiiUNIi is not rvconsuie ior meopinions or statements of correspondents.

ATTOllXKYS-AT-L-A-

Wise & Ross,ATTORNKYS-AT-LA-

Will practice In oil Courts of the Territory, andthe Supreme Court of the United States.

Office: Tridunk Bijildino,BrldKeStieet, HILO, HAWAII

c. M. LKnLONIl W. II. SMITH

LeBlond & SmithATTORNEYS-AT-LA-

Hawaiian, Japanese, and Chinese IntcrpitUrs,and Notary Public in Office.

Office: Shvkranck Building,Opposite Cour House. HILO, HAWAII

J. CASTLK Ridoway Thos. C. Ridoway

Ridgway & RidgwayATTORNHYS-AT-LA-

tollcllors or Patents CJeneral Law PracticeHILO, HAWAII.

Notary Public in Office.UI'l'ICK : Walanuenue and nrlilge Streets

HEAL ESTATE, ETC.

I. JE. RAYATTORNKY AT -- LAWan NOTARY PUBLIC

Waiauuetiue St. HIlo, Hawaii

DENTISTS.

M. Wachs, D. D. S

DENTIST

Office Hours: 9 to ia, I to 4.HILO, HAWAII

Geo. H. WilliamsNOTARY PUBLICCONVEYANCING

In Laud Office

Walanuenue Street, HHoIS

A H. JACKSONFIRE AND --LIFE INSURANCE

AGENT FOR NEW YORK LIFE

WAIANUENUE STREET. - HILO

S. GRACE.Agent for

PACIFIC MUTUAL LIFE, FIREAND ACCIDENT

INSURANCE CO'Y OF CALIFORNIAIIILO, HAWAII. 9.tf

W. H. BEERSINTERPRETER andTRANSLATOR(English and Hawaiian)

poininissiou and Business Agent.Will Act as Administrator, Guardion andExecutor. Rents and Hills Collected..

Office with I. E. Ra. Telephone 146

9

1CHTAHM8H1CO 183H.

BISHOP & CO.Bankers.

Honolulu - .,,,.,,Transact a General Hanking nud Ex-

change busbies.

Commercial and Traveller's Letters of j

Creditissued, available In all the principalcities of the world.

Special attention given to the businessentrusted to us by our friends of the otherIslauds, either us Deposits, CollectionsIusurauce or requests tor Exchange,

Notice to Creditors.

United Stntca of America, ) ,Territory of Ilnwnii, )',,

In the Citcitit Court oftlie fourth Circuit.AT ClIAMIIHRS IN PROIJATK.

Ill the tuntter of the Hstnle of JOHN D.KRAWEHANO, deceased.

Notice is herchy given that the under-slgnc- d

has been appointed Administra-trix oftlie estate of John D. Keawehano,nf IIilo, Hawaii, deceased.

All creditors of said deceased arc hereby .notified to present their claims,whether secured or unsecured, dulv verlficd and with proper vouchers, if anv, tothe undersigned, IU IIilo, Hawaii, withinsix months from the date of this notice.or such claims, if any, will be foreverbarred.

MRS. GRACH DLACK PA,Administratrix

IIilo, Hawaii, T. II.. May 3, 1904.F. S. Lymak & R. A. Lyman,

Attorneys. 37-- 4

Hiio Railroad Co.Short Route to Volcano

TIME TABLEIn effect July 13, 1903.

Passenger Trains, Except Sunday.

A.M. P.M STATIONS A.M. P.M.73: 3:00 11110 ar 9:30 6:007:SO 3:20 ..Olaa Mill...ar 9UO 5:308:00 3M Keaau ar 9:00 5:i5

4:00 .. Fcrndale...ar 845 5:008!3! 4:30 .Mount. V'w..lv 8:301 445

A.M. P.M. SUNDAY. A.M P.M.8:00 3:30I lv, Hllp loyo 5:30S:ao 3!5oar, ..Ulna Allll...ar IOHO 5HO8:30; 4:oo!nr Keaau ar lOlOO 5:008:45 4:i5nr, .. I'crndnlc.ar 945 4:459:00 4:3o,ar. .Mount. V'w-l- v 9:30 4:30

A.M. FOR PUNA P.M.10:30. lv IIilo ar 3:5010:50;. nr...01aa Mill...ar 3:30Ii:2o'.. ar..Pahoa 'linear 3:00HMO.. ar Pahoa ar 3:40I2:oo nr..lthou Jutic.ar 2:20I2'.20 ar l'ttua lv 2:00

A.M Sunday. P.M.9:00 lv IIilo ar 4:509:20 nr...Ulaa Mill...ar 4:3

10:05 ar..Pahoa June. 4:0010:25 ar... rnlioa ar 3:40IOI45 ar..Pahoa Juncar 0

arx Puna lv,

Excursion tickets between all pointsare sold on Saturdays and Sundays, goodreturning, until th'e following' Mondaynoon.

Commutation tickets, good for twenty-fiv- e

rides between any two points, andthousand mile tickets are sold at verylow rates.

W. II. LAMBERT,Superintendent.

WH, 6. IRWIN & CO., Ltd.

Sugar Factors,Commission Agents.

Sole Agents for

National Cane Shredders,

Baldwin Locomotives,

Alex. Cross & Sons' Sugar Cane

and Coffee Fertilizers.

CRESCENT CITY

BARBER SHOP

CAItVALHO BROS;,Propriotors.

The Old Reliable Stand isstill doing

WORKRazors honed, .Scissors and all edged

tools perfectly ground. Satisfac-tion Guaranteed,

iwoN'r

TRENT & CO.HONOLULU.

COMMISSIONMERCHANTS

ACENTS AND BROKERS

Correspondence Solicited.

ROBERT INNES LILLIEWHOLESALE

COMMISSION MERCHANTAND BROKER.

Exporter of Island Produce.liooks Kept and Audited.

Room 1, Sprcckels' Block, IIilo

Notick Neither the Musters norAgent of vessels of the "Matsou Line"will be responsible for auv' debts con-tracted by the crew. R. I GUARD,Agent.

Hllb, April 16, 1901. J4- -

LEGAL NOTICES.

United States of America )

Territory of Hawaii Jss.

In the Circuit Court of the Fourth Circuit.In Bankruptcy At Chamuuks,

In the matter oftlie Estate of GEORGEM. DEACON.

The etltiou of Finnic A. Medcalf,assignee of the nbove estate having beenfiled, wherein he asks that the Courtmay set a clay.for Hie hearing of thispetition, that n notice may be publishednotifying all persons interested herein toappearand show cause, if any they hnve,why this petitioner should not he

all further liability fromhis obligation as assignee nf the saidestate, that your petitioner's accountsmay be examined and approved. Andthat he may be discharged from furtherduties and that his bond maybe declaredcancelled.

Notice Is hereby given that Mondaythe 13th day of June, A. I). 1904, at 9o'clock a. in. be and hereby is appoint-ed for bearing said petition "in the Court-room of this Court at IIilo, Hawaii. Atwhich time and place nit persons con-cerned may appear and show cause, Ifany they hnve, why said petition shouldnot be granted.

IIilo, Hawaii, May 17, 1904,By the Court:29.3 DANIEL PORTER, Clerk.

Mortgagee's Notice of In-tention to Foreclose

ami Sale.

Notice is hereby given that under andby virtue of a power of sale contained ina certain mortgage made by Y. Hnuiadn,01 IIilo, in Hie Island and Territory ofHawaii, to J. Iwasaki and II. Tnuetuotoof Olaa, Island mid Territory of Hawaii,dated December 17th. 1903, and recordedin the office of the Registrar of Convey-ances in Honolulu, T. IL. on the 21stday of December, 1903, iu volume 252 atpages 257 and 253 lliercol. and the said J.Iwasaki and II. Tnnemoto intend to fore-close snid mortgage for a breach of coudi-lio- n

in said mortgage contained, t:

The non payment of the principal sumnud interest, thereby secured, when thesame became due nud payable.

Notice is hereby also given that all andsingular the property covered by s.iidmortgage will be sold nt public nuctiouat the front door of the Court House Inthe town of Hiio, Island nud Territory ofHawaii, on Tuesday, June 14th, 1904, at11 o'ciocica. in.

The property described in said mortgage nud which will be sold nt said timeand place is described as follows:

1st. mat certain indenture or leaseexecuted by the HIlo Sugar Company tosaid Y. Hatnada, bearing date June 9th,109a, ior lot 11 l'uuauou, containing 1.20ncrcs, together with the crop growingupon said lot.

and. That certain indenture of leaseexecuted by the Hiio Sugar Company toFukuda Salkichi on the 16th day of June.1898, for six ncres of lot I, and 2 J acresof lot 3 Puuahoa. Together with thecrop growing upon said lot.

3rd. That certain indenture of leaseexecuted by the IIilo Sugar Company tosaid Y. Hamndn on the nth day of No-vember, 1903, for lot 38 Punahoa 2nd,containing six acres, more or less, to-

gether with the crop growing thereon.4th. One hack, number 335.5th. One black horse, 7 years old.6th. One black horse, ten years old.Terms of sale, Cash.

S. IWASAKI.II. TANEMOTO,

Mortgagees.Wisk & Ross,

AttorneysIIilo, May IS, 1904. 29.3

Hooliilm Hoopnii Molaki.

Ke hoolaha ia oku nei, e like me knmatin kuai i hoike ia mnloko o kekahimolaki i haua ia e V. Haiuada o IIilo,Mokupuui ame Tcrctori o Hawaii ia J.Iwasaki ame H. Tnnemoto o Olaa, Moku,-pun- i

ame Teretori o Hawaii, haua ia maka la 17 o Dekemnba, 1903, a i hookomoia ma kc kecun o kn men kope Palnpalama Honolulu, T. II. , ma ka In 21 o

1903, buke 352 ma ka aoao 257ame 258.

Nolaila, o J. Iwasaki ame II. Tanemotokc uianao uci c lioopaa i ua molaki nei,no ka tihaki in o tin aclike iloko o ua mo-laki nei, oin hoi, kn uku ole ia mm o kckumtt pan ame kn uku Pnuee i ka wn okn uku ana.

Nolniln, ke. hoolaha in nku uci o uawaiwai npau iloko o tin molaki uci c ku-dn-

ia ana 111:1 ka puka mamunoka HaleHookolokolo, tun ke town o IIilo, Moku-puui nine Teretori o Hawaii, ma ka Poa-iu- a,

June 14, 1904, ma ka horn 11 o kekitkahiakanui.

O kn waiwai iloko o tin molaki nei n ekuai ia nku ana hoi peuei 110 ia:

(1) Ke la palnpala hoolimalima i linunin e ka IIilo Sugnr Co. ia Y. Ilmnada,liana in ma kn In 9 o June, 1898, npannniiia helu 11 Puuahoa, noun ua Ekn he1.20, me na ko c 11I11 nun maliiun o uaaiua nla.

(2) Kc la palapaln hoolimalima i hauaia e ka IIilo .Sugar Co. ia l'ukuda Sal.kichi ma kn la 16 o June, 1898, npaunnir.u helu 1, noun na Ekn he6,atneapaunainn helu 3, Punnhon 2, noun ua Ekn he2 if, me na ko e itlu nun mnlunao ua manainn nla,

(3) Ke la palapaln hoolimaliiuui liaiutin c kn Hiio Sugar Co, iu V. llnmadn, maka la 11 o November, 1903, npana alunhelu 38, Punnhon 2, noun ua Ekn he 6, oinku paha cm! mai palm, me 1111 ko c tiluana malunn o ua ainn ala,

Hooknhi kun pio helu 235,Hookah! lio cleelc, 7 makahiki.Hooknhi Ho, eleele. 10 makuhiki.

Me ke Dala kuike ke kuai.J. IWASAKI,II. TANEMOTO.

Na Men Pan Molukl,Wish & Ross, Nn Loio.IIilo, May 18, 1903,

UKANII .IUKV ItKI'OltT.

Hn.o, Hawaii, May 24 1 904.Hon. Gilbert F. Little,

Judge of 4U1 Judicial Circuit,Territory of Hawaii.

Sir: We, the Grand Jury sc- -

lected to serve during this Maytenu 01 court, alter carelully considcring and thoroughly investigateing the various cases brought toour attention, herewith submit ourfinal report.

In addition to the ten indict-

ments already handed in, we findthree others presented herewith.

We investigated one case inwhich we found 110 bill.

We believe that certain mattersbrought before us demand morethan passing notice; we, therefore,present them under appropriateheadings.

LAND OPPICK.

In.our investigation of the LandDepartment, we, ns Grand Jury-men, cannot too strongly condemnthe methods iu vogue respectingthe maimer in which that depart-ment has transacted public business,and with this end in view, we en-

deavor to present such evidence tothe public as will result iu n thor-ough overhauling of that depart-ment, and an entirely new systemput in operation by which publicfunds will be deposited or held assuch and not on personal depositor hehi personally as in the past;also, that government laud patentsiu which the applicant has compliedwith all conditions and made fullpayment will he issued morepromptly; also that all governmentland agents handling public fundsbe $&.!u under bonds.

We most severely censure themain office, located in Honolulu, fortheir lax methods itn the past,which will be .shown by a few ofthe cases and copies of two lettersenumerated below.

MONIES TAID ON RIGHT OP PUR-

CHASE I.KASKS.

On investigation, we find thatMr. R. D. Baldwin paid over thefollowing amounts: April 11, 1904,$318 was paid over to G. H. Wil;liams, Sub-agei- 011 April 28, 1904,the sum of $4371.51 was paid toJ. W. Pratt, Commissioner of Pub-

lic Lands; on May 6th, the sum of$6.00 was paid to G. II. Williams,sub-age- making a total of $4695.

51. l liese amounts were paul to Ii.I D. Baldwin by twenty-fou- r individuals as purchase price on Right ofPurchase leases and dated as farback as September 28, 1900, andhave beeri in his possession for over

I three years and six months, it beingj the custom to hold such monies asspecial deposits as shown in lettersof Commissioner of Public Lands.On examination of witnesses andvarious applicants, we find, though

'several had deposited the amountof purchase price and had paid therents at regular times for somereason or other, they had notfulfilled all conditions and iu someinstances had done so very re-

cently.Here the Grand Jury cite numer- -

ous cases coining before them wheremonies were held on deposit foryears and the applicants hadcomplied with all requirements.Patents had not been issued and the

'money! never returned to rightfulowners. One homesteader, havingno advice to the contrary, believed-- (

he had title to his land and deededtmrt of his lnf in rfion in flip Hnnrrl

I of Kducatf on.! Continuiiur the

f . m.adjusted immediately and that j

new system adopted 111 the futureas to the

leases.

IIALDWIN

We find that he has accounted to

the government for every dollar re-

ceived. As per attached letterfrom his superior, he was personallyresponsible for any monies he may

J have received for land patents, buthis system of keeping records ofthese transactions has been very ir- -

, regular and is certainly deserving'of censure, although we are firmly'

convinced that the evil originatedin the Honolulu office.

' Honolulu, Dec. 19, 1002Mr. E. I). Ilnldwiii,

Hiio, Hdwnii.Dear Sir: Mr. II. L. Shnw has ad-

dressed me n letter iu re bis patent onurove up No. 164, Olna Lots. On yourlist you have n note ' "nothing paid"made it's hold the patent buck from sub-mission to the Governor. I beg to informyou that the land patent on same hasbeen1 issued nud nwnils the informationof payment due the government. Holdsame oil personal deposit until youactually receive patent. Do this in allother cases, when you receive noticethat patents have issued 011 any proveup application, then inform this oflice ofthnt fact: upon rceeint of which we willsubmit same to Governor. You arc to bepersonally responsible for the deposit.

Yours respectfully,E. S. 110YD,

Commissioner of Public Lands.T WILLIAMS.

The books of Chas. Williams,second laud district,

show that he has kept a carefulrecord and the attached letter showshis position regarding monies ondeposit.

Honolulu, Dec. 23, 1902.Chas. Williams, Est.,

Honokna, Hauiakua, Hawaii,Dear Sir- :- I beg to say that by direc-

tion of the Commissioner of Public Lauds,you are respectfully requested not to col-lect nny purchase prices on Right of Pur-chase leases, until you hear from thisoffice ns to whether the patents nre issued,and before we submit them to the Gover-nor you nre to first inform us that thelesseeof such has paid iu the put chaseprice iu full 011 deposit.

You are to hold some on personal de-posit until you actually receive signedland patents before you remit same ns re-

ceipts to this office.Respectfully youih,

(Signed) SAM'L K. KAMAIOPILI.Clerk.

If the Attorney General's De-

partment iu Honolulu had taken,or will take, the same pains to ferretout evidence against offenders ashas been done iu this instance bytheir representative here, the ringleaders would beassuredly punished.

LIQUOR.

There is no doubt in the mindsoftlie members of this Grand Juryas to the extensive practice of sell-

ing liquor without license and thegreat difficulty is in securing evi-

dence. Therefore, we would re-

commend to the proper authoritiesto renew'their efforts iu putting astop to the illicit sale of liquors.There is yet 'another phase to thisquestion, viz: retail liquor dealerswho pay an annual license of $1,000have a legal right to be protected.

RAPE CASKS.

Two cases in which indictmentswere brought relate to a mostheinous crime. We believe severestpunishment should be meted out tothose beasts in human form whoare guilty of rape or attempts thereat, especially where the victims areyet children.

JURY ROOM.

We find that as far back asJanuary, 1901, a report was madeby a grand jury recommending theacquirement of suitable quarters forthe use of grand ajid petit juries.As 110 no.tice, however, was takenof this recommendation, we wouldnow bring this matter again to theattention of this Fourth CircuitCourt. The present quarters, beingsituated on the principal thoroughfare of the town, are conspicuous

proper quarters be addedd the!

"i "0US,e the sl,ecIal

flitlinii ,.(nl l.rm.fl.l,W.7 llli.lV;ik

Grand Jury sav- - Juncs- -

We feel that great has)" $ "nbeen done these people and would Deputy

Hint l,oS l.n,l ,,. has performed

applicantsthe

(Signed) K. N. HOMES, Foreman,and members of theJury.

KMIIKXXI.KSir.NT UAMl'ANT.

Former Commissioner lloyd nutl Ills'Uhlor Clork Arrested.

Honolulu, May 20. Edward S.Boyd, former Commissioner ofTub- -

Lands, and Stcpiien Mahaulu.chief clerk of the Public Laudspartment, were arrested for em-

bezzlement of public moneys. Theshortage for which they are heldaccountable is from $10,000 to $20,000, and possibly more.

Mahaulu when confronted ad-

mitted theie was shortage, sayingit dated back from the time J. I.Brown was when K.S. waschief clerk and handledthe receipts.

The shortage ut that time wasthree thousand dollars, which hedeclared Boyd had taken, accord-ing to Malta ulu's statement, Boydwas constantly drawing on thefunds giving his I. O. U.s and in-

structing Mahaulu to pay his pri-

vate bills, which the clerk said hedid.

Mahaulu turned over to the At-

torney General vast number of I.O. U.s from Boyd and some fromothers, alsoa large number of Boyd'sreceipted private bills. These evi-

dences, the clerk said, were ofmoneys which Boyd had never re-

funded.Having admitted that the moneys

given to Boyd were taken fromLand office funds Mahaulu wasplaced under arrest.

admitted that, he had takenmoney from time to time, but as-

serted that he had always returnedit. On the strength of his ad-

mission, Mahaulu's statement andthe Lnrrd office rccoids, Boyd wasarrested.

Attorney General Andrews sworeout the warrants of arrest in bothcases.

Bail was fixed at $Io,ooo eachami they were released under bonds

Cheyenne, Wyo., May 21. Theloss from the floods in Wyomingand Colorado will reach millions ofdollars.

Liaoyang, May 24. The Rus-

sians are preparing to retreat andthreaten to burn Liaoyang andMukden before retiring.

Seoul, May 24. The Russianshave burned five hundred housesat Hamheuug. Marauding bandsare harrassing the rural population.

Manila, P. I., May 23. TheMoros at Malaberg attacked andmassacred 53 Filipino employeswho were working for the militarygovernment.

London, May 22. It is reportedthat Viceroy Alexeiff hns tenderedhis resignation, giving ill health ashis reason. The Czar has graci-

ously declined the proffered resign-ation.

Newchwang, May 20. Twentythousand Japanese retreated onencountering 32,000 Russians 60miles west ofThere have been minor clashes.Thej Cossacks are harassing theJapanese.

St. Petersburg, May 23. Theblowing up of the Russian cruiser

St. Petersburg, Russia, May 21.General Stoessel,iu command oftliePort Arthur garrison, made gal- -

lant sortie against the Japaneseforces. The Japanese were defeat-ed and driven back with loss of

Russian loss was 16. The Russiansoldiers bore' themselves with splen-

did gallantry, the Japanese beingunable to withstand the

ami no secrecy can prevail as to Bogatyr of the Vladivostok squad-investigatio-

or proceedings when; ro ,s Il0W ndmltedi The -

witnesses are seen to go and comei 'from the quarters iu question. srlled and it was impossible toFurthermore, bedroom exists jnlsuveher. The guns were takensame, occupied by public officer, j from the ship before it was de-I- n

view oftlie above conditions, we!stroyed.cannot too strontjly suggest that I

to! of"ilfr

1,, n ,, n.wl- (III IIJIU CA

i ' l g " 1,em

a injusticev'

JZ-T-l

,,.. nil .Attoriiey-Geiiera- l'

abe

,,,

lieDe

a

a

i

'

a

a

1

aa

,1,peditious manner and has lelt 110,1,000 killed and wounded. The

Wttzrs&&- -Grand

Commissioner,Boyd

Boyd

Fengwangcheng.

RSI

381

timfP'

JlC SftilO VUUUtcJr . . . -- . . . I

I'UI DAY, MAY 27,

I

F.ntctcdntthc Postoffice at Hilo, Hit-wnl- l,I

ns second-dns- s nmttcr

ruiit.iRiir.n kvhrv pkiuay.

W. C. Cook - - Editor

PUBLIC OFFICE A PUBLIC TRUST

The teport of the Grand Juryappearing in another column of this '

issue is the result of an exhaustive '

"and painstaking investigation byJICfl ,, (.onrt rlll(,8 out 11

that body into Land Office methods .

UrW (.rlmlnn, ,, t.,Tn ,,,,.which have been permuted to remain unchecked in that department

..., MM... f, 1 1i.n ntv.iwi j;u.-)- , 1 uv; vxi.iuii Ji"J l'rpronched their duty fearlessly andininnrli.illv. determined lo shieldnot the cuilty nor condemn lhcinnocent. They were not movedby any delicate qualms of conscienceor sentiment in their deliberationsand spared no public official in theirsearching scrutiny for the truth,The disclosures made, which whilenot amounting perhaps to a criminaloffense on the part of officials, con-

firms what the Tkiiiunh has here-

tofore asserted, that the seat of thedisease lay near the principal office

at Honolulu. The latest discoveryof alleged defalcations hi the formeradministration of the Land Office

at Honolulu only corroborates thisstatement and the Grand Jury'sfindings. The Grand Jury is a

safety check, when properly ap-

plied, against official irregularity ormalfeasance in office, and if the in-

dictments returned be not sustainedby a trial of the fuels in each case,the result to the community and tothe public service will be of incal-

culable benefit. In the languageof a great statesman, now departed,"a public office is a public trust,"and government officials in theTerritory of Hawaii should bemade to realize their obligations todo right and to avoid wrong in

their public and private conduct.

CHANGE THE SYSTEM.

As discoveries of embezzlementof public funds continue to bemade, the necessity of placing underheavy bonds all public officials whohandle monies becomes more ap-

parent. There is no question thatthe fear of prosecution by bondingcorporations or private parties, hasa restraining influence upon a

public accountant who has tempta-tion thrown in his way. Onetrouble with the present disorgan-ized form of government of Hawaiiis, that there are too many tempta-tions created by having too manyreceiving agents permitted tomingle public funds with their own.The system of bookkeeping is like--

wise radically wrong, which en-

ables a crooked official to play fastand loose with public funds withoutincurring detection by the perfunc-tory examinations made from timeto time by the Auditor's Office.

Douhting the sincerity of hisprofessions of faith and expressingthe hope that he may never becomea member of that organization, G.1. Affonso, corresponding secretaryof the Young Aleut- - RepublicanClub arraigns J. U. Smith in an

open letter to the Advertiser. Thewily politician comes back withcounter-charge- s of uurepublicauismon the part of Young Republicanleaders, some of whom he claimsare more enthusiastic Home Rulersthan himself.

Candidate Charles I. Parsonsin explanation of the Bulletin in-

terview lifts his voice and says: "Inever said any such thing." Inthe meantime, as he was informedno recommendations will be madeuntil Governor Carter has conferredwith the President, the newly-converte- d

disciple of republicanism isbusily wearing away places for

patches on the "anxious seat."

Tin- - I. O. U. habit seems to be

growing, alas and alack, and whenthe authors are called upon to ex-

plain, they arc alas sadly lacking.

Not to be outdone by Hilo inLand Office achievements, Hono- -

lulu unearths a greater sensationin the laud business.

THE WEEKLY HILO TUtllbNE, HIJ.O. HAWAII, FRIDAY, MAY

A '". of Inbor which thus furhns been neglected by the Hoard of

of

IiL-ulth-, is tlieprevnleiiey ofmid tunny dogs which nrc

permitted to run loose about thestreets. The sight of dugs coveredwith ugly sores, impeding pedest-rians ns they wnlk along the street,is sickening ntnl disgusting. Al-

lowing such diseased animals torun the streets endangers not onlyevery family pet but likewise is u

menace to the public health.

CIIIUU1T (!UUKT BUSY.

After being in session nearly tendays, the Grand Jury submitted itsreport to Judge Little Tuesdaynight. Thcv gave an exhaustive

'report of their itivestigntions in theLand Office difficulties, recommendgreater vigilence in the detec ion ofillegal liquor selling and the addi-

tion to the Hilo court house ofsuitable quarters for petit and grandjuries. Ten indictments were re-

turned, three of which were placedon the secret file, until the personsindicted could be apprehended. Anindictment was brought in againstWm, Ragsdale Kamanao, formerlyemployed in the local land office,

for the embezzlement of publicfunds amounting to $32.50. Thieecounts are alleged, he being chargedwith having taken on Oct. 23, 1903,$7.50, on Oct. 25th, $12.50 and on

Jan. 23, 1904, $12.50, the transactions occurring at Pahoa, Puna.Mr. Ragsdale made a plea of "notguilty" and was released on his ownrecognizance.

Saka Moromoto, charged withselling liquor without a license, onappeal from district court, a nolleprosequi was entered, and subse-

quently an indictment returned for

the same offense. On a plea qfguilty, Court suspended sentencefor thirteen months.

Ben H. Hrown changed his pleato "guilty" in the two indictmentsfor embezzlement returned againsthim last February, and the Courtfined the defendant $20 and costsof prosecution. In explanation ofthe lenient sentence, the Courtcharged the motive of prosecutionto political reasons.

In the case of Oswald Waikalai,a Puna school teacher, indicted forassault and battery, having beatena pupil, the defendant was foundguilty by a jury and fined $100,the maximum penalty.

In the two cases of assault on apolice officer, growing out of theaffray at Kalapana, the appealswere dismissed, and the indictments against the defendants JohnKuokoa, Kahue Kaiwi and PeterKanakaole, nolle prosequied.

Tsutsumi, Japanese charged withassault with deadly weapon, pleadguilty and was sentenced to pay $50and costs.

A demurrer to the indictmentagainst Ah Kee, charged withattempting to bribe a police officer,was sustained and a new indictmentimmediately returned by the GrandJury.

White Sandy, a Porto Ricau,churned with abduction, was civena jury trial aml fouml gllilty asPiinrPli

In the "kahuna" case againstKanaloa, defendant plead "notguilty" and bail fixed at $100.

The suit for $30,000 damagesagainst II, S. Overend and K. deSilva brought by Win. Kerandezand wife, went over until next termof court.

The assumpsit suit of Whitehouse& Hawxhurst vs. Benton at al.went over pending suit for anaccounting in the Equity Court

The greater part ol Thursdaywas spent in trying to get a jury inthe case of Antone Joaquin, aliasRulia, a hack driver, charged withassault upon a (female under 14vears of age. The case promisesto be a hard contested trial.

All ol the sugar plantations nlongline aie contributing to the JapaneseRed Cross Society. Contributions aregratuitous and are being received byMrs. Miki Saito, wife of the JapaneseConsul, nt Honolulu.

"'To Shippers.

All freight sent to ships by our launcheswill be charged to shippers unless nccoui- -

J'.V'L0' IL.TIitU'H nler rr'" '''T0''1''3uf R. A. LUCAS & CO

hentio n. txMitdhlllt)'.MKMOKtAt. IlAV,

In memory of "our boys lit blue,"Of warriors bold unci patriots true,Wr meet niul speak today.All honor to those men who dii-il- ,

He heard tlielr praise on every side,T either ocean's shore.UemetnbcriiiK them, forget wc notThe liberty and Union boughtBy shedding or their blood.But let Memorial Day recallThe precious price paid for It nil,With heartfelt thanks to Cod.

Pittsburg Chronicle Telegraph!

The nvidlty with which certain staidbachelors nbout Hilo nrc buying house-

hold furniture nt recent miction mles,suggests early matrimonial possibilities.

Hllo's gourmet is ngainHilo's restnurnnteur and the Intter standsthe treatment most ndmirnbly.

Pnlfrey, the powerful, of l'ap.ialoa, isshedding his hnir to such an extent thathis most intimate friends tire becomingalarmed regarding his future nud haveadvised n trip to the coast ns n remedy.

Owing to the prcvnlcncy of suicide inJapan by jumping into certain water-falls, the Japanese government hnserected big sign boards prohibitingsuch rash acts nnd imposing n severepenalty upon the offending victims.

Two plantation magnates fled fromtown Inst week when it wns intimatedthat Railroad Ilcrg was about to return.

It is rumored that K. I). Lance ofHoiioknii 1ms purchased n large supply ofKxtrn Dry wherewith to celebrate hisdiscovery of waters of lesser value.

A woman who knows how to talk nmlhow to keep still, may, if she has infinitetact, intelligence, poise, reserve pov cr,brains nml courage, become n goodlistener. Puck.

The curtailing or teachers' snlaries isenough to drive many of the femininecontingent thus employed to matrimony.

Following the proverbial maxim ofthe feline to return to his native haunts,"Mac came back."

Mr. William Yates, the Ookala schoolteacher, is the "David Harum" of a,

when .t comes to n horsctrade.His friends believe that his recent suc-

cess among the equinac may lead to a"hitch" elsewhere.

The ingredients for a cocktail "a la St.Croix" arc ns follows: A sufficientquantity of vinegar, tabasco nnd Worces-tershire sauce, some whiskey, gin, ver-

mouth nnd of "high life," two drops.

There will be no more "bob-tnilcd- "

grand juries in island courts if'jftdgeDe Bolt's decision on the qualificationsof jurors amounts to anything.

Some statesmen go into politics toreform political conditions, others forjudicial honors which tuny follow, whileothers again go into politics well, merelyto be in politics.

The rotund figures of seme people belietheir prowess as sprinters and athletes.The story goes that the well knownbohemian about town, nbout to departfor the coast, was formerly an unbeatenfeatherweight boxer in Switzerland, anda few weeks ago while training in Hauia--

kua, wagered a test against a companionon horseback to outclimb the latter in n

race up the mountain side. Berg has notovertaken the otlfer fellow yet.

HIM) VISITOR PLK.ISKIJ.

Agreeably Surprised With Inter-Islan- d

Steamer Service.

Honolulu, May 20. S. 11. P.Knox, of Santa Barbara, Cal., abrother of U. S. Attorney GeneralPhilander B. Knox, has been in theIslands now for about three weeksand has formed some decided impressions ol the country. Mr.

.Kn)X hnd , ftour to the Island of Hawaii andthe first thing he said was to ex-

press his satisfaction with theIsland steamer service and thecourtesies extended to passengersboth on the Mauua Ioa and theKinau. He visited the Volcanoand Hilo and said one of the con-

spicuous sides of a sojourn in theIslands is the uniform pleasanttreatment accorded travellers by ;

;

people of all classes.

"I was most agreeably disap-

pointed," said Mr. Knox, "in yourisland steamer service. In the oldbooks there is so much said of thehardships of the traveller in Islandseas, of stormy channels and laud- -

was Happily astomsticU to luul allthese dangers absent. I believevllr prnmr.f:nn rv,n;, d.,,,.1,1".Sive this matter prominence 1.1 the

1 a ii 1 e j '

auverusing literature 01 tue isianus.1.... . ... . ...1 lie people in tne states wno naveread anything of the Islands have'erroneous ideas, gathered frombooks, or if they have not readthese, they are apprehensive fromthe lack of information."

theiinKS s.Urf tsed boa,s- - that J

TIIK "NAUIItllt MA.V AltltlVKS.j

The Apostle nl" Vrvv Air 11 ml SightLiving Appears In Hilo,

Standing or sitting on the streetcurbs, the motley figure of thej"nachur man" attracted a large!throng of spectators, nud whereverhe went, an enthusiastic nnd curi-

ous crowd followed after. Clad in ,

a light undershirt, open and pulleddown about the neck, a d a pair ofblue pantaloons rolled up above hisknees, this advocate of living outof doors wandered about Hilo'sstreets all day Thursday, seeingwhatever sights there was to beseen and delivering impromtu lee- -

tines on health at frequent intervals.E. W. Darling, who styles himselfas the "nachur man," is a man ofmedium height, sturdy and brownskinned by exposure to tropical airand sun. With blue eyes nnd pleas-

ant features, overtopped with ashock of yellow hair and wearing aflowing beard, Darling presents aninteresting countenance.

He is well educated, speakinggrammatically and intelligently onthe subject nearest his heart, whichis living close to nature. He ismakinga sight seeing tourof Hawaii,having made the complete circuit inthree weeks. He uses a bicyclewhere he can, but finds the road.stoo hilly or rough for comfort, andhas trudged barefoot most of theway pushing the wheel before him. '

Landing at Kukuihnele May 5, he.went through Waimea, Kona, Kau,and came to Hilo via the volcano I

House He declares lie did notfind the temperature at the crateruncomfortable in his light raiment,and only after considerable persuasion on Manager Bidgood's .part, l

did he consent to occupy n room inthe hotel. He slept with doors and'windows open, which he regarded I

ns nearly in the open air as possi-- 1

ble under the circumstances. At '

Olaa he delivered a lecture to alarge crowd on "Good Health"Wednesday night and repeated hisremarks at the Hilo Hotel groundslast evening after the band concert.He leaves by the Kinau thismorning.

BY AUTHORITY.EXECUTIVE NOTICE.

Monday, May 30th, Decoration Day,being a Legal Holiday, the Governor di-

rects that all public offices he closed.A. L. C. ATKINSON,

Secretary of Hawaii.Capitol, Honolulu, May IS, 1904. 30--

EXECUTIVE NOTICE.

During the absence of the Governorfrom the Territory, the Secretary of theTerritory will act as Governor.

A. h. C. ATKINSON,Secretary of Hawaii.

Capitol, Honolulu, May 21, 1904. 30-- 1

SEALED TENDERS.

Sealed Tenders will be received by theundersigned up to Thursday, 12 m, June2, 1904, for the filling in of the I'.irk siteon Front street.

Filling to be of sand or earth, nnd toconform to grade ns given by the PublicWorks Department. Ilids to give priceper cubic yard.

Amount to be filled 14,000 cubic yards,more or less.

1?. K. RICHARDS,Agent Public Works Department, Hilo.

LEGAL NOTICES.

United Stntes of America, )

Territory of Hawaii, J"'In the Circuit Court, of the Fourth Circuit.

At CiiAMiii'.ns In Proiiatk.In the matter of the Kstnte of F.KAF.KA

of Kiiluoa, deceased.PETITION FOR ALLOWANCE OF

ACCOUNTS AND FINAL DIS-

CHARGE.The Petition of Uila Waiulee administ-

rator of the Estate ol Ff kacku deceased,having been fded, wherein he nsks hisaccounts be examined and annroved. andthat a final Order be made of distributionof the property remaining in his hands totue persons uiereto entitled, and dis-charging him from all further responsi-bility as such administrator.

It is ordered, that Tuesday the 28thday of June 1904 at nine o'clock A.M.,is the time set for hearing of the said pet-ition in the Court room of the FourthCircuit Court nt South Hilo, Hawaii, atwhich lime and place nil persons con-cerned may appear und show cause if anythey huve, why the prayer of the pet-ition should not be granted.

Hilo, Hawaii, May 18, 1904.lly the Court:

DANIEL PORTER, Clerk.Hy Chas. Hitchcock, Deputy Clerk.

F. S. J.YMAN,Attorney for Petitioner. 29-- 4

- -

ALL KINDS OF

DM Dprn GOODSCOODYEAR RUBBER CO.

R. H. PEASE, President,

SAN FRANCISCO, CAL., U. S, A.

1904. y

San Francisco Prices Prevail

AJ--L NEW STOCKJUST RECEIVED:

NOBBY NECKWEAR

Plain and Fancy Negligee ShirtsStraw Hats, Latest Spring Styles

Panama Hats, Reasonable PricesSteamer Trunks, All Sizes

I Our Motto: 'QUICK SALES,, SMALL PROFITS."

I The Globe Clothing Co.I WAIANUENUE STREETI PEACOCK BLOCK

HILO MERCANTILE CO.LIMITED

DEALERS

Plantation Supplies

FOR

FlourCement

Kutter" Knives and Hoes

Varnish WorksStove Co.

OF ALL

.ACENTS

Port CostaColden GateSimmons'

" KeenSan Francisco

PioneerPeninsular

P. O. Box 94Tolophonos

A FULL4A4B

Complete

AND

IlOX

IN

DESCRIPTIONS

Hilo Wine and Liquor Co.

Hilo Saloon

Choicest American and European Wines, Beers, Whiskies,Gins, Brandies, Liquors, Etc.

J. S. CANARIO, Manager.

Line of Groceries

WholesaleP. O. 396Tolophono 90Front Near Church St.

RetailP. O. Box 396Tolophono 41

Near Front St.

FACTORY :

HONOLULU IwileiIleyoud Prison

THE HAWAIIAN FERTILIZER CO., Ltd.

SPECIAL FERTILIZER

For Cane, Vegetable and Banana Fields.Soil Analysis Mnile and Fertilizer I'urnUhed Suitable to Soil, Climate and Crop

FOR THE LAND'S SAKE USE FERTILIZERS I

Sulphate of Ammonium Nitrate of SodaBono Moal H. C. Phosphates

Sulphato of Potash Ground Coral

Fertilizers for sale in large or small ciu.mtitles. Fertilize your lawns with ourSpecial I.uwn Fertilizer.

OFFICR:Drewer block. P. O. 767,

Queen Street

C. M. COOKR, President. K.K. F. HISIIOP, Treasurer. J.G. II. ROllF.RTSON, Auditor V.

AND

Box

King

At

OUR

I). THNNF.Y. Vice-Preside-

WATF.KHOUSH, Secretary.M. AI.KXANDF.K, C. II. ATHEKTON

Dlisctors,

RDSIrt

Iw

' Si

fill

' H

B

mil

vi5dtj!&.w33!niVBHHSRKNEAn'

vMfi llMIWWlllWMWtWWMWWW

&lffijffiW4ffiytttffi

r

I

'J

' t

w

A llttlo vanity Is n good thing.Kvory woman should tiy, nt nil times,to look bur very bust. BiitUceitnuilymust bo illsenuiiigl'ig to hno ottrmlrriir toll you that ytntr hair Is jjioyvrlioti you am only thirty or llftyldray h.tlr adds twenty years li tlioago. Why not look as young us youaro, or oven joungor?

Ayer's Hair VigorAlways rostorcs color to gray hair,always. Brings back all thu (loop,rich, beautiful color of early youth.

Perhaps tho color of your hulrsults,but you aro losing tho hair Itself. Younro threatened with thin hair, roughlialr, seraggly hair. Your hair scornsvroak, not well uouiishod. Then glvoit Ayor's Hair Vigor, a trim hair-foo- d.

It stops falling hair, makestho hair grow, and kcops it soft andsilky.Prtpirtd fcjr Dr. J. C. Ajer Co., Lowell, Mill., U.S.A.

For Sale by HILO DRUG COMPANY

OGeanicSS Company

Time TableThe steamers of this line will ar-

rive and leave this port as here-

under:

FROM SAN FRANCISCO.Alameda May 20Sonoma June 1

Alameda June 10

Ventura June 22

Alameda July 1

Sierra July 13Alameda July 22Sonoma August 8

Alameda ;. ...August 12

Ventura August 24Alameda September 2

FOR SAN FRANCISCO.Alameda , May 25Ventura May 31

Alameda June 15

Sierra June 21

Alameda July 8

Sonoma July 12

Alameda July 27

Ventura August 2

Alameda August 17

Sierra August 23

Alameda September 7

In connection with the sailing of theabove steamers the agents are prepared toissue, to intending passengers CouponThrough Tickets by any railroadfrom San Francisco to all points in theUnited States, and from New York by

an steamship Hue to all European ports.For further particulars apply to

Wm. G. Irwin & Co.LIMITED

General Agents Oceanic S.S. Co.

Union Barber Shop.GARCIA & CANARIO, Props.

Ule Shaoc, gut fair and Shampoo

at Ect'Eioe Rates.

We also take particular pains with Chil-

dren's Haircutting.

Union Building,. Wai anueuue St

PLANTERS' LINEOF

SAILING VESSELS

Direct Line between SAN FRANCISCOAND HILO.

llaik .St. L'litlinrliie, Capt. SaundersHark Amy Tumor, Capt. Warlandlliirk Martini Davis, Capt. McAllman

QUICK DISPATCH

For freight and passage apply to

WELCH & CO., Agents, San FranciscoC. BREWER & CO., Ltd., Agents,

Honolulu, or

H. Hackfeld &Co., Ltd.AI1KNTS, 1111,0.

White

Horse

TlIK WEttKtY HILO VRIBUNK, H1L0, HAWAII 1'RIDAY, MAY 37 1904,.. .. ... . 1 .. ,"--

! Id he 'BlazedTrailCopyright, 1902, by

.. ,t. ,t, A ,f . J. - -fTTTTT VT 4W I"Flrtiey do, my son. When old Daly's '

hand gets ucnr northing it cramps. I .

don't know how tho old man coino tomnko such n contrnc', but ho did. Re-

sult Is bo's out bis expenses and time."Tho exceptionally early break up of

tho spring, combined with tho factthat owing to the scries of Incidents ,

niui accidents already sketched the ac-

tual cutting and skidding bad fallen sofar behind, caught Iladwny unawares.Hu saw tho rollways breaking outwhile bis teams were still hauling Intho woods. In order to deliver to thomouth of the Cass branch tho 3.000.000already banked ho was forced to drop I

everything else and attend strictly to ,

tho drive. This left still, ns has been'

stated, a million and n half on skid- -

ways, which Radwny know ho wouldbe unable to get out that year.

In splto of tho jobber's certainty thathis claim was thus nunultcd and thatho might ns well abandon tbo enter-prise entirely for nil he would over getoiit(of It, bo finished tho "drive" con-scientiously and saved to the companythe logs nlrcndy banked. Then bo hadInterviewed Daly. The latter refusedto pay him one cent.

Tho next dny Radway and Thorpowalked tho ton miles of tho river trailtogether, while the teamsters and tbo

cook drove down the five teams. Un-

der the Influence of the solitude nnd acertnin sympathy which Thorpe mani-fested Radwny talked a very little.

"I got behind; that's all there is toIt," ho said. "I bit off more than I

could chew."Thorpe noticed a break In the man's

voice nnd, glancing suddenly towardhim, was astounded to catch his eyesbrimming with tears. Radway per-ceived tho surprise.

"You know when I left Christmas?"ho naked.

"Yes.""The boys thought It wns a mighty

poor rig my leaving that way."lie paused again In evident expecta-

tion of a reply. Again Thorpe was si-

lent."Didn't they?" Radway Insisted."Yes, they did," answered Thorpe.The older man sighed. "I thought

60," he welit on. "Well, I didn't go tospend Christmas. I went because Jim-my brought me a telegram that Lldawas sick with diphtheria. I sat upnights with her for eleven days."

"So bud after effects, 1 hope?" In-

quired Thorpe."Sim died," said Radway simply.

I

CHAPTER IX.

'RTI ADWAY," said he suddenly,I If I "l nccf 'money, and I need It

1 ,nU l think you ought togot something out of this Job

of the M. & D. not much, but some-thing. Will you glvo mo n shnro ofwhat I can collect from them?''

"Sure!" agreed the Jobber readily,with a laugh. "Sure! But you won'tgot anything. I'll give you 10 per centquick!"

"Good enough!" cried Thorpe. "Now,when we get to town I wnnt your pow-er of attorney and u few figures, afterwhich I will not bother you again."

The next dny the young man calledfor the second time nt the little redpainted ofllec under the shadow of themill and' for tho second time stood be-

fore tho bulky power of the Juniormember of the firm.

"Well, young man, whnt can I do foryou?" linked the Intter.

"I have been Informed," said Thorpewithout preliminary, "thnt you Intendto pay John Radway nothing for thework dono In the Cass branch thiswinter. Is that true?"

Daly studied bis antagonist medita-tively. "If it Is true what Is It toyou?" he asked at length.

"I am acting In Mr. Radway's Inter-est"

"You are one ot Radway's men?""Yes.""In what capacity have you been

worklns for him?""Cant hook man," replied Thorpe

briefly."I see," said Dnly slowly. Then sud-

denly, with an Intensity of energy thatstnrtled Thorpe, he cried: "Now, youcot out of hero I Right off! Quick!"

Tho young man recognised tho compelling and nutocratlc boss addressinga member of the crew.

"I Html! do nothing of the kind!" hereplied, with a flash of Are.

Tho mill owner leaped to his feet.Thorpe did not wish to bring about nilactual Hceno of violence. He had at-

tained his object, which wns to flusterthe other.

"I have Radway's power of attor-ney," ho added.

Daly snt down, controlled himselfwith an effort and growled out, "Whydidn't you say so?"

"Now, I would like to know your po-

sition," went on Thorpe. "I am nothero to make trouble, but ns an asso-

ciate of Mr. Radway I huvo a right tounderstand the case. Of course I havehis side of the story," he suggested, mthough convinced that n detailing ofthe other side might change his views' Daly considered carefully, fixing hisflint blue eyes unswervingly onThorpe's face. Evidently ills scrutinyadvised him that the young mnn wns11 force to be reckoned with.

"It's like this," he said abruptly;"we contracted Inst fall with this muiiRndwuy to put 111 5,000,000 feet of our

By STEWARTEDWARDWHITE

I

S"ftart Edtuard XOhttt

I

The mill owner leaped to his fict.timber, delivered to the mnln drive ntthe mouth of the Cass branch. In thishe wns to act Independently, except ntto the matter of provisions. Thoshe drew from our van and was debitedwith the amount of the same. Is thatclear?"

"Perfectly," replied Thorpe."In return we were to pay him, mer-

chantable scnlo, ?1 a thousand. If,however, he failed to put In tho wholeJob tho contract wns void."

"That's how I understand It," com-

mented Thorpo. "Well?""Well, he didn't get In tho ti.000.000

There's a million and n half hung up In

the woods."

"But you have In your hands threeBillion nnd a half, which under thepresent arrangement you get free oany chnrge whatever."

"And we ought to get It," cried Daly."Great guns! Here wo Intend to sawthis summer nnd quit. We want toget in every stick of timber wo ownso ns to be able to clear out of borafor good and all nt the close of theseason, and now this condlgncd Jobberties us up for a million nnd n half."

"It Is exceedingly nnnoylng," con-

ceded Thorpe, "nnd It Is n good dealof Radway's fault, I nm willing to nd-inl- t,

but It's your fault too.""To be sure," replied Daly, with the

accent of snrcasm.".You had no business entering Into

any such contract. It gave him noshow."

"I suppose thnt was mainly his lookout, wasn't It? And, as I already toldyou, we hnd to protect ourselves."

"You should have demanded securityfor tho completion of the work. Underyour present agreement, If Rndwuygot In tho timber, you were to pay hima fair price. If he didn't, you appro-priated everything ho had alreadydone. In other words, you made hima bet."

"I don't care what you call It," an-

swered Dnly, who bad recovered hisgood humor In contemplation of tho se-

curity of his position. "The fact standsall right."

"It does," said Thorpo unexpectedly,"and I'm glad of It. Now, let's examinea few figures. You owned n.OOU.uoafeet of timber, which nt tho price ofstumpuge" (standing tues) "was worth510,000."

"WellV""You come out at tho end of the sea

son with three million nnd n half ofsaw logs, which with the ?l worth oflogging lidded are worth S'JI.000."

"Hold on!" cried Daly. "We paidRadway $1. Wo could have done It

ourselves for less.""You could not have done It for one

cent less than four-twent- y In that coun-try." replied Thoipe, "as tin expert willtestify."

"Why did we give It to Rndwuy ntfour then?"

"You saved the expense of n Hulnrlcd.iverseei- - and yourhelves some bother,"replhd Thorpe. "Radwny could do Itfor less because, for some strange' reu-mji- i

which you ynurhclf do not under-ntniul- ,

11 Jobber can always log for lesthan 11 company."

"We could have done it for four." Instated Daly stubbornly. "But get on.What are you driving nt? My time'srulunble."

"Well, put her at four, then," agreedThorpe. "That makes your saw logsworth over JfJO.OOO. Of this value Rad-wny added $111,000. You huvo impro-priated that much of his without pay-ing him one cent."

Duly seeiuul amused. "How nboulthe million and 11 half feet of ours heappropriated?" he asked quietly.

"I'm coming to that. Now for yourlosses. At tho stunipage rate yourmillion nnd n hnlf which Rndwuy 'uppreprinted' would bo only three thou-sand. Rut for the sake of argumentwe'll tako the actual sum you'd havereceived for suw logs. Even then thomillion nnd 11 hulf would only hnvobeen worth between eight nnd nlnothousand. Deducting this purely theo-retical loss Radwuy has occasionedyou from the amount ho bus gained

On

Steep

niii-Si- de

I" -Tho

Where a team can walk and draw a plowThe Reversible works perfectly.

The combination of features in ... .

Bonocia

The Benecia Reversibleit the most valued of all DISC It can be right or left hand,

plowing around the laud or REVERSIBLE, throwing furrows all one way. Will plowbetween terraces WITHOUT leaving a water furrow. Made only in a sulky.

Tho Abovo Cut Shows tho

H.HACKFELD & Co.SOLE AGENTS HAWAIIAN ISLANDS

ror you, you arc still some rour or uvothousand ahead of tho game. For thatyou paid him nothing."

"That's Radway's lookout.""In Justice you should pny him thnt

amount. He Is 11 or man. He hutsunk till he owned In this venture,some $12,000. niui he bus nothing tolive nu. Kven If you pay him five thou-sand, he bus lost considerable, whileyou have gained."

"How have we gained by this bit ofphilanthropy?"

"Because you originally paid In cashfor nil that timber on the stump Just$10.(iu0. nnd you get from Rndwuy suwlogs to the vulue of ?JO,()00." repliedThoipe shurply. "Besides, you stillown the million mid u hnlf which, ifyou do not care to put them In yourself, you can sell for something 011 tinskids."

"Don't you know, young mnn. thaiwhite pine logs on skids will spoil ut-

terly In n summer? Worms get Into'em "

"I do." replied Thorpe, "unless youbark them, which pioeess will cost youabout $1 11 thousand. You can findiiny amount of smull purchasers nt redured price. You cuu sell tlicinat W. That nets you for your 'millionand a half 11 little over ?4.MO moreUnder the circumstances I do not thinkthat my request for five thousai.d U

at nil exorbitant."D.ily laughed. "You lire 11 shrewd

figurer. nnd your remarks, lire Interest-ing," said he.

"Will you give $.".000?" asked Thoipe"I will not," replied Daly; then, with

n sudden change of humor: "And nowI'll do n little talking. I've listened toyou J11U about as long ns I'm goingto. I have Radway's contract In thatsafe, and I live up to it. I'll thank 3011

to go nlunib to hluzna!"

(TO 111'. CONTINUHU)

Political.Santa Cruz Cal., May 17. The

committee on resolutions of theDemocratic State convention report-ed adversely on Hearst instructions.The convention rejected the votedto instruct the delegates for Hearstby a vote of 365 to 346.was a long controversy.

Milwaukee Wis., May 17. TheDemocrats of the State conventionoutvoted and endorsed Kd-wa- rd

Wall as Wiscmsin's candidatefor the Presidency.

Sacramento, Cal., May 19. TheRepublican Slate Convention en-

dorsed the Roosevelt Administrationand instructed its delegates for thePresident today. The delegates at-- jlarge are Governor Pardee, Knight,J, D. Spreckels and J. W. McKinley.

1 11KpS

Abovo Is tho Rovorsiblo Disc Plow.

Make PLOWS. used

FOR

There

Hearst

Bonocia Ratoon Disc Plow.

Losses In Buttle of Yulit.

Japanese Minister Taknhua atWashington, .D C. cables to ConsulGeneral Saito tlie record of YnluRiver three clay's battle.

General Kuroki's report is asfollows:

"The exact number of casualtiesin the battle along the Yalu: 218Japanese iiiclutling 5 officers, ,verekilled, officers and

officers, mencorpses buried by were the not

1,363 the

largerifles, of trooPs

quantities of clothingetc., and at Peiighuaug ' .

iin.... ,....:.:.. f :.:..ui3umiw iuaiiiiiiw3 ui uiuuiuimiwiitoioiiiincr nnd nrovisinim "

nnmmr..u1n C ..- -.

which landed at Liaotung reportsBowen on 16th 111st. '

follows:

"In daily skirmishes, our de- -

been theand icessful for

and its and iiouirnvnriUkMruyiUand telegraph

lines, on the lutu alterfighting, occupied 3.5

from Kinchow. cas-- ,

ualties in battle were 146, in-

cluding 9 officers wounded." j

Gen. Kurokl reports the JapaneseChinglicnchang 1,

as killed, 223; wounded, 816. The'Japanese buried bodies

and captured

Tangier, May 19. MrPertdicans, anand a British havebeen by brigands.

Baku, 18. In ain Chelcuzan district the

Turks lost 136The Armenians had kiiled.

111., 20.over Governorship'

in the Con- -

vention unbroken.convention has adjourned to31st. Yates, and Deneenare There have been 38ballots,

THIS

PLOW

Hills up the dirt betterthan a hoc, besides leav-

ing the soil behind it in asplendid pulverized con-

dition. It is the ONLYPLOW for ratoons that

does what it itsupposed to do.

U. S. Wnrslilps In Port.Honolulu, May 20. is

being favored with the visit of alarge number of warships nt thistime. It is only a coincidence,however, ns some of the sea-dog- s

came into port to coal and othersmet while passing en routeunder orders to elsewhere.Advantage of the stay in port

How to Avoin Tkoum.k. NowMi tlw titllf In lr1ltirn1f- w fcW r...w JV...i .t..wfamily with a bottle oflain's Colic, Cholera and DiarrhoeaRemedy. It is almost ceitain to be

.needed before the summer isand if procured now may save you

.-

a trip to town in the night or 111

vour busiest It is everv- -

auu'is- - an o laiiniv can aiioni to ue., Tfnr cnl lit. 1, TTJ1,xisfc at a. v tiittv. I (J. AHIWrjrug Co

for the TkihunijIsland subscription $2. 50 a

and 7S3 Japanese, including jhas been taken by both33 were The of each of the vessels, and as aRussian us consequence streets have

and prisoners were 612. teemed with so much life since theOur booty: 21 quickfiring ' boom times when the army trans-fiel- d

guns, 8 machine ports were carrying numbersguns, 1,021 63 horses, large to tlle Philippines.

ammunition,and tents,

'IMw,

from the as

tachments having always where to be mosthaving already medicine in use bowel

driven the enemy from Pulanlien complaints, both for children andvicinity

enemy's railway111st., seriousthe heights

miles Ourthis

losses at on May

the of 1363Russians 613.

Morocco,American citizen,

Varley subject,abducted

Turkey, Maybattle the

killed and wounded.many

Springfield May Thedeadlock thenomination Republican

remains TheMay

I.owdenleading.

actually

Honolulu

hereproceed

short

nrniMiln nml

Chamber

over,

season.

Subscribeyear.

wounded.

quickfiring

admitted

ff7nm"'MllimisHMs-- i

, IP 5 3 20

. o go 3 3Ja !Z2 '

J ?3 3fj ?;mo SHE; g ?3 en CS ami j

-

'3 q. g s :

'-1

-r- DO0 "SI- - ;:; r.5" 3 os :

? S z ssns ;

' w o aI PS CO;

piVl

Ml

&a

S&1

4

Sffl

jmXEy4

5VEA 5

INSURANCECOMPANY

Of (inthcnbiiri:, Swcilcn

Assets (lltutu Office) .... $7i3".o63.36Asset in U. S. (for Atlililion.il i ity of AtiiLricun Policy Holders) 656,678.43

PuaincCi.il Deimtliiifiit: HOWARD IIKOWK & SONS, General Agents411-41- 3 California St., S.mi Prancisco.

iH. HACKrELD 1 CO., Ltd., Resident Agents, HILO

THE BESTIMMMlM'

Nothing hut the very hestof wheat is hought by themillers who put up . . , .

livery bushel used must be sweet and sound, andkept so. Eveiy grain of wheat is run throughfour cleaning and four scouring machines, and isthoroughly washed before grinding.

It is not enough that the dust is removed fr6m thewheat, but each grain must be cleaned, and thecrevices and irregularities of each grain scoured,thus securing a CLEAN, PURE FLOUR.

You can always depend upon the HOLLY FLOURbeing all right. For sale by

& GO.

Hvl I KA,N,ER BOTTLING WORKS IM ilk ACENTS. HONOLULU' ICD 1

PLANTERS, ATTENTION!

SPECIAL ATTENTION IS CALLED TO THE FACT THAT

THE ONLYOKICINAL AND

CELEBRATED

"Holly Flour"

XV

Limited

FERTILIZER

Is that which has been manufactured for the past fifteenyears exclusively by the

California Fertilizer WorksSAN FRANCISCO, OAL.

When purchasing be sure that in addition to the brandthe utiine of the California Fcrtili.er Works is on everysack, otherwise you will not be getting the genuine article.

A large stock of our Diamond' A and our

XX HIGH-GRAD- E FERTILIZERIs kept constantly on hand and for sale at San Francisco

prices, plus only freight and actual expenses,

tSaaa

Dy Our Hilo Agents,

Lr'lVllTED

R CO

nm wumcLV HILO toUHUNI t mt,u, HAWAII, FRIDAY, MAY 27, 1904,J! .j

4USTICK AM) MKlU'V. Is finishctl. that those enemies to" I law nnil good order lire scattered.

Juiticp Minis CoiilriiftN PlrluroH of "i,it in the presence of all theWorlds Progress mid Crlmr. Lrvmsritv m ivhi.-l- i I Imu.. r,.r,.rr..,l

In his charge to the Grand Juryon the convening of the May termof the Circuit Court, Judge Littlegave expression to some patriotic inning skull of skeleton,utterances. is as amid and winesfollows:

"Iftheohl patriarchs could riseand speak to us, what charminghits of history they could dwell up-

on touching conduct of theirday and generations which havefollowed along down the avenues

forget thegreat

the everHis address present the flowers

the

of time until we ourselves this i "I will harrow you by the cvi-da- y

discussing the same subject, deuce that a revival in the enforca-exceptin- g

that we follow the plans ment of law and in the punishmentof our d.iy and time under the of crime is indespcnslble to ourforms of our more modern present and our future wcll-bein- e.

The sentinels of peace and goodorder have, in judgment,never been more watchful thannow. It was a part of their dutythen as now, and former grandjuries have bejn in our own timemost effective and salutary sup-

pressing evil.The establishment of a grand

jury as one element of the freedomof the citizens has resulted in incal-

culable good.Unlike the Spaniards in the time

of the good saint, we have a goodgovernment. But it is truethat the lawlessness which prevailsin our land is unsurpassed in theworst of the governments of theseearly days. At.d yet I am afraidthe. angels will not take np theirabode amongst us until we reformsomewhat, so it devolves upon thegrand juries to assist in maintainingpeace and good order. Whatblessings we have! No people onearth enjoy liberties so large! Theburdens of a benevolent govern-

ment are scarcely appreciable.They are returned to the people inmany forms of most striking andwidespread benefit. Millions areexpended for the development ofour livers and harbors. Publicbuildings, spacious, comfortable,exquisite in architecture are con-

structed all over the laud for theconvenience of the people and theready disposition of the public busi-

ness of the country.Our postal system is unprecedent-

ed in its comprehensiveness, effici-

ency and completeness,The flag born by our gallant

navy is known and honored onevery sea. Our foreign policy hasgiven to the clearly ascertainedwill of the American people prac-

tically the effect of internationallaw.

The great isthmian canal, whichwill soon be an accomplished fact,will save more than 10,000 miles indistance and more than fifty daysin time by steamer as to time andexpense formerly necessary to com-

plete the trip around the Horn.All these things tend to developthe good citizen and the man wholoves his country and to makegood jurors.

The performance of any duty required of you as grand jurorsshould not be influenced by poli-

tics or political associations.

The grand juror is not onlyterrifying to wrong doers, but he ispursuasive to those who hesitatebetween the narrow path of dutyand the broad and open way to de

struction. A uigu-minue- u jurorwho knows the public right andknowing dares to maintain it, mayin truth be no less effective than ahigh minded preacher. Both havenoble missions, but while the lattercan depict the sinner in glowingcolors the lurid terrors which awaithim in the life to come, theformer can give to that reprobate avery convincing illustration of thewages of sin in the life that now is. j

This is sometimes salutary to thosewho would be moved by the

benefit by pains and penaltiesthe flesh under the forms of law.I have-- sometimes thought that thegrand juror confronting the bale-

ful organization of crime andcriminals, either in n greater or lessdegree, should he animated by someof the spirit of Cromwell, who, ashe drew his sword at Dunbar,shouted in the words of the psalm-ist, "Let God arise! Let his enemies

we must not that spiritof lawlessness, in a luinywnjs, is abroad in the land like thegt

in

ami music, and the entertainmentof a Roman banquet. Your dutyis, therefore, like the mariner atsea, to take your bearings and as-

certain your progress on the courseof civilization and its influence onyour fellow man.

find not

laws,

my

not

not

w

We alt recognize that fact, andevidence might be offjred mountainhiifh to establish it. A ."ingle ill-

ustration I will give to indicate ina measure the necessity for the per-

formance of your duty, unhesitat-ingly and faithfully:

"But a little while ago, by ac-

cident, it came to me in a voice outof the night speaking the anguishof a woman's heart. Who wasshe? I know not, nor do I care toknow. I was using a telephone,when, by the mysterious inductionof electricity, this message to an-

other came to my car. It was toher husband she said in toneswho'.e pathos will ring ever in mymemory: "Here I am late at night,alone with the children; I am lonely and frightened as I can be, andthere you are gambling. Won'tyou please come home?" Thesepathetic words accidentally heardupon this particular line of crimeare but faintly expressive of theagony of many thousand gentlehearts. Hearts of mothers, wivesand children, occasioned by themany forms of crime which go

by Justice. Why? Be-

cause the laws enacted by the rep-

resentatives of our people, not inone place but in many places, arepractically a dead letter. Whatevangels of civilization! What ad-

vance agents of prosperity yet un-

known would be the grand jurorsand other officers of the law whowould, as they easily can do,stamp into nothingness the varioushydra-heade- d monsters of crime,who fatten on the anguish of de-

serted wives and the cries of star-

ving children."After outlining the law relating

to their duties as juors and govern-ing their deliberations as a GrandJury, the Court closed his remarks

follcws:!:

"You should be most consideratein dealing with your fellow men;by your actions you should teachthe poor unfortunates who breakthe law that the greatest of allthings on earth to be a good man;that glory cannot glorify it; thatwealth cannot enlarge it; thatstation cannot dignify it; that em-

pires cannot increase it; for whosois a man, a good man, and a goodcitizen, carries within liis ownbreast the essential principles of allgreatness. And when wealth isgone, glory faded and empireswrecked, the man, if he is a lawabiding citizen, stands amid theruin great as before.

I "Let your actions as grand jurorsand your recommendations in yourreport be not harsh or convulsivelyoppressive, but to the extent ofyour ability let those who look up-

on you with terror be compelled torespect yoij in the loyal dischargeof your duty. Teach the wrongdoer to look higher, to be a man ofideals. Teach him by your actionsas grand jurors that the only failurefor man possible is in infidelity tohimself. If he be a law abidingrilizcn nml lmvp the fenr of find in

spirit, but who yet receive lasting!...' his heart he will be incapable of

to

as

is

such failure and the grand jury'will have no terrors for him."

Victoria, B. C.May 12. Reportswere received here today of aterrible massacre in British Borneo.Rebels have overpowered the fore-

ign colony at Kwaug Station andslaughtered 150 of the residents.The scenes of the massacre were

be scattered!" It is sometimes 'most horrible, men, womentrue, when grand jurorrf have per-- ' children being sacrified informed their duty, when their work bloody struggle.

midthe

If fcvrA rJmliwW Drink to your' y llf vJJxnmpy own health with

! BR WHITE ROCK! WliA WATER

ll M f'l ! ' Sparkling and pure

IKf lISI W C PEAC0CK & C0-- ' Limited

N. Ohlandt.J. C. OlilsnJl,

of

(27 Street.

ESTABLISHED (864

N. OHLANDT & CO.Manui'actuiihks and Dkai.kus in

FERTILIZERSOf Eoery Description.

Bone Meal,Sulphate Potash, of

of of

Duckbuck

Fish

Office:Market

HoofMuriate Potash.

Sulphate Ammonia, KilniteScrap, Double Superphosphate

High Grade Tankage.

SAN FRANCISCO, CAL.Indiana Void

Certificate of Analysis our shipments, which we yiiaranlecbe correct.

Agent for the Hawaiian IslandsORDERS FILLED SHORT NOTICE

Enterprise Planing Hill Company.

GIJO. MUMMY, Mgr. Pko.vt St., rear of Hilo Mercantile Co's MultilinePlaning, Mouloing, Scroll Work all kinilsof Turned Work, Whitlow Frames, etc

WATKR TANKS SPECIALTY. Household and all kinds of Furniture,Store Pittings, Counters, etc., made order. Crosscut Sawsmade good new, easy rates.

Manufacturer ol School Seats, Chinch Pews, nud Redwood Gultcin, all sizes

HAND MADE SADDLES AND HARNESS

k CARRIAGETRIMMING.

RICHARDS & SCHOEri,Hilo Harness Shop, Hilo, H.

K - O

CD o :g

--252 Cr"CO .5 "j zm bw o

c Co

- tS, c.22 cli s

E 1 (0 S w

CCa ! o ooi P i H fnva !

I!

-1

l

J wi-1 i

H 2

-- AT-

Meal,

Sorta,

J. A.C. H.

7

Alaska

Factory:i. Sts

accompanies

to

AT

in-

andA

to andas as at

i.

cu

g

o

?"

Waiakea Boat HouseR.A. LUCAS & CO., PropVh.

WAIAKKA IlRinGK, 1111,0

HAVIS NOW A Fl.l'.HT OP

Gasoline Launchesand Small Boats

POR PUilMC HIREl asseiiKers and buggnge taken to and

from vessuls in the harbor ut reasonablerates. Launches and rowboatb to hirefor private picnics and moonlight rides.

RING UP ON TKMJPHONU

AGUNl'S POR

.Votaine Gasoline EngineSelf-start- and reversible engine. In

practicability it is equal to the steam en- -JKine. Sis from 1i h. p. upwards.lioals fitted wilh this engine or frames 01any sic to order. Por particulars applyto R. A. LUCAS, Malinger,

's

LOOAIj itbms.A good fresh milch cow for silc. Mo

Taggart.A. 11. Jackson wh n returning Klnau

'passenger.WliUely Kxercbcrs nl N. Y. price.

Wall Nichols Co. 30-- 1

Mr. ami Mm. Jnmc Glbb of lMnuliiunre ililo visitors this week.

Judge niul Mr. Galbrnilh left Saturdayon the Siberia fur Okliihoma.

Tax Assessor N. C. Willfoug rcturncilfrom Laupahochoe 011 Saturday.

Mrs. Klla M. Loebeinteiu is n return-ing passenger lo the Coast on the Kilter-pris- e.

J. S. Cannrio returned on the Kilter-pris- e

nfler 11 short business trip to thecoast.

Mrs. Keith Mack'e entertained n num-

ber of frienils Tuesilay evening with n

dance. '

A. C. McKenney Is back again on nbusincss'trlp connected with the bananaindustry.

W. K. Shaw of liana. Maui, is vUltiughis brother H. L. and Mrs. Shaw ntReed's Hay.

If you want the latest style in Panamahats mid spring clothing call on theGlobe Clothing Co.

The regular monthly meeting of theBoard of Trade will be held this eveningat 8 o'clock nt Firemen's Hall.

A. S. Lellarou Guruey will have chargeof O. A. Steven's auction business, duringthe tatter's absence in Honolulu.

The baseball score of the game lastSunday between Onotuca and Waiakcawas 11 to 14 in favor of the latter.

Kllison Powell, station agent at Kapoho,Puna, gave a luau to a number of choicespirits at that place 011 Sunday last.

Mrs. Bernice Held and daughter havebeen the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Geo.Ross nt Hakalau for the past week.

Mrs. T. T. Chave, with an infant daugh-ter has joined her husband, who is em-

ployed with the Ililo Mercantile Co.

Albert Horner Jr., D. Deacon and ItruceKennedy return home after a year's ab-

sence attending school on the Coast.

A son was born to the wile of J. C.Carter on Tuesday, May 24, being theseventh of these God given blessings.

Miss Kllcn Pcarcc has returned from atwo year's absence at Stanford, where shehas just graduated from the preparatoryschool.

Miss Alice II. Arnold, Miss Maud A.Crabbc and Mrs. Mary L. Peck of Konanre stopping with Mrs. C. N. Arnold atthe Peacock.

S. Grace's spirited little pony biokcaway from his master's control mid strewthe letter's road enrt over Hilo's principalthoroughfare.

Cheap for Cash A Kingsbury piano,in good condition, and furniture and ahorse and brake and harness. Apply toR. K. Ilaptiste.

After a six years' stay in the Islands,Prof. H. W. Henshaw returns to themainland on the Enterprise much im-

proved in health.

The laborers of Puna plantation arepreparing a mammoth farewell luau toformer Manager Campbell, to be given atPahoa next Sunday.

During the absence of Governor Carter,who left on the Siberia for the Chicagoconvention, Secretary "Jack" Atkinsonwill be acting Governor.

A picnic for the infant class of the Suit-da- y

School of the First Poreigu Churchwas held Saturday afternoon at the IliloHoarding School'grouuds.

Hy executive proclamation of ActingGovernor Atkinson, Monday, May 30th,is recognized as a legal holiday and allpublic offices ordered closed.

Mr. mid Mrs. M. Brown of San Fran-

cisco, accompanied by Miss Woollier, aretouring the Islands, and left Ililo Wed-

nesday morning for the Volcano House.

PAUSE, PLEASE, ANDPERUSE!

HUNTER RYEIS NOT

"Nearly the Best"NORISITMKRKLYAS

"Good as the Best"ITIS

ABSOLUTELYAND

POSITIVELYTill?

BEST WHISKEYMADI?IIYANYIIODYFORANYIIODYANVWIIKRK

Hoffschlaeger Co.,MMITKI).

CHURCH STRKKT

iffit&m

THE WUKKLY HII.0 TRIBUNU, IIII.O, HAWAII, FRIDAY, MAY 27 1904.

MIlMOItlAI, DAY.

Appropriate Kprc.lii' lo lie llrlil nn

'llcioiiilliiii Diiv.

Preparations arc being mnilc for theproper observance of Metuoti-i- l Day 011

next Monday. A committee of localGrand Army men, under A Richley,have the matter in charge, nnd have ar-

ranged mi appropriate program of exer-

cises at the Haiti Church at 2 o'clockp. m. sharp. Chns. M. Lellloud has beenchosen orator of the day and suitablemusic will be furnished by the baud nndchurch choir. The Legislature at its Insttegular session made May 30th a legalholiday within the Territory, and this willbe the first commemoration of the daysince it was legalized. Immediately fol-

lowing the exercises at Halli Church n

line of march will be commenced headedby n platoon of police under GrandMarshal Fetter, nnd followed by thebaud, (lower girls, Company D, G. A. R.veterans, Ililo Hoarding School and civicsocieties. They will proceed by way ofPitman and Waiatuicnue streets to theccmctary on School street, where thefinal exercises will be held.

Mrs. H. N. Hitchcock and child, nflerover a year's absence on on the Consthave returned to Ililo and arc stoppingwith Mrs. I?. G. Hitchcock on Schcolstreet.

All members of the Ililo Cotillion Clubare requested to attend an important busi.ness meeting to be held In the roomsover the Ililo Drug Co.'s store, Tuesdayevening, May 31st.

J. D. Kaston, Democratic politician,sporting and society man of Ililo, leavesby the steamer Enterprise for the St.Louis Fair and the "neck of woods"around St. Charles, Missouri.

The Inter-Islan- d steamer Niihaubrought foreign mail on Saturday andleft immediately for Kau, carrying n

large quantity of yellow Caledonia seedcauc for the Pnhala plantation.

W. W. Iliuuer, the Koiia coffee groweris reported as saying that hard times arenot heard of in that vicinity. Betterprices than for seven years past nre ob-

tained and this year's crop promises tobe larger than last year's.

J. W. Mason, accompanied by hisdaughters Misses Gertrude and MaudeMason, arrived by the Enterprise fromSan Francisco, where the young ladieshave been attending a young ladies semi-

nary for the past two years.Alex. Raymond of the firm of Moses

& Raymond returned 011 Sunday fromSan Francisco, to relieve his partner E.H. Moses, who leaves on the return tripof the Enterprise fora few weeks vacationon the Coast and nt the St. Louis Fair.

If you play tennis you can order yourtenuis racket by mail from Woods &Sheldon, Honolulu, mid receive it by re-

turn steamer. Tenuis racketsand fresh balls received twice a month.Prices of rackets quoted in advertisement.

The Foreign Sabbath School has ar-

ranged for a picnic at Puna on Saturday,June 11. A special team will be provided,and tickets will be sold at One Dollar forthe round trip. All friends of the schoolarc imvited to join with them on this outing.

The announcement in the Herald ofthe engagement of Miss Emily Wery andDr, W. II. Schoeniug appears to be apractical joke. Both parties deny thatthere is any truth in the statement andsay their friends are striving to perpetratea joke at their expense.

Bock beer is still 011 tap at UnionSaloon.

I want to rent my Puueo residenceAllan Wall.

Subscribe for the Deliuator of Moses &

Raymond for one year only $1.00.

Wall, Nichols Co. will give you newVictor Records for old ones. 27-- tf

Moses & Raymond take old machinesin exchange for new Singers. Call and secthem about it.

Lost. On May nth between FirstForeign Church and Spreckels' Block oron Government road to Waiiinku, a smalloxidised silver watch with carved back.

5.oo Rewurd. Return to TRIBUNEOFFICE.

It Works Likk Magic The reliefobtained from Chamberlain's Bain Balmwhen applied to a burn or a scald is sonearly instantaneous that it seems almostmagical in its effect. An injury of thiskind heals without maturation when thisremedy is applied and unless the woundis very severe does not leave a senr. Forsale by Ililo Drug Co.

THE OLD RELIABLE

EWffiBUMIfi

IkPPOWDERAbsolutely Purs

THERE IS NO SUBSTITUTE

FOURTH OF Jill, V CIXKIIItATION.

'Arrangements for llltr Tlnu- - 011 In-- 1I

ilrpeuiloncu I biy lleluir Mnilr.j A goodly number of citizens met inFireman's Hull last Saturday night to

i discuss n proper celebration of Fourth of'July. C. E. Wright waschosen chairmanof the mectingmid considerable discussionwas brought forth as to the character ofthe celebration to be held this year.Owing to the depleted condition of the4th of July fund left over Irom last year,it was decided not to have ns elaborate nprogram as heretofore. The consensusof opinion, however, was in favor ofsports and races, mid possiblly appro-priate literary exercises in the morningnt one of the churches or elsewhere.Chairman Wright was authorized to ap-

point a General Committee on Arrangetiients of five, which he has done, con-

sisting of E. N. Holmes, J. C. Ridgway,R. T. Guard, Dr. J. J. Grace, nnd E. 15.

Richards. There will be no parade oruptown celebration, but ChnirmntiWright believes there will be a sufficientnumber of events to make the races in-

teresting and attractive. Already J.O'Rourkc has his new speeder "EgyptianPrincess" in training and with Mousar-rat'- s

string of three racers 'at the racetrack, there is a promise of some livelybetting on the new entries in the field.

Dixie Laud, Defender and Frank S.will be on hand, nnd it is expected thatMcLennan will have Rejected ready forthe contest of speed. It is proposed tomake the purses suitable to the occasionand an Incentive to invite owners to putfoith the best metal in their horses.

Egyptian Princess Arrives.John O'Rourkc returned on the Enter-

prise from San Erancisco nccompnnicdby Claude Burlingame, in charge of Mr.O'Rourkc's new racing mnrc "EgyptianPrincess." This horse is one of the bestbred animals in the United States, beingsired by Ivcrncss and Sistrum, dam, bothimported stock, and Mr. O'Rourkc be-

lieves he has a prize winner. As soon asshe has fully recovered from the effectsof the long sea trip, she will be put intotraining on the local track preparatory tothe 4 th of July races. If he can arrangeto do so, Mr. O'Rourke hopes to take the"Egyptian Princess" to the Honoluluraces on June tith.

Kluuti Departures.C. N. Prouty, Jr.. Rev. S, L. Desha, W.

C. Meyer, Rev. E. G. Silva, M. G. San-

tos, O. A. Steven, W. E. Shaw, Miss M.Thurston, Miss U. Tiltou, Rev. L. D.Kcllipio, Mrs. J. D. Lewis, Miss A.Lewis, Mrs. Sarah Kaiawe, J. W. Mason,Mrs. Wilcox, F. M. Marks, Mrs. C. K.Stillman, Mrs. W. P. Bluett. 'Miss Moss-ma-

B. R. Meyer and wife, M. M.Brown and wife, A. II. Jacksou, Mrs. A.G. Curtis, Miss Woolner, Geo. II. Angus,C. Kaiser, Mrs. F. B. McStodker, MissSarah fi. Lewis, Col. C. P. Iaukea.

Booked For Enterprise.Passengers booked for the S. S. Enter-

prise, which leaves next Wednesday areas follows: J. D. Easton, A. C. McKen-ney, C. N. Piouty, Mrs. Ella M. Lochcn-stei-

Prof. II. W. Henshaw, Mrs. L. E.Arnaud mid child, E. II. Moses, D. '..Dickie, Miss E. I. Aitken, Harry S. Gray,Mrs. E. L. Myers, Mrs. Hogau, MissHogan, mid 12 Japanese steerage.

Enterprise Passenger List.J. W. Mason, Miss Gertrude Mason,

Miss Maude Mason, A. C. McKenney', J.S. Cannrio, John O'Rourkc, Alex. Ray.inond, Claude Burlingame, R. .. Dickie,Mrs. E. N. Hitchcock and child, Mrs. T.T. Chave mid child, Mrs. Hogan, MissHogau, Bruce Kennedy, Albert Horner,Jr., D. Deacon mid Miss Ellen R. Pearce.

Kinnu Arrivals.L. Severance, A. II. Jackson, Mrs. F.

Brood, W. I. Madeira, W. G. Smith, Mrs.W. G. SuiitlO Miss Kate Kelley, J. A.Scott, J. Sheridan, E.J. Walker, Miss M.Williams, J. Williams, F. Kiindu. Mrs.McTaggart mid son, C. R.Meyer andwife, F. M. Marks.

Postmaster Madeira returned fromHonolulu on the Kitiuu.

Bids for filling in Mooheau Park areadvertised for in another column.

Many residents of Ililo appear un-

aware that there is a postoflice at Pahoa.Miss Kate Kelly, chief clerk in the

Executive Office, is visiting her sister,Mrs. J. T. Stacker.

, Weather permitting n party of youngI ladies and gentlemen will endulge in 11

moonlight launch party this evening.! A. W. Keech and Alex. Valentine wereinitiated into the mysteries of Elkdom atthe regular Lodge meeting Mondaynight.

E. Brumaghin is reported to be verylow with pneumonia at Mountain View.He has been confined to his room for tendays.

, Territorial officios ure waiting for nl(leiiuue siuiemciu 01 me location 01 meproposed Kohala ditch, before granting '

me rigni 01 way over government lauiis.

Little Lena Cameron, the 'daughter ofMr. and Mrs. John Cameron of Puukaa,was the sole passenger on the hark St.Kalhcriiie, which arrived Tuesday morn-ing.

C. N. Prouty leaves by the Kutcrpriscfor his old home, Spencer, Mass,, wherehe will make an extended visit with hisfamily. He makes 11 hurried trip toHonolulu before his departure.

tiiktis t;o.Mi:s AND HOKS.

Iti'vcnui' (,'ullrr Makes Short Nlny ut

Ililo nnd 1,'ontluui's Voyage.

The United Slnlcs Revenue Cutter"Thetis" arrived oh port early Sundaymorning, and many mistook the vcelfor the U. S. S. Adams, which has beenat Honolulu. The "Thetis," which iscommanded by Captain Hamlitt, is mak-

ing n tour of inspection of the Islandspteliminary to permanently locating pos-

sibly in these waters. After completingher Inspection tour, the revenue cutlerwill proceed to Midway, where it is re-

ported the Jnj)aiiese are committing dep-

redations on bird life. Liter Ihe vesselwill return to her Arctic cruise, withheadquarters in Alaska. The Ililo Lodgeof Elks had planned a reception nnddance in honor of the officers of tin- - reve-

nue cutter, hut owing lo her sudden de-

parture Tuesday morning fur Mahuknua,110 arrangements could be made.

The "Thetis" is 11 bark rigged steam-shi-

of 723 tons burthen, manned withone rapid fire gun mid especially adaptedfor service in Arctic waters. She wasoriginally the British screw steamer"Thetis," built at Dundee, Scotland, midused ill the whaling trade. In 1883 shewas purchased and fitted up for the re-

lief expedition in search of the Greelyparty and was successful in bringingthem back to New York. In 1899, shewas transferred to the Revenue CutterService ami has since been stationed onthe Pacific Coast. It is expected thatshe may be permanently detailed to theHawaii station, pending construction ofa revenue cutter especially for the islands,the authorization for which failed ofpassage at last session ol Congress.

The vessel was at Honolulu on May 201892. making a cable survey between theislands and Sail Francisco.

May Buy Cuttle Itaneh.J. A. Cunningham, a wealthy capitalist

passed through Ililo last week, on ajourney overland through Koiia and Kau.He is nccompauicd by his son J. A.Cunningham, Jr. and two daughters,Misses Alice and Florence Cunningham.Charley Hall, the popular society man ofHonolulu is making the trip with theparty. Mr. Cunningham has a verbaloption from Col. Sam Norrisof Wuiohiiuifor the purchase of the letter's 183,000acre cattle ranch. The ranch while oneof the most valuable properties in theislands, has never been run as a businessenterprise by its eccentric owner, whohas an income from other sources to meethis wants and heretofore has been satis-fied to see his herds increase and multi-ply unmolested. It is impossible tostale therefore what is the probablenumber of cattle running wild on theplace. At one time a deal was aboutcompleted for the sale of the propertythrough J. O. Carter, but when theColonel heard the "missionaries" wereto be the owners, he called all negotia-tions off and has since refused all offersfrom island capitalists. It is possible theSalt Lake gentleman may be able toclose a bargain with peculiar ranch owner,in which event the Kahuku propertymay eventually become one of the mostprofitable ranches in the Territory.

liuselmllistN Form League.The several managers ami captains of

the baseball teams iu the vicinity of Plilomet'togcther last Tuesday night and per-fected the organization of a league. Thevarious nines represented were Bcamer'sSpecials', Ililo Railroad, Waiakea SocialClub, Ponolmwai, Union Specials, andOnomea. A constitution mid by-la-

were adopted mid the following officerselected: Donald S. Bowman, president;B. Kuhlberg, vice president; W. H. Johnson, secretary, and Wm. Downer, treasurer. A board of managers, consisting ofW. II. Johnson, J. J. Dower and M. I.Kechcn was appointed, which will ar-

range all schedules of games nnd settleall disputes between opposing tennis. Itis proposed to enlarge the scope of theleague by extending to Olaa, Puna oudHimiakua and play a series of games be-

tween the members of the association forthe championship of the district. TheUnion Specials and the Ililo Railroadboys will cross bats on next Sunday after-noon at 2 o'clock at Brughelli Park.

There will be a match game betweenthe Mocheau baseball team and theBeamcr's Specials at Briighelli's Pnrk 011

Saturday, May 28, 1904, at 3 p. in..

First Foreign (Jhurcli.Sabbath bcrvices, May 29; 11 a. 111.

"Repent mid believe the Gospel," Mark1 :i5- - 7:30 p. m. "What mean thesestones?" Josh. 4:21. A memorial sermonuddrcsscd especially to the G. A. R.

NOTICE TO '

BANANA SHIPPERSTHE STEAMER

goa at mua mpy m m m amKr K Iwb

WILL SAIL FOR SAN FRAN-CISCO ON

June I, 1904R. T. GUARD, Agont.

iiUiitiiiiiuiuummmiiUiuiiiij' Subscribe fc.r the Tkiuunk, Island sub

criptioii $2.50, j

i X

WOODS &91 KING STREET,, -

LIMITED.

AND SELLS

LOANSFIRE LIFE

ISSUES BONDSAS

AND IN ALL

P. O. BOX 348.

0000

ooou

For and of

Limited

0000OTTO.ooco

Steamers of the above line running iuway Company, B. C, and Sydney, N. S.Suv and Brisbane, Q.; are duo atstated IZt

From Vancouver and Victoria B. C.For Brisbane, Q., mid Sydney:

MIOWF.RA JUNK 4MANUKA JMLY 21

AORANGI JULY 30

the isAND run in ,00change. finest service in the world.

Honolulu to United Kuroi.efreight all apply

Snlc.

is hereby given that iu pursu-ance of an order made entered hythe Circuit Judge of the CircumCourt Territory of Hawaii, iuon the 12 day of A. 1). 1904, inthe matter of the estate of

of Puiimoi, Ililo Hawaii, deceased,the ofestate will bell at public auction subject'to confirmation hy Court, the follow-ing described real estate, bituated on theliindof District of

Territory of Hawaii, namely;Twenty-si- x and one half acres of tin"

land set forth iu of conveyancefrom S. L. Austin and wife, inLiber on pages 133 iu the

of for Territoryof Hawaii, at Honolulu, Oahii, the por--jtion be sold is 011 the ofsaid land, adjoining the gulch.

Said be made at public auc-- 'tion at 11 o'clock a. in. on Saturday the,day of June, A. D. 1904, at the front

door of the court house iu the town ofHilo, of Hawaii, to thebidder for cash iu United Slates goldcoin. purchasers expense.

Hilo, Hawaii, May 11, 1904.

S. LYMAN.of the estate of Kainulii-- '

wahiuc, deceused. 28-- 4

Do You Flay Tennis?

We vtul tennis goixls bySTEAMER when

by tin il.Satisfaction Guaranteed.

P1M . $7.00CAMPBELL, - - SO. GOWRIGHT & DITSON.SB. OOSPAULDINfi, - - $3.50No. 2 SPAULDING, $1.50Fresh W. & D. Tennis Balls re-

ceived scmi-mouthl-

5

THE HENRY WATERHOUSE TRUST GO.

BUYS

REAL ESTATE.STOCKS AND BONDSSECURES INVESTMENTS

NEGOTIATESWRITES AND INSURANCE

SURETYACTS ADMINISTRATOR, EXECUTOR, TRUS-

TEE FIDUCIARY CAPACITIES

Newnillinerythe Spring Summer

1904

L. Turner Co.

Canadian-Australia- n

Administrator!

SHELDON- - HONOLULU

HONOLULU, HAWAII,

coooSS

qoao

ocou

Royal Mail SS. Go.

connection with the Canadian Pacific RuilW., nnd calling at Victoria, II. C, HonoluluHonolulu on or about the dates

From Sydney, Brisbane (Q).For Victoriu B. C:

MANUKA nix,. 1

AORANGI ., JUNK 29MIOWKRA., JULY 27

VERY LATEST!

!i NEW STYLES 5OF

GLADIATOR SHOES

Arrived this week ex S.. Enterprise.

TIIRV ARKNEWNOBBY andCOMFORTABLE

ALWAYS THK PRICK:

$3.50ECONOHICSHOEJO, HILO

Subscribe for the Tkiuunk, SulJscrin-tio-u

f2.50 per year.

The magnificent new service, "Imperial Limited," nowBRTWKKN VANCOUVUR MONTR1JAL, making the Yourswithout The railway

Through tickets .ssued from Canada. States andand passage, and general information, to

Theo. H. Davies & Co., Ltd., Cen'l Agts.

Noticeoud

FourthProbate,

January,Kamaliiwa-hiue- ,

undersigned Administrator said

said

Puumoi, Ililo, Islandand

thedei;drecorded

107, and 134,Registry Conveyances the

to Iliiutakua side

sale will

18th

island highest

Conveyance at

FRI5DKRICKAdministrator

RK-TfR- N

RACKETS,

oooa

helow

and Vancouver,

THE

S.

SAMK

For

CVEtfiilSSTOMa REE19HBII mmm

i

kW

Ifcfl

$m'ZJZ2

fflSM

run

FIRST BANK OF HILOI.IMITI!!).

Incorporated Under the lAt of theTerritory of Hawaii.

CAPITAL, $100,000.

PEACOCK BLOCK, HILO.

r. I'HCK IMcMcnl.C. 0. KKNNKIIV ..Viiol'te.JOHN T. MUIK...11M Vicfl'rr.C. A. BTOIIIH Cinlilrr.TIIOS. 0. KIIHIU'AY, Srctilaty.

' IllltHOTOKS:

J. . C.itutlo, Jolm J. ttinctr,1'. HW.yiiinti, II. V. l'attin.Win. rull.it. V, II.S1iiiiinii

Druw ISxclumue onThe Hank of Hawaii, Ltd Honolulu

Wells. Eargo & Co. ll.ink...S.iu l'r.inciseo

Wells, Eargo & Co's Hnnk New York

The National Hnnk of the He- - chicauopublic )

P.lyiin, Milh. Curtie & Co I.0111I011

Hongkong Shanghai Hank- - Hongkong.ing Corporation ) Chim.

Hongkong-Shangh- Honk. (Shanghai,inn Corporation ) China.

... .!...!.) YokohamaItoiigKong-niiaugii- iwhk- - jIit,0

ing Corporation., Japan.

SAFE DEPOSIT BOXESRented by the. Month 01 Year, Par

liculnrs on Application.

UNIONSALOON

SlIIPMAN STRKHT

Open front 5 A.M. to u P.M.

First ClassLIOUORSWINES AND

CORDIALSAt Moderate Prices.

Mixed and Fancy DrinksConcocted by

lixrhRiKNCKD Mixologists

The Celebrated

" Honolulu Primo Beerand

Rainier BeerOn Draught.

Ten Cents a ClassEREE LUNCH

J. C. SERRAO,Proprietor,.

fteon Navigation Co.

1 he only Direct Liue between Snn Fran-cisco and Hilo, Comprising the

following Fast Sailers

Steamer ENTERPRISE

Bark ANNIE JOHNSONBark SANTIAGOBark RODERICK DHUBark MARION CIIILCOTTShip FALLS OF CLYDETuir CHAS. COUNSELMANLaunch LURLINE

uid other Specially Chartered vesselsmakes this trip with at least one of theseboats each month, carrying both Freightand Passengers.

For dates of sailing and terms,Call upon,

' no. D. Sprechels & Bros. Go(Agents,

327 Market St., San Francisco.R. T. GUARD, Agent,

H11.0, "awa" j

AlAAMAli.A.A.4lThe Largest Importers of

Also. Dealers in Dates, Oranges,Applet. Lemoiih, Limes, Potatoes,

Onions anil All Kinds of Nuts.

L. C. SRESOVICH CO.S in Francisco. - California

FvvtrwwvrifWi)iwvmi99V i

FRANK GREELMANt

CARRIAGE a.SIGN PAINTER

HACKS A SPECIALTYSTRICTLY FIRST-CLAS- S WORK

Formerly with RivetMile Shop. j

Ponohawal and Volcano Stshilo

um

WtK WttUKLY

DKKKUTlVi: lltlAMI JUItV.

Coiivlrlrd Juror Cannot SH All

lnillclmenln to lie (tinnlicil.

Honolulu. Msiv 10. Hecsuise of

IncU divulged iti the motion toquash tlic finding ngainst him,IWitor F. J. Testa of the Inde-

pendent U relieved of the disagree-nblcticss-

having an indictmentfor criminal libel against him and

John Kdwards and Henry Hicky,are dismissed from the TerritorialGrand Jury.

Judge De Holt this morninggranted the motion to dismiss theGrand Jury's return concerning a

libel charge which named Testa as

defendant.Motion alleged that two members

of the inquisition, Kdwards andHicky, were men who had been

convicted of offenses against thelaw, the former having served sen-

tence yeara ago for larceny in thesecond degtce and the latter havingbeen convicted of having opium in

his possession contrary to the sta-

tute. These facts were presentedby defendant's counsel as groundsfor the disqualification of the twojurots and therefore as ground for

quashing the indictment, iunstiiuchas the disqualification of Kdwnrds,

and Hickcy left an insufficientnumber of Grand Jurors for thepttrpohcs of indictment.

Attorney General Andrews part-ially admitted the allegations in re-

gard to Kdwards. Judge De Holt

stated that there was no questionof law in the matter, only a ques-

tion of fact: if facts alleged weretrue, then the two jurors namedwere disqualified.

As the facts in the Kdwardsmatter were clear, the Court, afterordering the dischurge of defendantTesta, ordered the dismissal of

Tohn Kdwards as a member of theGrand Jury.

L,ater the dismissal of HenryHicky was also ordered. The loss

of these men left the Grand Jurywithout a quorum and a forced ad-

journment was taken until tomor-

row morning.Kditor Testa had entered no plea

to the libel indictment at the timeof counsel's entering plea in abate-

ment.It is a question whether, if he

had entered his plea, the Courtcould have granted the dismissalof the true bill against him. Not

(having pleaded the law was clearand nothing remained but to setTesta free.

In criminal cases pending, wherepleas have not been entered, de-

fendants, it is said will be ci titledto their discharge on the groundthat their indictments are not validand they will either be Kiven theirliberty or their cases will be againconsidered by the present GrandJury, minus Kdwards and Hicky

Of cases awaiting trial, wherepleas have not been taken, the onlyimportant matter is that of thecharge against K. V. Richardson,alleged to have embezzled fundsfrom the Water Works Department.A. G. M. Robertson is his attorney.It is not improbable that Robertsonwill move to qtia.su on ttie samegrounds alleged in the successfulTesta motion.

It will be necessary, then toRichardson if the pro-

secution wants to sustain the chargeagajnst him. Other cases in whichpleas have not been recorded areminor matters ol assault and battery,selling, liquor without a licensewherein Orientals are defendants.

Wei-hai-we- i, May 20. A Britishwarship has gone to Newchwang toprotect British interests.

Paris, May 20. The Russiancruiser Bogatyr grounded in a fog

at the entrance to Vladivostok har-

bor and is in a perilous position.ri,e Bogatyr is one of the fleet of

.four cruisers of the "CommerceDestroyer" class which has beenoperating from Vladivostok sincethe opening of the war, and thelatest exploit of which was the

(sinking of the Japanese transportKinshui Maru. The Bogatyr wasbuilt at Stettin in 1900. She is of6,'50o tons, has a speed of twenty- -

three knots, and is considered 11

better vessel than the Americanbuilt cruiser Varjag, which wassunk at Chemulpo at the openingof the war.

HH,0 IrRilJUM, HttO, HAWAII, PttlDAY, MAY 37, 190$.iiiiiii miii.i

U.UJNKM OK l)i:tiVV At K.tll.UA

Attorney Ill-pi- incut mil

UenpouMble for Court's Mistake.

M. V. I'rosscr, Deputy Attorney-Gener- al

who is in Hilo in attendance on the May term of the Cir-

cuit Court, desires the Tkihuni: tomake a correction of Mr. JulianMousarrat's statement appearing in

these columns last week regardingthe delays at the Kailua term ofCourt. Mr. Prosser said: "Thedelay in the trial of cases at theAptil term of the Third Circuitwas not caused by myself or anyrepresentative of the Attorney Gen-

eral's Department. The mistakeoccuired in impanelling a petit jurybefore calling a grand jury. Uponmy arrival at Kailua on SaturdayAnril to. I found that the ennui' ' o I

jury had not yet been summoned,!but that a lull panel of petit jurorswere ready and waiting ' for thetrial of causes. Through misin-formatiq- n

or ignorance of the law,the Court offiicials did not regardit necessary to present any mattersto a grand jury and consequentlyhad failed to summon the rcquire.ilnumber ofjurors. Immediately up-

on looking over the calendar, Ifound seven cases, which requiredindictments by a grand jury beforethey'couid go to trial. Nothingcould be done therefore until thegrand jurors could be summonedtogether, inquire into the evidenceand report their findings. Thiswas done as speedily as possible,considering the distance some ofthe jurors had to travel, and threedays later seven indictments werereturned. It so happened thateach of the prisoners against whomtrue bills were brought by thegrand jury plead guilty, and wereduly sentenced by the Court, whichdispensed with the necessity ofholding any jury trials. The termwas very short and when it wasdiscovered there was no 'businessfor the trial jury, the jurors wereexcused. It cannot be .Said therewas any delay occuring because ofthe Attorney General's Departmentnot being ready, for no trials couldbe had until the impaueleing andreport of the grand jury, which hadnot been called until I arrived andhad rectified the error."

Comity Act Commission.

Honolulu, May 20. Just beforeleaving for the mainland GovernorCarter appointed the five membersof the commission authorized by ajoint resolution of the Iegislatuie atthe recent special session, whichbody will draft a county act to besubmitcd to the next regular scsrsion of the legislature. The per-

sonnel of the commission appointedis as follows:

Henry K. Cooper, chairman.Clarence L. Crabbe,Fred W. Beckley,K. M. Watson,T. Mcdants Stewart.The resolution provides that the

members of the commission shallserve without pay, but allows suchexpenses as may be incurred bythem, with the approval of theGovernor. Governor Carter en-

deavored to make the commissionnon-partisa- and after careful consideration, at the solicitation ofeach of the representative politicalparties, appointed Speaker Beckleyas a Home Rule member and K. M.Watson as a Democrat. All of themembers are lawyers.

Gibraltar, May 20. A Britishtorpedo-boa- t has sailed for Taugicrsto investigate the reported kidnapp-ing of a British and an Americancitizen.

London, May 18 Balfour hasdefeated mi attempt in the Commonsto upset the Government on thefiscal question. By a vote of 306to 251 fiscal matters were shelveduntil the next Parliament meets.

Admiral Togo also reports theloss of the battleship Ilatsuse oneof the largest of the Japanese fleet.The Ilatsuse was sunk by a Russianmine while operating off Port Ar-

thur. Three hundred of her officersand crew were saved.

Kaichau' May 18. The Japanesedrove 1,500 Russians out of thiscity, destroyed the railroad andthen reembarked. The fleet sailedsouth. One thousand Russianshave Newchwang butare'iti readiness to evacuate.

SHOUT (JA II 1,1.0 It A M.S.

New York, N Y., May 19. Re-

fined sugar was advanced 5 centsptr hundred today.

Newchwang, China, May 20.The report of the Japanese retreatfrom Fengweugcheng is confirmed.

Paris. May 17. A great battle!is expected. One hundred thou-

sand Japanese troops arc advancingon IJaoyang.

Newchwang, Mayao. It is re-

potted that the Japanese army hasbeen defeated at Fcngwenchcngaud.driven back.

St. Louis, May 17. GeneralMiles expresses the belief that othernations will become involved in hcIfar Kastern war.

.r.. - 1 t,i.i'cn.uiirB, m i. Advicesshow that the Japanese are com-

plete masters of all southern ' L,iao-ton- g

peninsula, except Port Arthur.

St. Petersburg, May 17. GeneralZassalitch has been relieved of thecommand of the second Siberianarmy, General Killer succeedinghim.

St. Petersburg, May 17. Seven-

teen Japanese warships bombardedKaichau and forced a lauding.The troops marched in the directionof Kaiping.

Paris, May 18. The Japanesehave occupied Newchwang andLiaoyang. The rains and snowarc impeding operations The roadsarc impassable.

St. Petersburg, Russia, May 18

It is officially stated that GeneralKuropatkiti, commanding the Rus-

sian army in Manchuria, is prepar-

ing to retreat from Mukden to Har-

bin.

Loudon, May 20. The Newscorrespondent at Tientsin says that70,000 Russians are marching tothe relief of Port Arthur. TheJapanese are hastening offensiveoperations.

Tokio Japan, M 18. Therailroad line north of Port Atthurhas been cut in ftVe places by theJapanese forces. All Russian com-

munication with the port by landis cut off.

St. Petersburg, Russia, May 18.- -

It is believed that General Stoessel,commanding the Port Arthurgarrison, received a supply of warballoons to be used in the defenseof his garrison.

Tokio, Japan, May 19. AdmiralTogo reports that while off PortArthur theJapanese cruisers Kasugaand Yoshino were in collision andthe Yoshino was sunk. Ninety olher ship's company were saved.

Chefoo, May 18. Russian re-

fugees from Dalny declare that theJapanese bombarded Port Arthuron Monday. They say the Jap-

anese battleship Shikishima andthe cruiser Asama struck minesand sank.

....Chamiikklaik's Cough Remedy

is the mother's favorite. It is pleas-

ant and safe for children to takeand always cures. It is intendedespecially for coughs, colds, croupand whooping cough, and is thebest medicine made for these dis-

eases. There is not the least dan-

ger in giving it to children for itcontains 110 ppium or other injuriousdrug and may be given as confi-

dently to a babe as to an adult. Forsale by the Hilo Drug Co.

TmnmimnmnmnmminimH

For Elegant

Society

Stationery

Invitations

Programs

Announcements

Call at Tribune Office

imimmumtummimumiiiii

Be hi! itvI'nrhftjs you cat cnnii(;li, jet you

do not j;ut much liouulit from yuiln'od. oii keep thin a. id ue.iks ar '

Until alt tlm tlini). and jour nxrwsuio in a bail way. Why tint hlretuM Inn ,

your digestion and gut 1 i.l of Joiirdobilltyv

krPte.KIaS?rrt'SS-3- i

m$mm&vtviw vv;i

m

J11M- -. . s, 1 '.in .i.iiXmHStf. jiAJv Nilks..r Vwfllfcflfff. Sim v. s "wmmsgr

lipail tlirivs words from Mm. I!. (1 "in mof Culture;, Victoria. Mm. .M111110 uti nomlilier hi;r.iili.

"1 mlTcrod crmtly with lnillgrtlnn arilfleiillity fur 11 Ioiir tlmo. Sleep did no xtIri-sl- i mi", timl 1 wat In a very KiiIkU'ii, Oreof my I rlttniN Htriiiigly recommended Ajer'sM.irAiiurllU, and Mltern (Tixict dull 11I I if.itlnn I mailo up my inhiil tn trjvlt Tn 1

preit nirprlse, I had not til.cn ntis-- h Itliofiin! 1 fcltgrcatly linpnmil ltie

way. I Hilly tiwik tlireo Imttles, and I e .mi linnc-Ml- 8iy tint I am en Irely fifmni all nr my old troulile, mid ruiiFn rmyself liorfcctly cured. Aver'n'ir.ni.in.:.iIs certainly a underfill hloud ineillcliii ."

Ml ELS"i n3)

arsaparillariioro arc many Imitation Htmaiariilas.

lie turo you get "Ajcr's.Prcrirtd by Dr. J. C. Ar Co., Lowell, Miss., II. 5. A.

For Sale by HILO DRUG COMPANY

Hilo Electric Light Co., Ltd.

Houses Wired andLights Installed

In accordance with the rules of the Na-

tional Hoard of 1'irc Underwriters.A comptcl" stock of

ELECTRICAL SUPPLIESFixtures, Sli.tdes, Tahle, Iltd and Desk

Lamps, etc., always 011 hand.

Fan Motors . . . $15Fan Motors, swivel frame, 8Sowing Machine Motor 20Power for operating them ft a month

Installation charid extra.

Estimates furnUhed on all classes olElectrical' Work and Contracts taken toinstall apparatus complete.

AAiAJt"! ?! 2. 2.

i : Jr ;

.11 ji ;

I O O M J

U 'J-- ICO 6

: W sc CDa -- 2 In

J. Ivancovich & Go.WHOLESALE

Commission MerchantsSAN FRANCISCO, - CAL.

' IMPORTERS OE

HAWAIIAN BANANAS

and OTHER ISLAND FRUITSCONSIGNMENTS SOLICITED

PAY FOR THE BEST

IT'S CHEAPESTAND THAT'S THE CLASS 01' WORK

EXECUTED I1Y

CAMERON

THE PLUMBER

ERONT ST., Op. SI'RECICEL'S I1LOCK

PACIFIC TRANSFER GO.

Handle and Store IUG(UtfE126 KING ST. HONOLULU

Phone, Main $

IMPORTED

CIGARS

You will find jour fvoiite Mow JLa AfricanaCabanasHigh LlfoBock & CoLurllnoSanchez & HayaManuel LopozVan DyckEl Princlpo Do CalosConoral ArthursVillar & Villar

Always fresh at the

HILODRUG 1

H.COMPANYL. SHAW, Manager I

HILO MARKET CO.,

LIMITED.

Telephone No. 39.

Bkimgk St. - II11.0, H. I

Pacific Meat Market

Front St., Hilo, H. I,

Choice Cuts of

Beef, Mutton,Pork, Veal.

POULTRY of all Kinds

FRESH ISLAND BUTTER

Fine Fat Turkeys.. . Sucking Pigs.

KEYSTONE

SALOON

Draught Boor IO ContsWhen you need a drink call

at the KEYSTONE, corner

Front and Ponohawai streets.A first class line of

. WINESLIQUORSBEERS

always on hand.

Telephone IO

W. DOWNERProprietor.

KoaJJKoaMKon Lumber In small and large quantl- -

ties; well seasoned,Eurniture made to order, any style

j wanted. Repairs made on any kind otfurniture. Prices moderate.

Sorrao Cabinet Shop.Ajpjy to JOSE O. SERRAO.

Wilrier's Steamship Go.I Change in Sailing

....Time of

LtSteamer MAUI"

X Connecting with

222 "ALAMEDA"I'rotirthe Coast.

Commencing FE11RUARY 5th, 1904, theSteamer "MAUI," hVnnett, Master, willsail from HONOLULU at 5 ji, 111.

Eor LAHAINAMAALAEA HAYKAWAIHAEMAHUKONALAUI'AHOEHOEaudHILO

With Mail and I'asseugert.

Wilder's StcmiisliI) Co.8.3m

9

i

&SltPJWis!fBl