m THE TEACHER WHO IS NOT AN ACTIVE WORKER POR THE COMMUNITY BETTERMENT OUTSIDE THE SCHOOL ROOM IS NOT DOING HER FULL DUTY TO HER SCHOOL, TO THE COMMUNITY OR TO THE BEST HERSELF. TEACHERS AS A RULE ARE THOSE MOST CLOSELY IDENTIFIED WITH PUBLIC AFFAIRS. NEXT WEEK'S MAILS From Coast Sonoma, Nov. 17; Maul, Nov. 21; Ecuador, Nov. 22. For Const Shlnyo Maru, Nov. 18; Niagara, (Vancouver) Nov. 18; Manoa, Nov. 22. $5L THE MAUI NEWS, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER TWENTIETH YEAR NUMBER 1026. 14, 1919. Japanese Base Ball Foresters' Ladies Army Looking For Waikiki Ball Team Invited For New Years Player Is Drowned To Organize Circle Camp Site On Maui Chief Of Staff Much Impressed With Would Be RecupeKula District ration Post For Troops From Oahu Gen. Morton Favors Plan Unless something unexpected .irises to upset present plans, Maul will soon have the distinction of being one of the chief recuperation posts for Uncle Sam's army In the Pacific. The plan has been under consideration in the department headquarters Hawaiian for some months past.- - It is underl Charles G. stood that Morton, department commander Is strongly in favor of the proposed camp. Major Edward F. Witsell, chief of staff, returned to Honolulu last Monday night after spending three days In personally looking over prospective sites for the camp. If one is finally decided upon, Major Witsell stated, it will undoubtedly be located in the Olinda or Kula section. While not intending to speak authoritatively on the plans for the camp, he gave the impression of his, belief that such plan would be realized as soon as a definite site was decided upon and arrangements made for leasing the land necessary. The idea back of the project is a camp or permanent post located on the higher lands of the Island to which the. troops from Oahu may be sent in companies or battalion for a week or two of rest, recreation and change of environment and cli,mate. Major Witsell was enthusiastic in expressing his conviction that some of the country ho visited Is ideally alapted to the purpose For a number of years tho army has maintained such a resort post near the Volcano, on the Island of Hawaii, and while this may not be abandoned It has various drawbacks which would bo avoided on Maul. One of these Is the distance from Oahu and cost of transportation. Another Is an undue amount of rainy weather on tho Dig Island. Mnjor-Oenera- NEIGHBORS' QUARREL NOW IN COURT The Waikiki Athletic Club baseball team will probably be the one which will come to Maul for the New Years series of games to be played in connection with the big race meet. At the meeting of tho Athletic Division of the Maul County Fair & Racing Association, held on Wednesday evening, the secretary was instructed to adthat vise tho Honolulu aggregation $350 would be allotted to cover the expenses of tho visitors. The Walki-ki- s had asked that their expenses be guaranteed. The Walklkis ball team is said to be one of the strongest teams in Horn lulu, having only been nosed out of by the the season's championship Braves. The plan Is to have a series or three games played during their vis-it- . Lahaina Not Ready Winter Ball Delayed No Game Ground Next Sunday As Planned-Ope- ning Of Series Set For 23rd Officials Named Wacs Lose Game Although the new winter league series of ball ga.mes was to have started next Sunday, the opening has been postponed for one week for tho reas-so- n that tho Lahaina team is not able to get in shape by that time. At the meeting of tho Athletic divlc sion of the Maul County Fair &' Racing Association, on Wednesday evening, the schedule for the coming series was arranged, and other details decided upon. The series will be played fori handsome silver cup. There will be four teams in tho field tho Lahainas, the Wacs, the com Wailukus, and the Puunene-Pai- a bination. A. Garcia and Yemoto were named as umpires; and Eugene Bal and Win, McGerrow as scorers. C. A. Puck was appointed grounds manager. Wacs Defeated Sunday The game played last Sunday be tween the Wacs and a picked team under Joe Rodrlgues' management, re suited in victory for the latter by a score of 4 to 3. The tamo was a good one fast and snappy and was ap' predated by a fair sized audience. J. It. Modelros, Jr., charged by Mary Pomba with assault without battery, waived trial In tho Walluku district court on Wednesday morning, demanding a jury trial. The alleged assault is said to have occurred last Sunday afternoon on the way home from the KOHALA PHONE COMPANY ON CARPET base ball game. It Is said the trouble is tho outcome of a neighborhood HONOLULU, Nov. 14 Hearing tho quarrel. complaints against the Kohala Telephony Company has beon postponed LANAI PLAYERS TO ARRIVE TOMORROW by the public utilities commission unThe commission til Novomrer 29. Honolulu's successful amateur thea- - will not go to Hawaii. trical aggregation, tho Lanai Players, JURY SAYS WILL WAS twho will appear at tho Walluku INFLUENCED heum next Monday night in tho clever comedy "A Pair of Sixes," is HONOLULU, Nov. 14 The jury of ed to arrivo either tomorrow ing or evening. The play has been the circuit court decided yesterday most successful in the city. Those In that Win. Heeb's will was made under the cast are Mrs. Itoger Burnham, undue influence of Lucy Heeb, his Mrs. Frances Reed, Miss Marjorle widow. Tho Heebs lived in Hamakua, Guild, Miss Katie Slnglehurst, It. A. Hawaii. McNally, It. N. Burnham, and Watson WOMEN PLAN TO SAVE BABIES Ballentyno. DEMAND NOW FOR CATO'S RETIREMENT HONOLULU, Nov. 14 Tho reorganization of the league Is demanded and that Viscount Cato resign tho leadership of the Kenselkal party, and quit public life, following the criticism of tho Hara ministry, charging petty politics, says n Toklo cable to the Hawaii Hochi. CLAIMS BOLSHEVIKI MORALE IS POOR WASHINGTON, Nov. 14 Because of a lack of food tho Bolsheviki have controled Russia but without much enthusiasm being felt in Moscow over the forward movement of the state department advices say. Duo to the lack j of morale, Trotsky has ordered the forces following up the main Bolsheviki armies to shoot all Red soldiers who fall back. l, 0 PARIS, Nov. 14 The German delegates charged with signing the peace protocol, regarding the execution of armistice conditions, ave expected here Monday. Popular Kaltului Boy Washed From First Meeting Selects Officers Final Float While Bathing With ComOrganization And Installation In Few Weeks panions At Waihee Body Recov-e- d Honolulu Officers After Long Search Coming To Conduct Ceremonies Unable to swim, Kanelchi Mania, a and popular young Japanese clerk of the Kahului Store, was drowned last Sunday afternoon at Waihee, when a big wave broke his hold upon a log upon which ho had been supporting himself in tho surf. A companion who was wnshed from the log at the same time nearly shnrcd the same fate, but was rescued s In a condition. Young Manta was a well known base ball player and was one of a p.vty of young Japanese, most of whom are members of the Asahl base ball team, who were plcnlcing on the Waihee beach on Sunday. When the accident happened the companions of th" unfortunate boy were forced to see him disappear beneath the wav.es, being unable to render any aid. The tragedy produced a great stir in tho local Japanese community, particularly as It was not until the following day that the body was located. Hundreds of Japanese dropped their work and flocked to Waihee to take part Jnthe search. A reward of $50 was offered for the discovery of tho body, and this was finally earned by Joe Kaiama, a young Hawaiian swimmer, who finally located tho corpse In a pool of water some 12 feet deep, and brougi' it to tho surface by well-know- n dlv-Inf- e. sub-chie- Pas-choa- l, Kauai Wants More Maui Owls Plan Program And Dance At Paia Cement Than Can Be Had -- The Order of Owls Is preparing for an entertainment and dance to be given under its auspices on Saturday night, (tomorrow) at the Pala The show includes local talent Orp-heu- and nothing has been spared to make It a grand success. The first part of the program will bring out a number of musical stunts quartet singing and steel guitar solos. A comedy act will follow which gives promise of carrying the audience off Its feet. A number of violin solos by Al Rels will complete the program. Miss Eva Rodrlgues will accompany Mr. Reis on the piano. The dance will commence about 9 o'clock. Six Basket Teams Start Play Friday All Junior Players--Bask- Ball As et sociation Reorganized ries Will End Dec. Enters Field New Sc 26-Sch- ool A series of junior basket ball games with six teams contesting, will start In tho Alexander House Gymnasium next Friday evening, November 21. It will continue, with two games each Friday night, until December 2C. This was the outcome of the meetST LOUIS, Nov. 11 The national ing held last Wednesday evening at council of women has outlined a plan the Gynin, at which the Maui Basket to save 1 million American babies Ball Association was reorganized, with during tho next six years. It has also C. A. Puck, president; W. II. McDon advocated tho Sheppard bill now In ald, and Al. Rels, congress, for giving financial aid to secretary-treasurer- . mothers. Tho teams entered for the series, with their managers, arc Maul High County Asked To Help School, P. A. MacCaughey; Walluku Trade Team, Herbert Rodrigues; Finish Survey Chinese, Young Ting; Gymnasium, A. P. Low; St. Anthonys, Francis Hama-moto- ; Walluku Athletic Club, Geo. In order that the federal school survey may bo completed, an additional Cummlngs. $2000 is needed, and Superintendent The players must all bo under 10 Vaughan MacCaughey has asked the years old to qualify. to supply Maui county supervisors $370 of that amount. FINNS TO FURNISH The matter came up at this week's TROOPS "AGAINST PETROGRAD meeting of the board and was reHELSINFORS, Nov 14 Tho Baltic ferred to the county attorney for opinion as to tho legality of such ap- states conference ndvicos say that propriation. Finland has decided to aid Yudenltch The appropriation made by the with 30,000 volunteor troops in an atlegislature for tho survey has been tempt to take Petrograd. exhausted, says Mr. MacCaughey, and This may interfere and perhaps unless the additional money is forth- perhaps bring an end to the 'Baltic coming tho work will have to bo drop- states' efforts to reach an ngroomont ped in an uncompleted state. with tho Bolsheviki. Federal At a well attended meeting of ladles and members of Court Valley Island No. 9239, A. O. F., held last Sunday evening In tho IC. of P. Hall, Walluku, It was formally decided to organize a circle of Companions of the Forest, and a charter has been applied for. The new circle will bo known ns Valley Island Circle. This organization is the women's branch of the Foresters' fraternity, to which, however, Foresters arc admitted as honorary members. Sometime during the latter part of this month it is expected that an initiating team from one of the Honolulu' circles -- will arrive for tho purpose of conducting the Inauguration ceremonies and Installing the now officers. These officers have already been selected as .follows: Mrs. A. Garcia, chief companion; Mrs. Carl F. N. Rose f companion; C. F. N. Rose, financial secretary; Mrs. Joaquin Garcia, treasurer; Miss Gussle Silva, recording secretary; Mrs. M. G. left guide; Mrs. M. C. Ross, right guide; Mrs. C. P. Bento, inner guard; Mrs. Stephen Lake, outer guard. A committee was appointed to draft s a set of to bo reported at the next meeting. It is expected that the new circle will start off with a membership of about 75. Maui cement is on tho market as a. commercial commodity that will hold its own with any cement made, and the first consignment for Kauai has recently come to McBryde, says the Garden Island. The capacity of tho mill Is 150 barrels a day and It is being run to its full capacity to keep abreast of its orders. The principal ingredient of cement is limestone of which Maui has an unlimited supply In its vast deposits of coral rock. The enterprise undoubtedly has a great .future before it because of the advantages which this homo product will have over tho imported. Heavy freight charges will be saved, It will be available on "short call, and it will be a superior article. We heartily commend tho initiative and enterprise of Maui, and congratulate thorn on their success. And that reminds us that wo have vast deposits, of lime rock on Kauai, .miles of It In tho Mahaulepu region east of Koloa. And in addition to being nn excellent lime rock it is also rich In silica which is an important Ingredient of cement. Farther-mor- e It is of easy access, tho quarries being already connected up with tho Koloa plantation railway. The Cliam- ber of Commerce, or some competent individual should look into tho matter. As w.o go to press we learn that thorp Is a cement famine on, and that none can be had on the island, In Honolulu or elsewhere. In their distress the Lihuo Plantation sent an order for 400 bags to tho Maui factory only to be advised that they could not fill It had more orders, on file than they could fill. Another argument for a loi a' factory. FISH HATCHERY SEEMS ASSURED , HONOLULU, Nov. 13 H. C. territorial game commissioner, told the Rotarlans tody that tho prospects are good ior the establishment pi a fish hatchery for mullet hero in Hawaii. Ho also ropurted thut a shipment of striped bass will arrivo soon for stocking the rivers of tho Islands. Kel-ley- JAPANESE STEAMSHIP LINE PROSPEROUS HONOLULU, Nov. 13 Tho Nippon Yusen Kalsha will probably declare a 100 percont dividend, according to an unofficial statomunt of tho directors, according to a Tokio cablo to the Nip-pu Jiji. Officers Of New Gun Club Division Named New Jury List For .V i, Balance Court Term At a meeting of th new Gun Club division or tho Maul County Fair & To Taka Place Of List Held Invalid Racing Association, held last evenJury Panel To Be Drawn Next ing in the chamber of commerce room, officers were elected and details New Monday List May Be of the plans for getting started were Challenged discussed. Tho officers elected are Geo. S. Judge Burr and Clerk Harry Moss- Aiken, president; P. IL Ross, man have made up a list of 100 13. R. Bevlns, secretary- - nnrnna nf vninra nf ATnllt frnm wlitnh treasurer Young Ting, field captain L panel of 20 names will bo jury fti jind ga.me warden. drawn next Monday for Jury duty in This body of officers, with C. D. the 2nd circuit during the remainder Lufkln, member of the county fair & of tho 1919 term. The list prepared racing association directorate, will takes the place of the one declared form the executive committee of the by Judge Burr's opinion rendernew division. of ed several weeks ao, on account Tho executive committee was in- the failure of the jury commissioners structed to take up with the main lo draw the names pro-ratfrom all organization the matter of securing of the voting precincts of the county. and installing traps and other equipWhile there will be no chance piob-ablment needed for trap shooting. of upsetting the new jury list on the same grounds as In the other instance, it Is possible that objection will be raised to it just the same by attorneys on the ground that the law Joes not provide for the contingency in question, ami that the new selection was made under a provision Interesting Program Prepared Puu-- w hich in the pr. sent instance did not obtain. nene School To Serve Lunch-Sc- hool Whether such objection will bo Survey Head May Be made renlalns to be seen, as well as the outcome; Present. Following is the new "list in quesAt the Kahului Community House, tion: on Friday, November 28, tho day folPrecinct 1 Lahaina George K. lowing Thanksgiving, the annual meet- Richardson. ing of tho Maul Teachers' association Precinct 2 Nnpili August will be held. The meeting promises Honokohua Henry F. Chung, to be the best by far of any previous Alebrt J. Cockett, ones, and much Interest is being mani Precinct 3 . Lahaina George Cockfested by teachers throughout the Akana, A. W. Collins, Charles ett, county. e George Freeland, Andrew Gross, The program committee, consisting L. Ricard, George Stephenson, of B. O. Wist, H. M. Wells, and L. L. Edmund Daniels, George II. Dunn, Summers, 1ms prepared a very inter George L. Keeney, Henry S. Hagerup, esting program, both instructive and Frank F. Stark, Charles K. Farden. entertaining. It Is hoped that Dr. Precinct i Olowalu Manuel CasFrank' E. Bunker, of the federal school tro. survey party, may be on Maul at the Precinct 5 Wailuku William H. time and make an address, but this is Engle, Ching Sing Ho, Alfred K. Ting, not definitely assured. C. Mozetta, The problem of luncheon has been Manuel R. Coelho, Amos Bal, Jr., Antono J. Faus-tlnE. William solved by the offer of the Puunene Manuel Dutro, Samuel Kuula, school to prepare and servo a noonday Okamura, Yolkl Furuka,wa, D. Koichi meal to the teachers. Thos. B. Linton, MilWadsworth, S. The officers of tho association, are Krueger, John Thomas R. Kiester, ton 'e. A. Brown, Puunene, president; F. S. Wilmington, Joe Borba. W. Hardy, Makawao, Precinct G Waihee Edwin Soper; Frank Martn, Puunene, secretary-treasurer- . Waihee Joseph Whltford, Smith J. Following is tho program as ar- Kaiania, R. J. K. Nawahine, John K. Teixeira. ranged for tho coming meeting: Precinct 7 Kahului Tom J. Chong, Survey of Citizenship Work on Maui Henry Long; Puunene David Kuaha-hi- , Robert A. Judd. William Crowell. Edmund K. Relation of tho Kindergarten to tho Cockett, C. C. Campbell, Edmund F. Public School Miss L. Merrlman. Piano Duet Misses Webb and Rus- Dlenert, James T. Fantom, Josoph A. Hannon, Frank Pestana, Jr., Alfred sell. Georgia S. Taylor, Robert E. aughes; Bill Playground Work Miss Kihel Antone Peroira. Thayer. Precinct S Peahl David Kiakona; Preparation of the 3th Grade Pupil Haiku Edward L. Y. Shim, Akl Tom. for High School Pau; MacCaughey. Precinct 9 Honuaul a George Bird Lesson Misses Crowell nnd Edward Wilcox. Aop. Precinct 10 Waiakoa Frank C. da Spoken English Discussion Grado Receiving Miss Edith Rus- Cambra; Knonoula Lorrin Smith, Joe Pereira; Keokea Harry F. S. Fong. sell, Paia. Precinct 11 Makawao William A. Coates, Grado 1 Miss Blanche Clark, Joe Froilas. Spreckclsvlllo. Precinct 12 Hamakuapoko Antono Grado II Mrs. Flora B. Brown, M. Ambrose-- , William S. Nlcoll, John Puunene. Grade III Miss Jessie D. Storie, P. Foster; Pala Edward A. Campbell, Manuel S. Jardln, George Kaluna,' Hamakuapoko. Grado IV Manuel G. Anjo, Maka- Buntaro Yoshlhara, D. C. Lindsay, 0. William Gerner. John M. Modelros; wao. Joseph l Dollm. Keahua Crockett, V. V Miss Annio Grade Precinct 13 Iluelo Joseph K. Em- Walluku. Grado VI Miss Mary Ash, Maui mesloy. Precinct 14 Keanno John Plunkett High and Grammar. . Lahaina-lunaWilhelm, Jr. R. Putman, VII S. C. Grado Precinct 15 Nahiku- - -- Marlon Cabral Precinct 1G Hana Gordon Erret, Grade VIII Miss Clare Stevenson, Charles O. Jacobs, C. H. Kaualoku, Kamehanielia III. John Wilcox, Charles Rolnhardt, John Mob Singing. Address Dr. Frank F. Bunker (not A. Medoiros. Hans Klpahulu Precinct 17 definitely decided.) Ladles Octette Mrs. Mooklni, Miss Fassoth, J. Torres. Precinct 18 Kaupo A. V. Marclel, Mae Dunn, Miss Carrie Dunn, Miss Lilian Whltford, Miss Lily Apo, Miss Jr., Albort J. Ahulll. Precinct 19 Halawa, Molokal SolElsio Crowell, Miss Gertrude Seong, omon K. Kaallhlkaua. Mrs. Lucy Furtado. Precinct 20 Mapulohu Molokal INCENDIARY I. W. W. Jamos C. Crane, Pala Naki, William ORGAN RAIDED F. Jonos; Pukoo A. Dudolt; Moanui, Kamalo Frank H. Olaf Tollofson; SEATTLE, Nov. 13 Federal olllcl-al- s Foster. today raided tho Union Record olllce, an international weekly, and TO CELEBRATE KALAKAUA DAY arrested the staff and soized the HONOLULU, Nov. H Momorlal plant's records. Tho paper had editorialized rioting which rosulted in a services will bo hold on Sunday mark-int- c tho S3 annlvorsnry of tho birth of long sories of Illegal acts, including tho lato King Kalakaua. tho Centralia shooting, it is said. t; In-al- a y Annual Meeting Of Teachers On Nov. 28 Rei-man- An-ton- Na-pall- Uwe-koolan- l, t. TWO THE MAUI NEWS FRIDAY, NOVEMBER On The Other Islands Preparing To Take e one-hal- MSn fT.S Wailuku School Notes Dying Maui Woman The Pay Too Small The court is finding it difficult to secure suitable appraisers for the A. S. Wilcox estate. one Haleakala during the week end. On Thursday of last week, K. C. sandwiches, 5 cents. Bryan, spoke to the school on the vocational work on the mainland and J. II. Grey, city editor of the Hono- in Hawaii. He was pleased at the belulu Advertiser and Mr. Buick of the ginning that the school is making same paper, visited the School on along this line. 5 The Wailuku Public School now has 451 pupils enrolled. There are 15 in Brave Nurse Submits To Blood Trans structors, including 2 vocational fusion In Vain Hope Of Saving Life Of Mrs. Ventura Medeiros Of burins the past week Rev. and Mrs. Puunene Crider paid a short visit to the school. Supervisor Fleming was also a caller. Although a nurse in the Queen's Vocational Supervisor K. C. Bryan, of Hospital gave up 500 cubic centimetHonolulu, was at the school one day ers of her own blood in hope of savduring his inspection trip to Maul. ing the life of Mrs. Annie Medeiros, of Puunene, Maui, who had recently Dispensary Soon undergone a capital operation, the The Wailuku school now has the stricken woman was unable to surbenefit of a trained nurse. It is the vive the shock and died at 11:20 o'plan to convert a store room at the clock Saturday morning. school into a dispensary as soon as The nurse who made the sacrifice for possible, where Miss Marjorie barbie, her patient was Miss Florence Loud, nurse of the Alexandcl House Settle a recent arrival from the coast. Folment will make regular visits to look lowing the transfusion of blood, which after the children's ills. She visited took place on Tuesday of last week, the school two days this week during Mrs. Medeiros gained strength almost which 64 minor treatments were ad immediately and for a time it was ministered. thought that she would survive, but later she began to sink again and Fifth Grade Reports passed away at the time before stated. The following several items were She was 41 years of age. written this week hy 5th grade pupils: The deceased was 'he wife of VenThe boys are making a school gar tura Medeiros, formerly of Lahaina, den to supply the kitchen with veget later of Puunene, but who has more ables. recently been living in Honolulu. She We have two divisions of boys in is survived by a number of children jur room to work on certain days. one of whom is Stewart Medeiros, of The first division works on Monday Puunene. Another is Mrs. Mary from 8 to 9 o'clock, and on Thursday Francisco, whose husband was killed from 9 to 10 o'clock. by a locomotive at Lahaina more than The second division works on Tues- a year ago. day from 9 to 10 o'clock and, on Thurs-lafrom 8 to 9 o'clock. Mr. Tamanaka has charge of the boys. We are deal ing a field back of our school building for a playground. We Miss Olive Lindsay, in charge of are going to borrow a plow from the the domestic school lunch room of the Wailuku plantation. school has just gotten out the record We have a Flower Club. of the supplies used during the first Our Fifth Grade has charge of the six weeks. front part of our school yard. We are These are as follows 24 pounds going to plant red geraniums along meat, 176 loaves bread, 35 pounds butside of our walk. ter and crisco, 8 dozen eggs, 186 Miss barbie is our school nurse. If quarts milk, 450 pounds ice. any one has any sores she will dress Besides this groceries, fresh fruit them. Robert Hart. and vegetables were bought. This record shows on what a lrage Our grass needs water. scale these lunches are prepared. Our Flower Club wants to water the Any of the parents are welconv? to grass, but when we turn the water on bring friends and have lunch at the the grass the kitchen does not get school. water. So we can't water the grass Following are a few sample menus: very much. Macaroni and cheese, and one butWe hope we will get some more ter sandwich, 5 cents: one glass of water and some mor.i hose pipe. We milk, and one butter Bandwich, 5 want a pretty yard. Toichi Kondo. cents; one orange, 5 cents; one glass of orangeade, 5 cents; three butter children In our sandwiches, 5 cents; one piece gingerThere are forty-fivroom. It is so crowded that there are bread, 5 cents; one dish custard pudno desks for some children and when ding and cream, 6 cents. we are absent those children who have no desks will take our desks ex- One bowl meat soup, one cracker and cept when we are sick or to be ex- one butter sandwich, 5 cents; one cused. orange, 5 cents; one beet salad, 5 Sometimes we have week's attend- cents; one pineapple salad, 5 cents; ance of 100 rr. Shizuno Nubul. one large ginger cookie, 5 cents; one glass of milk and one butter sand Our teacher wrote on the black- wich, 5 cents; one dish of ice cream. board that "Many hands make light 5 cents; three butter sandwiches, 5 work." That's true. If you have cents. help who will and sisters, brothers One bowl vegetable soup, one you to clean the yard work will be cents; one class of milk and butter sandwich, 5 cents; three butter ofyour car oAdds years to the life Correct lubricatipn with Zerolene means bet- ter performance and longer life for your car. By exhaustive study and actual tests the Standard Oil Company Board of Lubrication Engineers has determined the correct consistency of Zerolene for your make of automobile. Their recommendations are available for you in the Zerolene Correct Lubrication Charts. There is a chart for each make of car. Zerolene is correctly refined from selected California crude oil. It keeps its lubricating; body at cylinder heat, holds compression, gives perfect protection to the moving parts and deposits least carbon. It is the product of the combined resources, experience) and equipment of the Standard Oil y High School Notes 1 jf Company. Get a Correct Lubrication Chart for your car. At your dealer's or our near- est station. STANDARDOIL COMPANY qA grade far each type ofengine I If you are not now receiving the REXALL MONTHLY MAGAZINE please send your name for mailing list. The Magazine has recently been enlarged, and improved by the addition of stories by prominent writers and pictures of current events. Benson. Smith & SERVICE EVERY SECOND The Rexall Store Box 426 Honolulu, T. H. George Aikau. FITZGERALD'S HAWAIIAN DERBY PLAN ADOPTED HONOLULU, Nov. 13 The Hawaii Polo & Racing Club has adopted br. Fitzgerald's plan to commence an annual Hawaiian berby for Hawaiian bred horses in September 1923. Of the futurity stakes $250 goes to the breeder of the winning horse, the remainder to owners of first, 2nd, and 3rd horses. The Oliver Typewriter is the best machine on the market for the price. The OFFICERS and DIRECTORS BANK OFMAUI, LTD. are pleased to present to their friends a cut of the New Bank Building at Lahaina Adv. .. 4, immmrmm 'Fl .. On the strength IUDIB$0rTHIAP.URPLSiL(lEWILL1AMrOX.VR0Di;C-riO- r WAII.UKU ORI'HEUM THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 20th. KAIIUI.UI THEATER FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 21st. WAILUKU ; 3 f.l...lJ KX 8 years record and our unequalled service, we solicit your patronage BANK OF MAUI, Limited of l Co., Ltd. the finished quickly. I I I e New Manager For Hilo Sugar Alvah A. Scott, head mna of the Hilo Sugar Co., is to become manager of the plantation succeeiiing his father, John A. Scott, who will retire on the first of the year. The elder Scott fcjes to Honolulu to reside, having built a mansion for himself in the metropolis. Alexander Kiaser, a division overseer on the plantation, becomes head luna in young Scott' place. Kauai Short On Quota The island of Kauai fell down on its assigned quota of $Houo for the Roosevelt memorial fund, between ?700 and $800. cracker ind one butter sandwich, 5 Wednesday of this week. cents; one orange, cents; one cup K. C. Bryan, vocational instructor hot cocoa and one butter sandwich, on Oahu and Paul MacCaughey of the 5 cents: 5 cents; one banana salad, one dish chocolate pudding and cream School.made a trip to the summit of Gives Own Blood To 1920 Maui Census Bureau Orderi Folders Bids were opened yesterday by the Uawaii Tourist Bureau for the print ins of 100,000 W. H. Engle Named Director For This Island 30 Enumerators Netded folders, descriptive of the Islands, such as are regularly published for Count Of Persons, Farms, Buildings Hawaiian promotion. The contract Animals, Etc All Confidential was awarded to the Paradise of the Pacific, which bid $4170. The taking of the 14th census on Bars Wage Agitators Manager J Maul will require about 30 enumera B. Thomson of the Waipahu planta tors working for a month; according lion, Oahu, has refused to grant to to Richard C. Lappin, supervisor of the Plantation Labor Supporters' As the census for Hawaii. The enumera plantation tors will receive approximately $5 sociation use of the A per day, the exact amount depending premises for meeting purposes. committee from the association wait in a measure upon the kind of terri ed upon Manager Thomson last Frl tory covered. day and made formal request for the Mr. Lappin came to Maul from House of the plantation, camp for a high nolulu last Saturday morning to make er wage meeting and was refused preliminary arrangements for this is' The association committee is now land, and he returnc'. on Monday ev making arrangements with lite owner eniug after appointing V. H. Engle of a theater located outside of th Bank as of the Baldwin National plantation property to hold the meet director of the work on Maul. He ing there. will receive applications from persons desiring to act as enumerators up to Stabbed Wife In Hilo After search November 20. ing for his wife on Maui last week, St People And Farms Iago Meledas of Honolulu, proceeded The actual work of enumeration to Hilo last Thursday where he found will begin on January 2. It will conthe woman at Waiakea and Immediate sist in obtaining a record of every per ly stabbed her in the neck and breast son living on January 1, 1920. Another He so seriously that she may die. schedule will secure data on ngricul was arrested and slated that his wife tural matters number of farms, status had deceived him. Meledas was forni- - of the occupier (whether owner or erly a member of the Hilo band. renter) value of land, buildings, crops, stock, Implements; and total numlive Cemetery Distiller Fined $500 M. O. and kind of all of these. ber Moraes, who was arrested Thursday The population record will show the on a charge of mamifncturing whisky number of families, persons In family in the Catholic cemetery on South nationality, age, relationship, and King street, was fined $500 and costs citizenship, education, status, marital yesterday afternoon in the federal occupation, etc. court by Judge J. B. Poindexter. Data Confidential The law provides heavy penalties, Receiver For Hilo Tribune A. S. any enuLe Baron Gurney, manager of the Hilo including imprisonment for official who census or merator other Com& branch of he Bank of Bishop pany, was appointed last Thursday re- makes public any facts concerning any ceiver of the Hilo Tribune Publishing person or industry which he obtains Company, following a decision by the in his otlicial capacity. It also specificof circuit court awarding damages, after ally declares that no statement hearing in a libel suit, to Charles P. property values shall be available to Warren for $25,000. It is understood any municipality, state or territory in that the publishing company will ap- connection with taxation. In fact the census data collected is peal to the supreme court. solely for Statistical purposes, and Is Railroad To Honokaa It is reported required simply .for the purpose of being able to find how many persons from Hilo that the Hawaii Consolidated Railways combine has again taken and things of a given kind or condiup the question of extending Us line tion are In the country. For this reafrom Paauilo to Honokaa, with the son no one need hesitate in answering freely any question asked, no chances in favor of an early start. matter how personal. It will never Honolulu Has Typhoid Carrier A be divulged. In the young Japanese, apparently best of health, is at present confined GOVERNMENT LOST MONEY ON WIRES in the Queen's Hospital, Honolulu, as a "typhoid carrier." The man's wife WASHINGTON, Nov. 13 War time died of typhoid fever recently, and this as well as other sporadic cases operation of telephones, telegraphs of the disease had been puzzling and cables cost the government Secretary Burleson reported to physicians for some time. The case is exciting considerable interest In Congress today. Thi't represents the difference between the net earnings medical circles. and the compensation guaranteed the Hilo Railroad Raises Rates With owners. comauthorization of the inter-statQUIT MINES merce commission, the Hilo Railroad ILLINOIS WORKERS company raised its passenger rates on DI'Ql'OIN, 111., Nov. 13 Complying f cent a mile, and November 8 with orders of the local unions, the its freight rates by approximately 25 engineers, firemen and pumpmen and percent. other unionists who were permitted to keep he mines of the 12th district Death Adds To Robbery Mystery in working order, have left their posts After reporting to th deputy sheriff as a protest against obedience to the of Kohala that he had been robbed national officials court mandate callof $7000, II. II. Kamaunu, an aged ing off the strike. Hawaiian, died at his home in the same district last Saturday without A number of capable men have been having been able to tell the sheriff appointed and have declined to serve the details of the alleged robbery. It because of the meagre pittance by is supposed that the loss of his sav- way of compensation. This is fixed ings of a lifetime hastened the old by statute at $5.00 a day and expenses. man's end. It has been generally be- Competent men are busy men and lieved in the neighborhood that 'Ka their time is worth more than five maunu had a good det l of money hid dollars a day. Prices have advanced den away. since that law was passed. Garden Island. McSwanson l Custodian James B McSwanson, a well known newspaper man, has been named custodian and manager of the Hilo Tribune Publish ing Co., under the receivership o A. 1 S. L. Gurney. The company was placed in the hands of a receiver last week, following close upon the awarding of judgment by a jury of $25,000 damages against thn company to Charles Warren, for libel. 14, 1919. 1 LAHAINA PAIA I THE MAUI NEWS, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1919. THEATERS The Lanal Player "A Pair of Sixes" will be presented at the Walluku Orplieum on Monday night by tho Lanai Players of Honolulu. In the six or seven years that this play has been before the public, Its many ludicrous situations have never failed to bring forth applause and amusement. The play concern two men, partners, who are unable to agree, and demand a separation, Neither will sell to the other and the attorney who tries to solve the difficulty bluffs them into playing a hand of showdown, the loser to act as butler to the winner for one year. Under penauty of a forfeit of $5000 none of the parties to the contract may tell of it. The contract finally is broken through the cleverness of the loser's fiance, and after a series of laughter-provokinsituations, the audience witnesses the reconciliation of the partners and the discomfiture of the lawyer, who, one is led to infer, concocted the scheme and fixed the deck as a means of advancing his own cause with the lover's fiancee. Roger Burnham enacts the role of the winning partner with characteristic excellence, while to Watson Ballen-tyn- e falls the difficult part of the losing one. He handled the role admirably. It. A. McNally in the character of the lawyer does hid part well. Mrs. Frances Reed, as the wife of the winning partner. Is excellent. Miss Mar-jori- e Guild, as the fiancee, gives an excellent characterization. Miss Katie Singlehurst, In the role of Coddles, the English maid of all work, has the choice comedy part t.f the play -- and I handles It well. 'Putting It Over" Bryant Washburn, In his new Paramount picture "Putting It Over," plays the role of a young rube who goes to the city to make his way in life. He gets a job as a soda clerk in one of a large chain of stores. One of his practical Jokes results in his meeting the girl of his dreams and he tells her he makes fifty a week, whereas he makes only ten. But his landlady's daughter, whom he has escorted to the ball for political reasons, gets offended and his landlady refuses to let him enter his doom again until he pays up his back rent. To cap the climax, his employer lays him off on, account of slack winter business. Buddy now begins to think hard. He gets an idea, gets a contract from g his boss and fifty dollars a week as an advance payment, which he put up as a first instalment on a classy car. Then a wedding follows and Buddy's happiness is complete. "Rider Of The Purple Sage" The picture shows the hunt of the hero of Zane Grey's famous novel for the Mormon elder who had. abducted his sister, and admirers of the screen's greatest star who have seen the picture have been thrilled with the manner in which he accomplishes his revenge. William Farnum, as Lassiter, furnishes a delineation of rugged, wholesome, fearless Americanism that has not been equalled in the history of the films. In his relentless pursuit of his sister's abductors, Lassiter pits his courage lone skill and dauntless against all the resources of a powerful organization, and the situations that develop make "Riders of the Pur ple Sage" one of the most thrilling of screen plays. "The Haunted Bedroom" The spirit of romantic adventures, is not only held but intensified In the picturing of the Paramount release, "The Haunted Bedroom." There is an abundance of storm effect, a ghostly atmosphere prevading the quaint old Southern house and interest is sustained by the superior play construction of C. Gardner Sulivan. The picture Is supervised by Thomas H. Ince and the cast is flawless. Enid Bennett is in a role that suits her. She not only appears to oetter advantage in the part of an Intelligent American girl, but the opportunities afforded by such a role call out her spiritual resources. The story is not emotionally Intense, but it is picturesquely so, and may be put down as a true entertainment on any exhibitor's program. "True Heart Sueie" Distinguished by admirable typing, especially in the feminine roles, "True-Hea- rt Susie" does not greatly differ from other Griffith stories. In a grey role of extreme simplicity, Lillian Gish manages, by pure art, to win sympathy. Then It is next to Impossible for her to be unlovely, and even In 'the most unbecoming unpleasant costumes. In strong contrast is the charming characterization of Clairne Seymour as a naturally gay and Innocently selfish girl so full of high spirits that she enjoys life until she has to settle down in the melon-cholround of drudgery as the minister's wife. She has not been taught to prepare meals, so the minister turns to Susie, who is a fine cook. The role of the. pastor falls to Robert Har-roand he does the best he can with it. The whole pathos of the piece depends on Lillian Gish. Adv. WML Sunday, November ICth. GLADYS LESLIE In "FORTUNE'S CHILD" And "LURE OF THE CIRCUS" Monday, November 17th. THE LANAI PLAYERS in "A PAIR OF SIXES CHARLES RAY In "THE BUSHER" Also Pearl White lr 'The Lightning Raider1 And "THE FATAL MARRIAGE" Sunshine Comedy Mpnday, November 17th. BRYANT WASHBURN in "PUTTING IT OVER" And Paramount Tuesday, November 18th. MAY MARSH in "A GLORIOUS ADVENTURE" And "THE BRASS BULLET." Wednesday, November 19th. LILLIAN GISH t in "TRUE HEART SUSIE" Also "THE MAN OF MIGHT" Serial. And "PATHE NEWS" Thursday, November 20th. WILLIAM FARNUM in "The Rider of the Purple Sage" Friday, November 21st. ENID BEN NET in "THE HAUNTED BEDROOM" Tuesday, November ISth. GLADYS BROCKWELL in "CALL OF THE SOUL" And "THE MAN OF MIGHT." Wednesday, November 19th. JAPANESE PICTURES Thursday, November 20th. LILLIAN GISH In "TRUE HEART SUSIE" Also "THE LURE OF THE CIRCUS" And PATHE NEWS Friday, November 21st. WILLIAM FARNUM In Comedy. CHINA n JAPANESE PAPER ENDORSES JUDGE VAUGHAN'S SCHOOL SPEECH (By The Associated Press) HONOLULU, Nov. 13 The Nippu Jjiji, commenting upon Judge Vau- han's school address, said today: "It Is quite proper for Americans to take Biich measures as would prevent Hawaii's coming under a commission form of government, especially when they are looking for e must lsten statehood. well to sound opinion expressed by impartial men like Judge Vaughan. However, it seems that Ama misunderericans are still undt-standing as to the real status of the Japanese schools." JAPS LAUNCH BIGGEST BATTLESHIP (By The Associated Press) HONOLULU, Nov. 12 The JapanNagato, was ese launched in the Kure shipyards last Sunday. Tho vessel displaces 33,800 tons, is 950 feet long, and is the largest battleship now afloat; says a Tokio cable to the Nippu Jijl. r t, From Open Stock You can buy one dinner-war-e FEBRUARY CAKNIVAL CALLED OFF (By The Associated Press) HONOLULU, Nov. 12 The chamber of commerce directors today voted to eliminate the Februavy carnival next year owing to the uncertainty of transportation. It also voted to reemploy Geo. McK. McClellan as Washington representative for another year WASHINGTON TO SEE JAPANESE "SLAM" (By The Associated Press) HONOLULU. Nov. 13 Postmaster McAdam has sent the postoffice department in Washington a copy of the Hawaii's Shimpo's editorial referring to Americans "arrogance and piece would cost you in a 100 piece set. Thus with open stock dinnerware the problem of replacement i solved. You can start your set with a few piece and then add to them from time to time as your needs demand or your purse permits. Sample plates for selection sent at our expense. Fifty patterns to choie from at W. W. DIM0ND & CO., Ltd. "The House of Houseware" King Street Honolulu 53-6- MERCHANDISE DEPARTMENT WAGE CONFERENCE STARTS FRIDAY WASHINGTON, Nov. 12 The coal operators have accepted Secretary Wilson's invitation to meet miners' representatives on Friday to negotiate a wage agreement. The miners have already accepted. WILL PUT THE TEETH IN PROHIBITION (By The Associated Press) WASHINGTON, Nov. 12 John F. Kramer, attorney of Mansfield, 0., has been appointed federal prohibition commissioner charged with the enand constitu forcement of war-tim- e tional prohibition. PRINCE OF WALES IN WASHINGTON (By The Associated Press) WASHINGTON, Nov. 11 Prince of Wales welcomed by Marshall. A reception was held at the station and Informal calls made at White House late in the day. "The Rider of the Purple Sage" Two residents of South Africa have The United States army will patented a single wheeled litter for a permanent school for In iprial photography in Virginia. moving sick or injured persons. REPUBLICAN NATIONAL COMMITTEE CALLED (By The Associated Press) CHICAGO, Nov. 11 Hays called re publican national committee to meet in Washington on Docember 10 to select time and place of the national convention. LAUDED IN CONGRESS MORMONISM (By The Associated Press) WASHINGTON, Nov. 11 Senator Smoot, praising the integrity and patriotism of the Mormon church, de fended the members against what termed libelous published attacks on Mormonism. Ashursv, Thomas and Henderson joined in praising. NEGRO INSURRECTIONISTS MUST DIE (By The Associated Press) HELENA, Ark., Nov. 11 Eleven negroes convicted of murder in connection with the October insurec tion, have been sentenced to be HONOLULU, Nov. 11 The McKin ley High School football squad today defeated the St. Louis College eleven by score of 7 to 0. Just Arrived A Cargo of Nor'West Lumber and A Cargo of Redwood EXTENDED VISION NECESSITY Bautch & Lomb A MODERN VICTORY BINOCULAR Glasi angular field 6.8", linear filed 120 yds. across at 1000 yds. distance; weighs 25 oz., measures 4 " length x width closed. AT PRE-WAPRICE, $47.25 including ca.se and straps Sent on approval to responsible parties Write for Folder A New Stereo-Pris- h" R HONOLULU PHOTO SUPPLY CO. "Everything 1059 Fort St. Photographic" Honolulu Telephone Nos. 65 g 201 Connecting All Departments 1 of at the same price it Kahului Railroad Co.'s Vice-Preside- Kahului Theatre Saturday, November 15th. WAITS ON LEAGUE OF NATIONS (By The Associated Press) PEKING, Nov. 11 It is officially denied that China contemplates opening direct negotiations with Japan over the restoration of Tsingtau. VIENNA, Nov. 3 (By The Associ China's attitude is thHt China's claim ated Press) The conflict between the should wait the league of nationf Czech element of the population and the German-Austrlan- s is manifesting itself very sharply over the school WILSON OUT OF BED FOR FIRST TIME question. The Czechs, who form (By The Associated Press) rather a large and influential part of WASHINGTON. Nov. 11 President the population, while naturalized Aus- Wilson was permitted to nit un for trians, seem to assert their nationalione hour today. It is the first time ty over their citizenship and are de he has been out of his bed since the manding purely Czech language pub return from his tour six weeks ago. lic schools for their children. He took a little ride in a wheel chair. Lately they have been withdraw ing their children from the schools LEAGUE BURDENS TO BE HEAVY and meet the compulsory school at (By The Associated Press) tendance laws with the statement that LONDON, Nov. 11 Balfour, open- their children are in a Czechs school. ng the league of nations campaign, These schools have been found to be declared the future of the league to coffee houses where the children, boys be dark indeed unless all powers and and girls, sit around and discuss particularly Great Britain is prepared Czechs aims, but so far as can be to take an equal share of the burdens found no lessons are given. he league will cast upon them. The Czecho-Austriaantagonism DUBLIN, Nov. 11 Sinn Fein parli- crops out constantly. The Vienna press charges that Bohemia's failure ment raided today by authoritie and to live up to the coal contracts is a 8 members arrested. part of that government's support of LONDON, Nov. 11 Armistice Day the Austrian Czech's campaign for was solemnly observid throughout the their own schools and other privileges. In a recent meeting of the city coun- United Kingdom. cil a Czech member said that as a COLOGNE, Nov. 11 Cardinal von Czech he was glad and proud that the Hartmann, archbishop of Cologne is Austrians and their empire had been dead. crushed and humbled. At the same time the Czecho-Slova- klan government is restricting in every way the use of the German language in that country, having made French the official language of communication with Austria and issued a decree that German cannot be used in the postal system after a certain time. They are also closing German schools and have made their tongue a compulsory study in such German schools as remain. Europe Also Has Many Language School Problems y Weekly, Program At Wailuku And Kahului Theatres Saturday, November 15th. BRYANT WASHBURN in "PUTTING IT OVER" Also Pearl White in 'The Lightning Raider And Paramount Comedy. THREE Lumber Yard Kah ului, Maui, T. H. THE MAUI NEWS, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER FOUR THE MAUI NEWS 14, 1919. NO CLOTURE RULE IN WIIAVS WRONG WITH THE TEACHERS? SENATE COMMITTEE There might be no especial significance in the fact that the school matter. teachers of Honolulu have declined to join the American Federation of Labor. A lot of people are not in sympathy with labor unions in general or with the big organization named, in particular. A Republican Paper Published in the Interest of the People The discouraging thing is the lack of interest shown for or against the effort : the positive inertia which seems to grip the teaching force Issued Every Friday. as a whole. MAUI PUBLISHING COMPANY, LIMITED, It is not a new phenomenon. It is simply characteristic of the IsProprietors Publisher.. lands and perhaps of the whole country. The matter of joining or not ScitfCKirTiox Ratks, $2.50 per Year in Advance joining a union is of no moment in itself. But the fact that the of teachers ever seem willing to drift with the current, loath : : EDITOR AND MANAGER WILL. J. COOPER to exert themselves even a little for their own or the common good, : : : NOVEMBER 14, 1919 except perhaps momentarily to gain some immediate and specific object, FRIDAY is the serious feature of the situation. Entered at the Tost Oflice at W'ailuku, Maui, Hawaii, as stocoml-clas- s vast-majori- ty Knur pp our of politics" THE MATSON COMPANY'S PROPOSITION Of all catch-pliras- e injunction which have gained the currency of HOsjel among the unthinking masses of the American people, this is erhaps the most misleading and mischievous of all. It seems incongruous that in this land of the people, for the people and by the people, politics the science and art of government should g be treated as an unclean thing, as something to be eschewed by people, or as a necessary evil from which we ourselves and our institutions must be protected. With the Matson company's definite announcement of intention to build at once a $4,500,000 passenger vessel for the Island trade, with accommodations for 750 passengers and capable of making the run to Honolulu in 4 days, together the company's further declaration of policy to amply provide for passenger travel in the future, it is no more than just for the Islands to back the Matson line to the exclusion of foreign shipping. It is not reasonable, however, to make traveling on foreign ships a crime, as is the case under the present coast-wis- e shipping law, and punishable as such by a fine of $200. A law requiring American shipping concerns to supply on demand transportation on foreign vessels at a premium of $50, or even $75, should amply protect domestic shipping, would not work an undue "hardship on persons compelled for any reason to travel on foreign ships, and would remove the stigma of criminality which the present law imposes. right-thinkin- How much the United State;, has suffered from this attitude of mind would be hard to estimate. Certainly it has been responsible for much of the corruption and graft and inefficiency in government that has marked our tuition's history. And conversely, of course, this corruption and graft and inefficiency of government has brought politics into it present state of disrepute. By right we should be a whole nation of politicians. Dictating as but also through the power we may not only through the ballot-boto dictate issues to be decided by the ballot, it would seem that the first interest of every citizen should be in politics: that politics should take precedence in importance to almost every private interest. Why should we be counseled to keep everything out of politics? Just think about that for a moment. W hy should we not be urged instead to get into politics and to bring all of our civic and social and religious institutions into politics with us? The American Legion, a great new organization of the men and women who took up arms for the nation in the Great War, starts its Yet young Theodore career with a declaration to shun politics. Roosevelt, Jr., already in politics himself, and by all indications a born politician as was his great father, is the leader in the movement. Why should it keep out of politics? It frankly aims to shape the course of the nation in the trying period following the war; to uphold true American ideals, and to defend the country from the enemies within as it did from the enemy from without. Our old political parties are felt to be inadequate. To be weighted down with traditions, bound by selfish interests. How could the American Legion better tackle its big job than by frankly jumping into the political arena and if need be, forcing the old parties into the discard ? The individual citizen grumbles and kicks about his taxes, the waste of public money, and the inefficiency of men in office. Yet many of these "good citizens" do not even take the trouble to cast their ballot at the regular elections. They have no legitimate kick coming. Until a man not only votes at the regular election, but votes also at the primaries and in his precinct club, and uses his voice in determining what shall be voted for, he has no right to complain. He has acquiesced in being governed by men who are in politics as a business and not for their health. x first-cla- WASHINGTON, Nov. 13 The dem ocratic atempts to Invoke cloture to limit debate In the foreign relations committee on reservations to the peace treaty, has been defeated. The chair held the petition for cloture was out of order because It did not seek to limit debate on the whole treaty. Lodge said that for this reason republicans opposed the move. The senate defeated by a vote of 6S to 4 the Walsh (Montana) resolution which proposed to amplify the reservation to Article 10 so that other nations would be under no obligation to aid the United States in preservrng her territorial Integrity. 30 I. W. W.s HELD IN CENTRALIA ss 13 Wash., Nov. More than 30 I. W. W.s are held In charging jail here on information them with participating in the shooting Into the Armlstic Day parade which will be filed, the county attorney announced, as soon as the Inquest is completed. for the CENTRALIA, WASHINGTON, Nov. threaten serious trouble 13 Radicals in the bitum- inous coal fields' of West Virginia, the department of juptiee has announced. The situation Is deHcriped as "particularly nasty." and attended A meeting directed largely by Russians has precipitated violence among the miners. BRITISH AVIATORS KILLED LONDON, Nov. 13 Lt. L. M. Doug- flying corps las, of the Australian and Lt. J. S. L. Ross, navigator, who started flight for Australia were killed when their machine crashed at Surrey. DENIES BOLSHEVIKI TREATY RUMOR LONDON, Nov. 13 Premier Lloyd George declared in commons today that no person on his behalf or with the his knowledge had Interviewed Rolshevikl to learn If peace negotiations might be opened and upon what terms. LLOYD GEORGE "GREAT - HEART" The Life Story of ROOSEVELT THEODORE HENDERSON The style of leadership of Fred Makino was never more manifest than in his declaration to the Japanese that the sugar planters are at the bottom of the foreign language school agitation. In view of the fact that at least some of the Japanese laborers may naturally be expected to go back to Japan when the Japanese schools are abolished (Makino says most of them will go) it is hard to see how he expects to put his propaganda across. It has beenut a few months since the Japanese press was gloating over the claim that it had scared the sugar planters in the legislature into killing the foreign language school control bill through fear of losing their laborers. , By DANIEL 16 Leonard Wood. 242 Pages. Duotone illustrations My offer $2.00 One year's subscription to McClures 1.75 $2.75 "GREAT-HEART- " De Luxe Edition $3.75 Value Orders filled while present edition lasts! Act Now! F. K. LEE, Special Representative, Box 62, Paia, Maui. Introduction by educational bill has of passJust what chance the ing the Congress in the near future we don't know. The bill would create a department of education with a new cabinet member as its head. It carries appropriations amounting to $100,000,000 and provides for the spending of a large part of this for educational purposes in cooperation with the various states. It is quite certain that sooner or later this or a similar measure will carry. The point of local interest is to see that Hawaii is not left out of consideration as she has been in various other acts simply because nobody was on the job. Smith-Town- WEST VA. MINERS THREATEN TROUBLE Major-Ge- n. er Kahului Auto Stand FOR GOOD CARS Three 1919, 5 and 7 Passenger Buicks. Before the war practically every steamer of whatever character or ownership, which touched at a Maui port brought a later mail. Now, for some reason not yet clear, vessels arrive constantly with no mail whatever. The Lurline from Honolulu last week was a case in point. It would certainly be in order for the chamber of commerce to inquire of the postoffice officials as to tta reason for the change of policy and to try to get the old policy restored. Ford Cars. Also Reasonable Rates. vxxx,,xvvxvxxxx PhoriG 191 "A & 191B The fine of $500 levied last week by Judge Poindexter against a moonshine booze maker is more to the point than the $50 "licenses" HOMES TEA DING! which the same court used to hand out and call them fines. A six Daily Passenger Train Schedule (Except Sunday) months jail sentence, however, would beat fining all hollow. The fedRead the following new item from a Honolulu newspaper and see eral officials ought really to be ashamed of themselves at their general The following schedule went into effect November 18, 1918. what you think of this kind of homesteading : inefficiency in coping with the illicit liquor traffic in this territory. "Since the agreement of the Waiakea Mill Company to cultivate TOWARDS HAIKU TOWAItDS WAILUKU the 1920 cane of those homesteaders who signed the contract providing Distinct 18 2 9 7 lor the payment of five percent of the proceeds of this crop to the farmI I i Miles ers, a considerable number of additional signers have come in, says "" STATIONS David Forbes, manager of the mill. Cultivation of the crops is going on satisfactorily, and the result is expected to be gratifying. He at40 8 40 A..Wiluku..L js 5 35 S 33 3 3ol 258 35 3;j tributes the failure of certain of the homesteaders to sign up with the 4;J 4J J It 4 5 8 50 336 5 '5-JZ 5 3 3 "Jj8 company to the fact that some of them at least have not thoroughly ..Kahului.. 6 52 8 20 ..L 4 3 47 understood the situation. la.o A.. I so 3 17 02 8 10 L" Spreck- - -- A 5 3 J7 "He also announced that the company had decided to pursue a 10 3 07 ' j ' you can get almost any variety of leaded glass policy whereby the laborers formerly in the employ of the company, :jl a" 8 08 7 03 53 3 S8 J 09 3 05 required for any building. Beveled Glass, Art, will not forfeit their bonus from the company if they go to work for a 03 4 10 8 00 7 1 ..A L.. 1 00 a 55 ,8 the homesteaders, thus working indirectly instead of directly for the 5.5 Plain or Colored for doors and transoms. plantation. Should they, however, go to another plantation, the result Aj: 4 38 a 53 J? a 07 4 7 15 7 J7 would be different. But, although the management feels that it would L" Hm- - -- A o a 5 14 4 If 7 52 7 47 LEADED ART GLASS be quite within its rights to deny these men participation in the bonus 11.9 A;;kupokL a 15 4 to 7 22 7 5" 4 5i a 46 should they leave the direct employ of the plantation, Manager Forbes Call or zurite for full "information A L.. 3 4 t 7 30 7 45 4 45 4o says he believes better results will be obtained by close' cooperation be4 tween the company and the homesteaders, and for this reason the plan2 23 4 30 7 32 7 44 39 4 44 tation is determined to grant the laborers their bonus, as long as they a jo4 j3 7 36 L.. Haiku -- A 13.) 7 4o 40 a 35 LUMBER & BUILDING MATERIAL do not work without the limits of the plantation." HONOLULU Co. In Our Leaded Glass Department M- A-- 1 1 3 3-- 1 8-- 3-- Lewers & Cooke, Ltd. 3-- - PUUNENE DIVISION PLANT FRUIT TREES . . Next Friday is Arbor Day. In this connection the Hawaii Educational Review, the official organ of the department of public instruction says: "Hawaii's children are hungry for fruit. Encourage them to plant fruit trees papaias and bananas. Plant fruit trees on the school grounds. Plant fruit trees ;.long the roads. Plant fruit trees at home. Hawaii is hungry for fruit. Plant fruit trees. This is good citizenship." The suggestion is good. Hawaii is hungry for fruit. In this land of summer where fruit was designed by nature as one of the principal foods for man, it forms perhaps a smaller part of the dietary of the average family than in most temperate zone countries. And the lack of an abundance of fruit, especially for the children, cannot but ke detrimental to their best health and development. The craving for fruit in children is not merely a perversity, as grown-up- s sometimes think. The boy who hurls stones into your mango tree is not actuated solely by mischicv ousness. He craves the fruit because his system demands it. It is right that he should have this need satisfied and an injustice to him if it be denied him. There is no excuse for lack of fruit in these islands. Many kinds will grow with little or no care after they are once planted. Fruit should be so plentiful here that no one would need ever to be fruit hungry. lx:t's take up the school department's suggestion and make this Arbor Day a fruit planting day. Plant fruit trees. CAPITAL, LABOR AM) THE PUBLIC The compliance of the United Mine Workers with the demand of the federal court that the strike order be recinded is not to be construed as a victory for the mine operators over the miners, but a victory of the people of the United States over both. Both sides are together, and indications are that, aided by the mediation of the department of labor, a settlement will be arrived at that will be reasonably just to all. The conference, which begins today, may of course result in nothing, but it lends hope to the belief that realization is dawning for both capital and labor that neither can rule : that the public which both serve is inevitably to be the master. now-gettin- TOWARDS EBB ? BROWN PORTABLE Conveying Machinery "Built to fit the job," whether it be handling bags, bales, cases, rlls, barrels, drums, bundles or other material at terminal and storage plants. ' Rapid and Economical. Write us for full particulars Catton Neill & Co., Ltd. Queen and Alakea SU. PlSIHIir fltHlf llltMCI .0 6 00 3 3. STATIONS I lit MM ' fillllfr Pufgw L..K.huluI..A- -J A..Puunene..L charged. For Ticket Fares and other Information see Local Passenger Tariff L C. C. No. 3, or inquire at any of the Depots. HONOLULU We have just received another We are in business to serve you and wish you to associate yourself with us and secure the advantage of our experience and judgment in financial matters; to make our offices your headquarters for financial transactions; to have you feel that we appreciate your patronage and that you are under no obligation in consulting with us about any matter of a financial nature or relative to real estate, trusts or insurance. Henry Waterhouse Trust Co., Ltd. HONOLULU. j 6 22 3 16 2.5 6 12 10 8 05 00 0 2.5 All trains dally except Sundays. A Special Train (Labor Train) will leave Wailuku daily, except Sundays, at 5:30 a. m., arriving at Kahului at 5:50 a. m., and connecting with the 6:00 a. m. train for Fuunene. BAGGAGE RATES: 150 pounds of personal baggage will be carried free of charge on each whole ticket, and 75 pounds on each half ticket, when baggage is in charge of and on the same train as the holder of the ticket For excess baggage 25 cents per 100 pounds or part thereof will be 2 60 1. 2. L. TOWARDS KAHULUI PUUNENE ship- ment of those delicious Golden Pheasant Chocolates, Zephyr Creams, Scotch Toffees and Taffydills Everybody likes them because they are sure that they are Fresh. They buy them at THE MAUI DRUG CO. Market Street, Wailuku Telephone 232 THE MAUI NEWS, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER Letter Shows Why Hawaii "Val" Stevenson Invents Is Short Of Teachers Wonder Cane Harvester Illustrative of what the department of public Instruction has been up aaginst In matter of getting teachers to fill all of the rooms In Hawaii's public schools, the following letter from a mainland institution Is characteristic. Superintendent Vaughan MacCaughey states that the letter is typical of the kind he has been receiving for the past two months. It follows: Oct. 6, 1919. Mr. Vaughan MacCaughey, Supt. of Schools, Honolulu, Territory of Hawaii. My Dear Mr. MacCaughey: We regret that we have not found any one to respond to your last call, by cable, for. six teachers. Of course you know the situation here. During we had one hundred September, seventy three requests for teachers and could find only eight or ten. I am trusting all we have recommended to you have succeeded In getting transportation. It has certainly been trying and slow work, though no doubt the government has tried to handle the situation. We have recently sent a list of our graduates to Dr. W. W. Kemp, who I understand is a member of the commission to survey your schools. We shall also be greatly interested In his report and suggestions. We are also hoping for some practical suggestions from you. I wish it were possible to always select the teachers best qualified for your work but as you know we are forced to take those who are willing to go so far away. The .tew girls who came home for their vacation give glowing accounts of the Islands and are enthusiastic ovci the outlook for the schools. Yours sincerely, M. BCJRNEY PORTER, Appointment Secretary Per K. STEWART. "Val" L. Stevenson, editor of the Hllo and well known on Maul where he was editor of the Maul News for a number of years, has applied for a patent on a cane harvesting machine, which he claims will work under any and all conditions and will reduce the number of laborers now required by 90 percent. Stevenson Intends to build his machine as soon as hiH patents are awarded, and hopes to interest the sugar planters' association in it. Although there has never been a successful cane cutting machine made, Stevenson, who has worked in the sugar fields of Queensland and Fiji before coming to Hawaii and who understands fully the difficulties to be encountered In producing a machine that will do the work of men, declares that his machine will fill the bill. It is different in principle from any previous machine, he states, and will harvest cane on any kind of land, regardless of stones or ditches, and regardless of how the cane is lying in tho fields. N AMERICAN LEGION WOULD DENY CITIZENSHIP TO ORIENTALS AMERICAN-BOR- Lumber Prices Take Banquet Journalists Another Climb Upward HONOLULU, Nov. 10 (Special to An unique and signific ant event in the history of Hawaii's public schools was the banquet tender ed the American Journalists of Honolu lu by the public school men principals of the city, last week. Never before in the history of the schools have these two groups come together in informal comradeship and good cheer. The banquet was held at the Nuu- anu Y. M. C. A. The elaborate dinner of eight courses was interspersed with witty stories and cogent speeches by the Journalists and by the members of the federal school survey. Doctors Frank F. Dunker, W. W. Kemp and Parke R. Kolbe, comprising the fed eral survey men, were the guests of honor. Interesting addresses were made by members of the survey party, who called attention to Hawaii's extraordinary educational problems. After several hours of visiting and good fellowship, the very pleasant session came to a close, with every one feel ing that the public press and the public schools are staunch allies in the battles of Americanism. Maul News) PEOPLE MEETING POSTPONED Agent J. O. Andrews returned last evening from the Kaauhulu and Puuepa homesteads in the North Kohala district. He says that Frank Woods assisted him In the work of making the applications of the ten homesteaders for loans amounting to $8,000, from the Honolulu Farm Loan Board. The applications will be for warded next Friday to Secretary W. C. Avery of the Farm loan Board. The Land Agent reports that the home steaders in the Kohala districts are feeling happy now that they are as sured of being able to grow some commodity other than cane for the homesteaders are going now into the pine apple industry. The Kohala Pineapple Company is now putting up camps for the laborers and planting large areas in pineapples. Hilo Post- Herald. Sub-Lan- WOULD LOWER RADIO RATES.... WASHINGTON, Nov. 10 Senator McNary today introduced a bill in the senate authorizing emergency commercial messages by naval radio at 5 cents a word maximum to Honolulu and 6 cents word to Asia. JELLICOE REACHES CANADA VANCOUVER, Nov. 10 The battle cruiser New Zealand arrived here on Saturday, bearing Admiral Jellicoe. CARRANZA'S WIFE DEAD MEXICO CITY, Nov. 10 Virginia Salinas Carranza, w'le of President Carranza, Is dead. WET8 GET TEMPORARY INJUNCTION PROVIDENCE, R. I., Nov. 12 Federal Judge Brown today Issued an injunction temporarily restraining the enforcement of warrtime prohibition. 4 MARRIED In Honolulu, November 7, 1919, David K. Kinney of Wailuku and Miss Margaret of Paia, Maui, Rev. Akaiko Akana, pastor of Kawaiahao church, officiating; witnesses, Miss May and Ralph Turner. RUMANIA'S REPLY UNSATISFACTORY PARIS, Nov. 12 The Rumanian reply to the Allies note demanding that Hungary be evacuated Is regarded In peace circles as wholly unsatisfactory. Is considering a reThe ply. il COLD WAVE IN NEBRASKA LINCOLN, Neb., Nov. 12 Nebraska J900; lieutenant-commander- CALL MONEY SCARCE: STOCKS TUMBLE NEW YORK, Nov. 12 The local stock market has crashed. Brokers report that It is impossible to borrow money, as a result of which much stocks have had to be unloaded. NO PROSECUTIONS EXCEPT FOR PROFITEERING ir $840; senior lieutenants, $720; Junior lieuten ants, $600; ensigns and warrant officers, $480; chief petty officers, max lmum, $126; other enlfsted men, $40; with same raise for corresponding ranks in the marine corps. DUKE SUES ADVERTISER FOR LIBEL HONOLULU, Nov. k Duke Kahanamoku, the swimmer, has filed suit in the circuit court against the Pacific Commercial Advertiser for libel and demands damages in sum of $50,000 The paper recently criticized him for MAUI TO COMES MANOA NEXT TUESDAY his failure to take part in the recent HONOLULU, Nov. 12 The Manoa swimming meet leaves here for Kahului at 10 o'clock END OF COAL TROUBLE NOT YET p. m., November 18. is in the grip of a cold wave with temperature of from 7 above to 8 below zero. The fuel shortage is causing suffering. - INDIANAPOLIS. Nov. 8 The Mine Workers union officials have been summoned to meet here Monday to draft a cancellation of the strike order. They must submit to the court decision which restrains the unions from ordering a strike. Laborites refused to comment on the order but shook their heads and BKRNE. Oct. 8 (Associated Press) smile1' grimly. the war. beginning of the Since the Swiss mails have forwarded an4 re- The Oliver Typewriter is the beet transmitted for prisoners of war over 560,000,000 letters and 93,000,000 par- - machine on the market for the price. HELSINGFORS. Oct. 6 I Associated Press) Forty thousand persons have died in Petrogrr.d in the last six months. The number of births re gistered during the same period amount to only 5,800 according to inr formation received here. Adv. f Mr. A. H. Sylva of Waihee was kicked by a mule Saturday noon. He was taken to the Malulani hospital for treatment. He was taken out of the hospital on Wednesday and is now staying with his daughter Mrs. Duarte on Vineyard St., in Wailuku. WASHINGTON, Nov. 12 A movement has started to limit the senate's debate on the peace treaty by invoking the cloture plan inaugurated by the democrats two sessions ago. The petition has received more than double the necessary signatures. Some reMr. and Mrs. Edward Sopcr with publicans stated they would support their daughter Margn-.e- t and their son the cloture proposal which was cirFrancis returned Saturday night. On culated after consultation of leaders to It is intended the third curve coming from Lahaina of botli parlies. they met with an accident. The steer- limit each speaker to one hour. ing gear gave way, fortunetly the machine ran into the bank. No one was EDINBURGH, Ort. 7 Illegitimate hurt. children constituted 7.49 percent of A daughter was born to Mr. and Mrs the total number of births registered Benjamin Morton on A'ednesday, Nov- in Scotland in 1917. ember 5, 119. Sophia Sequeira, Waihee School. SPEAKER HOLSTEIN ON TRIAL FOR ASSAULT AND BATTERY MAUI BOOKSTORE STATIONERY NEWS DEALERS BOOKS, HILO, Nov. 8 The hearing of the assault and battery charge against H. L. Holstein, speaker of the house of representatives in recent legislatures, was begun today but was continued until Monday after the testimony of Miss Lane and a policeman were taken. The charge against Holstein Is pre ferred by Miss Lane, who is a sister of John C. Lane, former mayor of Honolulu. The case has aroused much interest on Hawaii. Hawaiian Views and Pott Cards Souvenir-Jewelr- y Kodaks and Films Ukuleles Fine Candies Koa Novelties WAILUKU, MAUI stop. K. MACHIDA (Associated ICE CREAM speciment of The Best In Town the extinct bird, the great nuk, has And a Soda Fountain been sold at auction here for $1,625. Give Us a Trial It was bought by a private collector. : WAILUKU. MARKET STREET, LONDON", Oct. 6 Press) A magnificient WILL HOLD BEET PRICES DOWN KINNEY-McGOWA- WASHINGTON, Nov. 12 Secretary Daniels has presented the house navy committee with a schedule of tempor ary Pay increases to enable the navy to retain its personnel of officers and men. The proposed annual increases are admirals, als, and captains, 10(.0; commanders, vice-adm- farewell reception will be given viniaalea Hussey Alumni Association tomorrow evening at 7 o'clock in Knumakapili Hall, rear of the Palama Fire Station. All Lahainaluna students past and present, now in the city and their families are requested to attend. Hussey, who has been visiting his home the past few w:eks, will leave on Friday for Vancouver. The young Hawaiian fought with the British forces throughout the late war and was twice seriously wounded. Ad vertiser, Oct. 12. A in honor of William by the Lahainaluna The monthly meeting of the Maui DIED County Industrial Accident Board has I- been postponed from Tuesday, Novem- KUKEANUI In Lunalilo home, Ho ber 18, to Tuesday, November 25, at nolulu, November 4, 1919, Kukea-nu- i 10 o'clock a. m., in the Wailuku disof Waihee, Maui, widower, trict court room. farmer, native of Kohala, Hawaii, WILL. J. COOPER, Secretary. 86 years old. NEW YORK, Nov. 13 Replyng to the sugar board's inquiry, Assistant Attorney General Figg said that the importation of foreign sugars will be allowed without prosecutions, except for unreasonable profits being demanded. The board desired to pur chase foreign sugars for which 14 cents, duty paid is the lowest price; WAR BROUGHT U. S. but Figg said that the urgency due to MANY NEW SHIPS shortage transcends the necessity of price below what foreign NEW YORK, Nov. 13 The monthly keeping the expect ers shipping board, statement of the U. S. to November 1, shows that more than Waterfalls a few miles distant will 1400 freighters have been added be harnessed to rive Tamatave, th through resources creuted by the war port of Madagascar, a water principal Of signed. since the armistice was supply electric light system. and these 1322 were built or purchased, the remainder being seized. MINERS NOT RETURNING These ships are divided among 300 TO WORK companies. CHICAGO. Nov. 12 Reports show DANIELS ASKS MORE miners generally refraining from re PAY FOR NAVY MEN turning to work. rear-admiral- LAHAINALUNA BOY GETS FAREWELL IN HONOLULU ) d n MINNEAPOLIS, Nov. 12 The Legion, in Its national MORMON HEAD SAILS tion today, adopted a resolution deSATURDAY FOR HAWAII manding a constitutional amendment barring from citizenship American SALT LAKE CITY. Nov. 12 (Asso born children of Orientals and others ciated Press) President J. Heber ineligible to citizenship. Grant, of the Church of Latter Day Saints and six other officials of the Mormon church will sail from San MAKINO BLAM ES. SUGAR PLANTERS Francisco Saturday for Honolulu for HONOLULU, Nov. 10 Fred Makino, the purpose of conducting dedicatory owner of the Hawaii Hochi, told the ceremonies of the new Mormon Tern plantation laborers' supporters' asso- pie at Laie, Oahu. that President Grant announced ciation last night that the sugar planters are responsible for the language probably the dedication of the temple will take place November 30. school agitation. Am-erica- Lumber prices tooK another shoot upwards, according to a new list sent out by the Kahulul Railroad company effective last Monday. This time it Is redwood that does the principal skyrocketing, the advance on this kind of lumber being $3.50 per thousand board feet, bringing the price of 1 x 12 boards up to $74.70. Norwest advanced but 30 cents over the advance of 10 days before of $2.35, and now averages about $61.65 per thousand. CLOTURE ON TREATY DEBATE TO INVOKE Waihee Items Honolulu School Men Post-Heral- PINEAPPLES HOPE OF NORTH KOHALA FIVE 14, 1919. OMSK EVACUATED SAYS TOKIO CABLE WASHINGTON, Nov. 13 Truman Palmer, executive secretary of the U. S. sugar manufacturers' associa- tion, today notified members of the department of justice that while not desiring that any producer should sell below a fair margin of profit, his as sociation will not increase the general maximum of 10 cents per pound wholesale for be.et sugar. He said producers might sell higher to manufacturers provided these manufacturers had validly contracted not to raise the price of product because of higher cost of sugar. WOULD REDUCE SIZE AND RAISE RATE FOR ADVERTISING NEW YORK, Nov. 12 President newspaper Glass of the American publishers' association today urged an increase of advertising rates and a reduction in the size of newspapers, at a special meeting which is considering the problem of the news print paper shortage. He said that the publishers are mainly responsible for the wild market and shortage. A reducd tion in size of papers is suggested. FARGO. N. D Nov. 12 Federal district attorney Hildreth said today that the coal strike situation in North Dakota is being considered by federal authorities. one-thir- VIRGINIA STATESMAN DEAD CHARLOTTESVILLE. Va., Nov. 12 U. S. Senator Thomas S. Martin, of Virginia, died here today at his home He was 72 years of age. CENTRALIA GUARDED BY SOLDIERS HONOLULU, Nov. 12 Kolchak has ordered Omsk evacuated and his CENTRALIA, Wn., Nov. 12 The na forces to retreat to Irkutsk, according tioiuil guard is patroling the city. to a Tokio cable to the Nippu Jiji. More than 20 I. W. W.s are in Jail. The body of "Brick" Smith disap It also demands the deportation of peared and it is believed that the rope alien slackers and interned aliens. was cut and the body sunk in the A resolution also authorizes the ap river. pointment of a committee of the It is reported that the governor does Legion to spread the doctrines of Am not fear more violence. The mayor ericanism. stated today that he intends to clear Leonard Wiihington, of Hawaii, was the city of I. W. W. the author of the convention's Amerl caniation program. Frank Dolier, of The WASHINGTON, Nov. 12 Philadelphia, was elected first nation Prince of Wales visited the Red Cross al commander. Lincoln memorial hospital here today JAPAN TO DOUBLE WAR BUDGET HONOLULU, Nov. 8 Japans war BRITISH LABOR TO DISCUSS NATIONALIZATION budget for 1920 is to be double that figures budget, but actual 1919 of the LONDON, Nov. 12 Representatives are yet unavailable, according to a of organized labor are called to meet Hochi. message Hawaii to the cable here December 9 to discuss the nationalization of mines. BLIZZARD IN COLORADO WRECKS WIRES SAN FRANCISCO, Nov. 10 Trans- ITALIAN SOCIALISTS AND SOLDIERS CLASH continental telegraph and telephone ROME, Nov. 8 Disorders have occommunication has Deen interrupted in the vicinity of Denver, which has curred at Milan and Genoa, where all but Isolated the west coast, by a socialists celebrating the Russian rev blizzard followed by 12 hours of snow olution, clashed with soldiers. storm. Heavy losses of live stock in Colorado are feared. The Associated $2500 will buy the Alana's Homestead at Makawao, adjoining the Press gets its report today through Catholic Mission, containing an area Canada. of 1.15 acres, with all improvements sj of thereon. An Englishman is the inventor h B. J. GUERRERO, a greenhouse weighing several tons Execlusive tgent, and so mounted on tracks that it can Room 7, Magoo'i Biulding, be moved from one flower bed to an Honolulu. T. H. other as needed. Than It Looks A Gown Is No Older Our operators are expert at restoring new ness and longing the life of garments Moil pro- for the whole family. Service Always Prompt Press We Clean, Dye FRENCH LAUNDRY, and Mend J. Abadie, Prop. 'TOXOLULU The Milk That Never Fail- sCarnation Milk Is always on the market. You can get it any time at your grocer's. It is economical, convenient and absolutely safe it is sterilized. Xo reason to wony about milk shortage. "From Contented Cows" Henry May & Co., Ltd. Wholesale Distributors " FORT STREET 1 HONOLULU 1 tt.-"? '' r - The One Store In Honolulu That Sells Dependable Shoes "REGALS" Our Mail Order Department is Always At Your Service OUR SHOE REPAIR DEPARTMENT IS P.EST IX CITY It Pays to Have Your Old Shoes Repaired "In The REGAL Way" $2.25 $3.25 Yi soles and heels sewed Whole soles and heels sewed III Work ( Hdiiintt'cJ SIX THE MAUI NEWS, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER RENAME PLAYS OF SHAKESPEAR'i FOR EFFECT WOULD Airplane Flight To South Pole Plan Of British LONDON, 9 (Associated Wayne, dramatic actress, finds an explantation of the question as to why Shakespearian plays seldom win financial reward in what she terms Shakespeare's inability to give his productions catchy titles. The suggests a repertoire of the bard's plays rechristened to meet popular demands for stimulating titles. She suggests "How Could You, Juliet?" ns more appropriate than plain "Romeo and .Juliet." She also would substitute '"Call of the Flesh" of Venice;" for "The Merchant "Strangled in Bed" for "Othello;" "The Nutty Frincess" for "Hamlet;" "Hon, Whom Do You Love" for "Henry V"; "Big Dick" for "Richard the Third;" "The Knife" for "Julius Caesar" and 'Moonlight and Honeysuckle" r Night's Dream." Tor Press) Party LONDON, Oct. 9 (Hy The Associated Press) John L. Cope, leader and organizer of the IiriliK.li Imperial c Ant-arcti- Expedition, states that the preparations for his flight to the South Pole are well advanced. Experts are now encaged in designing the plane in which the flight will be made. "We have received n terrible Mow-ithe death of Brigadier General Lee, who had signed on with the expedition as chief of the aeronautical staff and would have piloted the plane to the South Pole," said Mr. Cope. "I am now In negotiation with one of the most famous airmen in the world, who, I think, will take the place of (leneral Leo. I cannot disclose his name, but he has won the Victoria Cross as well as the Distinguished Service Order lor his magnificent exploits as an airman on the western front." Mr. Cope stated that he was not merely going to fly to the pole but that he intended to use the airplane throughout the six or seven years that the expedition would be on the ice. The Antarctic had never been chart-teproperly, he said, owing to the fact that many parts were quite inaccessible on foot. It was his intention to chart the whole Antarctic from the air. Second in command to Mr. Cope will be Ernest Joyce, who accompanied the first Scott expedition to the South Pole and was a member of both Sliackleton expeditions. Nov. Justina "Mid-summe- AMERICANS TO PRESENT CHURCH TO FRENCH TOWN (Asso- CANTIGNY, France, Oct. ciated Press) This village where the American troops first "went over the top" In earnest after the Germans, the first of the many towns and villages the American army liberated for France, will soon have a new church n the front of which will apear the inscription "Gift of the American People." Until it is possible to restore the old stone edifice, the church will be located in one of the American Red Cross huts. The first ceremony to be celebrated there will be the marriage of he daughter of the nviyor of Cantigny 10 d PEACE COUNCIL MAY IN IRELAND ADJOURN SOON (By The Associated Press) CORK, Ireland, Nov. 11 Constant PARIS, Nov. 12 American peace collisions between the military and lelegates have informed the civilians culminated in serious rioting that they intend to leave France last night when solders, enraged by Hiring the first week In Decora iittacks, broke through the police lines The British peace members express and conflicted with the crowd. he same desire and the general impression is that the conference will WETS WIN OUT IN OHIO conclude its work by the end of NoELECTION vember. (By Tho Associated Press) COLUMBUS. O., Nov. 11 The state DORPAT, Nov. 12 Lettish troops a week ago voted against ratifying the near Riga attacked German-Russiafederal prohibition amendment by a forces and pushed them back several majority of f41, according to the offici- miles. al count just announced. The drys have asked for a recount. AMERICAN ARMY CASUALTIES (By The Associated Press) MOTOR SCHOONER ON WASHINGTON, Nov. 11 American TRIAL TRIP revised casualties of the war are (By The Associated Press) 293,089 including 34,625 killed in acHONOLULU, Nov. 11 The City tion and 215,489 wounded in action.' Mill Co.'h motor schooner Tioneer darts for Ililo today on trial trip. If TEACHERS NOT INTERESTED IN UNION successful the trip to the coast will then be undertaken. (By The Associated Press) HONOLULU, Nov. 11 But eight TURKISH PLOT REPORTED teachers who attended the meeting (By The Associated Press) last night voted in favor of forming BERLIN, Nov, 10 A plot to rein- a union under the American Federastate the deposed sultan of Turkey tion of Labor. Not much interest is has been discovered, according to a teported among teachers in the matter dispatch from Constantinople received Monday. GOVERNOR PROCLAIMS WORE RIOTING THANKSGIVING NEGOTIATES WITH D'ANNUNZIO (By The Associated Press) ROME, Nov. 10 The Popolor Romano says a definite agreement regarding Fiume is imminent and that the Italian chief of staff has reached an agreement with D'Anminzio whereby (he latter will not oppose the government. ITALY (By The Associated Press) 11 Governor HONOLULU, Nov. McCarthy today proclaimed Thursday, November 27, as Thanksgiving. OF PEACE WITH BOL- SHEVIKI STARTS SOMETHING (By The Associated Press) LONDON, Nov. 10 The Premier's hint in a speech today of an attempt , to negotiate a peace with the Bolshe-viklThe profound stir. has created a LAW AGAINST MINE press is highly indignSTRIKE TO BE ENFORCED ant and the The Daily Mail scouts the (By The Associated Press) WASHINGTON, Nov. 10 Attorney idea of "shaking hands with murder-era.- " General Palmer today reiterated that the coal strike is illegal and declared emphatically that he will enforce the PARIS TO CELEBRATE VICTORY law. (By The Associated Press) PARIS, Nov. 10 An Allies' victory SATURDAY'S FOOT BALL' GAMES pilgrimage has been organized for (By The Associated Press) Day, with Cardinal Lucon Football Armistice HONOLULU, Nov. 8 and with 1 British, and 19 leader, as scon s: Putiahou 21, Honolulu Military French generals participating. Acadaniy 7; College of Hawaii 26, Mc7, Outrigger Club 7; Kamehameha LONDON, Nov. 10 A wireless disKinley 0. patch from Berlin says that- Nekras-off- , 12, Vale 14, Brown 0; Notredame Russian finance minister former Army. 9: Georgetown 0, Navy 0; Chiof the Duma was and Min10, cago 33, Michigan 0; Illinois year ago. nesota fi; U. or C. IS, U. of S. Cal. 13; shot by Bolsheviks a Stan-folWashington State 7, Oregon 0; ACHI, JR., NAMED CIRCUIT JUDGE 13, Santa Clara 0. WASHINGTON, Nov. 8 President has nominated W. C. Achi, Jr. Wilson KAUAI SUPERVISION ARRESTED of Honolulu, as circuit judge of the (By The Associated Press) HONOLULU, Nov. lu J. S. Betten-court- , &lh circuit court, Kauai. Jr.. a Kauai supervisor of Kea-liii- , HARA MINISTRY has been arrested following the SAYS DISGRACED JAPAN of envelope disappearance of a pay imHONOLULU, Nov. 10 The il, o Makee Sugar Company, where he in of the Hara ministry peachment is employed. the December diet is planned by the SERMON ON LANGUAGE SCHOOLS Kenseikai, the opposition party, whose leader, H. Kono is quoted in Tokio (By The Associated Press) HONOLULU. Nov. 10 -- Rev. A. W. papers that "weakness of the Hard Union church ministry in dealing with the United Palmer, of Central pivached upon the abolition of foreign States and China is a disgrace to the Tokio national honor of Japan." language schools last liight. table to ;he Hawaii Hochi. A. F. L. WILL BACK STRIKING MINERS MINERS TO STICK BY DEMANDS SPRINGFIELD, 111., Nov. 12 (By The Associated Press) WASHINGTON, Nov. 10 Executive Sccretaiy Farrington has announced committee of the American Federa- that the original demands of the mintion of Labor will support the miners' ers will be presented to the operators at Secretary Wilson's conference. strike. TALK - d BRITISH PLAN TO FORM COLONY LONDON, Press) Oct. Brigadier-Genera- l 3 IN MEXICO (Associated A. C. Crit-chle- is going to take a chosen party 14, 1919. BRITISH CAPITAL $EEKS FIELD IN NEW EUROPE BRITIAN BERNE, Nov. 1 (Associated Press) The Rumanian Bureau states that newly-formeEnglish companies, backed by English banks, have begun They operations in Transylvania. have already bought a potash plant, iron mines, cement and glass plants and are now negotiating to purchase all the important coal, gold and copper mines In the country. The Rumanians welcome English interest and capital in Transylvania and the Banat, which have been neglected In past years owing to lack of capital although there Is plenty of natural wealth. American capitalists are also obtaining important concessions in Rumania especially in oil mines. Oct. S (Associated Britain is expecting Czechc-Slovak- ia to furnish an important market for British trade when more stable economic conditions have been established in the new republic. The Board of Trade Journal points out that Czecho slovakia, which includes Bohemia, is rich in raw materials and possesses some of the most Important industries In Europe. It 1b estimated that about eighty percent of the mines and industrial businesses of the old Empire are now within the boundaries of the republic. d of fifty fellow British officers to settle on a million-acrranch about 400 miles north of Mexico City. He says Mexico is "the coming country of the e world." . Discussing the reported opposition to his colonization scheme of the British and American governments, he said: "We are not going out to stir up trouble. I have no urgent need of taking the officers with me, but I want to give the lads a chance if they've got enough grit in them to make good, and I want company. Both my father and my mother are coming out with me, but with fifty Englishmen in the party we can be very happy." JUDGE VAUGHAN CONDEMS JAPANESE LANGUAGE SCHOOLS RUSSIAN AMAZON IS (By The Associated Press) BLOODY PORTIA HONOLULU, Nov. 12 Judge H. W. Vaughan, last night, in an address to TOLTAVA, Russia, Oct. 2 (Associ- the local post of the American Legion ated Press) A young woman, about said that congress will never permit twenty-twyears of age, known here the conducr. of the givernment of this simply as "Rosa," was the prosecutor territory by an electorate not thoat the Red tribunal during a great roughly American. Half of Hawaii's part of the Bolshevikl occupation of voters will soon be Japanese and in Poltava. It is said she, herself shot a few years the voting majority must with a revolver seven be of Japanese parentage and it will and civilian prisoners. become necessary that proper meast ures be taken to qualify them in acWILL CALL CONFERENCE cordance with American principles. OF MINE MEN "In my opinion," the speaker stated, (By The Associated Press) Japanese language schools inWASHINGTON, Nov. 11 Secretary "The with this work." terfere of Labor Wilson said he will call miners and operators to negotiate and OPERATORS AND MINERS reach a agreement after cabinet met. TO CONFER (By The Associated Press) AMERICAN LEGION WASHINGTON, Nov. 11 Chairman NOT IN POLITICS Brewster of the operators', committee (By The Associated Press) Lewis, of the MINNEAPOLIS, Nov. 11 The Am- has wired President asking that a Workers United Mine erican Legion today, by unanimous to be appointed vote, adopted a resolution demanding miners' committee new scale as on of a matter confer the cancellation of Victor Bergers per Secretary of Labor Wilson's incitizenship. vitation earlier in the day. The conThe convention voted to amend its to be held Friday and will is ference constitution to make the Legion field of differences. whole cover the for and to bar candidates public office from holding office in the INDIANAPOLIS, Nov. 11 The minLegion. It was decided to make In- ers have accepted President Wilson's dianapolis the national headquarters. invitation because it includes all fields and notified Brewster MINNEAPOLIS, Nov. 11 American and have so Legion has selected Cleveland for its Wilson. , o next meeting place. M'CARTHY OPPOSES EXTRA SESSION NOW H. RENTON HENRY Associated Press) (By The DIES SUDDENLY HONOLULU, Nov. 10 On account (By The Associated Press) possibility of an extra session HONOLULU, Nov. 10 Wireless ad- of the following the return legislature of the vices report that Henry H. Renton, Washington of the legislative manager of the Union Mill of Kohala, from commission. Governor McCarthy is unis dead. favorable to an extra session now to consider the Japanese language school TERRITORY APPEALS TAX CASE question. (By The Associated Press) HONOLULU, Nov. 10 The territory has filed an appeal from the tax- ap-- i PARLIAMENT TO DISCUSS BOLSHEVIKI peal court's valuation of the Niulil (By Tho Associated Press) Sugar Mill & Plantation Co., of $575,-00LONDON, Nov. 10 Great Britain The company's return was $450,-00not intend to negotiate with the does was $750,000 while the assessment Bolshevikl until the house of commons thoroughly, discusses the subject SENATE BACKING UP today. Law Bonar stated RESERVATIONS (By The Associated Press) WASHINGTON, Nov. 10 The sen- HUN SECRETARY GETS PAPAL AUDIENCE ate today declined to replace the Press) Associated (By The Article 10 reservation with the reserROME, Nov. 10 The pope today regroup by of vation framed the mild ceived Baron von Gobsatt, secretary reservationists, by a vote of 58 to 36. of the Bavarian legation. This is the It also defeated Borah'e resolution derepresentative of the central third claring the United Slates is not bound powers thus to be received In private by Article 10, and defeated a motion by" the pope since the war modifying the reservation provision audience began. authorizing congress to decided questions involving the use of force. RECORD SNOW IN CANADA (By The Associated Press) WINNIPEG, Nov. 10 A big snow MORE TALK OF TREATING WITH REDS storm is general over the entire Canadian prairie. It is one of the heavi(By The Associated Press) HELS1NGFORS, Nov. 10 In politi- est storms in years and is still in procal circles it is believed that the Bal- gress. Three feet of snow is reporttic states and Poland conference at ed in southern Manitoba. Dorpat will invite the Bolshevik! to send representatives to Dorpat on HOUSE PASSES MERCHANT MARINE BILL November 16, to discuss peace. (By The Associated Press) WASHINGTON, Nov. 8 The house SENATE COMMITTEE opCONDEMNS STRIKES today passed, practically without permanoutling the bill position, the (By The Associated Press) WASHINGTON, Nov. 8 The senate ent policy regarding the American steel jnerchant marine. It provides for the the committee investigating strike, characterizes all industrial sale of the government owned fleet It declares to American citizens and the continuastrikes ns barbarism. th-- re is no place in this country for tion of the U. S. shipping board with labor or industrial despotism, and regulatory powers. recommends the establishment of some permanent mediation agency as WANTS LEGISLATION FOR PEARL HARBOR a preventive of strikes. (By The Associated Press) WASHINGTON, Nov. 10 Secretary NEW CABLE TO GO NORTHERN ROUTE Daniels has written a letter to the congress asking that the navy base at (By The Associated Press) HONOLULU, Nov. .10 The Adver- Pearl Harbor as established during correspondent the war under temporary legislation, tiser's Washington says indications are that the senate should be continued. He also asked commerce committee favors a new authority to purchase from the Oahu trans-Pacificable to follow the north- Railroad & Land Co. the fishing rights ern route via Alaska instead of Hono- in Pearl Harbor. lulu. BERGER DENIED SEAT IN HOUSE WASHINGTON, Nov 10 The house TO RA'oE TAXES FOR WAR BUDGET today denied Victor Berger a seat by (By The Associated Press) vote of 309 to 1. He Is held to be HONOLUIU, Nov. 10 The Japan- ineligible because of his opposition to ese budget for the next diet included the government during the war. conCO.000,000 yens for navy and 30,000,-00- Joseph Carney, democrat, who yens for the army. It is proposed tested Berger's election, is also not to increase the sakl tax, according to entitled to the seat because he did a Tokio cable to the Nippu Jiji. not receive a plurality of votes cast. 0. 0, SEES MARKETS IN CZECHOSLOVAKIA LONDON, Press) Great Austro-Hungarla- DUE DECEMBER 18 (By The Associated Tress) HONOLULU, Nov. 12 The Matson a company has announced that the will sail from New York on November 25, and will reach Honolulu via San Francisco about December 18. The ship will go from here to Kilo about the 20th remaining there two days. MATSONIA n MUST PAY FINE FOR AID EXTENDED TO KOREANS SEOUL, Korea, November 7 (Associated Press) The Rev. Ell Mowry, an American minister convicted by a Japanese court of having given Bhelter to Keorean agitators (luring the dem- onstrations against Japanese authority early this year, yesterday was sentenced to pay a fine of 100 yen. The fine was imposed following a review of the case, Mowry having appealed from a lower court which sentenced him to serve six months In jail. Mat-soni- Early Holiday Suggestions n IN EVERY GIFT Christmas Cards and Greetings ON EVERY GIFT Christmas Stickers and Seals AROUND EVERY GIFT Christmas Ribbons and Tinsel Cord Careful Attention Given . Mail Orders ORDER NOW WHILE THE SELECTION IS GOOD HAWAIIAN NEWS CO., LTD. FIRE UPON I. W. W.' VICTORY PARADE (By The Associated Press) CENTHALIA, Wash., Nov. 11 Arthur E. McCelfresh was killed, Ben. Cassagranda probably fatally wound-ed and 6 others wounded when men suspected of being I. W. W.s fired upon former service men .marching Jn an Armistice Day parade. One I. W. W. was rescued from the mob by ' police. and sailors are now guarding the jail. Later Warren Grimm, attorney, died from wounds, and Dale Hubbard is reported dying but others wounded will recover. Six I. W. W.s have been arrested, and posses are seeking others. A great mob has surrounded the jail which tuard. The mob also ransacked the 1. W. W. hall tearing down the front and burning the furniture in the rtreet. Bishop Street Honolulu. : 1 POAHA WINS WRESTLING HONORS (By The Associated Press) HONOLULU, Nov. 11 L. J. Poaha defeated ICinjo Ikeda last night In Islands wrestling championship .match. Ikeda secured the first fall but Poaha got the second and third. The bout lasted hours and 1C minutes. E. Giesecke REPRESENTING THAYER PIANO Company, Ltd. . Will visit Maul Early In December on his regular tuning trip, WE EXCHANGE PIANOS. WE SELL THEM TERMS. ON EASY LET'S TALK IT OVER. Address earn Maul News. OILS & GREASES TIRES TUBES Lahaina Auto Supply Co. Shimamura Hotel Bldg., Lahaina PARTS ACCESSORIES BICYCLE SUPPLIES ALVOLINE V Lubricating OILS For all kinds of Engines and are Petroleum Lubrication Oils refined especially for all designs of gas and steam cylinders. Special A Grade for your Machinery Engine Your dealer has it or can get it Honolulu Iron Works Co, WHOLESALE DISTRIBUTORS Honolulu. J . When in Honolulu stop at THo J . ill iCi - I . uElifii c 0 EUROPEAN PLAN Running water In every room; rooms clnnlv AH urlth hnlhc MmlAaliiklA kAsi close to best restaurants and all car Highest class service. lines. Ceatrally locale J. la the theatre aa4 ihopalaf ccalera, F. CHILD, Proprietor ft E fj' ,vv( v.- hi . ( I I ( I. THE MAUI NEWS, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER I PAPERS RECORDED Treasurer's Deeds JOHN CHONG ft WP. to M. Hlrata et, als., 3 A land, Haiku, Makawao, Maul, Nov. 7, 1919. $1400. KAIKAINA KAPUA (widow) to A. Mienelogilo, shares In Walnlha Hul Land, Walnlha, Maul, Dec. 30, 1914. 115. JOE GOUVEIA ft WF to John Fernandez 1 Bhare In Hul Land, Peahl, Hamakualoa, Maul, Nov. 3, 1919. $350. LILY A. DAILEY & HSB. et. al. to T. B. Lyons, Int. In R. Ps. 6330 4 aps. & 4893 2 aps. Waihee, (Wailuku), 125. Maul, Nov. 10, 1919. Lease JOHN DA COSTA to S. Yoshimasu et. al. 30 A land, Hamakualoa, Maul, May 23, 1919 6 yrs. at $650 per an. Agreements J. L. NEVES to K. Kobashlgawa, replanting ft selling of pineapples on pc. land, Peahl, Hamakualoa, Maul, May 29, 1919. Deeds AH COOK & WF. to Lahaina Agrctl. Co., Ltd., Int. in R. Ps. 2567, 3535 Aps. 1 ft 2, 1756 & 1714 Ap. 1 rents, etc., Lahaina, Maui, Nov. 3, 1919. $700. J. P. KAPIHE ft WF. to Charles Mel int. In 2V4 A of R. P. 2194 Kul. 3336 Haiku, Maul, Nov. 4, 1919, $125. ANTONE SOARES ft WF. to Joe Soares, L. P. 1176, Kul. 487, Lahaina Maui, Oct. 31, 1919 $1000. Agreements ROYAL HAWAIIAN SALES CO. LTD with William Cooper to sell for $1400 3 Ton Packard Truck ft equip ment. Maui, Oct. 22, 1919, $200. ROYAL HAWAIIAN SALES CO. LTD with T. Hanzawa, to sell for $1056.40 490 Chevrolet touring automobile ft equipment. Maul, Oct. 4, 1919. $250. Deeds HULEKA KAEA (widow) to Moses Akawa, int. in R. P. 5475 Kul. 146B Puahala, Molokai, Nov. 1, 1919. $150. Trust Deeds NviLLIAM K. ALULI to Noa W. Aluli int. in real & personal property, Wailuku, Maul, Oct. 16, 1919. $1. Leases ALEXANDER ADAMS to Chan Cheen Maul, pc. land, Kalnehe, Lahaina, Nov. 6, 1919, 20 yrs. At $36 per an. Bill of Sale WILLIAM K. ALULI to Alai K Aluli et. als. Tr. of goods, wares, mdse. & personal affects, (Wailuku, Maui.) Oct 16, 1919. $1 ft love. 1-- RUSSIANS INVITED TO CONFERENCE W.-cw- r-- Those Who Travel Office, Honolulu, Oahu. In accordance with the provisions of Chapter 181 of the Revised Laws of Hawaii, 1915, as amended by Act 57 of the Session Laws of 1915, entitled, An Act to Amend Chapter 181 of the Revised Laws of Hawaii, 1915, by adding thereto a new Section to be known as Section 3308 A, Providing for the Dissolution of Corporations in certain cases," I, the undersigned, Acting Treasurer of the Territory of Hawaii, hereby give notice of my intention to dissolve the following corporations established and existing under and by virtue of the laws of the territory of Hawaii and to annul the Charters of said corporations: American-HawaiiaPaper Co., Ltd Incorporated May 5, 1913. Aloha Meat Market Co., Ltd Incorporated June 2, 1913 Caliornia Stock and Dairy Co., Ltd., Incorporated Mar. 27, 1895 The Grand 'Hotel Company, Limited - Incorporated June 8, 1916 Hawaiian-AmericaRubber Co., Ltd Incorporated Apr. 16, 1906 Co., Ltd., Hawaiian Vulcanizing Incorporated Nov. 18, 1913 Hawaiian Taro and Mercantile Co. Ltd., .... Incorporated Apr. 17, 1916 Hawaiian Philippine Gold Dredging and Mining Company, Limited Incorporated Feb. 19, 1917 The Honolulu Monument Works Ltd Incorporated Mar. 2, 1911 Honolulu Draylng and Building Co. Incorporated Oct. 6, 1914 ....Ltd Hawaii (Soda Works Company, Ltd., Incorporated Aug. 10, 1898 Company, Ltd., Island Sight-SeeinIncorporated June 14, 1916 Keokea Cigar Company, Limited, Incorporated Nov. 17, 1911 Kona Tobacco, Company, Limited, Incorporated May 18, 1908 Limited, Orchards Laurel Hill Incorporated Nov. 6, 1909 Reliable Transfer Company, Limited Incorporated Sept. 24, 1915 The Standard Optical Co., Ltd., Incorporated Aug. 8, 1917 Wailuku Rice Company, Limited, . Incorporated Sept. 13, 1909 Now, therefore, notice is hereby given to any and all persons that have been or are now Interested In any manner whatsoever in the corpora tions, that objections to the dlssolu tion of said corporations must be filed In this office on or before 12 o'clock noon of December 12, 1919, and that any person or persons desiring to be heard thereon must be in attendance at the office of the undersigned, in the Executive Building, Honolulu, at 12 o'clock noon of said day, to show cause, if any, why said corporations should not be dissolved. Honolulu, T. H. October. HENRY C. HAPAI, Acting Treasurer, Territory of Hawaii. (Oct. 10. 24, 31, Nov. 14.) n g Departed M. i SECOND CIRCUIT, OF HAWAII. At Chambers. n By Mauna Kea, Friday, Nov. 7 T. A. Cooper, Chas. Mel, W. O. 'Aiken, C. B. Hudson, I. T. Seo, Mr. and Mrs. Hata and infant, Nakama, Arakakl, Miss M. L. Sherwood, Miss Grace Graham, Miss Helen Xerbe, Mrs. Mary L. Zerbe, Manuel Rocha, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Non, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Chong, K. H. Nagatani, J. Ntshikawa, Mr. and Mrs. T. Kunikiyo, Mr. and Mrs. Suglhara and three children. Arrived By Claudine, Saturday, Nov. 9 L. K. Smith, Richard L. Luffin, Major E. F. Witsell, Private Carey, M. T. C, Geo. Davles, F. Sakate, M. Mazlma, Jno. C. Rodrigues. Mrs. Lum Ching Lee, Miss M. Francisco, Mrs. E. G. Keen, T. O. Kamato, Joe Whitford, Joe Tarres, A. V. Marciel, Frank R. Souza, Miss J. Yapp, Mrs. M. Keanu, J. S. L. Apo, Nancy Hul, Harry Kimu- ra, J. R. Watson. Lahaina M. Smith, Mrs. B. Smith, Y. Maruono, S. Saito, Miss G. Morton. Departed By Claudine, Saturday, Nov. 9 Mrs. H. D. Sloggett, Mr. and Mrs. M. R. Medeiros and daughter, Mrs. Ludwich, and 3 children, Mrs. R. K. Purdy, Mr. Fuji Yashlgoro. Arrived By Claudine, Tuesday, Nov. 11 Miss Alice Mitchell, M. J. Sleeper, H. Howell, Mrs. Jno. G. Howell, Tge, Ya-sutani, J. Goldstein, Mr. Voss, Mrs. Voss, Kan Hin Yui, Mrs. II. D. Sloggett, Mrs.Rainaholo, Mrs. Chang,' W. Chang, A. H. Wong, C. C. Condradt, Angus McPhee. For Hana Y. Nagata, Y. Tadayama, Fred Pierce, C. N. Farbes, Mrs. E. Anderson. For Lahaina K. Takeyama, Chas. Mel, Mrs. Chas. Mel, Miss Shisido, Mrs. Shisido, S. Tige, T. Nakama, G. Nakama, A. Takashima, M. Kaide, J. Nukui, Y. Kunlchika, Mr. Kinoka, E. Mayer. Departed By Claudine, Nov. 12 Miss H. Webbs, Master van Hogan, Mr. and Mrs. Kauka and 6 children, Mr. A. K. Char, S. Ohta, Mrs. Ohta and son, R. Ohta, H. Ohta, M. Nakamoto, D. C. Buick, J. H. Grey, Mrs. Erhet Lum, Mr. and Mrs. Matsumojto and 4 chil dren, Mrs. C. E. S. Burns. . Treasurer's Office, Honolulu, Oahu TERRITORY Probate. In the Matter of the Estate of Joseph Neves, Late of Peahl, Maui, T. H. THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE SECOND JUDICIAL CIRCUIT, TERRITORY OF I 1919, HAWAII, JANUARY TERM. P CONTRACTOR N N. SANO Territory of Hawaii by Lyman II. Notice of hearing Petition for Letters Bigelow, its Superintendent of Pub lic orks, of Administration. Plaintiff The petition of Maria Neves of Paia, Maui, T. II. alleging that Joseph Neves, late of Peahl, died Intestate while a resident of Pcnhi aforesaid on or about the 17th day of October, leav ing property within the Territory of Hawaii, necessary to be administered upon and praying that letters of ad ministration Issue to Joseph S. Sousa having been filed. IT IS ORDERED that Thursday, the 11th day of December at 10 o'clock, be and hereby is appointed for hear ing said petition In the Court Room of this Court in the Court House in Wailuku, at which time and place all persons concerned may appear and show cause, If any they have, why said petition should net be granted. BY THE COURT HENRY C. MOSSMAN, Clerk. Dated Wailuku, Maul, T. II., Octo ber 29th 1919. EUGENE MURPHY, Attorney for Petitioner. (Oct. 31st; Nov. 7, 14, 21.) IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE SECOND CIRCUIT, TERRITORY OF HAWAII. Notice Of Drawing Of Trial Jurors NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, that the drawing of trial jurors to serve and act as such during the balance of the 1919 Term of the Circuit Court, Second Circuit, Territory of Hawaii, will take place in the Court Room of said Court, at Wailulru, Island and County of Maui, Territory aforesaid, on Monday, the 17th day of November, A. D. 1919, at 10 o'clock in the fore noon of said day. Dated at Wailuku, Maui, this 4th day of November, A. D. 1919. L. L. BURR, Judge of said Court. . Attest: HENRY C. MOSSMAN, Clerk of Baid Court. (Seal of Court) (Nov. 7, 14.) NOTICE TERRITORY OF HAWAII In re Dissolution of the Wailuku Construction and Drayage Company, Limited. LONDON, Nov. 13 The inter-allle- d Whereas, the Wailuku Construction commission to Baltic states, sitting In and Drayage Company, Limited, a Koenigsburg, has Invited Col. corporation established and existing chief of staff, and comunder and by vlrture of the laws of independent detachments manders of the Territory of Hawaii, has pursuant to attend the Tilsit discussion. Safe to law in such cases made and provid conduct has been promised. ( ed, duly filed in this office, a petition BRUSSELS, Nov. 13 The Belgian for the dissolution of the said cor royalty has arrived here from Brest. poration, together with a certificate thereto annexed as required by law. Now, therefore, notice is hereby given to any and all persons that Honolulu Wholesale Produce Market Quotations have been or are now interested in any manner whatsoever In the said corporation, that objections to the I88UED BY THE TERRITORIAL MARKETING DIVI8ION granting of the said petition must be Week ending, November 10, 1919. Wholesale Only. filed in this office on or before aJnu ary 12, 1920, and that any person or Buy at these Prices Small Consumers Cannot persons desiring to be heard thereon must be in attendance at the office of the undersigned, in the Executive 65 Island butter, lb Fruit Building, Honolulu, at 12 o'clock noon 1.05 Eggs, select, dos 02 Bananas, Chinese, lb of said day, o show cause, if any, Eggs, No. 1, dos None Bananas, Cooking, bnch 1.75 why said petition should not be 75 Eggs, Duck, doz 02 V4 granted. Bananas, Apple, lb 65 .70 to Young Roosters, lb 1.00 Figs, 100 HENRY C. HAPAI, 25 Rabbits, live weight lb 10 Grapes, Isabella, lb Acting Treasurer Territory .55 50 to Hens, lb 07 Watermelons, lb of Hawaii 65 Turkeys, lb 60 to .75 Limes, 100 Honolulu, 30, 1919. October .40 35 to Ducks, Muse, lb Pineapples, cwt 2.00 (Nov. 7, 14, 21, 28; Dec. 5, 12, 19, 26; 30 to .35 Papalas, Ducks, Pekin, lb 02 lb 1919; Jan. 2. 9, 1920.) 13.00 Ducks, Haw. doz. None Strawberries, bsk.t .75 Aligator Pears, doz NOTICE TO LICENSED DRIVERS ft Oranges, 2.00 100 Haw. Vegetable COMMON CARRIERS OR RENT 8ERVICE VEHICLES,, Livestock 05 Beans, string green lb bought sheep at Cattle not are and 05 Beans, string, wax, lb Notice is hereby given that all per They are slaughtered 05 live weight Beans, Lima in pod, lb sons engaging in the business of Com paid weight on and dressed basis for a 5.50 to 6.00 Beans, Maul red, cwt mon Carrier or Rent Service( Hacks 25 to .28 6.00 Hogs up to 150 lb Beans, Calico cwt Automobiles, Trucks and Wagons) to 5.50 to 6.00 appear at the following places: Beans, Speckeld cwt Dressed Meats 6.50 to 7.00 Beef, lb Beans, S. W. cwt Paia At Kwong Sun Loy Store, on 16 to .18 t. .' 5 "0 Veal, lb Beans, L. 18 to .22 the 18th and 19th of November A. D 7.00 Mutton, lb Peas, dry Is. cwt 26 1919, between the hours of 9 A. M ,.30 Pork, lb Beets, doz. bnch's 25 to .30 to 12 M. 03 Carrots, lb Lahaina At the Lahaina Court Hides Wet Salted 3.00 to 5.00 Cabbage, cwt House, on 'and Nov 20th 21st the of 26 1, No. lb Steer. 3.00 Corn, Sweet 100 ears 20 ember, A. D. 1919, between the hours Steer, No. 2, lb 75.00, Steer, Corn, Haw. am. yel. ton 20 of 9 A. M. and 12 M. hair slip, lb 65.00 Kips, lb Corn Haw. lg. yel. ton Wailuku At the Sheriff's Building 20 09 on Peanuts, lg. lb the 24th, 25th and 26th of Novem .30 25 to white each Goat, 10 Peanuts, sm. lb ber, A. D. 1919, from 9 A. M. to Feeds 05 Green peppers, bell lb P. M. 05 Corn, sm. yel. ton None Green peppers, chili, lb For the purpose None ....1st For examination of Vehicles, 3.23 Corn, lg. yel. ton Pot. Is. Irish cwt 70.00 3.25 Corn Cracked, ton Pot. Is. Irish cwt 2nd For issuing of Licenses. 56.00 Pot. sweet, wh. cwt .... 1. 65 to 1.75 Bran, ton 3rd For delivering of Licenses and 80.00 Badges. Pot. Sweet, red cwt 1.70 to 1.75 Barley, ton 93.00 Taro, cwt BY ORDER OF, 2.00 to 2.50 Scratch food, ton 80.00 Taro, b.tli 15 Oats, ton P. J. GOODNESS, 75.00 Tomatoes, lb 04 to .05 Middling, ton Examiner of Chauffeurs. 98.00 Green peas, lb 08 to .10 Wheat, ton Wailuku, County of Maui. 48.00 75 Hay Wheat ton Cucumbers, dos November 1, 1919. 48.00 (Nov. 7. 14, 21.) Pumpkins, lb 03 Hay Alfalfa, ton Avaloff-Burmond- . IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE BY AUTHORITY TERRITORY OF HAWAII SEVEN 14, 1919. Certificates of Hawaiian Birth & Petitioner, ceased. On Reading and Filing the THE TERRITORY OE HAWAII of M. N. Silva of Hana, Maui,Petition allegTO THE HIGH SHERIEE OF ing that Emma Silva or Hanu, Maui, THE TERRITORY OE HA- died intestate at Hana, Maui, on the WAII, OR HIS DEPUTY, 18th day of June, A. D., 1918, leaving THE SHERIFF OF THE property in the Territory of Hawaii COUNTY OF MAUI, OR HIS necessary to lie administrated upon. DEPUTY: and praying that Letters of Admini You are commanded to summon stration be issued to a suitable per Margaret Nahaolelua ; Emily Na Nahaolelua, haolelua, Margaret Dorothy .Jahaolelua. and Ruth Na- laolelua, Minors, bv Henry Smith, their guardian; George Nahaolelua lohn Nahaolelua; Mrs. Annie Rcn eicke; Charles Kia Nahaolelua and Alice K. Nahaolelua, Minors; Albert Nahaolelua ; Alexander Nahaolelua ; Alice N. Lane (Mrs. John C. Line), Emma N. Dunne; John Doc, Mary Doe, and Richard Roe, unknown owners and claimants, de fendants and respondents, in case they shall file a written answer with in twenty (20) days after service hereof, to be and appear before the said Circuit Court at the term thereof pending, immediately after the expiration of twenty (20) days after service hereof,- PROVIDED, HOWEVER, if no term be pend ing at such time, then to be and appear before the said Circuit Court at the next succeeding term thereof towit, the January 1120 term to be holden at Wailuku, County of Maui, on the second Monday m January, 1920, at ten o'clock A. M. to show cause why the claim of the Territory of Hawaii, by Lyman II. Bigelow, superintendent of Public Works, Plaintiff and Petitioner, should not be awarded to it pursuant to the tenor of its annexed complaint, and have you then and there this writ with a full return of your proceedings thereon. tory of Hawaii, and ficio Clerk. Circuit Second Circuit. (Seal of Court.) Service Institute, P. O. to. Pacific Box 1352, Honolulu. ALOHA LODGE NO. 3 KNIQHT8 OF PYTHIA8. Regular meetings will be held at the Knights of Pythias Hall, Wai luku, on the second and fourth Friday of each month. All visiting members are cordially Invited to attend, J. H. PRATT," C. C. A. MARTINSEN, K. R. A S It is Ordered, that Thursday, the 4th day of December A. D., 1919, at ten o'clock A. M.. be and hereby is ap pointed for hearing said petition in the Court Room of this Court at Wailuku, Maui, at which time and place nil persons concerned may appear and show cause, if any they have, why said Petition should not be granted, and that notice of this order shall be published once a week for three successive weeks in the Maui News, a newspaper printed and published at Wailuku, Maui, the last publication to be not less than ten days previous to he time therein appointed for hear ing. , Dated October tow it : 27, 1919. L. L. BURR. Judge of the Circuit Court of the Second Circuit. HENRY C. MOSSMAN, Clerk of the Circuit Court of the Second Circuit. ENOS VINCENT, Attorney for Petitioner. October 31, Novemb. r 7, 14, 21, 1919. L. C. A.. 8515 Keoni 3. 65 4. 336 120.4 20 33' 107.8 Ana, thence along feet stone wall L. across C. A. 8515 Keoni Ana to 2" pipe, thence feet along fence old and low stone wall along L. C. 10806 A. f- Court I, HENRY C. MOSSMAN, Clerk of the Circuit Court of the Second Judicial Circuit, Territory of Hawaii, do hereby certify that the foregoing is a lull, true, and correct copy of the original sum mons in the case of the TERR! TORY OF HAWAII v. MAR GARET NAHAOLELUA, et al as the same appears of record and on file in the office of the Clerk of said court. I further certify that the Petifor tion nravs the condemnation use as an extension of the public school grounds of Kamehameha III School at Lahaina, Maui, and for the purpose of erecting thereon, teachers' cottages and or school play ground purposes, the follow ing described land and its appur tenances, situate at Lahaina, Coun ty of Maui, Territory of Hawaii, apply son. - Many of our former men remained in Honolulu upon leaving the service, For Information Hardware. Margaret Nahaolelua, Emily Na- Market Street Wailuku rsaliaolc.ua, aolelua, Margaret Dorothy Naliaolelua, and Ruth Na- aolclua, Minors, bv Hcnrv Smith, their Guardian; George Nahaole- - IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE ua, John Nahaolelua. Mrs. Annie SECOND CIRCUIT, TERRITORY Rcneicke, Charles Ki.i Nahaolelua, OF HAWAII. and Alice K. Nahaolelua, Minors; AT CHAMBERS. IN PROBATE. Albert Nahaolelua, Alexander Nahaolelua, Alice N. Lane (Mrs. ohn C. Lane), Emma N. Dunne, Order of Notice of Hearing Petition For Administration. ohn Doe, Mary Dot. and Richard Roe, Unknown owners and claim In the Matter of the Estate of ants. Defendants & Respondents. Emma Silva, Late of Hana, Maul, DeTerm Summons COUNTY OF MAUI, SECOND JUDICIAL CIRCUIT, TERRI TORY OF HAWAII. them where they are needed If trans portation is provided. Coffins and General Phone Attention! They are rapidly tiring of the streets We will gladly gather them and send I I Just received a new stock of Mattresses, poultry netting, paints and oils, furniture, etc. vs. The issuance of certificates of Ha waiian birth in accordance with the provisions of Chapter 20 of the Re vised Laws of Hawaii. 1915, will be discontinued until amended regular tions governing their Issuance are WITNESS THK HONOR promulgated, and no replications for PRESIDING JUDGE of ABLE such certificates will be accepted in the Circuit Court oi the Second undersigned until the office of the Judicial Circuit, at Wailuku afore that time. said, this 1st day of October, A. 1J CURTIS P. IAUKEA, 1919. Secretary of Hawaii. (S) J. A. THOMPSON, Honolulu, Oct. 30, 1919. Clerk, Supreme Court Terri(Nov. 7, 14, 21.) Ex-O- Plantation Managers i AND BUILDER Part 77 Pa 5. 244 III. Haleka-man- i, passing over a "X" cut in stone at 97.8. feet thence, 19' 216.2 feet across L. C A.'s 8515, Keoni Ana and M 6325, . Kekauonohi to a 34" pipe Front in at the St. foot of a low . stone wall 6. 152 22' 66.7 thence, feet along C. A. 6325 M. Kekauo- nohi along low stone- and wall picket fence to point of beg inning and containing an area 19,330 of sq. feet." All persons having any interest in, or claim to the land and its appurtenances sought to be con demned, are hercbv warned that un less they appear before said Circuit Court of the Second Judicial Circuit, on or before the 2nd day of February, A. D. 1920, they will be iorever barred from contesting said petition or any judgment en tered thereon. IN WITNESS WHEREOF I have hereunto set my band and affixed the seal of the said Circuit-Courthis 10th day i f October, A. Beginning at a 34" pipe, the coordinates of which referred to the Government Trig. Station "Laina," are 9262.2 feet south 2849.9 feet West, same beLODGE MAUI, NO. 472, F. A A. M ing by true azimuth and distance from the County of Maui Street Monument at the intersection of Prison Road and Front Street, 330 59 118.15 feet, and running thence by true azimuth: Stated meetings will be held at 1. feet along 00 36' 85.0 t fence along Masonic Hall, Kahulul, on the first L. C. A D. 1919. Saturday night of each month at 7: SO 6325 to M HENRY C. MOSSMAN, P. M. Kekauonoh Clerk. Visiting brethren are cordially In to stone (Seal of Court.) vited to attend. wall, thence (Oct. 17, 24, 31; Nov. 7. 14, 21, 2. 147 15' 35.8 feet J. H. Pratt. W. M. along 28; Dec. 5. 12, 19. u; 1920, Jan. stonewall in 2, 9, 16, 23.) W, A. CLARK, Secretary. THE MAUI NEWS', FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1919. EIGHT PERSONAL MENTION Lorrin K. Smith, ot Kuln, returned HILO, Nov. 11 Yesterday afternoon a joint petition for the discharge of the receiver of tho Hilo Tribune Publishing Co., Ltd., signed by the attorneys for The Tribune Publishing Co., Ltd,, and Chas. F. A. Warren was heard by Judge Qulnn and an order signed by which A. S. LeUaron Gur-iiPecelvei, was directed to turn over and deliver to the Hilo Tribune Publishing Co.. Ltd., all tho properly coming into his hands as receiver and to tile a report as receiver on Wednesday, November 12, 3019. Shortly after the order was signed thi' propel ty vns turned over to the ' ompm.y. In the joint ps.iUcii It was sluwn that thj paities iu'o cMed have on 'on-Into a mutual aur.ngcment agrc" ment whereby they have am!ra bly adju-Ueall of the claims and de mands which lnvu hiiftofore existed. Company. In the Joint petition it was shown that the parties interested have en Into a mutual arrangement and agreement whereby they have arnica William IJ'Ksmond, engineer of the ably .id.iu.stcd all of the claims and de public works department, vlHitod Hann mauds which have heretofore existed. this week for' the purpose of inspecting the progress on the new wharf at Lava Flows Across that place. He returned to Honolulu on Thursday. Kilauea Woith O. Aiken, of Maul, succeed ed Iti securing passage to the coast by HILO, Nov. 11. (Special to Maul the Luiline leaving Honolulu last Saturday morning. He was called News.) The activity In Kilauea craaway suddenly by business on the ter continues to, be of much Interest. Tlie rising lava has now crossed the mainland. trail in the crater between the VolSaturK. G. arrived Keene last Mrs. day from Honolulu, where she has cano House and Halemaumau. This e been for several months, and has join- stream is Ilowing near the ed her husband at the Maui Hotel. across the big steam crack which They expect to return to Honolulu formed in 1889 and Is remembered by about the first of tin year after the all visitors. completion of the territorial building There seems to bo a possibility at the Kahulul fair grounds, on which that tho main crater may become still Mr. Keene is government Inspector. more active. It is very spectacular Miss Eva U Heusner, formerly prin- at present. cipal of the Maunaolu seminary, who From Kona and Kau report comes resigned some months ago to return that all sign of the recent activity to the mainland, Is now living in on the mountain above Alikl has ceasPeoria, 111. ed, and it Is believed tho eruption Is been who Howell, has Annie Mrs. over. visiting on the coast for several months, returned home the first of this week. She was mot in Honolulu ly her son Hugh Howell, who went Engineers Celebrate down last week for the purpose. Discovery Electric .lames D. Dougherty, of the firm, of Wall & Dougherty, who has been on Bulb Maul for the past two weeks on a business trip, was confined to his room CHICAGO, at the Maui Hotel for several days Nov. 8. The fortieth this week by Illness. He Is now able birthday of the incandescent light to be about again, however. bulb was celebrated here recently Judge h. L. Burr, who has been when the delegates to the convention seriously ill for several weeks, was of the Illuminating Engineering So able to be out of doors for the first ciety of America. met on a date es time last Sunday, and is now recover- pecially arranged to coincide with tho ing his strength slowly. He expects anniversary. Speakets recalfed that to be able to take his place on the the announcement by Thomas J. Edl son, October 21, 1879. that ho had per bench again next Monday. Miss Marion Green, of Oakland, Cal. fected nn incandescent lamp that arrived in Honolulu last week on tho would really "light," was received Nippon Maru enroute to Paia, where with But so ridicule. she takes a position as nurse in the rapid was the development of the InPaia hospital. She succeeds Miss vention and recognition of the accomMargaret McGowan, who became Mrs. plishment that on the following David Kinney last week, and at the Christmas Eve an excursion train was same time a resident of Wailuku. Miss run from New York to West Orange, Green is a cousin of Mrs. Kinney. N. J., carrying a Hirong to view the Maj. O. J. Whitehead, who' has been wonders of the first community lightseriously sick for several months, and ed by electricity. who has been recuperating in Kula Declaring that tho use of electricity recently, has practically Recovered his for lighting is yet only In the first .health and is back home once more. stages of development, tho speakers He is being 'congratulated upon his pointed out that general use .of tho recovery by his many friends. Edison invention did not como until Mr. and Mrs. Frank Stark, of Lahni-na- , the last ten or fifteen years and that wunt to Hawaii to seo the Volcano up to that time kerosene and gasoline last Sunday. lamps an,d candles were widely used. F. G. Krauss, of tho Haiku But now even small communities have of the Hawaii Experiment Sta- electric lighting plants and farm tion, Is on the Uig .Island this week homes are lighted in a similar way on one of his regular visits among the while the application of electric pow agriculturists. er to practical uses has been widely James It. Love, deputy county extended. treasurer, has been confined to lis home for several days on account of Illness. Treasurer L. M. Baldwin, who Newspaper Writers- has been sick for several months, is still unable to be at his office, as a May Form New Union result' of which tho county has been without an official treasurer. ST. LOUIS, Mo., Nov. 7. A camMrs. H. P. Ponhallow Is spending paign to form a national association several weeks visiting friends in Hoof newspaper writers, the object of nolulu. Mrs. C. E. S. Hums, of Wailuku, which is to place the profession on a high piano and obtain better wages, left on Wodnesday for Honolulu where has been launched by tho St. Louis nhe will visit friends. Association of Jmirnulists. The proThe Oliver Typewriter is the best posed organization Is to bo known as machine cn the market for the price. the American Association of JournalAdv. ists, and all active newspapermen will be eligible to membership. EVIDENCE AGAINST I. W. W. Circulars explaining tho proposition COMING OUT havo beon sent to papers In all parts OISNTHALIA, Wash., Nov. 13 Tho of the country, It was announced, and lyuchod I. W. W. man has been Iden- a national convention tho early part tified as Earnest Evortts, and not of next year is contemplated. Richard L. Stokes, prosldent of the local Sniith. organization, announced that requests Dritt Smith has turned stato's prisoners as for chapters have boon received from and idontlfied being at the I. W. W. hoadquartors many cities. during the shooting. He said they The Oliver Typewriter Is the best that wore armud and ho "guessed" machine on the market for the price. thoy shot Into tho Armistice Day liome Inst Saturday from u business trip to Honolulu. Mrs. II. D. Sloggett returned home on Tuesday morning's Claud! no from Honolulu where she went last week to meet her sister, Miss Mabel Wil cox, of Knunl, who returned on Satur day from three years service in lied Crofts work in France. Mrs. It. K. Purdy, of Pain, is visit ing friends in Honolulu this week. Wltsoll, chief of staff In Maj. 13. the Hawaiian department, returned to Honolulu on Monday night after spend , ing several days on Maul looking for sites for tin; proposed recreation camp for the army. Mrs. Charles Mel arrived from San Kraneisco this week to join her husband who Is manager of the new Pau- wela Pineapple Co. Mr. Mel went to Honolulu last Saturday to meet hex, They will make their homo at Kuiaha in the Stanley Livingston house. Kred Murphy, deputy supervising principal, has returned from a three trip on Molo-kai- . , weeks school inspection l- - Crater Trail foot-bridg- Incandescent . E. A. C. LONG Tribune Libel Suit Settled Out Of Court sub-statio- n 1 Adv. it- S - S G IT Klnney.McGowan David K, Klnnoy, sugarboller with Company, the Wailuku Plantation Wailuku, and Miss Margaret McGowan, nurse with tho Paia Hospital, Paia, Maul, were married at 8 o'clock last evening at Knwaiahao Church, the ceremony being perXotmcd by tho pastor, llov. Akalko Ak.uia. Tho bridesmaid was Miss May McGowan, sister ot the bride, and the best man was Ralph Turner. Following the wedding a dinner was given at tho residence of Mr. and Mrs. William T. Frost, which was followed by a reception to the young couple. Mr. and Mrs. Kinney will spend their honeymoon on this island and will return to Maul next week, establishing their home in Wailuku. Tho blrdo is a sister of Allan McGowan of The Adverdepartment. Advertiser business tiser. Ma-klk- i, : $ H? tt IS DEAD HONOLULU, Nov. 13 Eliu A. C. Long, Hawaiian attorney, is dead, He was 42 years of age. The funeral will take place Saturday afternoon. Clifford HONOLULU, Nov. 14 Miss Lucy Rlcharson, Miss Gladys go to will Hapai Geo. and Charlock Hnrt, Miss Choy, Mrs. John Abreu, Hilo 'tomorrow as the new sanitary Mrs. W. H. Field, Miss Mnry Dal. olllclals of the board of health, An Informal Party Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Taylor, of Puu-nen- CANADIAN RAILROADERS WANT HIGHER PAY entertained a party of some 25 young people informally and most deMONTREAL, Nov. 11 Tho Canadilightfully Inst Saturday evening. There Pacific Railway shopmen's union an was no fixed program but there was has agreed to demand a wage ineveryno lack of cntertain.mcnt and crease and changes of working condibody had a jolly time. One feature tions. were especially enjoyed of the evening songs and recitations by F. C. Harper, DELIVERING NEW SHIPS FAST Refreshments a Honolulu visitor. were served during the evening and WASHINGTON, Nov. 14 The fleet much appreciated. has announced that 16 t ship'j, totaling 92,675 dead weight tons Mr. and Mrs. Frank Burns left oji were delivered to the United States Monday for their now homo, Kcalla, shipping board during the first 10 days Kauai. During the Burns' stay In in September. Honolulu they were the guests of Mrs. LUXURY IMPORTS IN PR EASE Burns' parents, Governor and Mrs. Charles J. McCarthy. NEW YORK, Nov. 14 Tho port collector has reported that prosperity Searby was Mrs. William hostess at an informal tea at her Mauoa home Is indicated by an lncrense of luxury imports which nro 125 percent over on Tuesday afternoon. a year ago. Fine Music In Prospect The concert to be given tomorrow FEDERAL AGENTS ACTIVE IN WEST VA. evening at the Lalmina armory lor the benefit of tho Lanikila Catholic CHARLESTON, W. Va., Nov. 14 church, promises to bo an artistic treat. It Is under the direction of K. Tho department of justice agents have in tho Y. Zedtwitz, who Is noted as a violin- begun rounding up radicals fields. Virginia coal West high ability. Almeida, of ist Frank of St. Louis College, Honolulu, also a violinist of note, is hero to take part BOTH SIDE WILLING TO , BE REASONABLE In tho program, and H. K. Bruss will bo pianist, WASHINGTON, Nov. 14 Prior to A native glee club will also furnish operators' and miners' meeting to'lie evening's part tho entertainment. of a day with Secretary Wilson,, both Indicated a willingness to accept a reai CENATE LINING UP ON sonablo adjustment of differences. RESERVATIONS ar-Bulletin. Shower For Mrs. Llchtenfels Mrs. J. H. Kunewa was hostess at a pleasant gathering last Saturday afternoon, tho occasion being a shower for Mrs. R. C. Llchtenfels (nee Miss Ella Bal), on the ovo ot her departure is for liana, where Dr. Llchtenfels located. She departed for her new home on Tuesday's Claudlno. During tho afternoon dainty refreshments were served. Mrs. Llchtenfels was the recipient'of many pretty and useful gifts. Those Invited to the party were Mrs. Llchtonfols, Mrs. William Bal, Mrs. William Bal, Jr., Mrs. Wilmington, Mrs. Garcia, Mrs. Waikaloa, Mrs. George Weight, Mrs. G. N. Weight, Illinois Professor Star-Bulleti- Produces Alloy To Replace Platinum WASHINGTON, Nov. 13 Tho senate today adopted the report of its foreign relations committee on reservations to Article 10 by vote of 46 to URBANA, 111., Nov 11 (By The 33. This was done after rejecting InAssociated Press) A new metal al- Senator Hitchcock's proposal to sayiug Unita sert paragraph tho that platinloy that can be substituted for um or gold where acid resisting met- ed States policy is to interfere whenAll als are required has been discovered ever civilization is menaced. by Prof. S. W. Parr of the department negative votes.were democratic. Senfor the of chemistry of the University of Illi- ator Lodge filed a petition nois. Tho new alloy, which Profess- closure of debate on the entire treaty. or Parr has named "Jlllum" in. honor ESTHONIANS TO TREAT of tho university, costs approximately WITH BOLSHEVIKI 25 cents an ounce whereas tho cost of platinum recently was $140 an 13 Peace HELSINGFORS, Nov. ounce and gold ?40-aounce. negotiations between the Esthonians The first mixture of illium was and the Bolshevik! will begin on Satmade in April 1917. This was not en- urday. Tho Lithuanians will not parti- tirely satisfactory but early in tho next year a fifty per cent standard of MATSON LETS CONTRACTS FOR FREIGHTERS success was obtained. Now a piece of the metal has beon kept In acid for HONOLULU, Nov. 14 E. D. Ten-nesix months while the acid has beon cabling to Cnstk- & Cooke from made hot and cold, dilute and concentFrancisco, San stated today that, the rated, and the metal has shown no Matson company has let tho contract sign of change. 2 now freight si earners of 14,000 Last year it was used with marked for tons each. success and the calorimeter bombs The designing of the big passenger used in measuring the heat units "in ship promised for Island trade is becoal which the government has ordering pushed actively. Tenney will reed' in largo quantities now contain turn to Honolulu by tho Maui, leaving illium Instead of platinum. Other tomorrow. alloys, it is said, havo been found so the coast brittle and can bo cast but not maCOUNTESS TOLSTOI DEAD chined like illium. LONDON, Nov. 11 Countess Leo Tolstoi, tho widow of the novelist, died at Yasnayapoliana, on November MARRIAGE LICENSES 4, says a Helslngfors dispatch. SHOJI- - TERAMOTO At Camp 5, Puunene, Nov. 8, 1919, Tokuji Sho-jl- , VIENNA, Nov. 14 Premier Fried-rich'- s 35, of Puunene and Toyo Tera-motefforts to form a coalition cab22, of Puunene. Ceremony by inet has failed. Rev. K. C. Konda; witnesses, Dai-ch- i SAY FIUME BLOCKADE LIFTED Oto and Izo Humoto. KAMAKA-AI- I PUNA In the WaiCOPENHAGEN, Nov. 14 Italy has luku Catholic Church, Nov. 8, 1919, tho blockade at Flume accordraised James Kamaka, 34 and Emma Ah ing to advices from Austria. Puna ,17 both of Kahakuloa. Ceremony by Rev. Father Bruno; witAnOklahoma inventor's adjustable nesses, Kama Ezera, Jr., and Lizzie wrench for hexagon nuts grips four of Kuhns. the six sides of a nut between tho end CAI1RAL-SHAVIEIn Paia, Nov. 10. of a slotted bar" and a sliding sleeve. 1919, Frank Cabral, 24 of Nahlku, Lakes in Calabria are to bo utilized and Millie F. Shaviel, 20 of Kahu- in tho production of about 200,000 lul. Ceremony by Rev. Father hydroelectric horsepower, which will Francis; witnesses, T. Tokunaga serve most of southern Italy and Sicily. and Mrs. Vlctorlana Gomes. SAYS BOLSHEVIKI Pertinent Paragraphs a. . . u Tomorrow is tho last day for paying taxes before they become delinquent, Victor C. Schoenborg, former-clerof the 2nd circuit court, In Wailuku, but now cashier of the Walpahu branch of the Bank of Hawaii, on Oahu, has sent to friends on Maul a picture of the now bank building now tinder construction of which ho will bo in charge. Tho structure Is to bo. of solid concrete, and will apparently bo a very handsomo one. The Annual Bazaar of tho Woman's Guild of tho Church of the Good Shepherd will be Held on Saturday, November 15th at the Wailuku Gymnasium. Proceedings will commence with a musical program, after which there will bo n sale, of fancy work, plants, candles, refreshments, and grabs for the children. Dancing will conclude the evenings entertainment. Adv. With the exception of tho public schools and banks being closed, and closed a part of the day, Armistice Day (last Tuesday) was not formally observed on Maul. No program had been arranged and no public exercises were held. Tho plantations worked as usual. The day was celebrated In Honolulu with a big parade of military and civic bodies under direction of the American Legion. Aloha Lodge No. 3, K. of P. will hold Its regular meeting this evening. The 'concert feature of tho bazaar to bo given by tho Woman's Guild of the Church of the Good Shepherd Alexander House gyjnnaslum tomorrow evening, should be an unusual attraction to music lovers. Tho outlook for the most successful fair' ever given by the local organization Is considered excellent. The Makawao Christian Endeavor society members and friends held an enjoyable picnic supper at tho Paia , ...... i. i at-th- uu.ii.il, lilBL i'MUilJ UVt'JUIljJ. The Bolsheviki At the meeting of tho Ladies'- - Aid have beon overthrown in Society of the Wailuku Union church', says a Moscow dispatch which adheld at the home 'Of Mrs. D. T. Caroy mits that the Bolsheviki have retreat- on Tuesday afternoon, a very interested after 8 days fighting. ing talk was given by Miss Cecil on her experiences in Turkey. KANSAS MINERS DEFIANT The Maui Woman's Club will nieet PITTSBURG, Kansas, Nov. 14 The again on Monday, November 17th, at loeal miners' union has adopted a 3 P. M at the Kahulul Community resolution declaring that their mem- House. This is a specially called bers will not return to work until their meeting for tho purpose of disposing demands have been mot. of unfinished business, and is of fcreat interest to all existing and prospective members, and It is hoped all RAISING BOOZE RESTRICTIONS A LITTLE women who can will ho present. Two additional officers are to bo PROVIDENCE, Nov. 14 Tho police elected. The charter is still open so have decided to allow under the fed- that some who found It impossible to eral court injunction, saloons to sell be present at the last meeting still beverages containing not more than have the privilege of becoming chart1 per cent of alcohol. er members. Adv. LONDON, Nov. 14 Brest-Litovs- k Hoi-llda- y . - 1 o MEXICO TRYING TO BUY ARMS IN EUROPE WASHINGTON, Nov. 13 The United Slates is trying to prevent tho shipment of arms and ammunition, purchased in Europe by the Mexican government. Tho American charge d' affaires in Brussels. has entered a protest against a shipment to Mexico of arms from Liege, on grounds that tuch would bo a violation of the international arms convention. WOMAN KAMAAINA MINE OPERATORS MAY NOT PARTICIPATE NON- - UNION WASHINGTON, Nov. that participation 14 Holding rAfght bo construed" as an acceptance jof union principles, have anmine operators nounced that thoy will probably not" accept tho invitation of Secretary WIK, son to participate in the conference. non-unio- DIES HONOLULU, Nov. 13 Mrs. Mary Ann Lemon, aged 75, died hero .today. Six children survive her, including Charles B. Lemon and James Lemon of Kamuela, Hawaii. Prof. J. Gonsalves. Ukulele, Mandolin Instructor, and Steel Guitar. Studio, Paia. Hotel. Tel. 52-Fer-nand- OWL Entertainment And Dance Paia Orpheum, Saturday, Nov. 15 Si 7:30 P. M. Admission 50 cents Pair Of ixes Farce Comedy. volley of laughs. Business it. men will appreciate Everybody welcome. A 0N5 NIGHT ONLY Mrs. Burnliam, Director. Wailuku Orpheum HI Monday, November 17, 19 PRICES S1.00 and 50c RESERVE How would you like to be a butler to enemy? YOUR your SEATS intimate NOW- - it
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