Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archiveArchive Home
Hilo Tribune from Hilo, Hawaii • Page 5

Hilo Tribune from Hilo, Hawaii • Page 5

Publication:
Hilo Tribunei
Location:
Hilo, Hawaii
Issue Date:
Page:
5
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

rw i Piy rM 'w Pi 1 t. ggB'iAiEgfgg! ViK CONDENSED Suit lengths nt cut price at Economic. Call and see tlictn. Mr. anil Mrs.

C. C. Kennedy return by the Kiirntt totnortow from Honolulu. A. G.

Corren, an attorney of Honolulu, was in the city on li-gil business over the list Kiuau trip. The Hilonlnn will leave Sun Francisco about the 17th for Hllo, by way of Seattle and Honolulu. The Woman' Board will meet In tile's. S. room on Tuesday at 3:15 Tapers will be read on South Africa.

Rev. C. W. Hill will preach on Sunday morning, May so, at Houokaa, and In the afternoon at Kukulhaele. The Bark Amy Turner, Capt.

War-land, sailed for 'San Francisco Thursday morning. She had a full cargo of sugar. May 30 being a legal holiday In the territory the acting governor publishes notice that all territorial offices will be closed on that day. An Interesting game of baseball was played on the Moohcau park grounds Sunday, Natives against the Portuguese. The score was 106 In favor of the Porlu-guese.

L. Turner, who retires as manager of the h. Turner Co. store, expects to re-main In Uilo for the present, at least. He is considering removing to the Coast later, but his plans arc subject to change.

School Supervisor Severance has received a bundle of flags lor the tcrrl-torlal schools of his district. The eight schools of Hllo and vicinity are each to have a brand new 6x8-foot flag floating over them. The Iwalanl, which Is to make a cruise for the cable company In the transportation ol supplies to the Midway station, leaving on Saturday, came off the marine railway yesterday, after mi overhauling. Advertiser, Miss Paalana Ahina, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.

Ahina residing on Volcano street, died of lever Sunday after a three waeks' Illness, aged 14 years. Miss Ahina made her home with Mis. Nawahl at Honolulu, up the first of January 1905. Mrs. A.

Undsay.has gone to Houokaa on a visit to her sisters, Mrs. A. B. Lindsay, and Miss MacDonald, who has recently arrived In the Island from Scotland by way of Australia. Mrs.

Lindsay visited friends at Peepeekeo and Honomu on the way. Base ball enthusiasts are urging the proposition of having selected a picked team from this island to play some team from Honolulu on the Fourth of July. A team of players, it is argued, could be gotten together that would be likely to scoop the Honolulans. A game of the kind would be very interesting and would be an attractive feature for our day here. Word was received Monday from Sub-land-agent Williams, who was at Hama-kua, that at the sale there Saturday he had sold all the reservations but lot 17, which had been withdrawn.

The property brought the upset price, nil but the reservation between lots 23 and 54, which brought the sum of $355, A. Lid-gate, manager of the Paauilo Sugar being the purchaser. Judge II. Hall bid on the latter tract as lepresentative of Chas. Notley, of Honolulu.

Holds In Pleasant Memory. That Mr, Haworth, who has located in the mining town of Manhattan, where he is conducting a newspaper, has a warm spot in his heart for Hllo, appears in a letter recently received by a friend: "It Is a source of regret," he says, "that it is not easy to run over to Hilo and see you all. I certainly expect to go back there. It was the place of real friendships and make-believe enmities, Aloha." "The mining camp life attracts first by its strenuosity and then by its beneficent panorama of opportunities. I miss tny own while gapiug at others who, standing by my side, leap from poverty to opulence." in Mnrriedi At the residence of Mr.

and Mrs. T. Balding, Waiuaku, on Wednesday, May 9, Dr. Archer Irwin and Miss Louise Monte Verde were quietly married, Rev. Father Adrian performing the ceremony.

Dr. and Mrs. Irwin went to Hakalau on a wedding trip returning Sunday. On the return ou Dr. Grace from New Zealand, Dr.

Irvyin will return to Hakalau, where he will have the position of plantation and government physician, now held by Dr. Fred Irwin. The latter takes the position of plantation physical! at Olaa relinquished by Dr. McGetti-gen, who goes to the Oahu plantation. Transferred Prisoner Escaped.

Francisco Pasquale, commonly known as "Lopez," who was convicted iu Hilo some five years ago of participation in an affray, escaped from the chain gang in Honolulu, and Deputy Sheriff Fetter re ceived a "wireless" to be ou the lookout for him when the Kinau arrived. A lookout was also kept for the escaped at the other landings on the island, without resul however, and the deputy and half a dozen policemen, armed so as to' carry out instructions "if he attempts) fight, do not take any chances with him' were in waiting at the Kinuu's arrival. I Lopez, not being aboard was notcsptured, I LOCAL ITEMS jS See the notice of Gouvea, the horse-shoer. The schooner W. II.

Manton sailed Sunday frout San Francisco for Hilo. I). W. Marsh and G. A.

Cool, of the Tkiuunk office, spent Sunday at the volcano. K. F. Patten took charge of the L. Turner Ltd.

store, as manager, on Monday. F. L. -Winter, deputy U. S.

Marshal, arrived from Honolulu Wednesday, returning Friday. The Claudinc arrived in the bay at five o'clock Monday morning on a special trip with the mall. T. S. Spanr and Mr.

and Mrs. Stewart, of London, and C. C. Edmunds, of Honolulu, went up to the volcano Thursday morning. The brig Geneva from the Sound arrived on the 9th with a cargo of lumber consigned to Hackfeld and is unloading at the Railroad wharf.

Rev. W. D. Westervelt Is quoted by an evening paper as saying he sees no reason why the law should not take its course with the five Koreans sentenced to death for murder. Advettiser.

The Hilo Band orchestra will give a benefit concert and dance for Chas. Ca-ceres, the blind pianist, on the evening of June it, at the armory. Mr, Caceres himself will play. Admiral and Mrs. George Beckley announce the engagement of their daughter Juanlta, to A.

R. Cunha. The latter returned from an absence of almost a year on the coast, by the Moana on May 5' P. A. Kim, one of the partners in the firm of Kwong See Wo, who has been employed in the First Bank of Hilo, has resigned his position in the bank and will devote his attention exclusively to the business of the firm.

A couple of hundred delegates are expected to attend the meeting of the Hawaiian Evangelical Association here tomorrow. Those from the other islands receive special rates in steamer fares from the 1. 1. S. N.

Co. Advertiser. Mr. A. B.

Loebenstein received in Monday's mail a column clipping from the New York Evening Post relative to Hawaii and the proposed legislation. The situation is adequately described and the remedy proposed put in favorable light, showing that Hawaii is not without friends over there. Rev. Da Sllva, pastor of the Portugese church, has gone to Honolulu to attend Hawaiian association. He will probably go on his vacation from there directly.

His family accompanied him and will remain in Honolulu during his absence. Portugese ministers from Honolulu and Maui will supply his pulpit. County Clerk Sam K. Pua has been beard from at Kailua as being benefitted already by the change to the warmer and drier climate of Kona. Being one of the best interpreters on the islands, his services were sought by the circuit court in session there, and on the approval of his physician, he has been acting in that capacity.

On a warrant sworn out by L. Severance as school agent, two boys were brought before Judge Hapai last Monday, and the same were committed to serve till the ages of sixteen, respectively, about six years. The parents of the two boys are dead and it is a case of want of parental care. It was deemed the best that could be done for the boys. Annual Sprluo: Outing.

The boys of the Hilo Boarding School enjoyed a couple of days' outing Friday and Saturday of. last week in picnics to Cocoauut Island. A few days annually, about the first 'of April, are devoted loan outing, usually a camping trip. The Robin Hood entertainment interrupted the program this year and the usual camping trip was 011 that account given up. Hi Klnau Departures, May 11th.

Mrs. H. Taklmaso, Mon Wau Wing, Rev. A.J. da Sllva, and wife, Mra.iGllll-land and children' John Clerc, Lawrence Rochas, R.

A. Lyman S. L. Desha, F. S.

Aplar, C. E. Edmonds, Miss Er-beck, Miss S. Lyman, Bergstrom, F. L.

Winter, F. W. Hayselden, A. Lindsay, Fercy Stewart, Mrs. Percy Stewart.

A HATTER OF HEALTH POWDER AbMltrtaiyPtira HAS MO SUBSTITUTE fotjimk itAd tvvvvt4 1 CARL SCHURZ DEAD; LA PALOM A ARRIVES SPECIAL TO THE TRIBUNB. Honolulu, May 14, 4:30 p.m. The Hawaiian Yacht, Ia Palomn, has arrived in San Francisco. Carl Schurz is dead. Turkey has settled with England.

iVVWVVV4 THE LINK OF PKONT STKKKT. Hollowiy Disapproves or Proposed I'liango. The county clerk's office received a communication by Monday morujng's mail from Supt. of Public Works Hollo-way in reference to the proposition to change the mauka line of Front street. He says: It does not seem to me advisable to make the jog in the line as shown at the intersection of Church street.

It would be much better to have the line continued as shown on the Walauuenue street side than move it mauka on the other side of Church street. If, however, the Supervisors, after careful consideration of this matter, consider that the location as shown by Mr. Cook is the proper one, I will nrrange to approve the tracing. I am returning it' with this letter and would ask that you bring the matter again to the attention of the Board." Incidents of the Earthquake. C.

F. Bradshaw has received a letter under date of May 6, from a friend who formerly lived In Hilo, and who experi enced the earthquake in San Francisco. It contains some startling statements of incidents of the catastrophe. For in stance, three women and two men were shot for having fires after 9 p. fifteen out of sixty men who broke into the mint were shot on the date of the letter; four men were lynched for attempted holdups; eighteen infants were born the day before at the locality where the writer was, and twenty-five at the park; supplies were being distributed, and measures taken to send thousands away and set other thousands to work cleaning up debris, providing sanitary arrangements, building temporary structures and disposing of the dead.

Nobody knows, it says, the loss of life or destruction of property. The whole coutitry was rising in support but the burden was tremen dous. Accounting Called For. On a motion made by Aki Aoaa, son of Mrs. Emma Kaeewalhau, an insane per son, Beu H.

Brown, the administrator of the estate, was summoned liefore Judge Parsons on Wednesday last to show cause why he should not make an accounting of the affairs of the estate. It was charged that he had made no accounting of the sum of $276.39 received at the time of appointment; also of the sum of $619.75 realized from the sale of real estate nt Waiakea. The guardian had leased land belonging to the estate, it was further charged, for $100 a year, which sum had not been accounted for; and there was also unaccounted for furniture of the value of $90. The defense set forth that certain vouchers had been lost, and the case was continued till Tuesday. Judge Kalakou appeared for the prosecutioti and Carl S.

Smith for the defense. (lift For Kaluboir Falls Park. At the regular meeting of the executive council of the Board of Trade held Friday afternoon Mr. Scott offered the amount of his share of the liability that he had assumed on the Moobeau hall Indebtedness to the Board for the beautifi-cation of Rainbow Falls Park, this indebtedness having been shouldered by the county. A subscription fund for the improvement of the park was started some time ago by Miss Pomeroy and this gift of Mr.

Scott's, amounting to $116.70, will increase greatly its total. This fund is to be expended with the approval of, and in cooperation with, the local improvements committee. Disembarkation (julot. A man representing himself to be chief cook on the Olympla, and to have been left, stated that the Victoria, another steamer of the Dollar Hue, also chartered by the Hill railroads, like the Olympla, to take Japanese from the Islands to the mainland, would not make the trip here iu his opinion. He described the landing of the passengers as done as secretly as possible to avoid arousing anti-Japanese labor sentiment.

After health examina tion at Port Towusend, the ruu is made by night to a point beyond Seattle where they disembark the laborers and put them aboard cars for distribution where they will attract the least attention. Movements of Vessels. The steamer Enterprise will leave from San Francisco for Hilo direct. The Hilouian will leave Seattle for the Island about the 33rd. The Annie Johnson probably left San Francisco on Sunday for Hilo direct.

Mrs. J. C. Mocine was in Fruitvale, Oakland, at the time of the earthquake, awaiting her husband for a trip north, Mr. Mocine having been delayed in leaving Hilo.

She has been heard from as safe, Hake" Speech BefOre bilge concourse of peonl Willi the President of the United States as the chief figure of interest ami with the Supreme Court aud the Senate, the House of Representatives and the diplomatic corps as spectators the corner-stone of the office building of the House of Representatives was laid with Impressive ceremonies. The speech delivered by the President on this occasion contains utterance that have aroused much comment, and the suggestion of taxation of inheritances 011 a progressive scale is a bold and radical one. The two passages that have made the muck' rake" speech so extensively commented upon are as follows At the risk of repetition let me say again that my plea is not for immunity to but for the most unsparing exposure of the politician who betrays his trust, of the big business man who makes or spends bis fortune in illegitimate or corrupt ways. There should be a resolute effort to hunt every such man out of the position he has disgraced. Expose the crime and hunt down the criminal, but remember that even in the case of crime, if it is attacked in sensational, lurid and untruthful fashion, the attack may do more damage to the public mind than the crime itself.

It is because I feel that there should be no rest In the endless war against the forces of evil that I ask tha the war be conducted with sanity as well as with resolution. The men with the muck rakes are often Indispensable to the well-being of society, but only if they know when to stop raking the muck, and to look forward lo the celestial crown above them, to the crown of worthy endeavor. There are beautiful things aboye and round about them; and if they gradually grow to feel that the whole world is nothing but muck, their power of usefulnesses gone." It Is impqrtant to this people to grapple with the problems connected with the amassing of enormous fortunes, and the use of those fortunes, both corporate and individual, in business. We should discriminate in the sharpest way between fortunes well won and fortunes ill won; between those gained as an incident to performing great services tJ the community as a whole, and those gained in evil fashion by keeping just within the limits of mere law-houesty. Of course, no amount of charity in spending such fortunes iu any way compensates for mis conduct in making them.

As a matter of personal conviction, and without pretend ing to discuss the details or formulate the system, I feel that we shall ultimately have to consider the adoption of some such scheme as that of a progressive tax 011 all fortunes, beyond a certain amount, either given in life or devised or bequeathed upon death to any Individual a tax so framed as to put it out of the power of the owner of one of these enormous fortunes to hand on more than a certain amount to any one individual; the tax, of course, to be imposed by the national and not the state government. Such taxation should, of course, be aimed merely at the inheritance or transmission in their entirety of those fortunes swollen beyond all healthy limits." Figuring ou Cannery. Approval of articles of incorporation of the Pineapple Cannery Co. have not yet been received, but are due soon. On their receipt a stockholders' meeting will be called and permanent officers elected.

Officers of the company arc figuring on the probable supply of fruit that will be offered, and the capacity of cannery it will be advisable to construct. Secretary Vicars is desirous that all who propose growing pineapples confer with him and advise him of what they purpose dolug. Notice. Gouvea, the horse-shoer, has located a the comer of Frout aud King streets, makal. He is a first class mechanic Iu his line and guarantees the best work in Hilo.

He respectfully solicits the patronage of all, old customers aud new. Do you Seasick A trip on the Kinau is to be dreaded unless you are supplied with our French Seasick Pellets. They are a sure preventive, a bottle with you next time, fifty cents. Take Price Directions for Taking: One pellet every 15 minutes until five are taken. Hilo Drug Co.

SPRECKELS' BLOCK AROUND THK CORNKK prom THK iioTKt, 1'rcslttoiU's "Mtiok 1 tori, nijitjirtjgiiii iinfini inn iiTfAatfTIniiii inwtfiiiAIilTBi.S.ii HtniiiniinnitniitminiltniiinimiiiniiiitniiHtiiniHtiiiiii HO! FOR THE GLORIOUS 1 4th of JULY TWO DAYS' RACES At Hilo, Hawaii, July 4th and 5th, 1906, under auspices Hawaii Jockey Glub at Hoolulu Park PROGRAM WEDNESDAY, JULY 4U1 PURSE J-mile Hawaiian Bred 75-oo 34 -mile Free-for-All 150.00 1 mile Trot, best two in three 150.00 -tnile Hawaiian Bred 50.00 4'mile Jap Race 50.00 1 i mile Free-for-All 150.00 34-mile Hawaiian Bred 7500 1 mile Bronco Bustins, Club to furnish 50.00 THURSDAY, JULY 5th PURSE -rajle Free-for-All $125.00 i-mile Hawaiian Bred 75-oo 1 mile Luna Race 50.00 1 mile Free-for-All 150.00 6-milc Hawaiian Bred 50.00 4-mile Jap Race 50.00 J-rnile Pony Race for Boys.i 20.00 1 mile Hawaiian Bred 100.00 3 mile Relay Race, for other than race horses 50.00 TERMS: Entrance fee, 10 of purse. Three or more to enter, two or more to start. Professional jockeys will be barred in all races excepting Free fiur-Alls. Hawaiian bred races to be catch weights. Free-for-All races to be weight for age.

No stall rent will be charged. BASE BALL GAME E. N. HOLMES' SALE Lace Curtains M.OO per pair $1.50 $2.00 $2.50 $3.00 E. N.

HOLMES Rout. The house now occupied by Mrs. Gere. Inquire of DR. HAYRS.

24-tf If you wish your coffee to bring the highest market prices let the Hllo Coffee Mill clean, classify and place the same on the market for you. Liberal cash advances made ou shipments. Besides the big electric plant being installed ou the island of Kauai for supplying power to Mcllryde plantation, electric plunts are being put iu for IPepeekeo, Walluku and Walmanalo I ltlMntHtlnn. llv tli Trnurnttu. f-rt Advertiser.

For t-S A a AM, KIND3 OF RUBBER GOODS GOODYEAR RUBBER CO. R. II. PEASE, President. SAN FRANCISCO, U.

S. A. P. C. Heamer received a letter recently from Phil 11.

Dankey, formerly of the Hilo hotel, and who is now editor ol the Uulletin 111 Manila. Dunkey wrote that Gene Clarke, formerly of the Hilo Drug hud just dropped into his office from Panama, 011 his way to Tieu Tulii, China, and Manchuria. 1. 01 I I ri MS H5 tki 3 i 5 4 in iAMftLiiiiA miArAlJUlHWMM.

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

About Hilo Tribune Archive

Pages Available:
1,675
Years Available:
1902-1906