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nOOLTTLU STAH BULLKT IN, SATURDAY, JITLT 0, 1012. TV V: E30TGL ( )IHg WUIilll SAU FRANCISCO Geary Street, above Union Square ' fYopcan Plan $1.60 a da up Aqpcrican Plan $3.00 a day up -New steel and trick- structure. Every comfort and convenience. A high class hotel at very moderate rates. In the center of theatre and retail district. On car lines trans ferring to all part of city. Electric omnibus meets all trains and as Hawaiian Island Headquarters. , I Cable Address TrawetsABC code. I JJi. Love. Honolulu representative. J Hotel Potter, Santa Barbara HOTEL mm 8(11) JMIiHSCO " '. ' Ktlnforced Concrtts BulWino, 225 Rooms. 2trtf Cltsieating houses Mfthlnl block. Ratestt.f1.S0 ioHGOperCv. F. L 4 A. W.Turpto. Props. A Ksr rr; Ths Colonial has the patronage of tha. people who know what a good hotel should be from point of 'cuisine and ser vice. HISS JOHNSON, Emma &L, Above Vineyard pj? ah t -mm . ".a. .if i' l!( 'ALL'THE TIME til - r I . ... ' . t . .,!, . - . , : Trains ' to th ' door ' . Auto in . h!r, service on premuts P.LEASANT0N HOTEL ' ' ? Qui c t and Reline d ' r ' ! Large, Cool Outtide Rooms; Private Sleeping -Verandas; 1 Phones In all rooms; Artesian Plunge; Nlflht and Day Ten. . i rla.4 ,FRCE Garage. - f i ; 'Four Acres Beautiful ' ' . Tropical Gardens,. ; Special Rates by the Month itfne was never like this . HOTEL WAir.IEA WAIMEA, KAUAI Newly Renovated Best Hotel on Kauai Tourist 'Trade Solicited GOOD MEALS : 1 . Rt,t Reonabt, a W. SPITZ - Proprietof Crater Hotel KILAUK A, HAWAII. Special Terms for Summer Months. T. A. SIMPSON, Manager. THE SPA Waikiki Beach Resort FURNISHED COTTAGES.. $10 Day FURNISHED ROOMS.. 75c, $12 Manth PETER GIBB, Proprietor Now Open- Phone 2S36 ME FOR A SWIM AT THE WAIKIKI INN NEXT SUNDAY ' J - Ci p Says the Wise Bather 'Cook With IAS om CIGAR-SOW 4e M.A.GUHST &C0. Agents INDUSTRIAL EDUCATION BY SITT. "Industrial Education Is a system of education that will prepare the. youths of the country to best meet the problems of life. There are now many methods of instruction, many types of schools, each partaking of a plan most suitable or that Is supposed to be most suitable to the locality and type of pu pils with which (Key have to deal. Generally speaking, we can say that all of these schools are working for the same great end in culture and crafts. Just as do the churches of the many creeds, differing in their points of view yet aiming to accomplish the Fame great achievement. Industrial Education Is supposed to have entered our educational system as a branch of art The first decisive steps probably took place In Boston: where drawing and practical demon strations in mechanics were ' first made, along with the regular studies of reading, spelling, writing and arith metic The story of the early develop ment of this kind or educational work is interesting Progress was slow, but gradually there were opened, here and there throughout the Eastern States private schools of various types, with the public schools slowly venturing into industrial training. It Is claimed that the few industrial training exhib its at the Centennial, held in Philadel phia In 187C, were the first to attract the attention fof the great masses of citizens in America. Many leading ed ucators there took the inspiration and very soon thereafter there grew Into existence schools of many types, vary ing from fine-art museums to the rud est of workshops. Of recent years, the pumic scnoois oi America nave snown- a very.great amount of this Industrial: . t m J m . progress and we can Justly be proud of what we are prone to believe is the finest public-school system as well as one that has great influence in the developing "of the most intense system of Industry in the world. , During the last 20 or SO years trade schools have been established in mbst of' the-cities- and'towns throughout United States, it is now a great sat isfaction to find many high-grade traie schools, polytechnic high schools! and .secondary fcchpol of agriculture being 'established throughout the entire country. There is probably no move ment in education (hat has of late f Re ceived so much attention as this at ter-mentioned kind .of' school- sec ondary .agricultural schools. ;, L I i , , . In , an investigation of any of these 1 scnoois we una . maviney are eacnjjf' i ganlted to suit the needs of, the com munity In which they are located and of the pupils for whom they are 'cre ated. These country schools" are, strictly speaking, agricultural trade schools and have for their sole object the educating of the farmers boys and girls who cannot or who do not wish to take up an extensive college course but who are anxious to get that from a training which will be most useful to them when they take charge of the home farm or farm home. . The school Is made the educa tional center of. the community and the farmers are free to call upon it for assistance in any line of work pertain ing to farming and home-making. Be ing of a trade-school type, these schools do not prepare students for State universities or for colleges of agriculture. -' In considering Industrial schools and their, work in the country In general, we must not fall to mention what has been going on all these years in Ha waii. The, early history of Industrial . work In the Hawaiian islands is as in teresting as that of any oiher part of "the country. From th3 very first, ed ucation held a permanent; place In the work of the American Mission Loard That organization made mauy attempts to encourage among the ratives the arts and usages of civilized life. : It sent out with the early missiona is skilled teac&rs whose entire duty it was to instruct the natives In agricul ture and the rudiments of mechanical arts such Industries as carpentry, ma sojiry, shoemaking, tailoring and par ticularly along agricultural lines. While the ancient Hawaiians were . well informed in the agricultural pur suits of the country, we find that the pursuits were so limited that a great many branches entirely new to them had to be taken up In order to comply with the requirements of the new civ ilization. The demands for industrial training became so great that the mis sionaries found It necessary to estab- . lish industrial schools. The Lahaina luna Seminary, on Maui, was opened In 1S21 and while the object of this institution was mainly for the training of teachers and other helpers in the mission work, it naturally has been an industrial school more or less all through its entire period of existence. This school has gone through various stages of development and at present is the largest industrial school under the management of the Department of Public Instruction. It occupies an crea of several hundred acres of land? has a number of j good buildings and an enrollment of 120 pupils. These pupils are busily engaged in various auraii FOR HAWAII'S SCHOOLS W. T. POPE departments,-i-a printing shop, black- smith shop, carpenter shop, culinary department. Aside, from the agricul tural training, they get opportunities to learn many things In reference to the carrying on of a large agricultural, partment of Public Instruction estab fairo. The Lahainaluna institution,) lished a manual-training department being a very old school, its graduates. ajoag with agriculture in the Territor are numbered by the thousands, most! Jai Normal School and the work has of whom have proven a great credit to ,' n.M.cr,ra inflnn, : w their race and to their teachers and it is to this school, along with others, that we can look for great progress in Industrial training in the future. Soon' after the establishment of the Lahainaluna school, the Hilo Boarding School was founded, 183C, as an Indus trial school. Industrial training has always been a prominent feature of Lahainaluna Industrial School and the ; Iliio Boarding School are practi - cally of the same type and- it is be- lieved that they are the best suited to the needs of our growing youths in the Islands; in that they Include prac- tically a grammar school . course of t . . - v,nn wtth lho' fnnQfrln1l tra!n,n& ,n the past sixty years there' have been a number of schools created throughout : the Hawaiian Islands.! many of which have offered a training of an Industrial nature. At the pres - ent time there are a number of private schools that are doing industrial work, Manual training has been included in the course of study at Oahu Colleee for some time, and the Kamehameha money for themselves while in attend Schools, for Hawaiian girls and boys. ance at such a school. Naturally such offer not only a good primary and grammar-schhool education but also a thorough manual training course. There are two industrial Refonna - at the nresent time under the' torles.at tn Pr8fnt under .th! - management oi me uepanment or, Public Instruction. The Boys' Re- ol eucu B BCU001 mu1' IWK lor lue fcrmatory at . Waialee has ; long been support of the leaders of the large in considered of much consequence i andrdustriea: 'i otherwise ; we cannot hope while the appropriations for the school for success. The new school law per have not been large, for the! great' mits children, ; who. fail ( by the Mme numbers of boys assigned there, the In. tney are 12 years, of ,age. to pass Into stitution has done good work !undertne fiftn fade.-to: attendee of these the circumstances. The new Mproon.? prlktion of 125,000 for maintenance ' ould 'have to be a i boarding school for this biennial jJerfad a -well a $30,-.-: the .work .wouhj f be so arnged 000 for new buildingVhas made .llW thaeach -pupil could re toimproJthtnratnlngong ifnduS::SCI10IS ,wiu ieepe.ywtis trial lirieVbut to reorgze the! class, coun.try ctanay.iemped:tt-?.they mmr, rV- HnVu fmm t,o ntivJ & UP Into manhood' and woman- ' - part of the larger boys aiding In: the. construction of new buildings, they get : considerable : training in . agricul tural work, wood wor k, - Jron wor k, tai ioring, and other similar branches. The. Girls' Industrial School s also at; tempting to give such .training as will be helpful in their life work after leaving the institution. While industrial and manual train ing has been developed in the public schools in most of . the States,, it has also been making advancement in the Territorial schools of Hawaii. In the rural schools, the teachers are en couraging industrial work as best they can. . Most of the - reports show that the teachers are training girls in sew inging and washing and the boys in woodwork and to some extent in gen eral agricultural work, In some places their efforts have not been met : with encouragement, but in most respects we can claim the support of not only the parents of children but of the su i - - THE CLAIMS MADE FOR may seem unbelievable to women who have never tried it, but they are now known facts in domestic science schools c::d in hotel kitchens. . AT ALL GROCERS. THE ONLY COMPLETE CAR Electrically Self TMTTTP nrterl nnrl I AtrhteA UN 1 JU1V MODEL 405 Passenger, Fore Door Touring Car. MODEL 414 Passenger Demi Tonneau. MODEL 42Roadster type all with Ihe splendiB new en bloc motor, 4 in. bore, 5 in. strote ; 40 H.P. MODEL 507 Passenger, Fore Door Touring Car. MODEL 514 Passenger, Demi Tonneau. MODEL 52 Roadster type all with the ntw MTM head 5 in bore, 6 in. stroke motor ; 50 H.P. . . ......... GEO. W. MOORE Telephone 1902. Demonstrator and Selling Agent. MM, gar plantations, pineapple plantations 1 and other industrial organirations; The plantations recognize that Industrial-trained labor of people grown up in the Territory is far superior to that of any other kind of labor that they can get. They are not only support ing our system financially but are ad vocating the establishment ' of such pchools as will improve the labor of the country. A few years ago the Do- many localities in which its graduates have gone. The manual-training de partment of the. Normal School has been greatly improved In the past few years. It .has been enlarged and is much better equipped in every way than formerly. It is capable of- accom modating over .100 pupils a day and , there are now over 0 normal gradu ates of the teaching force who have j received more or less of this industrial influence. The establishment of one or more industrial schools throughout the Territory by the Department of Public Instruction has been more or less agitated during the past year and r the nlan is being very generally sud- Ported. The scheme, as it stands at present, is the establishment of Indus trial Boarding Schools,, to which pu PHs may go after they have finished at 'ast four grades of the common schools- The pupils are certain not only of qualifying as practical work- men in various branches after they re through, but also making some schools must be established hear cen- tera of large Industries as in the pine apple-growing region or ; near sugar ' Plantations. Plans' for such, schools have met with hearty approval and of- fprs of rnnneratlnn. For the urre8a ' : - r) rinrl ' cq vl n c 7 f ri om ' f rrt m H ri a' ri rAfl Ai tour ' years that many of them' waste uuer f leaving tine rpuun bcuooxs : ana before they enter : . Into, fl any-, regular work as wage-earners. r Such schools would not have the nature of reformatories,- but would be -branches of the regular public-school system. While the pioneers who laid : the foundation for ihe early Hawaiian school system had a homogeneous population to deal with, they found great need for industrial training, but as time has gone by, the need has In creased greatly owing to the popula tion developing into one of the most cosmopolitan. The educators of the past have done commendable work, but it is evident that those concerned at present and in the future have a much greater work to: do. Hawaii is In need, of a diversified system of in dustry. To have - It her population must be industrially educated - and this. must come through our schools. $2700 0 D 3 STATE $3700 WHY Yin CGUGj?" Q. What is good for my .cough' A. -Ayer's Cherry I txtonJ. ; Q. How Ion hzi it been i:.,; A. Seventy ycirs. Q. Do dwCiors cr.Jurse it r A. If not,wu wcui J it tntV ril Q. Do ycii publish (he f A. Yes. On every LotUv. Q. Any alcohol in it? A. Not a single drcp. Q. I low may I learn more of thl r. A. A-!; your doctor. I T knov Ayers Gx:: t von Hamm-Young Co., Ltd. Pioneers and Leaders b J , . the Automobile 'Business Agents for such well-known cars as Packard. PoDC-Hartford. Stevens- Duryea, Cadillac Thomas Flyer. Buick, Overland, Baker Electric and; others. -.i ' 1912 "American" . , . - CARS ,:; ; " Typ. 22 and 34 Can ; Be, Seen, at Our .: ; ::Garag ... i'; ''v! '.' . tv :-- .A;,vvi 'V :r. .American Hotors Co., 'Corner Aiakea and Hotel 8treeta ; ' ! ' PHone SOW l-'i5 4 : GEO. a BECKLEYpI Sole Distributor . ' : 8UPPLIES AND REPAIRING ASSOCIATED GARAGE, LTD.! intoiobilesi ICHUMAN CARRIAGE CO. ; Merchant 8tr For the BEST RENT CARS in the city, ring up for : , OLDSMOBILE, No. 403 . . . LANDAWLET, No.5) C. H. B E M N . Vulcanizing ALL, WE ASK IS A TRIAL : HONOLULU VULCANIZING WORKS Phon 1823 KapioUnt Buitdinp Use a PREST-O-LITE TANK on your Automobile and save Gen erator Troubles. Acetylene tight and Agency Co., Ltd. Chemical Engines and I7atchmaji's Cloclu , ' ' For Sale'br J. A. GILMAN Fort Street . AIIXftMnRII lTl WrtTIPPl We make a specialty of recharging your storage battery carefully by im- proved non-overcharging system, which ! Insures long life to your battery. We also repair and make plates of . any kind of storage cell to order. i Call or telephone 2914. Berger Electric Works, 70 N. School St. ! pi 1 IF YOU WISH TO ADVERTISE IX NEWSPAPERS : Anywhere at Anytime, Call On or .. ;:Vr ;,.. ; Write . E. C. DARE'S ADVERTISING . AGENCY j 121 Snnsime Street San Francisco . i Everjtliinz In the printing line at Star-Bulletin, A lakea street; 'jranch, Merchant street. ' linderslung Cheap For Cash Win, Pracha, The Expert Watchmaker 1123 FORT STREET J Eyes Examined ' Glasses Supplied Factory on the Premises A, N. Sanford, Boston Building Fort Street ; Over May & Co. . The- i ! i Visible WHting .iV-iA' visit -to, our,, salesroom and r a demonstration of the many de slrable ffatures,of this rnich!ne rjwill-prove its superiority. j . f -1 f . J 5 1 f " '' ' ' ' ! . Hawaiian Hews Co.; Young Hotel Building ORANGE DLOCCOM CANDIZ3 The Most Popular Candies Made on the. Coast S HONOLULU DRUG CO, LTD. 1C24 Fort St. Telephont NEW DRUG STORE SODA WATER FOUNTAIN v . HAWAII DRUG CO.; ' 42 Hottl Street, at and of Bthl Well Stocked with New Dru;i and Novel ties... THE Crossroads DooIishopV Limited : . v Successors to ; Crown 6 Lyon Co Ltd. A.EpCANDER YOUNG BUILDING , . "Everything In Books" For GENERAL OFFICE STATION cRY end FILING SYSTEMS, call or write to us and we wilt fill your wants. Office Supply Co., Ltd., t31 FORT STREET HIGHLAND SWISS CHIFFON Paper New Shades and Sizes 50 Cents Per ' Pound : A. B. A R LEIGH oV C O. i DUNCAN'S GYHHASIUH G. 3L DtTXCAX 258 Beretanla SL,opp. Roajl Hawallau Hotel PHONG 3324 mmmmm'mn! ffl T T f III A T T7TT A w Office: 1412 Nuuanu SU cor. Vineyard Telephone 1540 Office Hours: 9 to 12 a. 7 to 8 p. m. Sundays by appointment Residence: 50 N. Vineyard Street, near office. Telephone 2513; P. O. Box j 84Z. KOA FURNITURE OAHU FURNITURE CO. King Street, opposite - Young Hotel P. O. Box 840 Phone 3082 J. lypevntci lAfl iiii T Note C. Q.Yee Hop u Co. MEAT MARKET AND IMPCRTERJ Clothing and Sho2S Yee Chan & Co. Bethel and King Streets. BUY YOUR Off GOODS FROM jKwong Sing Loy & Co. i King Street. Three Doors from Cathtl FINE LINE OF, DRY GOODS KING STREET EVTA FISIIMA.KET l21l'Oi:T2 of onir.MiL-cu::3 Wing .Wo Tai b Co. Ill Ncsua3,:rrar Elrj tirttS. FINEST FIT lad Cloth cf Al"QalJtj'C:a E PurclscJ frca ;sa riG c ii a n ' rcCANDLEC3 ELrCJ. IML Hox C31. Tc!rr!:r; 17:1 WONG.WOMG CO. i 1 .rur.NiTur.s,. 'Mattreet Uphslt:rin3 ar.J Turrll-jra I; : , n-iHr- ti v :2' berhtania ' f;zAn r;uuAr;u YOU'LL FIND WHAT YOU AT THE VAfiT City S2GriI;7G?3. Co. NUUANU AND KING GTHIZT3 . Wing Chon Co. - ' bcalert la Fnrsltsrr, Zlziirz : : !, tcn etc All klnij cf H0A nJ HU STON FUKNITUIir. tz:ti U crjrr. y O I - 3fen of the Fleet 8nJ 'Toarhti The best place la Honolulu to buy Jade and Chraese Jewelry of all Kina. HOTEL A'D S2IITJI STIIIILTH 9 01 The CI CYCLE I VZiLim 4 PA1CEIL has corr J U 180 Kl.NU 'STIIEET New locallnn HeJ frcnL ctzt Yoansr Uutldlnz. Telpphosa S-l.S. Telephone 3197 P. O. Box TCJ Vulcanizing Works 182 Merchant Street - Near Alakea HONOLULU, T. II. COMMISSION MERCHANT Japanese Provisions and General MerchanJiss NUUANU ST. NEAR KING STREET CUT FLOWERS Also CLOTHES CLEANED and PRESSED S. HARODA Fort and Pauahi Sts. Pnono ZZiy WHEN YOU WANT Wire Woven Fen C2 The Man to See Is C. AXTELL ALAKEA CTREE! Yes