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I WITH BIT Ttey Bear Tm .La&eJ This week we are offering io per cent, discount on all our printed wash fabrics of even- description. . ABOUNDING W : VeTdN-Riotn (p Don't You Think it is a mighty convenient' thing to be able to step into our store and buy custom-tailored clothes ready-to-wear, that will fit and satisfy you thor oughly? That is one reason why so many men who wish to be well dressed are today wearing. STEIN-BLOCH SMART CLOTHES Another reason is because they cost about one-half less than the made-to-order clothes, require no special fitting and you need not wait for them they're fit-to-wear . the very day purchased. .Stein-Bloch Smart Clothes are worn today by men of means, who could not be won back to the costly to-measure-made habit by the most se ductive offers because no better clothes are made. STEIN-BLOCH SMART SUITS AND SPRING OVERCOATS, $15.00 to $35 00. M. MclNERNY, Ltd Tcrt and. MercHaat Streets 04 Young Full -Grown Island Capons Today A few choice ones now in stock and they are in great demand. Order immediately by tele phone. Excellent for roasting. We also have a large stock of turkeys. :-: :-: :-: :o: Metropolitan Meat Company, Ltd. KLCPHONE INI A I IM 45, James F. Morgan, President; Cecil Brown, Vice Preside F. Hustace, Secretary; Charles H. Atherton, Auditor; W. H Hoogs, Treasurer and Manager. H-o.sta.ce cSs Co., ILitcL. WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALERS IN firewood, Stove, Steam, B acksmith'sCoa? Also Black and White Sand. Telephone Main 295. Special Attention Given to Draying. ALWAYS SATISFACTOR V THAT'S WHAT PEOPLE SAY OF TH E WORK WE DO. It's because we use the best White Lead we can buy, absolutely pure linseed oil, only the most durable and expensive colors, and employ none but skilled work men. The kind of painting we do costs a little more than some others charge, but it's "always satisfactory." y. STEPMSON, Prfcfca! P?h?er. K;ng Street. THE ORPHEUM Engagement Extraordinary OF THE Walter Sanford Co, I Of Players for a Season of Three Weeks Beginning EniDi, Nov. 14 Saturday OPENING PLAY The Powerof Gold Popular prices 75c, 50c and 25c. ' Box office open Thursday, Nov. 12, at 10 a. m. Watch the papers. l. W. L. McCuire FLOBIST Orders Left at Hawaiian Bazaar, MASONIC BUILDINO and Hotel St. Phone Main MT. Just received Rose Bushes of rare variety; also Carnation Plants from California. Mrs. E, M. Taylor, FLORIST. FAMOUS CHAIRS OF ANTIQUJTY The Papal chair in St. Peter's cathe dral is, it is claimed, the oldest and most interesting relic of antique fur niture in existence, having been in use since the days of ancient Rome. The strongest structural parts of the great chair are of acacia wood. It is to these supports that the massive rings are at tached through which staves are run when the pontiff is borne shoulder high through the great church when he pronounces a blessing on the kneel ing multitude. The chair is ornate with carved panels and ivory plates. and is kept in a wooden case almost as elaborate as itself. ! Amnne- nthpr famnna rViafTo to marble frame in the treasury of St. Mark's, Venice, which, in earlier days, j was overlaid with plates of ivory sei : in wood; the so-called "ivory" chair of St. Maximian, at Ravenna, dating from th. rxth centurv. and the splen- I did silver chair at Bareclona. A lively dispute is in progress be tween the mayor of Canterbury and the ; bishop of Hereford, England, over St. 1 Augustine's chair, which is now in th Canterbury museum, but which was found discarded as rubbish under the tower of Bishop Stanford church. The chair is entirely of oak, put together without nails or other metal work. According to local tradition it is 1300 years old and was used by St. Augus tine on his visit to the place. Dr. Perclval regards the relic as diocesan property, while the mayor of Canter bury maintains that the proper place for St. Augustine's chair is in the ( city where he founded his first see. i In Canterbury cathedral is another chair known as St. Augustine's on which the archbishops have been en throned for centuries. It is an an cient stone chair. Philadelphia Enquirer. Island Polo Players to Meet Again Today. t Kauai Will Put Up the kGame of Their Lives. A Perfect Field and Fearless rs Promise Brilliant Match at Moanalua. Playei Lively Last Week Was Mokua-weoweo. Mr. Thielen Describes a Night View of the Eruption. Molten Lava Springs Like Water From an Artesian Well. The second game of the polo match series between Oahu and Kauai team pher, and H. A. Baldwin, manager ot will bring a big crowd to Moanalua this afternoon. The beautiful environs of the turfy arena and the drive itself, winding through the park like grounds of S. M. Damon's residence, in them selves play no small part in the general attraction. The game will be a hard one this aft ernoon. Spectators will see the Kauai boys clinging like leeches to the op posing riders in an endeavor to block their game and leave openings for their own attack. Arthur Rice and Bob At kinson will hold pitched battle from the start unless Judd plays, when he will do the hustling for Oahu. Spald ing, who failed to show up in his usual form last Saturday, possibly the mas querade had something to do with this, will be keyed up to his tightest tension and has perhaps the stiffest fight of all on his hands, pitted as he is aeainst a man of much greater experience, cool headed, sure hitting Charlie Dole. "With the fighting quartet. Castle and Dillingham for Oahu and Charles Rice and Malina for Kauai, the brill.ance of the play generally rests. There is little to choose between the men for general clan and dash. Malina is a sure hitter but has the fatal tendencv of gallery play. His riding and saving I of his horse is first class. Castle's mal- let work is to the full as good as Ma- ! lina's. but he is not as weil mounted. He is better coached and backed up bv Dillingham than is Malina by Rice. Dillingham's work for cool headed sur vey of the situation and faultless stick handling is on a par with Dole's. He needs however another good mount for the last period. Charlie Rice showed denceg Qf con;ide'rable activity nis auiwues in me mst. two uenuus ui Saturday's game and he can be relied upon to play an even game throwing away no chances. Summing up it seems as if Kauai possesses a margin of odds on their mounts offset by the better team work of Oahu. Kauai played a substitute Saturday and Oahu could have done better had Dillingham followed the lead. Looked at carefully and candidly it seems an even game, while a Kauai victory would be a very popular one. The ball will be thrown in at three o'clock and to those who are not ini tiated the process of throwing in the : siderably greater, than in the daytime, ball might be interesting reading. Were j There was a row of small cones run it not for the necessity of the ball be- nin& across the lake from the Kona to Haiku plantation, Maui, last week as cended to the crater of Mokuaweoweo, the expedition having been arranged by Alfred W. Carter, They .landed at Kailua on Wednesday morning and began the main ascent from T. C. White's, Kainaliu, at 1:30 p. m, the same day. Their camping and their experience of cold that night were like unto the experiences of others who had done the toilsome journey. Yet they were blessed with delightfully clear moon light and immunity from snow, rain or hail. The summit was reached at 1:30 p. m. on Thursday, after actual trav eling time of twelve hours from Kai niliu. Mr. Thielen described the erup tive conditions to an Advertiser re porter yesterday as follows: CRATER IN DAYLIGHT. "On arriving at the crater we found that the central cone was very active, ejecting lava every few seconds with an explosion very much like the blow ing off of steam by a locomotive. The jets rose to a height of about 200 feet. There were other signs of fire in the immediate neighborhood of the cone. "The cone stood on the rim of a cir cular space in which activity was shown all over, fire being also visible in the daytime. Eruptions were in termittent, occurring every few sec onds, and throwing up ejecta to a height of from a few feet to possibly a hundred feet. "Other evidences of fire appeared all over the floor of the crater, steam from apertures and fire occasionally visible during the day. Over in the corner. on the Kau side, there were also evi- Great quantities of steam 'were being emit ted. MAGNIFICENT NIGHT SCENE. "At night the whole scene' was mate rially changed. It then beggared de scription. "A circle o activity in proximity to the cone resolved itself into a lake of pure fire, acting in some manner like a storm-tossed sea. Waves of molten lava dashed against the rocky margin. "During the night eruptions were more frequent and more violent, while the volume of matter ejected was con- Great Reduction In p Ladies' Lisle Thread Lace Hose, fast black in all sizes, regular 50c hose on Special Sale at 35c. or $2.00 1-2 doz. Ladies Vests Ladies White Jersey ribbed vests on sale at .12 i-2c. Ladies Handkfs. Initialed 500 dz. Ladies' Every Thread Linen Grass Bleached, soft finish, washed ready for use, full line of every initial on special sale at $1.50. dz. Men's Initial Linen Handkfs. SPECIAL AT 15c. Pacific Import Co., Ltd. PROGRESS BLOCK FORT STREET WOOOOOO000X0000000 m A Pelican will swallow anything But the wise man demands the best Don't be a Pelican DRINK Primo Lager Not Preserved With Injurious Acids. ft oxxkxxxoxxxkx ooooo oxoxxooc ing put into play by some one other than the players, the neessity of a referee on the field would be obviated. That official could much better render decisions and be out of the way alto gether by watching from a high stand in the center of the field outside the lines. , The ball is not thrown in at all. bdt dropped. The teams line up opposite each other, the Donies almost rubbing noses, the No. 4s usually laying back. The referee rides up closely and when centered, raises his arm, the ball being held loosely in the hand, with an over head sweep, dropping the ball just as the full swing of the arm is nassed. This is all done in one continuous movement rendering it impossible for the referee to favor either side, the writer has refereed many games and speaks advisedly. The ball drops to the ground and rolls, probably three to five feet, squarely among the ponies' hoofs. There were some amateurish comments as to the way the ball was thrown in on Saturday but all onlookers may rest assured that when the referee throws in the ball properly, there can be no favoritism, even unintentional. The crowd, following the example of Saturday, will probably gather about two-thirty to secure good locations and the ponies of both teams will be out on the field warming up by that time. Buses will connect with the cars pass ing fort street at 1:3S, 1:53, 2:0S and 2:28. IT CURED THE DOCTOR. New Scientific Dandruff Treatment Recommended by a Physician. Mrs. Maty y. Crawford, Oakesdale, Wash.: "Herbicide cured me perfectly of dandruff and falling hair." Dr. E. J. Beardsley, Champaign, 111.: "I used Kvrpicide for dandruff and falling hair, and I am well satisfied with the result." Alf R. Kelly, 219c Desadero street, San Francisco: "Herpicide put a new growth of hair on my head. Herpicide does more than is claimed." Herpicide kills the dandruff germ. "Destroy the 1 ause. you remove the ef fect" cures dandruff, falling hair and prevents baldness. Sold by leadmg druggists. Send 10c. in stamps for sample to The Herpicide Co., Detroit, Mich. Hollister Drug Co., Special Agents. A journalist sat for many weary minutes in the waiting room of one of our medical celebrities. His patience at an end, he called the servant and said: "My man. just go in and tell your master that if I am not admitted in five minutes I shall be well again." 7E" the Hilo side. Between twelve and one i o'clock these vents suddenly became 1 very active, ejecting a large stream of lava which continued for several min utes. "At the same time the mass of lava in the larger cone rose to the surface and slopped over in a lake on the Kau side. About one o'clockthe lake aD parently got fuller than it could hold, j for the lava ran out in three small streams on the Kona side, uniting in I one stream some distance from the rim. j These streams broke over afresh sev eral times, with occasionally a tremen dous eruption. The explosions sent matter high in air, which came down like showers of stars. AUXILIARY LAKES. . "To the left of the main lake, during the night, there were two small lakes almost in a straight line about midway between the wall of the crater and the main lake. A third lake was situated at the foot of the cliff on which we were standing. Neither of these small er lakes seemed to have any walls. The one at the foot of the cliff, be neath our feet, had a little cone which broke out and boiled over like water from an artesian well. "Almost the entire floor of the crater is gridironed with orifices through which fire gleams at night. The entire lower plateau, as it is called, has been filled up by the present eruption so as to be flush with the formerly higher level. UNFOUNDED REPORT. "I can state definitely that there has been no flow out of the main crater. Dr. Douglas, who accompanied Mr. Fleming on the trip from which it was reported there had been a flow on Kau side, states that the story was un founded and that Mr. Fleming must have been misauoted. "I secured fifteen photographs, seven of which were taken at night. We found It intensely cold at the summit and the water in our can was frozen with a crust of ice half an inch thick. There was considerable snow in the crevices on the summit." RECOMMENDS THE ROUTE. Mr. Thielen and party whose guides were Charlie Carr and David Nahale- left the summit at 9:30 Fridav morn ing. The crater then showed about the same degree of activity as at their ar rival. They reached Kainaliu in ten hours, having made the round trio in twenty-two traveling hours. Mr. Thiel en strongly recommends the route they took by way of White's. "The spectacle to be seen at its best," he said in conclusion, "must be viewed at night when it is more like a srrand pyrotechnical display than anything else I can liken it to. The sunset which we witnessed on Thursday evening was a close rival to any volcano on earth." Dericripttre Iwoklet with proofs of its value on request, ESTABLISHED- 1S7. Cures While You Sleep. For Whooping Cough, Croup, Coughs, Bronchitis, Influenza, Catarrh. It cnrW because the air rendered strongly antiseptic is carried over the diseased surfaces of the bronchial tubes with every breath, giving prolonged and constant treatment. Those of a consumptive tendency," or suffer ers from chronic bronchitis, find immediate relief from coughs or inflamed conditions of the throat. Cresolene is a boon to Asthmatics. All Druggists. THE VAPOCRESOLENE CO.. 180 Fulion St., New York CHy. FIREPLACE 20,000 YEARS OLD. (Continued from Page 2.) was a kingdom where dishes of gold were used in serving the nobles, where there were houses several stories in height, and where the king and his lords rode under golden canopies in canoes with twenty rowers on a side. Coronado did not find any of this golden splendor, but he did discover two Indian nations living only a few miles? apart, one rude and barbarous, eating its meat raw, and fashioning rude implements of flint, the other making fine flint im plements and pottery and living in houses, whose foundations still stand. His expedition proved beyond a doubt that either Kansas or Nebraska was the great centre of Indian population on the plains before the coming of the white man. In later years Nebraska historians- have conceded that Coronado never reached this State, although there is evidence to the contrary in the disinterment in Franklin county recently of a Spanish stirrup of Moorish design and in Red Willow county of a straight, two edged Spanish sword of sixteenth century design used upon suits of chain mail. Kansas has the better of the argument, because lying diagonally 'across it for a hundred miles is a great limestone flint belt which bears evidence of many years use. o t PROPER CARE OF CUT GLASS. "With proper care cut glass should keep its purity for a hundred years. This cannot be done, however, if it La carelessly washed in greasy dish; water of if exposed to extremes of heat and cold. Out glass articles require much more care during the process of washing than those made of plain glas, because of the unequal thickness of the glass, which makes it expand and shrink irregularly. Warm water, the best castile or other pure soap and a stiff brush are the first essen tials. Wash carefully in a good suds and brush thoroughly through all the cuttings. Rinse the glass in clear water of the same temperature and set to drain. After five minutes put in a box of lxxwood sawdust, filling all the cuts. This will absorb the moisture in the cuttings. Let it stand ten or fifteen minute.-, then give it another brush through the cuttings with a dry brush or soft cloth. Wije inside and out with a lintless linen cloth. By following these directions the original sparkle and cleanliness of the glass will be maintained. Shot should not be used in carates, cruets, decanters, oil bottles, toilet and similar articles. It is apt to scratch. Plain everyday potato parings are the best cleansing agencies that can be employed. Let them remain in the glassware over night and then rinse out in tepid water. When there are no stains a sxnge fastened to the end of a stick will be found useful to wipe the inside of the ware. In washing cut glass put a folded towel in the lxttom of the dishpan, unless you have one of the cedar tubs. To distinguish between the genuine hand cut fflass and that where the pattern is bitten out by immersions in a corrosive liquid, look at the cutting. A greasy shading betraying dullness is never seen in reputable hand work. ITALY'S KING WANTS TO DANCE. The London Chronicle says that the King of Italy, if he is to be entertained in England according to his heart's desire, must be given an opportunity to dance. His majesty is in all ways as excellent a visitor as he is a dancer. He has an open mind and a keen intelligence. He loves travel : he uses his eyes : he asks questions ; attends to replies ; and he remembers. The Queen of Italy is less enterprising than her hus band as traveler and visitor. Her excessive home-keeping is the only fault the Italians find with her, unless it be her failure to learn to speak their language with a perfect fluency. ma 1 V.