Search America's historic newspaper pages from 1756-1963 or use the U.S. Newspaper Directory to find information about American newspapers published between 1690-present. Chronicling America is sponsored jointly by the National Endowment for the Humanities external link and the Library of Congress. Learn more
Image provided by: University of Hawaii at Manoa; Honolulu, HI
Newspaper Page Text
& Just Received a Breakfast Such as- i Also CREAM OF WHEAT FLAKED BICE GERMEA A. A. OATS C. iL OATS B. GEM WHEATDTE Large Variety of Cereals - - FRESH CRANBERRIES JAMS. JELLIES VAX CAMP'S PORK AND BEAKS ANDERSON'S SOOP, ETC. SALTER &, WAITY Tel. 6S0. Orpheum Block. Grocers. The Porter Furniture Co. BETHEL AND HOTEL STREETS IMPORTERS AND DEALERS IN Furniture anil , Upholstery Chamber Suits Chiffoniers Chairs, Tables Side Boards Divans China Closets Extension Tables Direct from Eastern Factories PACIFIC VEHICLE & SUPPLY CO. Ltd. ?tWE HAVE JUST RECEIVED A L.ARSE SHIPMENT OFp I inlrc Drays, Dump Wagons, Dump Carts, Farm Gears; Express Wagons and Delivery Wagons. US5 rn Wig y'VSr ' r DAT BLOCK at. BEVERAGES SUPERIOR ArsllMATTTMGJ CARBONATED FOUNTAIN DRINKS (SODA WATER) NUTRITIOUS DELICIOUS REFRESHING IN THE HIGHEST. DEGREE PERFECT Great Variety of Flavors Novelties Added Frequently Our Yichy a Special Feature Natural Fruits Our Own Selection Our Ice Cream "par Excellence" the Finest FOUNTAIN, COR. FORI 25 HOI EL 31 5. Noted as the Coolest Corner in Town. Benson, Smith & Co., ltd. BOWER'S MERCHMTS' PMTROli AND- CONPIDENTIAL AGENCY Office: Boost 4, Model'Block. Teuotont: 70S. P. 0. Box 284 - Beliablo and Confidential Watchmen furnished on short notice for Stores Residences, Property, Etc First-class references furnished. Read The Sunday Republican THE HOSOLTJLTJ REPDBLICA3 "WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14. 1900. " I JS- ui ' ""'V A new line of Surreys, Buggies, Runabouts, Phaetons, Buckboards, Harness, Whips, Lamps, Robes, Etc. Pacific Vehicle & BERETANIA STREET OOL.D LUSCIOUS lYour Credit Is Good AT'THE COYNE FURNITURE CO. PRfffiAESS ILUL You Don't have to pay Spot Cash For Furniture at our store. Our System "A Small Cash Payment and A little each month.' Come and let ns explain oar Installment Plan- THE YOKOHAMA SPECIE BANK LIMITED Subscribed Capital - Ten 21,000,000 Paid Vp Capital - - Yen 18,000,000 Reserved Fund - . - Ten 8,130,000 HEAD OFFICE Yokohama The bank iuys and receives for col lections Bills of Exchange, issues Drafts andvLetters of Credit and transacts a general banking business. Branch theYokohama Specie Bank. New Republic Building, Honolulu, H.T. Old papers for sale at this office. Supply Co., ltd. NEXT TO THE FZRE STATION. i if r -4 H Chunks oMW !" ff J-W A . . .. -I Snlifl Arnhn 111 ! l nats Alcolia ... jl . , . . ff fewest auu most useiul H, traveling or pocket stove made, if It make a verv hot heat, it p- is perfectly safe; uo leaking or JJ; spilling. b il! therefore cheap. ii. It has everything to V- commend and no -I ages. ' This little stove is indispensable in Afternoon Teas Chafing Dishes QCurling Irons Sick, Booms Travelinsr Yachting 2? urserv Camping If Since we spoke of Alcolia u last week the little stoves have been selling like hot p cakes. Toa will want one M sometime. Come in and see tlipm hm1 all 41) of ro !!' have said of them will be r, yermea. TWO SIZES, 25 and 40 cents. Ml - DRUG - CO. SMiAKNTS. TOT AKD JCTHG STKZIT5 R jSU, , - -. ft mm or stock HIEISKUOMPUT Restitution Forced hy Mr. H. P. Baldwin. CUT DOWN I1LF MILLION MLURS BECAUSE ECE BELIEVED THE COMPAKT WAS CAPITAL1ZED. Means Dividends on Fifty Thousand Shares Instead of Sixty Thousand Facts of the Deal. The long talked of and much desired reduction of the capital stock of the Kihei Sugar company is about to be consummated. The news ha been known for a couple of days on the street by a few of the big shareholders in the corporation and as a result there has been quite a flurry in the stock, which for a long time has been going begging. For over a year there has been talk of the desire of Sir. II. P. Baldwin, one of the largest holders of Kihei stock, to reduce the capitalization by half a million dollars, as in his opinion the company was over-capitalized. Of the $1,500,000 in paid-up stock, a greater part of which is held by Messrs. Baldwin and Thurston, it is proposed to refund to the treasury of the company ?."00,000. This will reduce the capital to two" and a half millions. It will le a great benefit to the holders of the assessable stock, as it will mean that dividends accruing will be divided among the holders of fifty thousand shares, instead of among sixty thousand. As will be remembered in the prospectus of the Kihei Sugar company, there was no "'promoters' stock." The paid-tip stock was taken in payment for the land turned over by the promoters of the plantation. At the time it was thought that the price paid wns a rather high one, but it was not until after the first break in the Kihei boom that there was consideration of the price paid by the company for the land. Mr. Baldwin first proved the reduction in the paid-up stock of the company, but his proiwsal was not looked upon with favor by his associates and for a long time they objected to the idea. lie. however had made up his mind that the price paid for the land was an exorbitant one and declared his intention of refunding his pro rata of the stock. Finally his influence brought to bear on the others bore fruit and as a result there has been called a meeting of the Kihei stockholders to be held at the-Chamber of Commerce rooms on Tuesday next to "consider .n projwsition to surrender certain shares of stock and the disposition to be made of the same." The sale of delinquent stock in the company which was to have taken place on Saturday last was postponed presumably to await the action taken at the meeting next Tuesday. In the meantime the activity in the stock has greatly increased and yesterday the stock, which has been selling at $10 and under per-share for quite a while, was sold at $l.?.r0 on the Stock Exchange. Ever since its flotation Kihei stock has been the popular gamble among the assessable stocks and there has been more money lost and made on this security than probably any other stock at present on the market. S ALMOST FIFTY YEARS. Faithful Servant of the Bishop Bank Passed Away Last Sunday. Wiliam Kaluna, who for years has been the jnpitor of & Co.'s bank, died suddenly on Sunday last and was buried yesterday, rt the Makiki cemetery. Kaluna was sent to the bank to work when it first opened its doors, by Bernice Pauahi Bishop, one of whose retainers he was. Ever since then he has faithfully done his duty to the bank and had the trust of all the men employed in die institution during his employment there. Several times during his service he was threatened with discharge for being remiss in his work of keeping the offices clean but these threats did not affect him in the least. In reply to a warning he would say: "How can you put me out? Pauahi sent me here to work, and when I am dead then I will be pau work." The regard in which the old man held his beloved alii was remarkable and when things did not go to suit him be wonld complain that Pauahi would not like it. or if Pauahi was here this would not be done. An amusing anecdote ofhis loyalty to Pauahi Bishop and his interest in anything that belonged to her is as follows: One day during a very heavy rain storm he accosted G. R. Bishop, waiting for the rain to cease. He was on his way home to lunch. Mr. Bishop was quite a distance from the bank and Ka luna asked him why he did not take a hack and get out of the wet Mr. Bishop said that it cost too much money. At this Kaluna took a quarter out of his pocket, and tendering it to the banker. said: "Here ! You take this. Bimeby you get home all wet Pauahi she growl you." Kaluna was often sent to collect money during a rush and never was he known to make a mistake in his collections, and daring the whole time he was connected with the bank never a thills' was misplaced or missed. & Suburban Hoodlums. Judge Wilcox imposed a fine of $20 and costs upon Solomon Keawe yesterday morning- for throwing stones at a Chinaman who was coming into tows along Nnuauu street with a cart of fish. The hoodlum element in the suburbs is a growing evil and will be handled without gloyes by the police jadge. a BOBK. LINDSAY At Tali. MauL on November to the"'wife"of D.C., Lindsay,, daughter. J ' ' - ;; personals. ;; The board of health ViH probably elect a president today. G. X. WIteax. ose of tb defd candidates for the senate frota Kauai. is ia the city. The PaciSe Cycle Co. will yocr wheel and cake it look like ew for the small cost of $6. IUs delivered and called for free of charye by the Territory Stables, KJa street. Telephone main 35. The Hawaiian Woman's club held a meeting at Mrs. Thompson's home. yesterday afteraoon. Attorney J. A. Maroon threatens to have Theresa Wilcox arrested for the value of some calabashes which he gave her to selL Mr. and Mf5. James Carry have a daughter in Gaam who is married to a Spaniard. They sent a Christmas ban-die to her by the Solace yesterday. The adjourned annual meetin? of the Honolulu Library and Reading Room asociation will be held on Friday evening. November 11th, at 7:30 o'clock. Miss Anna Paris, who has been the guest of Mrs. H. P. Baldwin at Haiku for the past two weeks, will return to Honolulu at the end of this week. Robert Atkinson, who has been engaged on ome special work for the census bureau, returned by the Manna Loa yesterday from Maui and Hawaii. The election was too much for aged 5o. residing on Mr. Damon's place near Koko Head. He drank so much that that night he died of alcoholism. A meeting of the board of directors of the 1. M. C. A. was held. Monday night at the association rooms. The general secretary reported thirty-six new applications for membership. Wind storms have been unusually severe on Maui lately. Many trees were blown down at Lahaina and a number of corn fields in Kula were laid low by the wind and rain. - Miss Charlotte Alexander, sister of Mrs. II. P. Baldwin, arrived at l'aia on Thursday for a brief visit to Haiku. Miss Alexander has been a resident of Italy for some years iast. There will be' a big labor picnic at Pearl Harbor on Thanksgiving day. In" connection therewith will be boat races, athletic sports and fireworks during the day and dancing in the evening. The annual meeting of the teachers of Maui will be held at Mauuaolu seminary. Makawao. on Monday, December :i. An elaborate and interesting program of practical work has been prepared. A special meeting of the stockholders of the People's Ice and Refrigerating Co. will be held at the office of the Hawaiian Trust and Investment Co. on the 2Sth day of November, at 10 o'clock a. m. The recent ruins have done an immense amount of good to the cane on the central Maui sugar plantations, says the Maui News. Cane on Wailuku plantation is already beginning to tassel and will soon be ready for the mill. Mounted Patrolman Gumpher and his wife are to give a three days luau at their home. Moanalua, beginning with Saturday. The feast will begin Saturday afternoon and will last until Monday. Natives from all over the island will be present. This will be the biggest luau on the island for many years. am A nnounce' ment , , , 3 m QN AND AFTER this date we will give a discount of one third on allclass' ical and popular sheet music, thus W ""ij making the price as low as can be found & where in the United States, Respectfully, TJergstrom Music Co, W by Dame!! Great in resnlt!!! rs the CARBON PAPER that the Hawaiian News Go. Lt'd., is distribut ing samples of. fl large stoek of some received by the Tor Sale by " ," HAWAIIAN NEWS C&. LIMITED. Special GOLF.. 100 Dozen Stanley and usual One-Fifty Waehuseit Shirts. The quality. A profusion of patterns to select from. TOtTS $t Each UXhitney 8t 519 Fort i - - - - s it - -- i Jv ii 5 1 1- -v vr. 8 8 Watch This Space -for-Important Items r . 'f f -a" IDoney Back Some men wear just what they please; others wear what other men affect There is a certain style which mort men regard as proper, and one must be independently rich or hopelessly poor to utterly ignore the dictates of fashion. One great point about our clothing which ought o appeal to every man who wonld be well dressed is that it is so well made and so entirely in accord with the right fashion without being cost'y. It has all the merchant tailor's distinctiveness: is, in fact, tailor-made; but is much less expensive than the so-called custom-made apparel. SUSPENDERS The top notch of excellence, the low water mark in prices; that's the way it is in our splendid furnishing department. As typical of values here, wo note today a strong line of MEN'S SUSPENDERS made of excellent elastle of new designs, with leather-trimmed, cast off or nickel plated mountings equal in make-up to the usual 75c or $1.00 kinds. r ,l Price 50cts Per Pair ' THE TWO STORES, TWO STOCKS. P. 0. Box 55S. 9 and 11 Hotel Street and Corner of Fort and Hotel Streets. H ' ' H an aid to digestion k H a tonic stimulant, A aged in wood. k Creenwood L sour mcvsh k a A old fashioned H . whole grain whiskey H A- ' - 'f sy -"'K- SJe'&kikularu Sale or- SHIRTS CHOICE Per Dozen $2 flQatfsh, Iitd. Street. 7W if Vou Say Sol K ASH " TWO TELEPHONES, CKJ and (J7C. mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm 4 St. 71..- i. v ;-i K-. -- " ' 'fe&; &$& e& it? 7 V - -T-. V ., -:. -'. mi ii iJilWWPHWF jansAwMBjEsecak,.' . o- .-..- "; "'" ' ' BE? j 4 - Ljmssr. LJkAJ L.-&. - I-