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MAILS From San Francisco: Sonoma, Oct 4. For San Francisco: Tenyo Mam, Oct. & From Vancouver: Niagara, Oct. 6. Far Vancouver: Madura, Oct. IS. 12 PAGES - HONOLULU TERRITORY 01 HAWAII, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 1915. 12 PAGES.' Evening Bulletin. Eat. 1882. No. 6281 Hawaiian Star. Vol. XXIII, No. 7322 PRICE FIVE CENTO. IS m l o m :i rA rn r a h?i r n m ( v ?:! ?c riL i tnn n r m iv w k ii . " a a - .. .- -. i : . i a - - i ' ' ' i - . i hmwv w i ii i kh a a i - m a i s . i a fStfo)W!Ar f wl cirfniinrfi ri .v if" -V HI 1 UUuJ A A'- I'M wmm i:cfliis tiEiv GUARD COMIIES Secretary Garrison Cables Gov : crnor. Pinkham That Author ization is Given for Equip ment of Six More Companies 'AUTHORITY FOR SIX MORE WOULD BE GIVEN Sixty THdusand Dollars' Worth .of Paraphernalia Forthcom , - ing if Needed for Citizen So! S diers of local Organization a ; Secrelarjr of War Llndley M.' Garrl aoa and the war department : ' are ' . ttrongly with Hawaii in its efforts to develop the national gujtrd, ; 'CI : The recent plans for guard. expan- sion, worked out by Governor, Pink . j iuun, ! Col., Johnson, adjutant-general. and other of. the guard leaders, meet V wlln the approval of the'war depart :d men and Its encouragement la evl- 'dent I. a..materla, warN : i These are he slgnlfican conclusions " derived from a caMegrara recelred by ' Gorernor Pinkham yesterday alter- noon from Secretary Garrison. -The c war secretary informs the governor; v t In answer to a cablegram from the Ha-' v :i wail executive, that authority. Is grant l ed the Hawaiian department to equLp i?" six' new infantry companies, oL5 men each, the cost of equipment and cloth-;.(.-; Ing to be charged to unallotted U. S. funds set. aside to encourage and de Vr . velop tlie miliUa,; ;- f - ; . . .Though it Is not proposed as yet in . v Hawaii to raise .1200. meni in addition V to the companies already formed, the i attitude of the 1 war department ts k -shown when Secretary Garrison says vt that if 1200 men additional are to be . raised authority can - be granted, for f ' the equipment. of six more companies ' ,':v- from unallotted funds. . , : "- ,. r; ; , i - The q uipraent of ?theSe ;' 1 2 com . v panics .wll- 1e- anrro'xlmatcly $60,000 - v . and the war department is right with Hawalljn b!i? viiyiae.jBioayi " ft. 1 1. . , ' - 1 win ,oe wei -Bpcni;M:tv.. s;ffV: l -, When the new companies annouhcocl time to time by Col. Johnson, m- iudlng the Filipino,, company, the en gineer company and the machine com pany, are completed, as they ; will toe in a short time, Hawaii win have Its .12 - companies. i ' 1r':r:K:. Governor Pinkham ' is gratified at the Increasing interest in the- guard and the steady growth of Its compo f neat J'arta, and gratified -also at the , attitude. of the war department ln'au thoriring the money for the equipment of the six new companies, v v n naann naannaa n a II GOVERNOR'S CABLE ASKS Vt GAS MEN TO SEE HAWAII S 7 tt Before the hundreds of " delo- tt tt gates to v the International Gas tt tt Congress, .who banquet , tonight tt ;:: tt at San Francisco, tha following a tt cablegram, which was sent from tt tt Honolulu last night, will be read: tt f tt "Dr. ; Alexander C. , Humphrey, u tt S ; "President InternaUonal x Gas tt .;; tt Congress,V 4 t-S ; - '' ;tt tt ?: u "San Francisco. 'tt V "Hawaii sends r greetings , and tt tt aloha ' to the International " Gas tt '-tt Congress. - -We Invite you some tt ' tt day to meet' In sunny Hawaii. tt tt ' : "LUCIUS' E. PINKHAM, tt t v v ,.Governor . of HawalL tt J tt ; Harry Strange, manager of the tt : tt local gas company, has been tl tt working for more than a year to tt tt bring the : Gas Congress to Ha- tt tt wall in 1916. Friday he will con- tt ' tt duct the members of the' con- tt tt gress through the Hawaii build- tt tt ing at the - exposition, and give tt . tt them an "afternoon in Hawaii." tt tt ' - ". ''' ' tt v tt tt tt tt tt tt tttttttttttttttttttt HONOLULU BIDS ALOHA TO LAST PACIFIC MAIL SHIP Immense Throng Bids Farewell to Manchuria as Huge Liner Casts Off From Dock for Last Time; Captain Dixon Leaves Message to People Women's eyes were misty with tears, and men's throatB closed with a choke at the last sailing of the giant Pacific Mail liner Manchuria from the port of Honolulu this morning. More than 1000 people gathered at Pier 7 at 9 o'clock and watched the boat back away from the dock and head out to sea for San Francisco, symbolizing the passing of the Pacific Mail after 60 years of service. Men who have seen Pacific Mall boats arrive and depart for more than two generations were on the wharf. Millionaires and laborers, bankers and stevedores were gathered there. Ilron Fence Structural and Ornamental Iron t . H. E, HENDRICK, LTD, - ' ' 1. Merchant and AUkea Sta. Frame Kilauea National Park Bill at Capital That the volcano of Kilauea will again be proposed for a national park In a bill to be presented to the com ing congress is the Information car ried in a letter from John R. Desha, secretary to Prince Kalanianaole, the Hawaii delegate at Washington. Mr. Desha-has written to this ef fect In a letter to Raymond C. Brown, secretary of the Chamber of Com merce. It Is asked that all material concerning the volcano which might be of possible help In putting the bill through the legislature be forwarded to Washington. . The purchase price Of the pvk Is not to exceed $50,000, according to the proposed bilL The matter from the , Honolulu . end will probably be, handled by a special com mittee from the Chamber of Com: merce. v r - - i - Superintehdentof Glarhage Ac- cused of Keeping Idle fjanT. ton icity's Payroll. y ; Maintaining that R. W- Aylett, su. nerlntcndent' of the garbage- depart ment,' has made Im proper use of, pub lic funds, and charging him, with neg ligence in duty for Jiavlng failed to report a case coming Under his super- vision tor a period of ,flvo months., the ways and means committee of the city supervisors .last night handed Its te port in tb board, t The report .was adonted.V: ..-." -'.?'. , r ;;; ; - -a' Thef Aylett case dates back to last May; and ' has for ' the. past severs! meetings been fcrouftiVtsp-.for'lgbt notice tr the brird-i l ,3 toJFltJi bneTA: -liT- i rwMaTabbrerVtel!ie city's ' garbage' 0160' wbo,wair injurod by one of the city autompbUes, five months ago. According to the report, 0r. . I R. Caspar certified to Ayletl on, the; day following the accident that .the injured man would not be able to resume his duties for three or four, weeks. - Aylett In the meantime kept' pimenta on the payroll without consulting the super visors in the matter. In.Aneust, four months after the ac cident,. PIm en ta changed doctors, and Dr, v Wayson; city phvslcian, reported to Aylett that 'he did not think ' Pi mento's condition due to any Injury received while In the employ of the city. ' ' The report says that Aylett did not make this matter known to the sick man until Seotember 21, which was five months after the accident had be fallen hlm.' Further than this Aylett kept Pimenta on the payroll during the month ;o : September, though in formed . tn " writing by the city " physi cian that Pimenta had not suffered injury while In cltv employ. Imnroper Use of Funds." The ways and ; means committee holds therefore that Aylett has been derelict In-his duties by fkiling to re port the case, and that he has made an' Improper use. of the public funds by keeping on the payroll the name ol an Injured employe long after the em ploye . recovered from the effects of his Injury. Ayleffwill be furnished with a copy of the report, and will be ordered to strike the name or Pimenta from his payroll at once. 4 Hinging directly upon the Aylett case a resolution was introduced at the meeting last night by Chairman Logan of the ways and means commit tee, relative to the carrying of the (Continued on page two) all with the same intent, to say "Aloha" to the line which has done so much toward building up Honolulu and the territory of Hawaii. Early this morning a little group of men with flags and leis in their arms went down to Pier 7 and pro ceeded to adorn the ship and the pier, to give outward token of the sincere good will and cooperation which has always existed between the Pacific Mail and the people of Honolulu. On the bridge of the Manchuria Director A. P. Taylor of the Promo tion Committee and his assistant, Phil Danky, placed a large wreath with the words "Aloha, 1915, After Sixty Years," inscribed in the center. Reaching out from this were long lines of leis, their orange tones con trasting brilliantly with the white of the bridge woodwork. The design was the gift of the Promotion Committee and Chamber of Commerce. These organizations also decorated the for ward part of the pier. At the same time, Alexander Hume Ford of the Pan-Pacific Club, assisted by A. E. Larimer, J. W. Bains and Joseph Stickney, hung on the walls of (Contlnuea on page four) CHARGE AYLETT ll!F nf RW IJIII, III 1 IJllIJII . iff i nmnninn iFrnnrr ni'inTn- ALL KAlLilUAUd UUjiL'i . JiUlH; IQHE tAbbK 1U BUUSI IUIU. W BIG CARNIVAL OF JA1 i'S YOIiE Judge Henry E. Cooper Says Poster Will Be Displayed in Stations and Ticket Offices: NEWS SERVICE AGREES TO AID I PUBLICITY International Syndicate, Which Supplies Hearst's and 400 r Other Papers, In Uneg- Director General Cooper of the Mid-Pacific Carnival returned to his desk today for the first time, after an absence at sea and on the mainland of Just four weeks. .Owing to a mlsr understanding a personal message to his family, delivered more than a week. ago, was not , given dut' or com municated to his carnival ' associates, with the result ' that ! he arrived yes terday on the Wllhelmma unannounc ed 1 and - slipped quietly down1 to- his country pi tee on the peninsula, r . :So far a advertising and publici ty, for the carnival gor -said --Juage t toner todav. "my trln was evett more of "a success than I hoped. I was able to cover the , field sot thoroughly , at San Francisco that it was hot neces sary for me to visit the San Diego ex position r to go east, for confer ence with the big railway' men. . I dealt 'direct with tha general passen ger agents of the Important lines, all of which are represented at San Fran cisco by department chiefa.!; 5 w ; .So far as ' Ideas - for - the carnival go, there was. little to learnV .Attrac; tlons such as" 'Creation; and (he Pa-, nana Canal,, which are fitting for an exposition and good revenue makers In their proper , setting, -would be.- out ot"'the-'quetlojil..or-'R;.caralv4i;'j:'-r ."1 didn't co. to San Dieco because. though everybody praised the beauty of the Panama-California exposltloh. It was' generally- agreed that It had-very litu-ib4w tahe; way."tf aHu mcfiTfSCIaltteai, 'ft v-;; rThe International . News Service; which supplies the Hearst newspapers and 400 others scattered over ' the length and:. breadth of the ; ; country With pictures ' and - special articles,-as well as straight news, will take every thing of legitimate interest thatiwe Offer them. After I Ulked with them, they were not?only willing to cooper' ate but anxious to be supplied: -V"Our carnival, poster will be dis played by the transcontinental and all the other important railway lines! in, their mailt ; stations, on their, ferry; boats, in their branch ticket offices and their office ; buildings -In short,' wherefeJr theyhre pushing; their own business, they also will press ours. "The Carnival Pathfinder and the' Carnival Code, to smooth the way for f visitors, will receive even greater pub licity. Not only will they receive the same distribution as the poster but tney also 'will be placed in all Pull man cars, where they will come ini contact With the cream of the travel. 'The. Southern Pacific and the San ta Fe systems, 'which between them handle the entire volume of Califor Bia tourist travel, have agreed to make special efforts at Los Angeles, me tourist center of the coast, to stimulate carnival travel. "It gratifies me very much that the business community in general has 1 given the Pathfinder such good sup port. It is support well placed, for I find that wherever the purpose and scope of the Pathfinder have been ex plained on the mainland there Is a desire to get it in circulation as early as possible. The railroads believe it will create business for them and, of course, for Honolulu, so I am 'partic ularly anxious that the remaining sub scriptions needed be booked as rapid ly as possible. "Let no merchant here think that we are hasty. Tne first turn of the tide in winter travel begins to be felt strongly in October, and the sooner we get out into the stream the farther it will carry us." ROCKEFELLERS ARENT READY TO YIELD THEIR CONTROL OF FUEL CO. Associated Press by Federal Wireless DENVER, Col., Sept. 29. Rumors that the Rockefeller interest might retire from the Colorado Fuel & Iron Company were denied today by John D. Rockefeller, Jr., who has been vis iting the properties. He said the Rockefellers have no intention of los ing control of the company. The re cent H in stock is said to be due to war speculations. JAPANESE FIGHTING MAINLAND COUNCIL TO GET LIQUOR LICENSE (Srecial Cable to Nipnv. Jiji.) SAN FRANCISCO, Sept. 29. The superior judge at Marysville granted on Monday a writ of certiorari applied for by Japanese who aeclared that the city council had infringed their righta by refusing a liquor license. The court ordered the matter to be investigated on October v President of iation, Fore ndence Itional :nriG of past H"-' ays People of Vit Kingdom ''China l; , nation is bitterly Iscontented with ' . :reana are waiting 1 - -S v. .'l. ' t -V f - Ann ning not wno n ciruin -Korea' will be am Independent na : tlort agaln. f, f i: patiently "and Working twbefully rfor Independenca. JH T.j- 'VTJiafrtff;' this v the 4eadenaof jUW ;;acei4rttIvv Jwll -the 1-efforts. JThat they.af ft aintin.to clvJUie the nation highly awhile ih"ey -wt for the Opportunity tbbiakaway!;frqnirJa pan. ; J . ' ''f-,:, That thjpif Inclination tea them fo look upon China as close frjend and ally.f V; -:: ..These are a few of the statements made by .InternaUonalPresident Ahh Chang Ho of the Korean National Association to the Star-Bulletin. Pres ident Ann; , whose headquarters are in wcut riauviovu uao yccu. sas tvi three weeks settling w the differences that have existed between' the two (Continued on pag two) Dr. Frank J. Goodnow Certain China's President W Not Mount imperial Throne That Yuan Shih-Kat president: of the Republic of China; has not changed hiBmtnd one particle etjncernlng his determination .not to accent: the throne of China if the country goes back to the monarchical . form of government, was assertedVtWa morning" by . Dr. Frank J. Goodnow, president of. Johns Hopkins University, and for the last year and a' hal legal adviser to the republic, who has just left Pekin after working on the new constitution. ; Seen by a Star-Bulletla reporter a few minutes before he and his family sailed for San Francisco on the Man churia, on her last voyage homeward. Dr. Goodnow, on being asked what bfc thought- of yesterday's ; Associated Press desimtches that President Yuan Shlh-Kai has dropped his opposition to the monarchical form of govern ment, made the following statement: "I see no reason why President Yuan Shih-Kal should change his mind, and I am sure he has not. He told me repeatedly that he believed the matter should be left to the constitution drafting committee, and yesterday's despatches show this is what has been done. "Yuan said to me he would not ac cept the imperial crown of China even if the constitution drafting committee decided to resume the monarchical form of government. "I am iositive that he has not (Continued on page two) JAPANESE MINISTER TALKS ON DEMOCRACY (Special Cable to Nippu Jiji) SAN FRANCISCO, Sept. 29. M. Ye bina, pastor of the Honga Church at Tokio, addressed the students of the University of California Tuesday on "The New Significance of Democracy and Its Demand to Japan and America." Ahn Chant National, seel. HONOLULU I .4TA5,: - Head Officr Former I.' ri --rLer That thekor; and Vf-urfreitf ull Japamesa rule.? - That io,cco,c: . RATHER THAN BE " .5 res ran FOUSiiioiKFiiTS-iyTo:3S;tffi::B2 TiliilBOiiMiiifliijJST- szi ALUESR0LLE BACK IN DEFEAT, GEWIANTASSERTS Official Cablegrams of Yester day and Today Declare Her , aided Offensive : of i French and British is Checked With Great: Slaughter r1- Claim Steady Progress: Against Russian Armies in the North -v;v -w.; .; ;;;; ' German off iclaJ cablegrams jfrom the German army headquartsra yes terday and today emphatically main, tain that the Allies drive on the. west has been : checked. and. that the Ger mans have inflicted great Josses on the ' enemy. ? , V ';-v-" ; ;: J The 'following cablegram VteUIng of yesterday's events was received to-day;:v:n:.,:-., :-,;-j-;,";t' "German ? Army Headquarters, , Sept. 2ZrOn the . west ' front the enemy continuedattempts to break our lints, without any results," but at several Flacea suffered - heavy fosses. The English attack' near; Loos with gas was without effect. German ceurtter attacks resulted in the capture of 20 officers and 750, men ; and the toUI number of prisoners at thia place now amounts to 3397.; Nine more machine guns were" captured. . All the French attacks In Champagne and In the Ar. gonnes were defeated. ' Near: Sousain some' Trench cavalry most-curiously misunderstood the situation ' and ad vanced, , being. 'Immediately defeated and forced to flee. V-X", : V' 7 "The Saxon ? reserves . ahd Frank furt division distinguished themselves eVnift i atuSkl laTrriVnne Improved 4our- position at Fllemorte, where: we .took four office rs and ; 50 men;-;. Near;Combres:;thevenemy'a po sitions .were destroyed; by yaat ; mine expiosIonsvr;;4i::Srfv. n "On the" east . front, so rapid was the-advance of.Gen.; von Elchhorn' army,, that Field Marshal .von. Hi n denberg'a ' arm had not j known the results of the battle of Wllna, by which the Russians were thrown back behind the line from Noroci to the sea. : At.Smorgon.andWishnoW 70 of ficers:, and 21,908 men . were .taken, three t cannon: and 72. machine guns and plenty of baggage left by the" Rus sians, who,. were fleeing rapidly, also belngsecured,-. ' ' This number of prisoner does not include J those r hitherto announced.fi ; "Northeasts of 1 Wishnow the ' ene my's liner were broken and; 24 offi cers and 3300. men : Imprisoned, ''nine machine guns being taken, -; "German -attacks have made prog ress, southwest ; of Duenaburg .and south 5 of Smorgon. - Field Marshal Prince' Leopold's Bavarian army took Tetedepont, yeast ' .of, - Baranowitschl, after a struggle, capturing 350. .Rus sians. Gen. von Linsingen ffried a passage of the Sty r and ( his troops are exerting a pressure compelling the Russians' to retire along thr whole front north of Dubno." ,;. TODAY'S SITUATION. The foflowing cablegram tells of the situation today: .: "German Army Headqaurters, Sept. 292 The enemy continued with exas peration the attempts to break our front In the .same places where the English attack with gas failed, north of Loos, our center attack resulted in regaining part of the ground formerly abandoned. Violent English attacks in the district of Loos were defeated. The English suffered severe losses. "Repeated and desperate French at tacks at Souchez and NevHIe were Checked partly by violent counter at tacks. In Champagne all the enemy's a tempts to break our lines were with out results, only northwest of Souain a trench of 100 meters in length is still occupied by the nemy. . ."An uninterrupted wave of French attacks broke down before the indom itable resistance of the Baden and Rhenish reserves, the 65th Westpha lian infantrv distinauishina itself. The enemy's heavy losses when repeatedly ! storming the height of Massiges were in vain. All heights were held by our troops. "French attempts to regain lost trenches at Fillemore were defeated, ' the number of prisoners we took here! increasing. In Flanders two English aero- planes were shot down and the occu. I pants imprisoned. "In the eastern war theater Gen. von Hindenberg's army advanced southwest of Duenaburg. The Ger- man cavalry, after efficaciously back ing up Gen. Eichorn s army opera tions, abandoned the district near and east of Vileyka. The Russians re mained inactive. "German troops are victoriously advancing between Smorgon and Vish- nev, where Gen. von Linsingen's army has thrown the Russiana back behind Kormin and Putilovka.', D3ts rs Afi LONDON HEARS ARMY OF 300,000 GERMANS AND AUS TRIANSIS; ADVANCING -J TOWARD 0RZ0VA GERMAri NEWSPAPERS ANNOUNCE TWO GENERALS DISMISSED BECAUSE OF REVERSES ON WEST BRITISH WIN SUC CESS JN MESOPOTAMIA BRITISH TRANSPORT. IS RE- r PORTED SUNK BUT APPARENTLY NO TROOPS ABOARD Associated Press ServJce M and 'inces sant fighting cohtiniies today alon aiargo portion of the west era frbnt and the Allies are pressing forward further against the Gerrnan V resistance which has-been disorganized by tho irtiHer;.bibar ."- - In Cliampagne the , righting is uninterrupted. , Progress is being made'by; thd the Artois regionl North of fas- signe ; a thbusand Gemans surrendered when the Allies charged their, positionsv $r!p5 : -; ' - i 6 German casualties as the result of the. new offensive movement the-AlHes; amount, in killed, wounded and pris oners to mbre'tlian 120,0 meru: : t LONDON, England, Sept.: 29.-Three hundred .thou?;n:l merire;beirig;launchediby the Germans and "Aiistrians upon Serbia;faccording-toa: teleani to Uhe Exchange Telegraph Agency to3ay7v.The army has begun to move in the direction of Orrovafon the Serbian frontier. ? lM - i " - ' ; n I .m i ATHENS.: Greece. -Se released Ii . onumBer of ittkhs "and Gonrlcas, who ivcre survive i . of the British -transport RemazanV sunk by a, submarine. Th; fact! that the transport was '.sunk : did not come to kno wlcd go until these surf ivors were found.; : ':-,:v': ' -f-r . , 1 " , ;.- ; :- ' 'BE Sept; 29.-Constantinople reports to day tliat a British transport has beensunk' with the loss of all but a fewbfihe crewV j Ais destch may be a repetition of the news of the ; Kemazan' sinking ; ; ? f v ' . - -- , t German'; BERLIN' Germany, ;Sept. 29.r-The war office announced today: that jw British in fighting nortli of "Loos, prJhe westA front; has been" retaken. ThewaribfficeIso;sy at Souchez and Neu- velle havebeen partly repulseUv; : ,v A S ;;,'",:-; ; . : 1 PARIS, France, Sept 29.-A despatch, from Athens today declares that Bulgaria ns' preparing to attaclc Serbia within two weeks. - . ; " -: t -".;.; ' - Turks Lose to British Near BaJad LONDON, England, Sept; 29. The British' forces in Meso potamia have won an important victory from the Turks oper ating in that region. The Turks are in' full retreat toward Bagdad. Say German Generals Are Dismi::: LONDON, England, Sept. 29. German newspapers an nounce that two German generals, whose names are" riot 'given, have been dismissed from their commands in the western zone as the result of the recent set-back sustained at (the hands of the Allies. Gen. von Hindenberg, commanding anjimpbrtaht army in the east, is now mentioned for transfer to the western front. Allies to Aid Serbia BERLIN, Germany, Sept I Drenarinir to aid Serbia have near Saloniki, Greece, according to the Overseas News Agency. Additional Teleoranh WOUNDED OUTLAW DIES Associated Press Ty Federal Wireless! ALBANY, Oregon, Sept. 29.-Otto Hooker, the escaped convict who was hunted down yesterday by a posse, died in the hospital today. ' tie, had been - badly wounded. v-v-; ;; -' -, ' :-':.v-; '.-'-'.'--; SAHIB by Federal Wireless ;" - ' ' ' : : f i :it 1. ; f .- -.4 "r ii It With Soldiers 29. British and French troops landed at the port of ;Kathrin to a despatch from Budapest . - Despatches on Paac 9 CHERRY DANCERS GO SOUTH " (Special ble to Nippa Jiji) SAN FRANCISCO, CaU Sept. r The cherry dancers, who have t entertaining here,; will leav- fsr i. south on October .1, They w I . entertainments at'Sacramsr.i:, -. ton, Fresno and Los Ar.zi'- Army