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TWELVE) THE HAWAIIAN STAR. WHDNB8DAY, AUGUST 10, 1911 IN TUB UNITED STATICS DIS T1UCT COUItT FOR THE TERRL TORY Of HAWAII. THK UNITED STATUS, Plaintiff, v. THIS HOARD OF THE HAWAIIAN EVANGELICAL ASSOCIATION, ot. al., Defendants. Action brought In said District Court, and the Petition tiled in tile omce of the Clerk of sfttd District Court, in Honolulu. FR1SGD LETTER (Continued from page one.) compllmont n young woman could be given. "Anna Gaffney was n decant girl." To nil tho sultora who cnnie hor way, good and bad and there wero THE PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED ' liotli, Bho tossed her sunny head and STATES, GREETING: I"0"1 ,lor until Jim Langley, THE HOARD OF THE HAWAIIAN a wo11 dressed, woll mannered young EVANGELICAL ASSOCIATION, ii.ninn of ' district crossed hor path corporation existing and doing bus!-,dld she hesitate. Ho wns hotter ness under and by virtue of the lnws dressed, a little more roninntlc than of the Territory of Hawaii; J. K, other suitors and he hold her fnscln PlTMANTT. T. I. JOSEPH. JON'AH atod. Ho pointed out a little cottage KAIWIAEA, S. K. PUPUHI and II. !vl covered, at tho top of n nearby K. KAALAKEA, as Trustees of hI" n,ld talke'l of lvo- She listened the KIPAIIULU PROTESTANT t0 him. Then came hor friends and fJHURCH ; THE KIPAIIULU SUGAR , intimates who told hor of another COMPANY, a corporation existing side to Jim Langley. She half be and doing business under and by vIr-.oved them for n time, but Jim ox tue of the laws of tho Territory of Plained everything away and she Hawaii: KAHELE OPIO: SAM KA-.loved him. A gentle mother protested MAVAft. mat.ta tat.apat.a wiiinw I but for tho first time In her life of KANAKAAUKAI. deceased: SAM Anna couldn't listen. She answered PALAPALA: KANAKAAUKAI, KA-,ho Protest by stealinR away in the NOHONAHELE, KEALOHA NUI, shadows of a night and she nnd Jim ANNIE, whose full name is unknown, .were married. and MARY KUPIHEA, heirs at law) Her parents forgave her. From of KANAKAAUKAI. deceasod; DA-,thon 0,1 tllev kncw nothing of Anna's VID DROWN. HENRY SMITH,, real life until something happened. JANE BLACK ami MARTHA GREEN, Two weeks after their marriage ho unknown heirs at law of KANAKAA- loft ller one evening "just for a few UKAI. deceased: DAVID KUPIHEA', 'minutes." She waited all ,that night H. HACKFELD and COMPANY, LIM- anA into the next morning for him. ITED, a corporation existing and A little later ho took her nnd a girl doing business under and by virtue of , friend down town, left them on the tho laws of tho Territory of Hawaii; , corner nt ten o'clock, "just for a mln ISAAQ P HARBOTTLE; MARY K. "te." and returned n,t twelve reeling HARBOTTLE; WILLIAM HARBOT-1 with drunkenness. She could hardly TLE; DVVID H. HARBOTTLE; jget li'ni home, and "everybody on the JAMES HARBOTTLE; FREDERICK car laughed nt her." KLAMP; AGNES G. KLAMP, wife ofj She moved her home so the other FREDERICK KLAMP; JOSEPH People in the house wouldn't know. WHITE, WILLIAM DAVIS, HELEN IIe drank more than ever, and she JOHNSON and JULIA ROBERTS, un.' moved again and again with him to known heirs at law of IIALUALANI. escape the humiliating knowledge deceased; THE TERRITORYNDF HA-,hcr friends might gain. Finally he! WAII; and JaMES THOMPSON, Quit work altogether and she had to JOHN GRAY, HENRY STONE, ELlZbegin work again as a stonographor ABETH STONE, MARY STILES and ' to support them both. fr MARTHA STILES, unknown owners "Then he stole my money," sho and claimants; J explained afterwards. "He pawned You are hereby directed to appear my watch and made me get his meals and answer the Petition in an action and pay tho rent, and he abused me." entitled as above, brought against t "I stood It up to Tuesday. One you in tho United States District 'gnt ne struck me, and a man came Court, for the Territory of Hawaii, in to separate us. Tuesday night he within twenty days from and after tore my collar off and pinched my service upon you of a certified copy black and blue. He said be d of Plaintiff's Petition herein, together MR nie, and I screamed. A girl in city the next morning when the pa- "Anna, you may go now; you nro pers gavo tho nows, nnd a Bcoro of free." officials set tho wheels of Justice mov-j And to tho swooning, trom'bllng Ing to set hor frco. It wns a strange girl, counting her bends, mumbling case, juiruor trims orton taKe her prayers, with ,tnc wiougnt oi the months, but Anna didn't think any- dead husbnnd on hor soul, with tho thing nbout that She killed 'when ton thousnnd humiliations hoaped hor love died, when hor pur6 Hfo hnd upon hor during hor short life, must been brnnded by hor husband by com- have como tho question FORMS. OF THE OCEAN'S FLOOR. pnrlson with "women of ,the Const." Free from what? Men skilled in the Intricacies of the 11 criminal law, men hardonod to the STRANGE dally cruoltlcs of the police cour, wept with Annn. Tho mon sworn to Intorprot tho laws wanted to "peer. .,nr ... tho donlh8 ot reat ovor the formalities and see tho thing oona nnd Ilvo ,nyrlntiB of 8imno8 that moaned in tho path ' and cried monBtroUa nlui uncouth, some of thorn out for a fair deal." No man cared ltimvn ovoll t0 tho hnclont races one whit for the still body on the of I1inI1utiitl. others discovered by scl morgue slab, but everybody wanted onllstB my in modorn days by tho aid to help Anna, who remained In hor of tll ,ivoaKe on tho ono hand and tho cell until morning counting her beads mcrosol0 0n the other. Animals of over and over, and praying for Jim. ti.eg0 i0vcr groups of life, such as "I lovo him still," sho cried, "but 1 protozoa and hydrozot some of largo had to do It." size, others of minute proportions, at- Tho police Judge the next morning tract and surprise, not so much by hoard ,tho law's formalities, then t,0ir shape and habits, strange as leaned over and whispered to a re- these appear to tho observer new to porter, "This little girl was acquitted them, as by their mysterious blending last night before a tribunal -where with other individuals of their same thoy get quick hearings nnd where sort. our laws don't count! Ball is set nt At ono moment, says the Philadol $100," he added, and every man phlu Record, a protold is free, swim- reached for his money. mlng in the blue water, a JelliMiko They took ber to tho inquest, where mass, with a thick center In tho midst, all the testimony of the eye-witnesses We wonder how it camo to exist. to the shooting was heard. And never Then, of Itself, tho creature solves tno a good word for Jim Langley camo rll"e; slowly Its Jelly mass lengthens out until two or three saloon loafers out, while tho center nucleus In its and bartenders took the s,tand. The midst also elongates ana sprts m two; hoarse voice of the beer sot tried to then the Jelly mass grows thin at the soften Jim's record. "He hadn't been lnil,(lle- and then stm thinner- tlU m ,,m ,ivnv mni, finally the animal bursts asunder at vj imu v. iiviui . n . . . v ...... w. never more than seven or eight little beers a day." And so they went limp ing through (their foolish lies with a sneer nnd a defiant look. Anna told her story on the stand. Hers was the storytho art if you will of utter truth. And there wasn't n ury eye in me room win . , i,.m. (,rn Miir minrio whiin sho finished. As she concluded her U)e 0,d mlnd ccaged to be at a stoiy sue larnteu. , Tllrnin, to other nhases in the life .She had to go through all her story history of another sort of these lower again before the grand Jury. Eighteen anlmals we find the inverse operation, men listened as best they could. Some two UvIng beings conjugating, Joining had families and daughters of their , lnerKnK lnt0 one. xot so start- own. Sho said sho was nineteen. 1Ing as tho WOndcrs of the pnyslcal They shuddered. Hearing her sory -laboratory, these lower forms of sea through they helped her from the ufe i1U.e yct about them features even room anti ieit ner souuing wun tne moTe thought-provoking, more puz prison matron while they went back znng, baffling and suggestive of the and closed the door. Ten minutes deepest mysteries of existence. later the jurors came out and the The protolds, as their names indl the thinnest part. Where there was ono animal before, now there aro two, swimming apart from each other,' never to return. The one conscious ness of this nnimnl, no matter how rudimentary and narrow it may be, has still become two; It is as if a hu man being's mind should double Itself tlons. Thoy nro composed of but ono edR whllo othor living beings our solves Included, nro made up of Vast multitudes of colls. Usually those ono called nnlmnls aro mtscroscoplc in s'ze, yet Bomotlmos thoy attain a very appreciable size. Portions of tho gol- ntlnous or outside parts of tho cell bo- come specialized to dlfforont functions, feeding, swimming nnd defense. A typical example of tholr build is shown by tho cut of tho ono cnlled aulocoros." Hero tho nucleus of tho coll Is in tho vory middle. This Is tho contor of its life. Beyond that Is a multiform, Jelly mass of protoplasm ending In sharp spines for defense nnd feelers to entangle and draw In tho food tho latter being absorbed by chemical action at tho surface of tho body in a mnnnor which, on the sur face, reminds ono of tho way tho in-sect-cntchlng plants, such ns dloncnsc, bohavo. Some of these protozoans build up for them -elves a shellwork of siliceous material or fibrous matter, at tho very npex of which lives tho nucleus, as a watchman in tho tower, or as a sen tinel in a lighthouse. To tho sorts of siliceous protozos belong tho radlo- larians, so called from tho starry processes which go forth symmetrl cally from the body and which, in do ing so, create forms often of oxqulslto beauty. Another beautiful form, with lace like processes emanating from its branches, Is called "gorgonetta." This protozoan was discovered by Haeckel, the Gorman scientist and popularlzer of Darwin's Ideas. Still another odd form is "capo- canlum," with its long, translucent, al most transparent feelers and Its slllce. ous shell reminding ono of a lady's cap. London Globe. ' fnvpmnn wnllflnn nvni iilnnnil his nntoc nro tlin Inwpnt nt nil nnlmnla 1 11 with a certified copy of. this Sum-.me next room came in and he threw hand on her hcad and said Wm11v, structure, though not always in tunc mons. I imiu out. 1 iosi so mucu sleep And you are nereDy notified that.from worry that I couldn't do my unless you appear and answer as,01"1 Properly. I lost Job after Job." above required, tho said Plaintiff will1 u was just a story of beatings and take judgment of condemnation ofjal'"ses aftdr that. The kindnesses the lands described in the Petition of n gentle girl were repaid with herein and for any other relief de-!c,,rses nnd kicks. Sho wouldn't go CHAMBERLAIN'S COLIC, CHOLERA AND DIARRHOEA REMEDY. This is unquestionably tho most suc cessful preparation that has ever been produced for bowel complaints. Dlar rhoea, dysentery, colic and pains in tho stomach are quickly cured by It It can always be depended upon on even In the most severe and dangerou cases In almost every neighborhood there !s someone whole life has been saved by it. For sale by all dealers, Benson, Smith & Co., agents for Hawaii. We Ask "WHY COUGH?" 1HQ Q. What is good for my cough? A. Aycr's Cherry Pectoral. Q. How long has it been used? A. Seventy years. Q. Do doctors endorse it? A. If not, we would not make it. Q. Do you publish the formula? A. Yes. On every bottle. Q. Any alcohol in it? A. Not a single drop. Q. How may I learn more of this? A. Ask your doctor. He knows. Ayer's Cherry Pectoral Prpred by Dr, J. C. Ayer & Co,, Uw.ll. Mm.. U. S, A. Fraternal Meetings HONOLULU LODGE NO. 61G, B. P. O. ELKS. Meets in their hall on King street near Fort, every Friday cenlng. Visit ing Brothers are cordially Invited to- to attend PAUL R. ISENBERG, E. R. GEO. T. KMJEGEL. Sec'y. !F Ynii WISH Tfl ADVERTISE 1 s i S-t'.DAKE'S AMERIISHIG AGSKH IN NEWSPAPERS ANYWHERE AT, ANYTIME '.nil on 3T Writs i JU4 Saiisomo Street BAN FRAKSI8CO, CALIP. Oahn Railway and Lard Co., Ltd., will have its annual meeting at tho rillinghnm office, Stangenwald build ing, next Monday at 2:30 p. m. manded in the Petition. home. She had too .'much pride, and 1 xl i ... .. . WITNESS THE HONORABLE ulu "UL "UIU "el I0IKS t0 K'iow an tne 5ANFORD 13. DOLE and THE HON- terrib,e tIlInKs ho did after they had ORABLE CHARLES P. CLEMONS, advisctl her not to marry him. Sho Judges of said District Court, this Iove(1 her J,m- She wanted to elevate 30th day ot June, in the year of our,hlm' wanted him to be a man. She Lord one thousand nine hundred and;thoUKht he was eood once, and be- cloven and of the independence of ci,uso sac Ioun" aim a unite sue be, the United States tho one hundred and thirty-fifth. : (Sgd) A. E. MURPHY, Clerk. (Seal) (Endorsed) No. 77. UNITED STATES DIS gan her bitter struggle to put him on his feet She hunted jobs for him and so did her parents they thought ho was having hard luck. One night her mother came with news of a job, but Jim was out. Anna waited until nearly morning, TRICT COURT, for thp Territory of tncn he came home drunk and abused Hawaii, THE UNITED STATES OF llcr- Tho thread of her strength was AMERICA vs. THE BOARD OP THE, "ear tho snapping point. She took HAWAIIAN EVANGELICAL ASSO-some of her things and went home. CIATION, et nl. SUMMONS. ROB:T'ate 1,1 the day she set out to find ERT W BRECKONS, United States nIm nRa,n- Attorney. j WaIting in front of a saloon until THE UNITED STATES OP AMER-,'10 came out Intoxicated, sho plead ICA, Territory of Hawaii, City of'wlth llim t0 como home. Ho cursed Honolulu, ss. Iner' vilified her. She cried and then I, A. E. MURPHY, Clerk of tho,ho s.tnlck her- An Italian bootblack United States District Court for tho protested volubly, "I no treata my wife Territory and DIsrict of Hawaii, do llke dat" he cl'Iod angrily. Jim hereby certify tho foregoing to be a,took ner to a restaurant near by and full, truo and correct copy ot the or-sho askea for ller bankbook and mar iginal Summons In tho case of THE rIaBO license which ho had taken UNITED STATES OF AMERICA vs. ifrom ner- He gave hor the bankbook THE BOARD OF THE HAWAIIAN J an(l demanded ?40 to pay a man's. EVANGELICAL ASSOCIATION, etlSaIoon "cense. Tho saloonman, he nl., as the samo remains of record and sai(J' nad lost nil his money on the on file in tho offlco of tho Clerk of races. Annn refused tho money, and said Court. is0 Jlm struck her and went back to IN WITNESS WHEREOF. I have!1110 saloon. hereunto set my hand and affixed tho Crazy with it all, Anna ran Into a seal of said District Court this 29th pawnbroker's and pawned her watch day ot June, A. D. 1911. A. E. MURPHY, Clerk of United Statqs District Court, Territory of Hawaii. By GEO. R. CLARK, Deputy Clerk. Wright-Hustace LIMITED. Phono 1148. Cor. King and South Sts. Successor to W. W. WRIGHT & CO.. Ltd. also Kellogg & Dempsey Auto, Motor and Carriage Repairing. Painting, Trimming. Horseshoeing. KB Catton Neill & Co. Limited Engineers, Machinists, Blacksmiths and Boilermakers. First class work at reasonable rates. Saturday, August 1 8th, is the closing day of the most successful and satisfactory sale we ever inaugurated. Hundreds have taken advantage of the many rare values we offered. Have you? If not, we advise you to avail yourselves of this last week's selli ng. Remember that it means a saving to you of from " 20 logos! m 8ie of lining Furnslisre for something she put under hor coat, She went back to the jaloon and waited. She flnnlly sent a mnn In to get Jim, and he camo out drunker than ever. He sworo terribly, so badly that even tho drunks with him protested! "Go home with your wife and bo decent," bawled one. "With her?" Jim sneered. "Say," he cried, turning upon her fiercely, "I haven't got ns much respect for you as ,the women 'down on the Coast," and then he struck her. There was n blinding flash and Jim Jerkod backward with a queer, sharp cry. Another shot, and another shot, and a third. A passerby called to tho girl to stop shooting. Sho stopped, white and frlghtenod. A figure reeled out Into tho street, whirled around and Jim fell into the gutter, a dirty heap. He was dead. EXTENSION TABLES. $50.00 Early English $25.00 ?30.00 Early English 7 $22.00 ?27.00 Golden Oak $20.00 J34.00 Golden Oak $25.00 $17.00 Early English $12.75 $18.00 Golden Oak .....$13.00 BUFFETS $100.00 Golden Oak -T. $60.00 $ C5.00 Golden Oak ., ... .$40.00 $ CO. 00 Golden Oak $33.00 ? 80.00 Early English $60.00 $ 52.00 Early English $40.00 $ 44.00 Early English $35.00 $ 30.00 Early English $24.00 $ 90.00 Fumed Oak, damaged $55.00 $ 50.00 Fumed Oak $40.00 $ 44.00 Fumed Oak $35.00 $ 32.00 Fumed Oak $25.00 CHINA CLOS.ET.S $ 55.00 Fumed Oak $36.00 $ 30.00 Fumed Oak $22.50 $ 58.00 Early English $46.00 $ 48.00 Early English $35.03 $ 45.00 Early English $30.00 $ 70.00 Golden Oak $48.00 $ C5.00 Golden Oak $52.00 $ 34.00 Golden Oak $24.00 $24.00 Golden Oak $19.00 DINING CHAIRS. $0.00 Early English, leather seat $4.00 $4.50 Early English, wood seat....'; $3.25 $4.00 Early English, wood seat $2.90 $5.75 Golden Oak, leather seat...7 $4 50 $2.50 Golden Oak, cane seat $1.75 $3.00 Golden Oak, cane seat $2.15 $2.00 Golden Oak, cane seat ..$1.50 MISSION DINING SETS Fumed Oak Finish, comprising 8 ft. Table, Buffet and China Closet. Regular price, $120,00; Special, $85.00. Flanders Dining Set, comprising '8 ft. Table, Buf fet, China Closet, six straight chairs, one arm chair. Regular prico, $218.50. Special, $160.00. CLOSING OUT OUR ENTIRE STOCK OF LACE CURTAINS AT ONE-HALF PRICE. $3.50 Nottinghams at $1.75 a pair $5.00 Nottinghams at $2.75 a pair $9.00 Nottinghams nt ; $4.50 a pair 510.00 Nottinghams nt $5.00 a pair $G.00 Battenburg at 3.00 a pair $7.50 Battenburg nt $3.75 a pair $5.00 Battenburg at ". $2.50 a pair $15.00 Battenburg at $.50 a pair $10.00 Brussels Net $5.00 a pair $5.00 Brussels Net at $2.50 a pair $8.00 Cable Net at -.$4.00 a pair $5.00 Cablo Net at $2.50 a pair $3.50 Cablo Not at $2.75a pair Scrim by the yard, 35c grade, 17 cents. Madras by tho yard, 20 cent grade, 10 cents; $1.00 grade, 50 cents. FURNITURE RUGS AND DRAPERIE8. j. Hopp&Co.,Ltd Do You Feel Warm? Does your head itch? Do you i scratch, scratch and scratch? Tho only way to keep cool and prevent a visitation of tho dreaded prickly heat is to uso PACHECO'S DANDRUFF KILLER. "A word to the wise is sufficient." Sold by all druggists and at PACHECO'S BARBER SHOP. 1 I Cools I 5 1 WITH 1 6 G j I Dainty Women f LIKE THE iRegal Shoel P A PBR All Kinds Wrapping Papers and Twines, Printing and Writing Papers. AMERICAN-HAWAIIAN PAPER & SUPPLY CO., LTD. Fort and Queen Sts., Honolulu. Phone 1410. Geo. G. Guild, Gon. Mgr. Fine Job Printing,-Star Office. A wave of sympathy swept ovor tho E3MH Fine Job Printing, Star Office.