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.1. , 0 r S) 0 i W 1 5- 31 III it W X Ktahl!slitHl July , 1S50. VOL. XXX., XO. 5315 HONOLULU, HAWAIIAN ISLANDS, SAT UK DAY, AUGUST, U, 1S9S. SIXTEKN PAGES. PKICE FIVE CENTO. Itiif 1 M V i . I II I I' l 1 L V3 If t) i V 1 1 x I H V T PROFESSIONAL CARDS. A. L. C. ATKINSON. ATTORNEY-AT-LAW. OFFICE: COR ner King and Bethel Streets, (up ct&ir). DR. C. B. HIGH. DENTIST. PHILADELPHIA DENT Jd College 1892. Masonic Temple. Telephone 318. OR. A. C. WALL. DR. 0. E. WALL. DENTIST OFFICE HOURS: 8 A. M. to 4 p. m. Love Building, Fort Street. M. E. GROSSMAN, D.D.S. DENTIST 93 HOTEL STREET, Ho nolulu. Office Hours: 9 a. m. to l p. xn. GEO. H. HUDDY, D.D.S. DENTIST FORT STREET, OPPO ite Catholic Mission. Hours: From 9 a. m. to 4 p. m. DR. A. GORDON HODGINS. OFFICE AND RESIDENCE, GEDGE Cottage, corner Richards and Hotel streets. Office Hours: 9 to 11; 2 to 4, 7 to 8. Telephone 953. DR. WALTER HOFFMANN. BERETANIA STREET, OPPOSITE Hawaiian Hotel. Office Hours: 8 to 10 a. m.; 1 to 3 p. m.; 7 to 8 p. m. Sundays: 8 to 10 a. m. Tele phone 610. P. O. Box 501. DR. T. MITAMUBA. CONSULTING ROOMS, 427 NUUANU Street; P. O. Box 842; telephone 132; residence 524 Nuuanu street. Hours: 9 to 12 a. m. and 7 to 9 p. m.; Sundays, 2 to 6 p. m. OR. T0MIZ0 KATSUNUMA. VETERINARY SURGEON. SKIN Disease of all kinds a specialty. Office: Room 11, Spreckels Build ing. Hours: 9 to 4. Telephone 474. Residence Telephone 1093. DR. I. MORI. 133 BERETANIA ST., BETWEEN Emma and Fort. Telephone 277; P. O. Box 843. Office hours; 9 to 12 &. m. and 7 to 8 p. m.; Sundays, 9 to 12 a. m. DR. A. N. SINCLAIR. 413 KING ST., NEXT TO THE OPERA Houe. Office hours: 9 to 10 a. m.; 1 to 3 p. m.; 7 to 8 p. m. Sundays: 12 m. to 2 p. m. Telephone 741. C. L. GARVIN, M. D. OFFICE N. 537 KING STREET, near Punchbowl. Hours: 9:00 to 12:00 a. m., 7:00 to 8:00 p. m. Telephone No. 448. T. B. CLAPHAM. VETERINARY SURGEON AND DEN- sit. Office: Hotel Stables. Calls, day or night, promptly answered. Specialties: Obstetrics and Lame- si CATHCART& PARKE. ATTORNEYS AT LAW. HAVE moved their law offices to the Judd block. Rooms 308-309. LORRIN ANDREWS. ATTORNEY AT LAW. OFFICE with Thurston & Carter, Merchant street, next to postoffice. ' FRANCIS J. BERRY. ATTORNEY AND COUNSELLOR AT Law. Will practice In the U. S. Federal and State Courts. Pro gress Block, corner Be re tan la and Fort Streets, rooms 5 and 6. W. C. Achl. Enoch Johnson. ACHI & JOHNSON. ATTORNEYS AND COUNSELLORS at Law. Office No. 10 West King ... Street. Telephone 884. CHAS. F. PETERSON. r i i ATTORNEY AT LAW AND NOTARY Public. 15 Kaahumanu Street. LYLE A. DICKEY. ATTORNEY AT LAW AND NOTARY Public King and Bethel Streets. Telephone 806. P. O. Box 786. J. M. KANEAKUA. ATTORNEY AND COUNSELLOR AT Law. Office: In the Occidental Hotel, corner of King and A'akea Streets, Honolulu. r A. J. CAMPBELL. STOCK AND BOND BROKER. OF fl.ee Queen street, opposite Union Feed Co. .... T. McCANTS STEWART. ATTORNEY AND COUNSELLOR AT Law, Progress Block, opposite Catholic Church, Fort street, Ho nolulu, H. I. Telephone 1122. T. D. BEASLEY. DRAUGHTSMAN. PLANTATION and Topographical Maps a Special ty. Room 206, Judd Building, Tel ephone 633. FREDERICK W. JOB. SUITE 815, MARQUETTE BUILDING, Chicago, 111.; Hawaiian Consul General for the States of Illinois, Michigan, Ohio, Indiana and Wis consin. ATTORNEY AT LAW. F. 0. CREAMY, A.B. . TUTOR. WILL TAKE A FEW PU pils for private instruction. Of fice cor. King and Bethel Sts. Tel. 62 and 806; P. O. Box 759. MISS F. WASHBURN. PUBLIC STENOGRAPHER AND Typewriter. Office: Room 202, Judd Building. Telephone 1086. WILLIAM SAVIDGE. STOCK AND BOND Mclnerny Block, BROKER. Fort Street. C. J. FALK. STOCK AND BOND BROKER. MEM ber Honolulu Stock Exchange. Room 301 Judd Building. WM. T. PATY. contractor" and "builder. HAVING PURCHASED THE Busi ness of Mr. J. C. Chamberlain, is now prepared to do any and all kinds of work. Store and office fitting; brick, wood or stone build ing. Shop, Palace Walk; resi dence, Wilder avenue, near Ke walo. DR. A. C. POSEY. THROAT AND NOSE DISBAsS AND CATARRH. Masonic Temple. Hours: 8 to 12 a. m; 1 to 4 and 7 to 8 p. m. 0. G. TRAPHAGEN. ARCHITECT 223 MERCHANT ST., Between Fort and Alakea. Tele phone 734. Honolulu, H P. SILVA. A.GENT TO TAKE ACKNOWLEDG ments to Instruments, District of Kona, Oahu. At W. C. Achi's of fice. King Street, near Nunann. BURIIETTE & GO. STOCK AND CUSTOM HOUSE BROK ers. Real Estate and General "L-VF and Bethel streets. P. O. box 262. Telephone 641. JAMES T. TAYLOB, H. M. SOC. C. E. CONSULTING HYDRAULIC ENGI- neer. S0G Judd Block, Honolulu, H. I. AIIHIS MONTAGUE TURNER, Remaining In Honolulu for a few months will take a limited number of pupils for VOCAL INSTRUCTION. Terms by the lesson or month. Com mencing on and after the 10th of July, "MIGNON," 720 Beretania Street, Honolulu. COOK'S MUSIC SCHOOL. Love's Buildinsr: Fort St. PATJ. TRRAT HFIGTJJS SRPT. 4th Pupils who have not arranged for hours should apply at once. HONOLULU SANITARIUM. 1082 KING STREET. Telephone 639. Tr T .noil o Q aytaI in n t erintendent. Hours: 9 a, m. to 5 p. m. Methods of Battle Creek, Michigan, Sanitarium. Baths of every descrip- tion. Trained nurses in bath rooms as well as in sick room. Massage and manual movements. Electricity In every form. Classified dietary, etc. Ample facilities for thorough examln- auuii. jut. V. vjhviu, vuusuiuug physician and surgeon. S. E. LUCAS, Parisian Optician. LOVE BUILDING, FORT STREET; Upstairs; P. O. Box 351. I carry a full line of ALL KINDS OF GLASSES from the CHEAPEST to the BEST. Free Examination of the Eyes. A CREMATORIUM Oalin Cemetery Association May Soon Build One. MEETING HELD YESTERDAY Report of Secretary David Dayton. What Disposition Shall Be Mada of Reserve Fund? The annual meeting of the Oahu Cemetery Association was held yester day afternoon. Several attempts have recently been made to hold this meet ing, but owing to the lack of interest among members it was postponed from time to time. Among the first matters brought up was the report of David Dayton, sec retary of the association. Last year this office was given a salary in order that the work might be properly kept up. For over fifteen years no official written records of burials had been made for the association. The work of compiling these was entrusted to Mr. Dayton, whose long residence and close familiarity with the matter in question made his services invaluable. His efforts have taken the form of a double-indexed catalogue in which ev erything is recorded from the first be ginning of the cemetery in 1842. The treasurer's report, published on page 13 of this paper, was then read and approved. The disposition of the reserve fund of $9,207.62 brought out several sug gestions. There is a certain amount of property belonging to the assr-Ha- tion yet unutilized. It was proposed that this be sold at auction and the proceeds be used for a perpetual fund for taking care of the graves. Then w,th the reerve 1,1,1,1 U w SugSest ed that a receiving vault and a chapel he built, uoth ot these latter are needed, as the present receiving vault is private property and is soon to be torn down, and on rainy days the ab sence of a chapel is a great inconve nience. That these two structures should be built all the members unani mously agreed Another plan was proposed in con nection with the care of the graves. The suggestion was made that the own ers of the lots should look out for them. A communication was read from a well-known lady asking .what amount she should set aside for a per manent fund to be used for the care of her lots. It was generally agreed that this plan should be followed by all the holders, and thus provide for perma nent attention to the graves. If this course be pursued the pro ceeds of the sales of the remaining lots will probably be used for the estab lishment of a crematory to be con trolled by the association. This idea met with general favor, although no decisive action will be taken for the time being. Everybody realizes the need of such an institution and the Cemetery Association is the proper body to inaugurate it. The difference between the proceeds of the lots and the cost of the crematorium it is thought could be met by popular sub scription. Now that this organization has ta ken hold of the crematorium question some progress toward the solution of rthe vexed burial problem and ceme- ,tery Question may be looked for. A New Settler. Arthur F. Stone leaves the St. Johns bury Caledonian to go to the Cannibal Islands, otherwise Hawaii, and raise bananas r his health, and J. . Sault takes the paper. The Caledonian has been published bv a Stone father and cnn ,n,i 1, oi. , , , . , , wavs we11 ueserveu me success it naS had. The State will be sorry to lose Mr stone, but it will hang to the Cal- f edonian with Mr. Rutland Herald. Sault in charge. A German Officer. Lieutenant Commander Gruttner o the German warship Cormorant was a through passenger on the Ala meda last night. The mail boat was delayed at Apia three hours while his giving him a good Oalm Collie Trustees. The trustees of Oahu College met yesterdav afternoon and took up the question of a site for the proposed new j preparatory school. No definite deci sion was reached and the matter will come up again at a meeting to be held in the near future. Bicycle Thief Caught. A young native named Paulo was arrested for bicycle stealing last night. During the evening previous he had appropriated a- wheel belonging to a Japanese, which he rode until it was punctured. He then left it at the Or pheum and took another wheel stand ing outside. The latter bicycle be longed to the lad who was reported lost that evening. Paulo was riding the stolen wheel when captured. This is one of a number of bicycle thefts that have occurred lately, and it is probable that Judge Wilcox will not deal gently with the offender. MAGGIE MOORE GO. Arrived on the Alameda Last Night. Leading Lady Tells of Her Previous Visits to This City-Reminiscence of Kalakaua. The 'Maggie Moore-H. R. Roberts company arrived last night by the Ala - meda. They will play a short comrades wore P.rlld-OtT. - i mi vii(-)ii in-, luuiiuu jl i vauiug, auu ' f-,-------- ... . . . ment in Honolulu, opening tonight in thus the child forms an association .is the uridSe by which he passes over "Struck Oil." Lvith tlle obiect itself which must heifrom this almost Psychological devel- The two stars are Maggie Moore and'rVa Harry Roberts. The former is well the main subject is i not altogether out abut him would not extend bevond his known to all old theater goers in ot tlle way. whicn ls to notIce wnat is mn Qf powers Gf seeings things. The whose esteem she always held a high S" 5"" 'adult has a world of activity, occupa- nl-iee ShMns irUlnni mrh fmm mental principles ot action eerj- ti professions, vocations and the place, bhe has net changed much from where; the tendency of every idea en- likc. e world f' activity in the child the Maggie Moore who used to . de-.tertained by the mind is to find some i, nf trnltnnn light large audiences of t.e old Cal Jalifor- nia theater in years Oil" was her great ; T together. "I am awfully glad to be in Houo - lulu," she said last evening. "I re - member some veirs airo when T nassed member some 3 ears ago when 1 passeu through here. There were three of us bound for Australia. It was in the days of the old regime, and when King t ' ivaidKiiuii uediu our pressure near- ranged for an entertainment. It was ivivtrxi in. 'tue iiu wptrid, rnju&t? duu we scored quite a success, even though our numbers were quite limited. I also nnfiRpd hm,h ,m,ni, of VMr 4 L, B and spent a most delightful day with Australia's ravorite and Hawaii s pride, Mrs. Annis Montague Turner. "Yes, this is the first strictly Aus- traiian companj to attempt a wona . T4f T . , tt tour. If I were not afraid that Hono- lulu people would think I was merely talking, I should tell you of the great , . ., success we have had throughout Aus tralia. "I can is stronsr . ., well say that the company throughout. Everything is lovely and full of harmony. Why, we are line one big lamny. we mtenu to cio our very nest nere, ior we realize that a Honolulu audience is apt to be critical on account of its ability to ine address. His reputation for bril- liant and versatile work is of the lligheSt I uiguesc. Maggie Moore s daughter, Miss rsel- lie, is also with the company, and is said to be most charming in her many roles. At the Hawaiian. Lowrie, Spreckelsville, Maui; TV. J. C. D. Clark, Wyoming; T. F. Sanborn, Spreckelsville; Fred H. Hayselden, La-II haina; Walter H. Hayselden, Lanai; J. A. Clough, city; W. TV. Brunner, city; Alec Cochrane, Australia; Major Cor coren, Victoria; Miss Maggie Moore, .Miss Nellie Moore, H. R. Roberts. Per cy Ward. GOING AWAY. L. B. Kerr, the Queen-street mer chant, will go away on August 18th and from now until that date an nounces a departure sale at his big dry goods store, nt prices that will make competition impossible. judge. Wo are sure that they he ?o a chilFs'mind thAn ' Sat o a "hh" 5a 'i d nioacD1i 4AT,i(riit i. a i i but the average, or normal, child is pleased tonight. system of habitual customs and re- . . u0(i, t i.fln r .r-rtJ.. i Ij. -t -in. i not altogether taken up with these ii. ivuutna i& uuiib mail jl pitrtxa- otiaiuiQ, maoivc inuunuj 10, 111 DR. JOHN DEWEY His Second Lecture in the Uni versity Extension Conrse. IMAGINATION AND ASSOCIATION The Natural Inheritances of the Child Finally Dominating: His Later Actions. ofessor Dewey of the University of Chicago gave the second lecture of the University Extension course at the High School last evening. The sub ject dealt with the play and imagina tion as developed in early childhood and its influence on the life of the fu ture man. He dwelt most interesting ly on the phases of imagination and association which are the natural in heritances of the child, finally becom ing the dominating features control ling his later actions. Professor Dew ey is strong in the belief that far from being unreal, the child's imagination is as strontr realitv as the realitv which i ii i.-ii 2 9 e.xisis in uie uuuu mum. rouowing out this line of thought he said: "The child forms an association with the objects themselves, so that everything which the child reacts is to it a bundle of suggestions to act or respond to in a certain way. To givea familiar il lustration: the ball is something to throw, the door is something to opened and shut, the paper is some- 'thing to hold before the eyes and go outlet for it; we see a door, but it does gone by. "Struck ?cc,lr to us adults to open or shut perform and if it were not for the oc success anil that l 81ply b seeil?S t, and yet it is cupations and vocations' of the adult. i oaj uicic 1.-3 a. cufeiil, icaLUUU . ig which we are i'T ""xiuB we-dlB not accustomed to and, being a new ,,(,ea - there is a tendency in ur mind CLi JTta ifI. J111101. see Cer.lf.m nins .r SO to cer- tain places without making certain motions. In criminals this power, this motive power comes out very strongly. . TT'y-.'M fnr.-r.nnA 1. 1 1. ll community by murdering their own rhihlren- ihf nnlv pvnhnntinn i thnt - w VT v. V -'"-- they have heard voices telling them to " aymc va.oc it w mc uuiua voce: and in others, the devil's voice, i18 SOm.V?lCe,v thT t(? omm1,t yhe ? f ?. i?m ??y. J1 uie imng saiu; xney nave ine ,aea m their minds, and it has to get itself out; it reacis. m uypnouzmg peopie, or, as it is sometimes called, animal magne- iism, ine same ining comes ouu i ne ordinary restrictions which are actine within us all the time in our normal t .... , . . . condition are removed when this pow- er of animal magnetism or what is pop- ul.af the Pwer ?f one Person's i will over another is simply a relapse of this conauion of ordinary restriction. It is suggested ii i i to such a person under hypnotic power that he is drowning, and he will throw limself on tbf fl(?r a.nd so through all There is no such a thing as passive as an inert passiveness. This be- ideas an inert passiv comes very relevant to the subject of child-Imagination and play. There is iiouuug more iieipiui iu giwng uu in lar&e measure, due to the fact that his Pla' and imagination are controlled so largely by his physical surroundings and conditions, encroaching upon his perceptions and observations. That point, of course, makes a natural in troduction of imagery in the child's mind. The child simply does things seeing done, and he does this with lit- the door opened and shut, and he be gins to open and shut the door; he has then passed the period of imagination. , saw a child once pick up a watch- chain which happened to fall to the V Makes the food rr.n fMicious snd wbnMsome ground in such a shape as to form In the child's imagination the hammock, and the reaction caused the child to swing the chain as he had seen the hammock swung: that was the first idea which presented itself to the child's mind, and the reaction came at once. He was just beginning to come into the period of Imagination when he could see other objects which re verted him back to some other object, and in the form of some literal reac tion. There comes a period in the life of every child about two or two and a half years old when they perceive this analogy in practically all objects and a practical reaction to them in that way. A child saw a finger crooked into just such a shape, that the child said it was a typewriter; there was merely in the way the finger was held which the child had seen in the act of manipulating a typewriter, and this po-' sition of the finger had only the ono idea to the child the idea of a type writer. On the one hand there is no principle in this development; it is merely activity; what characterizes it is simply that the idea is freer in imagery, more flexible and more plas tic than other suggestions would bfc. It is the thing or the something which suggests .itself to the child's mind,. ra ther than the literal presence present ed by it. If a child sees an act of pouring something into a cup, it is for him simply to react by doing the same thing; he sees a leaf which suggests to him the cup, and his Imagination runs to play In this matter and pro ceeds to fill the leaf. The act in itself is very commonplace, were it not for the fact that it is the aptitude of the child to make something big out of the mat- iter. although oftentimes fantastic, un- ileal. "What characterizes the imagina tion is that it affects the unreal and not the real. In the child, it is not a thing which is fantastic, but, to the 'ifi1 ?d!Jr??e mental side of the child's development and brings out the many ways in. which the child reacts upon sugges tions to its mind, and if it was not for I tll -lrr nJ t m r rr I n t. I i n n It- X rf T i 1 1 i say me emm wouiu come io a very abrupt end. Every child presents a case of arrested development if the thinrs which hfl in th aflult ta V,D 1.1.,- fr-c nf aotivUv i- luuov. iii-iiu uauj i w i 1110 wi. chv k-i I ilj ii , .1 : 1 i r.. v. ..4-i- can readily be seen what a bad outlet for la and imagination there would )e for the chnd Tue imaglnation comes ln tne child in a vicarious way and does for it wnat the occupations of the d lt do forhim extend his meatal development.. - The child, in his f ia a fflthAr or , " 5,1ao ,'., " fr,,m - " " .v has seen, and reacts all these things, and in this way gets a tremendous p.re- deny that the purely fantastical and absolutely make-believe imagination does nt rm an important part of the child's development. Some children gt tin Uita? fr us " thing for us to bear in mind and that through these mediums the child gets . acquainted with the realities of things, and so , s ,, . trn Jf fo1 fni. va and to him it stands for the whole worjd ..0n'e of the chief representatives of cnildren and child-study in the United 0t. i n acts and development of children in mis regaru, wnerem iu ciuuus, iu.ui, thunder lightning form an important parfc Jn suggeStibility; these objects this regard, wherein the cloud3, rain. have been of considerable force in the liJlrl'a Irn r tul n f T1 n lr 1 n f iir mvha tnroUgh the natural forms and forces u ..i,.. xr ates the clouds and thunder and makes up stories about them; most children spontaneous myths and their- making. It is through these more average, com- lace things th f tne6chi, 1 t. fi . nnn that the great devel- Id comes. Froebel was the first one o absolutely recog nize tlie play-form in child as an im portant element of the child's -development, for it is at this period of the child's life that the natural and normal JlS S?. only of inane; iucuiaT;ica ten. "After all the main thing from the 1 A. A A.1 A iV w" "Tf y, f ? in , f llfe 13 that he should not be surfeited (Continued on Pape Thre.) j . ... i i