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8 fTHE PACIFIC COMMERCIAL; ADVERTISER, HONOLULU, JULY 13, 1904 A Tover of Strength For the strong an invigorator for the weak It is fine and pure and gives strength to all who use it- Rainier Bottling Works AGENTS FOB HAWAII. Fbone White 1531. P. O. Box 517 Commencing June 30th CLOSING OUT SALE Entire Stock of Dry Goods, Clothing, Shoes, Hats, Etc. GOO KIM Nuuanu and Hotel Streets. BWELL OUTING HATS ... lor the Fourth of July at Hiss Power's Millinery Parlors Boston Building, Fort Street. (First floor.) Developing v Printing 'To get out of the film all there is in it in the developing aad printing is our specialty. We do the work with the greatest speed and at the lowest prices. Ask to see the developing machine. HDHQLULU PHOTO SUPPLY GO i FORT STREET. HORSE SHOEING ! f . W. Wright Co.", M have opened a hofse-shoe-ing department in connec tion with their carriage shop, etc. Having secur ed the services of a first class shoer, they are pre pared to do all work in trusted to them In a first class manner. &HS DOUGLAS I t i i. ,,- BATH, THE PLUMBER pa Kims Street, opposite Young Hotel. PHONE 61. THE ANGELUS If you cannot play a piano with your hands you can with your feet. The Angelus will help you. Call and see it at Hawaiian News Company. Alexander Young Building Store. GENUINE "1 E IVl Q I"4l3it FOR $6.75. GIiOBE CLOTHING COMPANY Fine new line of gent's clothing and furnishing goods. Hotel St., near BetheL New Restaurant JUST OPENED. Everything New and First Class. THE KAIULANI U35 Fort St., oppo. Club Stables. REMOVAL NOTICE. The TOWNSEND UNDERTAKING CO. and HONOLULU MUTUAL BUR IAL ASSN. have moved next door to the more commodious quarters former ly occupied by Pacific Vehicle & Sup ply Co. Roomy office and parlors are nicely and comfortably arranged. "Y. MAN SING 1117 NUUANU STREET. STASHIONABLF DRESS MAKER LADIES UNDERWEAR. Dresses made to order. Sewing guaran teed. If the stitches break I will repair without extra charge. Innnairw rnn i If y h V r I K 1 IVl U II L I I Ull ! CLAIMANTS Fire Claims Fund Not for Insurance Com panies. The test case brought into the Fed eral Court under the title of W. F. MacLellan, United States Treasury Agent, vs. Tee Wo Chan, to decide the ownership of fire claims money In the former's hands, was decided yesterday by Judge Dole in favor of the defend ant, the opinion being rendered orally In favor of the defendant. The decision was to the effect that the insurance companies which had in terceded claims for a portion of the amount due Yee Wo Chan, had no right to enter claims, and the total amount, $15,000 was awarded to the defendant. Notice of, appeal was made by At torney A. A. Wilder for the Insurance company. It is probable that all other cases of the same nature numbering thirty-one all told, and involving some $50,000, will not be pressed until the ' appealed case is decided in the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals. The money came from the fund of $1,000,000 appropriated by Congress for the relief of claimants against the Ter- ritorial government for property de- stroyed during the plague epidemic of . 1899-1900. Treasury Agent MacLellan j was sent from Washington to disburse i the million dollars. He was stopped in this act by insurance companies who claimed their right to certain sums on the ground that they had been compelled to pay policies under cir cumstances which they believed to be illegal. Judge Dole will file a written opinion later. CASH PAYMENT WAS ONLY A DREAM The case of H. E. Cooper vs. The Island Realty Company and Jos. A. Gilman dragged on in Judge Gear's court yesterday afternoon, Mr. Cooper being on the stand most of the time. Mr. Cooper outlined the transaction by which he turned over his Manoa Val ley property to the Island Realty Com pany, in the initial stages of which he expected to receive $60,000 cash as part payment, but found it only a dream. Mr. Cooper stated that he had given an option on the property to J. F. Mor gan, the auctioneer. One day Mr. Mor gan came to him with a check for $25, 000. Mr. Chase, who organized the Is land Realty Company and was Its man ager, came in at that time and said he was anxious to take over the prop- DONE BY TRYING. Nobody can tell what ho can. do till he tries. When a thing ought to be done the modern spirit moves lis to keep working away at it until it is done. In the face of this idea the ''impos sible" vanishes. Where there's a will, there's a way. "If we could but rob cod liver oil of its sickening taste and smell and then combine it with two or three other ingredients we should possess the best remedy in the world for certain diseases that are now practically incurable." So said a famous English physi cian twenty-five years ago. "But it will never be done," he added. "You can no more turn cod liv er oil into a palatable medicine, than you can turn the Codfish itself into a Bird of Paradise." Yet he lived to admit that in WAMPOLE'S PREPARATION the " impossible " had been ac complished. It i3 palatable as honey and contains all the nu tritive and curative properties of Pure Cod Liver Oil, extracted by us from fresh cod livers, com bined with the Compound Syrup of Ilypophosphites, Extracts of Malt and Wild Cherry. This remedy is freed from the bad peculiarities Dr. Frothingham so detested, and it is precisely the splendid medicine he wished for. Use it freely and confidently for Hysteria, Wasting Complaints, Anemia, Blood Impurities, Asth ma, and Throat and Lung Trou bles. Dr. W. II. B. Aikins, Phy sician to Toronto General Hos pital, says: "I am much pleased to state that the results from using Wampole's Preparation of Cod Liver Oil have been uni formly satisfactory; it appealed to me as being prepared accord ing to correct scientific princi ples." It increases the appetite and influences the digestion of food: it is delicious to take, will not disappoint you, and is effec tive from the first dose. One bot tle convinces. At all chemists. erty, and would pay cash. The propo sition looked good to Mr. Cooper, the result being that Morgan and his $25,- 000 check were withdrawn and Chase substituted. The papers were drawn up.- Chase said he had organized the company. Then the day that Chase was to hand over $50,000 as the agreed price for the land in cash, the remain der to be secured by mortgage, Chase came to Mr. Cooper and said he was sorry but he couldn't pay cash. The matter was finally wound up by the proffer and acceptance of notes, inter est to be paid on May li and Novem ber 11 of each year. This was paid up by Mr. Gilman until last May when only a part was paid. Mr. Gilman. had claimed that the taxes should be paid by Mr. Cooper. This controversial point precipitated the civil suit now in progress. PARKER SUES THE METROPOLITAN CO, An assumpsit suit was filed yester day by Col. Samuel Parker against the Metropolitan Meat Company to re cover the sum of $26,252.39, which the plaintiff claims is due him as the resi- due funds, of the partnership existing between himself and the late John P. Parker. The amount is alleged to be due for cattle and sheep delivered to the Metropolitan company between May 9 and June 18 of this year. The Metropolitan Company, however, is not concerned in the matter except to the extent of who shall receive, the money claimed. The company does not deny the existence of the claim. The suit is an outgrowth of the present Parker Ranch litigation in the CircuU Court. COURT NOTE. In the case of the Territory vs. Jack Morgan, seductiont the defendant is given twenty days from July 11 in which to file his bill of exceptions on appeal to the Supreme Court. II CAUGHT GAMBLERS Apana, the Chinese policeman, made a record for himself last night. He caught forty Chinese gambling in an upstairs room on Smith street. Al though four doors and four watchmen barred his way a clever disguise gained him admittance and the jig was up. Apana, like other members of the raid ing force at the police station, is now so well known that it is impossible for him to go anywhere, at night, in China town undisguised without Chinese rais ing the cry of "cop." The Chinese have posted various men, whose business s to know by sight every known police officer and informer, to watch the en trance to gambling resorts and on the approach of the police raise the alarm in time. Apana wore a native hat, a pair of black glasses, and a Chinese coat. Then he blacked his upper lip sufficiently to give the impression that he needed a shave badly, and started raiding. He passed four doors of the entrance to the Smith street resort and when in the gaming room watched the progress of the game for a moment or two before being recognized. Forty men were ar rested and will be dealt with today by Judge Lindsay. While station clerk McKinnon was making out bail receipts for the crowd, attorney C. C. Bitting entered the station and announced that as the whole crowd were his clients he demanded that the police do not ill-treat them. Then he went outside again and made off on his horse. PLANS READY FOR HILO'S SEWER SYSTEM Plans for Hilo's sewer system are completed and work will shortly begin to lay the mains. The system will be laid upon Front, Waianuenue, Bridge, Shipman, Richardson and other streets in the lower portion of the town. The sum of $10,000 is available for the work. WOULD HELP WOODS ESCAPE W. J. Glenn, formerly a sailor on the training ship Adams, was tried and convicted in the police court yesterday morning on a charge of attempting to assist Fred Woods, the notorious negro convict of Oahu prison to escape from that institution. Glenn .was serving a sentence there and it was proven he had written a letter which Woods was to use in securing assistance from someone ? on a transport in order to leave the coun try after making a dash from the Ma kiki quarries. Glenn had six months tacked on to his present sentence for the latest escapade and Woods will be care fully looked after by the zealous guards of the prison. . . DISGUISED PA ISS KELLEY PUSSES Efficient Clerk in the Secretary's Offce ' Leaves. Miss Kate Kelley, chief clerk in the office of the Secretary of the Territory, laid down her pen yesterday afternoon at the close of the day's business, and thereupon ended her long official career with the local government. Acting Governor Atkinson addressed a letter to Miss Kelley in which he warmly thanked her for her past efforts, paying a high tribute to her clerical ca pacity and wished her success in what ever venture she undertook in the fu ture. Miss Kelley has been clerk in the same office for the past ten years, pass ing through the successive changes of government from the Provisional Gov ernment, Republic and lastly under the present form of Territorial government. She leaves for the Coast on the steam ship jChina. JOHN L IN TAHITI. Sullivan in Process of Deification Among South Sea Islanders. "When I first went to Tahiti," said a traveller from the South Seas, "I land ed on one of the remote islands. The first night I went in state to visit the chief. "He was a fine old fellow, fully 6 feet 2 In. in height, and a man every inch of him. I happened to know people who had lived on his island for a time. Through an interpreter he asked me all kinds of questions about them if they were well, if their, hair was get ting gray, how much money they had, etc. Then conversation languished. "At length I heard him repeating to the Interpreter a word that sounded like 'Yonelsulwan.' The interpreter seemed to catch it finally. He said: " 'He wants to know how is John L. Sullivan? Is he fighting as hard as ever? " " Oh, no,' I said truthfully. 'John L. Sullivan isn't champion any more. He was beaten by a big man from the West, and a man from the Big Islands beat that man, and another big man from the West beat him. "When this was told to the chief, he looked me all over and said some thing in a very positive tone. " 'He tells me,' said the interpreter, 'that he doesn't believe you. He thinks you don't like John L. Sullivan. "Everywhere I went on the islands it was the same story. When they found that I was an American they all ask ed for John L. "Some of them knew who was Presi dent of the United States, though most of them who had any ideas on the sub ject thought it was Cleveland. But every one thought he knew who was was champion of the world. In several native huts I found little old-fashioned j prints or the Boston boy, "It appears that the Americans first began to come in numbers to the is lands about the time when John L. was supposed to be unbeatable. These Americans introduced the boxing game. "It was a great hit. Every native wanted to learn. And when the Amer eans told of their great champion the natives took it all in and made him a tribal tradition. "It's a study in the growth of le gend. If they aren't killed off by clothes and consumption, I suppose they'll have him a kind of an Odin some day. "Whenever an American beachcomb er strikes those shores, he has to put on the gloves with the natives. If he can't beat them, they've no use for him. "Luckily, the natives are about as poor with the gloves as they make'em. It doesn't take much of a beachcomber to whip the champion of Tahiti. That fact saves the faces of our country men." AT AUCTION Just a Select Assortment of Ferns and Plants will be sold at my salesroom, 847 Ka ahumanu street, on THURSDAY, JULY 14, . AT 10 O'CLOCK A. M. Now here is the list, and they are all elegant plants: 7 Hanging Baskets Maidenhair. 35 Pots Maidenhair. 25 Handsome Begonias. 12 Calladiums. 2 Farleyensis. 3 Umbrella Plants. JAS. F. MORGAN, AUCTIONEER. Received Per S; S. Nevadan 1 Jersey Cow, 6 Hereford Heifers, 4 Hereford Bulls. All registered and young stock from the Alamo Hereford Stock Farm, Governor J. Sparks, pro prietor. Also a lot of fine table fowls and a limited number of White Leg horns and Black Minorcas. Club Stables Fort above Hotel St. Phone Main 1M. OT ATAuonM THIS DAY Ruction Sale OF Furniture, Etc. On Wednesday, July 13, 1904, AT 10 O'CLOCK A. M.t I will sell at my auction rooms, 847 Kaahumanu street, Chairs, Tables, Bed room Sets, Pictures, Rugs, Mirrors, Hammocks, etc. 1 Diebold Safe. JAS. F. MORGAN, AUCTIONEER. THIS DAY Auction Sale OF POTATOES! POTATOES! On Wednesday, July 13, 1904, AT 10 O'CLOCK A. M., I will sell at my salesroom, 847 Ka ahumanu street, on account of whom it may concern, 50 Bags Potatoes. JAMES F. MORGAN, AUCTIONEER. THIS DAY Ruction Sale OF fir, soli SainioQ' onfl Oiooerles WEDNESDAY, JULY 13, 1904, AT 10 O'CLOCK A. M., I will sell at my salesroom, 847 Ka ahumanu street, on account of whom it may concern: 200 Bags Flour, Seattle brand; new goods. 5 Bbls. Salt Salmon. Lot Case Goods Groceries. JAS. F. MORGAN, AUCTIONEER. THISDAY Auction Sale OF Old Lumber, Corrupted Iron Old Foundry Building, Queen street, opposite Inter-Island S. S. Wharf, WEDNESDAY, JULY 13, 1904, AT 12 O'CLOCK NOON, I will sell the Lumber and Iron upon ground situate as above. JAS. F. MORGAN, AUCTIONEER. Unction Sale Elegant Koa Furniture ON THURSDAY, JULY 14, AT 10 O'CLOCK A. M., AN ELEGANT OPPORTUNITY TO LOVERS OF OLD "KOA," I will sell at my salesroom, 847 Ka ahumanu street, very choice Koa Fur niture, comprising: Sideboards, Center Tables, Carving Tables, Bookcases, Chairs. JAS. F. MORGAN, AUCTIONEER. Auction Sale OF- LAUNCH ! LAUNCH! "TALULA" Length over all, 45.6 ft. Beam, 10.8 ft. Depth of Hold, 5 ft. Built of wood at San Francisco in 1S99. 12 tons register gross. 9.36 tons register nett. I will sell at Brewer's wharf ON SATURDAY, JULY 16, at 12 o'clock noon, as she now is, with fish tanks, anchors, chain, etc., the above named Launch "Talula." JAS. F. MORGAN, Castle & Gooko, Ltd. HONOLULU. ' . Commission Merchants SUGAR FACTORS. ) AGENTS FOR The Ewa Plantation Co. The Waialua Agricultural Co., Ltd. The Kohala Sugar Co. The Waimea Sugar Mill Co. The Fulton Iron Works, St. Louis. The Standard Oil Co. The George F. Blake Steam Pumps. Weston's Centrifugals. The New England Mutual Life In surance Co., of Boston. The Aetna Fire Insurance Co., of Hartford, Conn. The, Alliance Assurance Co., of Lon don. .S.Grinbaum&Co. LIMITED. Importers and Commission Mercbutt SOLE AGENTS FOR Little Jack Smoking Tobacco. 5c. and 10c Packages. Agents for BRITISH AMERICAN ASSURANCE COMPANY, of Toronto, Ontario. DELAWARE INSURANCE CO., Of -t Philadelphia. y -4 W. W AHflfiA I CO. Limited Merchant Tailor Walty Bnilding, King St. Phone Blue 2741 OppotMe Advertiser Ofllet American and Foreign Worsteads PERFECTION Berctania St., near Emma. All kinds of HOME BAKING mad from only the BEST MATERIALS. Tel. Blue 211. mn timm m mm mm Fort St., Opposite Star Block. Have your old SUITS MADE TO LOOK LIKE NEW. Dyeing and press ing. Tailoring. The renewing of a Idles clothing a specialty. Prices very low. Phone White 230. Roofs Repaired BY WM. T. PATY. I Carpentry of all kinds attended tot ' Give us a calL SMOKE GENERAL ARTHUR CIGARS Gunst-Eakin Cigab Co. DISTRIBUTORS. AH PAT & CO. 103 South King, near Alakea. MERCHANT TAILORS. Expert cutter, formerly with J. D. Tregloan. Cleaning and rfrpairinar specialty. Phone Blue 646. P. O. Box T Kwong Yuen Hing Co. 36 and 28 N. King Street. Importers and Dealers in Chinese Silks, Fine Mattings, Teas, Ebony Fur nnure, Bamboo Stools, Rattan Chairs. Grass Linens, and color, at very prices. HOME MADE CAKES,' PIES, BUNS, ROLLS, AND, . BREAD J HOT MINCE PIES EVERY SA2 URDAY AT aiLLER'5 on Hotel &tt Courteous treatment. Prompt attention. Best Quality and lot more at CONSOLIDATED SODA WATER WOFiU PHONE MAIN 7L COTTON BROS. & CO. ENGINEERS AND GENERAL CON TRACTORS. Plans and Estimates furnished for all classes of Contracting Work. Boston Block, Honolulu. ALL KINDS OF Goodyear Eubber Co. R. H. PEASE, President, San Francisco, CaL, U. S. A. Union Street, oppo. Pacific Club. First Class Accommodations for Board and Lodging. 11SO and 118S Unlnr Street. low V V 4fi