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Ml WW VOL. LII.. KO. ST7i HOXOLXTLU, HAWAII TEEBTTOBY, WEDXESDAT, SEPTEMBER 21, 1910. PRICE FIVE CENTS. I IV IB II II I I I HI II I II I W V I J II I I II BOLTSTHE DEMOCRATIC PARTY WHERE THE NATIONAL GUARDSMEN ARE AT WORK COMPLETE HUM EXISTS 111 AMONG 4 1 tf '" ,. i-: & Announces That He Will Scratch His Ticket in State Elections. CAN NOT SUPPORT DAHLMAN Party Nominee for Governor Is Not Local Optionist and Will Not Be Voted For -- -f t vir -0-1 jcCw&s -idj&r m X mr ' iyv HUB IB s s HERMAN L 0 "Wireless to The The Advertiser.") NATIONAL GUARD OFFICEES AT CAMP BTJLLAKD. ILO. September Sawrvisors I IVsta &:! Lymaa have buried tbe hatchet aad are now working tosretker i on and off tie "iK-ar-l for Republican suf-ees? in the comic caicpaign. This I fcealicg of The breach between the Ke- publican leaders . brings the party to- geiher in hannony for the first tune in i niaur years. linis praeticaiK" ensuring j . Tv victory this fall. ! Can-pa M answer Cail Smith was tie one wLo eoaxei the d"ve of peace to settle in the Republican midst, bring- lesha and Lyman together in a I ecnferenee yesterday. At this confer I enee the two talked over their own j individual differences aiid agreed to call il ail off until after the election, j The Democrats will convene in cour.tv j conveatiou tomorrow and have adver j tised s mass meetir.g for Thursday 1 evening, at which Link MeCandless will open he Hawaii campaign for his side. IN OWN S DISTRICT New York Fight Gets Hotter as Date of Convention Approaches. OLD GUARD IS SANGUINE While Roosevelt Partisans Claim They Will Control by a Small Majority. LIXCOLX. Nebraska, September 21. William Jennings Bryan yesterday bolted the DeTiHH'ratic party of his State, announcing in an authorized in terriew that he would not snpport Dahl man. the Democratic nominee for gov ernor of Nebraska. Mr. Bryan base"! his objection to Pacinian on the tact that the latter is not in favor of local option or prohibition. Pahhnan was nominated at the State eonvention that refuse! to accept the local option plank presented by Bryan. PROMINENT ITALIANS LYNCHED IN SOUTH CUPID DELAYS CITHAMR5 Supervisors Courtship Causes Two Meetings in One Evening. Florida Mob Hangs Four Men and the New Orleans Lynching Trouble Is Recalied- TAMPA, Florida, September 21. Gastenge. Ficsrotta. Angelo and Alba no. foar prominent Italians f this city, who have been conspicuous daring tbe -atrike of tbe cigarniaker?, wete yes terday taken from the charge of deputy sheriifs and lynched. It was charged against tnem that they had been acces sories to the recent shooting, in which a number cf the strikers were wounded. The Ivnehing of tnese men has re called the trouble that followed the lynching cf a number of Italians in New Orleans some years ago. for which Italr demanded reparation and over whieh incident the relations between the two countries were strained almost to the point of war. LORIMER NO MORE A HAMILTON MAN In ?;: e of the fact that the lir.irv, D?Tnccrarie member of the supervisors i is to be mi tried t-3-liy. there was a; meeting of the board of supervisors last -even:n. ! i It wal this way. The meeting was ; supposed to begin at half-past seven , o'clock, bat at that hour the only mem-; bers of the board present were Daniel j Logan, Ahia ani Jim Qninn. j Others present, besides the members of tbe board of supervisors mennond.l were Mayor Fern ani its private sec retary. Bertram G, EivecbuTgn. City Phvslciaa" "Mackalf. Stenographer Aiea. Eectrielan Fjazee, ilsnager anipoe-i of the Inter Island Chandlery. Fire Chief Thurston, Jailor Asch. Clerk Baf fandeau t.nd City Ciek Kalauokalani. "When it was seen that there were but three members of the board of super visors present, there was naturally much concern. Ahia. who is a captain in the Na tional Guard of Hawaii, which institu tion is at present engaged in the oSi ces of an instruction camp at Fort IShafter, had secured permission for leave of absence from Colonel Bullard A- .-. .i- r.- - . . v is.. 3 h 3 Here Company E. MOD Eli Twentieth Infantry, U. S. A. CAMP AT CAMP BULLARD. , under Lieutenant Pardee, show National Guardsmen how to do thing CHICAGO, September 21, The hoard of governors of the Hamilton Clnb has accepted the resignation of Senator Lorixner, tendered because of the re quest of the board that he return an invitation sent him to attend a dinner given in honor of Colonel Roosevelt, who had refused to sit at the same table as Lonsner. As a result of the incident, a new club is to be started, founded by members of the Hamilton Club who have likewise resigned owing to the Roose'velt incident. HACKDRIVER ROBBED BY HIS PASSENGERS A very pleasant esperience last nigh: f a haekdriver named oi Lis money and one shoe. The irt of it was enjoyel by an fell Lnm ssng. who came tb rough it minus his watch, pleasant allege. 1 s.-.Mn r and a Portuguese byy If they h better hri-jr -.. ; : ia t;.. behi u:'.. Kk-i at i U:n Sin Last ' ".t e. In": Laniied him so roughly, pjiiiiaDiv Liu- l.u j bat as it wa it was a half- he t-ouid finally gasp out -.' station that he had been -peciul 0;rit-rs Apana and ce wt-nt out on the ease. drives hack number Gi. a man. who he thinks is-a to attend a meeting of the board o. supervisors tonight, and very emphati cally proclaimed the fact that if the meeting was not held tha: night he would not be able to obtain leave of absenee far any other night in the near future. Mayor Fern suggested that it would be a good ideh to wait and see if any body else turned up. Nobody else, how ever, turned up. Ahia wanted to know if there was very much business to transact. Mayor Fern thought there was not very mucn GRACE S STORY S OF LIES MAS SEATTLE Wilis POSTED PRIZE Breckon's Counts Murderer's Special Committee Selects Their Pulse With Watch of the Murdered Man. "The strangest lies, weak stories." mas of ir.rrobai!e invention and tangled what United States Dis- Design From the Entry of Sound Artist. trier Attorney Breckous brands the story told to him yesterday morning in Oahu jail by Anderson Grace, the mur derer of Mahu. who. having Seattle wins the rrize offered by the Hawaii Promotion Committee for a de s;gu for a floral parade poster for the 1911 celebration. D. Howard Hitchcock, lid. Towse and J. T. Warren, the committee mail . escaped - careful survev of the desias nffprp, and been at liberty for over five ' and decided that Maring & Blake "s was months, was captured Monday night. ithe most acceptable. This is a design Melodrama, high trageiy and histri- J showing a girl ia a diaohanous green onics figured in, the interview between robe, a modified holoKu effect, standing Breckons and Grace. Grace, describing J-eneath a palm tree, and holding a long his sufferings and privations, told lei of avs which festoons to her r, , . a- r Rnees. It is a daintv poster effect, but Breckons taat a man eiifienntr from ;. n .,. t V. I 1 j . "l aiivciuci Hawaiian iu eneet. as fever caused bv the Ions consunintiou onlv t!.t fain faoinn t to do, and tne Cierx agree-i iu "'' of gu3VSs and sngar cane could hardly gives a subtropical effect. Five, ten, fifteen, twenty, and even j fce expected to answer all questions in- j The committee, however, had little twentv-five minutes passed, with Quina j teiiigibly. s encouragement from the other designs. i , ..v.si Brevkons reached out and grasped as some were too garish in coloring, getting anxious, lx'gan feC.iu . - j bauJ of the negro. "Fever."- he others tore too much lettering and in and Ahia setting fidgety. i said contemptuous! v- "vou have no others the contrasts in colors were too iaahv it "was" suggested re sal" that the meeting lev. bv some . ujor stand ad- after I bra ?.TTa But this was rot untu Wuiervisor Jim gatnn had suggested that he might be aide to rind fe-upervi Mc 'lellau.' in order ta get a q v 3 .1 t )nt he would , ..... V. t li-iti l nii H ei- r-" " .:" - i- ,r j, count vour pulse and I m eosug to u i a 11. inii oiiu.-nui. m -. fa he married today. or I i rum. e lever ttan l nave. , 10 eaten tne put-iic eve. torae 'But my j.ulse is fast." complained were too much like advettisements and Anderson Grace. j some did not meet the poster idea at all. "Well. I'm going to see whether it There was some hope that a well ar is or not. ' said Breekons, "and I'm ransed design showing a surfboard going to d.- something dramatic. Here, know' leaning forward and grasping the ne- McCIellan Wednesdav. s,'d in citizen ' &e l."v took hi and that he would Trcna r.iy r.e m .-.'; .....-., f-.n.!:i,-.i ? o take his seat in ! the Ward of sui-ervisors. j r M vn n it Ihivid Mahu's watch to do it by, too." And Bret-Kons pnued irom his pocket ! thf ch ilver watch once worn bv Nf vertnt'it-sf b:g automobu tu his mind t frr Mcnvilan. H lio';ed aid eanse bac:i and rej the bridesrroonx had not Then the me adi rh, line? f the ("ia: us aw-l.er t wno was ,ir ek.th:-. ..i.l a I'ortazne lack .n Hotel street and told him to drive .-. They went to Palama where t : .-v tvTt.ed'up Peterson lane un til ti,e;- were ;;rar the Asylum road. His ..a.-n ..- ra then reached over and I r.r, th war our of th roni Beiz-r?'' Lliii bv the neck strangled bim wa't in. in all the prid Bnti' .,!inf, unc-iTisj'ioiis- Thev j cnrfiriw and indignation. I - - ...... . . i tore hi watch from his chasn. iansac.- ,;..; el h: j.o-kets Gaithongh he don't re-j j tnember how much money he had) and tbpn t .1, his sLoe off to hunt for more cash. The d-s'-ripi-on of the man ta!!ie itl thrsr of one who rommitted an ex actly simihtr act at Kalihi a month ago. After h.u ing been driven to the tnauka cad of O-.iVck avenue, he robbed the driver of thirtv dollars. r--- ' "ieriiue. Ar.d. h.,hbn- r.raje's wrist vctm ou;-i'ic. between his fingers lie carefully connt- r us wou.-i o.. " : .... went our 'mi or ted that vet c-ime. lurnea accorj- nnse-beats -of the negro. which (juickent'd j-erceptibly under the rider sweeping m on the crest of a wave would ie offered, but those of-, ftrei were too listless, lacking enemy and action. The wash drawing which appeared in the latest Illustrated Lon don News, drawn from photos submit ted ly Alexander Hume Ford, it is general !- screed among promotionists. ! canned woum nave made an excellent tester, i steamers wu Secretary Wood is pleased, however, i months. th canning that Seattle gets the poster award, for j now in full blast, it may le an encouragement to 1'nget , After the Luriine CLEANING UP - SUGAR GHOP About Seventy Thousand Tons Shipped on Matson Vessels. VICE PRESIDENT SHERMAN, Defeated in own district but confident of hohPivT istate control. Seventy odd thousand tons of Castle & Cooke sugars have been shipped out of the Islands to the Coast refineries on the Matson Navigation Company's steamersf and with a shipment of about a thousand tons to be male on the next trip 0f the Luriine to San Fran cisco and a couple of hundred tons from Kohala. the season's output, for the Matson line will have been cleaned up. The Wilhelmina trok away the last big shipment for the season, and for the next three months the vessels will have very little sugar to carry. The Luriine on her next trip up will carry another consignment of 20i'd tons of molasses, shipped in bulk, the product of the Hawaiian Commercial and Sugar Company of Maui. The Luriine made an experimental shipment last voyage of the same amount. The molasses was pumped into her vacant tanks. Before that several hundred empty gasoline drums were utilized as containers for molasses, and this was also a success. Heretofore, much of the molasses bv produc: of the plantations has gone to waste, or was used to some extent as fuel. The Luriine will nlso have about 12. cases of canned pinenprde. ''The pineapple shipments on all be quite large for a few season t'e:ng on returns to the VIVIAN LEWIS WILL RUN AGAINST WILSON ! Grace told a story which differed con i siderabiv from that published in The 1 Xil vpr!-is,r vpst.rdrj v morrsiniT -oncprn- iie board was. ;n2r jlis wanderings! and which will vn.snouidj j.robaidy be found to differ a good deal of virtuous j fTf)rn tie dories he tells in the future, t Mc1 lelian. "(.race is beginning just the same i i 3: l . . ' . i. , . 3 ' ;t. - j whv f.e ooi licii in- "d nisi aiics.icu. wanted to know what all the fu; sajd ureckons yesterday, "and it will was about, lie was nmy nair an .uri probaoly be about a weeiv before we late and he could not understand what! can sft out the lies and get at the truth of the njatter. ex'ensive f-iotipa ny " orations are made plan- contemplating a large onr-iers to work up tneir proposed ex- i ".at she will be laid u; one tr cnrion to honouilu next Fel ruarv. There is considerable talk iu the North-! west over ti e propose-' ex-t:r!on w hich i Mrs. Frances Kina Hea-ilee. the pro-j motion eommittee " tej.resoritative at) Seattle tor the North west, i working tip. The steamer Priio-e Knj'ert is re garded as nn excellent vessel to charter for the Hawaiian trip.. while . the NEW YORK. September 21. One startling result of the primary elections yesterday was the defeat of Vice-President Sherman in his own district., in spire of which Timothy Woodruff pre- diets that he ' will be elected as tem porary chairman of the State conven-. tion to assemble at Saratoga on Tues day next. Sherman wi-1 attend the convention a: the head of the delegation from the First Oneida district, while Colonel Roosevelt, who will contest the election and the control of the convention with him, will come at the head of the Nas sau delegation. Yesterday was an exciting day in the Empire State struggle between the Rooseveltians and the Old 'Guard par tizans. " Chairman Griscom, oi the state cen tral committee, who is a Roosevelt man, claims 570 of the 1015 delegates to the convention are for Roosevelt for tem porary chairman, against Vice President Sherman. This claim of a small margin for victory is just about matched by the other side, which claims 560 votes for Vice President Sherman. TnWIlEY DEFEATED BY PROGRESSIVE III MINNESOTA i- was that his friends were worrying about. Where he had been did not en ter into the discussion. But it happened that Ahia had gone our inst as 'MeOellan had come in. so the board wa still just one man short of a quorum. .Tim Quinn then a-gam volunteered to go and look for the miss ini member of the quorum. While J:m Qainn was out looking for Ahia. who should come in but Ahia. And then thev had to wait for Jim Quinn. rinallv .Tim Ouinn came back and TRENTON. Nw Jerev, September then there was indeed a quorum to wit: A n-- t, ... , a a ! , . . r,.n!..llBn Atil r. A T.orran i ne lif-!-ut,hi-ans nave nom.naieu j ,nni uinn. .uccinui". - " 1 "-' Vivian Lewis to run for governor in I The mayor and the rest took their i nis r tv ,i i in i if v i iiiin rii t uaii an movement'? of the evening he Pposit;'fn to Presulent Woodrow TVil- t taadidate. j (Continued on Tage Four.) Grace insists now that I he was alone al! t he time and received j no aid from anybody. But I know that that is a lie. He certain! v did receive outside assistance, and I'm going find out who helped hirn before I get through. " .Grace contends that he simply walked away from the prison gang, crossed Beretania avenue, stopped at a Chinese s'ore ir. the outskirts of town to buy some chewing tobacco, and disappeared into the country. This story is not be lieved at all by Breckons, who is sure that somebody helped the negro out of LIBRARY ARCHITECT IS LOOKING OVER SITE n to the stateroom capacitv, and the present small deck spac will be evtended so that'the promenades aboard the vessel will be as lasge as those aboard the Wilhelmina. HALSEY BEGINS HIS TRIAL TODAY Henry D. Whitfield, the architect of to'fhe proposed Carnegie library, arrived j on the -Sierra and is now looking over the ground with a view to finding out what ar the needs of Honolulu. Mr. Whitfield is a brother of the wife of Andrew Carnegie, the million aire who is donating the money to build the library- Architect Kerr of Honolulu will be the supervising architect. esterdav noon A. JLewis. Jr., chair- town. Ana tfrectcons nas made up nis TO3J1 of the brarv building commit- mina ro learn me iruin oeiore ne gets through with Grace. (Continued on Page Two.) e. had .Mr. nirneld and governor I Frear to luncheon at the Universitv JCIub. S. X FRANCIS (). September 21. Theodore V. Halsey, general agent of the Pacifii st ites Telephone Company, will face, his judges today on charges of bribery, made against him over three years ago in connection with the gen eral bribery scandals of the San Fran cisco supervisors. Halsey had ten in dictments returned against him early in 19o". being charged with having bribed the supervisors to favor his company against the Home Telephone Company. He fled to Manila but was arrested there by secret service officers. Detec tive Burns meeting him in Honolulu on his wav back and bringing him here. y'vX, V' -V' f REPRESENTATIVE JAMES A. TAWNEY, Who has served during nine sessions of congress defeated for renominat ion. ST. PAFL, Minnesota. September 21. The returns from the State p rimrr.es si) far indicate that Sidney Anderson, Progressive candidate for nomination to the !:r.tf -:' rr reser.tatives from the first di.-trict. has defeated James A. Tawney, tii" siandpat candidate for re flection. The four insurgent congress men from this state have bcea renominated. GRAND SIRE ELECTED. ATLANTA, Georgia, September 20. John B. Cock rum has been elected Grand Sire of the Independent Order or Udd lei lows. b t Si s V, - i