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Vdt.UME V? NlJMHER HONOLULU, HAWAIIAN ISLANDS, SEPTEMBER 7 1884. Whole Number 210<br />
tiiv r.ittrcATiox or iiawaitax<br />
atHT.it.<br />
AMre.t nf the Ittttrtnt I'retldenl,<br />
Dr. .V. B. Kmer,on.<br />
The choice of i subject on which to<br />
" address you this" evening is the more<br />
, embarrassing from the1' richness, of the<br />
field that offers itself for selection. My<br />
purpose has been from among the<br />
many problems that thrust thcmselrc<br />
upon us, impatient for an answer, to<br />
take that one which stands in the fore<br />
most tfnk ot importance. Vc cannot!<br />
shut our eyes to the ital imiwrtarrcetm<br />
us in Hawaii nci of all that pertains to<br />
education.<br />
When the first missionaries landed<br />
on these islands they found awaiting<br />
them a race on whom the unclean hafid<br />
of commerce,- - extended by an eager<br />
and aggressive civilization, had already<br />
been laid with no light touch, Disease<br />
had been sown broadcast and was be<br />
ginning to ripen its harvest of death.<br />
The people had the passions and vices<br />
of full grown men, yet, like untaught<br />
children, they were weak and vuh.erj<br />
aoie, necuing ueicnsc at every, poini.<br />
The partial solution of the problem<br />
of how to furnish the needed defense<br />
was all that could be reasonably ex<br />
pected of this or any band of men and<br />
women, even had thev been furnished<br />
with every appliance and with unlinv<br />
ited resources. That with the means<br />
they had at command they managed to<br />
accomplish what they did in fortifying<br />
this race by a broad and Christian edu-<br />
cation against the mighty influences<br />
that were in operation for their physi-<br />
cal and moral destruction, must ever<br />
cause grateful wonder in. the minds of<br />
reasonable beings.<br />
The terms of the problem presented<br />
for our solution arc not the same as<br />
those that obtained sixty years ago, in<br />
the days of Uingham, Whitney, and<br />
Thurston. The great movements of<br />
population, which have followed the<br />
discovery of the precious metals in<br />
California and Australia, have<br />
affected the course of events<br />
in these islands. It yet remains to be<br />
cen whether this will prove to be the<br />
making, or the unmaking of this peo-<br />
ple, asa nation,and of thiscountry, as the<br />
home for a civilized and enligtcued race.<br />
This new order of things has been the<br />
means of fostering enterprise and the<br />
commercial spirit, thus stimulating the<br />
production of wealth, and bringing in-<br />
to our midst a large and heterogeneous<br />
alien population. The Portuguese have<br />
come by the thousand, the Chinese by<br />
the ten thousand. With this invasion<br />
has been thrust upon us the necessity ofa<br />
new study of the field and a redistribu-<br />
tion of the forces in all lines of Christ-<br />
ian and philantropic effort to meet the<br />
exigencies of the case. Some steps in-<br />
deed have been taken towards this<br />
needed rearrangements of forccs,but tard<br />
ily and ina degree not commensurafewith<br />
the rising tide of resistance, and thus<br />
the danger threatens that the forces<br />
fighting on the side of the right shall<br />
- - be and the ground be<br />
occupied in advance by the enemy. It<br />
is of the highest importance not only<br />
to the cause of Christianity and mor-<br />
als, but also to that of good order and<br />
common decency that the offensive<br />
and defensive operations now in mo-<br />
tion should enter upon new ground,<br />
and that as soon as possible.<br />
Among the questions brought into<br />
prominence by this state of affairs, none<br />
in my opinion, outranks that of the ed- -<br />
ucation of the females of the Hawaiian<br />
and the imported, or mixed races that<br />
form the underlying strata of our popu-<br />
lation.<br />
It is one of the Curitans1 chiefclaims<br />
to grateful remembrance that they took<br />
measures very soon after their arrival<br />
in New England, that, as their old law<br />
frankly expressed it "learning might not<br />
be buried in the graves of their fathers."<br />
In like manner the early American Mis<br />
sionaries to Hawaii nei showed their<br />
(rood sense and grasp of the situation.<br />
by devoting not a small part of their<br />
earnest efforts to sowing, broadcast the<br />
seeds of what must be considered un-<br />
der the-- circumstances a liberal educa-<br />
tion.!<br />
It may be said theirs was an attempt,<br />
in imitation of the pilgrim fathers, to rear<br />
a .social fabric with its corner-ston- e<br />
resting on a book.<br />
Whatever praise is due to the present<br />
system of schools, as well as what ever<br />
there is that may deserve the name of<br />
higher education in this country, rest<br />
on fourxLtions laid by the foresight of<br />
the early missionary fathers, as a result<br />
of which we may point to a peo-<br />
ple among whom the knowledge of let-<br />
ters is so general as to make illiteracy<br />
the rare exception.<br />
The missionaries deser e the credit not<br />
only of having lifted the race monegene-ratio- n<br />
from a condition of savage illiter-<br />
acy to be a people of eager iJbok read-ers.b-<br />
also that of having imparted to<br />
the people many of those useful house<br />
hold arts, without a knowledge of<br />
which any eople is heavily handicap-<br />
ped in this nineteenth-centur- race for<br />
civilization. When the missionary<br />
landed on these shores he did not leave<br />
behind him all the arts and appliances<br />
of civilucd, domestic life. He brought<br />
with him not only that great engine<br />
of education, the printing press, with<br />
its fellows, the Hibleand thebpellingbook<br />
but also imoduccd at the same time<br />
those other great civiliiers, the spade<br />
and the plough, the saw, the plane<br />
and the needle, and was the first to in-<br />
struct the Hawaiian in their use. Super-<br />
ior to all these was the influence of the<br />
Christian family which he set up in<br />
their midst ai an object lesson for<br />
their instruction in household art and<br />
all the Christian wrtues. The educa-<br />
tion given to the" Hawaiian may then<br />
be classed a of three kinds ; first<br />
religious and moral, second that of<br />
the sort taught in the schools, book<br />
education ; and third that of the<br />
practical sort which concerns the arts<br />
of the householduid domestic life.<br />
If now, one mt asked to designate<br />
the weak point in the Hawaiian ed-<br />
ucational system he might unhesitingly<br />
declare that it consisted in its failure<br />
to wield such an influence over the wo-<br />
men of this country as shall lead to<br />
that happy blending of the moral<br />
force with bouathold thrift and skill<br />
y Fkh ictuks ia the home. It seems<br />
m utttfisf tfi a4 common pkee<br />
phrases to rail to mind that the best<br />
wisdom of statesmen and philosophers<br />
the world over save" perhaps in Tur-<br />
key and China has declared its opin<br />
ion that in the virtue and .character of<br />
its wives. and mothers lies a oouutry's<br />
greatest security. For these make<br />
the home, and the. home is the fount-- .<br />
am whence stream forth all eood in<br />
fluences into the state. The integrity,<br />
virtue and common honesty displayed<br />
by a people in the marts of trade, in<br />
the halls of legislation and in all the<br />
public walks nf life can tise no higher<br />
than this, their fountain head,<br />
Measuring the moral influence of the<br />
average Hawaiian home Jjy this stand-<br />
ard, we shall be forced to declare it<br />
sadly deficient Applying this prin<br />
ciplc of reasoning to explain this lam<br />
en table deficiency, wc are forced to<br />
the conclusion that the root .of the if<br />
trouble lies in the feeble grip the great<br />
principles of morals and of industry<br />
have on the females of the race. Thus<br />
it has happened that through the<br />
cjiararter of its women this nation has<br />
received it most nrcvioiK wounds.<br />
Now a chain is rfb stronger than its<br />
weakest link, and the morals and chara-<br />
cter of a nation arc no better than<br />
those of its women. Not but there<br />
exists among the Hawaiians many<br />
noble instances of womanly virtue. Wc<br />
all know too the admirable skill which<br />
the women of this race attain in the<br />
use of the needle, their old time in-<br />
genuity in the manufacture of useful<br />
and ornamental articles. Hut the pos-<br />
session and exercise of all these arts<br />
do not relieve a people from the<br />
charge of savagery, and do not of them<br />
selves lift the home into the plane of<br />
purity and enlightenment,<br />
What is the remedy for this state of<br />
affairs? What is the lever that will<br />
avail to lift the tone of the home life<br />
of this people, to make the word home,<br />
one of sweet and pleasant association,<br />
and the place itself a sacred retreat,<br />
fenced about from all impurity and the<br />
invasion of intruding vice, the nur-<br />
sery of industry and orderly habits ?<br />
It was formerly the custom for the<br />
prudent housekeeper each week to set<br />
aside a small portion of the dough she<br />
was making up into bread, to 'be kept<br />
as yeast, with which to leaven and raise<br />
the next batch of flour she mixed for<br />
bread-makin- By this intcrestsng<br />
in germ culture, the leaven-<br />
ing process, once established, was con-<br />
tinued indefinitely. The loaf of one<br />
week gained its sweetness and lightness<br />
from that of the week before and trans-<br />
mitted it to the next in an unbroken<br />
series. Applying this homly figure to<br />
the cast in hand, I would argue that<br />
the influence of the home was the best<br />
leaven to mix with the character of a<br />
girl that her whole nature micrht be<br />
leavened with domesticity.<br />
Looking back to the early , days<br />
of the mission, wc find that nearly<br />
ever)' missionary family and many<br />
Othcrfaitulies, of white peopje in this<br />
countty "were practically schools in<br />
vvhich Hawaiian women were trained<br />
by the leavening influence of example<br />
in the arts of the household. The<br />
success of the method proved its sound-<br />
ness and commends it to us as the<br />
one to be employed.<br />
We find that the Hawaiian women<br />
I<br />
Who went through this sort of training,<br />
though possessed of a modicum of<br />
were vastly more<br />
skilled and'proficient as housekeepers,<br />
and were, as a rule, better wives and<br />
mothers than their daughters and<br />
grand-daughte- of the present day, who<br />
have received many times their amount<br />
of school education but have not re-<br />
ceived their domestic training.<br />
There exists a feeling, which in some<br />
minds amounts to a conviction, that<br />
the education given to the Hawaiian<br />
girls in their special schools is not<br />
proving a full success, and is not<br />
graduating Irom the schools young<br />
women fitted in mind and body to<br />
take the places now too often vacant<br />
as wives and mothers in the homes of<br />
the land.<br />
1 nerc is, 1 lear, too mucn truth in<br />
th. frequently repeated criticism that<br />
the ornamental book education given<br />
the young women, has too often inten<br />
sified their natural antipathy to the<br />
useful, handsoiling drudgery of the<br />
household, in which they have not<br />
bjen systematically trained ; that it has<br />
bred in their minds a perilous ambi-<br />
tion vvhich disdains, with false pride,<br />
the honest work of their parents in their<br />
lowly homes ; that it allows them to<br />
affect a distaste for the wholesome pot<br />
and fish that constituted their staple<br />
food when at home ; that it permits<br />
them to develop such expensive tastes<br />
in dress as the narrow incomes of their<br />
homes or their own honest efforts can-<br />
not supply ; and that, as an outcome<br />
of all their fine education, we uee them<br />
too often scorn the idea of marriage<br />
with the educated young men of their<br />
qwn race, graduates of<br />
or Hilo, and as a result they drift<br />
away and go to ruin. Happily this is<br />
not true ot all or of the majority of the<br />
graduates, and the observant traveller<br />
will find scattered from Hawaii to Nii-lia- u<br />
a goodly number of Christian<br />
hornet, the presiding geniuses of which<br />
are graduates from the schools from<br />
Kawaiahao, Makawao and elsewhere.<br />
The practical test of the value of<br />
female education in Hawaii net, as well<br />
as any where else, is that it shall fit the<br />
girls to be wives and mother!<br />
Failure to accomplish this means<br />
complete failure.<br />
The fault of our Hawaiian female<br />
educational method, as it seems to me,<br />
is that it relies to much on mere<br />
n.<br />
Books can supply the<br />
knowledge needed to lit youths for<br />
Harvard or Williams or Yale or Vassar,<br />
but the book is not et made that can<br />
teach the art of housekeeping.<br />
I know and appreciate the value of<br />
good books to one who has any<br />
drudgery to perform as well as to<br />
others ; how they cheer the heart in<br />
me MJiiiuucs 01 uic ; now nicy iceu<br />
the imagination with wholesome food ;<br />
how they bring the ideal into life in<br />
spite of sorrow ; how they help one to<br />
raalue the words of the poet :<br />
"A Kjvml with Ibis cUuic<br />
Mike 4nKty divine i<br />
Wka iwfp room a foi thy lwi,<br />
MsIms thw, lW Mtian, Am."<br />
Hut it is necessary to have the action<br />
come first.<br />
Year by year the deficiency of the<br />
Hawaiians in home training becomes<br />
more and more patent and exhibits it-<br />
self as an apparent arrest of deMilop-men- t<br />
in the practical education of the<br />
women in the arts of domestic life,<br />
while book knowledge has Jhriven<br />
apace, domesticity remains dwarfed.<br />
Housekeeping is an art, and as such<br />
can be imparted only by example, can<br />
be acquired only by practice. In order<br />
to train up the irecnt generation of<br />
Hawaiian gin") iu oe goou iiuum:im:;ii- -<br />
era as well as honest wives and mothers,<br />
we must rcvett to the principles and<br />
methods of education employed by our<br />
fathers and mothers, and again bring<br />
into play that university of domestic<br />
art and accomplishment, the home , or.<br />
this plan cannot be followed literally,<br />
some substitute should be found that<br />
will embody its spirit. The old plan of<br />
instructional! the family t no longer<br />
available It was capable of but a<br />
limited application at the be3tjmd its<br />
benefits' could directly reach bill (ffewr<br />
Thc time has now come, it seems to<br />
me, when the plan of giving instruc-<br />
tion in the arts of housekeeping<br />
should be introduced into our girls'<br />
schools and should constitute the main<br />
feature of their education. In this<br />
way can the benefits of domestic train-<br />
ing Ix made general. Happily there is<br />
nothing new or original in the idea of<br />
introducing into the schools for girls a<br />
certain amount of training in the arts<br />
of housekeeping. Hut there is great<br />
need that the application of the princi-<br />
ple should be emphasized and extended.<br />
It is not enough that the girl should be<br />
taught to sweep and wash, to make a<br />
bed, to mend and sew, to cook an appe-<br />
tizing meal and serve at the table,<br />
merely as a part of the domestic<br />
economy of the household. That is<br />
very well as far as it goes, but to insure<br />
success the idea must be carried fur-<br />
ther and made to demand the erfor-manc- e<br />
of these works and others.<br />
under the direction of special, skilled<br />
instructors, as an Kitegral part of the<br />
gitl's educational curriculum. . In ac-<br />
cordance with this plan, the ability to<br />
cut and fit a garment would rank as"'an<br />
accomplishment of greater merit than<br />
proficiency in mathematics; topioperly<br />
broil a steak or cook a meal of food<br />
woutd gain as high a credit mark as<br />
excellence in geography ; while cleanli-<br />
ness, tidiness and approved good taste<br />
in dress, would gain for the scholar a<br />
higher standing in the class than the<br />
hitherto overprized ability to play the<br />
piano, or to recite in public on the<br />
stage.<br />
There is such a thing as<br />
or more properly,<br />
in vvhich certain faculties, or parts of<br />
the nature, are disproportionately exer<br />
cised, while others are left untrained.<br />
A mere book education, even though it<br />
includes the precepts of morals and the<br />
jtheorics and doctrines of religion, is of<br />
necessity a one sided and imperfect<br />
education. Education should be ad<br />
apted to the special needs of the individ-<br />
ual, supplementing weak points, so<br />
planned as to fit the person for his or<br />
her future career in life ; and no educa-<br />
tion can be called complete vvhich<br />
does not train the hands to some useful,<br />
skilled work. With many persons, ave,<br />
with most persons, the training of the<br />
hands, which is the training of the<br />
brain and moral nature as well, is the<br />
most important part of all education,<br />
and without tin's the otlver will make a<br />
sorry failure. I do notifbrget that the<br />
princesses of intellectual and cultiva-<br />
ted Cermany are carefully trained in the<br />
arts of the household. In all modesty- -<br />
1 would ask it these principles have not<br />
been too much neglected in the educa-<br />
tion of Hawaiian girls Without in<br />
the least disparaging the noble work<br />
that has been done, it is my conviction<br />
that the educational work of the future<br />
in this country lies along the lines I<br />
have indicated.<br />
As an admirable illustration of what<br />
good results may be accomplished by<br />
tne application ot this method of cdu<br />
cation, I take pleasure in instancing<br />
the gins school in Kona, Hawaii, un<br />
der the care of Rev. and Mrs. Davis,<br />
of the English Church, a school of<br />
which, I regret to say, I have heard<br />
only by report.<br />
The educational needs of the' Ha<br />
waiian girl are greater than those of<br />
the girl born of enlightened white par<br />
ents. In the case of the Hawaiian<br />
girl there is an almost total lack of<br />
home education to begin with. Morals<br />
and manners, habits of industry, thrift<br />
and economy plants of slow growth<br />
together with the necessary<br />
e,<br />
which I am far from despising,<br />
have to be imparted to her all at once.<br />
e be ot ordinary quickness, it is<br />
comparatively easy to give the book--<br />
knowledge, but when it comes to the<br />
more important items in the above<br />
category, it is a heavy lift, and too<br />
often it seems as if the very idea of<br />
these things had to be constructed dt<br />
ntnv in her mind, n work which has<br />
been imperceptibly accomplished for<br />
her more lortunate sister by the subtle.<br />
moulding influence of generations of<br />
home culture. Again, the warm, ease- -<br />
loving, sensuous nature of the Ha<br />
waiian, which finds its ready expression<br />
in mirth and song and gossip, and de-<br />
lights in babbling the vapid and mean-<br />
ingless verses which may be described<br />
as belonging to the<br />
order of poetry, is not the nature<br />
that most rc.-di- ly lends itself to the<br />
economies and drudging virtues of the<br />
household. Cut it need not be thought<br />
necessary to attack directly and with rude<br />
hand the harmless, gleeful levities or in-<br />
nocent follies which the Hawaiian girl<br />
finds it in her nature to love by virtue of<br />
her tropic blood. These effervescences<br />
may well be left to exhale themselves if<br />
proper training ana development be gi-<br />
ven to the nobler faculties of her na-<br />
ture.<br />
Mjr proposition, then, is that the<br />
great educational demand of theday, as<br />
regards the Hawaiian girl, will be met<br />
by making the basis of her education<br />
consist of a thorough and kytternatic<br />
training in all the essential or closely<br />
allied branchei of hntnilrMMiino On<br />
this, as a substantia! basis, may be te -<br />
curely laid as much intellectual andar<br />
listic accomplishment as is thought ne- -<br />
fate.-.- rt.- - lOMflll<br />
I vi uikiuii -<br />
If tins is the solution ot the prouiem<br />
of education for the Hawaiian - girl, it<br />
will applv . also in the case<br />
-- ..<br />
of the rortu<br />
guese girls that arc .nocking to our<br />
?fo<br />
shores, and to those ot the unincsc<br />
race, and to all of the mixed races that<br />
.iri ur( In mnllinlv in our mirkt.<br />
Tt,i fiimlirMirm nf lliU ue?pm wiH lit!<br />
first be expensive. It will need brains<br />
as well as money. If in your opinion<br />
No<br />
it deserves our hearty supported us<br />
further the cause by every means in our<br />
power, and let us pray our legislature,<br />
now in session, to devote to it such a<br />
liberal grant of money as shall "assure T<br />
the cause full success.<br />
JsorE-bin- me above aiiure vtuuemer-- i<br />
ed, my attention h been especially called to,<br />
good work that It being done in the line adro-i- n<br />
Tariout Institutions. At the Notili Pacific<br />
Missionary Institute Mrs. C. M. llMe haruii.<br />
dcr her training a class in cookery taken from<br />
among the ie of the students of that instl<br />
tlon. At the Makawao Femnle Seminary gco-- ,<br />
eral attention is pant to housc-ulfcr- ) and do<br />
mcstic training. At (lit Kawaiahao Female<br />
Seminary Ihe faculty are fully impressed with<br />
the value and necessity of this sort of educa-<br />
tional training and would be glad to give it<br />
due importance if the means Merc provided<br />
M'il r 7 II K ItA Itl-r.l- OVVOHK Itl.A I AT.<br />
Appropos of Knickerbocker's budget<br />
of Blaine chit-cha- t, the following<br />
scoring of Harper's Weekly, from the '<br />
pen of Frank Pixlcy of the San Fran<br />
cisco Argonaut, is by far the most tell<br />
ing bit of counter criticism it has been<br />
the writer's good fortune to notice :<br />
"TAtDiirna of Ciiiitati'on" lor all the<br />
years of its existence has thanked God dial it<br />
was Iwttcr than the Sadduccs and sinners of,<br />
the press. Its editorial high priest Ins stood<br />
uith.luoad phylacteries, and made long pray-<br />
ers in the political synagogue thanking Ood<br />
that he and his employers, the Harper<br />
Brothers, were better and purer than other<br />
men". Now they have been whipped oui of<br />
the temple as unclean and dishonest money<br />
changers. Their professions of supctior mo<br />
tives, their hypocritical pretences of immacu<br />
late and unselfish purity, have been exposed,<br />
and it is now demonstrated that all their op-<br />
position to Mr. Blaine, all their indignation at<br />
his lack of public integrity, results from a<br />
business jealousy. Harper's Weekly owned<br />
by Harper Brothers an J edited by George<br />
William Curtis opposes the nominee of a<br />
national convention in wliich its editor acted<br />
as a delegate ; in aH of its deliberations lie<br />
participated ; all of its acts he approved ;<br />
and, with solemn voice and serious counten<br />
ance, he declared it was an insult to question<br />
the sincerity of his purpose to support the<br />
nominees. And why do they oppose this<br />
nominee ? For the sole and only reason that<br />
the firm of Harper Brothers was liot chosen by<br />
Mr. Blame to print his look. A private, per<br />
sonal grudge, inspired alone, by mercenary<br />
considerations, has prompted this business<br />
Krai, the Harpers, to send their editor to<br />
national convention to betray the Republican<br />
party, to v iolite his word of f cisonal Ifoimr,<br />
and to bolt his ticket. It has prompted these<br />
proprietors of the "Journal of Civilization " to<br />
turn loose its pensioned libelers, with pen<br />
and pencil, in type and picture, to vilify "and<br />
caricature the man concerning whom J. W.<br />
Harper, Jr., (the head of the firm) wrote as<br />
follows only sixteen months ago. The Harper<br />
publishing house desired to secure the pub<br />
lication of Mr. Blaine's history, " Twenty )cars<br />
of Congress," and wrote to a personal friend<br />
of his own and Mr. Blaine the following<br />
lettrr<br />
" With the instinct of a publisher accus-<br />
tomed to deal with the people rather than<br />
with the privileged classes, I recognite the<br />
fact that there is no man living more closely in<br />
sympathy with the people than Mr. lilaine.<br />
I keep a not untrained finger on the popular<br />
fiulse, which in our American life is generally<br />
and I am sure that it beats strongly in<br />
admiration and affection for the man who has<br />
been absolutely fearless in his patriotism. Mr.<br />
Weed's reminiscences will be interesting as ttie<br />
record of an acute observer, but I am sure that<br />
Mr. Blaine's narrative will hold the American<br />
people, because it will be a human, real,<br />
not of a Machiavellian ob-<br />
server, but of an active participator, brave<br />
fighter, and gallant leader in the most critical<br />
events of our nation's fcUtory. So, when it<br />
comes quite convenient to you, I wish that<br />
you would give Mr. Blaine to understand that,<br />
while the doors of Franklin Square always<br />
stand wide open to ' them literary fellers,'<br />
such a: scholars, and poets, and novelists, and<br />
evangelists, and travelers, the proprietors gen-<br />
erally go down to the sidewalk to welcome a<br />
historian of his own limes, and, with uncov-<br />
ered heads, reverently help him to unload the<br />
manuscript from his trfumnhal car on the<br />
Elevated Railway. Please intimite all this to<br />
Mr. Blaine, and vnu know how to do it<br />
gracefully and well."<br />
This Mr. James W. Harper, with his " not<br />
untrained finger on the popular pulse," only<br />
tisteen months ago lxire testimony to the fact<br />
that this American popular pulse is " generally<br />
healthy," and that it was then beating in<br />
"strong admiration and afftctim for the nan<br />
who Kit ittn abtoluttly ftarltst tn kit patrio<br />
tism AN ACTIVE PARTICIPATOR, IIR.VVE<br />
HGllTER, ANII OAII.ANT I.K.VntR I.N THE<br />
MOST CRITICAI EVENTS Of OUR NATION'S<br />
HISTORV." This man at that lime this pro-<br />
prietor ot the "Journal of Civilization "<br />
wouhl go down to ihe sidewalk with "rev-<br />
erent " mien and " uncovered head " to help<br />
Mr, Blaine unload a manuscript into his pub-<br />
lishing mill, to help him dump his brains into<br />
the Harper hopper, that should grind out<br />
profit to his printing jr4ablithment. For<br />
coin, for gain, for earning some paltry thou-<br />
sands to add to Mariillions, (lie represent!- -<br />
tivfrmiit ul America's most exalted<br />
type of journalism would have eaten the dirt of<br />
the pavement over which the brave fighter<br />
and gallant leader miked. Because he did<br />
not get the chancn of this business venture,<br />
with a meanness that is contemptible, a cow.<br />
ardice for which there Is no sufficient expres-<br />
sion of detestation. Mr. Harper turns his<br />
types, his printing-presse- his personal influ-<br />
ence, his hired dude and Hessian, to personal<br />
detraction and abuse of Mr, Blaine, He<br />
charges this man who has been "absoluttlr<br />
ftarliss in kit patriotism " wjth dishonesty<br />
andwithhctra)alofa public Inst ; he holds<br />
him up to ridicule in caricatures J ht lies about<br />
him with a malicious and devilish pertinacity<br />
that would be unworthy of a civilisation "<br />
that uses the stileUo and the assassins' blade<br />
in secret passages, that strikes tn the back<br />
and in Ihe dark. If George William Curtis,<br />
Thomas Nasi, and James W. Harper, Jr. are<br />
the journalists of civilization, God have mercy<br />
on such barbarians as edit the Argonaut<br />
Kchli pUnlitlon finikhol up the )tn<br />
crop Utt week, and Manager Cbapln It off<br />
fkr a visit to th mm. M Lake, tn<br />
Igiucr, gots at tb umt'tiaw.<br />
ikofcGoiomtl QTnrbo.<br />
CMITIt & THURSTOM, I W. 0. Smith,<br />
1 1. A. THuisrot<br />
AUmtyt nl tart<br />
j! MficitiT Stkkrt ItnuntuLV<br />
U<br />
w ILLIAM O. SMITH ft Co.,<br />
I L. A Tiiiro I<br />
ivv O.S.t cm.<br />
ItorU nnif 11ml I'.tlntr limit,<br />
H Mrociissr-STRi- tr .IIovoli lis<br />
BHaUMiI i' !?)<br />
"Silfar Railroad, TfUp'ione nd ohr Cor<br />
poration siocki, norms una simtur :.umte<br />
HnujiT and oiu ox Commission<br />
Money Loaned on Mock Seturilie<br />
fio-t- f<br />
, B. DOLE,<br />
O Cmintrtor til !.ne titul .Votry f'ttbttc,<br />
OFFICII,<br />
'ottir Kt Ann Mkrcimxt St nuts HotgiirLU<br />
o & (1 2<br />
R. CASTLE.<br />
W Attorney uf .nil- - ilfnl yotnrn I'tiMtr,<br />
Attends all the Cutirrs oPiU Klnjrdoni. t<br />
CDWARD PRESTON,<br />
Attorney tnut Votn1or ttt t,tttr.<br />
', rnuT Srnpn .llnjulln<br />
ALBERT C. SMITH,<br />
Aienl tn take AeliHotrtetlvemeHti to<br />
Instrument.<br />
OrvKE Willi A. S I Ian ell. over the ILnlV<br />
r '<br />
--<br />
RS. CUMMINCS & MARTIN<br />
,1ttryeonM nnil Hamtritothlr ?A;frfin.<br />
i 0ricit.riRNHK Fort and UtroirANiA Sts..<br />
pffite Hours Until 9 a. M., and from -3 and S c M.<br />
... n , UMVDUOM<br />
..... .,...<br />
u n<br />
VJiyntelan nntl Suryron.<br />
Hootun II I<br />
Tmrmionr Number to<br />
t)ince honri from 814 to io!4 a m.! t'6 to r!4 d<br />
Office and Residence, No. a Knkui mreet, comer I'orr<br />
Viteet. SI<br />
M. WHITNEY, M. D.f D. D. S.<br />
'j Ientat Ituotti on Vurt Xtreit, n<br />
Ho SOL ft U ... . . .II. I.<br />
Office in HrewcA Itlocl, corner Hole and Fort<br />
Street, entrance on Hotel Street.<br />
ILLIAM B. McAllister.<br />
W tK.RMKsrSlt. LOCATED IN IIUSOULl'.<br />
OTice. corner ol Fnrt am! Hotel ttrcet, oer irejlcuii'jt<br />
a lore.<br />
PariKular attention paid 10 restoration notcl Allinci.<br />
Uelln2 on good work at diaries to gain<br />
me commence 01 tne puDiic tj on<br />
-- EQ. L. BABCOCK,<br />
(LATC- Or OAkLAMj)<br />
Teacher vl the Phno.Frte, AdJrv, LYCAN ft CO.<br />
Rhmdcxce No, to Ktnma strtet. ilyty<br />
JHisincBs OTaric.<br />
O M. CARTER,<br />
Awn! to tnttt Acfinawtrdptnnnti to Con-tra- ct<br />
to Lnbnr<br />
Honolulu, Hawmiav Islands ij<br />
W. LAINB<br />
R CommtsAtantr vf lenl$<br />
For the Slate of California, for tiu Hawaiian Ilmls.<br />
and Ocnerat Agent for the Pacific Mutual Life In-<br />
surance Company of California. 14 "<br />
NO. A. HASSINGER,<br />
J<br />
Attent to ttOy.t Achnouteitutneiiti to Con<br />
tract for Labor.<br />
Wtkkiok Offick . ...Honolulu<br />
JOHN H. PATY,<br />
Aofir Public an ft Commtmtmn of Iteedn,<br />
For the State of California and New' York. Office<br />
at the I .j iik of IMiop & Co.<br />
Hosoit'Lt', Qaiiu, H.I .t<br />
P T. LENEHAN & Co.<br />
Tut potter nntt ComtnlMxton Merchant<br />
Nin.ANl STltBLT, HflNOH'IL.<br />
PRANK GERTZ.<br />
Hoot a tat Shoemaker<br />
HojttanJ jShoet made lo Order,<br />
No. 114 Fort T.nfinMrK Panthron .tahluk.<br />
. -- j<br />
Uf ILLIAM TURNER,<br />
t'ractiwt irrfri7i. ,<br />
ii KlSiTKKttfiSP .. .4 HONOIfLU<br />
ImjHjiter 01 American jewelry ot every iecrii<br />
im, (formerly 01 "vm rrancitco, lAi.io.'nia.j 50<br />
AL. SMITH,<br />
ftnparter untl Itenlur In llfaaMirttrci,<br />
MerUUn Sitrer-Ptnte- tl IVtire,<br />
" Hruchet, l'of.<br />
No. 44 Four SThirr Honolulu<br />
Kind's ComUiutlon SiKCtacte and Kv'Uie.<br />
Liiitral Wire Ware. Fiic) ."xoiii. Picture Frame, Pii--<br />
tola, WotcniioIm Pixkec Cutlery, Powder, Shot and<br />
Amiiiutiitian. Clark' Spool Cutton, Machine Od, all<br />
kinds of Machine Needlct, MDomtic Parxr rahiona.<br />
bow aseni u! tne umverwauy acKnowi-ot- uitiit.<br />
Runnln Dtaneatlc Siu Marhtn- -<br />
AX BCKART<br />
M Hrt(cArMnJlitr Jewcttr, Kuyrmrer, ami<br />
'litamoml Setter<br />
No. in KoutSthiikt<br />
HOXOLLLU<br />
Alt orders f.ithfutly executed. js<br />
P"ll. OEDINO, t<br />
KrnreMM and ItrnumaH<br />
(rcfht, I'ockasei. and Dicsntf. delivered li .ml from<br />
all iMrt. of jlonolulu .ltd vicinity. Cwful At- -<br />
tenlioit raid 10 inotinj? Kurnuure, with<br />
WAGONS KXl'RCSSI.V .Oil THE PUKPOSK,<br />
TepSoa. &&; UeftldtiK. .)) PatHlibowl .treel,<br />
Oltice, 86 King Slreer 06 11<br />
w OHO LEONO ft CO.,<br />
AffrntM for Jloanut Sugar, Valamu Hlet<br />
Vlantntlan,<br />
And Kalliu K!ce PUtituioii and Mill.<br />
N'tlUANU ST.rKT. .CO.NK. MfclUNS<br />
niiy<br />
T AHUO.<br />
llettfir In llru (loud; Itlee, Tta. Hllk and<br />
iautu liotMi, itaiM, miii ami<br />
,Ju'j, finiN, feed and flour,<br />
Cluuro and Tobaera<br />
Al propricttrf of Kic and butf.r Plantation at<br />
Kaneoli., KooUu, Watpl7, Ka. anil Hetla. 4<br />
Nvi'.nu CH.rtAiN Skt... KoMnrut--<br />
xv--iy<br />
A W. RICHARDSON Co<br />
auri DaatKat<br />
Banle, Shoe,, t'urHltAinf (ld.. Hat;<br />
Vi9, Trunk,, Vail,<br />
Vftfumtry anJ Soap., WJlaaw Watc.,<br />
tut j.wury, ere,<br />
CtithKR Foar Aku MictcriAKT Staaura, IIonolulu<br />
r?t C. ROWt,<br />
ff4M N( 910U i'Ulhter,<br />
I'arae HaNi.it, .it,<br />
No, io Kins bTiaa., ..llnvuitiv<br />
Ul im<br />
WHS. A. M. UKLLIS.<br />
rwMU lire and Mtmk Mmhtr.<br />
No. to. Fori Sraa.r .. ., ufcftrff wi Hon oici<br />
lUtoincss (Jliubo.<br />
It. WILLIAMS,<br />
J<br />
SND tlEALMI U<br />
Furniture nf Krfrfi Urtrrlpllotu Ahn<br />
Vphnhtrrer tfUd JmiiiViri'iiivr.<br />
furniture Wareroomi No. loo Kort Stteel.<br />
at old stand on Hotel Street Atl orders promptly<br />
attended 10. I J<br />
c C. COLKMAN,<br />
Wart, tm t(h Mftchhittt, Cftrrhipe llcrA.<br />
ttnrJtt SfOfii<br />
IIONOLUtl' II I<br />
rhniAiton Mhinr),nc. hop en Kln 5irrt<br />
next to Cattle h Cooke i<br />
W OIRVIN,<br />
C.'ntllttifeeffn Merchant und lleneiol lletttrr<br />
In tliff Gnnite,<br />
Wuiiki .Mai'I , It I<br />
Grnuriet, Hardware, Stationery, Talent Medulne,<br />
I'erfumery and Glauware ( l<br />
f. nuRonss,<br />
Carpenter anil Itulltler.<br />
All tdndi of Jolddnj itromptlv attended to.<br />
i<br />
Telephone No. I fi, VV illKnium's KieOAiie.<br />
tr<br />
Simr, No. la Kivn Srntr .. ..Ilonolitu<br />
A. SHEPARU,<br />
IVateliinaher ami tleweler,<br />
Wssteh repairing mail at Speciality.<br />
All orders from Ihe otliet Klands promptly attended to.<br />
No. 55, Horn. StRfrr, .K.lNOIt-LI'- , II.<br />
r<br />
npHOMAS LINDSAY,<br />
tleweler ami Itiamomt Setter,<br />
NnKi NtlUANU 5TFKET, HOKOtA't T, II I.<br />
(Oppoiite Itollliter t Co ),.<br />
FaniculAT attention paid to repairing.<br />
iji-j- r<br />
OPP A CO.,<br />
H Kic SrNttti<br />
VphotHtrrr; JrAperM niirt Jteatrrs t nil<br />
klntta of Furniture<br />
Telephone No f 4 j<br />
176<br />
WESTERN AND HAWAIIAN IN<br />
THR vestment Company (limited.)<br />
Money loaned forlorn; or short period on appro ed<br />
wcurit). Apnlyto W L, ORHKN,<br />
Office Heater I Hock, tort St Mamctr<br />
1UT THOMPSON,<br />
Attorney ( J.nw antt Sottctturtn Chntmry,<br />
Practice in the Count, and prepare Deed Willi,<br />
Mortgages, t,evet, Contract, Agreement, etc., md<br />
ne20liateO.T.;ii7 .mms, etc.<br />
Honoulc.............. ....H<br />
Omen -- Coiner Fott and Merchint Street,<br />
joytf<br />
T YONS & LEVEY,<br />
Aucttonecra nnt Cnmtntt(nu Jlrrrhntit,<br />
UrvpK Hi cot. Quit eh Stupkt, Hosoiuiu.<br />
Sale of Furniture. Stock;- Real Kstate and (Jen era,!<br />
Merchindise promptly attended 10. Sole nyenta for<br />
American and European merchandise. J I. I.vonk,<br />
( L. J. Lkvkv,<br />
TfciT W. McCHESNEY & SON,<br />
DEALLRb IN<br />
T.eaU4rrf ttltlent Taltow a tut 1omntvtfm<br />
Mereh'tttti<br />
t<br />
Agents for the Kojal Soap Company.<br />
No, 41 QfEKPi Strkkt , ..HoHoiuLtr<br />
5<br />
M. OAT, JR.', ft CO.<br />
J 'Stationer and JVVtrj neater<br />
Itctl Itubher Stamp Affcnc<br />
GAXErnt .. .No. 25, Mkrciiani St itkit<br />
'303 Honolulu, II. I.<br />
O HALL & SON . lUmitedJ<br />
IMrORTKRS AKI IHEAt KR IK<br />
Jtanttvare ami General MechamllMe,<br />
Corikm or King ,no Fort Strppt, Hiinolulu<br />
omcths:<br />
Will urn W, Hall. . . .l'y&ident and Manager<br />
L. C Able..,. ,, .Secretary and Treasurer<br />
George E. lloe...<br />
Auditor<br />
Director It. May.'K. O. White. 151<br />
T YCAN & CO.,<br />
Importer and Deafer (h atl Kind of<br />
Munte Hood, Fancy Hood,<br />
Japanese Uood<br />
No-.- .<br />
103 ani 107 Fort Strkkt.. . . Hnsnttn,<br />
Furniture, Chairs Sewing Machines, Mirror I and<br />
Mirror 1'Utcs, Picture Frame and Cnmices made to<br />
ortler. i,7f<br />
C BREWER &<br />
(Limittd.)<br />
COMPANY,<br />
General Mercantile and Commlaalan Ayentt,<br />
Qieew SritEtT, HiiNOLtLC.<br />
Officer. P. C. Jonet,r., preMdeiil and manager;<br />
lonepn u. carter, treaiurer ana Mcretary, I i rectorf<br />
lloiu. Charlc. K. Iluhonand II. A, I' Cairter; Henry<br />
May, audilor.<br />
1)3<br />
I" ILLIAM McCANDLESS<br />
Healer (h CAoi-r.- r Ueef, Veal, Mutton, Kir.<br />
No. 0 Qt a.N Stutr.T, Flju Maikkt.<br />
r'aroily and Shipiinic order, carefully attended to.<br />
Live &lcck furniahcil to VeMrl. at thort notice.<br />
VeKelable. of all hinds tupplied lo order.<br />
TKLKritoHK No. an.<br />
IU<br />
S. GRINBAUM Lo.<br />
M<br />
Importer and rTholetalr Dealer tn Gen-<br />
eral Mrehandte,<br />
MtKit'i Block ,,0UIIN SiailCT, HnNOLt'M'<br />
S. GRINBAUM Co.<br />
M<br />
fatwardlno: and Vomnilloii Merchant,<br />
114 Cam.oiihia St., San Fkanciko<br />
Siccial fadlitiet for and particular attention paid lo<br />
OM&irnmcnti of Uland ifouucc.<br />
P HORN,<br />
Pioneer Steam Candy Manufactory and<br />
hakcry.<br />
Honolulu ... . . II. I<br />
Practical Conftcliour, Paury Covk and llaVtr.<br />
Number i Hotel .treel, Ivlween Fori aid Nuuanu<br />
ktrcetw<br />
a<br />
fT B. MclNTYRB & BROTHER, ,<br />
Grocery and Feed Stare.<br />
Cor. Kino ako Fot St. IIoholilu<br />
XJOLLISTBR A" Co.,<br />
Wholet.it and U.lall liruggltl and 'to<br />
otirooMi.f..<br />
No. ,0, Nuuaku IIohohiv<br />
1 W. HINGLBV tX CO.<br />
Mamaetarer f llacanu Clyar.<br />
lUrORTKM ANU liRALMf IN<br />
Tobacco,<br />
Ct,ueltes<br />
ndSnwLera' .llirlei<br />
Th. nvM cotnpttie atock tn lh kingdom.<br />
King Hrcel, (near AlaVea) lloooli,Ut.<br />
loo-i-<br />
r KWHRS ft COOKK.<br />
(Siccutoaa to Law.at A Di:"0<br />
Importer and Healer In l.um.tr and all<br />
kind, of HuUdlng Material.<br />
FoirlT ,. ..HuNotvLU<br />
IOMN NOTT.<br />
Flu, Vppr mud Mht Iron Wemr,<br />
mnd Mange.<br />
ot all klula, tUiaumt,' atock aaM MJs lM limit,.<br />
,; iia fail., ckanJetterv, Luaf., c<br />
MC t Kaaimi truir. .,.'.,. ..Hoaoivtc<br />
3uoiuc6o Carbo.<br />
'<br />
-- ,-<br />
.<br />
M. OAT & Co.<br />
SrtUitmKrr, Fttiffi of nit tttwtpHnu<br />
tmittr tint! rtptilmt,<br />
llrtsouLt<br />
It. t<br />
1,0.1 In A I. i;ol'4 new firf pronf MlJin. fool ot<br />
Kuuanti Sirtcl. t<br />
BMME1LUTII & Co.,<br />
ifttnt(h ttutt Vtitmtrr or hi<br />
,Storrt itnnpn, fit.<br />
So. 3 N't'tMHU Srmur , . . ltoouu<br />
fTONOtULU IRON WOUKS Co.,<br />
Stenm Kntftnmt tlnUtr, Suynr MIMm,<br />
Coot rr , Irotip rrti,ml l,mt OtifftifM.<br />
IIONOttlU It, I 1<br />
Mac hi irf' of ever)' dewifftion made to cnler.<br />
pAMicular Attention p.(M to Ship IfUcksmitliing<br />
Jtb otI e teciitcit on the ihumt notice to<br />
110S. G, THRUM,<br />
IvroMtna and Mahi f actum ir<br />
fttntlottrr, Xetrn Jifntf Vrtutfr tlnok<br />
oiMfrrrrrM<br />
Arnl tmU..lter of if.e StnnAV t Kim. ami itwi'.<br />
AttHAHic n nit Annual, Merchant ttretts Deal<br />
In lint Stationery, WW, Mua.a, 'Ioyt and 1'ancy<br />
iHHHf i ot iirfii ear noiei, nnnoium.<br />
S, CLROHORN & Co,<br />
A MtnpartftM ntut tentti ttt (tenet rtt Jrr<br />
chmttUe,<br />
'<br />
jueen ami Kaahunumt Streets Honolulu<br />
T AINU & Co.<br />
Cami tn tUMton Mftrhn htt<br />
Importer ami ileAlert In 1U), drain ami General<br />
ProJnrp,<br />
Honolulu ,. . .. . .II 1<br />
npilE C.ERMANIA MARKUT.<br />
Hovni.utt, II I.<br />
reV IVrt, Mutton, f,nmht I'oultrj<br />
nntl l'lh<br />
Constantly on haml, ami of chotieM qua tit y. Pi<br />
autage. noiORnat, eic, amayi on nanu, Out mean<br />
ate an cut and put up tn j.aMrtn t)ie, All orJera<br />
faithfully attended to, and delivered In an) pirt of the<br />
ril). Shop uii Hotel Street. Union andTuit<br />
Streen. 406ml G, RAUPP, Proprietor.<br />
r HUSTACB,<br />
(OOdMSdLA WfH ItOLLM A CO I<br />
II irrff rt riff Itrlntt llrnrer,<br />
lit, KtMf, MrttFthr ....., .Unkfh Harmony HaU.<br />
Fainll), Plmtaiion, ami Ship itores supplied at short<br />
notice. New kU bv eery m earner. Order from<br />
the other I Oaud faithfully executed.<br />
Telephone No. 119. i75't<br />
PHILLIPS & Co.<br />
M<br />
Jtnpoiter Httotemtlv Jtrttter In Ctoth<br />
(nth Hoot, Mm, lint, Jlrn'M 'tw<br />
nth(ntf Oomtti, t'nncy fumf Mr,<br />
No. 11 Kaaiicmanu Stbrrt . . Honolulu 4<br />
O J LEVEY & CO.,<br />
Ilulcate anil itetati Urorem<br />
FOKT STKFrT . . .HnNOLUiU<br />
Fieh j;roccrie --nd potion9 of all kinds on tiand and<br />
received reculatly from Europe and America which<br />
Hill Ire oU at the lowest market ratcit,<br />
flood tlehvered toanj irt t( thcii free)f charge.<br />
Island order sol ion rd and prompt attention will In<br />
Riven to the umr, 111.1v<br />
THBO. ILDAVIES A Co.,<br />
(LaTk (anion, Crk!'N A. Co.)<br />
Importer ami (lrtmnttnton Mrrrhnnti<br />
AGKNIS F0<br />
f.lo)d and the Livcrtsool UnJerwrurr.<br />
l)ritih and Foreign .larine Insurance Compan), and<br />
Northern Assurance Compitt). I<br />
JOHN T. WATERHOUSE,<br />
importer ami nmic r In ttrnrtat 1frr- -<br />
ctut mtt me,<br />
STKFirr<br />
I<br />
HACKFELD& Co.<br />
H iteneral Comnttnntnn Agent,<br />
Qufrn KTKttT . . .Honolulu<br />
D. HOFFSCHLAUGBR & Co.<br />
Impotter and Vommtton Merchant.<br />
Ho SOLI' LU Oaiii. If. 1.,<br />
pILLINOHAM & Co.<br />
Importer and Healer in Hardware, Cut<br />
lertt Toot,<br />
Paints and Oil, and General Mrrchai.dlie,<br />
No. 37 FoitT Sthujt . .... T.Hoolvlu<br />
r<br />
A W. PEIRCE A Co.<br />
Ship Gaudier and Comtntnttan Mer<br />
chant.<br />
Honolulu, Hawaiian Islands<br />
Ayentt for Drat id' (Jinn and Horn, Lancet and Per<br />
ry Uavti Pain Kilter.<br />
P P. ADAMS.<br />
Auctioneer and Comnthtion Merchant,<br />
QtHvN STBHKT . HONOLI'LU<br />
P A. SCIIAEFBR ot Co.<br />
Impotter and C'ittnmtmton Merchant,<br />
MtRdtAVT HrHirr. .. . Honolulu<br />
WILLIAMS.<br />
Vhotnyraphlr ArtUt,<br />
104 Fort Stkbbt HoNOLt'lt'<br />
Pictures uf all tt and Vind made to order, and<br />
frame of all dwri,tioiit constantly on luud Alio<br />
Coral t. Shell and Cuttohltiea of the Pactric" t<br />
A LLEN & ROBINSON,<br />
Dealer In Lumber and alt kind of Uultd- -<br />
tna Material, Valnt, Oil, Sail, etc.,<br />
Honolulu, II. L,<br />
AGENTS OP fcCJIOONf H<br />
HaJekala, KuUmauu, Kekauluohl, Mar Ellen,<br />
UUama, Pa u ah I and Lemhi.<br />
At Uohimon'f Wharf, 1<br />
TTYMAN BROTHERS,<br />
importer of General Merehandl from<br />
France, Knyland, Germany and<br />
the Vailed Stale:<br />
No. jj li mn Struct .. :. . .Honoiul<br />
TJVMAN BROTHERS .<br />
n'holetale Grocer,<br />
116 ami atf California Sraa.r.. .San fRANCitcn.<br />
Pjniculir attention paid to filtine and .hitJtini? 1.<br />
land orderw . I<br />
B ISHOP CO., Bank.ri<br />
llnoitMi, Hawaiian I.LANoa.<br />
Draft Cxchangt on<br />
TIIK UNK OF CAUipkNIA.<br />
.SAN FRANCISCO<br />
And lh.il icentTln j."<br />
J<br />
NF.W YORK,<br />
BOSlON.jA,<br />
,' C "4f(ON0 KONO.<br />
i -- ' - (<br />
M.un. N M. ROJHSCHII.ptiONS.<br />
TxJNHON<br />
l1v.COMMbRCIM HANKI.NC CO,<br />
Of SYDNEY, LONDON,<br />
Tl COMMERCIAL MANKISd CO..<br />
cfSvunf.v, SVDNKV<br />
1k HANKS OF Nf.W ZLAI.ANU:<br />
AUCKLAND, CIIKISTCIlllKCH,<br />
AND WtLLINGTON,<br />
TIIK BANKS. OF URI'.'ISII COLUUU1A, '<br />
VICTORIA, ac. AND PORTLAND, OK,<br />
A N- O-<br />
TrMwt a Ctnirtl BmUar flutiiuil.<br />
. t<br />
"" ' .<br />
V<br />
JJuoiHCGo QTnrbo.<br />
ASTLRA COOKR,<br />
Shipping nmt Vm,nttntt Mrrhntit<br />
IfOMOLbt v<br />
iMmitriBiifD uRAless im<br />
ir<br />
OKNKRAt, MCRCHANDIS!..<br />
Agent far<br />
Th Hitchcock ft Con.MnV Plantation<br />
The AlevMhUr & lUMwlii lint At ion<br />
R. HaUtfAd. r.r WaUlut I'IjuUiImi.<br />
A II. Smith ft Commny. Kohx., Kami<br />
J. M Afeiandrr, IU.U, Maul<br />
'IiSe Haiku Snar Conmin).<br />
The KohatA .sugar Lomptny<br />
Hamafcua Plantation<br />
The Untoh Insurance OvnC(.y ot Mn FiAntevo<br />
h New Fnejant! I Ife InMiranca Company of Hjst in<br />
'Ihe HIate Manufacturing Cowpmv of Homoii<br />
D. M WrMorTi Patent Centrifugal Machine!.<br />
'Ihe New Votk ami Honolulu IVcUt I .In,<br />
'Ihe Merchant' IJne, jliuiolulii and San Frnnclva<br />
!r, JaynM A Son' CeleWated MetlidnM,<br />
Wilcox A OlMi'a Singer Mftmifjct urine Compmy.<br />
Wheeler A WiNon'a .sewing Machine ?5'IT<br />
TNO, O, POWLBR & Co.,<br />
I.EROS. KNOLAND,<br />
.li prepntett to fnrntfh 17a nt nttit Knit<br />
unite fitv&trrt<br />
POIlTAIU.n TRAMWAYS,<br />
Willi or nlthout Cars nnrl IocomolWtt, $fcUII<br />
AI)P1KJ fOR SUOAU PI.ANTA1 ION<br />
Permanent Uatli),nntl IxxvmotUea andean, Prac<br />
lion Enj;fne ami Koari UconvtW., Steam<br />
Plouahin imt Cultivating .Machinety, Pot.<br />
alilc I nKinei for all purpose, Windm<br />
natne fur incline.<br />
CataWuei Hith I l!uiralloti. Model anJ Photoi<br />
BrapiK Dlf llie abov riant and Machinery may t teen<br />
at irwciTtceitortht iindemened. W, u (Mr EN and<br />
O. rs CFARI.ANi: A LO , Agent for Ino Tm<br />
ler k Co.<br />
O, H. MAC? A It I ANR, M. R. HIACFAltl NR,<br />
W MACPARLANR A CO.<br />
Importers, ComraUtLon Mroliat4<br />
nutl Sugar Fact..<br />
Fir prmif Utitlitini Queen meet, Honoiul 4<br />
agent roii<br />
Kilauea Sugar Co, Knual,<br />
Ihe WaikapuSujr.ir Ptatttition, Maui,<br />
Ihe Spencer Suir Plantation, lliwiit<br />
Honohina Susar Co, Hawaii,<br />
HneloSujiar lill. Maul,<br />
HtieloSusir Plantation. Maul,<br />
Reciprocity Sugar Co., Hani,<br />
Makaha Sugar Plantation, Oahu,<br />
Ookati Sugar Co Htto, Hawaii,<br />
Oloalu SiiEar Co. .Maul,<br />
Ptiuloa Sheep Ranch Co, Hawaii,<br />
J Fowler A. Co'a Stearn Plow And Portable Trama<br />
Workf, IciU,<br />
Mirrle, Wtni K Co'a Suar Mirhiner), C.Imjih<br />
GlaLTow and HonnhiUi Line tT Packets.<br />
l.iverprx and Honolulu Line of Packet 1,<br />
iinuou anu iionuiniu i.ine 01 &i earner,<br />
Sun Fire Insurance1 Co of lrdon.<br />
)1<br />
DOOKS PERTAINING TO HAWAII<br />
Jarv' Hiuoryof the Hawaiian Id ml,<br />
Andrew Dictionary.<br />
Vhit,nej' (ItilJe Hook.<br />
Mi5 Hint's SU Month in the Sandwich UUnd<br />
Ml (Jortton Cuniniirt);' lire Fountain.<br />
Mr. Itidd't Honohilit.<br />
Hawsinn Almtnacnnd Annual<br />
Together with A tarie tock of aluaU and entertain<br />
ingbooki, ht of tohtch U pul4ihed In the tupplement<br />
of ltd piper . ,<br />
I or ale atl<br />
. Titos, a. Tilnews<br />
EVJ GOODS<br />
N<br />
H t RucKivrn rx<br />
" Mtrtln Divit," ,rMalUster' fcud ptcted ex<br />
"Marijo',and nther vreU<br />
Boston t!aid Matches, ,<br />
Hotv Shoe and NaiU<br />
nOWNF.US and NOONPAV Od,<br />
LulricAUns Oils of all LiuJi,<br />
Cut Kailt, all tires<br />
Clinch KatU, all aire.<br />
Ccton Watte in halet,<br />
IleUowk.<br />
Cheap Hl.n aockt,- -<br />
Garden Droomal<br />
Itrown Soap, In cases.<br />
Wirp Hanclne UatVetafor Ferns, Ac.<br />
I'lantation lloet,<br />
ft inch Go-- '. cV trVct Hoet,<br />
Ice Cream "recen,<br />
ax Mower, belt kind,<br />
Cam's (.enuine Amonkcac Denims,<br />
. Cae' Genuine Amoleag Mariners Stripe,<br />
tcftideia thoauiml aitirlet in the Hardware line alway<br />
on hand.<br />
t<br />
Soon eiprcte!, not hy the "Spartan," a moit rotu<br />
pleta aftvorlment cf<br />
Halt's .steel Plow and Hretker,<br />
With extra lUndlu, lleami and Points.<br />
All theftc will foti at the corner brick store of<br />
16. K O. HALL ft SQH. UmltU.<br />
ftcnctrtl 5bbtrli0tmetB.<br />
EMMELUTII a CO.<br />
J<br />
Wo. & Nuuanu aail 4 M.rohaut aUrMt.<br />
Honolulu,<br />
ILive on hand a loll line of Ih.<br />
rn'Mitttitt.<br />
A t.VA It A till,<br />
Itl AMOS II MOCK,<br />
Mllll A WK,<br />
HVKKKA,<br />
ftF.IT VAHAGOS,<br />
HIIIGIITOV,<br />
tll'll VHOIUK,<br />
II VIIMOK,<br />
,l,V XI.II III. K HIOVt.H<br />
ASH OtIIKH MA .VfllMi, ,<br />
A,.ni, fur 11. - HON"! ARUIV<br />
IOH" Uanees for Hltlnff ill trick. lL.ti.ulea mr.<br />
chated, for putlln, up th .am. with ojrwillmul hot<br />
water connection..<br />
a "<br />
Tri.MioNe Na n . '"<br />
J. KlOfELVTM 00,<br />
t NiSjahu aud 4 M.RCHART Stl,<br />
' , Auk. iC 'J,<br />
.<br />
LANKS, BCANKS.<br />
UOOf Coolracti. 11,11. of Ladloi.<br />
Illdi of Latrun,., Power, of Attorn.--<br />
,<br />
Mu.lf.ie. Charter Panv..<br />
nuiurr ruoniracta, 4,u.o. nxieeisriM,<br />
De-l- . Hottoovy Kiada.<br />
M.u-- s PunhaMt' and MaatiLxlur.rt InraicM, Mw<br />
Sheer Mao of th lUaodi, Plan.'<br />
nf Honolulu, Chan of<br />
FiiixW Pon<br />
ILWOlan .<br />
OR ANY BLANKS PRINTbD TO ORDnl<br />
At THH. H. THHVM'M<br />
Mircuant Sraiar Sr.at.<br />
TAKR t ARTOTYPI. j4Ml, a twnuaMi<br />
fc<br />
'<br />
) I.<br />
.<br />
j<br />
SS<br />
''tl<br />
J<br />
fJ<br />
1<br />
1<br />
1<br />
"<br />
"
SATURDAY I'RESS<br />
A Newspaper PaLUihtd WeeWlj<br />
IL11D jnWBIPriirtJ $5.00 l IF.IR, l WUCK<br />
I<br />
4.y lo Sf.jo. ' u r 11 tlwtt destmatlrm far<br />
lATURDAY<br />
, il4<br />
thi: .w;ir vulvmiu<br />
The fourth volume of the Saturday<br />
Press closed with last Saturday's issue.<br />
The year just past has been an exciting<br />
one in local newspaper annals. It his is<br />
seen the Advertiser change hands of<br />
twice, the Bulletin change editors three<br />
tunes, and the Hawaiian bud and<br />
Mobsom. The Press has prospered,<br />
has had its share of public approval of<br />
and of public patronage, and now it<br />
sneaks, as it did a year ago for<br />
that same approval, that same patronage 10<br />
and as much more of each as it may<br />
diserve. At no time in this paper's<br />
career has it made many promises ; but<br />
we think all that have been made have<br />
been kept except where some! modifi-<br />
cation ol an original plan was found to<br />
be to the better advantage of the read-<br />
ing public. Whether the course of the<br />
Press has met the approval of its read-<br />
ers cannot be fairly judged. There are<br />
too few readers on the islands to is<br />
give a weekly newspaper a large circu-<br />
lation. Divide that circulation among<br />
four newspapers and no one of the four<br />
makes a very extensive showing If we<br />
have any right to quarrel with the<br />
reading public it is that too hiany of<br />
our renders are not subscribers<br />
the only we have to make is<br />
that every man who endorses the stand<br />
of the Saturday Press for honest and<br />
economical government and for the of<br />
use of newspaper English that<br />
is vigorous without being inelegant<br />
shall emphasize his endorsement by is<br />
sending a cheque for the amount of the<br />
subscription.<br />
As we had occision to state last is<br />
Thursday through the medium of the<br />
Morning Guide, there is before the<br />
privv .council an application for n<br />
charter of incorporation of the Bulletin-- 1<br />
PrcbS Publishing Company. I here are it,<br />
enough subscribers to the company to<br />
Insure it a good start in life if the<br />
chariot be granted. In case it is<br />
granted, the Press will become,<br />
in part, the weekly edition of the<br />
Bulletin and will he published<br />
on life day found most advanta-<br />
geous in supplying other-islan- sub-<br />
scribers. In case the charter be not<br />
obtained and no unforseen contin-<br />
gency ariie the Press will keep on<br />
the even tenor of its way, content to be<br />
read, appreciated and supported, by<br />
the most intelligent in the community.<br />
i.ii.uifiu.i rio.v.<br />
The gentle angler of the Court Jour-<br />
nal, in his desire to further advertize<br />
Tort Street Church, in which body of<br />
our citizens-h- e takes a lively and appa-<br />
rently perennial interest, says the ob<br />
jixtion to Portuguese comes from the<br />
Poit-Strcc- t congregation for no better<br />
reason than that the Portuguese are Ro<br />
man Catholics. Those of us who re-<br />
member when Truthful Waller drove<br />
the editorial quill of the P. C. A. cannot<br />
forget a paragraph that ran like this;<br />
"We find a member of the 1'ort-ijtrc-<br />
Church ioininc hands with a Jew to<br />
import a Roman Catholic population."<br />
This was when Walter considered tne<br />
present - minister at 'Washington the<br />
prime offender against Hawaii-nei- . As to<br />
Japanese immigration, .the fact is that<br />
a. member of the Bethel Church took up<br />
Japanese immigration where the astute<br />
foreign minister laid it down, and by<br />
persistent and effort suc-<br />
ceeded in getting the scheme into favor a<br />
with the assembly and secured $50,000<br />
to start the enterprise. The inconsis-<br />
tencies of the Advertiser arc becoming<br />
glaringaltogether destructive of that<br />
continuity of thought and purpose<br />
which ought to animate so fearless and<br />
high-minde- a journal. The fact is<br />
that the employment of previously-un-instructe-<br />
Hessian labor does not pay.<br />
Mr. Editor Webb knew his duty bet-<br />
ter. His copy went to the foreign of<br />
fice for revision. Gentle Angler, go<br />
thou and do likewise<br />
Much has been and much may be<br />
truthfully written, in favor of Portuguese<br />
immigration." The best that-ha- s been<br />
Mid for it has been said in these<br />
columns. But our support of Portu<br />
guese immigration for plantation labor<br />
was based upon the profitable condi-<br />
tion of the sugar industry then existing.<br />
There were too many unmarried Chinese<br />
in the country for the country's<br />
good. The planters recognized thin<br />
lact and willingly paid more for Port-<br />
uguese than they had to pay for Chi-<br />
nese partly because good prices for<br />
sugar enabled them to do so, and partly<br />
because the general goodpl the conn<br />
try was'conidercd of the highest im-<br />
portance. With Portuguese laborers at<br />
$100 a" head and sugar at $130 a ton,<br />
the Portuguese immigration was desira-<br />
ble lor population nnd may have been<br />
nrofitablt: ns labor. Now, with Japanese<br />
al $ss per head and sugar at only $90<br />
per ton, the latter immigration is s.er<br />
talnlv the more desirable, as labor.<br />
"The Portuguese laborer at $100, su-<br />
gar at $t3o;the,Japancse laborer at$55,<br />
sugar" $90." This is the question<br />
in a nut shell. Possibly the econ-<br />
omy studied at the Tiscr office is<br />
not of the sort to fit it to grapple with<br />
.iny economic question. But the Tis-<br />
cr must remember that the wealthy<br />
backing it enjoys is not enjoyed by all<br />
Hawaiian plantations, anu mc uoiiar-andce- nt<br />
(trgument must have weight,<br />
Portuguese immigration for popula<br />
tion is as v desirable now as ever<br />
ir mh kteji it hen. But so general<br />
ts the movement of Portuguese laborers<br />
to California, so soon as their contracts<br />
expire, that a certain facetious plant.!<br />
tion manager speaks of Hawaii<br />
at "California's labor incubator."<br />
No, we want Pottugucse immigration ,<br />
but e cannot afford it, al its present<br />
cost. When aty friend of Portuguese<br />
immigration can show a reasonable<br />
plan for bringing Portuguese here at a<br />
cost the planters can Hand, and for set-<br />
tling them on the soil, we thall advo-<br />
cate that plan as earnestly as any one<br />
and so will the planters. At for the<br />
hostility of any one to Portuguese im<br />
migration on religious groundt, the<br />
statements to thai effect arc limply<br />
tilly.<br />
Another of the gentle angler's pretty<br />
little Inconsistencies saw the light this<br />
week, "h it not population we want<br />
but labor tayt the Titer, If that be<br />
not treason to king andrcountiy, it is<br />
because hta muciVraore consjiicu-cuil- y<br />
treason to common ieiuc.<br />
shall 111: ru: mart .iir.iir<br />
In the symposium of citizens who<br />
imc been considering over their own.<br />
signatures the important question1<br />
"bhould, or Should Not the King be<br />
.. n .. . I'<br />
ijisciis'cj, .Mr. m. .m. uamon's ts so<br />
the only negative voice. It is true<br />
that one newspaper has come to his<br />
support its principal argument being<br />
that the Magna Charta incident in<br />
English history Is not a sufficiently<br />
good illustration to enforce the Bul-<br />
letin's argument because the illustra-<br />
tion is "threadbare." Hut Mr. Damon's life<br />
supported by no other ally--n- ot one to<br />
the "many sober-minde- d and intelli-<br />
gent citizens of all nationalities, who<br />
would in common with himself depre-<br />
cate<br />
the<br />
all attempts to impeach the honor<br />
the sovereign," having stood beside<br />
hint in the breach. c said last week<br />
th.ii we rrititlrlrrcrl tlm Hirflctiti'i rmtv '...<br />
j,r Damon unanswerable. We his<br />
flunk so now. and. not withstanding<br />
the ability of the others in the contro--.<br />
vcrsy, we think that what has been<br />
said since has been at best merely<br />
plcmcntary. The essence of Doctor<br />
Emerson's letter is found in the follow-in- g<br />
paragraph ; "In this country where<br />
wchavc got from the method of divine<br />
appointment to election by the people<br />
through their representatives, surely it<br />
out of date to deny to the elector the<br />
right of discussing the one whom he<br />
had appointed to office."<br />
Hartwell's letter contains the following<br />
concise statement of the affirmative<br />
position, from the standpoint of public<br />
benefit ; " It would be a public mis-<br />
fortune, to the ruler as well as the<br />
p?ople, to refrain from open and manly<br />
discussion of his public course. If the<br />
criticism is unfair, the ruler has plenty<br />
means at hand to show the unfair-<br />
ness, besides coming out with news-<br />
paper<br />
ler<br />
articles signed by himself. If it<br />
intemcraie in tone, it loses its<br />
force. If it is libellous, the public law-ca-<br />
be enforced against its author. But<br />
within its proper limits, such criticism<br />
a capital conservative of law and or-<br />
der and of popular rights ; a safety<br />
valve too, which England would no<br />
sooner dispense with than would<br />
America. It h far to be preferred to<br />
alternative as illustrated in autocra-holdin- g be<br />
tic Russia." Mr. W. R. Castle<br />
that Mr. Damon's letter raises two<br />
questions, as to the right and as to the<br />
advisability oftliscussing the king s acts<br />
cannot agree with Mr. Damon in that<br />
gentleman's view of cither question.<br />
The Hawaiian discusses Mr. Damon's<br />
position in the light of history and for-<br />
tifies its own agreement with the ma<br />
jority opinion by citations from English<br />
history, and hngliMi literature generally.<br />
The Gazette alone among Mr. Da<br />
mon's critics treats the question in a<br />
vein of flippant personality which<br />
would come with better grace from a<br />
journal less truthfully characterized by<br />
the adjectives it employs in stigmatizing<br />
the letter criticised.<br />
As we said last week the public is In<br />
indebted to Mr. Damon for stating the<br />
king's side of the argument. And it<br />
required some courage on his part to<br />
write as he did in the teeth of public at<br />
opinion. But we consider Mr. Damon<br />
unjust to himself in declining or at<br />
least neglecting to his posi-<br />
tion<br />
a<br />
so that it shall not be misunder-<br />
stood. Mr. Damon's clear-heade- d<br />
ness as a man ot business, and nis<br />
knowledge of both the principles of law<br />
and the outlines of history, must teach<br />
him the folly or stilling free and mil<br />
discussion of every department (and<br />
every official of every department) of<br />
government whenever may be ne-<br />
cessary. But Mr. Damon and in this<br />
he has many supporters believe that- -<br />
the king's acts ought to be discussed in<br />
different tone, even in a different<br />
spirit, from that employed in discuss<br />
ing other men. Mr. Damon believes<br />
in studied courtesy towards the king,<br />
as much in the public prints as in the<br />
interchange of official courtesies; and<br />
he may very consistently.think so with-<br />
out having any absurd ideas about<br />
"the divinity that doth hedge a king."<br />
But certainly if Mr. Damon believed<br />
merely what we think, he believed he<br />
should have said so clearly; and should<br />
not have sent to press a hastily-prepare-<br />
letter no matter how strongly<br />
lie may have felt.<br />
But while we consider Mr. Damon's<br />
letter the manly utterance of a gentle-<br />
man whom we believe, in the language<br />
of the Bulletin, "to honestly differ in<br />
opinion with us as to the proper course<br />
to be pursued concerning this matter,"<br />
we disagree with him almost in toto,<br />
whether his position is merely what we<br />
have stated it to be, or what it has<br />
been considered to be by others. We<br />
do not believe that mere courteous dis-<br />
cussion of the kine's acts, unaccom<br />
panied by strong denunciation, is going<br />
to accomplish any thing in this clearly<br />
outlined fight for good government.<br />
Calm, cold, dispassionate, "courteous"<br />
talk no longer jibes with popular opin-<br />
ion. Men are thinking earnestly, arc<br />
talking outspo'tcnly and are feeling<br />
deeply. The popular indignation no<br />
longer contents itself with wishing the<br />
king would reform and give us a safe<br />
cabinet. The popular indignation uses<br />
stronger language than any Hawaiian<br />
newspaper has ever uttered. If the<br />
king could know by actual hearing and<br />
observation just what is being said by<br />
his subjects of all nationalities, Ha- -<br />
waiians no less than haolcs, he would be a<br />
belter informed perhaps a better man<br />
for the knowledge.<br />
1 he reeling against<br />
the present government is more intense<br />
than many ol those in power begin to<br />
reilirc. The (resent government holds<br />
office at the .'e.isnie of the king. So<br />
long as that lact is, so long is tne king<br />
ruling in defiance of public opinion ;<br />
and that means whatever you please<br />
to call it gentlemen : "An unfortunate<br />
condition of affairs," say some ; "a<br />
wrong that must be righted," say we.<br />
There arc two hitherto-unsuspecte- d<br />
gentlemen In Honolulu who will bear<br />
watching Hon. S. D. Dole and Rev.<br />
J, A. Cruzan They have unluckily<br />
fallen under the ban ot tne Lourt<br />
Journal's appreciation each having<br />
wen praised by it within the patt ten<br />
days. Anxious menus await an ex<br />
ulanation.<br />
The morbid state ol the Dally Hawaiian It<br />
to be pitied, if, in the selection of foreign<br />
items cf lowiest, it can find nothing more<br />
clcsaling to prcur.l to its leaden than was<br />
done on the 41b. Instant, when, in a half a<br />
of sixteen Pacific-Coa- iem. fourteen<br />
related 10 suicides, murders, ciltat, drownings,<br />
and fatal or aarloui. accidents, one to death by<br />
apoplexy ad the cthc related 10 ctatelitn RU<br />
Colorado. EntWalnlnc retd'02 this for<br />
Jowotl aspltusaj ! aUct la Um host<br />
Ttnvirl MrCartttrj, ,r.<br />
'Nvne knew him but ttf Mm,<br />
s'one nam,,m t w-<br />
So mote Hallcck of John Rod.<br />
mn Drake. So one might truthfully write of<br />
Davit McCartney Jr. If one might fairly<br />
write of any man'a part by the record of three<br />
lirief ears. This much Is known to all of us.<br />
He came here three jears ago with good rec-<br />
ommendations, not one of which was toostronfj,<br />
and made himself a teput lion that needed no<br />
recommendations. lint to few In Honolulu the<br />
slory of poor Mr, McCartney's tempest-los- t<br />
is known at least In part; and I beg lease<br />
tell it now as the hailing tribute of one<br />
whose life hat known many friendships, yet<br />
among then not one better wnrlh hating than<br />
friendship of David McCartney,<br />
He was born In Allegany City, Pennsylva-<br />
nia, May 21st, 1857. lie was the second of<br />
fire sons and before he was ten years old they<br />
mii,..i,... a, .i. s,. !.., , ..<br />
own living and up to the time of his death<br />
ktot on earning it. with vaivinc forcinr hut<br />
unvarying persistence, honorably ambitious al<br />
ways, prudent always, yet unswervinRin his con- -<br />
Idling<br />
,,.<br />
unflagging b his pursuit of duty,<br />
undiscouracetl by the frown of fortune or tin<br />
unkind cuts of malice. He educated himself<br />
and well. He mastered his specialty, step ty<br />
step, and five years aeo owned a drug store' In<br />
PittsbutE. He was doing well, earning a good<br />
living and accumulating a competence, until the<br />
knife of an aisasln threw him on a bed of tin- -<br />
gerlng Illness.<br />
He arose in shattered health. It seemed<br />
wise for his health's sake to sell out and "go<br />
west at least for a season, His friends<br />
thought so and he agreed with them. West he<br />
went and came at last seeking the lountain of<br />
youth to Hawaii. He travrlled to HHo and<br />
the volcano, to Maul, and (I think) to Kauai. In<br />
The climate of Honolulu seemed to suit his Is<br />
health and, obtaining employment with<br />
Jno. A. Palmer & Co., and then with Hollls- -<br />
& Co., he settled down with his accustomed<br />
energy to the exacting duties, the toilsome<br />
round of his profession. Methodic, exact,<br />
scrupulous to a nicety, he was oil that an<br />
apothecary should be and more than many ate.<br />
There were few weeks In which he did not burn<br />
the midnight oil In studying his profession. of<br />
His own advancement, the Interests of his<br />
employers, the better protection of the public,<br />
held equal places in his thought. "One cannot<br />
unjust to one's employers, or to the public,<br />
without being unjust to oneself," he told me<br />
once. The remark was !t key to his nature<br />
conscientiousness ingrained,<br />
Socially, Mac as bis familiars dubbed him<br />
was quiet to llic verge of reticence. Vet his<br />
quiet had no touch of haughtiness, not the<br />
ghost of a shadow of a suspicion of "airs." He at<br />
was grave beyond his years, quiet because his<br />
experience had made him thoughtful, reserscil<br />
because he had learned to weigh men before<br />
he took them Into his inner confidence. IJnt.<br />
when one knew him, there was no better com-<br />
panion than he in. all Honolulu. He had a<br />
fund ol the sott of humor we call "dry" for<br />
tack of a better word ; and some of the best<br />
thing the Tress has published during the past<br />
fouttecn months wrre suggested by that same<br />
dry humor. He was an intense American, in<br />
love of his country, in pride of its greatness,<br />
sorrow over its faults. He was an ardent<br />
admit er of James C. Maine, and the only pro-<br />
nounced regret I ever heard him utter was<br />
that circumstances presented him from being<br />
home to vote for president.<br />
A little over a year ago he married Miss May<br />
Fanning, recently of .Santa Roa, California<br />
congenial union. 1 heir little home was as<br />
nearly an Eden as homes ever become in this<br />
world where<br />
"Man mut work anj women must weep."<br />
And there can be no more pathetic chapter In<br />
any life than this the death knell sounding<br />
from. a d home like that : a good<br />
husband, a good wife, a life of useful happiness<br />
opening before them to be closed again in<br />
the twinkling of an eye.<br />
David McCartney died a victim of overwork<br />
and a martyr to his own conscientiousness.<br />
He had been in harness three years without a<br />
vacation. A more robust man might have<br />
stood It without danger. Not so he. Two<br />
month:' vacation taken a year, six months, even<br />
three months ago, might have renewed his<br />
strength and fitted him to cope successfully<br />
with the hard work he had to do. But there<br />
was no 'one 10 fill his place while<br />
he worked for Hollister & Co., and<br />
alter he entered upon his duties as one of<br />
the firm of Benson Smith 4 Co., there was no<br />
time up to the week before his death with<br />
the exception of three we:ks on Hawaii that<br />
he felt he could be spared from his post. His<br />
partners urged him to take a vacation on<br />
many occasions during the past few months.<br />
Had they realized, had they even sus-<br />
pected, his real condition they would<br />
have forced him away at the point<br />
of n physician's certificate. They ,did<br />
not, could not know; and next to the chief<br />
mourner and the father and three brothers who<br />
survive him, theirs Is the ercatest loss.<br />
The functal took place from St<br />
Andrews on Bcrctania stieet,<br />
street Wednesday. The exercises were accord-<br />
ing to the service of the Protestant Episcopal<br />
Church, Uev. George Wallace officiating.<br />
Many were present, and the hearse was fol-<br />
lowed to c by many sorrow ful and sym<br />
pathiilni; friends. He wa- -, buried in the cast<br />
disislou of the Nuuanu Street Cemetery, in<br />
Walklkl otner of the mauka side, next to the<br />
grave of poor Le Fas or whom be had follow-<br />
ed to the grave only seven weeks before.<br />
R.S.S.<br />
Many Hawaiians know that the de-<br />
struction of the sugar industry of these<br />
islands would injure, directly or indi-<br />
rectly nine out of every ten Hawaiians.<br />
It it true that if an Hawaiian tells a<br />
member of the Imposition this, the<br />
member replies: "What nonsense! is<br />
not Mr, Spreckeis the biggest sugar<br />
producer on these islands: and is not<br />
he one of us?" "That is so" replies the<br />
thoughtful Hawaiian,"but Mr. Spreckeis<br />
is Tar less a producer than a purchaser.<br />
He can altera to lose on his sugar in<br />
vestments because he makes so much<br />
on his purchases. And adds the<br />
thoughtful Hawaiian, "I notice that<br />
Mr. bpreckels is smart enough to let,<br />
other people do most of his losing for<br />
him." Spreckclsvillc was built largely<br />
by other people's money, Spreckelt-vill- e<br />
is heavily in debt Sprcckelsville<br />
is in debt partly to Spreckeis. By and<br />
by Spreckeis will foreclose on Spreck-<br />
clsvillc and then Sprcckelsville will be-<br />
long to Spreckeis at about half its<br />
cost on which investment it might<br />
be made to pay something. So, if all<br />
the plantations on the islands should<br />
go to the wall, Mr. Spreckeis would<br />
have a better opportunity than any one<br />
else to play over again the pretty little<br />
came of bnreckelsville<br />
..... a strictly legin<br />
.1<br />
-<br />
mate anu lawful little game, not tut<br />
ject to the ret trictiont of the gaming<br />
act.<br />
The band will play the following pfogrsBiBtt<br />
at 4 P r, St., at Emmroa Square.<br />
Ovnt. VabuaU..... ..,,,,,,,..,.,,...jrvw<br />
Cornet FoBt. Lav &&i<br />
INnala, aVlxaac ,tf .,,, Hjialaa<br />
hcWtwo, Jaftwaka. -- "<br />
waia. iu waaim.. ,.,.. r.W 1c.<br />
QiaaatoU, ft a law fair. I I f ( Of<br />
tripi.<br />
Til tree, that In W aipWs shady tale,<br />
tn olde there rNelt Hawaii a kings<br />
Tor mil their glory to the valley ilinge<br />
fa legends old, and oft repeated late;<br />
And still the long the pale<br />
O'to, warriortina;i hoM fame at til rmci<br />
In weird old chaunts, is seen by omt wh.i Ing,<br />
with<br />
Ofdarknee brooj the land. And then a wr!<br />
Is heard of waters, where the opn gates<br />
orMiltTs realm, receive them to their fates.<br />
We backward trace the stream of lime in ram,<br />
For soon wt reach a wall, that towers high,<br />
Whit o'er It falls the stream, at from the iky<br />
tall<br />
And then It vantihes in mitt and rain.<br />
S. E. MANN<br />
Honolulu, August 30, tile.<br />
red<br />
Our tornl Jlontlittr.<br />
was<br />
The Hawaiian Monthly for September<br />
the<br />
opens with a paper entitled The Volcanic<br />
Problem, taken from Captain Dutton's report<br />
on Hawaiian volcanoes. Cyril the Sulpician<br />
is pan. Night on the Praiiie is a taking bit<br />
of verse wilh only one faulty line in it "again<br />
plain." Madeline is pleasantly continued. , .<br />
V. , ; KPn,"",:"P:'ve'ucn"al-- " who<br />
UllB VI LllatIllCII.ttlUU III lUC JJICSCIH the<br />
instalment. So far. Madeline is a deal bcttei<br />
to<br />
than Mrs. Wymans' pre ious story, The Five<br />
Dollar Gold Piece. Some Rtndom Notes on<br />
the Hawaiian Language is an interestingly In.<br />
structlve ankle. In the V. litoriat Comment<br />
and<br />
the following paragraph Is timely, the editor of<br />
the monthly being an authority upon the new<br />
library and its needs i<br />
sul<br />
"The opening of the new building of the<br />
Honolulu Library and Reading Room Associa<br />
tion Is an event deserving more than passing And<br />
notice. The completion of a structure of th;t<br />
kind, substantial, spscious, handsome, ar<br />
ranged throughout with special reference to<br />
the wants of the association and fully equipp?.!<br />
all respects for the carrying out of its Work,<br />
of<br />
something in which the people of Honolulu<br />
can take an honorable pride. 1 he most satis<br />
The<br />
factory circumstance about the whole enter-<br />
prise is that the association have been able to hats<br />
complete this structure entirety free from debt,<br />
and to take possession of their new and beau<br />
tiful home with a balance In the treasury. Of<br />
the seiviccs of the officers and lrutees of the<br />
Institution j the editor of the Monthly being one<br />
and<br />
the number, does not tlc-c- It .fitting (to II.<br />
speak at length. We may be permitted how-<br />
ever<br />
ing<br />
to say that the work that has been accom-<br />
plished hii only been rendered pos you<br />
sible bv the moit unswerving faith<br />
and the most unflinching persistence t<br />
the part of those who had the enternrise<br />
in<br />
charnc. Tor the kindness and liberality of lit be<br />
public, by which the efforts of the officers<br />
hive been supported and made ao<br />
praise is too high. The list of those who hafe<br />
different and in various ways aided the en-<br />
terprise,<br />
of<br />
includes the names of nearly the<br />
whole community. We feel, however, tltat<br />
I<br />
we should not be doing our duty were we rapt has<br />
to mention Hon. C. R. Bishop and Mr. J. T.<br />
Waterhouse, Sr., the two largest contribuj-ots- ,<br />
and His Mijesty King Kalakaua and Mf.<br />
A. J. Carlwriglit, the two next largest. These to<br />
four contributions together amounted toabotil<br />
of all the money raised by subscrip-<br />
tion; the balance of the funds having come<br />
from two grand fairs and from the loan ex<br />
hibition. Il was the liberal subscription of<br />
the first few gentlemen to whom the Hit was be<br />
presented which acted as an encouragement<br />
to others and made succcs certain. In speak<br />
ing ot the fair we must make special note of<br />
the services of Her Majesty Queen Kipmlani,<br />
whese collection of goods was very large and<br />
valuable and whose table rcalired consider-<br />
ably<br />
ol<br />
the largest sum of any at the fair. Tile<br />
vjljableassiitance of Dowagir Queen Emma<br />
should also be acknowledged. All who have<br />
contributed many way, cither In monsy or in<br />
work, to the erection of this beautilul and<br />
appropriate structure, have a right to feel that<br />
they have done an honor to the town In which<br />
they dwell and that they deserve the thanks<br />
of their fellow citizens. AH honor then to<br />
those who have provided for Honolulu this<br />
temple dedicated to ' the att preservative of all<br />
art- s-<br />
In the Friend for September the Editorial<br />
Jotiingi of Rev. S. C. Damon have something<br />
to say of Peking. Among other things Mr.<br />
Dimon says : "No one can, even In a limited<br />
degree, understand and appreciate Chinas<br />
greatness unless they come north , Pe<br />
king Is the spot of all others In the empire to<br />
read the history and study the peculiarities of<br />
this most singular people." Writing from.<br />
Shanghai, July 8th, Mr. Damon says ; "Our<br />
plans now are for Mr. Damon and myself to<br />
sail for Japan while Frank and<br />
his wife return to Canton, and join us in Japan<br />
August 18th, en route for San Francisco and<br />
1 1onolulu. I do not see how we shall be able to<br />
reach Honolulu until about the 7th of October."<br />
The address of the new secretary of the V.<br />
M. C. A., Mr. C. S. Mason, Is printed in this<br />
number of the Friend and ought to be generally<br />
circulated.<br />
to<br />
The Planters Monthly has, besides Mr, Jae-<br />
ger's thoughtful paper, articles on Diffusion<br />
which are well worth the consideration of plan.<br />
lets who are, It Is understood, devoting much<br />
study and some experiment to this most Import<br />
ant sugar topic. The annual meeting of the<br />
Planter s Labor and Supply Company, on the<br />
201I1 proximo, Is spoken of and a full atten-<br />
dance asked for, the following suggestive para-<br />
graph appearing : "The dangers which<br />
threaten the chief industries and property<br />
holders of the country, from the reckless ten-<br />
dency of the government, Is prominent before<br />
the mind of every thinking man."<br />
The Anglican Church Chronicle is out to-<br />
daytoo late for more extended notice.<br />
The first anniversary of the Young People'<br />
Temperance Union of Honolulu was celebrated<br />
In the Fort-Stre- Church parlors last Thurs<br />
day evening. The programme included music<br />
and recitations, and an anniversary address by<br />
Miss Breete, which gave a clear and concise,<br />
yet full and very interesting review of the<br />
year's wotk. Secretary Swain and Treasurer<br />
Chapman read reports, showing a satisfactory<br />
condition of affairs. The membership a year<br />
ago was twelve, at present it is one hundred<br />
and twenty-five- . No more worthy wotk has<br />
ever been undertaken here, and Miss Brecse<br />
deserves much credit for carrying it out.<br />
The "International Congress for the Location<br />
of an Universal Meridian " will begin its de<br />
liberations in Washington during the first week<br />
of October. In common with other nations.<br />
Hawaii has been Invited by the United States<br />
government, which is holt of the occasion, to<br />
send representatives so this congress, bach<br />
country it limited to five representatives, each<br />
ol whom will have the title "commissioner."<br />
Hawaii will send two. It It understood that<br />
Prof, W. D. Alexander and Judgi Luther<br />
Aholo will bt our representatives 1 mmI Will<br />
leave for Washington by the Mariposa on the<br />
15th Instant.<br />
BaBBHaasBBMBaMaaaM<br />
Rev. E. C. Oggcl, who hat been tunrif<br />
the patt week froaa a acvert coU, has to far<br />
lecovarcd aa to aaneuBct hit intention of cob- -<br />
ducting (be Bethel Miriest m<br />
usual. Hia morning aubjact will bt, What do<br />
Wt Know about Jttut CtwUt, and it ChiU-liiait- y<br />
Tr? aad in ta tvtaiag a bible itad-la- g<br />
oa Tlaf fufcM tad UM WatfOM.<br />
if PtiKttr tpfirnr of th T.fffotrttttre<br />
f tSSI.<br />
Al tsrvon Atiti-it'i- INI. rtnaaonl.!<br />
UWI miw,uii Wlillll V I'lV'VIHVU<br />
an appearance of bustling expectation. The<br />
mauka balcony was crowded with Hawaiian<br />
ladies, and the mauka colonnade thronged<br />
newspaper men, ushers, islanders, mali-hlni- s<br />
and local notables, Including Ministers<br />
Gibson, Culick and Neumann in full liter)-an-<br />
the Hawaiian Dandy In the new regula-<br />
tion uniform of an Hawaiian admiral, swallow,<br />
coat of Turkey red, In graceful compli-<br />
ment to the new cabinet, blue trousers wilh<br />
stripes, gilt buttons and edging for coat,<br />
waistcoat, and red cocked hat,<br />
plumed m 1th flowers. The audience room<br />
pretty well filledby 1 1, 30. By that hour<br />
following four companies of the House-<br />
hold troop, commanded by Major Hopiili<br />
Baker, aided by Adjutant John Baker,<br />
Guard, Captain Kahioj Royal Guard,<br />
Captain Kalolii; Prince's Own, Captain Kahl)<br />
escorted by the King's Own, Capaln Know<br />
The troops were preceded by the band,<br />
occupied the half circle mtkai the statute,<br />
troops being drawn up along the driveway<br />
the right and left. Among the distinguished<br />
arrivals were the following gentlemen t<br />
United Slates Consul Mc KInley, Peruvian<br />
Consul Cattwrlght, Chinese Agents Alee<br />
Goo Kim, British Commissioner<br />
Wodehuuse, British Vice Consul Davlcs,<br />
Italian Consul Schacfcr, Spanish Vice-Co-<br />
and Mexican Consul Lane, Swedish Con-<br />
sul Schmidt, American Minister Resident<br />
Daggett and Bishop Willis. Mrs. Daggett<br />
Mrs. Schmidt were the only lady represen<br />
tatives of the diplomatic and consular corps.<br />
About twenty other ladles were present. At<br />
twelve the royal party left the palace. Rushes<br />
were st row n from the palacesieps to the entrance<br />
Allioltnl I ate and strips of carpet w ere laid<br />
across the colonnade from step to vestibule.<br />
party was proceeded by fourteen kahilis,<br />
carried by retainers in black suits, high silk<br />
and feather cloaks. Before the king and<br />
queen was Chimbetlain Judd, following him<br />
Brothers In Law Cleghorn and Dominls, ac<br />
companied by Colonel Iaukea and Majors, Pur-<br />
vis, Rosa and Boyd. Intheaudienceroom tricking<br />
queen sat while prayer wasoffered by Rev, J.<br />
Waiamau. The king then read the follo.v- -<br />
speech first In native and then In English.<br />
Nobles and Representatives; I coneratulate<br />
at the close of the session of 1884, on the<br />
completion of your legislative duties.<br />
Vour legislative action for the promotion of<br />
immigration and the regulation of the currency,<br />
the enactment of sundry laws, calculated 10<br />
of prcal benefit to the community, In voting<br />
liberal supplies lor sanitary and educational<br />
purposes, and for the encouragement of com-<br />
merce, have my hearty approval.<br />
I thank sou for the e:ncrous vote in support<br />
the clvii list.<br />
-- I am happy In slate that my special .envoy<br />
abroad, Hon Curtis P. Iaukea, whose mission<br />
announced at the opening ol the legislature,<br />
satisfactorily accomplished the object of<br />
that mission in Europe, and was most success-<br />
ful at the Court of Japin In having obtained<br />
from the government of the empire a liberal<br />
concession to promote emigration from Japan<br />
Hawaii.<br />
I am well pleased that the subject of ocean<br />
telegraphy to unite the kingdom with the<br />
Continent by cable, has been favorably con<br />
sidered bv.vour bodv.<br />
My relations with the United States of<br />
America and with other powers, continue to<br />
ol the most satisfactory character.<br />
Vou have voted supplies for the biennial<br />
period largely in excess of the estimated<br />
revenue of the kincdom, but mv government.<br />
recognizing that your authorization is to a<br />
large extent permissive, win not mane expen-<br />
ditures beyond the receipt of current revenue,<br />
except for Immigration and important works<br />
Internal improvement.<br />
Nobles and Representatives : " On the<br />
occasion of separating to return to your homes, I<br />
trust thaL vou will, when amone vour consti<br />
tuents, invite them to strive conjointly with<br />
myself in the promotion of the peace, progress<br />
ami weuare 01 my Kingdom..<br />
I pray that the Almighty will have you in<br />
His holy keening.<br />
I now declare the legislative assembly of<br />
1SS4, prorogued.<br />
The La it liuy'i Work.<br />
On Saturday last, the enrollment commltee<br />
reported the following bills as signed by the<br />
king:<br />
An act to regulate proceedings in bank<br />
ruptcy.<br />
An act to indemnify the minister of fi<br />
nance.<br />
An act to regulate the practice in suits for<br />
the recovery of personal property.<br />
An act relating to the powers of sheriffs.<br />
An act to faciliate the acquiring and settle<br />
ment of homesteads.<br />
An act to amend section 11 37 of the Civil<br />
Code, relating to costs In civil cases.<br />
An act to amend the act to regulate the<br />
sale of spirituous liquors.<br />
An act forbidding the organizing or assem<br />
bling of unlawful secret societies.<br />
An act to establish the Hawaiian Postal<br />
Savings Bank.<br />
An act to amend section 1280 of the Civil<br />
Code, relating to costs of court.<br />
Ad act authoriziaR the minister of the interior<br />
purchase lands on Molokai.<br />
An act appointing a deputy and second<br />
deputy clerk to the supreme court and defin-<br />
ing their duties.<br />
An act lo regulate the pay of laborers serv<br />
ing under contracts.<br />
An act fixing the compensation of pilots for<br />
the port of Honolulu.<br />
An act to regulate the remission and col<br />
lrction of tuition fees In public schools.<br />
An act to amend section 8, chapter 79, of<br />
the Penal Code relating to the registry of births,<br />
marriages and deaths.<br />
An act granting permission for a steam<br />
railway on Ihe Island of Oahu.<br />
An act regulating the issue ol patents.<br />
An act granting to W, R. Austin and<br />
a franchise for a stieet railway in the<br />
ciiy of Honolulu.<br />
An act to encourage the production of ra-<br />
mie and other fibrous substances<br />
The same committee also reported that his<br />
mijesty had wlthcld his signature from the<br />
following bills 1<br />
A bill to consolidate and amend the law<br />
relating to commissioners of private ways<br />
and water rights.<br />
A bill to amend sections 38 and $3 of chap-<br />
ter 4$ of Session Laws of 1 88a relating to<br />
tucs.<br />
A bill to suppress lotteries and other games of<br />
chance.<br />
A bill to amend sections 56 and 59 of Ihe<br />
Civil Code, relating to licenses.<br />
A bill to amend section 18 of chapter 5 of<br />
the Civil Code relating to the carrying of<br />
passengers between the islands.<br />
A bill to prevenl.tht roaming at night, of<br />
minor children In the streets of Honolulu.<br />
A bill lo repeal sections 6, 7 and 8, of<br />
chapter jo, Laws of 1878, relating to the<br />
carrying of passengers between the Islands.<br />
A bill to create a board of prison Inspectors.<br />
A bill to abolish th Intermediary court of<br />
the Island of Oahu.<br />
A friend noticing what yesterday'. Guide<br />
aald of Mr. R. W, Laiaa's old copy of lha<br />
Hallowell Guettc, loJcxrM tht Press that .Mr.<br />
John Paly has a copy of th Ulster Couoty<br />
Catena for January 4th, I Sax II la t four.<br />
page paper, its pagea ease eclutan let than the<br />
Guide peg 4 about m long. Tbe paper<br />
aria yelleib oriftaally, end Is do yallow-- ,<br />
brown Uh age. It coatalm aa eeceual ot<br />
live death aad battel Mnleie al Waabingteei,<br />
ai Met) poee la bi beset.<br />
r<br />
or n.; nr.ir.irr.<br />
I .iitriitl Xmitlrnt itriilrytn n Shnri.<br />
I.<br />
Tl-N- t On barJeftkt Artlhuta."<br />
Come, all ye jolly Hessians bold,<br />
Whose hearts are cast In a free lance mold,<br />
Hawaiian glory I unfold,<br />
Huzza to the KIpikona I ?<br />
The dear old tub is a free lance brave<br />
As ever stemm'd Ihe dashing wave,<br />
Her men are staunch- -In<br />
gullet and paunch<br />
And when the grab gong sounds, ah, then<br />
Come sec the valiant trencher men<br />
On board of the Kipikona I<br />
II.<br />
Tl'.Nt" Yht Minult Gun at Sta."<br />
When, on Oshu's coral shore,<br />
The bilious Kona maketh roar,<br />
To fret the placid lea, m<br />
We mark our war ship's dusky form,<br />
And hear, above ihe howling storm.<br />
The minute, gun at sea.<br />
And oh 1 what rapture fills each heart<br />
To know that Neptune's fiercest dart<br />
May never harm our pride.<br />
Because in Hades, long ago,<br />
Lame Vulcan forgrd, for weal or woe,<br />
The armor on lis side.<br />
III.<br />
TUNE" IV Mariners cf Engtjiut," '<br />
Ve mariner Hawaiians,<br />
That guard our native seas,<br />
Whose flag has braved so many )ears<br />
The battle and the breeze 1<br />
Vcur glorious standard flaunt again<br />
To taunt another foe.<br />
The traitorous opposition,<br />
Stately and grim nnd slow, aaynf<br />
Comes forth to do us battle.<br />
Comes forth to work us woe.<br />
The spirit of your leaders<br />
Should breathe from every plank ;<br />
This white deck was their field of famej<br />
Here stood, tn serried rank,<br />
Convivial contractors,<br />
Bridge builders and their ilk 1<br />
Contented sinecurists.<br />
Their manners fine as silk j<br />
And honey-voice- place hunters,<br />
With records white as milk.<br />
The flag of Kipikona<br />
Is floating at the fare<br />
The free lance flag of public loot<br />
Salute It, Jads, once more.<br />
" For King and Constitution "<br />
The traitors dare to fly.<br />
Our guns are double-shotte- j<br />
Hurl back the dastard He,<br />
In flame and smoke and leaden hall;<br />
" Loot, loot I" our battle cry.<br />
IV.<br />
Tune" The Battle efthe Baltic.'"<br />
Ninety-si- days we fought<br />
Each day fought hand to hand.<br />
And the lesson we have taught<br />
Belongs to all the land, a<br />
And this the lesson true :<br />
Maik well, nor fail its ken,<br />
" One pirate crew<br />
Is a match for more than two<br />
Of honest men I"<br />
V.<br />
TUNE" The Pirate's Reflection."<br />
Kipikona is my name,<br />
Peerless " primacy " gave me fame<br />
Aha ha ah whal sound is that ?<br />
Is ii the cat the cat ?<br />
I hear It whistle down the wind,<br />
It can't be very tit behind I<br />
I hear can it be but the wind ?<br />
I wish that Eve had never sinned 1<br />
Had never marked the rosy dapple<br />
Upon that golden Eden apple ;<br />
Had never stooped, so frailly fair,<br />
To bless the man and damn the pair.<br />
For had she not I might have been<br />
A little cherub without sin.<br />
I might have been, I might have been<br />
Outside this harsh world's horrid din,<br />
A little cherub, plumply fair,<br />
Withnild blue eyes and flaxen hair,<br />
And lily brow and rosy cheek,<br />
And dimpled mouth most sweetly meek.<br />
And yet, and yet I might have been<br />
So apt am I to spy out sin<br />
I might have been lhat special cur<br />
Who biles the heel of Lucifer.<br />
VI.<br />
Tune" The fognc's March."<br />
Bag and baggsge he drums them out,<br />
The lean and the lank and the stout.<br />
John and Walter and Charley and Paul,<br />
Satan watch tenderly over them all I<br />
For full on each bulging brow<br />
Their master has branded " Pau."<br />
MORAL I<br />
'Tis a long, long lane that knows no turning;<br />
TL a mighty big log that's never done burning;<br />
But he laughs beat who laughs the last,<br />
When the fight is won and the peril is past<br />
"Johv Thanks."<br />
Honolulu, Scplcrulier 6, 1884.<br />
Mom, Remknyi t<br />
The undersigned officers of the "Strangers<br />
rriend Society," desire to express to you, and<br />
tbe members of your company, in behalf of the<br />
Society, our grateful acknowledgements and<br />
sincere thanks for the liberal aid you have<br />
given us, by placing the entire avails of your<br />
last grand concert in our treasury, for the<br />
of sick and destitute strangers.<br />
ve cats,, poorly express in words, the great<br />
pleasure, wc In common, with this whole<br />
community, have enjoyed, in listening to the<br />
rare and exquisite music you hate given us, on<br />
every evening of your conceits. This, together<br />
with the agreeable intercourse we have en<br />
joyed with you socially, would have ensured<br />
for you our lasting remembrance, but you have<br />
added the crowning act to your beautiful ser-<br />
vice, by this graceful and generous gift to the<br />
poor and sick it rangers,, or whose car and<br />
comfort this society Is pledged.<br />
May the memory of it add a pleasnre lo your<br />
own reminiscences of your brief stay tn Hono-<br />
lulu as it surely will to ours.<br />
ElRNtCE R. Bishop,<br />
1'AUUNE McGmW,<br />
Mrs. L. Smith,<br />
Alicc Mackintosh,<br />
Mrs. ScRi.s-- Bisuor,<br />
Officers of the "Strangers Filend Society."<br />
RESUNVI ALOHA.<br />
Rettenyi's farewell concert, last evenlnc,<br />
for the benefit of the Stranger's Friend Society,<br />
scored another triumph for this master violinist,<br />
He played throughout In excellent spirit and<br />
took the prolonged demands for encores very<br />
good naiurcdly. Ills accompanyist Mr, Luck-ston-<br />
as wcli as Miss Downing and Mr. Him-me- r<br />
I'quitled themselves creditably also. All<br />
were recipients of numerous floral tokens of<br />
appreciation. The attendance was not ao<br />
Urge as it should have been, though all tbe<br />
lower part of the house waa full. The gallery<br />
was spatsely occupied, while the absence of<br />
tbe noisy, hoodlum element In the tear, al<br />
lowed the audience the thorough enjoyment of<br />
a full and varied programme without distrac-<br />
tion.<br />
Neiat ! MmMui.<br />
iy the steamer Llkcllke, the Frew teavna<br />
tUt Ml, M.,E. Xewtoa, Custom booae guard<br />
and inspector at Xaaultl, Maul, iammkui<br />
suicide oa Wedoeeday ftnaooon leer, by abet<br />
laghttntelflo (belief arlsiiApietel Al (naan<br />
waa bald ca tbe b4 by h4if CvateM,' m<br />
takat -- - "-- tJ ik MahS dtfaJT. kill ' MA<br />
gasajlgba)<br />
laetory was obtained as ta th,;<br />
causes which led him to commit the act,<br />
though the evidence showed tliat his mind<br />
was unbalanced, and thai he was partially In-<br />
sane, He was from Marlboro, Mass., 41 jcara<br />
of age, had resided on these islands ome fif-<br />
teen vrrui, was married, and leaves a wife and<br />
three children. Those who knew him, slate<br />
lhat he was a quiet,; modest and (empeiate<br />
man and greatly devoted to his family, who<br />
deeply mourtThii sad death.<br />
DIED.<br />
McCARTNUV. In this city, Sept. a, David<br />
McCartney, Jr., nged abjut 27 years.<br />
!.' JUtihorttt.<br />
COUXCTOR llointi-LV-<br />
, Sept, r, lllf<br />
Mr. H. R. HriDnrUir-ilinrd'il- it poiillenof<br />
cf Cuttftmi for tlia Port of Honolulu.<br />
W r ALLEN, Collectot-Ganera-<br />
tla<br />
cflctD bUcvtbcmcntB.<br />
TVR. N. FOLDI,<br />
MESSRS. HOFFNUNG & CO.,<br />
Of Sydner, N. S. W.<br />
Has Arrived with a SpleadiJ Assortment of<br />
CHRISTMAS GOODS,<br />
SADDLERY and<br />
GENU MERCHANDISE.<br />
ALSO<br />
Diamonds, Watches and Jewelry<br />
AND will, orai at ,<br />
.vn. loyy, ronr STitnr.T, ftrr htjius),<br />
Rooms fotmrly occupied by lha Honolulu Library<br />
anj Reading Room<br />
atc-- at<br />
hippmg.<br />
PLANTERS' LINK<br />
TOR SAN FRANCISCO.<br />
0. unr.nnii .t cajtrAxr, Aatnt:<br />
Merchandise received Storage Free, and libaraJ cash<br />
advances made on slilprnpnti by tl.ls line.<br />
'<br />
LDER'S STEAMSHIP CO'S<br />
W1<br />
ROUTE AND TIME TABLE<br />
Till! K1SAV<br />
Kins Commander<br />
Leaves avery Tuesday at 4 t. St., for Lahalna, Maa.<br />
laea, Mlltena, Mahukona, Kawalhae, 'Laupahoclioe<br />
and Hilo. Leaves Hllo IT.uridiji, tombing at the<br />
same ports on rtturn, arrivira back Saturdays iitr.N<br />
tin; LiKr.LiKK.<br />
LORBNZCN. Commands.<br />
Leaves Mondlvs at 3 r. M. for Kaunalcakal, Kabu<br />
lut, Keanae, Hueb, liana, Klpahulu and Nuu. Re<br />
turning will stop al the above potts arriving back Satur.<br />
day mornings.<br />
-- f or malls and patstngtrs only.<br />
TltK LEIIVA.<br />
WllSOARTH.. COMMANOSR<br />
Leaves Mondays al 5 r. M. for Taauhau, Kontlalek,<br />
OokiU, Kuktlau, Honohina. Lupahoehoe, Hakalau<br />
and Onotnea. Returning; will arrive back each Satur-<br />
day.<br />
TUB Kit. A OB A HOP.<br />
McDonald Command<br />
Wi'l teava each Wednesday for uma ports aslht Uhua.<br />
. TUKlIOKOLtl.<br />
.cOCO,...<br />
CoMMANDa<br />
Leaves each Wednesday br Kiunakakal Kamttoo,<br />
Pukoo, Moanui, HaUwa. WVJau, Piltkumi end<br />
returning each Monday evening!<br />
--<br />
piME TABLE OF STEAMERS<br />
OF THE<br />
INTER-ISLAN- D STEAM NAVIGA-<br />
TION COMPANY.<br />
Steamer Planter, ,;<br />
Dates. -- .i... Commander<br />
Will run regulatly for KONA and KAU,<br />
Leaves Honolulu at 4 P. M.t<br />
Tuliy., July Tuesday., ..Scpl<br />
rridety.t Aug 1 Friday,. r<br />
Tuesday ij TuevUy., I<br />
Friday<br />
M<br />
at<br />
Returning:. Touching at MaJa<br />
Tuesday . ...July Tuesday ..Scut<br />
r riday, , .. .. Artuuit & Friday...<br />
Tuesday ig Tueiday.<br />
Friday. 9<br />
SfejfTMter Iwalani,<br />
Cameron, commandt r, leaves Honolulu every Tuet<br />
day at s. p n. (or Nawillwili, Koloa, bleele, and<br />
Kauai. Returning leaves NawilitvUl every<br />
Saturday evening.<br />
Steamer iTamea Sfakee,<br />
Freeman, commander. leave, Honolulu everv Ttmrt- -<br />
day. at 3 p.m. for kapaa and Kilauea. Return<br />
in leaves Nauat avers .Monday at 4 p.m., and touch<br />
n at Walanaa both vavs.<br />
Steamer C, It, Bishop,<br />
Davis, commander, leaves Honolulu evenrTuevJav<br />
ar 4 r.M. for Kukulhale. Honokaa, al Re-<br />
turning arrives at Honolulu every Sunday rooming<br />
CTOHItE or the Company. Tool of KUijca<br />
Street, rear the r M. S. S. Wharf.<br />
.,.<br />
PACIFIC MAIL STEAMSHIP COMPANY.<br />
FOR SAM FRANCISCO.<br />
The Splendid Steamship<br />
will Icave'Honi lulu for San Francisco<br />
G1TY OF SYpXEl'<br />
Dearborn.<br />
Oa or about.. .ae.pt. 8<br />
OK SYDNBY Via AUCKLAND.<br />
F - ..<br />
Taa Style adM Siaamahip v<br />
AUSTJRAZIA,<br />
Oaovkhemt IcFteHssto 6<br />
Chert,, . CommaoJei<br />
i<br />
The atrentt here are now Bienare-- t ,a ntue tLkefa ta<br />
San (rtneisco and retui a for In;, the round trip.<br />
Goods for shlpaseni per steamer can now Ve novel. .<br />
fret of charge, In tht firt proof warthouM Mat the '<br />
utauier wharf. j<br />
For freight cr passage, apply so I<br />
T H. HACKreLO as Ca, Aitals.<br />
B EAVER SALOON,<br />
II. J. yOLTC PROFRIITOR.<br />
(eft ta aanouac ta Us friends and the puMU U (tn<br />
er-"f- lha aVav Saloon provides<br />
rirt-C- Ua<br />
Fro j a. u., tOl tt r, M<br />
Tea beat<br />
"aeW<br />
Wert,FI,vee<br />
4<br />
eaCatefe SeaVtaa<br />
cevvTAMtsv eat suns.<br />
Oae af rVasa lak ts lekVe'i aalaeteaai<br />
aw<br />
It eeaatcsW Ua k S'iayel?s4lte<br />
THaCASMf.<br />
at lUriasiai Faass<br />
a Jef aeee tJaSf, .tBvaaVBBBjeaa aaaVaebadai<br />
aftiiaaatmattMi<br />
aa. f. IfeafTC, jrtetajeeBf.<br />
"5 '.. -- ( ,<br />
General<br />
O BREWER A CO.<br />
Offtr for Sal the carfo of tVe Wit<br />
"MAtintA, BIris,"<br />
i ' --'<br />
Jmt arrlTtd, thi followfna tut of Mifthandlia t<br />
, f<br />
i<br />
'<br />
'<br />
Ox Carln,<br />
.<br />
'":'f$.<br />
Extrntlon Tip Carrlngt<br />
Snam Coal,<br />
CmHbrfamt Con,<br />
"' , J.,<br />
KKHOSEXX till.,<br />
Curamoa Wood Ch'ui<br />
Matcher.<br />
-<br />
VA 5r(n Barrel ShooVs.<br />
remix;'' it<br />
x<br />
- '. ' Sosp,<br />
let Caeiit, Not. t, ), and 1.<br />
Hoe Itindlae.<br />
Lobittri, Tina,<br />
Boars, lb. Tint,<br />
S nice Plankl,<br />
Hay Cutlers, N'oi. t, and 1.<br />
ja AaliGteaM, - i<br />
riitilankt' Seal ft, So: ?,$, W, It, ltl.9,<br />
,<br />
Iithtr DeUInf,<br />
'<br />
Cntrifual Ltnta(i, 14 tnchw<br />
n Nails i Inch wxl H nch<br />
Mammoth Rockers,<br />
Haiti Exeattloe,<br />
t- . tK<br />
Manila Cordaft, Ataocted,<br />
.t) Escaltlor Mutraaa-- l,<br />
Oalv. Feoc Staplat,<br />
vl<br />
Farraar's Bottert, ta and as Coda<br />
Siul Rope, Assorted<br />
Ash l'lanlts, .<br />
Dump Harrows,<br />
Ames' Shovels, Jjjp- , '<br />
Xtllotv Metal ShHithlng,<br />
Hair Mattresus,<br />
' t<br />
'Si.<br />
Grind stones.<br />
Rubber Hose,<br />
Hide Potvon; v<br />
IU,bW&VJM<br />
- :,;<br />
Refined Iron, .<br />
" ,' .5<br />
Annealed Fw Wirt<br />
...- -<br />
Cl. Screw, and Wa.ba<br />
.o '<br />
be, c.', ..e." '<br />
T1"<br />
ILLINGHAM-- CO. .<br />
D<br />
Hawjuat rtccivtd sw<br />
Iarrolo of Ncnr naA De-tlra- Good<br />
Sulud to flu want of thli<br />
compmmf<br />
VuUdtr nardutanf<br />
JejcAflNiV ToqU,<br />
and ft food line-<br />
AGRICULTTJRAI. IMPLEM ENT8<br />
Wt would call ihe special atwntlo--<br />
of riantcii to our<br />
Patent DoubU Motittl Hoard Pftw,<br />
which has Uen lha bm of<br />
the kind everutod In this country.<br />
We have ftUo teoe.vad a<br />
Mff lol Of tht<br />
DILLINGHAM BREAK I NO PLOWS,<br />
10, it, 14 tn,, which era living perfect<br />
taiufactlon whtrtTtr they<br />
re UVJ<br />
DKXAjtn rxcMtEAaixa.<br />
Tlit end. Mi variety of foods which<br />
we art now cootuntljr re<br />
eel ring are nowbelm<br />
OPENED TOR INSPECTION AND SALE<br />
AT THE eLOWESTiPRICE.<br />
D.Ultkm Co<br />
&7<br />
tjM. a. -<br />
HUSTACBV ffrav'<br />
'<br />
j<br />
.' .<br />
Has Just received per Matiiwta and other lata arrivals!<br />
Viukr Star llam, tirtakfast Cacon, CaKrorota<br />
Cream Cheatr, Fairh. n't's Laid, Table Fruits, Me<br />
Frutu, CronMrry buc. Anaear Sauet, Salad<br />
Dressing. Jams and JalltBt, OUv<br />
OJ, Comtt and Oolong at, s Boxes;<br />
r.nlii)i Breaklau lee, 5 lioaea 1<br />
Japan 'lea. Honed Chkken<br />
and Turkey, Curried<br />
Fov,l,(lrollcdChKkca<br />
Koast Chicken,<br />
Crushed Indian<br />
Meal, American<br />
Orcaafaet Canals,<br />
White Oats and Wheal,<br />
Buck sheas Flour aad Maple<br />
Syrup, Graham Flour. Oar Meal,<br />
Cora Meal. Wheal.. (Son, Darter.<br />
Potatoes, CU, rowdeiej and Crann<br />
kued Sugar, Freeh Soicea, Fish Chawuer,<br />
Clam Chowder, Atinores Mince Man, falaca<br />
KarstaM Oil, Crackers ot all kiods, fee., ex., at, tcl<br />
Freaea OressaA CtaW erreary amBkr<br />
X<br />
,LBAVZ YOUR ORDIM,, OR , RING UP<br />
sataneoeia sto.ua.?<br />
m GOODS DtUVtRip TO ANY<br />
PART OF TMS CITY." FUMS OF<br />
CsVARGS. , - , '<br />
C. MVMTACB,<br />
T' HI MMUINa'AeUtCLS-- -<br />
COIVMSU MYX eVAlMOM<br />
hm<br />
' '"" - i<br />
&<br />
Peak<br />
,r if- -<br />
P<br />
ai<br />
m<br />
J<br />
, '1<br />
c.<br />
er- . '<br />
A'<br />
Ai- - S<br />
VmiY i,rijuii T91<br />
CiaJSJUa<br />
ajMStoaeeM<br />
.V"<br />
1H<br />
1<br />
H<br />
& ,W- -<br />
'<br />
fc'l<br />
i P ". '<br />
h i<br />
W fe --<br />
r!J 4r f K<br />
-- ;
f<br />
u<br />
VeV<br />
IV<br />
I<br />
!<br />
1<br />
i<br />
"<br />
X.<br />
I<br />
1<br />
A<br />
I i<br />
1 ifP<br />
i<br />
it f '<br />
IK<br />
V<br />
vturday press<br />
Pnbltettlon orne. al it Merchant ttrMti Hd..,'1,nk "e ,r'<br />
torlal a.auai ask ly) Fort treat.<br />
Subscribers and Advertisers will please address,<br />
TI10S 0. THRUM, Publisher nd Proprietor.<br />
All matter for the Saturday Prrtt should be<br />
addressed to the " SATURDAY PRESS."<br />
Notlctofany event! of Interett transpiring on<br />
Ike other islandt will alvay t be the nktntljr received<br />
Tor publication. Correspondents art requested to<br />
apprrrj their true names lo ell communications,<br />
not for publication necessarily1, but at a guarantee<br />
thet the writer ictlnar In Hood tilth.<br />
SATURDAY SEPTEMBER 6, ia<br />
Our Honolulu Ltttcr.<br />
t expect to gel myself disliked forth., letter,<br />
but, a, I am writing for money and n,l for<br />
love, I don t know that It mat, any difer- -<br />
eice-'a- m.. Ihavebcen in a dreary II<br />
humr ever since the boyi quit ptajing base.<br />
t.. II en.1 !&. i.lk.i ,lt.l .!,,& .,l. .!.<br />
w.i., -- i... "- - .!: iiuucu u v't. ximj<br />
w'.enmeofthe oth,er se-t- who wrifes for<br />
me love oi me ming anu mi a avsciicu<br />
from turning off.ee door knobs, stopped me on<br />
the ttteet coiner, and, with one of those I'm<br />
learning giht said, "What'l<br />
yu fellows do now that the legislature has<br />
and the base ball season is over<br />
I gently disengaged him, and told him<br />
whenever he felt that way he hid better gx<br />
home and write up a sunset description ; and<br />
I further aisuie 1 him that 1 had great confi<br />
dence In the prescription as came froi<br />
on<br />
Insult hit mother tongue. He hive<br />
before his eyet the fear of thst pitiless critic,<br />
Ambrose Uicrce. l'erhaps he thinks he may<br />
write as he pleases here none be the<br />
wiser,<br />
Fi,(ie, O rubicund pow<br />
Nv',nr, iir; not We know ii I<br />
Perhaps, when all said, verses,<br />
rhymes and all, maybe forgiven for their<br />
cult meaning. It Is darkly hinted that the<br />
fluffy owl of Bohemia may "loaf" here not<br />
longer than a )eair. If the mullet ponds that<br />
know now know him no more<br />
i<br />
the poetic precincts of the Titer ofhee where<br />
It was used whenever the repotfers or "finest<br />
editorial staff" feljJown hearted and sad. 1<br />
am utterly sick of seeing avetage Honolulan<br />
tush into print, tiling ;sery public event ni<br />
newspaper editorial as a pretext to get his name j<br />
before the pnbllc. There are tome people who<br />
think we hae too many newspapers here but il<br />
they could only see the amount of ripe,<br />
Mis. going to seed In the waste<br />
basket of our Honolulu editorial rooms well, .<br />
the chances are that the first question!<br />
that would present itself would be, "'Wli) '<br />
doesn't somebody start a paper mill ?',<br />
Speaking of nusiinccs, I don't believe<br />
mortal ever saw a town the sire of Honolulu<br />
'with is many of them to the square mile. I<br />
saunteied up to Emma Square the othei<br />
evening tiled to listen to Mr. Bcrgei'i<br />
boys while they played tome ill their new<br />
music I dropped Into a seat near i thing<br />
with spectacles on, who sat between two girls;<br />
but I was soon driven to a remote bench,<br />
where I again caught the icund of big<br />
dium above social babel. I had only been<br />
seated long enough to light a manilla cigar,<br />
which the editor inadvertently left on his<br />
tabic, when a lot of Kanaka boyi and girh<br />
commenced a racket that drowned the musk<br />
amused a Tat policeman who xvas on duti<br />
until he leaned against a tree to laugh. " 1<br />
will flee to the uttcimot end of the earth<br />
I become a prdfane man Oi a criminal,"<br />
thought I, and I stumbled over a stray dog at<br />
I staggered blindly toward turnstile which<br />
added Its dissonance to my confusion. I w.i<br />
awakened from my bewilderment by tin<br />
laughter and oaths of a crowd of the pnui<br />
hoodlum who stood round the Emma ttreet<br />
entrance and disturbed esery body seated in<br />
that end ofthe square with ribald jut, or<br />
with open Insinuations about lespectablc<br />
people both in and out of the enclosure. There<br />
is still another kind of concert disturber known<br />
as the amateur musician) he Is generally in<br />
company with some of his ft lends who assist<br />
him. In whistling the airs through with the<br />
band. Thit nuisance should be treated in a<br />
summary manner and driven out of the garden<br />
with a Huffed club, to learn the manners he<br />
was never taught at home.<br />
Thcie ate two nuisances In town which<br />
rank side by side in pure cutsedness, although<br />
they arc totally unlike in kind : they are the<br />
side walks and hicktnen. Both seem<br />
filled with the deepest malignity against the<br />
wayfarer, until the fight for existence has be-<br />
come a one wherein the curb-<br />
stones and hickmen seem to have a decided<br />
advantage. If the government could only be<br />
enticed out for a walk tome night it would be<br />
moie than likely the citiicns of Honolulu<br />
would have the pleasure of taking it home on<br />
a shutter, to be bandaged up by Mr- - Fitch ;<br />
but alas I the government never risks scraping<br />
Its pedal polish against Its highway Improve<br />
mend, and, being in league with Mr. SprecV<br />
tit' dollar, It prcfert to ride. I have made out<br />
a good long black list of the iccktess and im<br />
"pudenl Jehns who base of late been running<br />
streets about as they liked, and If they<br />
don't stop it the public be informed as to<br />
their numbeis and stands. Befoic I am<br />
through growling, I might as wtll call th<br />
attention of watering catt dilvers to the<br />
fact that it It quite unnecessary to flood the<br />
"iidt walkt and along Hotel<br />
and Fort s'uccti with water, as there Is no<br />
contract made with them for tolling ladies'<br />
dresses and drenching genllcmens' legs.<br />
,., A gossip, gentle reader, Is a thing without a<br />
nut, that talks incessantly, and never tells the<br />
whole truth, but nurses the lie In an Innuendo.<br />
In olden times It was supposed that gossips<br />
were of the feminine gender, but with modern<br />
Srllitatton the definition has been extended to<br />
and of late years, since the<br />
advent of the dude, hat been made to include<br />
the neuter gender at well. Most townt have<br />
'the Veiitable female gostlp society, but It has<br />
been left for Honolulu to font a combination<br />
of forces Into a character-destroyin- association,<br />
lor which, Ibluth to say, the masculine gossip<br />
gathen iV of " news. This news is filtered<br />
Uwwugh, VUie gall of feminine prejudice, and Is<br />
then given to the public in tugar-coate- doses,<br />
such as It it thought its self retpect aud In-<br />
herent tegard for tiuth will permit. One<br />
cause ofthli social slate ta the eaclutivcness of<br />
Ctrtaln cliques In society here. I have heard<br />
the reputation of young girls who are blameless<br />
, discussed in a manner that would sully char-<br />
acter, and all, fonooth I because they did not<br />
happen to belong to that social coteite which<br />
ot folks ate pleased to style " respectable<br />
aocuty, i uve seen somewhat of world,<br />
bat I have yet to learn that any clique has a<br />
lihl, upheld by justice and rtaton, to set Itself<br />
up a a itandud of respectability on the<br />
(rounds that It, perchance, may bold peculiar<br />
ltw upon which assumes our social and<br />
moral fabric ttstt. Let It U rerotmoeted that<br />
social respectability rests neither in sect nor<br />
patty, but In the ttciling moral qualities of<br />
aen and women I and that if thtit be grades<br />
in society they will always be mailed by the<br />
Intellectual developeaient of the community.<br />
Of all plagues which infest budded towns<br />
that of gossiping alone defies fumigation.<br />
Gossips cannot even be dealt with like other<br />
cilmluals, but ho'J their with<br />
itpulty ever totnt iiltaiiag bit of fitiltf,<br />
Wfa t)tl lightly will) tkett sorrowt that hang<br />
wlni ef scoiplonj ca tht fair breast of hopt.<br />
TMf aalislon It death to aUrtcttr and tepuu-tiM- ,<br />
m4 their lictue It dtsuucllon to<br />
MA wt I do cm bum to imply that HM- -<br />
tia (Ratify wn. I aUnly mm that<br />
mm f-- "M if 'daily all I km<br />
pyttfl m hmnk, wciel m,<br />
Wtmtik WaptrasWiksfcccafrtMaof far<br />
tjkgeatiftttt tfceJtMM tlstw. VfthaftfaU<br />
jjMiaMtaaf WM4teftbt a very fcs.<br />
jp ttWft tfctyeMf fc.<br />
There li one other nuisance I'd HVe to dlv<br />
It<br />
It<br />
It<br />
It<br />
sect. It is your verbal critic -- the fellow who<br />
hit tcrilibling inspiration ,<br />
frrt a "mire well of Saxon undcfiled"<br />
and renerally dravst it from a taro pond. Hut<br />
the inexorable city editor, tucking hit tswny<br />
beard, informt m: there ii no more space at<br />
my commandt to I bide my time. Selah.<br />
IpMA.<br />
Honolulu, September l, lKS<br />
onj. i)y ineitabtc death. At Pope sajt,<br />
ue wntn(, j, a ,i,ngernu, thing and yours<br />
, foMy dangerous classical authority, and<br />
triply 0 when It atlempU to compete with<br />
this practical 'work-a-da- life' when know-mlr-<br />
Ul.,i,m... v .... .i.. . .... .... r<br />
vt would<br />
and<br />
I<br />
If<br />
Is the bad<br />
Dan should<br />
the<br />
and<br />
the<br />
this<br />
had<br />
and<br />
the<br />
the<br />
the<br />
will<br />
the<br />
the<br />
the<br />
and<br />
Mr. Daniel O'Connellhat mien tome<br />
poetry and no end of more or less clever vcrte<br />
-- much of the latter being good verte in a j<br />
prosodical at well at a literary way. Much<br />
that I know of Mr. O'Connell't work lad<br />
He hat done a few things than fogi<br />
Moore neci, nol hlve bieri ,hlmeJ lo own,<br />
and a few that John Godfrey Sae In hit salad<br />
day,, woald lia revelled in doing. Hot I<br />
object to hit latest cmttlbutlon to Hawaiian j<br />
,erse-T- he Owl In the Tropics. Ills not<br />
.. . . . ..<br />
!.lt.. I. .1. - - .1 tfcf i<br />
rsijrciaiiy iciicuuus um inai asiue. vvnai i<br />
jSject to Is Its faulty Its unheard of rhyming<br />
wnert ons writes Poetry with a lug<br />
,ecatlonal Irregularities of rhythm, occasional<br />
faulty thymes, may be forgiven one. Not so<br />
when doing mere vcrte. The Owl In the<br />
Troolcs it written In seven elght.-vcrs- c stan-<br />
zas the seconJ and fourth, .the sixth and<br />
jighth lines, only, rhyming. Vet, of the four-<br />
teen ihym-- s employed four are" faulty "coeoa"<br />
and "aloht", "murmur" and "summer" be-<br />
ing the worst. Now if Mr. O'Connell were<br />
in San Tranciscohe would know better than<br />
forever there would be g'eat piscatorial re<br />
jjlcing.<br />
The Owl In the Tropics suggests Bohemia<br />
nd that reminds one that last thltd of July<br />
3t thereabouts there wax an Hawaiian jinks<br />
it which some of the most and some of the<br />
least Bohemian of the Bohemians wcie picsent;<br />
Paul Neummn, Major Bender, Dan O'Connell,<br />
Dave Nesfield, Joe Strong, Stns Forman,<br />
foe Tildeu, Judgs Divldsin and John Spreck-:l-<br />
Wlist they Slid and dIJ is part of the<br />
long, unwritten record of the guild. That<br />
witty things were said, there may be no<br />
reasonable doubt; that any of thcsiyings were<br />
profitxbly wise, one may doubt not so un-<br />
reasonably. But there may have been some<br />
good sound talk Indulged In, for<br />
that jinks was held before Mr. Nesfield put on<br />
moral sackcloth and mental ashes In the ser<br />
vice of that journal of vigorous profanity and<br />
feeble logic, the P. C. A.<br />
THE CHAUTAUQUA CIRCLE.<br />
'The C. L. S. C. of Honolulu his entered<br />
its second sear," said I to loma, " would you<br />
like to join ?"<br />
"What do tho.e cabalistic letters stand for 1"<br />
he enquired.<br />
" For the Chautauqua Literary and Scien-<br />
tific Circle "<br />
"Oh, j ou mean the Consolidated Literary<br />
Smattercr's Club," he interupted. " Not<br />
much !"<br />
"J don't understand ou," I replied, a<br />
trifle nettled.<br />
" Do you understand it Its scope, its<br />
significance, in tendency,? Do you realize<br />
how big it is on paper and how little in reality?<br />
Do you know that it tries to do an impossible<br />
thing to find a royal road to learning; to<br />
acquire knowledge homcnpathically and ab<br />
sorb culture by mental sponge bathing?<br />
" I know nothing of the tort," I antwered,<br />
indignantly, " I underttand very well what<br />
you are hitting at. You collrglatcs think<br />
yuurs arc the only gajewayt to the gardens of<br />
Parnassus. I think not. I believe in self-hel- p<br />
as much as Sam Smiles docs, I believe<br />
in individual cultuie. in<br />
"So do I," interrupted my Impetuous<br />
friend. " But you beg the question. I ob-<br />
ject to the Chautauquan merely because they<br />
assume to do what they do not, cannot do, to<br />
give to their desulatory play-stud- the effect of<br />
systematic class work. Why,. they even state<br />
In their prospectus that the course requires<br />
about forty minutes time a day for.the term of<br />
four years, and further state that this need not<br />
taki place every day although it Is a desirable<br />
way to carry on the work ? I am astonished<br />
Veral, continued he, "that a man of your<br />
paits should lend himself to defend such flimsy<br />
work. The petext of this society is the pro<br />
pagation and diffusion of knowledge, while<br />
its real object seems to be to extend the<br />
circulation of a inagatlne called the Chau-<br />
tauquan."<br />
" I admit," I replied, " that the course may<br />
be less exacting, less thorough, lest helpful if<br />
you will, than that of the liest universities.<br />
But in that consists its gieatest excellence. It<br />
is brought down to the level of the avenge<br />
oppottunity not necessarily, of the average<br />
Intelligence ami offers to tho average nun<br />
and women of this work-a-da- world, a<br />
chanco to learn in systematic conceit what<br />
they probibly never would In any other<br />
way. I call it a great help, a mighty stimulus<br />
reacting against the intellectual ineitia of the<br />
v<br />
masse-i.- "<br />
"My dear Ve:al," he leplied with a super,<br />
cellious giin "I am vciy willing to admit all<br />
you say, only this society claims to advance<br />
the conditiou of all grades of intellect it<br />
claims to b a 'college Tor one's own house a<br />
school for busy people and for people of leis-<br />
ure and wealth who do not known what to do<br />
with their time; for 'University men,' 'farmers<br />
boys,' 'ministers,' shop gills,' 'lawyers,' 'busy<br />
housekeepers,' 'physicians,' and last of alltdds<br />
Insult to Injury by stating It is for 'atdmfliikij<br />
ladies,' alinost Immediately setting forth its<br />
complete course of study, which proves to be<br />
at last a preparatory course which every fresh-<br />
man passes before entering college for. accom-<br />
plished ladies indeed I And mind sou while<br />
this society claims to be Its pub-<br />
lished course give the lie to Its statement."<br />
"But you surely rcccgnUe that study nf any<br />
sou Is better than none tt all. Probably less<br />
than one man In every thousand, the civilised<br />
world over, lias a univeislty education or any<br />
toit of systematic education, except in the<br />
of bit calling. The man or woman<br />
wno take a course even in a small iiegice at<br />
thorough at the Chautauqua coarse It thereby<br />
better fitted for advancement,<br />
"But the course proposed by this society It<br />
one lead by eyery Intelligent person, even<br />
though he be opposed to the principles sit<br />
foitb theiein. That it (its a person for ad<br />
vancement In teaming It lets true than that it<br />
prompts to reflection and investigation, by pla-<br />
cing before one the questions of theology<br />
aad tcleaec sthiek mutt be gone aver. Wore<br />
ttlrliogopisloMaMformed. "Btd,Mhe went<br />
m to say, 'itt tad U objectlttti for aay ftnoa<br />
belt ensWtUst wasNgb te undertake the<br />
eel. of V vw 4uilat will read far beyond<br />
the ll tew laid on bf iblt auciety, aad still<br />
it will taut<br />
bitted of ailed. Tkia eessrn tbgttld be tin- -<br />
whose work on 'The Human Intellect i one<br />
of the few books published by the church which<br />
it recanted by tcholatt, a authority, sayr lint<br />
.education, and especially In mental and moral<br />
science, can only be rained by "constant re- -<br />
petition." This society proposes lo pise Ren<br />
eral and comprehensive inttruction in their<br />
branches to all grades of intelligence, but alatl<br />
Veral, the dark Beyond cannot be falhomed.<br />
Ilelief it at best but a hope which it common<br />
to all humanity and faith it an idolatry defied<br />
, frae. w , foo, of a p,j,icai. bul<br />
that you, argumrnts are right you will never<br />
'c if o,ey are reduced to sylcslsms."<br />
' I grant you that the ri, not going to<br />
i mne,rtx , . ,,,.. rnllr nf ,,,,<br />
'<br />
The proportion of cholrs to the grand aggre<br />
gate of humanity always has been and probably<br />
always will be small, I grant you all that, yet I'<br />
believe In the society and for these reasons I<br />
"Firtt Many persons are mildly ambitious<br />
to know more, yet, from lack of mental alertness<br />
or became they arc not surrounded by an at-<br />
mosphere cnlcu'ated to properly direct this<br />
desire, fail to mike the effort "r else follow an<br />
erratic course that does them no good. Such<br />
find In Ihe Chautauqua course a help, because<br />
at Uast a definite course of study is prepated<br />
for them.<br />
"StepiiJ The meie fact lliat success in Ihe<br />
Chautauqua course necessitates persistent daily<br />
work docs much to form the habit of systemstic<br />
study which, to most students, is inseparable<br />
from success. The man or woman who can<br />
wrest from the exacting routine of the<br />
averjge daily life forty minutes for study, is far<br />
more likely to make profitable otherwise idle<br />
or profitless time the time that Is too gene<br />
rally 'frittered' away than if the forty minutes<br />
study had never been attempted. In this age,<br />
as in every age, no matter whd may plan the<br />
campaign, It is the rank and file who must do<br />
the fighting. Here and there, now and then,<br />
some great scholar gives the world a new idea,<br />
or unearths from the debris of a<br />
past some old Idea that ought never to have<br />
been buried. To the average Intelligence Ihe<br />
new idea and the old alike, are part of a<br />
scaled book that might as well have been<br />
written in the cuniform writing of Assvria.<br />
There must be translation, adaptation, simpli-<br />
fication before a great discovery is understood<br />
of mankind. It Is truth that the world needs<br />
No roy hand maid, th<br />
Hut quen of queens'<br />
and I hold that even so poor a course as you<br />
make out the Chautauquan to be helps its stu<br />
dents not only to seek truth but to know her<br />
likeness when found. And is the mighty stimu-<br />
lus of united effort nothing ? Think of twenty<br />
thousand Chautauquans studjing the same<br />
historic epoch, or think of it, loma sipping<br />
together the nectar from your own sonnets "<br />
Alack 1 the taffy had been lavished<br />
vainly. I saw by the gentle vibration of his<br />
chin that loma was asleep. I left him so if--<br />
not convinced at least silenced.<br />
S. E. Vkral.<br />
Honolulu, Septembers, 1SS.1.<br />
Cnrreapntulcuce .Vcile I'rom Other Inland.<br />
Rev. D. B. Lyman of Hllo, continues to<br />
improve, gaining gradually.<br />
A small native boy fell from a horse last<br />
Saturday week, at Kohala, striking on his<br />
elbow, and breaking the upper part of the<br />
arm.<br />
Steam communication along the windward<br />
coast of Hawaii seems to be over abundant.<br />
The other week Laupahoehoe was favored<br />
with three steamers in one evening. One was<br />
bound ilown lh, coast with two psckar.es for<br />
a way port, and another up with a couple of<br />
bags of potatoes.<br />
Operations are soon to be commenced on<br />
the extension of the Hllo Telephone line<br />
through Hamakua to Kawalhie. The Inten-<br />
tion is to locate a central pflice at Laupahoe-<br />
hoe, and another at Honolaa, transfening<br />
through messages at these points.<br />
The recent trip of the Portuguese Consul<br />
and the agent of the board of immigration<br />
seems to have produced general satisfac-<br />
tion throughout the windward coast of<br />
Hawaii. The worthy gentlemen patiently<br />
heard a great variety of complaints mainly of<br />
a trifling nature, arising out of some slight<br />
misunderstanding, or some ignorance of the<br />
contracts, and, by their wic and prudent<br />
suggestions to both panics interested, settles)<br />
most of the difficulties most amicably. Such<br />
a practical method of settling any vexed ques-<br />
tions between employer and employee con-men-<br />
itself as vastly wiser than the fire-<br />
brand proclamation of a negligent min-<br />
ister.<br />
President Fairchild arrived at Hllo August<br />
21st. Was the guest of Rev. W. B. Oleson,<br />
a graduate of Oberlin. On the eve of the<br />
day on which he arrived a meeting was held<br />
at the house of Rev. V. B. Oleson, on Friday<br />
22nd, a dinner party was given to Rev. Mr.<br />
Fairchild and Mr. and Mis. Crutan at the<br />
house of C. S. Kittredge. On Sunday morn<br />
ing Mr. Fairchild preached at the Foreign<br />
Church, and In the evening Mr. Crutan<br />
preached. An unusually large audience was<br />
present on each occasion, On Monday the<br />
25th ultimo, Mr. Fairchild and Mr. Cruean<br />
and wife, Mr. W. U. Oleson, Mi. W. A.<br />
Bowcn, and Mr. E. N. Dyer started for Kill.<br />
uea and returned on Wednesday the 27th.<br />
The new library is now open for tisitoit.<br />
the reading room being already in use; but<br />
the classification of books is not yet complete<br />
and no books will be issued until It is com<br />
plete. Secretary Kodgert and the new libra-ta-<br />
Miss Saddle Clark, arc busily at woik<br />
bringing literal ordci out of literary chaos. An<br />
agreeable change for the better it to go Into<br />
effect with the new classification. The dismal<br />
bio 11 andjtraw. color paper coven are to be<br />
removed, and vach book will display<br />
tome or ugly, smooth-feature- or battle-scare-<br />
binding. Exceptions to this good rule will be<br />
made of those books only which are bound<br />
in colors that fade unpleasantly 01 are attract-<br />
ive to the moth that corrupts and the roach<br />
that breaks Ip to gnaw. At present the library's<br />
great strength is theology and its special<br />
wcakneu, science. Bound periodicals are<br />
wtll represented, travel! and Juvenile literature<br />
especially so and fiction iu the van. A care-fu- j<br />
description of the letting of the rooms will<br />
be worth making when the classification It<br />
petftcted which, it may be remarked in pasting,<br />
could not be In more efficient hands than those<br />
of Secretary Rodgtrs, with whom the wpik<br />
Is a labor of love.<br />
wilt be the first Sunday la the<br />
fourth year of Mr. Oman's ptstorati of Fori<br />
Street Church. In the morning he, will preach<br />
to tnnlvtrtary discussion. In the evening the<br />
fiist of a setits of tcraioni on The Great SInt<br />
ol Honolulu will be given. Subject, Uceo<br />
ikwwett, or tbt Social EvIL<br />
During bit proprietorship of tht<br />
Captain Cluoie hat arretted and tent to<br />
Jell for freai oae to tea daji thlny rovght of<br />
various tut localities.<br />
The Mil Heiris brought a. 04 of lime<br />
itaaa WaMMt kmi uairy yenasday.<br />
rnu.vr.ncr.il. '<br />
Honolulu, September 6tli, 1SS4.<br />
The month opens quiet and free of any in-<br />
dications of business activity to speak o'. The<br />
movement of foreign vewelt ami coasters too,<br />
for that matter have been almost all outward<br />
for the week. With the excepti in of the cargo<br />
per Alameda, for San Frand'co, vatued at<br />
Ji5j.105.oS, the other vessels coast bound<br />
have relumed for lumber cargoes, In ballast.<br />
The Ceylon and Catallna, which were repotted<br />
at hand last week from Hong Kong, are both<br />
up for return. The Ceylon will probably get<br />
off on Tuesday next, Ihe gth Instant, while Ihe<br />
Catallna will go abmt a week later.<br />
The V, H. Dimonil and Eva are both up<br />
and loading for Sin Francisco, the former to<br />
tail and the latter about the<br />
middle nf next week.<br />
To-da- or the Australia will be<br />
due from San Francisco with dates to the<br />
30th or 31st ultimo, and full post office mall,<br />
On Monday the Slh instant, the Maripo a<br />
will be along with dales to the 1st ajid the full<br />
supplies for the news agencies, which the<br />
Pacific Mall line his ol late declined to bung<br />
down,<br />
The schooner Maloln of the Pacific Naviga<br />
tion Company's fleet, has been chartered this<br />
week by Mr. V. (Jretg and has sailed for<br />
Tanning's Island. It Is probable that she<br />
will toad at that Island for San Fiancisco, ere<br />
returning here. Negotiations had been pend-<br />
ing for Ihe schooner Emma, but owing to the<br />
nelay on her recent' Hllo trip, other arrange-<br />
ments were concluded.<br />
The mortgagee's sale of real estate, cattle,<br />
etc., announced for Monday last by Mr. Ii. P.<br />
Adams, was pnstmncd by order of the court.<br />
On Friday Mr. Adams wielded Ihe hammer<br />
himself, at his regular sate, and took as<br />
naturally thereto as a duck to water, notwith-<br />
standing the seven years, suspension fiom<br />
this peculiar CRlling he has been indulging in.<br />
Messrs. Lyons and Levey held an auction t<br />
sale on the 3rd Instant ot the btnkrupt stock<br />
ofC. M. Nordberg, at the Anchor Saloon.<br />
Other thin the above, the auction business of<br />
the rival Iiojscs have been confined to the<br />
the tegular room sales.<br />
On Wednesday, claims to Ihe amounl of<br />
$36,204,. Si were filed before Judge Mr. Cully<br />
against the bankrupt estate nf Hart Brothen.<br />
The bark C. O. Whit more arrived yester-<br />
day with a cart;o of lumber from the Sound,<br />
to Allen & Robinson.<br />
AitniyAt.t.<br />
Saturday, August 30.<br />
Tern Eva from .tn Francisco.<br />
Stmt Llkchkc from Kahului and way potts.<br />
Sell Walmalu from Koloa.<br />
Sell Ehukai from Waialua.<br />
Sch Llholiho from Walmea.<br />
Sell Catcrlna from Hanalel<br />
Sch Nettie Merrill fiom Lahains.<br />
Sch Kawailani ficm Koolau.<br />
Sell Kob Roy from Koolau.<br />
Sch Waiehu from Koolau.<br />
Stmr from Hawaii.<br />
Stmr Kmau from Maui and Hawaii.<br />
Sch M E Foster from Hanamaulu.<br />
Stmr Walmanalo from Waimanalo.<br />
Stmr Kilauca Hou from Hawaii,<br />
Sch Mans from Honumu.<br />
SUMiAY, August 31.<br />
Stmr Iwalani from Kauai.<br />
Sch Kapiohni from Waianae.<br />
Sch Leah! fiom Hawaii,<br />
lluleakala from Peprckeo.<br />
Brit S S Zealand la from the Colonies.<br />
Monday, September 1.<br />
Sch Kekauluohi from Hanatei<br />
Stmr. Mokolii from Molokai<br />
Wednesday, September 3<br />
Strnr. Jas. Makce from Kauai<br />
Thursday, September 4.<br />
Sch Emma from llilo<br />
Sch Mile Morris from Waimanalo<br />
Friday, September v<br />
Sch Manuokawai from Koolau<br />
Am bark C. O. Whitmore Irom Port Towntend,<br />
Schr Rainbow from Koolau.<br />
Sclrt ibl from HinalcJ.<br />
Schr Marion from Waianae<br />
Saturday, September C<br />
Stmr Likelike from Maul<br />
Schr Nettie Merrill from Lahalna<br />
Schr Ehukai from Waialua<br />
rtEt'.llCTUIlKS.<br />
Sunday, August 31.<br />
Brit S S Zealandia for San Francisco.<br />
Monday, September 1.<br />
Schr Rob Roy for Hanalei.<br />
Schr Waiehu for Koolau.<br />
Schr Ehukai for Wallua<br />
Schr Kawailani lor Koolau<br />
Schr Rainbow for Koolau<br />
Schr Waimalii for Koloa and Waimea<br />
Schr Waiole for liana<br />
Sch. Ka Moi, for Laupahoehoe.<br />
Am. S. S. Alameda, for San Francisco.<br />
Stmr. Likelike, for Hana and way ports.<br />
Stmr. Lehua, for Windward ports on Hawaii<br />
Tuesday, September 2.<br />
Schr Caterina for Hanalei<br />
Schr Wailcle for Valpio<br />
Stmr. Kinau for Maul and Hawaii<br />
Stmr, Planter fur Maul, Kona and Kau<br />
Stmr. Iwalani for Kauai,<br />
Slnir. C. R. Bishop for windward wrtt of<br />
Hawaii.<br />
II. B. M S. Constance for Hllo.<br />
Schr Kekauluohi for Hanalei.<br />
Am bktne Amelia for the Sound<br />
Wednesday, September 3.<br />
Schr Nettie Merrill for Lahaina<br />
Sch. Manx for Hcnomu.<br />
Stmr, Kilauca Hou for windward ports of<br />
Hawaii.<br />
Stm Mokolii, for circuit of Molokai<br />
Sch Halcakala, for Pepeekeo<br />
Thursday, September 4.<br />
Sch. Malolo for Fannlngs Island.<br />
Men Lcahl, lor K:holalelc<br />
Sch Marion for Waianae<br />
Tern Falcon for the Sound<br />
Friday, September e..<br />
Sch Mile Morris for Molokai<br />
Stmr Waimanalo for Waimanalo<br />
vnoJKtrrKn UKVAttrunm.<br />
THIS DAY.<br />
Stmr. Jas. Makee for Waianae and Kauai at<br />
10 A. M.<br />
Am. bktne W. II. Dimond, at noon, for Sao<br />
Francisco.<br />
fKHSKi.a vr run fobkios rottm.<br />
Am. bark Ceylon, Barstow, for Hongkong,<br />
to leave about Tuesday next, C. Brewer &<br />
Co., Agents.<br />
Brit. bk. Catalina, Williams, for Hongkong,<br />
to leave about the 15th. Sine Choni! A<br />
Co., Agents.<br />
Am. bktne W, II. Dimond, Houdlett, for<br />
San Francisco, to sail this dty at noon. W. G,<br />
Irwin & Co., Agents.<br />
Am. terp Eva, Wilkinson for San Fran<br />
cisco, now discharging at the Esplanade, wilt<br />
leave alut Wednesday next. II, Hackfield<br />
Co., Agents.<br />
Merchant Vestals Now ks Port.<br />
Am. bl C. O, Whitmohi , CeJhoua<br />
Am. bk Cavui. Uuuov. . .1. up for Hongkong<br />
Aw.Utn. V. It, Diuoxd, lloudUti.up for San rrsncucS<br />
Br. bk Cataiina, WitliAins.. , .. . .up fr Hwkon<br />
A.ioEva . Witaaa<br />
Vtsiela BzptctM trcrs fweleo Porta<br />
Livxikwl, Bill bk Va.uxa , .Ingram<br />
Bm r, G. W, MictirUM Co., Ajtou.<br />
Disks, Gir. U C It HiSHOr. . WaIimi<br />
Pw nj. HicsMd a Co, Assnts.<br />
NtxCAsru. N S W, Am ship El Uoiado, llumiirsy<br />
Now due. 1, Agsus,<br />
SaH rAKCitco, tliit. S . S. A.xrilU. ,., .Cbess<br />
Dus beii, ; lUcksU ft; Ca, Agsou,<br />
LivtarooL, Brti IV Oimiua..., Umbos<br />
PutUvUi'S. T, It. Usvls. 4 Co., Agsolv<br />
jAicir. Ilaw. biw Haiaio.,.. , ,Ti.r<br />
DvielaaU OcwUr. A, K, Cwl... Ags.L<br />
Bostom, Aia bk M SITKA Davis . .. , Beoaoa<br />
Due Oct. to-s-s. C Hnwii ft Co., Agtois.<br />
Nts, Yo, Csr Ms Haha , , ..... Tbgrabo<br />
suv vn. !--) ssut loots, Afielt.<br />
KV riAKcitco, AmS. S, MasirotA. ,,H vd<br />
e i. srvist S.4. Agiasa,<br />
CiVo, Asm, itns bV Can. Houaa.<br />
Put bp. t, mlbiU.S. Cewaaient.<br />
FotT Towxhho, An. bit roitir Quae. ..Root<br />
Due Sept . At.<br />
Lodo, via Ss. Mlu!a. Ki..tb t Bos wmli.<br />
inw atft. 11. u. w, Jtaaiiaaeeise.lAaia<br />
ClAJoosv. sk. U Iakca..., ...... ,.,.... Barberr<br />
ioaulaUftiAvf. u t A. S stu ft Co., Ajjta it<br />
astTHjoiiT, Aav stta M. K. Dose<br />
ii lejis-t- -<br />
ltwwr !,cDixr., Am. lern Noas Hsixiii. --<br />
Doe Sept, 1 5, - Aients.<br />
tli .an .. Am. bV ,t Cauvrh Pendleton<br />
1 aiding ,vn 1 , Aeenrt,<br />
Sa- - rsclHO, Am BitnesV. G. lawtif.. .Tnrner<br />
Ini Vtn. V O. Ir in Co . Aimis.<br />
Si J'aswiwo. m. lllne, Fi-k-s e<br />
iruejepl. ,, 11 IIicVfeM ft Co., Aeews.<br />
SvBHtv.AmisUTVoMvnMrv . l)erlm<br />
Iluebept, J. Ilekleld Co, Agents.<br />
Ntw CASTll, N SV. rrii.Hi Pselne!!Lorr. ftrne<br />
Hie Not. Wilder A ta. Agents<br />
NtwCsttir.NSW.Am.t.li Nicholas rimFit.Crosbr<br />
Lending Aug 14 - Agrnti,<br />
r.i.i'ir.sor.its.<br />
From the Colonies, per Zrftlamtla, Am. 1,1,<br />
Mrs. Dumschlafl. Dr. Potter, N. Fofdi,<br />
Messrs. Good, Dibb, Dello Mr, and Mrs.<br />
Oliohant and ;;in transit.<br />
Passengers for 5an Francivcn, per Alameda<br />
Sept. 1 Danl Foster, Unlit Stirling, Mrs<br />
Jas Kobettson, Miss A Kemink, Mrs<br />
J A Cummins, Mrs Mary Kahii, Mivs<br />
Jennit H Keddlngton, C A Chipin, 1. D<br />
Lake, Miss Maud Wodehouse, Mrs II J Nolle,<br />
Miss FNolte, Paul Neumann Rev R W Fairchild,<br />
W O Smiih and wife, W F. Smith, T<br />
R Foster and wife, John Wright and wife, J<br />
Holing. CT Dalian and wife, I W Sass, J Stir-<br />
ling, C UCodman,JGndmin, W II Rice, Miss<br />
J Armstrong, Mist 11 Tuiton, II Glllard, W<br />
A Bailey, J W Kalua, Asa Haiku and wife,<br />
K II Baldwin, W A Wall, 1 L Miller, It<br />
E llalslcad tnd C I Hebberd, T<br />
Lnikin. C Ltttx. A G Ellis. Mi C CM.<br />
man. C N Atherton. CII ludd. Mrs II Tur<br />
ion, MisS E L Parker and two children, Mis<br />
Kiinscniai, a haiiiinum, .Mrs JI ienncll ami<br />
five children and servant, Mrs S Harrison.<br />
S P Pierce, Antone De Canto and wife. Mis<br />
M .MolMtt, L Perry, Mr G Nissen and sister,<br />
L Durklng, Lon Man, N Meyer, A P Mend<br />
onca, All A Verdugo, Ah Fun, A C<br />
Judson, J Artlgucs, It Von Ohlhaffen and<br />
wile, t. 1 U Wall, L, Hansen, II<br />
Klemine, K Klemme, A Schull, I) Daley, T<br />
ViKcOI, W Fennell, It T Wilbur. A Hilden<br />
wile and two children, E II Richards, W M<br />
Coodmin.T B Field, A Manning, S II Web-ste- r,<br />
A Vtenclck, M W Lowell and son, C<br />
English, I. S Olscn, F C Laney, O N Dorsey,<br />
ici In Jilt.<br />
From Maui, per Likelike, September 6 11<br />
M Whitney, Rev J M Kealoha, II Cornwell,<br />
C M While, J Robbins, F J Lowrey and wife,<br />
W O Atwater, W W Gowlale, Miss llensor,<br />
A Smith, J II Rcisl, Rev W A Swan, L M G<br />
de Sylva, A Enos, wife and 2 children, and<br />
about 75 deck.<br />
IMniltTH<br />
From Port Townsend per C. 0. Whitmore,<br />
Sept. 5,-- 480, 883 ft iough,.l05, 835 T andG,<br />
antl 16,770 ft sutfaccd lumber, 5,025, pickets,<br />
50 laths, 2 span.<br />
From the Colonies, per Zealandia, Aug. 31- -<br />
17 pigs samples, etc., N. Fold! 7 pigs<br />
mdse. Hollister V Co. j 4 casks rum, 5 hhds.<br />
ale, 3 cs plants, 3 nkgi to older, 1 dor 4<br />
crates fowl, II. Purvis; 1 heifer, II. Macfar-lan- e<br />
and 2,014 pigs transit.<br />
nxruiti.i.<br />
ForlSan Francisco per Alameda, Stpt I<br />
1,444 bnclis bananas, i6,68C pkgs, 1988, 277<br />
lbs sugar, 3,758 bgs lice, 17 cs betel leaves, 2G1<br />
bndls, 550 pkgs green hides, 46 dry hides; 8<br />
bndls, 520 pes sheep skins; 1 bndl, 54 pes gait<br />
skins,! chest,! bx taro, 2 sks coin $4,298, 1 hx<br />
sovereigns $25,000. I pkg jewelry, 3 empty<br />
tanks, 2 ex citrars. 8 cs tobacco, lb nki's sun<br />
dries, 200 bndls sugar cane, 5 rolls leather, 3<br />
unuis gunny sicki, iininestlc value $122,150.-88- ;<br />
foreign value $30,951.20.<br />
tiik jok.v.vo a ifrim.<br />
ltnmlaii Srjitemhrv lit.<br />
St. Aldan's. College liegins its fall term to-<br />
day.<br />
Chief Justice Judd and family and Mr. C.<br />
Furneaux returned to town last Saturday.<br />
Beach beat Hanlan in Ihe recent rowing<br />
match on the Paramatta river, August 161I1,<br />
by six lengths.<br />
G. K. Boardmsn has been appointed to po-<br />
sition in the Honolulu Custom House, vice E.<br />
R. Hendry resigned. '<br />
Some men and boys with torches anil trans-<br />
parencies paraded the streets last Saturday<br />
night, serenading the ministers and going to<br />
the palace. So soon as they (the elect) wcie<br />
inside the palace vard, the gates were shut,<br />
Further comment is unnecessary.<br />
x XurnlvirSipttm'M!rS.l.<br />
Thte were 5,560 letters and 1,143 papers<br />
forwarded by the per Alameda.<br />
The Zealandia took such as was marked to go<br />
by her, about 140.<br />
Miss Grey bad so far improved by Monday<br />
morning that Mr. and Mrs W. 0. Smith sailed<br />
by the Alameda as planned. Mr. Smith will<br />
visit Southern California during his absence.<br />
Itcmenyi, in he generosity ol his Hungar<br />
ian heart, in appreciation of an appreciative<br />
public in these tropic isles, has tendered a<br />
concert by his company to the Stranger's<br />
Friend Society nt the Music Hall on Friday<br />
next.<br />
The little red fish, Alalaua, hat<br />
In such numbers as to have largely rewarded<br />
quite an army of anglers, last evening, along<br />
the esplanade front. One observer remarked<br />
that off Ihe Likelike whaif the fishing rods<br />
were so thick you could have walked along<br />
them.<br />
The " Orplun "may the fates be good to<br />
him has sailul away into the<br />
east. He has not jet determined whether he<br />
win go north anu buy up a county or so in<br />
Eastern Oregcn or Western Washington 1<br />
whether ho will go still further north and try<br />
and "bond" Alaska ; or whether he will go<br />
south and pursuade Diat that he ought to put<br />
the Durcngo wheat fields into a joint stock<br />
coiporatlon and allow him to float the stock.<br />
But, wherever he goes or stays,<br />
he will not soon be forgotten. He will<br />
be accompanied as far as San Francisco,<br />
by that other eminent stock broker, Mr. W.O.<br />
Smith. If the world shall hear lhat thoie<br />
enterprising gentlemen have leased the North<br />
Pacific for salt wotks no one in Honolulu<br />
will be sttipriscd.<br />
Just thirty years ago y Ihe "Hercules<br />
of the West" as the Japanese and Chinese used<br />
to call Captain Morse, when first officer of one<br />
of the mail steamers plying between California<br />
and Hongkong, was assisting Charley Judd<br />
and Jchn Cummins to drive cattle from<br />
Koolau over the Pali to Honolulu. The cattle<br />
had been divided Into three bands of fifty<br />
each. Morse and a native boy were driving<br />
one band in which was a Polish bull. When<br />
about half way up the Pali this bull, some<br />
distance ahead of his immediate driven,<br />
turned and charged down the narrow path-<br />
way, The native boy spurred his horse,<br />
the bank, the horse's feet touching it,<br />
tils position leasing just room enough behind<br />
for Morse to swing his horse close to the bank<br />
atlhebu)! waton them. The animal wis,<br />
u stated, of Polish bleed, with horns that<br />
turned down and then out, to lhat, when<br />
striking with horns well down, his forehead<br />
would be inorcslangerous than his horus. He<br />
struck the horse of the native jusf behind<br />
the stirrup, the boys leg escaping the blow,<br />
and forced both horses against the wall with<br />
what the usual repoiter would term, a "Jul I,<br />
sickening thud." The horses, tnd Morse's<br />
l.esr leg acted with the elasticity of a ipiing<br />
cushion, The bull striking this Improvised<br />
cushion at tn obtuse angle, caromed against<br />
a big, slippery rock and went heels over head<br />
down the bank. When Captain Morse (not<br />
then t captain) looked back, he noticed that<br />
Cummins and Judd, tome hundieds of feet<br />
below, were scaling the tides of the pall<br />
perhaps in search of feint and trying to drag<br />
their horses up after them. This a true story,<br />
a "truly true story,' as tht Ctntdian journals<br />
pbrtse It.<br />
0rhhtvM4tyft tStfR4MstsF )- -(<br />
Tbt Alameda took away yrtttiday cargo<br />
valued at $I5J,I0, aad ose haadred and<br />
'tiinnn - a tfl" fc<br />
The Planters Monthly, The Hawaiim<br />
Monthly and the I-- riend forSeptcmber appearest<br />
promptly on the first.<br />
The Wlndsnr premises on King street is fur<br />
rental. The Press assertion recently tint Tt<br />
hid been engaged was evidently premslurc.<br />
Last night, between 7 and II, the cap-<br />
tain of the Llholiho was robbed of his walch and<br />
aliout $ 0 in cash fiom his room on Queen<br />
street near Alakc-t- . ,<br />
Mrs. D. McKlntev and Miss MeKInlev<br />
did not goto California by the Alanmls, ow.<br />
inp to the sudden Indispustllou of Mrs. l.<br />
v ssho is not, however, dangeiously ill.<br />
The Honolulu Rowing Club, crew number<br />
three, practice dally at 4 p. !., Sundays ex-<br />
cepted. Its members hope to be alile to out-pu-<br />
any six oared crew in the harbor on the<br />
king's birthday,<br />
The finest johndonkey in the country Is not<br />
yet owned by Mr, F. Ilayseldeii. It is not<br />
known whether the animal wfts to draw a "tur-<br />
key" wacon. or "bustle" aiound to hcln draw<br />
Ihe salary of the assessor for the disliict of<br />
Koni, Otlvti.<br />
Messrs. Iiwin and Spreckels have given<br />
the Music Hall fot the Stranger's Friend<br />
Society Benefit next Friday night, at half<br />
price, $25 the amount required to pay for<br />
lighting and for cleaning alter the perfor-<br />
mance<br />
Last Saturday the govcrnnicut sal,l they<br />
would pay Monday, Monday they said they'd<br />
ay on Tuesday, Tuesday they said they'd<br />
announce when they'd be ready to pay. At<br />
present they are paving salaries only and<br />
there Is " a just .1 favoritism even<br />
there.<br />
David McCartney Jr., a member of the firm<br />
of Benson Smith & Co., died last night at 1 1,<br />
of malarisl fever with typhoid symptoms. Mr.<br />
McCartney was a native of Pennsylvania, aged<br />
27. llewata conscientious man In every<br />
walk of life. Ills death it a loss lo the com-<br />
munity.<br />
There have been an unusually large numler<br />
of persons going from llilo to visit the great<br />
Crater of Kllauea this year. Many large par-<br />
lies, much larger than have gone from the<br />
other side of the island although special Induce-<br />
ment has been made to get persons desirous<br />
ol visiting the crater to go that way. On arrival<br />
At Hllo by the steamer Kinau passengers can<br />
have their choice of two hotels, one kept<br />
C. N. Arnold, the other by Dr. C. S.<br />
Kittredge. Each provides horses ( no guide<br />
needed) at a fair price if desired.<br />
A friend of the Guide gives this account of<br />
how Captain Morse came to be called the "Her-<br />
cules of the West." In 1871, Morse was first<br />
officer of the P. M. S. S. America, running be-<br />
tween Shanghai and San Francisco. One<br />
day when the Vessel was half way between<br />
Yokohama, and Shanghai, the butcher and his<br />
assistants took ft large California steer out of<br />
its pen, meaning to slaughter it. Breaking<br />
from them it started down one of the broad<br />
passages leading to the cabin, at that time<br />
weftsillcd by ladies and children. Fortunately<br />
Mate Morse look in the situation and was<br />
near enough to grasp it. The case was one of<br />
taking the bull by the horns, and "the II. of<br />
llic V." wa3 equal to it. Advancing rapidly,<br />
he met the steer half-wa- y down Ihe passage,<br />
and, grasping the animal firmly by the horns,<br />
turned it over on its back quicker than<br />
you could say Jack Robinson. There was,<br />
of course, assistance enough at hand the mo-<br />
ment after and the furious animal was<br />
dragged back to hit death with iguominlout<br />
abiuptncss. Mate Morse was the hero of the<br />
hour and enough pretty women shook bauds<br />
with him to male the purser and the doctor<br />
always ladies men, par excellence green with<br />
jealousy. Apropos ol taking the bull by tlie<br />
horns, there arc many native Hawaiian and<br />
not a few foreigners who can do the<br />
business with neatness and dis-<br />
patch. Ashford Spencer, of Kauai, ii one of<br />
the cleverest of them.<br />
TAurittaif, .friirrmder 4th.<br />
The Courl Journal announces,<br />
that the palace purposes to precipitate a<br />
crisis.<br />
The steamer Mokolii took away another<br />
deputation of sixteen unfortunate lepers yester-<br />
day for Kalawao, Molokai.<br />
A noisy spread was given by the Prince'<br />
Own at the Armory on Tuesday afternoon,<br />
said to have been in honor of Princess<br />
birthday.<br />
Postmaster-Genera- l Whitney has taken a<br />
flying trip to Wailuku, Kahului and adjacent<br />
postal quarters, on official business, intending<br />
to return on Saturday,<br />
Mr. Edward Jones.rcceiveil on Tuesday the<br />
duplicate government bonds for tho?c stolen<br />
from him at Lahaina several years since, accord,<br />
ing to the law rrcently enacted.<br />
The police court yesterday had a very mild<br />
session; in fact the spell of warm weather,<br />
through which all arc sweltering, takes the<br />
" bit " inclination even fiom the station house<br />
and the establishments contributing to it.<br />
The steamer James Makee touched bottom<br />
at Waianae yestciday morning whereby<br />
she received such Injuries as to send her on the<br />
Marine railway for repairs Immediately after<br />
discharging,<br />
Much complaint about the present condi-<br />
tion of drinking water is being made. It has<br />
certainly a bad odor and could not possibly<br />
be made worse by boiling before it Is drunk<br />
possibly a w isc precaution for the rest of the<br />
dimmer.<br />
The assertion of contemporaries lhat the<br />
Bulletin-Pres- s consolidation would not tale<br />
place, as announced, is without warrant. The<br />
application for a charter has been made in good<br />
faith and further steps in the matter await<br />
the action of the Privy Council.<br />
There have been erected, recently, at con-<br />
venient locations along Nuuanu Slicct, a num.<br />
bcr of handy hydrants with short sections of<br />
hose for use in alaimi of fire till the engines<br />
arrive and get tow oik. This Is a good pre-<br />
caution and may save the town from a disas-<br />
trous conflagration.<br />
Mr. Charles J. Fishel it closing up his Nuu-<br />
anu street branch store and concentrating<br />
forces and attractions to his main establishment<br />
The recent Press ttsertion that he would open<br />
a stand at the corner store now lecmpied by<br />
Mr. C. Hammer, was premature, Inasmuch as<br />
the pietent occupant has not completed the<br />
plan; he contemplated.<br />
Following the depattute of the inter-Islan-<br />
stcamtis, whereby there was quite an exndui<br />
of passengers, both native and foieign, thit<br />
little, burg his put on iuih a dull, quiet rnein<br />
cito have utterly annihilated the hope<br />
that on the close of the legislature<br />
people would give more attention to busines<br />
and less to politics, ergo, that immediate bene-<br />
fit of trade la general would cniue.<br />
The Laird o' Fanning', In the absence of<br />
hit own yacht, the Jennie Walker, on mission,<br />
work to the Motttoclt tnd way stations, takes<br />
hU departure for home by the Malolo,<br />
whUh he hat charttrtd for this purpose, with<br />
the proUHlity of vending bet from Fanoiag'i<br />
UUn4 to ban rrarunioa at be dm on a termer<br />
occasion. May tht trtdt winds waft bin<br />
gently Ig bit Island horse, and uwe gnat Mat<br />
yet auay ytstut of active aenrice.<br />
The late burnt districts are exhibiting sign'<br />
of activity, in clearing away debris, tearing<br />
down ruins and making repairs. The pre-<br />
mises lately occupies! by P. A. Dlst arc beinc<br />
put in onl'r again for occupancy, ami at soon<br />
as the live premises, on Nitnanu Street, are<br />
cleareil off, steps will be taken for the erection<br />
nf a corrugated Iron establishment In the rear,<br />
with ,t front store proliably taking the stand of<br />
thc.McCnndless building, instead of at theeorner<br />
of the lane as formerly.<br />
Mr. T. R. Foster and Mr. J. M. Salt went<br />
over by the Alameda to meet and greet the<br />
new addition for the Inter-islan- Steam Navi<br />
gallon Company's fleet, the James G. Maine.<br />
Mr. Sass will bring the new host down, at he<br />
has done several others of this line, but it Is<br />
nol certain whether a new and local name will<br />
lie given her on her arrival, or whether she<br />
will retain the one the builder has given<br />
her.<br />
rrhtait Sitttmher ,t.<br />
The Y. II. Dimond has hauled to the S. S<br />
Co's. wharf to load.<br />
Mr. Arthur Peterson was admitted to the<br />
bar the rally part ofthls week. He will hang<br />
out his legal shlncle shorllv. locatiniT (minora- -<br />
rilywitli Mr. Willl-i- Kinney, on Kaahtimanu<br />
street.<br />
An unwisely w illy critic civet the public a<br />
sample of his marc'a nesting In rne of Wednes-<br />
day's contemporaries, because of Ihe omis-<br />
sion of a line In the male up of n piragraph In<br />
Wednesday's Guide. Readers ol<br />
Press will please note the paragraph as written.<br />
Mr. It. W. Lalnenfthitcityls the proud owner<br />
of a relic nf ancient time of no little curiosity.<br />
in having Inherited from his father-- copy of<br />
the Hallo well (Maine) Garctle of 1826, brown<br />
wilhnge, bul containing many interesting Items<br />
and evidences of (blue) Isw that would shame<br />
a suggestor thereof In these tin) .<br />
The recently published report of the lioaril<br />
of health for August shows quite an Improved<br />
monthly record for this year, compared with<br />
last year, as also of 1S79 and slightly so of<br />
1SS0, but the reverse when compared with<br />
1882, 18S1 and largely so when compared<br />
with 1S7S. The moituary record it At follows<br />
1878 28; 1879, 69; 1SS0, 48; 1S81, 31! 18S2, 35;<br />
1S83, 60; 18S4, 40.<br />
The many friends cf Mils Annis Montague<br />
Ihe Hawaiian Nightingale and Mr. Charles<br />
Turner, will learn with pleasure of their con-<br />
tinued success in Australia, they having lately<br />
terminated a brllliinf season of English opera<br />
in Sydney. It is not at nil improbable lhat<br />
they will return here next month and<br />
favor us with a short season of concerts ere<br />
they go on to the Stales. Those who heard<br />
them in their operatic selections at Knwai.1h.10<br />
Church in the fall of 1SS0 will realltc the rich<br />
treat that is in store for the music lovers of this<br />
city.<br />
The steady departures of shipping, foreign<br />
and coastwise, and the almost total absence of<br />
arrivals since the first of the vv eck hat rendered<br />
the harbor quiet and comparatively bare. This<br />
condition of things has its cheering as well as<br />
Its depressing aspect, for it enables ihe dredg.<br />
ing of the harbor to go on with less liability of<br />
Interruption from the excitement and attrac-<br />
tion of naval and comineicial marine so com-<br />
mon to in, especially at this time of the year.<br />
Then, too, the field is quite clear for the prac-<br />
tice of the Pcle and its tenders in naval<br />
prcpiratory to the Court Journal's<br />
"crisis"<br />
A pally of ten friends of Earl Greig, went<br />
out on the Malolo yesterday afternoon, to say<br />
good bjeto the Laird o'Fanning's. They<br />
took with them a row boat, intending to pull<br />
back In It. lust outside the spar buoy a squall<br />
struck them, forcing Ihe row boat under the<br />
chain plate twits of the Malolo, upsetting the<br />
row boat instantly. Four natives were in her<br />
at the time. One of them gathered up the<br />
five oars adrift, and, as a bit of bravado doubt,<br />
less swam ashore with them. The other three<br />
climbed on to the keel of the capslred boat<br />
and sat astride until the Malolo came round<br />
and hove them a line. Tht parly of ten went<br />
ashore in a pilot boat.<br />
All Anltllc Untruth.<br />
It is a trifle late in the week now ; but the<br />
Guide's ait editor didn't get around to it be-<br />
fore and he's not to be' driven. The Kinau of<br />
last Tuesday bore away into the twilight shad-<br />
ows of Ihe Molokai Channel Hawaii's most<br />
famous visiting artists, Mr. Charles Furneaux<br />
of Boston and Mr. Joseph Strong of San<br />
Francisco, Strange though it may sicni, these<br />
distinguished gentlemen had never before met.<br />
There have been several explanations of this<br />
rather surprising circumstance, the following<br />
being considered by their intimates as Ihe<br />
most satisfactory in all particulars. Mr. Fur-<br />
neaux licsidcs being a landscape painter of<br />
extended and extensive reputation is a conchol-oglst- ,<br />
n fovsilist and an ostcogenist of no mean<br />
ability. All the time that he can spate from<br />
art Mr. Furneaux devotes to the study nf living<br />
and extinct shell fish, of petrifactions and the<br />
grow th of lionc i and on the several occa-<br />
sions of Mr. Strong's calling, was cither absent<br />
fiom his studio, or so absorbed in his favorite<br />
occupations as to be content ta leave the hos-<br />
pitalities to his pallette lioy. Mr. Strong has<br />
his hobbies also. Besides being a portrait<br />
painter of graphic strength and finished deli-<br />
cacy, he is one of the most muscular young<br />
Christians fot hit Inchct, In alt-th- ls musculai<br />
burg. His boxing if not Sullivanistic It at least<br />
more than Kipilonian, his swimming and<br />
diving recently enabled him to rescue from a<br />
watery grave the present athletic governor of<br />
Oahu ; and hit foil and broadsword fencing is<br />
better tlian barb wire. By a happy coinci-<br />
dence, both took passage on latt Tuesday's<br />
Kinau, Mr. Furneaux for Hllo and Kau, his<br />
fellow artist for Makena Bay and Ulupalakua.<br />
There happened to be a mutual friend on<br />
board whom modesly forbids the art writer<br />
to mention and he determined to make Ihem<br />
acquainted. So approaching the San Fran-<br />
ciscan he said i "Do you see yonder small<br />
but dUtinguithed-lookir- g gentleman?" "What,<br />
that uibane appearing person who looks like a<br />
middle-age- patriarch F "Yes, thai Mr,<br />
"Indcesl I Glad I've seen him I"<br />
Not discourtged the mutual friend sauntered<br />
over to where Mr. Furneaux sat, one eye on<br />
the serrated crest of Waitnae, the other on the<br />
opaline tinti of the Kaibor.<br />
"Do you tee that robust,<br />
looking voung fellsj-- over there ?" What<br />
lhat, pjwetfully built, voung person, hall<br />
Hercules half Adonis ?" "Yet, thtt't Strong-Str- ong<br />
the artist I" "The artist? Glad you<br />
told me.' The mutual friend was a trifle<br />
dashed, but he bided his lime. A few of (he<br />
passengeit elected to t'lcp 011 deck, among<br />
them were the two aillils. The mutual friend<br />
slyly managed that their matlrassct should be<br />
side by side, He then made hlrowlf as narrow<br />
at possible and lay down between them.<br />
After tbey had turned In, the mutual friend<br />
slyly slipped put without the notice of either.<br />
"You said his name u Strong," said sud-<br />
denly soene one tt Mr. Slioog's right, ia a<br />
stage whisper. "What does he do for a<br />
living?" "Palatt" said Strosg, rseantly.<br />
"Wbat't bk le. wagons or ttgnt ?" , "Signs,<br />
chiefly" replied the Drilled Sao Fransiteaa.<br />
'.'lie's at woik at present oa ose, tU by teo<br />
ffttt'to tit- - It It Uttodtd tor Mr,' f iHMtuta'i<br />
studio and will bear the legend 'standing<br />
room only, Mr. Furneaux can see a Joke at<br />
readily as he can detect the shadow of a shade.<br />
And grasping Mr. Strong's hand he replied 1<br />
"This it the ftlcnd I have long have lough<br />
and t'ghcil lvcc.iusc I found him not." And<br />
when they parted at Makena each vowed<br />
eternal friendship, and promised to exchange<br />
sketches anon, N, It. The irt editor It<br />
romanclst and the accuracy of the above narra-<br />
tive it debatable.<br />
Vmelotii Trim.<br />
Witty clilren, outward bound 1 "Vet, I<br />
had to go 1 You tee t hcord you were going<br />
to start another paper and 'twas mote'n I<br />
could stand."<br />
Dull Journalist t "Sol Thcti It teemi the<br />
sheet has done some good already,"<br />
rojf.vo nrr.XT.<br />
TMi Dv.<br />
To day at 3 r. t., Lyont & Levey, will tell<br />
a large astortment ol dry goodt at the I. X. L.<br />
tore, corner of Nuuanu and Queen streetl.<br />
(fluclioit giilcc.<br />
A SSIGNEES SALE OF LAND<br />
IN KALtlll, OIIAU.<br />
By Order of C Doltt. ni , tnd M. Green, Ci ,<br />
Assignees of the Cttste of Alooa.<br />
1 will stll tl public taction,<br />
ON SATURDAY SEPTEMBER tl<br />
At 11 o'clock noon at ulctreora,<br />
Pour Lots of Lsiid In Katlhl, Oahu, vtl<br />
1.01 No. 11 howi certAln j pieces of Unit la<br />
KaIiM known as Ka)c4w, containing ait area of I 94.<br />
100 cre, and fulljr described In Rtciury OMm, Ltbte<br />
11. pp- - ii", l, in. tills Is a line piece of Taro<br />
I.aik1<br />
LOT No. 1 Those, eertaln 4 pircili of Tro Land,<br />
numbered 11, io, 14,14, known 11 Kaluaopaleoa an4<br />
eonuinii k an of 3 ctts as described la R.<br />
f'. V93. with Ihe buildiiije and Improvements tbsraon,<br />
A fine crop of laro Is growing up.i this Und.<br />
LOT No. Those parcels ofTro LAnd Isnosra<br />
as paii of KumtiVulul, as described In Liber 1), pp.<br />
if). 3SO, 1JT, and PoliAuloe, as described la t.lbtr ),<br />
PP-- 4'S, 4 conulnlni together an aia of about<br />
acres, with the buildings Aid Impros etnanls thtrooo<br />
A eruptf tAro Is crowing upon thtw. lust.<br />
LOT No. 4 Thai certain plect clil Wing A pin<br />
of Kumukukul. and conlAtn an area of about of<br />
an acre with the building and Improvements lhartoa.<br />
For furllier particular! apply to tht Assignee as<br />
above, or to<br />
K. P. ADAMS,<br />
? Auctttnr.<br />
QTEAMERS AT AUCTION.<br />
Ity order of II. IIACKFELD k CO., I wUI toll cat<br />
Public Auction,<br />
. ON TUESDAY, SEPT. .th,<br />
Al 1 1 o'clock a. M., atmysatesrooa,thA<br />
STAUNCH STEAM SCHOONER<br />
W. U. REED,<br />
00 Tout butUiaa.<br />
" WITH'HER t<br />
MASTS,<br />
ANCHORS & CHAINS<br />
Haiti, nigging,<br />
Iioilrrand Bnginn,<br />
Meant rTlnrA, MU.,<br />
And all other appartl, at the now lies al anchor in ta<br />
hubor. This steamer is wtll titled and adapted for tha<br />
Island trads ; has a Steam Winch forllfilngandiwa.ro.<br />
cming and discharging cargo, sic. Shi Is a good car-<br />
rier, hat spacious deck and Is economlcAl to coosuaBtlsva<br />
of coal.<br />
ALSO-A- t the time, will h aWltl,<br />
iub rrse ,<br />
STEAM YACHT "KAPIOLANI"<br />
e<br />
at Tons burthen,<br />
Complets In Every Rcfftsttart,<br />
WITH DOUULE ENGINES.<br />
XJT These vessel can Ik inspecixl at any time tuao<br />
application to Meairi, IIACKFF.LD & CO.<br />
7;. V. AUA3TH, AutHr.<br />
cncr.il cllbbcrtjflcintnta.<br />
N OTICE<br />
Doctor Whitney's dental rooms will be. clotoa (rota<br />
Monday September it! lo MondAy Sept. to, 1KJ4.<br />
900-t- l<br />
CQUARE TO A CENT.<br />
tiik ukahox or 01x hvccmmm.<br />
do business on strict pelaclplaa.<br />
W have only a fixed ptrctsttaga a a twaeU.<br />
TUK I'JiHVKXTAait O.VF IS ArtBEB<br />
TO TUB COST Or TIIK GOOD.<br />
never deviate from tho prtc gatd uadtw<br />
We any circumstance. We aaatt. al awtilt<br />
with telUna; price In plaits Ifftsrt,<br />
W misara&r&as -<br />
We exchange goods caterfuiiy aad rettvra<br />
money wllflaaly ween aaaUe U MM car<br />
pita cattoanais.<br />
OUR MOTTO I<br />
"A child of five years cAn buy as cavesva at a at) al<br />
eipcrKnee," It (aiiMiitly itWieied.<br />
Hale no miitale I St Ihe naost of<br />
m. cony at co.,<br />
TEMPLE OF FASHION.<br />
ts aad at Fart tMreet,<br />
Oy.f<br />
COLLROB east<br />
OAHU PREPARATORY SCHOOL,<br />
FAIL TKRM BKQMXg MONBAT, .<br />
TBMHKB ta, 1H4.<br />
Tb Trutisct art happy to arusoutte that ta<br />
year since ihe alopk of lb ikw CcJtrt tf tlt1r<br />
,um. ,w v euttvwwu , ae. au<br />
a gradual of Mr. llcJ)-obe- . an. for Is<br />
snsmberof tbe Seminary faculty, has tstta<br />
in Instructor alike Collete. lib eifiooMst skat test<br />
new j'rnfcsenrsliip of Inaoenlry 404 (eat ataaaat<br />
?rieiKYe wui 1 nuea eariy in ta ywaf.<br />
Mis Emm V. Hall, as aaptrUacest taael<br />
fur some jesis PrlndpaJ ut t Grattuaar Hitat.<br />
mass.. CAWitea irwa Sl.a BOSeMon t taw at<br />
fuoahew Preparatory School. OiJyaetvaMrj<br />
can b iecis4 at itua etkoul, and ttety srtV It a<br />
led In order 4 application, bka matt b audi to<br />
C. M. II, de, D, 1)., or 10 lb Pi.aWea catt Ctj<br />
sMajoguet mm on appiKAiioti,<br />
DEAL ESTATE AT AUCTION.<br />
The assignees of tht ssiale i trl4 Ceosslatisiag.<br />
a baakrups. wiflMll ai rsiUHe auctiosi, at tat rVaat .<br />
sraataof AUeUa) Mum, uW<br />
itSttasstf & stfd'aSt?:<br />
Najto"IHt... '<br />
ffUf panlsssW, VwT. vW<br />
rr Ms, Aaaiavtwtttf iVl, ft7ilijS<br />
A 1<br />
VI<br />
J--<br />
1<br />
.2 "5<br />
:4<br />
"V<br />
M<br />
"--,<br />
H rS<br />
a .,<br />
V " --'j<br />
!"<br />
7.<br />
-<br />
"."- -
SATURDAY PRESS.<br />
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER;, US<br />
it ron mm.<br />
en it. Liar,<br />
till Majesty's Prlsy Pone A llojal 8tet. S<br />
Her Majesty ihioMn<br />
It. ft If. th. llrtr I'r.sompllve<br />
II It. II. Prliee Llk.llkf<br />
II 11 II. Kelulanl<br />
Ilia Masty'. Oh.mbwl.lii and Secret.iy.<br />
Household Expenre,<br />
rnnersl Kxpenee-e- , Kekaullk.<br />
rinoKim trrLcxtitTi.<br />
Iter Majnty Qn Dowager Emm...<br />
Ilia KrcelUnty I'. Kanoa<br />
II. ,n KulhfUnl<br />
Hon. II. Knlhed.til, tnlanc. if .alary. .<br />
Mhos KIli I<br />
Mrs. I<br />
n.i.<br />
. aana'ri.itia<br />
iioisurunx ad ritiTT oocxciu $<br />
Expenses nf f.fltlalnr of 1661 J<br />
secretary of t'rlvy i.'onnell<br />
Incidental! of Prlsy Counell<br />
jrurciinr DirAmxiirr. J<br />
Salariof Chltf Jmtlet anil Chancellor.... $<br />
first Aasoeial. Ja.tfc.<br />
" HMOti'l Aieoelatediistlce<br />
' Clerk of Hufirrme Court<br />
Deputy tiler.<br />
" Second DtpotT Ulerk<br />
" latvrpreter HBpreme and Folic.<br />
Conn<br />
' Circuit Judgs.. Manl<br />
(Ilia travrllnir ripn.ra<br />
" Circuit .lodge, llllo and Kan<br />
" Kohala. Kona, Ac.<br />
" ' Kami<br />
" Police Jiulltf Ilmioluli<br />
llllo<br />
" Lahalna<br />
Balance (.alary Pullce Jnillti- - La- -<br />
. halns<br />
" " Wallukn<br />
District Judge, North llllo<br />
" Puna<br />
Ku<br />
' M " Kan:<br />
" " " North Kon.. . .<br />
" ' " Month Kona<br />
Police Joitice North KolulS,. ..<br />
" District Judge Month Kohala....<br />
" M " Ilainakna<br />
' ' ' Honuaiiia<br />
" " " .Makaa<br />
" " " liana<br />
" " " Lannl<br />
' " Molokal<br />
(Traveling .ipciiai-- s lllitrlct Jus-<br />
tice Jlmokat)<br />
" Dlatrict Jnstlcc Kw<br />
" Walanca<br />
i " " Walnlua<br />
" " Koolailtoa<br />
" " Koolnnpokn<br />
" " llaiinlel<br />
" " " Kavralhan<br />
" Pollco Joallce I.lhue<br />
District " Koloa<br />
' " Walmra<br />
' Clerk Hecond Judicial Circuit. . . .<br />
" Third " ....<br />
Balance Halary Clerk 3.1 Judicial<br />
Circuit<br />
" Clerk Fourth Judicial Clrcnlt...<br />
Expenses of Supreme Court<br />
Expenses of witnesses In criminal caaca<br />
allowed by presiding Judge<br />
attila discretion<br />
Expenses Second Judicial Circuit<br />
Kxpenees Third Judicial Circuit<br />
Expenses Fourth Judicial Circuit<br />
i'urctisieof I.nve Hook<br />
Hlatloiirrr and Incidental of all Court...<br />
Printing vol. IV Hawaiian ltepnrti In thr<br />
Hawaiian I.angunge.,<br />
rranalatlnt Into Hawaiian nnd Printing<br />
and Ilindlng the Civil Code<br />
Pay of Clerk Police Jn slice, Honolulu<br />
I'ay of Chlne-- o Interpreter ,t Translator<br />
Pay of Messengers of Judiciary Ilcpnrt- -<br />
menl<br />
DrnTMMT ronnus irrxinn. itijju<br />
Hilary .Mlnlaler !2J'<br />
Hecrelary<br />
Copylat J.IHI<br />
Office Eipenc Foreign Agenli<br />
Incldeulala.if foreign ofllcf 3.11110)<br />
KxpcniM Foreign lllailona SO,(w)<br />
Kuvoy Kxtraorulnaiy ami Mlnliler PlenU<br />
potentlarr WaiUlngton IS.WJO<br />
Kzpenrei Incidental Legation Wnh<br />
Ington<br />
Relief and Iteturn Indigent Ilawallaua<br />
Abroad<br />
Salary Mexenger l,l)<br />
Education Hawaiian Vouth Foreign<br />
Countries 55,101<br />
King's and (Joternmcnt Unarda 81UX)<br />
Hand, Flaa and Malutes<br />
National Miiuum<br />
Oorernmcnt Librarian and Curator the<br />
Mutenru S,40O<br />
Relief Monument Committee<br />
Coronation Kxpcniea (additional) rlzt<br />
Wilder 4,T7<br />
OroLucai 310<br />
(loi Foater<br />
Watorbouie<br />
HMacnln<br />
llollen<br />
Ills.Majeaiy'a Chamberlain er.7<br />
Itollef oft) Uokca<br />
Volunteer .Military Compaulea l'J.ooo<br />
iNTrniou mrinTxcxT,<br />
Salary of Minuter<br />
Halaryof Chief Clerk<br />
Salary H.cond Clerk<br />
Balary Third Clerk<br />
fJalary-o- l Fourth Clerk<br />
Balary Fifth Clerk<br />
Salary tlovernor Oahn...<br />
Halary tlovernor of Maul<br />
Salary Governess of Ilavatl<br />
halary tlovernor Kaoal<br />
Halary Clerk Governor of tlahu<br />
Halary Clerk tlovernor of .Maul<br />
Hilary Clerk of tlovornisa Hawaii.<br />
Halary Clerk ot Uorrrnor of Kauai<br />
Halary of tmrvryorUenerat<br />
Uovernment Hurveylng<br />
Halary Poitmaeter-llenera- l<br />
Halary Assistant I'oslmaster.tlenrral<br />
Ulerke<br />
Poatmsatera<br />
Mall Carriers<br />
Incidentals 1'oitonke<br />
Postal Money (Jrdcrs<br />
Marine Telephone Htalloi<br />
Hilary Superintendent Public Wurks and<br />
Civil Engineer<br />
Superintendent Public Wurka to.Vngnat IS,<br />
IMI<br />
Incidentals and Tratellui; Kipcnaca Hn- -<br />
klneerand Hupt.nf Public Work<br />
Balary rjunerlutendent Water Works and<br />
Olerk of Market<br />
Salary Clerk Hupt, Water Work<br />
Halary 2d Clerk Supt Water Works<br />
Salary Jailor of Oahu Prison<br />
Hnpnort Prisoners<br />
Itoad Hupcrvleora<br />
ltaadsaud llrtdgcei<br />
Honolulu<br />
Kxtenalon o.uccn Htreel<br />
Xxtenslon Hotel<br />
ltoada In PauoaVallev<br />
Kamehamclm IV. road Kallhl<br />
Koolaiiixiko, tlahu<br />
Nonanu Pall Koad,<br />
Koolauloa<br />
Kwa I......!;!;;..,;<br />
Walanae,<br />
Walalua !...!"<br />
Lahalna<br />
Kaanapall<br />
Wsllukn .....I".!."<br />
Walhe<br />
Itoad from Lahalna Walluku., .......<br />
Makanao,<br />
Itoad Oapuloa, .Manl '.'.".,<br />
liana...<br />
Jlolokal """."!!..<br />
Lanal<br />
North Kohala ,...,,,.<br />
Honlh Kohala<br />
llaniakua<br />
between Uamakua Kohala..,.<br />
llllo<br />
Puna<br />
Houth Kona '...V.V.V.'.m!!!!!." '.',"..<br />
North Kona<br />
Ltune,..,<br />
Koloa<br />
Waluw and Nllbau... ,,<br />
Kawalhae...,,<br />
Ilaualel<br />
Hildas over Moloaa stream, Kauai<br />
Oontlogeut<br />
Unexpended Itoad tax, beeiprnded In<br />
district vrherei collected..,,,<br />
Road tax, bo ripendvd In district wljerc<br />
collected<br />
Road dausgra<br />
Sncourage'i Japanese Immigration, nulesa<br />
such found Imnracilcable, amounts ree'd<br />
from employers be turned Into the<br />
Treasury<br />
Portuguese Immigration, ainouuti received<br />
from actployers returned Treaa...<br />
Retaru ot noath sea Islandere ,,<br />
Cauctlllng Lease Claua rjpreckela,.,<br />
Purchase Honolulu and Leabl<br />
Dredgtnrlhe harbor<br />
Steam lug, with apparatus.,,. .,<br />
team Launch<br />
Improvements Uahu Prison ..,..,..,,,<br />
Enlargement ,,,,<br />
Hepalrsat Custom Mouse<br />
Kepalra Uovernment llulldlu;s Uusen 81...<br />
Police Court llulldlng, llunolulu<br />
Kerosene Warenuutc ,,,..,,.,.,<br />
Contingent<br />
Uulldluga and Itcpalrs of Couil Houses and<br />
Lockups,<br />
Court Houses, Hawaii,,<br />
Court Homes Maui,..,,,<br />
Coutt Houses Kauai<br />
Court Houses Oeliu<br />
Court House and Lockup Koolauloa<br />
Court Mouse North Kona<br />
Court Home Month Kona<br />
Lockup apalakua<br />
Lockup Klpahula<br />
Repalrea I'oull House, eltuea<br />
Kspalrt Court House. North Kohala.....<br />
Offlca and safe liorernorof Kanal<br />
Lighthouse, llarber'a Point.<br />
Market Walluku ,,<br />
Markftat llllu...<br />
Kxpeusea llunolulu Water Works.<br />
mprovlug audrettensloa ot Water Works.<br />
Uuaiaotlu places diseased animals...,<br />
Keeervolrai Walohtuu<br />
Ijauss Telegraph hlatlou<br />
hew banes and Itepalrs. Honolulu<br />
Amt accrued upon Wdarvsa alttsdr bnllt.<br />
Xxteudlng Wbarl Lahalna and Light<br />
rlreak-wate- r<br />
Wharf aliloalu,Maal..<br />
WhaifatMaalaa.laul. .!....<br />
Whaif Kallua, llawalt<br />
Vfhatf Keauhoe, Hawaii..<br />
Whattitll.iokcno. llawalt<br />
Wharf Watuiaaalo, Uaha..<br />
Mfhart Pukoo. Molokal<br />
Vnkaif Keunaktkal, Molokal<br />
Cleaning boat landing LaurtEoehve<br />
Landing Kukalau<br />
Wharf and Ciaue Koloa, Kauai<br />
Klteoelonvt Wharf at Nawlllalll<br />
Landing llokala .,,<br />
LaaJltg Napoo poo<br />
Breakwater WelmeeJthir M'.:<br />
Koad Iwllel.. ,2t<br />
Keeper, tUyet kleiie,luu<br />
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10,000 00<br />
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toO 04<br />
l.au tu<br />
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3,004 00<br />
3,004 04<br />
1,(04 04<br />
3.000 oo<br />
2.304 U4<br />
MX CO<br />
S.1UI 04<br />
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2.000 04<br />
2.304 04<br />
(wUU)<br />
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f l. til Hoi. andSt- r. j at llllo . . jnrtp)<br />
Itepalrs and furnltnro for Aillolant Halo. 7,mi Oil<br />
I adlngWatrr Pipes to Iwllel , .,. 800 00,<br />
Itepalrs and running exp'nsrs. I.lghthonte. 10.1'sl fl)<br />
Illnmlnailngof llock at I.neas' ISO oo<br />
llenilrs and extension of Insane Arylnm . 2.ui)tU<br />
.Malnuinance uf Insane Asylun 20,(ino,l<br />
Janitor. Alllnlanl llaletto live on premises) WO ul<br />
Mesirngera Interior Ilepattmenl 2.WH m<br />
Itepalrs of Landings lO.UHH")<br />
Purchase nf Lands at Kalawao, Molokal.. . 500 00<br />
Artesian Well. .Molokal , S. 00<br />
Aid to fneen'a Hospital 1,oto a)<br />
tunning Rxpnin of Stesm Togs 13.UH u)<br />
Anchoisnnd hnoy lOO'ltK)<br />
Honolulu Fire Department amidl<br />
Aid to Moral Hawaiian Aerlrnltnral Hoclety l.ixi oo<br />
Meneral Improvement of Pnbllc llroonds,<br />
"qeareiand Nnrierle 17,110 00<br />
IImiI Lot Alllnlanl Hale Vi i l<br />
Thomas Mijuare 3UDU)<br />
Emma Square 7IU U)<br />
Kaptnlant Park S.udoo<br />
KentofAlennl l.auj U)<br />
Item of Kohololoa Pound 7t Ul<br />
Oovernment Printing 5.0MJ IM<br />
Copying Heeordi Land Commissions 2,4'W W<br />
Hooks and Stationery for Heglstrar of Con<br />
veyancea SOU)<br />
Ripenae of filing Certlllcatea of Donndarles<br />
SU) UO<br />
Rxpenses nf Kleetlon 1,00) U)<br />
Kspensrs Election, Puna o 00<br />
Weekly Hteam Service between Honolulu,<br />
I'akoo, Lahalna and Lanal 5.70 00<br />
Incidentals, Interior Department 3,000 U)<br />
Incidentals, tlcvernor's omen 500 ID<br />
Pais, t Stable IS.UOOO<br />
For relief of Hoard nf Genealogy 10,000 00<br />
rixaxcx bitranTMCxT, JI,8I3,M8 00<br />
Salary of Minister .'.. H.Ciij Ul<br />
Halary nf Auditor-Genera- l IO.(ii) in<br />
Halary of Ileglslrar Pnhllc Accounts rj.uu in<br />
Halary of Clerk Finance nnice J.Ots) Is)<br />
Halary of Collector-Genera- l B.(M) oo<br />
Halary of Deputy Collector .!) in<br />
."alary of Hsrlwr. Master c.UUUI<br />
Halary of HutlsllcalClerk S.flu HI<br />
Halary of Hecond Hlatlitlcal Clerk l.ui) U)<br />
salary nf Hnrveynr and Gnard 1,ui) in<br />
Salaryof KntryClcrk ?,1to in<br />
salary of Hrcnud Knlry Clerk 2.m)UI<br />
Halary of Hlnrekreper 3,I)J(D<br />
Salary of Colli ctor a' Kahulnl 3.WO U)<br />
Salaryof Ci.llnclor at Mahnknn 2.dll HI<br />
Halary of follectorat llllo ,tl oo<br />
Halary of Collector at Kawalhae stum<br />
Salary of t rllretnr at Kealakekna IUl 00<br />
Halary of Uollrctor at Koloa a Don<br />
salary of Keeper of steamer Warehouse.... t,2inis)<br />
Salary of Keepir of Keroaeno Warrlnur. .. l.'JiDUJ<br />
Halary of Surveyor and (ina.-d-. Kaliulul,... 1UU<br />
Halary nf .Surveyor and Guard, .Mahukona. I.3D U)<br />
Salary or Surveyor and Guard, llllo I,until<br />
Assistant Giianls at all ports n I3.i'd U)<br />
Incidentals, Ciitom.houi' 5,ui) (a)<br />
Custoni'linuso llcwit I.'JX) III<br />
I'ay or Tax Assessors C8.ui) tn<br />
I'ay of Tax Collectors iKJ.ux) In<br />
I'ayofTax Collector at Kan for 13H.1 iiOH tcl<br />
Pay of Tax Appeal Hoards I.'.inii)<br />
National Debt falling due KCjiii tsi<br />
Interest no Nnllonal Debt I50.uu (O<br />
For purchnee and snhslltntlon of Gold Coin<br />
for Foreign Coin IMI.Uin 00<br />
Subsidy In Oceanic Steamship Company... Ct.un 00<br />
llo pltal Fund (estimated receipts to be<br />
paid to (j. II.) 15,(il fn<br />
IncidenlaU Finance Department fi.iin ID<br />
Printing Certificates of Depo'lt 1,51X1 )<br />
Htamjt-- and Dies hid in<br />
HogTags XD Ul<br />
Messenger I.VJD (ll<br />
Taxes Illegally Collected TS ST.<br />
$ 741,(0)7 18<br />
TierAntKiM or arronvKT-ogsgiu- u<br />
Salary of A tlorney.tlencral l'.'.(xi) U)<br />
Halary of Clerk Attorney-Genera- l B.iiD ul<br />
Halary of Marshal H,UD ID<br />
Salaryof Clerk of Marshal rtani ID<br />
Hecoudof Clerk of Marshal l.su) 00<br />
Salaryof Sheriff of Mnui 3.UD (D<br />
Salary of Hherllf of Hawaii 5.UD 00<br />
or nucriu onuai , 4,un (XI<br />
Halary Clerk of Sherlirof Maul i.eoo Ul<br />
Halary Clerk nf Sheriff of Hawaii 1,ND Ul<br />
nitiPE nroAiio.<br />
Itonoliilti.<br />
Halary Deputy .Varshal, a Jiper month j 6.000 rjo<br />
Captain (nalhe)<br />
i uuprain (lorcign)<br />
5 Police Officers<br />
'<br />
HO<br />
PO<br />
!D<br />
10<br />
U)<br />
10<br />
Pay of 2 policemen at 830 per month<br />
Pay of 41 policemen at $14 per month....<br />
OahnKwnt<br />
Halary Deputy at J 50 per month<br />
Halary 4 police at 20 per month<br />
Walanae i<br />
Halarv DeDUtv f at 40 nir tiinnth.. .<br />
2.880<br />
2.100<br />
Hilarys police at per month 1,410<br />
waloluat<br />
Salaiy Deputy Sheriff at 60 per month...<br />
Salary 5 police per month<br />
Koolauloa i<br />
Salary Deputy Sheriff at 10 per month.. .<br />
Salary! police at 10 per month<br />
ICoolanpoko.<br />
CD<br />
Ul<br />
U)<br />
00<br />
1.<br />
01<br />
950 00<br />
00<br />
at 25<br />
1.410 CO<br />
looo<br />
SCO CO<br />
Deputy HherllfSJOO 1 no CO<br />
7 Police J25 4,200 00<br />
or xaci.<br />
Lahalna.<br />
lDepntygioo 2400 00<br />
I fan tain ot Police S&O 00<br />
J Police oracers $ai zpj oo<br />
Ktthnkatou.<br />
1 Police OIllcerQ SI5 300 00<br />
Honakahan.<br />
1 Police Ulcer $13 3go<br />
Honokatval.<br />
1 l'olico onicerQJIS goo<br />
Olawatu.<br />
2 Police Officers $.-- .<br />
Walluku.<br />
Deputy Sheriff 7.1 00<br />
tlononalaa.<br />
Deputy Sheriff $10 720 00<br />
V Police nnicera$V 7,560 00<br />
Hana.<br />
1 prpcty 150 fjoa 00<br />
1 Police OMci-- $': coo 00<br />
S " " t, 140 OO<br />
Makan-ao- ,<br />
Salary Deputy Sheriff Sl!5 3,000 00<br />
Salary 1 Police OBci-rd- t 50 1,200 00<br />
Salary' " J .TO 5,010 00<br />
or MOLOKAt.<br />
Salary Deputy Sherlfl S W 1.440 00<br />
Salary ( Police 8 25 s 800 00<br />
Salary 1 Police Jso 720 00<br />
Or LANAI.<br />
Halary I i'ollco Onicc-- r $20 4W to<br />
or HAWAII.<br />
llllo.<br />
Deputy Sheriff $75 1,100<br />
Police otllcer (70 i,bo<br />
a jiu....<br />
I " " $n....<br />
4 Police Ofliccra $30...<br />
North llllo.<br />
1 Deputy ST)<br />
3 Pollco Otllcers $10..<br />
llaniakua.<br />
I DenntvrtJtIO<br />
3 Police Oillcers J<br />
2<br />
North Kohala.<br />
$35.,<br />
t Deputy $UD<br />
I Pollco Otllcer $10<br />
I ' $)<br />
I " " $<br />
South Kohala,<br />
1 Deputy $10<br />
1 Pollco Otllcer $10<br />
1 " i1<br />
I " " ')<br />
North Kona.<br />
I Deputy $10<br />
1 Pollco Officer f-<br />
I " " 9l<br />
3 " " SIS<br />
Hooth Kona.<br />
I Deputy $:0<br />
1 Police Olltcer tS<br />
1 ' " 6jJ0<br />
S " " 15<br />
Kau.<br />
I Deputy $100<br />
1'ahala.<br />
3 Pollco Ofllctra ft $30<br />
Walohlnn.<br />
Pollco Officer $10<br />
2 " J4<br />
llcalcla. t Policteflmcer C<br />
ruuaiun.<br />
1<br />
Honoapu. 1<br />
Naalehn.<br />
1<br />
Kahnku. I<br />
i$)0...<br />
J0.<br />
$)..,<br />
$21...<br />
Puna.<br />
!J)luty$IO<br />
I Police Oillcers $ai<br />
roue or KACAI,<br />
Salary Deputy hhcrln for the Island is)<br />
Llhue.<br />
Salary Deputy Sheillt 1 B)<br />
Salary Deputy Sherlll $ CO<br />
Koloa onu Deputy at $) per motth<br />
Walmeaonoliepuiy at$iO per month<br />
Kawalahau one Deputy at $00 per monlh...<br />
Ilaualel ono Deputy $10 per month.,,,..<br />
Kite Police at $' per month ,,...<br />
Kite Pollco at $23 per mouth<br />
Ten Police at $.x) per month ,<br />
Street Lampa throughout the Kingdom.,..,<br />
Coronera Inqaeats...<br />
luddentaia Criminal and Civil Kxpenses...<br />
Armed Forco Contingent Fund ,,.,,<br />
Messenger .,..,., ,.<br />
Total nrriarviriir mn-ifm- u<br />
Salaryof Inspector-Ueuera- l of ichoola..,<br />
Travelling expenses nf same<br />
halary. Clerk uf Hoard ut Kducatlou<br />
hup-Joi- t of Hawaiian and Engll.h schools,<br />
Sunport of Common schoola<br />
nuuunai ana ucrormaiory sc&ooi...<br />
Aid to Kawnlabao Seminary.,<br />
Aid to St. LmilaCollcgelllonololu).,,<br />
For Industrial Education In High Schools.,<br />
Protestor of ChetuUtry 4 Natural Bclince,<br />
Oahu College<br />
Aid to Illln Hoarding school<br />
Uulldlnjs and Kepalra of School Houses,..,<br />
nutlouvrr and Incidentals<br />
Pay of Messenger and Otlice Assistance.,..<br />
Taking Censnt"lr4l<br />
Aid to lolanlColltge<br />
i(wei(an cngusa tiiciionary and school<br />
lllltorv of Hawaiian lalanda<br />
Scholarship Ojhu C ygt....,,, ,<br />
U)<br />
OO<br />
oo<br />
00<br />
10<br />
m ID<br />
IU<br />
00<br />
00<br />
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00<br />
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10<br />
00<br />
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00<br />
00<br />
oo<br />
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00<br />
00<br />
00<br />
00<br />
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00<br />
00<br />
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U)<br />
00<br />
00<br />
00<br />
00<br />
04<br />
00<br />
04<br />
00<br />
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00<br />
uu<br />
Oil<br />
00<br />
00<br />
00<br />
00<br />
00<br />
00<br />
U)<br />
CO<br />
o<br />
of Secretary ot CO<br />
T.'!l,,nl!B?<br />
htlswaoand Kalanpap U)<br />
llovirom.nl Physicians healm't 00<br />
t.xpeniss of<br />
and utlntalulng Hospitals<br />
andeaieof Ijoarantlne<br />
hsplolant tD<br />
at w<br />
innv.<br />
List Hettiemeats ,<br />
and l'rlvv<br />
Judiciary Department<br />
u,iaitu,rH wi rwilicn AUSirS.. ......<br />
Interior Depattueul<br />
Dvpailtncnt ,<br />
Department of the Attornry-Uenera- l<br />
Department t Kducatlou<br />
of ,...!,.,,<br />
'J. too<br />
J.800<br />
10.8CO<br />
8(0 (XI<br />
1.II0.UI<br />
31,110<br />
1 ,560<br />
l.wo oo<br />
20<br />
1,93) 00<br />
rnucr:<br />
00<br />
00<br />
i,soo 00<br />
1,600<br />
roucc<br />
rOLICE<br />
at<br />
S.3iO<br />
2.8S0<br />
1.200<br />
2,lli0<br />
2,100<br />
1.H00<br />
2.100<br />
l,b0<br />
2,400<br />
IWO<br />
2,8;0<br />
2,100<br />
SCO<br />
720<br />
6(0<br />
480<br />
KCO<br />
HOO<br />
4b4<br />
7i<br />
ooo<br />
4S)<br />
720<br />
2,100<br />
1.410<br />
MO<br />
1,440<br />
780<br />
840 IX)<br />
rjo ID<br />
too<br />
600<br />
ecooo<br />
l,M00<br />
1,920<br />
1,410 00<br />
1,204<br />
1.410<br />
1,200<br />
1.410<br />
1,410<br />
3.C04<br />
3004<br />
2.400<br />
13,000<br />
2,000<br />
IJ.IUJW<br />
3,000<br />
1,"4 00<br />
t<br />
00<br />
0.00000<br />
(,un<br />
lOoouuoo<br />
to.uuouo<br />
U.raJO<br />
2.500<br />
2,(XX)U)<br />
10.UU<br />
v,mx)oo<br />
2.400<br />
3,tl)<br />
15,00)00<br />
80010<br />
1.800<br />
7,000<br />
8,000<br />
1.500<br />
V.MU)<br />
t 121.720 00<br />
lA.tn anirii<br />
ot Hoard Health $ 4.000<br />
IW<br />
loo.oaioo<br />
naler Pipes, I0.UO<br />
i. 53.000<br />
General Uoani Health a3.tXJ0.io<br />
llulldlux 40.0u)u)<br />
lepalia 5,uu)u<br />
Home 15.1x0<br />
Walkalu ....."<br />
npArmM<br />
Civil ;..<br />
rirtaaeent<br />
Lei!lslatue Council..<br />
Finance<br />
Board Health<br />
t,2oom<br />
2Si,7JO<br />
I.UUOUO<br />
Salary<br />
Medical<br />
llrldge<br />
SOI.MX) tO<br />
.$ 17.931 34<br />
,tU) U)<br />
. tO.JiO 01<br />
U)<br />
. 245.11)1 3d<br />
. 1 l.5M (0<br />
. Tffl.Mr<br />
. VU,TtIU<br />
. Il,7i0 IX)<br />
. MtUlltX)<br />
$ ).H,7H W<br />
H<br />
Incuntncc loticco.<br />
AMDURCMAGDERURO FIRB INSUR-ane- e<br />
Company of Hamburg;,<br />
A.AEGLK,AGF.S'r.<br />
Itailding, Merchandise, romltme aiHl Machinery<br />
Inswred against Fire on the most favorable terms. I<br />
FORTUNAOEMBRAL1HSURANCECOM.<br />
F, A. SCttAKrEK & C., AGSXTS.<br />
Th boT Iftiurarve Companj", hit csulliihcd<br />
Ctn-r- l wVffMcr here, nA tht undtnixBdt G?nenl<br />
Affenti, ar ftuifwrlrcd to UVe HtV iifrHt thedintn<br />
01 the Seal at th mmt rinbU rate and on tht<br />
mmt favorabl term.<br />
B RBMEN DOARO OF UNDERWRITERS.<br />
F.A.SCttAEFERfrC A(tt<br />
Al5 aeentt for the<br />
Dieid-- n Board of Uodcrwrttet.<br />
Vienna Board of UndenvrUeri.<br />
Torth Hawaiian hUndi<br />
GERMAN LLOYD MARINE INSURANCE<br />
Companr of Betlin<br />
F. A, SCUAEFEJt A C., AGSXTS.<br />
The above lnioranee Company l.aiMtaUithedaGtn-r- a<br />
AgetKy hre,ard the aboe.iffned, General Aienti,<br />
are author wed to take Kika agaimt the danfer of the<br />
Seal at the mot teatorublc tates, and on the mo it fa<br />
vorable term<br />
HAMDURG.DREMHNrtRE INSURANCE<br />
F. A. ACIfAFFER A C.. AGI2XTS.<br />
The above firm been appointed ajenti of tht<br />
company are prepared to ii lure rUki ajtaltwt fire On<br />
Stone nnd llrick building and on iert.handie stored<br />
ttiereln, on the most favorable ierm. For particular<br />
apply at their office i<br />
T FIRE INSURANCE<br />
Company of Hamburg,<br />
H. ItACKFJlLD & Ca, Agtntt.<br />
Capita! and Reserve KeithrmarV 6,000,000.<br />
' their Ke'Itiiurance (Companies " 101,650,000<br />
ToUl.. , ,Keichimrk io;,65oc<br />
The Agents of the boe Company, for the Hawaiian<br />
Ulandt, arc prepared to nxurelluildinet, Kuiniiure,<br />
MercliandUe and I'roduce, Machincr), etc, alw Sugar<br />
anl Rice MUU, and vesseli in the harbor nainU loi<br />
or damage by fire, nn th mo favorahtd tertm 1<br />
M UTUAL LIFE IHSURANCK COMPANY<br />
of New York.<br />
It tLDKK & C:, AGnXTS.<br />
tMrumt, .VirVsf assirf inoaf llfntmmleul IAf<br />
liiMUriitirr C'oinMirrf in ttrt H'orfif,<br />
CASH ASSETS OVER $osooo,ooo.<br />
For further information concerning the Company,<br />
ami for rale of Insurance apply to the Agent, or to<br />
J. K. Wiseman, Soliciting Agent. 1<br />
GERMAN FIRE INSURANCE<br />
NORTH. Company of Hamburg.<br />
. HACKFU.n - Co., AGFXTS.<br />
Capital and Reserve Reich smart 8,8,000<br />
' their Companies ' 35.oou,ojo<br />
The Afients of the above Company, for tie Hawaiian<br />
Idands are prepared to injure Duildinis, Furniture,<br />
Merchandise ana lVoduce, ,Machiner)'t etc, alvSucar<br />
and Rice Mill, ami vettels in the harbor, against loss<br />
or damage by tire, on the mott favorable terms. 1<br />
FOREIGN MARINE INSUR-sxne- e<br />
BRITISH Company, (Limited)<br />
ruso. n. jyAt'xs, agzxt.<br />
T..e above agent hat received instructions to re<br />
duce the rates of Insurance between Honolulu and<br />
Torts in the Pacific and is now prepared to issue o!l<br />
clet at the lowest rates, with a special reduction on<br />
freight per steamers.<br />
LIVERPOOL AND LONDON AND<br />
THE Globe Inturanco Company,<br />
BISHOP & Co., AGENTS.<br />
MTABISHBn tSjl<br />
rfiHtrifrV.t Liability to Stockholder.<br />
Assets.. iP.Mo'.too<br />
Reserve.. . 6,750,090<br />
INCOME ron l3;q.<br />
Premiums received after deduction of re-<br />
insurance $ 5.1.9$<br />
Losses promptly adjusted and paid here. 1<br />
ENGLAND MUTUAL LIFE INSUR.<br />
NEW anco Company of Ho ton.<br />
CASTIC h COOKE, AGEXTS.<br />
INCORPORATED 1B35.<br />
The oldest Purely Mutual Life Insurance<br />
Company In the United States.<br />
Pollcie IsMxted on (7i most Favorable Term<br />
KXAMFLK OP EtTL'FK ft. AN :<br />
Insured age 35 years ordinary life plan :<br />
1 Annual premium contlnuts Policy a years, 3 days<br />
j Annual premiums: continue Policy 4 years, is '<br />
3 Annual premiums continue Policy 6 years, i "<br />
4 Annual premiums continue Policy 8 years. 46 '<br />
i Annual premiums continue Policy ioyears,s6 "<br />
Assets.. .,.$13,300,030.<br />
Losses paid throuch Hnoluolu Affeacy. $40,000<br />
TDOSTON BOARD OF UNDERWRITERS.<br />
C. BREWER & C<br />
Agents for the Hawaiian Islands. 1<br />
jHILADELPHIA BOARD OF UNDER<br />
writers,<br />
C. EREll'SR y Cc,<br />
Agents for the Hawaiian Islands. 1<br />
U NIONMARINEINSURANCE COMPANY<br />
of San Francisco.<br />
CASTLE fr COOKE. AGZXTS.<br />
Incorporated 1S75.<br />
orcigu bcrtiocmcntc.<br />
IT W. SBVERANCH.<br />
116 CauroauiA St., Cau, (Room No. ..)<br />
UAW.ttTAX COSSVL ,t-- COJDIISSTOX<br />
Jrrcirtllt. 7<br />
-"- IIARLES BREWER tt Co,<br />
it KiLav Stiht, Dostoi,<br />
Aor.yrs or ir.iir.if.i.v vackkts.<br />
ftenerat CotMmuslori tieNfa<br />
Special attention civen to the purchasing of goodi for<br />
ins 1 tawaiian trade, r relent at low est rates.<br />
Scncntl bbcriiermmts.<br />
TDBNSON, SMITH, & CO.,<br />
' Pnaoticul Sntxeartata,<br />
ill tl j, 'FORT STRCEtT<br />
DefOttor<br />
oeatcKi & KHaica'a caLiaruTiD HouiiorATHic<br />
Macicwtt.<br />
BUkntr'i Ftrfunm,<br />
aad<br />
THE COMMON SLHSE NURSINC B0TTLB1<br />
I NKS, INKS, INKS.<br />
ARNOLD'S WRITING TLUIDS,<br />
In qtkt pis., K &nd coots,<br />
CARTFR'S COMBINED WRITING COPVING<br />
NK, tn cjtt. pis. and f P- -<br />
DAVIS DIAMOND BLACK INK,<br />
in its., ptw, K ptk and unu.<br />
ARNOLD'S COPYING INK, Inqts.. pts. and K Pts.<br />
.UAVisr and rfcEKLKSS cone Inks In black, blue t.j<br />
violet, and carmineandCTuasoa iluidlfroas 1 to 4 ot,<br />
ANIOINC'S violet TuUck Copstuc luV, att, and pts.<br />
CAWS Black Fluid Ink,<br />
tr DAVIS TREASURY MUCILAGE, U<br />
qtV, - ton 1, a moot refractory and reliable ankle.<br />
Automatic and PcaricrtON Mvciucb,<br />
tor SaU at THUS, O, TllltUJi'S<br />
Koit Stuit a wd MtacMAMT Stuir Sroasa.<br />
BUTTERICICS CUT PAPER<br />
VATTEUXS.<br />
A new toppIycUieu titts jo relW to U rt<br />
plcnlrhii each mMuh tad for salt at their uajkid<br />
pre at TUQS. G. TIIWM'S<br />
Tin St. Stcm<br />
(Gcncml bbediscmcats.<br />
ASTLE A COOKS,<br />
lIOHOtl'LV, It. I<br />
Would can attention to thnlr Lsje and<br />
varied Stock of<br />
AGRICULTURAL IMPLEMENTS,<br />
ConsrtMlaf of te unrirallfd Paris S<br />
Breaking Plow,<br />
The MoHne Steel BieaVer an4 rurrowinc Mo, Mo<br />
line Stul I'lowiall sues Plantt, Jr., Culti-<br />
vators, Dirt Scrapeii,<br />
John Diwr'i Onntc Plfw"t<br />
PUnteM Hoe t.f the t malvs<br />
(t<br />
DISSTONS CELEBPwTED CANR KNIVF.S<br />
uiAile to ordr. Aine' Shovels ,an4 3J<br />
Garden Hoes, Canal Barrows, 0<br />
Bows, Yokes, Chaini, Fends<br />
Chains,<br />
Sugar Mill Requirement.:,<br />
SUGAR BAGS, SUGAR KEGS,<br />
Onmbrlatid CoaI,<br />
Soerm Oil, Cylinder. lard<br />
and Kerosene Oil, Perfect<br />
Lubricators, Plumbago, Al<br />
tany Grcav, ar.d<br />
S. and J. Files, all sires and<br />
kinds. Steam Packing. Tlat<br />
and Round India ItubUr,<br />
Aslstos and Swp Stone, ,<br />
Flaa Packing, India Rii.<br />
Ur Hojwj, ); to 1 Inch, Pipes<br />
and Couplings, Nuts and<br />
Wathers, finished, Machine<br />
Bolts, all Ares,<br />
Blatkstnith's, Knninscr's and<br />
Carpenter's Hammers, Pipe<br />
Cutters, Winches, 8 inch to<br />
4 inch. Anvils, Vices, Tube<br />
Scrapers, Grindstones, licit<br />
American liar Iron and Toot<br />
Steel, guilders' Hardware,<br />
all kinds and styles, Hub-buc-<br />
Paints and Oil, raw<br />
and boiled. Small Paints lit<br />
Od, in large variety, Dry<br />
Paints, Umber, Venetian,<br />
Red, Ochres, Metallic. cc,<br />
Whitlnj. Certran window<br />
ss'td tiiet, Manila Hope<br />
Staple Groceries,<br />
No. t and a Flour, No. 1 and a KIce,<br />
Brushed Suear, China and Janan Teat;<br />
Clams, Salmon, Lobitors.<br />
Finest Table Fruits from the Factory<br />
Pure English Spices. Condensed Milk<br />
Cocoa, SPECIALTIES: The I'til<br />
nee Hcroame OU, M'caton's<br />
Ltn tuna, 14 Inch. Jtubber<br />
Sprlno find CTntvjj lirithc Just at<br />
hand, Blake Steam Pump VaWes, Pack.<br />
Inr, hc.t Blake Boiler Feed, Juice or<br />
Molasses, Irriaratln; & Vacuum Pumps<br />
Weston' Patent Centrifugals Complete,<br />
ALSO COHSICNMCNT<br />
California Hav, Darley, Potatoes. Darrels<br />
Salmon, tlimi, Asbestos Mixture for Tdoikrs<br />
and Steam Pipes, very cheap. Fence Wire<br />
and St pits, Galvanlied Roofing<br />
SEWING MACHINES,<br />
Wllcoa and Glbb's Automatic; binder Manufacturing<br />
4uiuiiT, 41IIVHVU, (cii.iiifiwu .vuafAitj, 1 auui)!<br />
Wilson tachines, the best assortment to t found,<br />
and at Bottom Prices,<br />
New Qou by ertry arrival from England, New<br />
1 ork and San Francisco.<br />
1 Kew Tnwrllou Emjln, jxiwer.<br />
Order s from the other Islands filled at Best Kale and<br />
with dispatch<br />
N O T l C B<br />
OH<br />
MESSRS. R. MORE & CO<br />
Kimo Sthiit ; Hon Jim c<br />
WouM kI la nolLfyth. Fublic tl. tb.y<br />
bavc usl rtcslvtd a tk1pn.nl of the famoua<br />
HOUSEHOLD" SEWING MACHINE.<br />
Jes Anypenen wlahtatiopiarjMs.ai.wlaffaBckuM<br />
wwua aa wiu lecxamut. inun.<br />
Alt.<br />
a aombcr of rupiitos<br />
- Doable-barr- el Dt.acb-loadl- n j; Shot Chins,<br />
WlackaatK Rlfies, KwaaOr RllM<br />
Parlor Riles,<br />
Smith & Wlason Revsilvsrs.<br />
A fall aiscitm.nl of CARTRIDCHS, brass and<br />
)aasr sn.ll ) aaa fpcsiini.ni usntru axppiKi.<br />
MT Call and aamlnt our StxL )<br />
Ilarinj la our trapby a nriKlait Lock and Can<br />
SoillH. wm ar rirepart J to da all kloda of itfalilaf la a<br />
lutluu maansr ana oa saon iwhi.<br />
tinting XacAlne. r.jxsfr.d and ajuttnl<br />
And all klods of I roa Wotk madt aad rspalnaL<br />
iji-i-<br />
"THE LATEST WORK ON SUGAR,<br />
SUOAR QROWIMO AMD RSTIWIM O<br />
LOCK, W10NKR k IIARLAND.<br />
llxcsraAiio B 10 PtAtat o aoj Euciav- -<br />
isot.<br />
Piki 1 A( fij psjss ,. i. lis jo<br />
r Sal. 11<br />
.<br />
m. O. TKrum'i Fri itntt $.<br />
saaviaa.<br />
6ccntl bbcrtlotmtjttc.<br />
rOHN NOTT.<br />
JOHN NOTT,<br />
AT THE OLD SfAND. NUMnr.R i KAA- -<br />
HUMNU STREET,<br />
TIN,<br />
COPPER,<br />
AND<br />
tmnirr iron worker,<br />
PLl'MllINC IN ALL ITS DRANCUES.<br />
Artesian Woll Plp all sixes.<br />
WtovoH nnd TatniifaN,<br />
Unda Sam, Medallion, Richmond, , Tatace.<br />
Ilota, May, Conlt-I- , Otand J'tlte, Ne Rival<br />
Opera, Derby, Wten, Dolly,<br />
, Quitn.<br />
Pani)', Army Ranges, Magna Chart.,<br />
llucV, Superior, Magnet. Osceola, Ala.<br />
tneda, Kctipic, Charter Oalc,<br />
Nimble, and<br />
Laundry Stoves.<br />
GALVANIZED IRON and COITHR IIOILERS<br />
FOR RANGES, GRANITE IRON WARE,<br />
NICKKL PLATED AND PLAIN.<br />
Galvanliod Iron water Pipe, All lic, and<br />
laid on at low-c-jt rates, also cast iron<br />
Lead Soil Pipe.<br />
Hous. FnrnUblng Goods, all kind.<br />
RUUDER HOSE,<br />
All sues and grades, Lin and Force. Pumps. Cittern<br />
Pumpa, Galvaiuied Iron, Sheet Copper and<br />
.Shaet Lead. Lead Pipe, Tin I'l.le<br />
Water doaetl, Maibla slabs<br />
and bov.ll, enameled<br />
wash'Stands.<br />
CHANDELIERS IMPS AND L,NTER<br />
-- FFICE OF J. E. WISEMAN,<br />
BRICK BUILDING,<br />
So. 91 Jtereiiant Xtrtet. Uonolutu, IT. I.<br />
Th only roogniaed Oaxwral Baata.u<br />
Axjent In tha KiUBtloxa,<br />
DEPARTMENTS:<br />
Real Estate Broker, Life Insurance Agent,<br />
Custom House Broker, Employment Agent,<br />
Money Broker, Fire tniuranc. Agent,<br />
And General Business Agent.<br />
Real Estatu DsrARTMBN-- Buy and aelt Real<br />
Estate in all parts of the Kingdom; atue Real Estate<br />
anrt nronertvofall LluJi: Kent and Lease Hous. Cot.<br />
tages. Rooms and l.and; Attemt to Insurance, Taaei,<br />
Repauinc and Cullcctinft uf Rental,; Draw Legal<br />
lapers 01 every nature, kicnri.il i nic ixcium., cic, etc.<br />
EmPLOVMENT DttrASTMKNT Find employment in<br />
all branches of Industry connected with ths Islands.<br />
Genxhal Husinfss Matters Keep Hooks and<br />
Accounts; Collectt Hills; I.oanand Inveu Money; Pen<br />
manthlp, Engroshine and all kinds of Copying donst<br />
Procure Fire and Life Insurance; Advertisements and<br />
Correspondence attended to.<br />
Custom Mouse Broker Attend toall Entries<br />
alva..t .wi.. altnm.u ears. I rtt Viatsrta las, .1 ssta<br />
lllllJUnll !"; Ul as"SS".J SS1.U WHIH nim. HHI.IH.<br />
will find this department a special benefit to<br />
attend to the delivery of invoices complete.<br />
Soliciting Agent for the .Mutual Life tnsarance<br />
Company of New VorV, the larcesi, Grandest and<br />
Murkiest Insurance Company In the world.<br />
Tourists and Travelers, and those seekinf rterma<br />
nent homes on the ands, will find It to their adsan<br />
tatre tr romult me trersonallv or Lv letter when suitable<br />
accommodationa are required, aivl thev will find it to<br />
their interest to call on me lor general imormaiion per-<br />
ikininev In tha Illanilc.<br />
Correspondence solicited from abroad and order<br />
accepted anu mica ior iiwjitn v.uiiu. rnm,<br />
Shells, lava .Specimens, J'hotos, Views, ttc, etc, apper.<br />
tainlns to the Islands. ,<br />
Orders uf every nature attended to, comitij from the<br />
oHous lUands.<br />
s.<br />
ii<br />
M. CARTER<br />
r:- -'<br />
S. P. ORAHAM<br />
S. M. CARTER c CO-- ,<br />
UTAH. DSUVIM<br />
riRKWOOD, COALJahd TEED.<br />
IUYahoOATS.<br />
fis. DsBvary u all pans of la City<br />
JJ(smsrmo.r t, X.V0 ttHKKT,<br />
Aad Talsovx No, llf<br />
PENHOLDERS. ETC<br />
Faiia's Aitoariu PamtolDaas,<br />
FADERS ANTI. NERVOUS PENHOLDERS,<br />
Robber Holders, Cork Holdsrs, Ivory aad Eboay<br />
Holdwa jtold aaounil. Ivory aa4 Bon.<br />
t'eldni and 1'ap.r Cuttsn, cur's TabUt<br />
Eraarrs, Dcnitjoo's Velvet Erasers,<br />
Crystal RubUr, Rubber n wood<br />
pndl shap. Thuaab Tacks.<br />
"Paxil ProSoct-r- s, Rubbst<br />
Uaads of various<br />
sins, etc, rt,<br />
Tmr Bait ol TMUM. O. XmUCW<br />
Miksuumt Sraaar aao roar ttaut f toaaa<br />
H<br />
6titcntl vlbijrrtiscmciilo.<br />
OLLISTER & CO,,<br />
txrttr. tuv ATTEXT10X or mr.<br />
vvtinc A covsthy JrftCI.I.VTJ<br />
, la particular, to thtlr large and<br />
v&ried auscetment of<br />
LUXVBOJIG'S Vt:hrUMEItY<br />
just received. This ,1 acknowtedied<br />
to t the fniett perfume In the<br />
world. All of one quality.<br />
Great variety of odort tytes<br />
and prices, alia<br />
CMlulotd TnnfM,<br />
(all ht--t and style)<br />
Saryieul Inttruutouta,<br />
PLutourupbe.fi Sitppllrji<br />
arid aht largest tnj most complete stock of<br />
DRUGS,<br />
, CHEMICALS,<br />
PATENT MEDICINES,<br />
ever kept In this Kingdom, a<br />
large Invoice of<br />
WASHED MKJUTlUtUAXVAX SPOXOK<br />
direct from Turope, free fuxn<br />
sand or dirt Agents for<br />
PARKS DAVIS & 008<br />
Pharmaceutical Preparations<br />
J. O. AVER & CO'S<br />
Patent MedictuM,<br />
Hofstfurd't Acid Phosphates,<br />
Green's August Flower & Gorman 3yrup,<br />
Allcock Porous PUtter Co .<br />
Murray & Lanmao' Florida Water<br />
Yetba Buona BlMeri,<br />
H OLLISTER Sc CO.,<br />
axe also Proprietors and Manufaa<br />
facturcrs of the celebrated<br />
Rheomatie LInvmni<br />
E.IJ C ALO FORM.<br />
Acents for Was. S. Kimball & Co's<br />
Traffntnt VanltU JT'nfr,<br />
To6aoco and Ctattrtft.<br />
hwh liave no risals. Th.<br />
Iarest a.tortment of<br />
PLUG TOBACCO AND ClOAltS IN<br />
THE KINGDOM.<br />
OUR GINGER ALE & SQDAWATER<br />
las always been recosnlred as ihe<br />
bst tnthe market.<br />
aux at.vGSK alk extract<br />
Uln; manufactured from our own<br />
private formula in<br />
Nev Vork,<br />
AERATED WATEKS In Patent or Cork<br />
Stoppered bottles as desired.<br />
WHOLESALE ft RETAIL, 50 NUUANU ST.<br />
RETAIL. Cna. FORT t MKRCHAKT STS<br />
tor<br />
V1-<br />
OUGAR MACHINERY.<br />
PEH " JXAJLLSOATE."<br />
V have rexelved a further conilxnment oi<br />
Sttrt. JrJirr.t.,' l'alaorCo.' HocMlntm<br />
And have now on hand, ready for delivery t<br />
Oo TtlplS'EtTect, enhaivlsome Ironstsxlnj,cofilslnio2<br />
3e)S square feet of hatin surface, with Puracinf<br />
Engine and discharging Montjus, complete.<br />
One Double Effect, having ,? srfuara ft of hs.lins<br />
surface, with Enzln. and Montjus.<br />
One let of Four Wsuon's Patent Csotrlfugali, with<br />
Engine and Nlisei.<br />
One Kt of Two Weston's Patent Centrifugals.<br />
Havin lacreaaad fadh'tias for the manufacture of<br />
lh.M nuchtnas, fths Wsston Psunl, fcr which, n<br />
Great Britain hii .spirsdX w aa abut enabled to offer<br />
ibm at mat.rlalty reductd prices.<br />
W. have a full assortment of Cutilfuai sparse<br />
linings, te asMi, rubber lands arsd bushes, etc.<br />
Two Diagonal Engines, each 6 bi. by is la,<br />
ClarifUri, Flat Cooleit, I by t by s aad i by 1 by i.t.<br />
One bpars Top Roller foe ti by 51 in. Mill.<br />
One Spue Sid. kollsr for do. do.<br />
On. bpars Intenrwdial. Spur Wheel for gearing of da<br />
lit If (I. W. MACrARLANE 4 Co.<br />
DENS AND PENCILS.<br />
CILLOTTS AND EASTER BROOK PENS<br />
la all the desirable numbers.<br />
QuiO Psos, Spn4triaa, Commercial and Custom House<br />
Tans. Mabi.,lodd&Cs.'s<br />
RELIABLE COLD PEKS<br />
Cross' Siylogtapbic Peas plain and gold mounted.<br />
Prince's Fountain Pens, Shading Puis4 sis...<br />
E.gl. Co.. Automatic Pencils ai;d kada.<br />
Red, lllu. and Cr..o Pencils,<br />
DIXON. FABER and GROSSBERGER Jr. KURTZ<br />
Peruila, No. 1 to 4. Aniua' PsntUs, Diswsog<br />
Peudls In sets, Pockw Peaola, Staa.<br />
Pencils plain or in wood,<br />
Af TMOM. 0. MMMVM'M<br />
l(uuVT.StauT.atx. roarrrMarr ttoexw.<br />
6citcnl Jlbbcrticcmcnlo.<br />
T. MATTHEW'S HALL, SAN<br />
.1 SCHOOL<br />
Under MlHtar<br />
f nr iA 1st. tka) V4,.(!i'..1 aJI.- - .! C. t(.. . I<br />
w-s- a . .,. - auniui .ni-i.- tr vi on tMatfT. on .ne<br />
t...ifii.iTu in i.yy rwyrifCT. oi rrnuia<br />
heated ty Veam, and are In every may anai.te.1 foe the<br />
teein. July ti,<br />
tot Turtner information and ratalottue. Just cut,<br />
IITILDBR A CO..<br />
ttnr-ort- aod dealers in<br />
LUMBER,<br />
And B a IUl uu Mntorlal<br />
. all Vln.lt, juit received, ea I.I. artivall, leveri<br />
large and well selected cargoes frf<br />
NORTHWEST LUMBER.<br />
enmteisinir; all the usual ,tK:k lire<br />
In Scantling, Tlmbct,<br />
FenclnK, Picket,<br />
1'Ixuiks and Board..<br />
ALSO DRY REDWOOD,<br />
Sciimlinf, Plane surface and touh Hoards ur<br />
faced and roUgjtiUaitens, Pickets, Rustic.<br />
1 lattice nd Clapboard 1<br />
DOORS, SASH AND BLlNDSf<br />
AM sires, of Kaittrn and California maV.e. and for<br />
iM--lf<br />
Ale ui quamiticf to suit, at low price.<br />
Alio, in Stock,<br />
White Lead,<br />
WHITE ZINC, TAINT OILS,<br />
METALLIC AND OTHER PAINTS,<br />
GLASS AND SALT,<br />
PAINT<br />
AND WHITEWASH BRUSHES.<br />
A 6ne aisortment of<br />
WALL PAPER,<br />
tm latest atjrlac<br />
Firewood,<br />
Nulla, Screws,<br />
Locks, Bolts,<br />
AT LOWEST<br />
UNION FEED CO.,<br />
Importers .ad tlMlcn la<br />
Cnf, Haft ana 111 ill n<br />
Goods pi omplly delivered.<br />
t).f, a mkitt,h xi,.<br />
Telephone No. 17s.<br />
P, O. Roa i).<br />
etc.,<br />
'T'HH ENTERPRISE PLANINO MILL<br />
Aiakea St., Niaa Quest, St.,<br />
TELr.rilONE Na jj.<br />
C. . Hardee,<br />
coirritaoTOR Bd bdicder<br />
Plmniof , Sbasptn, Turning,<br />
Band and Scroll Sawing,<br />
Doora, Sath, Blind, Door<br />
nd Window<br />
Brackat, Balloatara,<br />
Stair, made to order,<br />
Urn rrt an tl ot Tr.. Woorf jTor 5..V.<br />
MOLDINGS AND FINISH,<br />
Always on hand.<br />
At. j ..t t a ..ui ...<br />
ru Muers ntieu crnuert nosKff.aiui joowng prvenjtij<br />
IIWIIUSjU IV. VUSUglliEJ Jj,i lf IHI EjaaHtSa vEfl.ltVWW<br />
..... .1.. - I. ..<br />
. vii4ii tur aanii,<br />
w<br />
IllandOrftttlSoluittJ.<br />
ATER PIPE I WATER PIPE I<br />
WATER PIPE I<br />
Butts,<br />
PRICES.<br />
ProprUtor,<br />
Frame,<br />
We havt on hand a full S'tpply of Galvanised Iron<br />
pip., fittings also of Rrass Goodi for water and get<br />
from U to inches Inclusive, which will fc. kid .1<br />
reasonable prlc.t. Eaumates givsn on plans of pipe<br />
work fur water, gas or steam. On band at all llracl<br />
Sanitary Goods as follows I<br />
JBaiA.f u. H aA-tlam- lt (MsrbU and Eunseled),<br />
Hink: Murqmt Hep Umpptr; Wmtrr<br />
tturlr, otl rip, l4,<br />
rn. I'lpt, Trap,,<br />
Klc, i! Klo.<br />
Ordrs la this line will recciv. prompt aitaoiUn.<br />
a. KMmXtTTH ooM<br />
I Nll'SHV AMD 4 UxaCH.NT Sts.<br />
PNVELOPES, ENVELOPES,<br />
In aioca, and lb. way, a full assoneaam tt sis..<br />
ana ainerem quauty 01<br />
ENVELOPES. ENVELOPES, ENVELOPES,<br />
via 1 No. 1, X and XX In hlu, aa.be r and canary.<br />
No-- aad ?X X whits. No. IK, . lo, 1 1, is and<br />
MXXaod XXX wine! XXX Rero.UI what, 73<br />
Cabinet. JWsssra)U JfantoasM. Ctotk lla.4 Ea.<br />
velopa while, from Jio. 6 so 14, all la Da. rtfalar<br />
GosrefaoMnt sisea aisd shapes, or speaUl siaa. aaaal. tsp<br />
19 nit. at<br />
f<br />
rsvoa. a. tmmvm'm<br />
Mcwsuai Sraaat aa reaax-lru- Iin...<br />
6cncntl bbcrtiocntcntG.<br />
MATEO, CAL.<br />
yon nors.<br />
y Discipline.<br />
Southern Pacific R. R., at mllet from San Pranosw.<br />
lion and ability. Ilie buildings ate eslenslve, ar.<br />
l.eaitn anci cnrnion M me caneis. r,ny 3Tnun<br />
arldrtss<br />
M<br />
Hsv. ALPRLD I.EE nRtWF.H, M, A.,<br />
Principal.<br />
RS. THOMAS LACK,<br />
No. 79 Fort BtrMt. Honolttln,<br />
UnatElt AVD DEAIEX IN<br />
s<br />
SEWINO MACHINES<br />
AND GEffVINK<br />
rrr, fffdrimrtifs, Off ntirf Jrntforl't.<br />
At.E?eT roa riiE<br />
White and the NrwUoMs M vhlns.<br />
llou ant's Machine Needles, all kind.<br />
Cortlcell'l Silk, In all colors and slit, !<br />
narbotu'a linen Thread,<br />
CUrk's O. N. T. Machine Cotton.<br />
fnt. Dimertst'i KtliMt Oil Jiftr litltrn<br />
AND rUSLICAtlOHS.<br />
taler In KirtEs,<br />
KEVOtVESS,<br />
Cuki mJ Sroarmo Chmds,<br />
Sunt, Powb.it, Cart,<br />
and Metauic CAitritH.as<br />
KKlWSKSi: XTOrKS. tn nil .<br />
Sewing.Machine, tk and Cun.R.rainng piomily<br />
ali,i.del to.<br />
""<br />
QAMUKL KfwTT,<br />
liEAvnn. ni.0CK.<br />
FORT STR<br />
Impotler and Dealer In<br />
KEIIOSENE riXTUKES.,<br />
Chandeliers, Lamp., P.ni!ant, ltrarkei Ijampi;<br />
O Tubular, Side Tubular, lloiling-houw- ,<br />
nd Polic. Lanterns; Nurse, Pocket, and<br />
Table Lamps i Globes, Chlmneie, Rell.torl,<br />
Lamp Holders for<br />
STOVES AND RANGES Unci. Ssm, Duck'.<br />
Patent, Richmond, " Ka Mol," Pert, Oweols,<br />
Hawaii Aloha Aimed. Flora.<br />
MISSISSIPPI RANGU-CooV- ing rapacity or w<br />
men.<br />
FRKNCIt RANOES-F- or restaurants, hotels, and<br />
prival. reatitenerc, with or without hot water<br />
circulating boilers.<br />
WESTENIIOLM'S 1 X I, CUTI.KRV.<br />
A fine assortment of Table, Desert, and Tea<br />
Knives and Foils', Carvers and Steels, wills<br />
plain and omammtal Ivory handles I also<br />
IWl,., Ktlvx. Itarora. Shears. l)utton-ll-<br />
.n.l I tl!..' Sr7mt. IU..A Knisel. Ecnuloc.<br />
FrenchCnok Knives, liutcher and Kltthaajj<br />
ivniv.<br />
Ladie." Wotkstand Rasleti Ofiice, Lunch,<br />
laundry and Market nask.ts.<br />
DOORMATS Assorted sires and patterns.<br />
S1LVER.PLATEI) WARM<br />
Rogers Protheri'and Mcilden Plating Woitraj<br />
Water and Cteam Pitchers: Table, DeseH,<br />
and Tea Knives; Forks and Spoons, Siiooh<br />
Holders, Napkin Rings, Children's Mugs,<br />
Pickle and Cruet Siands, llulter Bawls,<br />
Card Receis-ers- , Fruit Stands, Preserve<br />
Dishes.<br />
'<br />
AGATE WARb<br />
Tea Sets. In part or whole,<br />
very neat and desirable. plain Looking<br />
Ulensila In lares variety.<br />
STAMPED TINWARLi<br />
Milk Pans. Pudding and plain Basins, Milk<br />
Boilers ! Rice. Jelly, and Moulds<br />
new patterns in Stew Pans.<br />
SAUCEPANS Enameled and tinnl Iron, from 1 plnl<br />
to vgallon.<br />
JAPANNED WARE: ,<br />
Toilet Sets, Toilet Stan-U- , V.t Coo ler.<br />
Cake, Cah, and Knife lloaesi Spittoon.<br />
Cutpidors, ChUJren's Trays.<br />
scai rs -<br />
'.ilVbnlc riaiform. Counter, and Kitcheo<br />
Scales.<br />
IMPLEMENTS<br />
Mollne Plow., Shovels, Spades, lloei. Kales, ,a<br />
Ricand Manuie Torks, Oos, Hoe Ifsodtes, fj<br />
I'low nanuiei and ucams.<br />
ICE CHESTS and REFRIGI'.UATORS.<br />
BALDWIN FODDUR CUTt ERS Three sires, H<br />
1, 1, and cut, an A 1 artieL.<br />
RUllBER HOSE:<br />
Warranted best grades New ork standard,<br />
and carbol'ued, K, !, 1, ij,', 1S1 Inch<br />
Hose, noieles and sprinklers, a.c.<br />
PLUMBER AND TINSMITHS' MATERIAL<br />
Sheet Lead, t to 14 lbs. suuaia foot ; Soil Pipe<br />
lead and cast iron; Water Closets, Cases<br />
Sheet Tin; Sheet Copper, clean and tinned,<br />
la to to or, ; Hose llibbs. Rosin ; Sinks,<br />
black and enameled; ditto Washslands ,<br />
Sheet Zinc: Son Solder, our own make.<br />
GALVANIZED IRON PIPE V, 10 s Inch .lUwi,<br />
1 reducers, plugs, bushing.<br />
PIPE VICES, lak. H to 3 inch pip ; stocks and dies,<br />
cuts H to 3 inch pipe.<br />
BIRD CAGES Largest variety In market, painled<br />
bright, an 1 brass wire.<br />
BABY CARRIAGES, Hoys' Wh.ellusrrnws awl C<br />
carts.<br />
AOENT FOR<br />
Hall's Fire and Burglar proof<br />
Safes. v keep In stock the tersest assort,<br />
ment of Safes to be found west orCstlfomla.<br />
Cuts mailed upon application.<br />
OELETTS ICE MACHINES"!<br />
Just the Ihinjr for use on plantations wheie<br />
. steam Is available. Smalt sire makes u lbs.<br />
lea In four hours ; second sire. 70 lbs. In seven<br />
hours. Cuts, with full direction for working,<br />
mailed to your address on application. SAc<br />
ire aulhorlrrd lo deliver tnes. inacfunes<br />
aiorigfciua as maaers prices, aouinx oiur to.<br />
, ol packing-case- s and freights, 9<br />
CUSTOM WORK, cf all kinds In tinl<br />
ih.et.lron workiria attended to. K<br />
comoetent 1<br />
over stole. Work .aecuted by<br />
woiamen ai rcasonaui. prices.<br />
REAVER BLOCK, FORT STREET.<br />
"Nimble siapenc. belter than a slow shilling -- asd<br />
P<br />
NT DON'T fOROKT IV, ja mil<br />
AINE CO<br />
Votk.hop<br />
uara a labc. tioot or the<br />
IKY BXaT KAY. ORAIW, StTO.<br />
which ll offered at the<br />
LOWEST MARKET KATES,<br />
.nd delivered fr. to anyparl of th. city.<br />
Agents for the<br />
Partlc Mutual Lift In.ur.st. Or,<br />
ofCaUfomta.<br />
Agenli forth. HOOVER TELEPHONE. .<br />
Cvcnralssiuiir of Deads for lis. State of CsWoraia--<br />
TELIPIIONE NO 147.t6.tt<br />
psBOROB LUCAS,<br />
CONTRACTOR and DUILDtR.<br />
STKA3T PLAXIXQ MXLLS,<br />
Btplanm4 H.ssofsslss.<br />
M.rwfattui all kinds of '<br />
Moulding,<br />
BracJttta,<br />
WLadow framw,<br />
m4 aU bUU of woosl-wot- k<br />
I<br />
4 DeMra<br />
AUUndis.' r1aaaajMa Sawle, MwtUts. mi 1m'<br />
usiag.<br />
OEOCRS PROMPTLY ATTINDtaf T A<br />
--Jfi<br />
WORK CUAKANTItO<br />
sttMlllMllllllt., ml'<br />
a- -