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-- K. m K V, i, ? "V S, If 4 .1 hook .iiK'ir.vr. Mr I191 alre.nty ilone to efface the ...ti.rul line in Ameriian politic.. Mi toceiu to and consular j Hitioru show 1I111. Fur the intercut of many American readers we append the from a New York paper of rrent date : Th; list whkh follow tfifMnU very r iti. wlrtch have fir !n miJe. The m!Ian still Y .t ate those 10 the Argentine Central American States, Culoiiil-ii- , CVea, Italy, Liberia amt Slim, bpaln will fi'ituMy be vacant by tin- - retirement of Minister I"tter net! fall. It not ripeeteJ that there will be any change In the Delgfan mini"", which It now filleil by the wm of a pre .sor ot Mr. Ilaar.l, aliho'Kit it is .mil: that what ii called " will, not nrrinl t that eter Twenty-seve- State are Wnhl lil. fair men will lay that realize the at St. UiuN, that " the ml- - minitratloti will malteercry cmleaxor to allay every remnant of cctlonal feeling In J it 11 for the whole country, ami not for only a part of it." The roster of I a follow 1 NI.W YORK. Minitter to Todicy $10,000 Minister to (lilll 10,000 Mioiilerto Hayll 5.0 Second Secretary I.evatton, Paris.. .. J.ooo Secretary location, Ohlli ' l.5 Consul at l'.cllevlllc, Canada 2,oo( Consul at St. John, Quebec l,So Consul at llarve J.ooo Consul ot Dundee 2.5 Commercial Agent, Ottaw ' a ,1,ooo !, Total $l.7U4 01110. Minisier to Germmy $'7.5 C Krankfort 3,000 Honolulu l.ooo Consul ut Amoy 3.5 Consul at llrussels 2,5 Consul at Iliimtneham 2,5 Total $33.ooo MARYLAND. Minister to France $17.5 Ilerlin ' 4,000 Consul at Leeds. (.. J.ooo Total $23,500 RLortniA. Minister to Mexico - $12,000 The mission to Russia and the consulate at ManchMer were offered to Ccorpjian and declined. KENTUCKY. Minisier to I'cru $10,000 Minister to Switzerland 5,000 in Kan.i(-a- a 4,000 Total . $19,000 a INDIANA. Minister to China $ 12,000 Minister to Sweden and Norway. ...... 7,500 Minister to l'crsia. 5,000 Total v .., $24,500 SOUTH CAROLINA. Charge, Paraguay and Uriicmy .MelU.urne. Consul, Chemnitz U Consul, Cologne , Consul, Total $15,500 10UISIANA. Minister u Bolivia , $5.ooo Minister to oreece Secretary Lrgition, I'srls , . . . Consul, l'aso del Norte Total .$I4.6S3 AIJ.SIAMA. Minister to Venezuela Kin Janeiro. Consul, Cardenas... Total .$13,500 WISCONSIN. Minister to Denmark ..$5,000 Montreal. . , , .. 4,000 Consul, 1'iaguc. .... ...... .. 2,000 Total ..; .$IJ,000 NLW J I.Kit, v. Minister to Vurtuipl .$5,000 Consul, Rotterdam . J.OOO Total $7,ooo MISSOURI.' 1 Ialifai. v $3,000 1,000 Consul, Totouto M.... 2,000 Consular Clerk. ..,.. 1,000 Total ....,., $S,Ooa lILlhOls. Coiuul General, fcVteima .$3,000 Consul, Stutgait i. 1,500 Tot a I ,., v. ,.'... ' $ . 500 I j.mliin . , $o,Coo Consul, I...... 6,000 Total 1, $12,000 .NORTH CAKOIINA. Minister to llr.uil Coiuul, 3,ooo ,.$ 15,000 M!nttr?r tn jian,. .$12,000 Consul,' Hamburg ,, 2.5CO Total ... , $I4.5 VIROINIA. Minister to Austria, .$12,000 .Consul, Hong Kong,... .....,, 5,u Total ,.,,.., $17,000 Consul, Ixhom ,,. ...... . ..$ , 500 wOiisul, (.iMiktlrlutt 11.. ,,....., Total NEW HAMfjlllRK. Consul, SherbrX'ke, , ........... .$2, Soil Consul," Malanzat .. 3.000 ..$5,500 CAltranNIs, SJ Consul, Apia. .. 1.500 VKRNOST. Minister lo UICIIIUAN, MluI.Ur to HusjU; , I7.5COI I ? KIIOtlK ISLjXMl. Minister tu Nithcilamls. . ., ..... . .. 7,500 ' . '"' ,ss.v.nt. Mlnlttrr tu Hawaiian Islands 7.J jUKa-NSA- Consul, liiuiiltua , . , J.OOO llU.AW.sltE. Consul, Nurcmbcrt; .j . . J.ooo Consul, St. Glle . ,5oo IohkI.hi hvs an fir hohliug religious Ktsictf. in theatres, am) music halls. M" llun'sU thouviit.1 inci;4 havclrci-- held a thhttwi .Us, the average atlcrulance Uli nine IruiUrctl. It Is fun.l that will not, prtie 13 the churtiiea still Hlhw lo ItMl the UosikI Id swuUr nails. iai.Avi'... ft. aw.if tntn thf t'ratrr. Viewed from distance the crater appear, an immense lb)-.,- , or walk-.- ! in by a precipice varying Irum jon feet tn 6Vx) feet I height and nbnot nine mile in 'lire Rrealer part rf this wall Is nearly Imt at I he Vc1tno llmmthere i n optnirtR which admit nf n KrAtual dewtnt to the lloot nftl crater. ThW floor i compme.1 wholly nf lira, a uaitinn nf it having the appearance of the ripple of the wnve on the afastmrc a llie tide cornea roll- ing hi arm' lit r oTtiin appetra rtrgteil ami hrolceii, wills small rhunlia of black, cnimbllnu; lava l)lnj lot as if it were the liotlnni of n col mine : elsewhere, the lava lonka a if it were made nf niolltn glau, the color varjinR uy from a thimmcrhrg grey In a glistening black to A )nu rtn over the trad small finite of reveal the molten lava beneath this crust. In some place the lava rise to within a foot of the surface, and in other phcea burst forth In small fnunlaln or nh.Is, The Mifface of this bed I imdu).itin, fro- - 'iirntly rWni; in bilUxl.s of a hundred fector so, wiin corrwponninj; tieprcssions. ucca slnnally the heel crushes through the upiwr crJt, which at first make one nervous J but frequent repetition of this occurrence, without of accident, soon wlal.lishc confidence. of Following our guide acros this Iwd rf lava two inilca or more, if reach the new lake, which, though smaller in area than the old lake, presents epial attractions. One of our Krts who had lingered behind, watching its changes, was o entranced by a sudiVn outburst of Iaa, cosering the entire hid with one sheet of fire, that he refused to 1. .if the Smt anil join us, to although wc sent the guide back for him ; so he niisred seeing Ilalcmatimau altogether. ' On leasing the new lake )ou pals the Little llegg-tr- , width is a circular opening, about three feel in diameter, in the solid lava. look- ing into its yawnlnv; mouth )ou see a white hot mass of liquid lasaand sulphurous flameslnlch. ing forth lli.il few nostrils arc strong enough In endure for more than a minute. Near this vent art- - irregular piles of sulphurous rock, still hot to the touch. The route from here to the old take becomes more and more rugged and fatiguing as jou ascend the walls of lss-- around ilatcmaumau. On inuring the top of lids elevation jou pass through .1 notch in these svall and rcacli a place, sheltered from the wind, from which you base a full sicw of the burning lake l)ing some fifty feet below you. To the right and left of the opening through which you gaze arc iricgu lar piles of las-- rocks rising still higher than the Iidgc on sslnch you are staliomd and forming nn immcnM circular basin. At the time of our arrival wc were fortunate basing the wind in a direction thai carried the sulphurous smoke away float us, aflording sicw. . The surface of the lake appeared at night, in the veiled light ol the full moon shadowed b) ibin, vaporous, flcrting clouds, a lustrous grey, interlaced with sivid streaks 01" brilliant d fire jetting forth from fissucs in tbs bed of solid lava, forming a of Irregular and fantastic shape. Ai intervals along these lines of fire would gush fiery fount runs of the most brilliant hue imaginable, as many as nine of Ihese bclng'in play at the same time, and hating the appearance ot bubbling spring ofmoltcn iron. Occasionally jets would be thrown from these fountains to a considerable height. At the edge of thi lake a flow of lava frequently bursts forth, in wascs of sivid fire toward the center, but ncscr wholly submerging tho sur- face. These exhibition were by liising, or rumbling sounds. Clouds nf sul- phurous vapors rose fiom Ihc-- e tissues carrjing wilh them fibrous parliVs claimed to be the hair of the goddess i'ele, a the old legends base it. The whole scene was grand, 11 Ail to con template, giving one a realistic kcnse nf Hell, as porlratcd k-- Holy Writ. . During our rtay here six of the party descen ded to the edge of the lake until nearcnougi to thrust a walking mcl in the red-ho- t lava. . It was conceded, byll those present who bad previously sisitcd the solcano, that wc were especially fasorcd on ihis occasion b) basing much finer weather and a grander dispt.1) tSan is luualty met with. One Knglish-man- , however, in the urly, thosght ihe exhi- bition was not as fine us some dNplais of fire- works he had seen in London! So much foi kiiilinicnt. Soon after nine o'clock we rclraced our stcpf to the new lake where wc found our solitai) fiietnl, whom wc left there, still intcntl) watching the scene and his enthusiasm was ss greal we consented to lemain wilh him awhile and fur another fl'), although the wind was chilly and the night waxing. In a few moments nfier our airisal the seams, ihrough which the il.imeiw'cre darting, commenced In umflow' and soon the emlie Uutom of the lake was one mm of fire of the 11104 brilliant coiurs imaginable thus never equalled in the arlist a coinbinalion of rose pink, carnation, magenSv crimson, scarlet ami carmine Hashing into a brilliancy almost ivi!n- - ful lo the esc to Uhold. In the cutter of this lake of fire stood out in lmld rtluf an Uland of rod. funned of lava, aiound which the flames crept and surged unlit it scrmed as if Ihe very island itself would be consumed, After a while the llow again subsided, and thcicafler the flames were glancing through the open fissures of the solid lava, in continuous lines of light, plating luck and forth, incre.-aln- or in brill) nicy according to the volume o the overflow, until we wen forced in recall 'Aa fact that ii was time to return, and icluclanlly left the scene nf enchantment. ty this time all vwie pretty thoroughly fatigued and it was with diflicully that wine of the ladies could muster sufficient strength enable them to traverse the three l"hc y came when a;eiui".nc the clitffiom the lava Jwl tu the summit, hut, by frequent lumlvve rc.iclu.1 our destination ahom eleven i .lllilf frtlni. t. .ill rAtitl.l t,, !.. l.al .. . ' """t m i.mi ivi ii.c lauuc sve V. ..1 ..l..a.a.n.. IMU U.HI.V1,V. Aiur i:imi; wc were luvilcl to vvtul Mr, ViVlcr called a hurt hut .' rcuirdcJ It as an eacellcnt supiKr, and all were s hungry Hits- - fully .ijojct It as one of the bol meals seisnlon llielniv. lljr iuUnI!hl nearly every one ha.'i iciiicil ami slept without rocking. In fart one ten llcman who had been sea sick said he frf ttnnilhU uuteWtsl tuihe rocklnc old Neil, tune had given him In Ihc cradle of ihe ilcv. T. V. Ilosolutu, July id, 1SS5. for Knctartd and. Hi Maiijuu Twog foe China hart signed new opium treaty Ulwrcn China and Gisal Britain, ty the uiutsof which Ihe Interior is opencvl up freely lo the opium liiJe, The t.lmrilrlrr nf Silk I'tillttrr A New Vork telegram, dated July 141I1, to the Associated l'res, Is a follows 1 "The Trllrane says eslitnria'.ly The raiting of silk- worm I petty, her!;, ealrtnsting and a of hlmr, and is fit only fur peons ami half animal wasants There is not much probability that the Industry can ever be raised into any importance in this eountty. It would not be good for the people of the country If ll eoukl be forced into temporary success." The New Vork Tribune is decidedly out nf it head in this nutter. It ought to know bet ler. Ii is true thst the successful rearing of vsorim requires knowledge, patience and a good ileal of that peculiar quality for which Americans are famous, and which is expressed that undefinable word but at lis Iwing degrading, etc., why the holding such a view argues Ignorance. In spite of the pircnt society at 1'hil.ulel phia and other tributary by which and devoted women are to educate the people in Ihe mat tcr of their s such Ignorance as that which the Tribune manifests. Whether the statement of the Tribune be attributable to Ignorance, or whether the car the editorial writer has been gained by some the importers, who, of course, fight home production of silk, it matters little. It is a gross libel upon the silk industry and a cruet blow at the people, who arc Irjing to develop a i profitable employ ment for American women. Wc have so often shown the fitness of the business til women, who are wise and patient proceed slowly, unlil they learn the condi- tions with which they have lo contend, that il would weary our readers lo recount the poinl which are directly at variance with the claims of the Tribune. Let it be known, however, that the labor is not degrading, but, on the contrary, is pleasant, Inspiring and elevating, and suited to the bright American worker. On this point a recent rejiort uf the California State Hoard of Silk Culture fitly says : " show that we can produce better silk in America on account of the higher men- tal condition of our people, which shows it- self in the ingenuity and inventive spirit ever improving on Ihe e methods of the Asiatic race, in the perfection ol machin- ery lessening manual labor, Inthcaid lurnished by scientific researches and in the quickness and skill of the workmen." The character of the women who arc now engaged in silk culture in this state, not those whu it from mo iti out jjiiojejwrto nrir actually prcxUicmt; h which is gained r if .w. ' " jy thr hours, show that claim of the Tri IrvmeTPtJlWit iir'litoiitv for Vpcns. It is a fit fjrMJrsjjcsl, intelligent, and women and children, and the are tnalcinf; in it in nearly all parts of the country is the best kis. sible evidence of the fact. The comments of the Tribune are of a'Uiud that injure must the one who makes them. Pacijic Rural Putt. F.I1UCATIONAL ANI1 REI IOIOUS NEWS. The Karen ltaptist Theological Seminary, at Kangoon, Hurmah, held its fortieth anniver- sary April 15th last. Dublin, Ireland, United have declared formally in favor of instrumental Music in public worship. A graduate of the Harvard Aanet has nt taincd a higher per cent, in her classics than any of the young men of Harvard. President McCoslt of Princeton has been Ihe relations of college athletics tn lie finds the leading athletes the poorest scholars. Last jtar the llritlsh ami foreign ' Itible Society Kstted nn edition of the New Testa ment, at two cents per copy, and 955,000 copies were sold in nine months. One rptcstloa uiscusscd at the late missionary cunlcrence at Ovtka, Japan, was whether it is better that missiohari should be sent out married or single. Not only was the senti- ment decidedly in favor nf their being married, but statistics from one society show ul that the term of service for single men-wa- s five vears slimier than that of the married. It is computed by a Dublin statistician (J. I.ambcrt Jones), that lVs I'rotistants at the close of the last century were 40,000,000, while Ihe Roman Catholics were 120,000,000; hut now. In 1SS4, ihe I'rotesiautsarc l.S,ooo,-00- 0 and the Romanists tSa.ooo.ooo. Thus Protestants have increased iihuit 250 per cent, and Romanists meantime only 50 per cent. In Foreign Missions the Southern I'icsby-teiia- n Church lias stations in the Indian Tec litory, Mexico, Northern and Southern Uracil, Italy, Greece and China ; il is about establish- ing one in Japan. The receipts for the year have lie-a- s about $73,000, and the year ends without a debt at home or abroad. The church ii asLetaso iuciease its gifts this year to $Se,.ooo. Qf the iS.jfij men svho received degrees. from Harvard Uriivcrsitv (irevious to this vcar, 127 bore the somewhat fanilajr nameof Sniilh. Williams is not considered a very siininon name, ) el its beaters come second in the list with a record of 113. .The llrowns and llrownes together number., ll. Fourth In numlier are the Adamses, with an even too. Then come the Clark and Clarkes 93, in all. The 1'aiVers come next, with 79. Strangely enough, the Joneses are well down on the list, numbering only jS. "We are gratified tn ;.e ihe fact that the pul.Sc schools of Alabiiua ate wilh scieiice and literature, tome phvsi. cal training wilh intellectual culture. t In female colleges vuuug ladies receive valuable insttitcliun in the art ami handiwork of house sslfer) ; and in the school-room- s young users, are Uui:ht that Uhor. whether of head 01 hind. ". brain or muscle, is always Hignn.ed, manly and honorable. It will be a pioud day of promise lor Alabama when every public school within her establish an indus- trial Says a Kilicrn stales In (he American Union con. tat.) University and college properly tu the value of $i,uA),od or over. The slates In tills topeel rank as lollowt 1 New York, I I Ohio, Sj,ScV;,31 1 Missouri, Illinois, j California, 5 Vif gluts, Tennessee, $1,409,630 ( Michigan, $1,380,. 1S4 1 lovsa, Rhode Islanl, $1,250,0x1 1 i4rict of Clumbia. $1,200,000, ami Indiana, $1,120,000. The state having Ihe low st Is Delaware, which has but $30,000 la velcj a Khuoht of j hUjh grade. starbr. U THURSTON. A t MttTM tttnrntft ot l.tttr. N J SttT. Hu.tOt.lMV pvR. S. M R. C. S. Kno., ... R. C. P. ami U S A. Uirtixw I .ate Achobr jifxl lVUtnwm of suiwiuiY .tsn MKHWIXt:, King' Co!lj, IWrdflt, OrricR and KrtDftfcic No. tjj Fort street, 1tly occupied by Dr. Caijpenter urricR jiqvm 9i is otiock a. m. JI-- t ta$nmt 1 lo8 r. !. EDWARD PRESTON, Attorney rtM'' Vo timet or itt l.atrm Nn. tj Kaahumanij STurtur.. HUNUU'IV pEO. L.nADCOCK, fntrher of thr Vtttno furff, Atlilres care Mekrt. Wet, Ui5 Cb., Urn ij Pour Br.,... IIiMfttct4r. Lu RiaiiirKCK No, n I!mma street. 3;8I I T M. WIHTNEY, M. U D. D. S. Urntot tloom on Votl Strict, fiNOLULO II. 1. Office ki llrewer' lock, corner Hotel And Port Street l, entrance on Hotel Street. iio-V- ,, AUSTIN, Attorney nntt Ctnitmrtlor ut .fir, ,ln Aynt to tuh N 14 Kaaiiuimhu SricKBr lloNOLmv aai-3- TNO. A. tyent to tithe to for Lttbor, Interior Omar HoNniuto ati-3t- OllU H. PATY, J Aotttry Vuhttr nntt Commtnnton of Dectlr For the State of California and New York. Office, at he Unk of IttsJwp Si Co. j 0nu, H.I. aio-i- P P. GRAY, M. D., fiirsivrAX AXt suitauox, Office, next door to the Honolulu Library. 9 ti to A. M. Houks: a lo 4 r. m. 7 to 8 r. II. Sunday, 9 to 11 a. m. Ktivm and rcnuoola Sia. O B. DOLE, Couunrlur at f.ait ami JV'oMr 1'abttc, OKriCE, Xo. 15 Kaa.wmanl' Strklt ..Honoluiu j4-j- TT7- - R. CASTLE, AltHrnelf at f.aw anil Xotary 1'ttbUr, No. ig. Merchant Strekt Honolulu Attends all Ihe Cifurls of the Kinsdom. tio-a- (l (iTartis. I A u awcni. Importer ttml Jtrulrr In OUmauutre, Jlertitrn SUrerVttttci li'itrr, JlruckelMp Vote, No. 83 Fowt SfkKUT ...Honolulu KInc' (ojiibination Sprcucl ami KrsUAe. uustrai vtc art?, rancy itM, r.cture l rabies, Wostenholm'f 1'ocktt CulfciT, ll. I ChauU tUnJ icu, L.larivi lSioI L,tt'iit, SUilune Uil, all Mm! of Machine Needle, "Domestic" ar rasSbii. Sole anent of the univcrully acknowleilgrAl Light. Uunninc Domestic Sewing Machine, 7lO2bf S. CLECIIORN & Co. A Importer unit lieutrm tn tlmcral .Wrr- - cntntltie. Comer Queen and Kaalmminu 3ireets, Honolulu. A. SHEPARU. WtttehmnUcr find farcler, Watch repairing inaile n Spool fill t'. .VII orders from the othei Ulan. 1 irompily attended lo. No, $i, 11.1. A W. 2HIRCB & Co. .Ship Chamltrra mut Commtaaton Mrr clutnt, No. is Qukkn St., Honolulu. A cents lor Ifrand' (jinbtaitiJ Hmli I jinr an( IVr. ty Da tb 1'a.n Killer. 110361 A LLEN A RODINSON, Oeulera In Luinhemn! ntt ktnt of Itutltt tny Mutrrloti, 1'utnts, OHm, Xutta, etc., NO. 44 QKBKN ...HoNOLULtJ, II. I, Ar.RNTS Or kCIIOONHU Ilale.ikala, KuUminu, KekauluoM, Mary Elicit, UHaina, TauaM and Leah!, . At KoUmotis Wharf. tio- -i DISUOI1 a CO., Uaukcri 11 010 lull1, Hawaiian Ulanij' Draw Exilune on THE UANK 6r . ' SAN FRANCISCO. s And ilwlr a(ci, tn NEW YORK. DOS'! ON. HONl. KONC MMr.N M, LONDON, UANKINO CO., OF SVDNLV, LONDON. TU UANKINO CO., SYDNF.T, Tb HANKS OF NEW 7L'A!-N- li: AND WF.I.LINOrON nu: aNr!s of ukivisii columuia, ' AND 1'0ULAND, OR. Trausait a Gaural Itmkitt Ihiuuesu tjs-it- o C BREWER A LimiuJ.i COMPANY, Ueuerol Mereuntlle nnl CommlaalaH Ayenta QUVKN StRIKT. HciMOLtLU, Osftcer4--!1- . C. Jones, Jr. tudut and manager lowrphO, Carter, lrurr art.) MvretaO' Iir1ort lions. OuuUs H. UuhopaM IL A. I. Uatcrj W'j F. ,nwn auuuor, 3 274 c. (roaNnuv rtu uu.k & ro.i IIA.r.wl. um.I Hrlail tirutrr. in, Kiku Srr .......Upo lUauomr lm KanUy. llaalallon, an.l bhip ait, supvt.nl at itnat rwrWc Nw cou.1t br ..cry tttvti, U.4ri fro. ttMutiM, IVUtluiM No. 11a. ii?-t-1 p C. COLBUAN, UmtktmUk, MathUUI, CmrrUf Wtrh Hon mt.tlmg, Hohohjiv , ..II. I PUatailoa llKIary, etc 5 oq King Sut aat Casak ft Ctfoae'k urbo. P ATURDAY JAji-SS- . VoLUMK NuM.ittK.4S. HONOLULU,- - HAWAIIAN ISLANDS, AUGUST r885. Whole Number 257. Clevcl.tiuVs ntlnitnistrntion smnctltTnt; rtltuttueiiw diploiiiatic following apfi!fttmnti Confeiletatlon, departmental coiitrj," rcproenteil tlirppolfitinentt Bcofiraphlcal appointment Interf.retcr.Tlcntsin onsntOc'neral, C'nnsul-Gcnert.- Contul-Gencra- Contul-Gencra- Consul-Genera- Tegucicalfa Kuinania,Seisia,anu ConsubUencral, Consul-Genera- Consul-Genera- CoiuuiGenerl,,.Miou ....:,.;..,., Consul-Genera- LUcrpHil",, ..,,,;$iMioo Manchottr..,. wfdswZf&tw rENMYLVAMA, ToUl,t,,,. KnfiU'Lt.............. urtpnUalion circum- ference, perpeBrltetlUr inagnificicnt accompanied sividnessby Isshingaiul diminishing nitlesdistani.?. T1ieMariiisof.SaliUiiy degradation "gumption," organizations, public-spirite- endeavoring occasionally public-spirite- arCT)rvmotJng philanthropic csake'rvl'ifiircward usraoymciiTjcshure fcrJfVpcrlifico- - dcnieiPtJl prOgrcaLiiC. I'rcsl.jtcrians invcliqating scholarship, inUlngV.iue IxHttidaiicAhall department." contemporary, 57,S5S."3 I'cnnsjlvanla, $4.3j.W $2,794,000! $2,501,000) Massachuselts, $1,568,749 $1,650,0001 $1,921,0001 Connecticut, $1,378,0001 IJrofcosiointt KRMESTCRADD0C1C. JONATHAN AcKiiotrlrttyrmpntM, UASS1NGMI, ArKiimrlettumriitn RESIDKNCK.cor. Justness Il0IiLhrHEKr.........M.,.l0N(ILULU, CALIFORNIA, kOlHSCHILDASONS, llivCOMMKKCIAK COMMERCIAL CFSVUNEV, AUCKLAND, CIIRISICHURCH, VICIOKIAtU.C IIUSTACE, w..iuuiUHii)r,sKua, Alitoincoc p H. WILLIAMS, ANtl lRAtRR IN fttrnttur of ttrerif lrerljttnn Mn tfftholaterrr itnt Maihtfttrtttrer Ftaflfafffl Wrrm.wn No in Fort Street. Work. ! old Wiiht on II ret Mtrri, All order promptly mrwrnaa 10. jr -- ) sirrSiCSK 'ri rj'l'tnif r.rin i rrwin Tiryi 'Jflrf ,ft fa. j Kim, StMti ' llniiitV. ',''-- P ''. rit-yi- . iMFonrPm a RHNUKAf. Mi:UCII fti)ih'.. (A Anent fof iWlliicHrnctt Coiitsiin'i riantation. 'TW Alevandtr & (Utdwin K. HaUewd, or Waialiu ria.itatkni. A. II. Smith & fompiitT, KoIia. Kauai, J. M, Alexander, Haiku, .Maui. " '11m llaiV.u buaar Comrony. 'Ihe Koliftl.iujnl Lumpany, llairul.w yiantalion lite Ufttoii iMiifartcf tHntanV ol San Fraiirvw, New lmt,wVlJV Insurance Com piny uf HoMut. M. Viort Paiem Citnful Machtnea. IM Ntw Yitrnami iimwmin rrcket l.irw. lh Men bant IJn, llnrmluln and San KrancIcoM Jr. Jitt '"i Hon LeleWaled Medicines Mcix OP.!' bhiMT Mfnuf.wturini; Comiiariy. Vhctltr & Wihuii't bewiAff Machine. 3iu-a- 6l E"1 r ADAM J, Auctioneer unit Cmmohatan Meicitttiti No, 4rfJtRRN ,, Honoiuip D. HOFPSCIILAEGBK Sc Co. E mtoirrt iitc Comntt.ilntt Jterthnnl. Kn, 4S ycKBhSTRFeT HonoluiU Oaiiu, II I sio-76-1 ED C. HOWL, limn it tut S11 I'uhtler, Pa ikk Hanger, etc, No. 107 Kino Strkkt ...HtiNoniLU Bai idi E HALL & SON ..(Limited) ItirORTBRS AND DEALERS IN Ilnrrhcttrr .nut r7ener.f JTerrtanithr, CoRNBit or King anu Streets, Honolulu ornccRs: William W, lli'l rresident and Manager L. C. Ablet Secretary and Treasurer W.K.Allen .Auditor Directors Thoma. Mav, E. O. White "asojo? P A. SCHAUfER & Lo. Imyortrr uttil Cotittntton Jleithont 2iO. 10 M&RCMANT STKRKT IIONSIAJLU 2IO-3- F.. OEDING. Iljcprrni uno Druynmii, r Office. No. 81 KkjET Strt. Residence. No. 47 Pnnclibowl Steret, Honolulu, Oahii. H, I, Fmflit, TackACt?, atvl Ragaije ilvloretl lo arnl froa tuipuirism Honolulu airU vionuj. iarciuiai IciitisUi aid lo .ioiUr2 wttli WAT.ONS KXPKKSSLV IORTIIK rUKI'OSl-:- . Oil.cc Tclclone. No. 8S. IIuusc Tclepliur.e. .Va do, zvj-z- - GKHTZ. . Hon! rtmt .Nmf miiXrr. lloots an J Shoe made lo Order, toj Fort Struct. Honolulu r a 6 1 U. UUrABLANE, II. K. UACKARLANR. Q- - V, MACFARLANE & CO. Importers, CommlMion Morolianta untl Suar raotor" riie-in- jf Ituitditif. . ,,...,, .Quten Krcct, lonolulo. AGKNJA VVR Puuloa Sheen Ranch Co. Hawaii. J. Tow Icr & Cu's btctm 1'Iow and 1'ortaM Tramwaj Works. ..ceil. MIrrless. WatMjn A. Cus Siiirar Machincrv. (ititL'usv t.Ui(v aad Honolulu Uric of Packets, i4tTjooi ami iiunoiulu i.insol rackets, laoiulon and Honolulu Line of Steatncrs, Sun Fire Oii.ce of London. 341391 HACKFELD & Lo. H Cor, Fort anu QtfcKN Stuvt. Honolulu 3toa6 fTOLLlSTEE U Co. IVmlrMttle unit Itilnlt liruyylata nmt No. 59, Nt't'wti Sr:.KKT Honolulu 3 1 Ll OPP A CO., Nu 74. KlHU iJTMKKT,. ...,..., ... Honolulu lrphol0lriMf ttruper ttml HeiUer lit till Klihh of Furniture Telephone Nj, 143. Ll.YMAN BROTHERS, t to node i'm nf leuerul Mfrchumlhe. from J'ntnce, iluutntut, tlvrmuny imf tho Ifuttnt Mute, NlX iBIjUKKN STJsKRT 4J HoNOLUIV H YUAN QROTHERS tnmllon Merchant. Ko,bo6 FttoNi Stkakt........ .....San Fmanciscu 1. H E. McINTVilE & BROTHER, Mtioccrtf uiut Vfl Store, Cor. Kino anu Fukt Sr Honolulu tio-r-tl H ONOLULU IRON WORKS Co., trnm lUtylnea, Uultera, Muuor Mltla, Cuulrr, Iron, llruau uml Lent Vnattnya Ho.MJLULU H.fJ Ilachiccry of every description nude to order, FaxttcuUr atlriitLrii iiald la Shin's Dlacksmkhlnir. job Witrk. en.CUlr4 cxi lb shortest ootice. THO. O, FOWLER & Co., $i LEF.DS, ENOUNP, .Ira prepaid to furnUh I'tuna ami tt inuLf-- fur Mtcrt FOUTAULr? TRAMWAYS, With or wuhoul CarsrsAJvd UcotnutiteSf Sprcial'y ADMTKO vOR SUGAR Permanent Uailvrays. aiht lxveuuit andean, )rac lion EniUca hh-- UdJ locomotives, biuani IlouzUing ai.1 Cdtiratini Machinery, Vuct aw toiiju fot all purpus Wllhllilg Cviutnet or tixiin. Ctakvitisu wtih tlkadrkjas. AlodeU aud Phitto. graph f ii.4 asovu ItinU i)J twhtnrry stay L teen at ib olhor tl lb uitdrrUgnal, W. I.GKI.EN h) O. W.MCFARl..AM-VeUsfo- r Imw Fo ier j a 34 T W, OIRVIH, CminihImIih itrrrhuut nmt 7jtTff i titer tu tirllnoit W.avtcv. I u't.-f...- ..H, 1 GVocsrks, Hwdvare, SutMMry. rlea MsdfavUets, I (It1WIT W4 lasIMaM. JOHN T. WATBHItOUSB. lMfMrl.r umi OtnUf Jh (lfHrriI Jfer- - rimmJt. Nixvj-- ji Qvm Sraurr,, , n,ItON0LLLU ,r-.- i luoinccc Cnrbs. T M. OAT, JR., &C0. Stnttnner ami r Itenter. Itctt Itttt'hrr ft I ft n p ,t(tney OAKfTPritOeK ... No, J5 MERCHANT SfRFFT 15S-- HOMOLVLtf. II. I. TOIIM HOTT, Tin, f'opfter tin rl .Stirrt iron M nriter, tstnm tiift Itonte o(W kind, Humbert' ock ati meuK hmm furnMi- - ,n HwS cliarnlelters lamp, etc NO. 8 KAAMt'MANU SfKRICT HONOttfLU ftO- -l f AtNE & Co., Votumtmton Merefittnti, !mpoiierAml dealen In Hay, Oratn and General Pmducf. Hotou Le.. . ............... .....,.t.t.,...,,H. t. io--6t r UWERS & COOKB, (St'icKORi To t.Rwa". ft I)i:kon,) Jmpniter Hint ifettterm In Lumber nntt att fitutta tf lliilMtnu Jtutrrtat. No. 8 Four SrRRkT HoNoitrui T AHLO. tituter In fJooff, litre, Tertt Sttkmntt , ttncft tinmt, iioiMt miooim nntt Stt or, limit, lUeil ittut I'tmtr, tHynrn uiut Tohorrn. AKo projirieior of Rice and Sugar Plantations at Kanenhe, KooIju, Waipio, I.waf And HeeU. Cor. Nuuanu anu Cuah-aI- n Srs. HonuK'IU T VOMS & LEVEY, Auction eclii nmt Cmtntton Merchttntft, Conkh Font and Qukrn HoNOLULtr, Sales of furniture, Stock, Htn Ffttate and General lerrhandte prom pi I y Attemleu to. hole agents for American and i.nropean mcrcnanuisc. 11. j.yons, 8j (UJ, LrvRV. PHILLIPS A Co. M tmpmtrri nmt it'ltotfote Deuter In Cloth- - tiijt llootn Shoea, llttt, JniV nr- - nhhlny tloinla, Funry tlnola, Etc, No. to Kaamumahu Stbfkt ..Honolulu 110-i- JWT W. McCHESNEY ft S0J, Dealers im Teuther, lllttrn, Tu'toir unit Commlnilon .Merchant, Agents for the Royal Soap Compat v. No. 41 QumN Strkkt . . Honolulu 8. rv T S;K1NIJAUM A Co. ?5kV I IVhotemle Heater In (lett w irr A y5t"a," Jciitittur .Mr$'s lirrac?. Qusky Strekt, Honolulu rV O T 1J1T'S. GRIaJAUM & Co. yx r XflkfifttnfViff itml 'omntttmlan ytrrehntitf ia St. San? Fkanchco. iiial ngJJir.e for and particular attention jaid to fnsi11iUji' Mand DTOduce. io-- al OACIFIC HARDWARE CO. importer mul ltntterv In II it nttru re, Cut- lery, Tool, Painu and Od, and Central Merchandise. N'n.?4ANi , Tort Stmkrt... Hooiulu 210-2- O J. LEVEY & CO., Whotennle ttml Uetnll Orocera, No. 95 Fort Strrct .Honolulu FreOi pfictrie and provisions ol all kinds on hand and received repilarly from Europe ami America vhicb will be sold bt the toweu maiket rates. Goods delivered to anj part cf the city free of charge. Island orders solicited and prompt attention Mill be cien to the same. WESTERN AND HAWAIIAN IN THE vestment Company ('limited.) leaned for long or shott periods on approved securit). Apply to W. L. GREEN, OlTce llcaver ltlock, Fort St, Manager U9S TMIEO. H. DAVIES & Co. (Latk anion, Gbsrn &. Co.) Importer mut Commhalon Jlerctmita No. 4 Kaahumakt St" Honolulu agists for Llujd'sand the Liverpool Underwriters. ltnti.hand Fotcii. ae Insutance Company, and Northern Asturaj.ee Company. a yHOS. G. THRUM, AND MANUrACTURtKa Stut loner, Itook-a'tler- , Vrtnter, Jlook- - bhtttct; rtt. An publisher of the Hawaiian Almanac and Annual Dealer ii; Una Stationery, Itooks, Mu.ic, Tos and Fain,y Goods. Fiartf SlRRfi. Nkar Hotel, Honolulu G. WEST, II. SI, DOW, C. . MACrARLANK. XITEST, DOW A CO., Importer mut lieutr in ntt ktml of Mtialc, fViMcy ami Juwtue tiootta. Furniture of all kliidk. Sewing MaUitn Errors. lUiniinits Chronws and 'lovs, 1'ictuia Frames ami 10 urucr. Movin; Miid repairing ruroiturc a s peciahty. No. 105 F.1KT Strhktm..., ...........Honolulu l?v XIT1LLIAU McCANDLESS licnter In t'holceat lleef, 9'rut, Mutton, Ktc NO. 6 QUKIC &TKIKT. Family and Shippint; orders carefully at I end vd lo. A e Stock f urnitvtd lo Vessels at short notice, Yegrtablet of all kind supplied to order, Fclli-mon- ....No-- 11. 206 i Iiieur.tncc iloticco. OSTON BOARD OF UNDERWRITERS. B C, MfAt'&X . cj Agenti for the Hawaiian Islands. sto-trt- DRITISH FOREIGN MARINE INSUR. O aoce Company. (Limited) 77EO. Ut UAl'tES, ACSXT, TW bov agent has reteived IiettritlLtts 10 rt- - iil tne 1 airs 01 insurance Deivieen iiomui4 anu ftxii in I be FaciTic. an4 is niw DreiMrrd to lut ioU lv at h loJ rates, with a special reduction 00 irrijiit pr Mcauiers. ORGMBN DOARO OF UNDERWRITERS. ". A . SCUA Er'EK 6 C Att Alo stfcnisfx h Dresden Board of Undcfwritfcit. Vienna Board of Uo4rwrU. Itxlhe lUwaiian lidaitds, tio-- 6 FORTUNAGEHEUALINSUKANCECOM-pioyo- f ?, A. SCIfAEPEK V Ct AGSXTS. The abo lasurans CmbAuy, has euaUithc! a Ociwwal Acencv here, and io uiiUsrsignvd, (lencraJ Agent s. art aultiurunl to lati n against the tUtigeni 4 1U4 beat at lb nuM. fcaonabl raist and va tle hum UoraUe terms. aiov6i LLOYD MARINE INSURANCE GERMAN Cooiimuiv f BerU. . A SCUARr'&X V C., AGXXfS, The above I nturancv Con.paay has esiaUuhcJ a Gen- era) Agency hue ud the abuts dgnd. tkiwr Agds, are autVMl to lake KbJts .4io4 ine lar.gtrs of the Seas ai the tl raasooabU iis and on the moa terms. AMBURCMACDBBURG FIRB INSUR st Coeaoaaj ol H&aMUf , A.JAE;KKtACXT, UUdiiitMrivksaJi- -, Funis If and MKhibery 3IO6ll UAUBUkCBRKMBNFIRKINSUIUNCB leeaf, r A, SCUASrSM A Cv A6KNT& TtM ktote am luirhte; bee aytutaud agsitis U lata co iy are ueiuiod b Lrswe risk aavMl fire w 2mm saI lM'X buUoWg id e MersuaJiM tors4 llKisW, . ifca m4 UvvfUa laau. F4 ar.tuUrs y ai ibttf uskwt. Jusincoo C:irt)0. OHRMAN FIRK INSURANCE NORTH. Company of Hamburg. . UACKFKI.D A O., ACKS'TS, Capttsl aM Kcwrv. Ketch.ma.V l,8jo,roa " their tt tnsutanrtComrnni, " jj.i,ftTa Tt Ag.nttcf Ihe atovc Coirpvnr, tot Itt llsw.iUn I.UnHf, Are prtttkted to Inture IIuiMiiS, Furniture, Mmhamli. .n.l frndiice, .Mahiner). etc., Alto Sujrsr ml Kic Mitl. amt vesfs la Ihe barter, .gainst loss or damage by r.,e, on the mol fsvorvUe lerms. sio-e- ENULAND MUTUAL LIFRINSUR. NEW ance Companj ot tto.ton. CA.1TLK & COOKS, AGK.VTS. iNcosmeArsu isjs. The oldest Purely Mutual Life Insurance Company in the United States. I'nltrlcM l..f.f o., IhrvkOMt f.iror.l6e r.rtn Losses paM through Honolulu Agcncr, $49000 tioi6i DOAHD OP UNDER PIIIJLAURLPHIA C. BRKM'KK A-- for the HswAtUn Islanils. eio-- 6i FIRB INSURANCE TRANSATLANTIC Hamburg. II. HACKFSLD If Ct., An-l- l. Cnpila! and Heserve Keiclitmnrk tf,au,otx tlieir Re Insurance Companies " 101,6),010 Total.., .....Reiclnntutk toj$yt,cm Ihe AKentsofthe ahove Company, for the Hawaiian Inland, are pretmred to Insure llutldinji. Furniture, IterchAndi aird 1'mduce. Machincrv. etc alo ISnsar Mid Rice .Mills, and veswli In the liarlur agaitut lo or damage vy lire, nn the most favorable ttinis. sio-i- HE LIVERPOOL AND LONDON AND T Globe Insurance Company. MSHOP& Co., ACEtVTS, KSTAEISHBD lSj6. Vi, limited Liability to Mochhotitcra. Assets ..... .$31,136,100 Reserve 6,750,090 incomk for i8;a: Premiums received after deduction of re Insurance.. $5,55.1,195 Losses promptly adjusted and paid here. NIONMARINEINSURANCE COMPANY u of San Francisco. CASTLE A COOKE, AGKXTS. Incorporated 187V sio-a- 4i ENGLAND MUTUAL LIFE NEW Company of Boston, Mass. INCORPORATED l95. ,taarti ilnnuury tat., iSH-i- tteitity 0. Polices Issued on the ratttt favorable terms, and absolutely after Two Payments. rXAMMK)K rLAN Insured ac,e 33 ears so ears Endowment Plan for Annunl Premium $'J42.30. Ch-Sur- VTe. At the end cf the sd Year. $ aSo.S5 $ 545 3d ' 464.70 14a 4th ' 641 15 1,130 3t Bit.ii 1,415 6tlt " l.oag 00 1,695 7th M 1.23515 t.970 dtb ' 1,450.75 ."3S oh " 1.676.05 a, 500 10th ' 1,911 65 2,755 nth " .i57 90 j221 11th " 3,4.5.45 2 13th j,65 00 3.484 Mth " .967.7 3.7" "S'h " 3.S03-9- 3.945 6h ' 3 57515 4.165 7! ., 3 90? S 4.3o lot I 4,143 50 4,540 19th ' 4.613,70 4,ioo oth ' 5,000.00 5,000 Tlw Second and subeqent premiums are liktly to be reduce by incrttuinf annual Jittrtbuttent 0 tr Of Applications can be hadof; and full Information will be given by the Agents, CASTLE V COOKE. foreign bbcrttecmento. CHARLES BREWER At Lo. 27 Kilpv Stkbkt, Uoston, AUKXTS Of UAWMI.tX VACKKTS, tlvnrrnl Commtaalon Ayent. Special alicntton given to the purchasing of goods for the Hawaiian trade. Frcivht at lowest rate. TJ W. SEVERANCE, 116 CALiroHKU St., Cau,(Koom No. 4.) itAWAiiAX voxsur. r COM Ml. HM OX Merchant, HEM BUSINESS OOLLEOI, 24 Post St a F. Seed for Circular The Full. Bkhinkss Coih&k Includes SinjU ih) LVtuble Fjtto Book keepinki, as applied to all depart mentk of lruttrw; Csfimcrcial Arithir.ttic, llusines IVnmamhip; Mrrratiise Law( Business Cot iti pond erxe; Lectures on Law; Uitvess Form, ana the Sclents of Account 1 ; Aitu ButncM Practice In VhoteAle and Retail Mrrihandisin?, ContniUi(in, Importing, Railroading-- Ect 11 u finest, liokerage, antl Banking; EnitlUh Branches, Incloding Keading, Sj'dlin.r,, Grammar, etc.; lring; and Modern lAnguagcs,conMiting of practical (ntstruction in French, tleiman, an J Spanuh. SrecUL Bkanchrs arei Ornamental Fenmanship Higher Mihctiutlcs, .Surveying, Natlgatlon, Cnil AMU)ing, Short (land, 'J Tele graph y, eic. For ftdl ..formation address, :. i UKAMtJtco. tjo-s- li San Fhancim., Cxi. (General bbrrtiettfitnts. N, F. UDRGESS, t VAIU'KXTKH ASH IIUILOKH, BVMifiily anruMUKeAo thr u!4ic ittat he has purclaset) the 1I.VGOAGK KXPIJKIiiH Uu.lne4 r.nlly uahtucr.l ty air. (I, t. tV,t al So. V4 King Mrl. htrh .lt t under Ihe manage. iMnn.ftii.K- -. B. f. BUKGES& 111. LapM ..It tlUiul lU arnral . u,aau and ffllylr Jivtr Kltr.lOIlT, PACKAGES & UAC.GAcJC, tu llonutulu ao vktn'tl). Txjnfjrxxmi at pianos , Mated il taf UK, AUSO, (IAS I'UkCIIAStt) Till: Tobacco, Cigar and Soda Water, ItiaWMU k(liis( Lia ,V klr. - W. IllltJaWv. N0.I1 Kin urwt, whkh i)l be ceetducled by hit thing I un, J, tl. Uividi SHau wmri ji f) lU line of hVJOKtRS' ARTICLE cm be louod, 1 Ihe bet iueJiiy lhanUng the Miln lot U favor and raaraMecIna; to xtvm4y esttnt all order in either line of Uu twftsal leaaonaUe tbargts ftjifuU aJicUa ulna wihimw pairobage, ULIa Talahatmm Jf. $& So, 84 Kin Mr, MmwMm .rv4 (1Q l(iu4 u ctoWf hf the (Stntral Jlobcrfiocmrnlo. -- ASTLK A COOKE, HO(OIUU It, I. Would call attention to their t.tr and varlM Stork of - AGRICULTURAL IMPLEMENTS, Conkiiting of lhcbnr!vatlnl Faiii Stttl Jtreukiny I'tow, The Midi ne Steel Breakers, anil Furrowing Plo, Mo line Steel Flows all sue Planet, Jr., Culti- vator., Dirt Simpers, John )re-- ) OaUK Plow a, I'Untcrs Hoes of the Wit nuke DISS10NS CELEURATKI) CANE KNIVES made to order, Ames' Showlt and Si a J el. Garden I Iocs. Caial Barrows, (is Hows, Yokes, Chains, Fence Chains, Sugar Mill Requirements. SUGAR BAGS, SUGAR KEGS, Camberlniiil Coal, Sprm 0.1, Cj Under, I Jim and Kerosene Oil, Perfect Lubricators, Plumbapo, Al lany Grae, Diton's and S. and J. Files, all sues and kinds. Steam Packing, Flat and Round Indu Uublr, Aslstos and Soap Stone, Flax Packing, Indii Kul-b- er low, H to a inch. Pipe and Couplings, Nuts and VAhers.imithcd, Machine ltullt, atl sires, Cold peiwd IlUik sun ill's, Lngtneer' rftid Carpenter's Hammers, Pipe Cutters, inches 6 iitcn to 94 Inch, Anvils, Vices, '1 ubc Svruperf, Grindduncs, Meit American Bar Iron and Too. bttel. Builders Hard-are- , all kinds and M)tc, 's Paints and Oils, raw and boiled. Small Paints in Oil, in larco variety. Dry Paints, Uinlxr, Ncnetun, Ked, (Vhres, Metallic, ftc , Wtiitinjt, Oertnan Vind'jw ass'td sires, Manila Roi Staple Groceries, No. 1 and a Flour, No. 1 and a Rice, Crushed Sugar, China and Ja tan Teas, Oysters, Cuuis, Salmon, Lobsters, Finest Table Frills from the Factory Pure English Suicei, Condensed Milk Cocoa, SPECIALTIES :The I'nl-ne- v lirrtMCtie Oil, Itrmtttu iJnlnya, 14 Inch. Ilubbtr Spriny unit Cnnrn llmkr Just at hand.BUko Steam Funm Valves, Blake Boiler Feed, Juice or Molasses, Irrigating & Vacuum Fumes Weston's Patent Centrifugals Complete, ALSO ON CONStCNMKN I California Hay, Btvicy, Potatoes, Basils Salmon, HanaVtftleto MuluiTTor Roilrrs and Steam Pipes, very cheap, Fern Wire and Staples, Oalvaniird Koof'U BEWXNG MACHINES, Wilcua and Oibb's Automatic; Singer Mamdactunng (Company, Assorted: keiniiifilon Loitipany. Family; Wilson Machines, the be4 assottinelit to be found, and at Bottom Prices. New Goo by every arrival from England, New ork and San Francisco. 1 JUw.Xraotiom !, powar. Orden from the other Islands iVJcd al Be si Bales ami ltt'Jupatdt S16S CITY SHOEING SHOP, Q (ovrostiK uoiitis hTAui.ta,)' .0 aa Hnsi SkMiaj ii ill its IriKhis Iun. tn ihaHt utaiui.r. Racing & Trotting those a specialty. Oitf Kalff will k. rtaaonatlf. 'ttM unJc.rcnl, having UwaM out tk lartrcu or ...... . 9,1. jam., .wuu ,w .n. .v.t wihui cu.hiih aiK cf Ik, tikrat palrvftaif, L,MO,d Mi Ik. tal. rtrM Wr. J. W McDouU r.c.1,.4 tb. hlr.t Award uid Olrd.au. for hi. Hand-ma- Am. at th. HawaUaa BaUUttM for tri. y.u .. f 47- - IIvtm, talru lu tk, kcl. aiat rvluirwd ar tkurl tiotKe vhsi desired. I. . iciiunAi.i- - HS-a- rA.iTMi: Ac 00. Xo.34 Fwt St., ClKklsllekg. Have received a cooizt.tiHi4 oftlie fot Fonotalral and Valuable rd for all kitaU of siCfk, u i VOOKKl L1SHKKD MKAL. It lithe greatest FWi forwer, MiIK and lluUer pro dacsr la ute Oil Caki Meal shov aLout tf pef lenl, U uuitblvt matte J this bear ty f$ vat 141, ie)W. oihU bmIh eual to staelbs, of wua, or is! tU. of turn, or lo 3f lb, of wheat bran, 'Mm, our UorUaUlllXICD IKED, aa well as our usual ututf vi the best kinds rf wrtM, Whit. I. ori.4 al Ik. l.nM Uw.M Kal.i. ud dtl.trl tnm lo qr sart Utim tAtj. rwlti Ihtwl Iks'lwn C rf CriiMU. Aswta'tW Ik, HOOVKR TKLCPttONK. Owwkaia rf P U '- - Ha TKLKMKMW 10 .an c Jl V 1 m 1 wl 1 'I r ,i vl

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Page 1: ATURDAY P - evols.library.manoa.hawaii.edu · --K. m K V, i, "V S, If 4.1 hook.iiK'ir.vr. Mr I191 alre.nty ilone to efface the...ti.rul line in Ameriian politic.. Mi toceiu to and

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4

.1 hook .iiK'ir.vr.Mr I191

alre.nty ilone to efface the

...ti.rul line in Ameriian politic..

Mi toceiu to

and consular j Hitioru show 1I111. Fur

the intercut of many American readers

we append the from a New

York paper of rrent date :

Th; list whkh follow tfifMnU very r

iti. wlrtch have fir

!n miJe. The m!Ian still Y .t atethose 10 the Argentine Central

American States, Culoiiil-ii- , CVea, Italy,

Liberia amt Slim, bpaln will fi'ituMy be

vacant by tin-- retirement of Minister I"tternet! fall. It not ripeeteJ that there will be

any change In the Delgfan mini"", which It

now filleil by the wm of a pre .sor ot Mr.

Ilaar.l, aliho'Kit it is .mil: that what ii

called " will, not

nrrinl t that eter Twenty-seve- State

are Wnhl lil. fair men will

lay that realize theat St. UiuN, that " the ml- -

minitratloti will malteercry cmleaxor to allay

every remnant of cctlonal feeling In

J it 11 for the whole country, ami not

for only a part of it." The roster

of I a follow 1

NI.W YORK.

Minitter to Todicy $10,000Minister to (lilll 10,000

Mioiilerto Hayll 5.0Second Secretary I.evatton, Paris.. .. J.oooSecretary location, Ohlli ' l.5Consul at l'.cllevlllc, Canada 2,oo(Consul at St. John, Quebec l,SoConsul at llarve J.oooConsul ot Dundee 2.5Commercial Agent, Ottaw

'a ,1,ooo

!,

Total $l.7U401110.

Minisier to Germmy $'7.5C Krankfort 3,000

Honolulu l.oooConsul ut Amoy 3.5Consul at llrussels 2,5Consul at Iliimtneham 2,5

Total $33.oooMARYLAND.

Minister to France $17.5Ilerlin ' 4,000

Consul at Leeds. (.. J.ooo

Total $23,500

RLortniA.

Minister to Mexico - $12,000The mission to Russia and the consulate at

ManchMer were offered to Ccorpjian anddeclined.

KENTUCKY.

Minisier to I'cru $10,000Minister to Switzerland 5,000 in

Kan.i(-a- a 4,000

Total . $19,000 a

INDIANA.

Minister to China $ 12,000Minister to Sweden and Norway. ...... 7,500Minister to l'crsia. 5,000

Total v .., $24,500

SOUTH CAROLINA.

Charge, Paraguay and Uriicmy.MelU.urne.

Consul, Chemnitz U

Consul, Cologne ,Consul,

Total $15,50010UISIANA.

Minister u Bolivia , $5.oooMinister to oreeceSecretary Lrgition, I'srls , . . .

Consul, l'aso del Norte

Total .$I4.6S3AIJ.SIAMA.

Minister to VenezuelaKin Janeiro.

Consul, Cardenas...

Total .$13,500WISCONSIN.

Minister to Denmark ..$5,000Montreal. . , , .. 4,000

Consul, 1'iaguc. .... ...... .. 2,000

Total ..; .$IJ,000NLW J I.Kit, v.

Minister to Vurtuipl .$5,000Consul, Rotterdam . J.OOO

Total $7,oooMISSOURI.'

1 Ialifai. v $3,0001,000

Consul, Totouto M.... 2,000Consular Clerk. ..,.. 1,000

Total ....,., $S,Ooa

lILlhOls.Coiuul General, fcVteima .$3,000Consul, Stutgait i. 1,500

Tot a I , . , v. ,.'... ' $ . 500

I j.mliin . , $o,CooConsul, I...... 6,000

Total 1, $12,000.NORTH CAKOIINA.

Minister to llr.uilCoiuul, 3,ooo

,.$ 15,000

M!nttr?r tn jian,. .$12,000Consul,' Hamburg , , 2.5CO

Total ... , $I4.5VIROINIA.

Minister to Austria, .$12,000.Consul, Hong Kong,... .....,, 5,u

Total ,.,,.., $17,000

Consul, Ixhom , , . ...... . . . $ , 500wOiisul, (.iMiktlrlutt 11.. ,,.....,

TotalNEW HAMfjlllRK.

Consul, SherbrX'ke, , ........... .$2, SoilConsul," Malanzat .. 3.000

..$5,500CAltranNIs, SJ

Consul, Apia. .. 1.500VKRNOST.

Minister loUICIIIUAN,

MluI.Ur to HusjU; , I7.5COII?

KIIOtlK ISLjXMl.Minister tu Nithcilamls. . ., ..... . .. 7,500'. '"' ,ss.v.nt.Mlnlttrr tu Hawaiian Islands 7.J

jUKa-NSA-

Consul, liiuiiltua , . , J.OOO

llU.AW.sltE.

Consul, Nurcmbcrt; .j . . J.ooo

Consul, St. Glle . ,5oo

IohkI.hi hvs an fir hohliugreligious Ktsictf. in theatres, am) music halls.M" llun'sU thouviit.1 inci;4 havclrci--held a thhttwi .Us, the average atlcrulanceUli nine IruiUrctl. It Is fun.l that

will not, prtie 13 the churtiiea stillHlhw lo ItMl the UosikI Id swuUr nails.

iai.Avi'...ft. aw.if tntn thf t'ratrr.

Viewed from distance the crater appear,an immense lb)-.,-

, or walk-.-! in

by a precipice varying Irum jon feet tn 6Vx)

feet I height and nbnot nine mile in

'lire Rrealer part rf this wall Is nearlyImt at I he Vc1tno llmmthere

i n optnirtR which admit nf n KrAtual

dewtnt to the lloot nftl crater. ThW floor

i compme.1 wholly nf lira, a uaitinn nf it

having the appearance of the ripple of thewnve on the afastmrc a llie tide cornea roll-

ing hi arm' lit r oTtiin appetra rtrgteil ami

hrolceii, wills small rhunlia of black, cnimbllnu;

lava l)lnj lot as if it were the liotlnni of n

col mine : elsewhere, the lava lonka a if it

were made nf niolltn glau, the color varjinR uy

from a thimmcrhrg grey In a glistening black to

A )nu rtn over the trad small finite of

reveal the molten lava beneath this crust. Insome place the lava rise to within a foot of

the surface, and in other phcea burst forth In

small fnunlaln or nh.Is,

The Mifface of this bed I imdu).itin, fro- -

'iirntly rWni; in bilUxl.s of a hundred fectorso, wiin corrwponninj; tieprcssions. uccaslnnally the heel crushes through the upiwrcrJt, which at first make one nervous J butfrequent repetition of this occurrence, without of

accident, soon wlal.lishc confidence. of

Following our guide acros this Iwd rf lava

two inilca or more, if reach the new lake,which, though smaller in area than the old lake,presents epial attractions. One of our Krtswho had lingered behind, watching its changes,was o entranced by a sudiVn outburst of Iaa,cosering the entire hid with one sheet of fire,

that he refused to 1. .if the Smt anil join us, to

although wc sent the guide back for him ; so

he niisred seeing Ilalcmatimau altogether.' On leasing the new lake )ou pals the Littlellegg-tr- , width is a circular opening, aboutthree feel in diameter, in the solid lava. look-

ing into its yawnlnv; mouth )ou see a white hotmass of liquid lasaand sulphurous flameslnlch.ing forth lli.il few nostrils arc strong enough In

endure for more than a minute. Near thisvent art-- irregular piles of sulphurous rock, stillhot to the touch.

The route from here to the old take becomesmore and more rugged and fatiguing as jouascend the walls of lss-- around ilatcmaumau.On inuring the top of lids elevation jou passthrough .1 notch in these svall and rcacli a

place, sheltered from the wind, from which you

base a full sicw of the burning lake l)ing somefifty feet below you. To the right and left ofthe opening through which you gaze arc iricgular piles of las-- rocks rising still higher thanthe Iidgc on sslnch you are staliomd andforming nn immcnM circular basin.

At the time of our arrival wc were fortunatebasing the wind in a direction thai carried

the sulphurous smoke away float us, aflordingsicw. .

The surface of the lake appeared at night,in the veiled light ol the full moon shadowedb) ibin, vaporous, flcrting clouds, a lustrousgrey, interlaced with sivid streaks 01" brilliant

d fire jetting forth from fissucs in

tbs bed of solid lava, forming a ofIrregular and fantastic shape. Ai intervalsalong these lines of fire would gush fiery fountruns of the most brilliant hue imaginable, asmany as nine of Ihese bclng'in play at thesame time, and hating the appearance ot

bubbling spring ofmoltcn iron. Occasionallyjets would be thrown from these fountains to a

considerable height. At the edge of thilake a flow of lava frequently bursts forth,

in wascs of sivid fire toward thecenter, but ncscr wholly submerging tho sur-

face. These exhibition were byliising, or rumbling sounds. Clouds nf sul-

phurous vapors rose fiom Ihc-- e tissues carrjingwilh them fibrous parliVs claimed to be thehair of the goddess i'ele, a the old legendsbase it.

The whole scene was grand, 11 Ail to contemplate, giving one a realistic kcnse nf Hell,as porlratcd k- - Holy Writ.. During our rtay here six of the party descen

ded to the edge of the lake until nearcnougito thrust a walking mcl in the red-ho- t lava.

. It was conceded, byll those present whobad previously sisitcd the solcano, thatwc were especially fasorcd on ihis occasion b)basing much finer weather and a granderdispt.1) tSan is luualty met with. One Knglish-man- ,

however, in the urly, thosght ihe exhi-

bition was not as fine us some dNplais of fire-

works he had seen in London! So much foi

kiiilinicnt.Soon after nine o'clock we rclraced our stcpf

to the new lake where wc found our solitai)fiietnl, whom wc left there, still intcntl)watching the scene and his enthusiasm was ss

greal we consented to lemain wilh him awhileand fur another fl'), although the windwas chilly and the night waxing. In a few

moments nfier our airisal the seams, ihroughwhich the il.imeiw'cre darting, commenced Inumflow' and soon the emlie Uutom of thelake was one mm of fire of the 11104 brilliantcoiurs imaginable thus never equalled in

the arlist a coinbinalion of rosepink, carnation, magenSv crimson, scarlet amicarmine Hashing into a brilliancy almost ivi!n- -

ful lo the esc to Uhold. In the cutter of thislake of fire stood out in lmld rtluf an Ulandof rod. funned of lava, aiound which theflames crept and surged unlit it scrmed as ifIhe very island itself would be consumed,

After a while the llow again subsided, andthcicafler the flames were glancingthrough the open fissures of the solid lava, incontinuous lines of light, plating luck andforth, incre.-aln- or in brill) nicyaccording to the volume o the overflow, untilwe wen forced in recall 'Aa fact that ii wastime to return, and icluclanlly left the scenenf enchantment.

ty this time all vwie pretty thoroughlyfatigued and it was with diflicully that wineof the ladies could muster sufficient strengthenable them to traverse the three

l"hc y came when a;eiui".nc the clitffiomthe lava Jwl tu the summit, hut, by frequent

lumlvve rc.iclu.1 our destination ahom eleveni .lllilf frtlni. t. .ill rAtitl.l t,, !.. l.al .. .

' """t m i.mi ivi ii.c lauuc sveV. ..1 ..l..a.a.n..IMU U.HI.V1,V.

Aiur i:imi; wc were luvilcl to vvtulMr, ViVlcr called a hurt hut .' rcuirdcJ Itas an eacellcnt supiKr, and all were s hungryHits- - fully .ijojct It as one of the bol mealsseisnlon llielniv.

lljr iuUnI!hl nearly every one ha.'i iciiicilami slept without rocking. In fart one tenllcman who had been sea sick said he frfttnnilhU uuteWtsl tuihe rocklnc old Neil,tune had given him In Ihc cradle of ihe ilcv.

T. V.Ilosolutu, July id, 1SS5.

for Knctartd and.Hi Maiijuu Twog foe China hart signednew opium treaty Ulwrcn China and GisalBritain, ty the uiutsof which Ihe Interior isopencvl up freely lo the opium liiJe,

The t.lmrilrlrr nf Silk I'tillttrrA New Vork telegram, dated July 141I1, to

the Associated l'res, Is a follows 1 "TheTrllrane says eslitnria'.ly The raiting of silk-

worm I petty, her!;, ealrtnsting and a

of hlmr, and is fit only fur peonsami half animal wasants There is not muchprobability that the Industry can ever be raisedinto any importance in this eountty. It would

not be good for the people of the country If ll

eoukl be forced into temporary success."The New Vork Tribune is decidedly out nf

it head in this nutter. It ought to know bet

ler. Ii is true thst the successful rearing of

vsorim requires knowledge, patience and a

good ileal of that peculiar quality for whichAmericans are famous, and which is expressed

that undefinable word but atlis Iwing degrading, etc., why the holdingsuch a view argues Ignorance.In spite of the pircnt society at 1'hil.ulel

phia and other tributary by

which and devoted women areto educate the people in Ihe mat

tcr of their s

such Ignorance as that which the Tribunemanifests.

Whether the statement of the Tribune beattributable to Ignorance, or whether the car

the editorial writer has been gained by somethe importers, who, of course, fight home

production of silk, it matters little. It is agross libel upon the silk industry and a cruetblow at the people, who arcIrjing to develop a i profitable employment for American women.

Wc have so often shown the fitness of thebusiness til women, who are wise and patient

proceed slowly, unlil they learn the condi-

tions with which they have lo contend, that il

would weary our readers lo recount the poinlwhich are directly at variance with the claimsof the Tribune. Let it be known, however,that the labor is not degrading, but, on thecontrary, is pleasant, Inspiring and elevating,and suited to the bright American worker. On

this point a recent rejiort uf the CaliforniaState Hoard of Silk Culture fitly says : "

show that we can produce bettersilk in America on account of the higher men-

tal condition of our people, which shows it-

self in the ingenuity and inventive spirit everimproving on Ihe e methods ofthe Asiatic race, in the perfection ol machin-

ery lessening manual labor, Inthcaid lurnishedby scientific researches and in the quicknessand skill of the workmen."

The character of the women who arc now

engaged in silk culture in this state, not thosewhu it from mo

iti out jjiiojejwrto nrir actually prcxUicmt;

h which is gainedr if .w. ' "jy thr hours, show that

claim of the TriIrvmeTPtJlWit iir'litoiitv for Vpcns. It is a fit

fjrMJrsjjcsl, intelligent, andwomen and children,

and the are tnalcinf; in it in

nearly all parts of the country is the best kis.sible evidence of the fact. The comments ofthe Tribune are of a'Uiud that injure must theone who makes them. Pacijic Rural Putt.

F.I1UCATIONAL ANI1 REI IOIOUS NEWS.

The Karen ltaptist Theological Seminary, atKangoon, Hurmah, held its fortieth anniver-

sary April 15th last.

Dublin, Ireland, United havedeclared formally in favor of instrumentalMusic in public worship.

A graduate of the Harvard Aanet has nt

taincd a higher per cent, in her classics thanany of the young men of Harvard.

President McCoslt of Princeton has beenIhe relations of college athletics

tn lie finds the leading athletesthe poorest scholars.

Last jtar the llritlsh ami foreign ' ItibleSociety Kstted nn edition of the New Testament, at two cents per copy, and 955,000copies were sold in nine months.

One rptcstloa uiscusscd at the late missionarycunlcrence at Ovtka, Japan, was whether it is

better that missiohari should be sent outmarried or single. Not only was the senti-

ment decidedly in favor nf their being married,but statistics from one society show ul that theterm of service for single men-wa- s five vears

slimier than that of the married.

It is computed by a Dublin statistician(J. I.ambcrt Jones), that lVs I'rotistants at theclose of the last century were 40,000,000,while Ihe Roman Catholics were 120,000,000;hut now. In 1SS4, ihe I'rotesiautsarc l.S,ooo,-00- 0

and the Romanists tSa.ooo.ooo. ThusProtestants have increased iihuit 250 per cent,and Romanists meantime only 50 per cent.

In Foreign Missions the Southern I'icsby-teiia- n

Church lias stations in the Indian Teclitory, Mexico, Northern and Southern Uracil,

Italy, Greece and China ; il is about establish-

ing one in Japan. The receipts for the year

have lie-a- s about $73,000, and the year endswithout a debt at home or abroad. The churchii asLetaso iuciease its gifts this year to $Se,.ooo.

Qf the iS.jfij men svho received degrees.

from Harvard Uriivcrsitv (irevious to this vcar,

127 bore the somewhat fanilajr nameof Sniilh.Williams is not considered a very siininonname, ) el its beaters come second in the list

with a record of 113. .The llrowns andllrownes together number., ll. Fourth In

numlier are the Adamses, with an even too.Then come the Clark and Clarkes 93, in all.The 1'aiVers come next, with 79. Strangelyenough, the Joneses are well down on the list,numbering only jS.

"We are gratified tn ;.e ihe fact that thepul.Sc schools of Alabiiua ate

wilh scieiice and literature, tome phvsi.cal training wilh intellectual culture. t Infemale colleges vuuug ladies receive valuableinsttitcliun in the art ami handiwork of housesslfer) ; and in the school-room- s young users,

are Uui:ht that Uhor. whether of head 01 hind.". brain or muscle, is always Hignn.ed, manlyand honorable. It will be a pioud day of

promise lor Alabama when every public school

within her establish an indus-

trial Says a

Kilicrn stales In (he American Union con.tat.) University and college properly tu thevalue of $i,uA),od or over. The slates In

tills topeel rank as lollowt 1 New York,I I

Ohio, Sj,ScV;,31 1 Missouri,Illinois,

j California, 5 Vifgluts, Tennessee,

$1,409,630 ( Michigan, $1,380,.1S4 1 lovsa, Rhode Islanl,$1,250,0x1 1 i4rict of Clumbia. $1,200,000,ami Indiana, $1,120,000. The state havingIhe low st Is Delaware, which has but $30,000la velcj a Khuoht of j hUjh grade.

starbr.

U THURSTON.At MttTM

tttnrntft ot l.tttr.N J SttT. Hu.tOt.lMV

pvR. S.

M R. C. S. Kno., ... R. C. P. ami U S A. UirtixwI .ate Achobr jifxl lVUtnwm of

suiwiuiY .tsn MKHWIXt:,King' Co!lj, IWrdflt,

OrricR and KrtDftfcic No. tjj Fort street, 1tlyoccupied by Dr. Caijpenter

urricR jiqvm 9 i is otiock a. m.JI-- t ta$nmt 1 lo8 r. !.

EDWARD PRESTON,

Attorney rtM'' Vo timet or itt l.atrm

Nn. tj Kaahumanij STurtur.. HUNUU'IV

pEO. L.nADCOCK,

fntrher of thr Vtttno furff,Atlilres care Mekrt. Wet, Ui5 Cb.,

Urn ij Pour Br.,... IIiMfttct4r. LuRiaiiirKCK No, n I!mma street. 3;8I

I

T M. WIHTNEY, M. U D. D. S.

Urntot tloom on Votl Strict,fiNOLULO II. 1.

Office ki llrewer' lock, corner Hotel And PortStreet l, entrance on Hotel Street. iio-V- ,,

AUSTIN,

Attorney nntt Ctnitmrtlor ut .fir,,ln Aynt to tuhN 14 Kaaiiuimhu SricKBr lloNOLmv

aai-3-

TNO. A.

tyent to tithe tofor Lttbor,

Interior Omar HoNniutoati-3t-

OllU H. PATY,JAotttry Vuhttr nntt Commtnnton of Dectlr

For the State of California and New York. Office,

at he Unk of IttsJwp Si Co. j

0nu, H.I. aio-i-

P P. GRAY, M. D.,

fiirsivrAX AXt suitauox,Office, next door to the Honolulu Library.

9 ti to A. M.Houks: a lo 4 r. m.

7 to 8 r. II.Sunday, 9 to 11 a. m.

Ktivm and rcnuoola Sia.

O B. DOLE,

Couunrlur at f.ait ami JV'oMr 1'abttc,OKriCE,

Xo. 15 Kaa.wmanl' Strklt ..Honoluiuj4-j-

TT7- - R. CASTLE,

AltHrnelf at f.aw anil Xotary 1'ttbUr,No. ig. Merchant Strekt Honolulu

Attends all Ihe Cifurls of the Kinsdom. tio-a- (l

(iTartis.I

A u awcni.Importer ttml Jtrulrr In OUmauutre,

Jlertitrn SUrerVttttci li'itrr,JlruckelMp Vote,

No. 83 Fowt SfkKUT ...Honolulu

KInc' (ojiibination Sprcucl ami KrsUAe.uustrai vtc art?, rancy itM, r.cture l rabies,Wostenholm'f 1'ocktt CulfciT, ll. I ChauU tUnJicu, L.larivi lSioI L,tt'iit, SUilune Uil, all

Mm! of Machine Needle, "Domestic" ar rasSbii.Sole anent of the univcrully acknowleilgrAl Light.

Uunninc Domestic Sewing Machine,7lO2bf

S. CLECIIORN & Co.AImporter unit lieutrm tn tlmcral .Wrr- -

cntntltie.Comer Queen and Kaalmminu 3ireets, Honolulu.

A. SHEPARU.

WtttehmnUcr find farcler,Watch repairing inaile n Spool fillt'.

.VII orders from the othei Ulan. 1 irompily attended lo.No, $i, 11.1.

A W. 2HIRCB & Co.

.Ship Chamltrra mut Commtaaton Mrrclutnt,

No. is Qukkn St., Honolulu.A cents lor Ifrand' (jinbtaitiJ Hmli I jinr an( IVr.

ty Da tb 1'a.n Killer. 110361

A LLEN A RODINSON,

Oeulera In Luinhemn! ntt ktnt of Itutltttny Mutrrloti, 1'utnts, OHm, Xutta, etc.,NO. 44 QKBKN ...HoNOLULtJ, II. I,

Ar.RNTS Or kCIIOONHUIlale.ikala, KuUminu, KekauluoM, Mary Elicit,

UHaina, TauaM and Leah!, .

At KoUmotis Wharf. tio- -i

DISUOI1 a CO., Uaukcri

11 010 lull1, Hawaiian Ulanij'Draw Exilune on

THE UANK 6r. ' SAN FRANCISCO.s

And ilwlr a(ci, tn

NEW YORK.

DOS'! ON.

HONl. KONC

MMr.N M,

LONDON,

UANKINO CO.,

OF SVDNLV, LONDON.

TU UANKINO CO.,

SYDNF.T,

Tb HANKS OF NEW 7L'A!-N- li:

AND WF.I.LINOrON

nu: aNr!s of ukivisii columuia,' AND 1'0ULAND, OR.

Trausait a Gaural Itmkitt Ihiuuesutjs-it- o

C BREWER ALimiuJ.i

COMPANY,

Ueuerol Mereuntlle nnl CommlaalaH AyentaQUVKN StRIKT. HciMOLtLU,

Osftcer4--!1- . C. Jones, Jr. tudut and managerlowrphO, Carter, lrurr art.) MvretaO' Iir1ortlions. OuuUs H. UuhopaM IL A. I. Uatcrj W'j F.,nwn auuuor, 3 274

c.(roaNnuv rtu uu.k & ro.i

IIA.r.wl. um.I Hrlail tirutrr.in, Kiku Srr .......Upo lUauomr lm

KanUy. llaalallon, an.l bhip ait, supvt.nl at itnatrwrWc Nw cou.1t br ..cry tttvti, U.4ri fro.ttMutiM,

IVUtluiM No. 11a. ii?-t-1

p C. COLBUAN,

UmtktmUk, MathUUI, CmrrUf WtrhHon mt.tlmg,

Hohohjiv , ..II. I

PUatailoa llKIary, etc 5 oq King Sutaat Casak ft Ctfoae'k

urbo.

PATURDAY JAji-SS-.

VoLUMK NuM.ittK.4S. HONOLULU,- - HAWAIIAN ISLANDS, AUGUST r885. Whole Number 257.

Clevcl.tiuVs ntlnitnistrntionsmnctltTnt;

rtltuttueiiw diploiiiatic

following

apfi!fttmnti

Confeiletatlon,

departmental coiitrj,"

rcproenteiltlirppolfitinentt

Bcofiraphlcal

appointment

Interf.retcr.Tlcntsin

onsntOc'neral,C'nnsul-Gcnert.-

Contul-Gencra-

Contul-Gencra-

Consul-Genera-

Tegucicalfa

Kuinania,Seisia,anu

ConsubUencral,

Consul-Genera-

Consul-Genera-

CoiuuiGenerl,,.Miou ....:,.;..,.,

Consul-Genera-

LUcrpHil",,

..,,,;$iMiooManchottr..,.

wfdswZf&tw

rENMYLVAMA,

ToUl,t,,,.

KnfiU'Lt..............

urtpnUalion

circum-

ference,perpeBrltetlUr

inagnificicnt

accompanied

sividnessby

Isshingaiul

diminishing

nitlesdistani.?.

T1ieMariiisof.SaliUiiy

degradation

"gumption,"

organizations,public-spirite-

endeavoringoccasionally

public-spirite-

arCT)rvmotJng philanthropic

csake'rvl'ifiircwardusraoymciiTjcshure

fcrJfVpcrlifico- - dcnieiPtJl

prOgrcaLiiC.

I'rcsl.jtcrians

invcliqatingscholarship,

inUlngV.iue

IxHttidaiicAhalldepartment." contemporary,

57,S5S."3 I'cnnsjlvanla, $4.3j.W$2,794,000!

$2,501,000) Massachuselts,$1,568,749

$1,650,0001 $1,921,0001Connecticut,

$1,378,0001

IJrofcosiointt

KRMESTCRADD0C1C.

JONATHAN

AcKiiotrlrttyrmpntM,

UASS1NGMI,

ArKiimrlettumriitn

RESIDKNCK.cor.

Justness

Il0IiLhrHEKr.........M.,.l0N(ILULU,

CALIFORNIA,

kOlHSCHILDASONS,

llivCOMMKKCIAK

COMMERCIAL

CFSVUNEV,

AUCKLAND, CIIRISICHURCH,

VICIOKIAtU.C

IIUSTACE,

w..iuuiUHii)r,sKua,

Alitoincoc

p H. WILLIAMS,

ANtl lRAtRR IN

fttrnttur of ttrerif lrerljttnn Mntfftholaterrr itnt Maihtfttrtttrer

Ftaflfafffl Wrrm.wn No in Fort Street. Work.! old Wiiht on II ret Mtrri, All order promptly

mrwrnaa 10. jr --)

sirrSiCSK'ri rj'l'tnif r.rin i rrwin Tiryi 'Jflrf ,ftfa. j Kim, StMti ' llniiitV.

',''-- P''.rit-yi-.iMFonrPm a

RHNUKAf. Mi:UCII fti)ih'.. (AAnent fof

iWlliicHrnctt Coiitsiin'i riantation.'TW Alevandtr & (Utdwin

K. HaUewd, or Waialiu ria.itatkni.A. II. Smith & fompiitT, KoIia. Kauai,

J. M, Alexander, Haiku, .Maui." '11m llaiV.u buaar Comrony.

'Ihe Koliftl.iujnl Lumpany,llairul.w yiantalion

lite Ufttoii iMiifartcf tHntanV ol San Fraiirvw,New lmt,wVlJV Insurance Com piny uf HoMut.

M. Viort Paiem Citnful Machtnea.IM Ntw Yitrnami iimwmin rrcket l.irw.lh Men bant IJn, llnrmluln and San KrancIcoMJr. Jitt '"i Hon LeleWaled MedicinesMcix OP.!' bhiMT Mfnuf.wturini; Comiiariy.

Vhctltr & Wihuii't bewiAff Machine. 3iu-a- 6l

E"1r ADAM J,

Auctioneer unit Cmmohatan MeicitttitiNo, 4rfJtRRN ,, Honoiuip

D. HOFPSCIILAEGBK Sc Co.Emtoirrt iitc Comntt.ilntt Jterthnnl.

Kn, 4S ycKBhSTRFeT HonoluiU Oaiiu, II Isio-76-1

ED C. HOWL,

limn it tut S11 I'uhtler,Pa ikk Hanger, etc,

No. 107 Kino Strkkt ...HtiNoniLUBai idi

E HALL & SON ..(Limited)

ItirORTBRS AND DEALERS IN

Ilnrrhcttrr .nut r7ener.f JTerrtanithr,CoRNBit or King anu Streets, Honolulu

ornccRs:William W, lli'l rresident and ManagerL. C. Ablet Secretary and TreasurerW.K.Allen .Auditor

Directors Thoma. Mav, E. O. White "asojo?

P A. SCHAUfER & Lo.

Imyortrr uttil Cotittntton Jleithont2iO. 10 M&RCMANT STKRKT IIONSIAJLU

2IO-3-

F.. OEDING.

Iljcprrni uno Druynmii, rOffice. No. 81 KkjET Strt.Residence. No. 47 Pnnclibowl Steret,

Honolulu, Oahii. H, I,

Fmflit, TackACt?, atvl Ragaije ilvloretl lo arnl froatuipuirism Honolulu airU vionuj. iarciuiai

IciitisUi aid lo .ioiUr2 wttli

WAT.ONS KXPKKSSLV IORTIIK rUKI'OSl-:- .

Oil.cc Tclclone. No. 8S.IIuusc Tclepliur.e. .Va do, zvj-z--

GKHTZ.

. Hon! rtmt .Nmf miiXrr.lloots anJ Shoe made lo Order,

toj Fort Struct. Honolulur a 6 1

U. UUrABLANE, II. K. UACKARLANR.

Q-- V, MACFARLANE & CO.

Importers, CommlMion Moroliantauntl Suar raotor"

riie-in- jf Ituitditif. . ,,...,, .Quten Krcct, lonolulo.

AGKNJA VVR

Puuloa Sheen Ranch Co. Hawaii.J. Tow Icr & Cu's btctm 1'Iow and 1'ortaM Tramwaj

Works. ..ceil.MIrrless. WatMjn A. Cus Siiirar Machincrv. (ititL'usvt.Ui(v aad Honolulu Uric of Packets,i4tTjooi ami iiunoiulu i.insol rackets,laoiulon and Honolulu Line of Steatncrs,Sun Fire Oii.ce of London. 341391

HACKFELD & Lo.HCor, Fort anu QtfcKN Stuvt. Honolulu

3toa6

fTOLLlSTEE U Co.

IVmlrMttle unit Itilnlt liruyylata nmt

No. 59, Nt't'wti Sr:.KKT Honolulu3 1

Ll OPP A CO.,

Nu 74. KlHU iJTMKKT,. ...,..., ... Honolulu

lrphol0lriMf ttruper ttml HeiUer lit tillKlihh of Furniture

Telephone Nj, 143.

Ll.YMAN BROTHERS,

tto node i'm nf leuerul Mfrchumlhe. fromJ'ntnce, iluutntut, tlvrmuny imf

tho Ifuttnt Mute,NlX iBIjUKKN STJsKRT 4J HoNOLUIV

H YUAN QROTHERS

tnmllon Merchant.Ko,bo6 FttoNi Stkakt........ .....San Fmanciscu

1.

H E. McINTVilE & BROTHER,

Mtioccrtf uiut Vfl Store,Cor. Kino anu Fukt Sr Honolulu

tio-r-tl

H ONOLULU IRON WORKS Co.,

trnm lUtylnea, Uultera, Muuor Mltla,Cuulrr, Iron, llruau uml Lent Vnattnya

Ho.MJLULU H.fJ

Ilachiccry of every description nude to order,FaxttcuUr atlriitLrii iiald la Shin's Dlacksmkhlnir.job Witrk. en.CUlr4 cxi lb shortest ootice.

THO. O, FOWLER & Co.,$i

LEF.DS, ENOUNP,

.Ira prepaid to furnUh I'tuna ami ttinuLf-- fur Mtcrt

FOUTAULr? TRAMWAYS,

With or wuhoul CarsrsAJvd UcotnutiteSf Sprcial'y

ADMTKO vOR SUGAR

Permanent Uailvrays. aiht lxveuuit andean, )raclion EniUca hh-- UdJ locomotives, biuani

IlouzUing ai.1 Cdtiratini Machinery, Vuctaw toiiju fot all purpus Wllhllilg

Cviutnet or tixiin.Ctakvitisu wtih tlkadrkjas. AlodeU aud Phitto.

graph f ii.4 asovu ItinU i)J twhtnrry stay L teenat ib olhor tl lb uitdrrUgnal, W. I.GKI.EN h)O. W.MCFARl..AM-VeUsfo- r Imw Foier j a 34

T W, OIRVIH,

CminihImIih itrrrhuut nmt 7jtTff i titertu tirllnoit

W.avtcv. I u't.-f...- ..H, 1

GVocsrks, Hwdvare, SutMMry. rlea MsdfavUets,I (It1WIT W4 lasIMaM.

JOHN T. WATBHItOUSB.

lMfMrl.r umi OtnUf Jh (lfHrriI Jfer--rimmJt.

Nixvj-- ji Qvm Sraurr,, , n,ItON0LLLU,r-.- i

luoinccc Cnrbs.

T M. OAT, JR., &C0.Stnttnner ami r Itenter.

Itctt Itttt'hrr ft I ft n p ,t(tneyOAKfTPritOeK ... No, J5 MERCHANT SfRFFT

15S-- HOMOLVLtf. II. I.

TOIIM HOTT,

Tin, f'opfter tin rl .Stirrt iron M nriter,tstnm tiift Itonte

o(W kind, Humbert' ock ati meuK hmm furnMi- -,n HwS cliarnlelters lamp, etc

NO. 8 KAAMt'MANU SfKRICT HONOttfLUftO- -l

f AtNE & Co.,

Votumtmton Merefittnti,!mpoiierAml dealen In Hay, Oratn and General

Pmducf.Hotou Le.. . ............... .....,.t.t.,...,,H. t.

io--6t

r UWERS & COOKB,

(St'icKORi To t.Rwa". ft I)i:kon,)Jmpniter Hint ifettterm In Lumber nntt att

fitutta tf lliilMtnu Jtutrrtat.No. 8 Four SrRRkT HoNoitrui

T AHLO.

tituter In fJooff, litre, Tertt Sttkmntt, ttncft tinmt, iioiMt miooim nntt

Stt or, limit, lUeil ittut I'tmtr,tHynrn uiut Tohorrn.

AKo projirieior of Rice and Sugar Plantations atKanenhe, KooIju, Waipio, I.waf And HeeU.Cor. Nuuanu anu Cuah-aI- n Srs. HonuK'IU

T VOMS & LEVEY,

Auction eclii nmt Cmtntton Merchttntft,Conkh Font and Qukrn HoNOLULtr,

Sales of furniture, Stock, Htn Ffttate and Generallerrhandte prom pi I y Attemleu to. hole agents for

American and i.nropean mcrcnanuisc. 11. j.yons,8j (UJ, LrvRV.

PHILLIPS A Co.Mtmpmtrri nmt it'ltotfote Deuter In Cloth- -

tiijt llootn Shoea, llttt, JniV nr- -nhhlny tloinla, Funry tlnola, Etc,

No. to Kaamumahu Stbfkt ..Honolulu110-i-

JWT W. McCHESNEY ft S0J,Dealers im

Teuther, lllttrn, Tu'toir unit Commlnilon.Merchant,

Agents for the Royal Soap Compat v.

No. 41 QumN Strkkt . . Honolulu8.rvT S;K1NIJAUM A Co.

?5kV I IVhotemle Heater In (lettw irrA y5t"a," Jciitittur

.Mr$'s lirrac?. Qusky Strekt, HonolulurV O T1J1T'S. GRIaJAUM & Co.

yx rXflkfifttnfViff itml 'omntttmlan ytrrehntitf

ia St. San? Fkanchco.iiial ngJJir.e for and particular attention jaid to

fnsi11iUji' Mand DTOduce. io-- al

OACIFIC HARDWARE CO.

importer mul ltntterv In II it nttru re, Cut-lery, Tool,

Painu and Od, and Central Merchandise.N'n.?4ANi , Tort Stmkrt... Hooiulu

210-2-

O J. LEVEY & CO.,

Whotennle ttml Uetnll Orocera,No. 95 Fort Strrct .HonoluluFreOi pfictrie and provisions ol all kinds on hand and

received repilarly from Europe ami America vhicbwill be sold bt the toweu maiket rates.

Goods delivered to anj part cf the city free of charge.Island orders solicited and prompt attention Mill becien to the same.

WESTERN AND HAWAIIAN INTHE vestment Company ('limited.)

leaned for long or shott periods on approvedsecurit). Apply to W. L. GREEN,

OlTce llcaver ltlock, Fort St, ManagerU9S

TMIEO. H. DAVIES & Co.

(Latk anion, Gbsrn &. Co.)Importer mut Commhalon Jlerctmita

No. 4 Kaahumakt St" Honoluluagists for

Llujd'sand the Liverpool Underwriters.ltnti.hand Fotcii. ae Insutance Company, andNorthern Asturaj.ee Company. a

yHOS. G. THRUM,

AND MANUrACTURtKa

Stut loner, Itook-a'tler- , Vrtnter, Jlook- -bhtttct; rtt.

An publisher of the Hawaiian Almanac and AnnualDealer ii; Una Stationery, Itooks, Mu.ic, Tos andFain,y Goods.

Fiartf SlRRfi. Nkar Hotel, Honolulu

G. WEST, II. SI, DOW, C. . MACrARLANK.

XITEST, DOW A CO.,

Importer mut lieutr in ntt ktml ofMtialc, fViMcy ami Juwtue tiootta.

Furniture of all kliidk. Sewing MaUitn Errors.lUiniinits Chronws and 'lovs, 1'ictuia Frames ami

10 urucr. Movin; Miid repairing ruroiturca s peciahty.No. 105 F.1KT Strhktm..., ...........Honolulu

l?vXIT1LLIAU McCANDLESS

licnter In t'holceat lleef, 9'rut, Mutton, KtcNO. 6 QUKIC &TKIKT.

Family and Shippint; orders carefully at I end vd lo.A e Stock f urnitvtd lo Vessels at short notice,

Yegrtablet of all kind supplied to order,Fclli-mon- ....No-- 11.

206 i

Iiieur.tncc iloticco.

OSTON BOARD OF UNDERWRITERS.BC, MfAt'&X . cj

Agenti for the Hawaiian Islands.sto-trt-

DRITISH FOREIGN MARINE INSUR.O aoce Company. (Limited)

77EO. Ut UAl'tES, ACSXT,TW bov agent has reteived IiettritlLtts 10 rt- -

iil tne 1 airs 01 insurance Deivieen iiomui4 anuftxii in I be FaciTic. an4 is niw DreiMrrd to lut ioUlv at h loJ rates, with a special reduction 00irrijiit pr Mcauiers.

ORGMBN DOARO OF UNDERWRITERS.

". A . SCUA Er'EK 6 C AttAlo stfcnisfx h

Dresden Board of Undcfwritfcit.Vienna Board of Uo4rwrU.

Itxlhe lUwaiian lidaitds, tio-- 6

FORTUNAGEHEUALINSUKANCECOM-pioyo- f

?, A. SCIfAEPEK V Ct AGSXTS.The abo lasurans CmbAuy, has euaUithc! a

Ociwwal Acencv here, and io uiiUsrsignvd, (lencraJAgent s. art aultiurunl to lati n against the tUtigeni4 1U4 beat at lb nuM. fcaonabl raist and va tlehum UoraUe terms. aiov6i

LLOYD MARINE INSURANCEGERMAN Cooiimuiv f BerU.. A SCUARr'&X V C., AGXXfS,

The above I nturancv Con.paay has esiaUuhcJ a Gen-era) Agency hue ud the abuts dgnd. tkiwr Agds,are autVMl to lake KbJts .4io4 ine lar.gtrs of theSeas ai the tl raasooabU iis and on the moa

terms.

AMBURCMACDBBURG FIRB INSURst Coeaoaaj ol H&aMUf ,

A.JAE;KKtACXT,UUdiiitMrivksaJi- -, Funis If and MKhibery

3IO6ll

UAUBUkCBRKMBNFIRKINSUIUNCBleeaf,

r A, SCUASrSM A Cv A6KNT&TtM ktote am luirhte; bee aytutaud agsitis U lata

co iy are ueiuiod b Lrswe risk aavMl fire w2mm saI lM'X buUoWg id e MersuaJiM tors4llKisW, . ifca m4 UvvfUa laau. F4 ar.tuUrsy ai ibttf uskwt.

Jusincoo C:irt)0.

OHRMAN FIRK INSURANCENORTH. Company of Hamburg.. UACKFKI.D A O., ACKS'TS,

Capttsl aM Kcwrv. Ketch.ma.V l,8jo,roa" their tt tnsutanrtComrnni, " jj.i,ftTa

Tt Ag.nttcf Ihe atovc Coirpvnr, tot Itt llsw.iUnI.UnHf, Are prtttkted to Inture IIuiMiiS, Furniture,Mmhamli. .n.l frndiice, .Mahiner). etc., Alto Sujrsrml Kic Mitl. amt vesfs la Ihe barter, .gainst loss

or damage by r.,e, on the mol fsvorvUe lerms.sio-e-

ENULAND MUTUAL LIFRINSUR.NEW ance Companj ot tto.ton.CA.1TLK & COOKS, AGK.VTS.

iNcosmeArsu isjs.The oldest Purely Mutual Life Insurance

Company in the United States.I'nltrlcM l..f.f o., IhrvkOMt f.iror.l6e r.rtnLosses paM through Honolulu Agcncr, $49000

tioi6i

DOAHD OP UNDERPIIIJLAURLPHIAC. BRKM'KK A--

for the HswAtUn Islanils.eio-- 6i

FIRB INSURANCETRANSATLANTIC Hamburg.II. HACKFSLD If Ct., An-l- l.

Cnpila! and Heserve Keiclitmnrk tf,au,otxtlieir Re Insurance Companies " 101,6),010

Total.., .....Reiclnntutk toj$yt,cmIhe AKentsofthe ahove Company, for the Hawaiian

Inland, are pretmred to Insure llutldinji. Furniture,IterchAndi aird 1'mduce. Machincrv. etc alo ISnsarMid Rice .Mills, and veswli In the liarlur agaitut loor damage vy lire, nn the most favorable ttinis.

sio-i-

HE LIVERPOOL AND LONDON ANDT Globe Insurance Company.

MSHOP& Co., ACEtVTS,KSTAEISHBD lSj6.

Vi, limited Liability to Mochhotitcra.Assets ..... .$31,136,100Reserve 6,750,090

incomk for i8;a:Premiums received after deduction of re

Insurance.. $5,55.1,195Losses promptly adjusted and paid here.

NIONMARINEINSURANCE COMPANYu of San Francisco.

CASTLE A COOKE, AGKXTS.

Incorporated 187V sio-a- 4i

ENGLAND MUTUAL LIFENEW Company of Boston, Mass.

INCORPORATED l95.,taarti ilnnuury tat., iSH-i- tteitity 0.

Polices Issued on the ratttt favorable terms, andabsolutely after Two

Payments.

rXAMMK)K rLAN

Insured ac,e 33 ears so ears Endowment Plan for

Annunl Premium $'J42.30.

Ch-Sur- VTe.At the end cf the sd Year. $ aSo.S5 $ 545

3d ' 464.70 14a4th ' 641 15 1,1303t Bit.ii 1,4156tlt " l.oag 00 1,6957th M 1.23515 t.970dtb ' 1,450.75 ."3So h " 1.676.05 a, 500

10th ' 1,911 65 2,755nth " .i57 90 j22111th " 3,4.5.45 213th j,65 00 3.484Mth " .967.7 3.7""S'h " 3.S03-9- 3.9456h ' 3 57515 4.1657! ., 3 90? S 4.3o

lot I 4,143 50 4,54019th ' 4.613,70 4,ioooth ' 5,000.00 5,000

Tlw Second and subeqent premiums are liktly tobe reduce by incrttuinf annual Jittrtbuttent 0 tr

Of Applications can be hadof; and full Informationwill be given by the Agents,

CASTLE V COOKE.

foreign bbcrttecmento.

CHARLES BREWER At Lo.

27 Kilpv Stkbkt, Uoston,

AUKXTS Of UAWMI.tX VACKKTS,

tlvnrrnl Commtaalon Ayent.Special alicntton given to the purchasing of goods for

the Hawaiian trade. Frcivht at lowest rate.

TJ W. SEVERANCE,

116 CALiroHKU St., Cau,(Koom No. 4.)

itAWAiiAX voxsur. r COM Ml.HM OX

Merchant,

HEMBUSINESS

OOLLEOI,24 Post St a F.

Seed for Circular

The Full. Bkhinkss Coih&k Includes SinjU ih)LVtuble Fjtto Book keepinki, as applied to all departmentk of lruttrw; Csfimcrcial Arithir.ttic, llusinesIVnmamhip; Mrrratiise Law( Business Cot iti ponderxe; Lectures on Law; Uitvess Form, ana theSclents of Account 1 ; Aitu ButncM Practice In

VhoteAle and Retail Mrrihandisin?, ContniUi(in,Importing, Railroading-- Ect 11 u finest,

liokerage, antl Banking; EnitlUh Branches, InclodingKeading, Sj'dlin.r,, Grammar, etc.; lring; andModern lAnguagcs,conMiting of practical (ntstructionin French, tleiman, an J Spanuh.

SrecUL Bkanchrs arei Ornamental FenmanshipHigher Mihctiutlcs, .Surveying, Natlgatlon, Cnil

AMU)ing, Short (land, 'J Telegraph y, eic.

For ftdl ..formation address,:. i UKAMtJtco.

tjo-s- li San Fhancim., Cxi.

(General bbrrtiettfitnts.

N, F. UDRGESS,t

VAIU'KXTKH ASH IIUILOKH,

BVMifiily anruMUKeAo thr u!4ic ittathe has purclaset) the

1I.VGOAGK KXPIJKIiiHUu.lne4 r.nlly uahtucr.l ty air. (I, t. tV,t al

So. V4 King Mrl. htrh .lt t under Ihe manage.iMnn.ftii.K- -. B. f. BUKGES&

111. LapM ..It tlUiul lU arnral . u,aauand ffllylr JivtrKltr.lOIlT, PACKAGES & UAC.GAcJC,

tu llonutulu ao vktn'tl).

Txjnfjrxxmi at pianos, Mated il taf

UK, AUSO, (IAS I'UkCIIAStt) Till:

Tobacco, Cigar and Soda Water,ItiaWMU k(liis( Lia ,V klr. - W. IllltJaWv.

N0.I1 Kin urwt, whkh i)l be ceetducled by hitthing Iun, J, tl. Uividi SHau wmri jif)

lU line of hVJOKtRS' ARTICLE cm be louod, 1

Ihe bet iueJiiylhanUng the Miln lot U favor and raaraMecIna;

to xtvm4y esttnt all order in either line of Uutwftsal leaaonaUe tbargts ftjifuU aJicUaulna wihimw pairobage,

ULIa Talahatmm Jf. $&

So, 84 Kin Mr, MmwMm.rv4 (1Q

l(iu4 u ctoWf hf the

(Stntral Jlobcrfiocmrnlo.

-- ASTLK A COOKE,

HO(OIUU It, I.

Would call attention to their t.tr andvarlM Stork of -

AGRICULTURAL IMPLEMENTS,

Conkiiting of lhcbnr!vatlnl Faiii Stttl

Jtreukiny I'tow,

The Midi ne Steel Breakers, anil Furrowing Plo, Moline Steel Flows all sue Planet, Jr., Culti-

vator., Dirt Simpers,

John )re-- ) OaUK Plow a,

I'Untcrs Hoes of the Wit nuke

DISS10NS CELEURATKI) CANE KNIVES

made to order, Ames' Showlt and Si a J el.Garden I Iocs. Caial Barrows, (is

Hows, Yokes, Chains, FenceChains,

Sugar Mill Requirements.

SUGAR BAGS, SUGAR KEGS,

Camberlniiil Coal,

Sprm 0.1, Cj Under, I Jimand Kerosene Oil, Perfect

Lubricators, Plumbapo, Allany Grae, Diton's and

S. and J. Files, all sues andkinds. Steam Packing, Flat

and Round Indu Uublr,Aslstos and Soap Stone,

Flax Packing, Indii Kul-b- er

low, H to a inch. Pipeand Couplings, Nuts and

VAhers.imithcd, Machineltullt, atl sires, Cold peiwd

IlUik sun ill's, Lngtneer' rftidCarpenter's Hammers, Pipe

Cutters, inches 6 iitcn to94 Inch, Anvils, Vices, '1 ubc

Svruperf, Grindduncs, MeitAmerican Bar Iron and Too.

bttel. Builders Hard-are- ,

all kinds and M)tc, 's

Paints and Oils, rawand boiled. Small Paints in

Oil, in larco variety. DryPaints, Uinlxr, Ncnetun,

Ked, (Vhres, Metallic, ftc ,Wtiitinjt, Oertnan Vind'jw

ass'td sires, Manila Roi

Staple Groceries,No. 1 and a Flour, No. 1 and a Rice,Crushed Sugar, China and J a tan Teas,Oysters, Cuuis, Salmon, Lobsters,Finest Table Frills from the FactoryPure English Suicei, Condensed MilkCocoa, SPECIALTIES :The I'nl-ne- v

lirrtMCtie Oil, ItrmtttuiJnlnya, 14 Inch. Ilubbtr

Spriny unit Cnnrn llmkr Just athand.BUko Steam Funm Valves,

Blake Boiler Feed, Juice orMolasses, Irrigating & Vacuum Fumes

Weston's Patent Centrifugals Complete,

ALSO ON CONStCNMKN I

California Hay, Btvicy, Potatoes, BasilsSalmon, HanaVtftleto MuluiTTor Roilrrs

and Steam Pipes, very cheap, Fern Wireand Staples, Oalvaniird Koof'U

BEWXNG MACHINES,

Wilcua and Oibb's Automatic; Singer Mamdactunng(Company, Assorted: keiniiifilon Loitipany. Family;Wilson Machines, the be4 assottinelit to be found,and at Bottom Prices.

New Goo by every arrival from England, Nework and San Francisco.

1 JUw.Xraotiom !, powar.

Orden from the other Islands iVJcd al Be si Bales amiltt'Jupatdt S16S

CITY SHOEING SHOP, Q

(ovrostiK uoiitis hTAui.ta,)'

.0 aaHnsi SkMiaj ii ill its IriKhis

Iun. tn ihaHt utaiui.r.

Racing & Trotting those a specialty.

Oitf Kalff will k. rtaaonatlf.

'ttM unJc.rcnl, having UwaM out tk lartrcu or...... .9,1. jam., .wuu ,w .n. .v.t wihui cu.hiih

aiK cf Ik, tikrat palrvftaif, L,MO,d Mi Ik. tal. rtrM

Wr. J. W McDouU r.c.1,.4 tb. hlr.tAward uid Olrd.au. for hi. Hand-ma- Am.at th. HawaUaa BaUUttM for tri. y.u ..

f 47-- IIvtm, talru lu tk, kcl. aiat rvluirwd ar tkurltiotKe vhsi desired. I. . iciiunAi.i- -

HS-a-

rA.iTMi: Ac 00.Xo.34 Fwt St., ClKklsllekg.

Have received a cooizt.tiHi4 oftlie fot Fonotalraland Valuable rd for all kitaU of siCfk, u i

VOOKKl L1SHKKD MKAL.It lithe greatest FWi forwer, MiIK and lluUer pro

dacsr la ute

Oil Caki Meal shov aLout tf pef lenl, U uuitblvtmatte J this bear ty f$ vat 141,

ie)W. oihU bmIh eual to staelbs, of wua, oris! tU. of turn, or lo 3f lb, of wheat bran,'Mm, our UorUaUlllXICD IKED, aa well as ourusual ututf vi the best kinds rf

wrtM,Whit. I. ori.4 al Ik. l.nM Uw.M Kal.i. uddtl.trl tnm lo qr sart Utim tAtj.

rwlti Ihtwl Iks'lwn C rf CriiMU.Aswta'tW Ik, HOOVKR TKLCPttONK.

Owwkaia rf P U '-- Ha

TKLKMKMW 10 .an

cJl

V

1

m1wl

1'Ir

,i vl

Page 2: ATURDAY P - evols.library.manoa.hawaii.edu · --K. m K V, i, "V S, If 4.1 hook.iiK'ir.vr. Mr I191 alre.nty ilone to efface the...ti.rul line in Ameriian politic.. Mi toceiu to and

vll WHAN I'KlvSSA NHMpaawr PnMtttltd Wefklr

-- 1 ffrrRinum Js-o- uta n iDHvt

' foranrn ,alwrriptioiw

t hi J? a, Koim i itb dwtmation

u.d H fRMS PUBLISHIHO COM.

PAtJY,(LWtrf.)

i s o THICK hat ad Maiunr.M1TM faasHiir M TrttHartr

bATUNDAV AUGUST r.iMs

mnmr.iric uriortrrr.e Hawaiian Gazette and1 Mr

s ire. keta" Advertiser are engaged in an

.npii'.ijanl squabble over diplomaticc ,uette, in and out of the foreign of.

11 The OMette' stupidityu ,ay "ill timed" liccatisc its apparent

; i plenty seems to prove that stupidity

un, n a rule -- has brought down upon

it the abuse of Mr. SpreclccU' paper,

unh essayed to be severe and d

in being indcrcnt The Ga-e't- t,

In an indirect and insinuatingmanner, charged the foreign office with

a ii of which it was not guilty ; and

Mil lied charges againstUangett and Ex Consul McKinlcy, unwarranted by fact. The organ of themori'ipoly and the government replied

in its old lime strain of ribald denun-M.iiio-

betra)ing at once the obsceneai.-- l the venomous in its nature. Yet

ilie two combatants each of which

lub earned, in the discussion undertonsidcration, the community's uti

lised contempt may have dune theinrumuiiity a real service if their teapottornado result in wiling general atten

tion to that pitiable thildV play calleddiplonvitir etiquette."

In the present unpleasant breath be

merit United States Minister Merrill..n the one hand and Commissionersv odfhouse, Freer and Canavarro on

'lie other, the diplomatic etiquette

ici cntly prevailing has been disregarded- the American, Minister -- with good

Ka-in- i He comes here to fill the'ugliest diplomatic office accredited to'ie Hawaiian government. He s

his credentials and is received in

I roer form. Then his social duty totiplomac) properly rests. His fellow

tlit'lnnuts think differently with per-- i

1 honesty doubtless, but none the

n . wrongly. Thev think the United

statets Minister Resident ought to call

hrst on them There arc two goodreasons why he should not call first onhis fellow diplomats In the first place,

t crank he occupies is higherthan theirs-- though that fact would not weigh if he

were not a stranger. In the second,the important place, he is a strangerand should receive the courtesy paid to

I iopcrly-j.-credite- strangers, the civi-hie- d

world over. This may not be the

etiquette of diplomatic circles here.Hut it ought to be. And the sooner areform sets in, in this regard, the better.

uoitic .i.; ii. i :.I he labor question is not to be tl

by editors, nor by planters, norby the government. It can only bedecided by the cordial co operation ofall who sec beyond their noses. The"Saturdiy llonulist," Mr. Spreckels'" Great I'upier" and our evening con-

temporary the Bulletin have at leastone belief in common : That belief is

that family labor which means thelabor of men who have families is nec-

essary to the future of these islands.Twenty thousand Chinese males makeone fourth of the population of thekingdom. So few of these 20,000 aremarried, (or, if married, have thvir wives

here) that it will not be misleading tosay that" three quarters of the whole1

C hmesc population of these islands

aic without wives, without homes andwithout immediate prospect ofobtainingthem. The most of them are woikingin cane cultivation, some in rice culli-vaiio-

some in legitimate trade ; but farto many of them arc employed in illegiti-

mate trade.in hidden violationoflawaudmore or let open debauchery of the na-

tive race, Theyc.dl Mr. Squires a crank,but he tells some plain and necessarytruths. They call Mr. Marques a vis-

ionary ; but there is practical commonsense in his visioning. They call this

apcr a hnmihst; hut if our homilieswere heeded ve would be better off asa nation in population, in dollers andcents and in the quality of the govern-

ing and the governed.

Thcie seems to be an importantdifference of editorial opinion betweenthe Satutday I'ress and the WednesdayGazette. I'lio former journal congratu-lates the public because the teachersof the various public schools have beenpermitted to carry out their educationalviews without improper intcifetenccfrom the president of the board ofeducation. The latter journal sees thedesirously sinister hand of that icrsonin the "small element of humbug" and"certain educational quackery" m

in the methods of somcteichcrsitot named. A more precise explanation of wlnt the flaiette writer meanswould be a favor.

Ve"lue learned with pleasure that agentleman of proven liberality tu education ami science has under considerationa project to give to the public a worthymuseum of Hawaiian antiquities. Thenucktu of ich a museum cv.ist inthtte or four private collections in thi.city. It would be disastrous to ayuieh attempt if the best uf thesecol- -

lections were permitted to Icayejhcountiy. It is to be hoped thafnontof them will be u permitted.

. ru iiTti it ritsrI here u a young Hawaiian working

for a prominent Honolulan dentistHe wotted for the same dentist six

years ago and has been in his employmost of the time since Up to thepassage of the law crmitting s

to drink, the young Hawaiianin question was a faithful clerk and a

iclf respectful, respected young fellow.

He did not drink, because he knewdrinking was unlawful and believed it

to be wrong. Hut when the licenselaw was passed he suddenly awoke tothe fact that drinking had been madeas "respectable" for Hawaiian as forwhites. So thinking, the young mantook the first glass and foiled that upwith enough to get drunk. He lost$75, confessed, persuaded his employerand himself that he had repented, andturned over a new leaf. His employerforgave him, and for awhile he sinnedno more. Anon he married. She wasyoung, pretty, affectionate, chaste. Hersex and her race were honored by the life

she led. She loved him and was faith-

ful. He loved her, and, until liquortempted him, was a good husband.Hut liquor 'templed and he becameexacting, fault-findin- quarrelsome,abusive, brutal. She stood his treat'ment till she could stand it no longer,and then she applied for a divorce.In the meanwhile, the young Ha-

waiian's conduct had forced his em-

ployer to discharge him. That actionand the action of his wife brought himto his senses. He again turned ever aa new leaf and thus far has not turnedit back again, He is again at work forbis employer and if his repentence is

sincere may win back the forfeited regard of his wife. The other day hetold in Kaumakapili Church the storyso curtly outlined above ascribing hisfall to licensed strong drink and to noother cause. That is an isolated in-

stance. It may be matched by manvlike instances. We think such instances

go far to confirm the belief that theHawaiian race would be better off to-

day if it could not lawfully obtainliquor,

Vet we do not advocate a return tothe old system. We know it is impossi-

ble and we have never believed it wouldbe just or wise if it were possible.What is bad for an Hawaiian is bad fora haolc and no amount of subterfugecan make it anything else. Nor do we

believe that prohibition for all can bepassed. We believe it would fail if putto a popular vote; and we believe legis-

lative candidates pledgee! to it would bedefeated at the polls. We believe intotal abstinence and we believe it will

one day be the practice of civilizednations. Hut, until that practice resultsfrom the common agreement of right-thinkin- g

men, prohibitive legislationwill be resisted. Hut as the tendencyof legislation and opinion, here andelsewhere, seems to be in favor oflicense, why not make license reachfurther? Why not make it operativeall along the line? Why not take upthe plan already advocated in thesecolumns ?

We outline that plan again: Licensewholesale dealers at $500 a year.License retailers at the same figure.I'.tss hws providing against adulterationof liquors. Compel dealers to submitto competent analysis at any time:Compel them to know that the liquorthey sell is what it purports to be.Punish them with fine and imprison-

ment and revocation of license for sell-

ing adulterated liquors, for selling todrunken persons or to minors, and forselling to unlicensed dealers or to un-

licensed consumers." License consu-

mers those who drink at home andchose who drink at retail establishments

at $10 a year. Revoke licenses todrink for any of the following reasons:lor intoxication or cruelty to onesfamily, for purchasing liqt'or from unlicensed dealers, for selling liquor, forgiving liquor to drunkards to minors orto adults ha vini: no license. Such a

license-- system might protect societyThe present system does not. Thereis no present system by which adulter-ated liquor may be officially detected.There is small check upon sale to ille-

gitimate dealers or by them to irre-

sponsible consumers. 'e think thelicense system we. have outlined wouldbe such a check upon the liquor trafficthat less harm would be done by itthan is now dune; while the "liberty ofthe individual" would not be disturbed.Of course we do not pretend to saythat the figures set for licenses are exactly the right figures. The projieramount could be determined by experience however.

VUKTVOVKSK IHMMHATIOX.SalUfacluty arranccmtnttliavlnj; Ixcn made

for the continual introduction of I'uttugucteImmittitit larmiers with their families, hitroajetly't government hat decided to atsitl theintroduction of a limited number ujr at thelite of joo to 400 adu'ilt a rear the fust thip.mcnl of 100 adult male laborers with (henict and children -- not mote lhan lam child-

ren under 11 yean of ace In each family, Inanive in Marcher April oflSS6. The wagttwit) be not more lhan $16 per month andtrim of leitlce three years. The other condi-tions will be the same at In the contract! nowin force'. All parties desirous of scurinc. theier Ices of agricultural laborers as above, arcinutrd to address the burrau of immigration inwitting without delay, staling the number reiiuircd, anj lite plantation on wnicn lite laoui- -

ert will be employed.lite above appears in the govern.

ment paper, by authority. We hopetliat before the first installment of theseimmigrants arrives that tome plan ofcooperation may be conceited wherebyPortuguese may be induced pcnnantlito tcmain in the kingdom, mowners of land sold on favorable termsor as cultivators on shares of caae or

I other crop.

ru tr loxirin u r tin 11

I he late trial f jng lai I'uun(( hinewr policeman) and h Leu and1 .11 Pou (common informers) on a

charge of conspiracy and their lonvic-tio- n

by a jury, we deem a matter ofsufficient imjtottancc to merit morethan a passing comment Not so muchthat certain Chinese should be foundfor their own gain, or from pure malice,conspiring against certain others of theirown countrymen, but that their supe-

riors should have acted as they havethroughout in the affair. Upon theevidence as given in the policeJudge Hickerton expressed in strongterms his want of any hesitation in

committing the defendants for trial atthe jury term, saying at the same time,with reference to the officer, Wong TatPoon, that he had "committed de-

liberate perjury as well j" and particu-

larly calling the attention of his " supe-riors" to the fact. After judgment wasgiven, the marshal immediately in-

quired the amount of bail required,which was fixed by the judge at $500.for each of the prisoners (so called).It is a fact that no arrest was ever madeof any of them, they being simply toldto appear on the day set for trial ; thateven after commitment in the policecourt, they were allowed to go upon theirown recognizance, and further, that thetwo police officers Wong Tai l'oon andKauhane were not even suspended fromoffice, pending their trial before a jury.At the jury trial, the remarkable fact

was disclosed by the marshal that WongTai l'oon had been appointed at therequest of the king. Further than this,nothing very remarkable occurred,unless it be considered so that tenjurors out of twelve, after about "ten

minutes deliberation, came to the con-

clusion that according to the evidence(which they had a crfect right to in

terpret as thty fltastd) the prisoners(so called) were guilty of conspiracy in

the second degree with no recom-

mendation to mercy. Again, at the re-

quest of the marshal, they were allowedto go upon their own recognizance untillast Wednesday, when they were sen-

tenced to pay a fine of $6 each. If theverdict was contrary to the judge'scharge, as the Hulletin would intimate,it was not contrary to the evidence;and if a jury is not to decide upwn theevidence, we would like to be informedwhat their peculiar province is. Hut,as to the judge's charge, it could nothave been so distinctly favorable to thedefendants as to warrant the accusationthat the jury "must have misunderstood" it, when they were distinctly toldthat they might take the opening partof the prosecuting counsel's addressas "pan of the instruction of the court."Counsel must have forgotten himself, ifhe turned the prosecution into a defense.So far as vvc have been able to learn,it was scarcely more (as Mr. Hartwellput it) than a question as to whether a

conspiracy had been committed on theone side, or whether all the witnesseson the other had committed perjury.It was scarcely more than a question of

veracity between several Chinesemostly better class merchants, againstwhom the jury knew nothing, and apolice officer in whose favor the deputymarshal could say nothing good ; a

man who is serving out a term forhouse-breakin- and another who mightbe serving out one also for perjury,committed in the Akiona case, had henot been adv ised to goback and alter his

testimony to save himself. There hasbeen a great deal of outside talk, ofthis case having been part of an organized effort among a large class of criminal Chinese, to prostrate the honestefforts of the executive in exposingcrime. It has had a certain effect, butwhere has been the proof? Had we

any proof that this was the case, nonewould be before us in our endeavor to

aid by every possible means in exposingthe same. We court no favor and we

hit no frow n.

The edict restricting the incoming ofChinese to this kingdom was issued bythe government, March 25, 1885. Thisedict provided that Chinese who leavethe kingdom, desiring to return, musttake out iermits; and that not moiethan 25 Chinese without permits wouldbe allowed to land from anyone vessel.

During 1884 the departures of Chineseamounted to 142 leaving leforcMarch 25th, so that those entitled toreturn permits in 1884 could not havebeen more than 1,275. "ut admittingthat all the Chinese, who left in 1884took return crinitst 1,417, and thatthose who have left during the presentyear, up to July 1st, 411 in all, also

took permits, the total is only 1,828,

During 18S4 (after March 25th, dateof exclusion order) 1,116 Chinesearrived. From January 1st to July 31st,

Uh is year, 2,097 Chinese have arrived,a total of 3,2 1 j. Granting (for sake ofargument, though we do not believethe facts will justify the assurance) thatall the departures since March1884, up to July i, J8S5, amountingto 1,828, returned on permits, there are1,385 yet unaccounted for. If thesehad come in on vessels, at theauthorized rate to each, 25, the excesswould have required 5b vessels duringthe lust 15 months. Something seemsto be rotten in our immigrationDenmark.

Since the beginning of QueenVictoria' reign, according to the Ha-

waiian (Jazctte'3 summary, the LiberalTarty, of England, is responsible for

17 wars, the Aden Rebellion, theCabul Insurrection and the IndianMutiny ; and the Conservative Party isresjwnsible for 5, wars. This showingshuuld be sufficient to condemn bothpolitical parties in the eyes ol modernCIVI

. n i

r. .iiijixWnr IfcAMf lf I1),, ffji I'lnutiltlitnt ttttil

lt 'rtrfl Onttntl Ia Hrtttalaii,

At e chmed the pitturesque Wallukuoutwact bound, Sooner arsttlullr remlnitntnf Mr Arnold's cats and I quite at appiccalltely mindful of Mr. Arnold1! coffee andmiffint, we puwd long enough for a long'10k up to the hoary head of Manna Kea,another look seaward and a ijuiet inspection ofthe long stretch of half placid, half restltiwaler beneath the bridge. To one w hose

had been paneil in a region of troutttreams the first view of Hawaiian streamt Is

one of keen delight. ISetter brooks for trouting tarring the absence of trout were neserrain furrowed or meadow bordered or grass

fiingrd or forest shaded. The lack of truutin Hawaiian streams has been primarily per

hapi th- - fault of the Hawaiian Undine. Hut

I cannot undentanJ why the absence of truuthat been so long toleraled by Americans. I

said as much In tome one Ned Macfarlane I

think at we were were riding in WailukuValley on Maul I " The water It too warm,"he answered, t said at much to another t

"The torrents rise too tuddcnly and are tooswift," hereplicd. I could not make myself agreewilh either, bo, when I taid at much to .Mr.

Arnold, it wat exceedingly gratifying to hearhim say "It iv'itt too swift for 'em here. Therearc trout in the Wailuku now." It was al-

most loo good to believe t but Mr. Arnold'sesplicitriesi left no room for doubl. If hitexperiment prote tuccessfirt the fish are now

about tS monthi old; if I remember rightlyevery itream from Waiakea In Hilo 10 theHalawa In Kohala miy be ttocked with trout,from the Wailuku, or directly from California, I

need not tell Irout fnhcrmen what that would

mean, 1 fairly tingled as I looked down intollie stream and withed I might whip it with a

leader of gray hackles.

The Wailuku bridge reminded mc that the

Iwo Hilo bridges I had met thut far were well

built. There have been built in the dlttiict,tlnce Augutl, 1SS4, 12 bridges under contractwith the Pacific llridgc Company, at an

cutl of $15,000. They are built over

the following streams! UaiaU-a- , 130 Iccl

span ; AVailuku, 175 fectj I'utieo, 40 feet;Ilonolii, 155 feet J I'ahoehoe. 85 feett Papal- -

kou, 65 feet ; Ilonotnu, no feet; Umauma,

irofeet; Opea, 45 feel; Nunui, 85 feetj Wai

kiiinalu, 65 feels I'ohakupuka, 5, feet, All

or nearly all these bridges arc built according

to the 1 ink Cor rill trust pati-n- t nr pltn. So firas myobservalion goes they ore all well built,and at such height above the streams theyspan that liny icein perfectly safe. Uoad Super-

visor Arnold has been rctponsible for their

location, and his judgement has bten confirmed

by the action of every fieshel since they were1

buil- t- so far as I have learned. Whin I rode

from Hilotu Waipio the approaches to sonic

of ihe bridges had not been

completed, and the residents of the two

Ilannl.ua and I lily, were growling no

end about it Mr. Castle arid I echoing their

disgruntlirg. Hut since we crossed them our

precious minister of the interior has gatheredids wandering wits sufficiently to authoiiietheir building.

Ononiea was not my first stuppitig place on

my outward trip, but as it is the next plantation beyond 1'apaikou, I shall tell what I knowof it in its order. In some respects it is themost interesting of the plantations I visited.

Its mill and ceiilrifugiU arc run by waler

power, and steam is used only in boiling.Onvrnca's reputation for hospitality it like thatof Ulupalakua, Maui, I'or twenty yean ithas been a sugar plantation. liut before

it became that it was a beautiful Infae.

Their name it legion who have tarried under

its reposeful roof. Artistt, poctt, idlers, pric-rlc-

men and beautiful women; two rv, 5a

lions ol hosts and two of guests, have lldethe place vocal with delighted gaiety. Jlttpicturesqucnest is scarcely less than its hotpi-taht-

(And when I have said that, I haveunconsciously paid tribute to half a hundred

pots on the island of Hawaii.) Some ol Mr.Furneaux's happiest painting, some of Mr.Williams' mo graphic photography, have

len done at Onomea. There are few sjotsbetter worth remembering in black and white

than the crossing at the Ononiea landing and

Ihe view of and from the old mill. When I

wat there Mr. Herbert C. Austin was mana-

ging the plantation, assisted by his brother!

I'rank II, and C. J., Ihe former ill charge of

cultivation and the latter of the tugar boilirg.

Capt. J. L. Robertson was engineer and Mr,

II. II Grant since dead of consumption,poor icllow was Every onewho has visited the plantation recogaiies at a

glance though no one realizes the fact better

than' the present management that theof Onomea was ill chosen. It is 419 I 24th feetaliove the sea the manager charged me to

be sure and get in the half inch "and itought have been built just high enough tube

out of the reach of the waves. The up hillhauling of cane and Ihe down-grad- e trantpor-tio- n

of sugar it expensive at the b'est. Hut the

expenslvcness of the first has been lessened by

the ingenuity of Mr. Krank Austin a young

gentleman who unites ihe versatility o( a bom

inventor with the fluency of a born conversa.lionalisl. Headers of the 1'rcst knowtomething

of his cane culLivator.and will knovituinciliing

of his weed gatherer. His hydraulic railirayl quite as clever in execution as the tonne r,

and as clever In conception as either. The

pioblem, in brief, was as lollows : There wata field of So acres of good cane land whose

upper limit wat touched by the lowest point atwhich cane might be flumed to mill. It was

of course possible to convey cane by cant or

wagons to Ihe lluine. Hut it would have been

an 'tpensive and a vexatious task becautt the" liquified tunshinc ' of Hilo hat tuch a soften,

ing and mellowiuc eflect upon the Hilo canefields that waggoning over thetn it ofieu

practically impossible. To put tteani enginesand stationery railway trackt upon the fields

would have been an expense unjuilined by the

out look. Fortunately also, the mill had an

extra overshot wheel. The manager bought

some cable wlie and some portable tramwayaud, by meant of the wheel, run by the waterIn a single llume, hauled the cane from all partaof the field at a coil of $8.50 an acre or $1

I per Ion 01 tugar. Iiauung oy leann woumhave cost $12 a ton, or J$l an acre II themanager's estimate wav correct. The presentmill hat many disadvantages besides ill oe.tion. Itt grinding power Is good but its boil,

ing works are old fashioned and inadequate tothe capacity of the plantation. The grinding

capacity of the mill It 9 tont a day. The old

torgum pan it utedy the Onomea mill to doall Ihe lulling and cleaning until the juice goes

to the vacuum pan.

The plantation hat 2,coo acres cleared nut2,600 of pasture and woollawq. The last

crop was taken from 230 acres uf plant caneand loo acres of rattooru, averaging 3 andtons to an acio the plant cane doing, In

places, as well at 4Lt lent to an acre. Whenthe plant of the management are realised, theplantation will lake ofuoo acres of plant caneami juo Kirs of laltoont each year, X of thlarvd letting every year. The plantation will

be divided into, four sections, which may heallcvl fields I, 2, 3 and 4, and will be employed as follows 1

12 3 4Miturc riint..Raltooni..Kittirn..N'cw flint

The nut year u folium t

I a 1

Itaitoont. Resting New PlantThe third year at fellows

$Resting. New Plant. Mature Plant

Mature Plant'

A

ItaHoeniThe fourth yrar ti follows

I 1 J 4New Plant .Mature Plant. Kaltoons. Resting

If I do not misrepresent the plan, it it agood one -- at least on per.

The cultivation at Onomet seemed thorough.The plantation has a daily average of I40 em-

ployed.I'rpeekeo it the next plantation beyond

Oromea. Its owner it Mr. C. Afong of thicity, and Mr. Chun Lung Afong it residentmanager. Mr. Sum Chun it tugar boiler, Mr.Chartet Ilortman it engineer and Mr. AnthonyAfong it assistant field overseer. When I wa

there the cultivated acerage was t,ioo acres,Irom 750 acres of which this crop has beentaken. The estate includes the landt off'epeekeo, Ivaupakuea, MaVahaniloa and

6,coo acret in all, of which fully

one half it good tugir land. The land of thuplantation it admirably lulled to easy and syttematlc cultivation. Itt slope In the tea isgradual, Itt land is rich. Itt water power itabundant. Ita virgin loil it ttill in excess ofits worn out soil. Itt mill It modern and willnext year be made even more o. When I

was there it employed 200 Chinese, 50 Ha-waiian! and 50 of other nationalities.

Honomu it a small plantation, owned largelyby C. Hrewer A Co, of this cily and managedby Mr, William Kinney, whose principal

are or were recently t Mr, M M.Wilson, sugar boiler ; Mr. LUInard Wilchey,engineer Mr. II. II. Scholuy,I did not visit Honomu mill, but I had a gooddinner with Manager Kinney and hcaul someentertaining plantation talk from him,Honomu, Hilo, and I'ahala, Kau, areat antip-odes in tire and consequences ; and the laborideas of their manager! are equally at antif-ode- i.

Manager Foster of I'ahala believes inIhe contract system 10 firmly that he will

employ no unskilled lalior except under con- -

tract, Manager Kinney is a radical disbeliever In the contract tyttem. He wants only- -

free labor. Hit system, at I understand it, itto discharge all tuperrluout men in the intervalbetween the planting and the gilnding teaton,thereby saving wages for a considerableperiod. Of the two systems I think the latterit the more mischievous to society generally.Contracts even for one year make men alth" mercy of unjust employers ; tut for only a

limited period and under legal protection,Ihe other system it the bett I know of tocreate here a tramp class, withfeaturet of the tramp chss everywhere, un-

steady employment fosters unsteady habit!.1 lie man who is sure of work for only onehalf, two thirds or s ol the year ismore likely to employ hit idle time unprofitably and to spend his earnings foolishly than ifhe had steady employment, even at lest wages.

Of all the evils possibly in store for the Ha-

waiian Islands, the tramp evil would be amongthe most deplorable. I think a system of co-o- p

eration, whereby both Portuguese and Japaneseor even Chinese labor might be madetocuttivateall Ihe sugar lands in the-- islands, on shares,would prose a satisfactory solution of the laborproblem. I believe it would do away with thecontract system and prevent the tramp evil,I believe it could be brought about by unselfisheffort

A little beyond Honomu tlic-- world famousHilo gulchet take on a deeper, darker, moredesperate character. To enjoy them onencedt to go into them gingerly and come out of

them leisurely. Ihey are neither 10 be enjoyed in an hour nor described in a paragraph.

Hakalau mill at least the one that wat being 0rated when I was there it in the " bot-

tom of one of thoe incomparable gulches, tolow that the tide wathet its foundation walls,and the spring frcihett threaten it not at thetword threatened Damocles, but quite as terribly. Few plantations arc blessed precisely atHakalau plantation is. It has two managers,Messrs. Christian Lehmann and II. M, Morrison. Mr. Heniy Willgeroth wat itt tugarboiler and Mr. Fremont Perry itt engineer,when I visited it. Irwin &. Co., ofthitcityare ill agents, Mr, Spreckelt it itt principalowner. Its crop this teaton hat been about2,800 tout.

lleyond Hakalau the nearett plantation itHonohino, at present a plantation withoutmill, and itt owners were trusting when I watthere to have its first crop ground by Hakalaumill. Metsrt. W. V. Horner, Jr., and IIGeorge Horner, tont of Mr. W. V, Horner ol

Lahaina are part owners and manager! of theplantation. Next year they will probablyerect a mill. They put in last year 550 acres.Kaiwilahilahi and'Laupahoehoe, managed

by Mr. R. McKcnile and Mr. J. M.

Lydgale, mutt be described in another letter.Ookaia under whose home-lik- e roof, I spenttwo ol the pleasantett nightt of my trip mustalto be left unsung for another week. S.

WHIfS OB WltK Mr.ATBKH.

The Philadelphia papers have gonein fur a revival ol the whipping post.The Piess has declared unhesitatingin favor of its restoration, saying:"Flogging unquestionably is growingin favor again as punishment for thecoarser and more btutal crimes, s;ich atwife beating and criminal assaults uponwomen and little girls. The revoltingcharacter of such offense?, demands anexceptional and vigorous punishment.They are committed usually by men forwhom imprisonment has no terrors, andon whom, therefore, there can be noreal punishment imposed ucju-s-s it be aphysical one.1 The Record sayt.;"There is a-- steadily growing opulardemand for the revival of the nhippingpost, as affording better ineana ofpunishing unusually brutal crimes inwhich women are the victims, than areprovided by law." Says the Star"These are the sentiments which for

years have been advocated in thesecolumns, and which we are pleased tonote have beeiVateadily gaining in pub-

lic fmor. We havr ever believed thewhipping post a much more effectualmethod of punishment for crimes of thecharacter referred to than imprisonmentand fine. The maudlin argument so

frequently urged against it, that it takesaway a man's is at once andcompletely met by the simple, undeni-

able fact, that a man capable of deliberately beating or wronging a defense-

less woman has no self respect to lose."One of our local papers is in favor of

whipping desperate criminals, likeCahtll who assaulted MonsarratL We

do not go so far a that, but we dothink that tht perpetrator of certaincrime against the decency and thesanctity of home life, noubly Um enticement of young Ktrls into dan ofvice aMgkt very properly be tubjtcttd

HAWlliFN l.ivHttUnt lie ,! t,itattChtvr

F II

MARRIED.

r r

DAVIS Hf'RIN'f, In thi dty, July t$ih i5, lath purl nf lh I oMhtp tht Tltthofi of Oil, byKrr FarilWr Lnenr, IIrnpy Uatm to Ml Nuia

! , Urth of jnoiuln.

nUMMif t.L HbMlfS In lUnolotu, July tyth,lit at ih rehJnc uf lh bH!'i putentt.. by IhHe Atnlr MruVirtath, Mr Iohn 1. linnnttLL, of kefoU, Hstmi, to Mi MATtLtiA, oiHdautiter of Ihemjis Hughe, Vm ( of thi city.

DIED.

In Sun Francisco, July 15, Aletarkler M. Rotinonnative of O(fo, N Y aeJ 4a yrar.

MAY -- In Honolulu, at the reittlencc of her brother,July 4th, Ms. K.ATR, fourth daughter of the lateIhomat May. of Newark on Irent, TnclaiHl and beloretl tlter of 1 May, Honolulu, aged j years

FCKHARJTln Honolulu, July 17th. 1885. of fever,ALMRr rctftlAHDr, aged t yn and to rantht.,

M..,

iiclu elvbucrtiociiiciiia.

ion to foreclosure.INTEN.

NvticeU hereby given that tumitnt tax power cftale containeil la a certain morttai,e. detd, elated theliOidaT of Urrli, iHj. made by IrK MUN ofHonolulu. Uland of Oahu, to N. A. KINNhY, et l,nf said Honolulu, bf record in the ciTice of l!Registrar of Conveyances in lijr jf on (age 14? and148; and for a breach of the conditions inlaid niort-fm-

deed contained to il ! the non pa) ment thereof,thai all the iutere&t of ak! I ee Munin the premisesdescribed in wtid mortgage deed, will after the timelimited by law. be sold at public auction, on account otthe breach of the condition as hereinbefore mentioned.

lhetrotny in aid mortgage desctiled being lotease of land 011 Smith's Ine In said Honolulu consi'ting of one third t,f land described In Koyil 1'alent

itai I.. (. A 149 to kawatuLui 'the first leaie beingdescribed In a'Ujjnment from Keltumu to leeMunolrecord in liber 70, on page an and eipues DecemberIt t, A. D. tS38, and the second bem an extern on irfteste for ten years from the eapiistion of the former,and of record in liber 8j on 470 and 471

KINNhY A rhli.KSON,Morttmees.

N OTICK.

HORN

Dr. Wiiitnev's Dental Rooms will be closed fromluesda), August 4th until Septmtr 7th.

Scitcr.il sbUccltscmcnto.

JLTEUNER & Co.,

MANUFACTURING JEWELERS,

lU,ere-o)N.ne- at the old staml No. 92 fort street,Mith a nevr and crcfully selected stock of

l'lnr Jpii'ctrii,

Watches, Clocks,

Gold Chains and Guards,Sleeve Buttons, Studs, &c,

Indies would d. well to rail and examine our stoclc ol

IttaceUts, Ilruocl e Fairi'if;, etc.,tiich were especially selected to suit tlie-

miiket

KUKUI AND SHELL JEWELRYMade to Order.

Hie re pairing branch of our bunness we regard as art

important one, and all jott entiuMcd to us w illIk; executed tn a manner vnd to none.

liitrttriiiifOf every description done to order. Particular attrn

tion U piid to or lent and job Hrk froutheother Island.

356-3-

TUHIIOL Ss CO.'H

TIIK UNPrUSlGNED WILL KIXLIYKMONLY AT 'IIILIR SAYlNCS

II INK UPON Till; rOL--

LOHINO TERMS:

On sums o) Five Hundred Dollars or under, from

one person, they Mill jia interest at the rite of fnc per

cent. cr annum, from dare of receipt, oif all turns thitt

shall have remained n dejwit three months, orlu,ebeen on deiosit three months at the time of niakm; upthe early accounts. No interest wdl he computed on

fractions of dollars or for fractions of a month.

No intercvt will be allowed on money withdrawnwithin three months from date of deposit.

Thirty da s notice must be given -- t the ltanlc of an

intention to withdnw any money; and the Depositor'smutt be produced at the sam? time.

No money will be jkiiT except Uon the Draft of theDepositor, accompanied L the proper

On the first day of September vf each ear, lhaccounts will be mvle up, and interest on all sums thatshall have remained o dcpo U three months or more,

and unpaid, will be credited to the depoM.ors, andfrom tliat date form pait of the principal.

Sumsofmore than Thrre Hundred Dollars will be

received, subject to special agreement.

The Hank ill be open every day in the week except

Sund)sand IIolida)S,f46-- BISHOP & CO.

OEAVER SALOON,

II. I. NOI.TK. PROPRIETOR.

Iteg4 la 10 hit friend and the public in Kniral that Ihe above Saloon pruvidet

Flnt-Clo- M Reb-Mtiuiu- a

Kruiu 3 A H , till 10 M

Clgatett

TtlB

The finest

Tobaccos,Clears, Pipes

CllHSTAKTI Y UN HAND

BlUUrd TUoaItconurUed hh the evublidimnif,

the praliuiute.

OHNUINU ARriCLB

q

OF

and

Smoker! Sundries

One of iirunsttkk & IUIU'i celebrated

cue canwhrr lovers t

COLUMIIIA R1VKR SALMON

ttri- -

Ralwoa BalltM, 1HHI CtJutt ter.ired from I'oitUnd, Oregon, by

CASll.K COOKK

Tnett FUh can bt relied upoa at Fiitt-CU- u

tj--Cj

GEO. M. RAUPP,O10IIMANIA MA.lf.1Cl-7r- . v

Ktnwved to

rort Slmt. OppoatU IKnU'a SUSlwt,

Beef. Veal, Mutton, Lamb and l'ork.Carman and Folk Sausafet,

FUh, Voultrjr aad Vej.tibU.?Onkrs dt receive ptMtii ailalUt Sbi(.a( tup.

)JiJ wilh JtVlMtlll.

lkt.arHQi,a N't 104.

tu--

PCONOMIC STATIONERY.

LUiALCAP rERr.CTIOS PAHS.

houdkr-- s LtrilliK PA1S,

L.U.r, Cau and Nut Bluest of am cjualdy papw.ircaj Lap, latter ana nor. uaxaa oc rvi.4

Maailla t4aut Mnka and NotIU.C, M- - t II, lorn lUks

for BiUa, tal.faclUa,WaAluU.UC.

Or PafMC PUT UP la ANY FOKI1 Dalfa4Al THO. a. TMMVM'M

Maactuar SraaaT on ITaai Sraaar Sisaar

General bucrlracmcnto.

JPioneei' fiiic.' Regular Saleffirrsl Hipi Uaullj frw

Fly " Orierrte ' rrnm I impnol, Htewwtw Ihim Sif rancieB and tihn lar aimar,

THEO. H. DAVIES & CO,,

tldvt rtteivwf

English and American f'riMs.While Cot torn, UnMewttred (.!,Unen I mil atwi Ihwk, CremR Car.,

Irene!. Mrrtnoof iKiTeteni tmftRtJenkGrey, 10staml Mliri fVt,Watertroof WetiH, Dre Materials,

Milt, Stttm, Sffk kfktMi.Velvet, lltvsfery, UffdrrtlSthin(,

IN CURAT VARlkTY.

Xjim, While awl Pnmetl MdleatrW,Linen and Lofton I taodoa, 1 oRHandkerchief, Miuno Nett w,

PtthtoCfothlnft. Warerpr)' HVwtrnt.Men's, Women A thi'.ren lkt Shoes,(.ie and mvIc adapt .Itathff Market,)

Horse llWkflVelt, led Ulan Vet,(all sites, weight, ijHaKtfet and color,)

Vch'tt tnt TtijH'itriftItuy tnnt

Centre Rut, Navy and Merchant Canvas.r liter

Mitt

Ve flags, (10s V.), auffar IWg,life IIar, Coal Tis 3 A 5 ly Twine,

English, Hawaiian & American Flags

Moor Oil Cloths, (tasteful designs Assorted width)Men s Saddles, Side .Saddles, Sutdler) ,

1rvn Itedtteftds, Galvanized thicket,tinned Iron lea Kettles, Sauce Pans, Fry Pan,

(assorted le),Mute her Knives, Knives and Fork.Iin Plate, Sheet l.eaL (lahamred Water Pipe?

to iihlies),W hue I ead, (various quititie),

Polled Oil turpentine,Lorrugitea Hunting,

(14 Kaugr, 6, j, 8 ami 9 ft tenet ru).liflisanucti iciews arm anetOatvanlred Kldftlnif,

VtUow ShrnfttlHV Mltt ll XuttsAnnealed Pence Wire, I erne Staples

Wir,e Plant Oturd and Arches,Steel Kail, w,di rWh Plates, Holts and Spike,

A I.AROI: jKtil! ASiOkTMr.NTOP

HIIltHir IIAICIVWAHIS,I'rocltry ml Glar, Ojs, Ptcfcs, 5luml,1 lantatton and Mechanic's Tool,

Kol Jt Co PortaUo - nguies,(l HP&nd6H-P- j

One Splendid Piano, b Urinsmead A Sons,)tested Chain, dosage's Soap,

(1 qualities, tn bx 34 and 60 bars),llest WeUh Steam Coil, Coke,

r loonng I ties, r ire Clay,Port Ami Cement, (White K Johnson's)

fire Uriels, bolli square And arth,I ump Nock bait,

LEATHER HALTING,(j lota Inch width,)

A Irjc ami rresh Afstirtmeri nf

Californian and English Groceries.

Pantheon Stahles,Corner Fort and Hotel Streets.

sBggJBiwtaaWlJjqLivery, and Salo Stables.

(Armcft for lure nt alf hour, of Ihe or niijit tnto, cumrynncet of alt Umli fur twines koiii aroumlllie iLnu!

Excellent Saddle Horses for Ladies and Gentlrr.ien Guaranteed Gentle

Itree and Miiall omnibus for i tctucs and excursionnartie, canning from lotd 40 asenctrs, canala)s!tc vcclired tij .ecial Arrangement.

The t.ou Branch Bathing House can alwaysbe hecurrd for pivnic or escurcion J attics t.y a l Ingal llie ufT.L.

THLrHlOM. No. 34.241--- JAS. DODD, Proprietor.

TkJTETROPOLITAN MARKET.

KJXV STItllKT,C. J. WALU.K, . . . Proprietor.

Choicest Brfeata from Fluent Hon!.

Families and shipping supplied on short notice and at

Lowest Market Prices.

All meats delivered from this market are thoroticl.Kchilled Inline! lately after Idling by means of a rclfColeman Patent Dry Air Kcfngerait Mtat sotrcurd retain all its juicyproptrtie. and is u.uantrcdto keep longer alter ueiuery man ircsrii) kiueu mcau

HONOLULU

CARRIAGE FACTORY,An. rJS.nml .!

imim's sTABiks.)

W. H. PAGE. Pratiriatar

dT Carriages o all deccrl4iout made ro oidtr onmutt favoraLIc terms.

The cleM attrntln given 19 repairs of all kind,.

All work guaranteed to sire sati.faclhjfit$o-a- 6

Saratoga House!

99 Motal St. near Library BulldluR.

B IIIUWFUK,

JlONril.OR IRANSIKNT.

hpecial aciuavtMlall". fwr Indies aiw rimliv

(Iradln,tZiUt

Tatljr )ljrfcritr on ror lb.of tl IIOUC.

11i Coidnl limn Room in lli. cil), NO 1 I.I l.S.

II HARDER.

Co., K.i rK. 1.M

lowrn'tin

AT Good. d.In.d to anjr part of tu '( UanltfcL

No. n Htl - ,

rostoKUCE Ku.

ST

lai (aat

U

I.'

IL

Hr-

Ruction Sales.

Cash

Bearding,

ON TMUnSttAV, AUOUBT tk,, a m . t am tetraitiAf wUI be wJ it .Mil.IIRVOOOt)C'IonllNO, tlUSSWARI,

tRocKrav riNWAKt,

CAt. rOTAIORS, MANILA CIGARS.

OROCtRILS, c, t,Attrt,

IIOUMISIIOIiI) I'tTHNITUIlIC,i.o. .c-- r.: i:r.

tjA

Special Sale of Horses.

We ill sell at our puWHe atttttem mmt on

SATUltlA AlMtiHT I, 1895,

At is o'tloct noon, the fouryesr oM

StalFfort,

ApoH Gliiof,Si ed by the great nietiioneerf d a by Speeulsllun

( an ttot in Owe mlnutet cr tetter, Wansatcd isuad

kind and sure foal ,

VAlio, a (.tutlenun'l Fin iWvinf

T 0 15 K

tt is utelcit to com men on this her

knows his Mtiahlies,

Also, utie fine, Isri,

Twc-Soato- d Family CarrUgi,

In Ootid Order

f.VO.M A LliVKT,

4urttoiter$.

ftKiicnil bucvliociiicnls:

NOTICE TO THE PUBLIC.

ItVr nt huh (intln); ha' In Iditlon laOlr CONrCvrlONKHt ANI LAkB III MRM, U( willt.'MnbA!UUDA", AI'KII. astt.at

KMUJUKAM PAR LOUhUh has neatt) fitted np tu mret the rcspilrr

mrr.ts ofu trjdcOur Ice nram wilt teoid) itahty, maJe

of genuine cream from Ihe W'oonuAtth DsiPs withwhom mc arranged to SU idy us fettulatlywith pure, cream, whlih, hating fmjuenll te 11,enahlcH is to guarantee s ainde, of Icecrran npial tu that made in any of the elites.

Ihe fJluwni,, vartrties of Rk CsptA-- l uml It us uiJIfurtils'ied at m.r cpemnfi, and mm era! oilier anetieA,

unr iraue miu piuny tt

lot aaara.i

(titer.

e H;

t

e i a

i

aUrfr

I

ii

ICK OK HAM.ANII.I t (.Or! I.I. (ILAfK,

!.KMOV, cuocouvu:,in RAWiiKuuv, imnuappli:

IOICS.ORANr. AND .STKAWIIKRKV

Parties Miptl.i any day cacept Sunday, llioseirvttunc Ite Cream for Sunday must leave their orderson Sstuida) before 9 r. si, which will b deliveredbe'bre 10 A. St. Sunda. The trraois will be, packedso that tltey will keep ciglit hours tn n firt-tta- s condi

tionHoping to rcceltn A share of pullic iatroni;c-rTr-

line of our and thanLIr g them fur their hlralfaors in the pait tie remain, re wet fully,

MELLER. & HALBE,4j-a- Hint trrrt ntiir .ttuKrti.

CHAS. HUSTACEHas jut recritxfd cr Mariroca,

DUPEE HAMS AND BACON,&U Oiree, Kit Salmon Ilcl!i, Cava Codt dKeg Family Ittef, SalsKtn Pilot tlread,CracL era, 1 able UaiMtit, Dried I'ealie.,Dried Apricot, Prune, (Jermea

Otillli'iiiu Comb llouo.v,'I able fruits, lantt and Jeihes Family flour,

heal, Corta, Potatoeii, Onion, CandUiv

Old Vii-ulul- a Swvet land Sour PioHre,And man) other ai tides tCOiiiiiTtout to rtiun,

uhich wilt bekuld at pneesto Huh ttielimea. X4 Satfaction CI IAS. MUSa'ACr',,

119. ()t-33- o. itt Klnirtree

LADIES HAIR SRE..IE

Switches, Curku, Front Fiocos,AM warranted Natural air.

Ikmhhk lUck IIaik NttsIjid c and Children Hair CutlfiijC and tMiampoo

ing at Hore residence.

Langtry Hatr Cutting a SpecUltyAH at Su Francisco IH(e

49174 Fort Street OfpoaiU Dodd'i ijtabt

M ACCOUNTS

In accordance wllli ttiJ--.ir- . of inanr nalron. and10 mcrt ttic cklif.nl ct U th. timet lh und.ri2nn v,illiicrcaAcr render and all a, count, month! y

M. OAI. JK.,ftCO,1 C. rilRUM.

i isiiinocoLKWIS CO .U'tvbl. now co,I'KAMvb. J. I l. h . LO.,a. i. ituirii,II. L. alclNrVHK CO.

ItoMvtulu, July 3, itt5. at) ?Cu

ENTERPRISFLAMING MILL.

Alakcav. ucatr Uuaatt St.

E

C. J (lontnatoi and IIuiU'T, It I'ritlclMMonllinifS and HnWi !) on han.1. 111. millkeeps for al Itard and kofl uoyt v.o'rul arl ,)Lt

- Tttophoria Na. ss. v)i-tt)-

California Produce and Provision Co.,IMIWttlJItS AND JOI1UKRS OK AI.I. KINDS OK

GroiericH, PiovMohh and l'rothtce.Kilt Macl.r.l. Kiltr-aWi- 1'iUi.t, Kit. Smoltd HaliUl, Kilt llaliUt tint and Naptl,

Kitt"lonurt anJhouiali, lkm.UuCi.il'.!.. I luar Lira

Wmrutr Same, u am), CalifxnU Od.r Vuxcar, (ca.l ai.J Up), IhmJ Aj 1., I'lacU., It.,Clifor.m lalJe RaiJn., Nan, Atlrd TaU. and I'm (mil., Jaiutaiu) Jtllwt,

COLUMBIA RIVER SALMON, 1884 CATCH, (Bbls. and half Bbls.)CAI.II-OUNI- FKESII KKUIT AND IIUTTKK 11V KYKRV STKAMEH.

AVliltili riiti illlnl t Ijiwiwt Murkut KuIom ftii Cttaili.m fcOLR AOKNTS FOU

bcamm.1 racainf &.dlaccrn

siwtt a HoUjib,hieotcrif (jlajf

TIIK IIAUUHS IIASI (lltUSAUK FIUK KXTISUVIHIIKM.'ior(t,

SUwt,wx oj. (ui-i- i)

vat,

y-- ,

business,

I'lIiRI,

llardiv,

I U I), laial Citarao.

Itlafui Oidrr. toUilMl and fltarHENKV DAVIS,

. Houolalu, Oaau. H. 1.TKLtHIONK No. t,a.

MATTHEWS HALL, SAN MATEO. CAL.

2S

A HVIIOOL rOK HOVH.Under Military DwcipJiae.

txicaiaj la tht Uauiiful nOafi U Saa Mai.", w Um SwOura PwuW K. K., it aJ fraai aatUtaUuJxd at ios lutmn unuwtart of raaatloa and mUUi. 11m UuMuii ai .al.au, fimrMatadk.yHaaaaaaJarta.txit'oay artaA,adff laa haaUb aa4 ' aloft U Iba udMa, Iflmitf tttmm. L

Tunaa laoraMiIoa caulafaa,

Habl'tonfait

ofsuprrwr

Kiiaranteed.'IVIephone

MADAME WAN't'K,

ONTIII.Y

tvmalaCaiHi

fcepaalar,

aatitfacttonMaaaitr.

KiaactH,

JUr. ALraUCtl LlUt aWWaat, M. A.,

I

(

c

r

6c'

Page 3: ATURDAY P - evols.library.manoa.hawaii.edu · --K. m K V, i, "V S, If 4.1 hook.iiK'ir.vr. Mr I191 alre.nty ilone to efface the...ti.rul line in Ameriian politic.. Mi toceiu to and

K

PS

I

K

'S

I 'y

SATURDAY Pk'KNSADVHRTISINO MATIsS IM PRR9H

M.itufttl hi Hwlm, Pali rtvt .f S.tttrrf.r

Vt t a fivehe lone

Ow TeSV. O Vl.mtt.t .

S m 1 !I " It ... fJ"I " . fI " Ml I" ..

" 4lt" . , llttm

cnrstM$IMr iW

I r rh jtmiml lath ft. rtift- mi hW'tttm (t m dtttfttj.1 fir dm imenton.

h i4kloiMl mam jf rale tha?(eil far tint

JSttlc? f 3 ' nnrr mnth wltlfmBwfm Hw rr f Ant month

"? Bmsa.tl C5r ieis fnMU frr in jtr, area lfi.nil t MM tMnl ffomtti' rat, wtiitnetc I ir Irtomcftt ttlisi!setMv

Alt funAffl Mfitltfiii'Mt mint t aerorainifl withthe pttjr wmi enlid In, r rw wake win b taken olIhern Tit rale f eSantr ar len in lh aimscat, ft remttum- - fr Htem American advert!.mni. or MlMcrlptioM mas-- b made bjr bank MIL,e ii i r morwT ortters

SATUKUAY AUOUST t, tMj

l.im.tt. .VRH.tr.

Hallway lmiltli'.f; in China It to begin loonon a large scale,.

Tht Plretiur nf the I'aeifi! Mail lute de-

flated a tlljMenetl of f )r ctnt.

Hon. I'juI Neumann and hit iliughlcr,Miw V.i 3, esir lot the co.nt lu tlajr fur a ihorlvacalion '

Dr. 7)i(ncy'i ilrnlal roomt wilt be cluicdfiuni Tucitlajr, Augutt 4th, till Muniiay,

7II1.

Kev. S. i:. Ilitln will prrach at the Itelliel

row forenoon. There III probably beno evening ervicei.

An article on Nihoa, by Ketr, S. U. Itithop,Mill be published next week. It will be of

Kientific value ai well ai literary interest..Mr. Wallace Alexander, nephew of Ihe

Surveyor General left for Yokohama on thetleanier Oceanic which sailed last Wcdneulay.

Dr. Alfred Castle, brother of lion. S. N.Castle of Honolulu, celebrated, ssitli his wife,

their golden wedding at Wyoming, Illinois, on

the 17th of May last.

Mr. I. U. Hendry, formerly of Honolulu,lias established himself in the commissionbusiness In .San l'rancisco. He is alto assist-in-

Hawaiian Consul. General McKintcy In

discharging his official dutiis there.

People can get an Idea of the wealth of news"

paper tntn from the fact tint as soon as theircoins become a little worn they throw themaay. The foreman of the Press office was

seen throwing two hamlfulls of coigncs intothe back-yar- this morning.

Owing to disarrangement of steamers last

week Ue. O. P. Kmcrson did not arrisc in

time to preach in t Church last

Sunday morning, but. will tio so

morning. In the evening, Pastor Crutin will

preach, taking for his theme. Only One Life.

The bau1 will play the following programmeat Kimna Square this P. M.at 4:30 o'clock :

March Honolulu Rifles LucVtumcOicrlure Tlrttin Life .... . ... ...ConraJiCavatiu-T- he .Mountaineer. I'atciniWaJti -- Scented rlowert WaMieufelSelection Natmcco VerdiMarchKile Keo Pit...... . . . . .Merger

A reception will be held this afternoon atIolani College from three to six o'clock, by thenative ond foreign memlwrs of St. Andrew's

to bid farewell to Krv. Alex-,- .

ander Mackintosh nnd wife, who will start for

England by the steamer Zeahmlia which will

arrive here or the nest day.

Mr. II. V. Dillingham's property at Puna-ho-

known as the Sea View tract, has beendivided ittto building lots. These lots occupy

rising ground, which lias the advantage of

natural drainage, the soil being excellent for

fruits and berries. Space has been reserved

for a rcsersoir which can be supplied by sink-

ing an artesian well

Manager Graham of the Hawaiian Hotelhopes to add greatly to the attractiveness of the

hotel grounds soon. The proprietors haseluthotiied him to make a s andcrnqucl fjrousj on the .site of the collage re-

cently dcstrcTtd by fire. Tents will be put up

to shelter spectators from the sun. The new

manager has in contemplation other plans for

the cnt?rtaiiimtrit of his guests.

Mr, '. K. Myers has perfected arrangementswhereby he will undertake the San Franciscoagency of several ol our largest andbanana plantations. Mr. Myers will alsohave the Pacific-Coas- t agency of llie Wailukataro Hour and dried btninas I and for such

other tropical fruits as certain fruit raisers are

able safely to ship to San Francisco. He will

also purchase in San Francisco and vicinity

for the California Produce ami Provision Com-

pany. His many friends in Sin Francisco andHonolulu will trust that Mr, Mcsers will besuccessful in his new venture.

While some private individuals were holding a select concert in a Fort-stre- gardenlast Wednesday night (hey ssere suddenly in

lerruptcd by the stiange action of a woman

wearing a.irhllc holoku and brandishingt)iiiCii. She rushed into their midst uncipectedly and struck madly light and left withthe broom, seemingly possessed with an insaneidea tttft she must destroy eterything withinreach. She finally became nulel, however.and letuincd to the house, declaring that she

wuu'tl have one ui.hi's acd wen if she hadto stay up to get It.' It is needless to say thatIhe cats dispersed.

Foreign local item made Hawaiian byemendation t A little boy and git.1 playing inIhe atd. The gill finds a mango under Ihe

tree, and will) an exclamation of delight tc1.1ns to bite It, "Hold on," said the hoy,"Throw it away. The (olwy is comiii', andif yuti rat that mango )ou will be took sick,an' yuiican'i talk, an' the doctor will ccincan' give )ou voinc lad medicine, ami thenyou'll die." The girl throws the maligo down,ami the boy, snatching it up, begins to eat it."Don't," ihe girl cries. "Won't it kllloo,tour" "No," said the boy, munching thefiuil, "it won't kill !)$. It's only literlittle gills. lloy don't have colwy."

This week, when the black clouds gatheredIn ihe nmili and ihe coming of athundci-storui- , a citiicn whu wascumingduwnim Ihe Puiiahou bus remarket! to an elderlynun beside blmt

"A storm Is poitcnding.""Heir Impaired the other."I say their are tokens of a storm,"

continued the first."llesC was the brisk Inquiry again,"Appearance Indicate a slot ml" exclaimed

Ihe citUrn, a liitle embarrasses

"Hey'. What did soti say about indelicate?"queried the other.

"There's goiiij; 10 be a lliuidci-oim-

shouted ihtciliicu, drooping his big words allof a sudden.

"Ah I now t understand," said the old man;"going In U a Ihundcr-ttotm- . Well what do)usi want tut to du about W " .iJjftni

I.I UK II A I.I.

llHotutttn r. Mnrrltl .Wan.

Utr." til.1 1 wc i,le mi lr the Mi

l(k ,ltamt,,, .. ,,., ,h,flk SltmlnflIpenswr U doing little tjtnet lilnwttrg whenhe detjatt that he feels it in his bnnei thatymt fellows wtll beat lite big II. Iyf y f"" Dunno I" said as he looked critically over his fume's ears, shut one eye andpulled hard al his cigar, " Dunno, If our bn,hold together and don't eel rattled I believe

e can get away with thrm." When we ar-

rived at the pavilion Spencer dressed himselfind brought me his watch and putse to hold,remarking casually that newspaer men atethe only people whom wealth places almve

the temptations oftheft.The game was not called until a quarter past

four o'clock, Mr. II. S. Davidson, after a

niiidenly protest, acting as umpire! while Cur-ve- r

Wall of theOccanics dotted the score-shee-

The Ilenedicls svent lo bat andretched first base after three strikes. Spencerwas thrown out at first bate by Harry Whit-

ney. Lishman went out on a called strikeand Charlie Wilder struck out before Levey

reached the home plate. Oat of the Hono-

lulu went out on 1 fly to short stop. FredWhitney was thrown out at first by Jack Dow.sett, Harry Whitney reached first on a safe

liner over second when George Markham went

out on a fly to llurgess.In the second Inning Don Antonio Kosa of

the Ilenedicls struck a rly to Fred Whitneyand retired. llurgess balled the ball to first

and went out, Jack Dowseit reached first on

a bad throw to first by Chan Wilder andlook second on a passed ball at first, Parkertook his first un called balls when Sheldon put

the side out on called strikes. Of Ihe big It.boys Jlrnmle Dowsett and" Chan Wilderreadied first base. Guy Wodehonse, CharlieEckels, and Hilly Moore striking out in sue

cession.In the third inning for the Ilenedicls I.evcy

was thrown out at first by Fled Whitney,Spencer struck out after having two strikescalled on him and Lishman went out on a

fly to Harry Whitney. Oat of Ihe Honoluluswent'out on a tiy to Don Antonio Kosa who

made a good catch, Fred Whitney was thrownout at first by Lishman, Harry Whitney tookfirst on a lly which Don Antonio muffed, Mark-ha-

made his first and took third, HarryWhitney coining home, while Guy Wodehousemade bis first and brought Markham in, but,trying lo steal to second, he went out andsent the Honolulus to the field.

The Ilenedicls were again whitewashed in

the fourth inning, Charlie Wilder going out at

first, Don Antonio making first and takingsecond on a passed ball, llurgess going out on

a fly to left field and Dowsett being thrownout al first by the pitcher. The Honoluluswere also duly whitewashed in this inningI'ckels going out at first base, Jiinmie Dow-

sett going out on a fly lo Spencer and ChanWilder being thrown out at first base by FtsdOat.

In the fifth inning Ihe Benedicts were goosed.

Patker went out at first, Sheldon struck out,Levey succeeded in reaching second, when

Spencer went out on a fly lo Harry Whitneyand ended the struggle. - In this inning Mooreof the Honolulu made a sale base hit to left

Id, Oat made a three base hit and broughtMoore home. Fred Whitney struck out.Harry Whitney made a safe base hit to rightfield and Oat came in. Markham took first

and Guy Wodehouse was thrown out at first

by Lishman, Eckels took his first and JimmieDowsett was thrown out at first by Lishmanputting the side out.

In the sixth inning the Benedicts made a

spurt and so-- d four runs, Lishman, CharlieWilder, Don Antonio Kosa and Parker reaching the home plate, llurgess went out at first,

Dowsett out on a foul and Levey was thrownout at first by Oat. The Honolulus werewhitewashed Wiidergoing out on a fly to Spencer while Moore and Oat were thrown out atfirst base by Lishman.

In the seventh inning both nines were

whitewashed. Of the Benedicts Spencerwent out on a called strike and Lishmanand Kosa were both forced out atsecond base. The Honolulus were retired lyFred and Harry Whitney going out at first

base, while Sheldon put Markham out at Ihehome plate on a good play.

In the eighth inning llurgess and Dowseltmade one run each for the Benedicts andtckets matte a run lor tne Honolulus. Ihescute now stoou o 10 o wnen the Benedictswent lo bat for the last inning and Lishmanimmediately went out on a lly to HarryWhitney ; he was followed by Charlie Wilderwho went out on first base and left things look-

ing rather blue for the Married fellows withprospects of a tenth inning, when Dun An-

tonio Kosa made a safe base hit over second

and stole a base. llurgess then made his first

and stole second, Don Antonio coming homemidst wild applause and hat throwing. JackDowselt svas so excited that he failed 10 reachArst and left the score standing at 7 to 6, infasor of the Ilenedicls.

The Honolulus went to bat for their lastchance, Fred Whitney made a safe lute hitto lift field, Harry Whitney went out on a By

to Spencer whu has become the glory andpride of the benedicts. Markham struck out.Guy Wodehosac reached first base whenEckels went out on Erst and came back sadly,muttering

"Woe 1. rat Alana I"

Then went up a right merry Jell and alegutar circus of congratulations commenced.Clarauce Ashford threw his arms wildly aroundMr. iloardman who was trying to kick his batover Ihe pavilion, and whirled him rapidly tothe ice cream stand. Levey stood on his headin right field and kicked his heels together,yelling lustily ''Fifty to one t" Mr. James G.Spencer forgot his usual dignity and was teenlolling over and user towards the home plate,holding his sides with laughter and shoutingbetween breaths "I told you to I" Scotty ofIhe Oceanic ran around wild-eye- yellinglike an Indian, while Kinney stood andgrinned. The Honolulu boys took their de-

feat in good pan and the boys were all sud-

denly brought to their senses by Jack Lucasasking them up lo ice cream. The followingIs a tummsiy of the game by tunings 1

I..II.C.S., l 1 I 1 6 I I TtiTtt"o""l ' 0M ir 7i

l so 1 oo t o a

Wild pitches -- PaiLer, o." " V. VthiliMV, u.

Pass o." " Wilder, 1.

Un(hue-ll- . S. DavUIsoo.Scuet Wall, U the IX.ajiks.

The steamer W. G. Hall, which arrived Inpott Thursday, reports that during the stormlast Sunday night, Messes. Allen & Robinson'sschoncr I'ohoiki was capsiied about threemiles off Niuuipele, Hawaii CaptainPaahao, his wife and young-- son were lost.The captain was dragged Into the boat,manned by two of the crew, after the sharkshad bitten oft' both his legs at the thighs. Asoon as it was seen that he could not live he wasagain thrown into the sea, at his own request,wheie he was drowned. Two of the men re-

maining In the walct were badly mangled, osmlosiuf bis left arm near the shoulder and theother being bitten In live abdomen. Theywere liken Into the butt which drifted aboutfiAy mile and landed In Kona 4U- -

Ulct. Tsvo ssi a lU S4CSST titsvIsom Ux Is Mill sssxlvsvosn.

thf IllIt llmlh

llotfitile Htlf miiM Hirtljr have imfln"8 ,n"'"B '"".. flare than lh lnttlI'atV lltilln Kink ,a Trntistla,- nlfihl, at lliefjlr women and brave men of trrf hsity burgeame in ami filled the seat pro hletl fnr Ihem.

On Ihe west side of the hall special chairs hadbeen set for King KalaVaui, members of his

family ami hit chief household servants. Abovethese chairs hung the Royal Hawaiian Stand-

ard, flanked by two Urge Hawaiian Hags.

The Hawaiian colorsthe only flags displayedwere gracefully disposed In different parts of

the commodious hall. Palm branches andChinese and Japanese tanlerns completed Ihedecnralinns. King Ka'akauA arrived early,attended by Governor Domini and hi staff

and by Chamberlain Judd and Vice Chamber-

lain Purvis. Princess Litinokalani, several

officers of the regular and volunteer militaryorganisation, ami many of our bet knowncitlrens were present. Many tasteful and a

few elegant toilets were worn, a fact not fully

brought out by Ihe dim if not religious light

that filled the room.At half-pu- t eight Ihe Rilles entered the

hall, proceeded by the band. There werethirty guns in line. Those in the ranks wereas follows Officers Captain Aldrich, FirstLieutenant McLcnd, Second Lieutenant Ileb-binl- ,

First Sergeant I.cvey, Sergeants Godfrey and Simmons, Corporals Pratt, Ilishopand Baldwin Drummers King, McGrcw,Miller, Love ond Uolhwell ; Prrvales Ash-

ford, Urun, Beats, Corville, Clark, Dow,Filch, Johnstone, Kenake, Lucas, McCarthy,Keist, Simonson, Severin, Scott, Smith, linger,Wood, Williams, Wiseman, Winter, While,Wagner, S. . Wlldei, C. T. Wilder, J. II.

Wilder, Wilfong and Voung. First SergeantLevey, led Ihe file and the rear was broughtup by the handsome local editor of the Gacctte,Sergeant Godfrey, whose inrefusing to be elected second lieutenant h',swon the grateful appreciation of his comrades.

They presented a tuarliat appearance, ofwhich their friends nay well be proud. Theymarched twice around the hall to the inspirit-

ing strains of Berger's Dominis March. Thenthe band and the drum Corps fell nut of theranks and the drill began,

After presentation of Ihe company to KingKalakaua, part of the manual of aims and ihefollowing inarching and field s wereexecuted : Fours in circle, right wheel ; Foursin circle, left wheel ) Fours right about ; Foursleft about ; On, right into tine ; Left front intoline, double time ; Open order, balance arms ;

Loading and firing f Charge bayonets ; closingwith the formalities of .1 tlrcss parade.

The drum corps performed its duty admirably. Leader King's mastery of the drum is

little short of wonderful, his four comradesdeserving high praise also.

The evolutions, the drill, the self possession,the soldierly bearing and the gentlemanlyaddress of officer and men ssou and dcscredthe eager attention and the applause of theiraudience. Their drill is not yet perfect. Bui

they arc evidently on ihe road lo tactical perfection. Long may Micir pennant wave, andmay their last tent lie pitched on the right sideof the line.

After the drill, tlancing. The grand marchwas by Mr. t.ticktone, composed when hewas here with KeinemI some months since, incompliment to the Honolulu Rifles, and namedfor them. It was played last Thursday for Ihefirst lime in public.

A Faithful ltrpnrl.After the meeting of last Sunday the presi

dent ol the Post Obit Literary Circle decidedthat a club bath would be conducive to thephysical welfare as well as to the witof the members, and the club accordinglyassembled per order last Wednesday morning,at the M)rtte Boat Club House, for a dip inthe briny. It was six o'clock when PresidentCathcart and Secretary Mahoney, in naturalundress, accompanied by the Tiscr man,arrayed in a beautiful purple and gold bathingsuit, borrowed from the editor ol the "greatpapier," came upon the platform. MembersKeist, Kiddell and Goodc were soon in thevasty deep, floating like small islands aroundthe continent-lik- e bulk of Member Barber,whose plunge caused the water to rise at thefish market. President Cathcart and Secre-

tary Mahoney had by this time finished a

discussion over the passage in Komco andJuliet, commencing :

" Oaltop apace ye lierr (bored slecds,"

and leaped to the cooling arms of Xeptunus.The Tiscr man, after anxiously surveying theparty for a moment, flourished his arms abovebis head, turned a rhetorical summersault andfell upon his back, immediately sinking to thebottom. In the meantime Member Keist play-

fully dived and caught President Cathcart bythe leg. The president raised Ihe ciy of"shaik," and In a twinkling all the memberswere on the platlorm, save Member Barber,who, like one of Roach's s, was uselesswhile in water. When the excitement wasover the 'Tiscr man was missed. SecretaryMahoney and Member Kiddell immediatelydived for him, and after strenuous effortsbroughtblmtothesuiface. When Ihe water waslolled out of him he became conscious, and puthis hind over the pocket of his bathing shiitas if in pain. President Cathcart proceeded toexamine the pocket and found there some lead-

like substance, wrapped in writing paper,which hail doubtless dragged the unfortunatescribe to the bottom. When the Tiscr manwas stripped of his editurial trappings hefloated like a coik, An elimination of the

package whicli sunk him showed that it con-

tained the notes of the rditorl.il on ContractLabor which appeared l.i the great papier lastWednesday. While tt breakfast the clubpassed a icsolutiou that, to avoid accidentshereafter, no member connected with a news-

paper would be allowed to apcar at bath,

except in p'rimilise costume, as editorial bath-

ing suits were too apt lo contain dangerousballast. When the vote was counted It was

found to Hand as follows - Ayes, PresidentCathcart, Secrctaiy Mahoney, Gazette man,Members Keist, Kiddell, and Goude and the

Tiserimn 7, Noes, Member Uaibcr, Bulletinman and Press man J.

A large company gathered at the Vosmilcskating rink last cscningln witness ami par-

take in the masquerade and hop which fol-

lowed. There were estimated la be 900present. Some sescnly masked peisons tookpart, the ctiaiactcrs being well sustained, manyof Ihe costumes being gotten up with care for

taste and elegante. The prucs were awardedas follows t isl, for the most elegant costumes,"Martha and George Washington," Alice Walland Ornwnd Wall J 3ml, the brat sustainedchancier, " Blind Man," George Huddyjrd, moat original "egg-shel- l dress," KatieLishman ; 4th, nsosl comical "law," atuesLove.

The committee consitltd of Mcsdamcs H.Johnson, A. M. San, Dr. uckcr and Messrs.II. Schmidt, Chas. Ilustace and R. W, Lalrve.

Twenty-nin- e tins of opium were vcucl yes-

terday noon in the room of a uian namedRaymond, located near the White House, on.S'uuanu street. Tbe Dpium and prisoner weretaken to the station house.

Tbe bell tower was brilliantly tiiMtairutedbut night In honor of lh departure of ChiefKnsjinssti John Noll, ptr Alameda,

f7e ertrtit liirf.

At the steamer twilini )c!( he ' vil ullnnnhtlti on Monday afternoon, July loth,the mad a rrrnsi interesting plrtoie, ami thetneiley throng lint crowded her decks ibttveand below seemed lo anticipate a trip frill ofpteainre and Incident. With deck and cabinto crowded with passengers, the trip to Nawlll-H- i

woald not be a pleasant one, though theea was smooth ind Ihe wind light. Her

Royal Highness Princess Liliuokilini with herservants and a large retinue of women, dressedin plaid holokus, and straw hats trimmed withwhile inuthn with btue figure, constituted a

very important feature of the expedition.

At Nawiliwili, the steamer arrived in time toHow the ussengers to go ashore for breakfast,

ami here Governor Kanoa had prepared a

grand feast for the princess and her party.During the day the twatani coasted round

the Eastern and Southern shore of Kami,touching for a short time only at Koloa, Ele-rl- e

and the Makawele landings, arriving atWaimea before dark.

Here everyone went on shore, teasing onboard only enough to took after Ihe vessel.During the evening and night a great feast svas

in progress and entertainments ami refresh-

ments of various kinds were provided.At a quaiter past three on Wednesday the

passengers from Honolulu and abont a hun-

dred more from Kauai were ail aboard and theIwalani steered away toward Ihe west in searchof Nihoa, The main deck, the cabin and esenthe hurricane deck were now paved with humanbeings, numbering over three hundred, and it

required the skill of a gymnast lo past from

one part of the vessel to the other

As soon as It va light on Thursday theform of Nihoa was seen liefore us, distant nearlytwenty miles, and the course of the vesstl waschanged slightly so as to bring the island alittle to the left. As we approached, Ihe teabirds became more numerous, circling roundIhe masts, and seeming to have much curio-sity in regard to our vessel and probably alioutthe object of the expedition. The artists ofthe party, Mr. Williams and Mr. Deverell,began preparing their instruments for the pur-

pose of taking views of the island, and theamateurs got out their pocket liooks and com-

menced taking pencil sketches of this greatrock whicli rose almost perpendicularly from

the sea. As the steamer passed to the norlhof Ihe island and within a few hundred yardsof it, a magnificent slew was had of the rockycliff, filled with innumerable holes and littlecaves, homes of thousands of sea birds. Thefirst point passed was about eight hundred feelhigh. The highest point, some eight hundredand forty feet high was to the north and west ;

and when the steamer rounded it and ne had aview of both angles of the island, the sightwas indeed grand, and one to be rememberedby every one on board. Every one of thethree hundred souls on Ixjard had forgottentheir many tribulations of the previous night,and every eye and ear was intent to take in thegrand scene before us. The air was filledwith the notes of the various birds which couldbe seen circling through the air by tens of

thousands as far as the eye could reach. Thesight reminded one of mosquitoes hoscringround a lamp on a quiet summer esening buton a much grander scale.

The birds seemed to have much admirationfor the Royal Hawaiian standard that flew althe mast head, and came by hundreds nearenough to touch it, looking first on one sideand then on the other. The coming of thissteamer loaded with strange human beingsinto this quiet and almost unknown regionmust have been a great surprise to these birds,most of whom had probably never seen any-

thing of the kind before.

The steamer came to anchor off the south-eastern coast of the island which was in theform of an frregu'Iar bay. The shore was veryrocky, all but one Utile sand beach to the left,and as we gaied at the breaking waves allalong the shore, no place could be seen whereU seemed (tossible to make a landing. Thecaptain, along with Ihe artists, the surveyors,the scientist, and several tourists, started inthe first boat for the 'shore and after severalattempts succeeded in effecting a landing on avery rocky shore at the foot of , a little bluff.Within an hour or two after the first boatlanded the whole of the passengers were on theisland, and it is a wonder that some seriousaccident did not happen.

There is hardly a square yard upon theslope from Ihe shore to thu lop of theprecipice on the northern side that hasnot a bird nest, and in several placesone can hardly step without treading uponbirds or a nest with eggs in it. The largest isthe Frigate bird. Its wings, when full grownwill stretch aliout six feet. It builds itsnest upon the top of the low shrubs thatcover the slope of the. island. Another bird,of the Booby tribe, somewhat smaller, buildsits nest in the same way; and the young birds,pure white, each one on a separate nest, makea most ludicrous appearance. These birdsshow fight when any one comes near them,squwaking and opening their bills in tjie mostexcited manner at if they would demolish theintruder, but never trying to escape. Besides

these large birds there is the beautiful Ula, atropic bird, pure white, with red bill, blackeyes and two long, slender red tail feathers,much prited by Ihe natises. These featherswere worn by all the excursionists and be-

came the badge of the expedition. There ateabout ten varieties of birds in all, but I shall

have to refer to Mr. Dole, the Hawaiian Or-

nithologist, who accompanied the expedition,for a full account of the birds of Nihoa andKaula.

The day was veiy warm, and as we found

no water on the island and very liitle had beenbrought Irom tht steamer, many of tbe excur-sionists suffered for want of it. There werethree white ladies besides a gieat many Ha-

waiian ladies, and tt it probable that thesewere Ihe first that had ever set foot on Nihoa.In Ihe depressions or valleys the ground wascovered with a low, scrubby bush, which hada yellow flower, this made a grateful shelterfor Ihe smaller birds. Several grot es ofthLoulu paints were seen un Ihe Island, and muchof the ground was covered with a bunch grass,which furnished places for thousands of birdsnests. The lender leaves of these palms fur-

nish the material for making those beautifuloft hats, much worn by the natives. The toil,

which covert neatly the whole slope of theisland Is very fine like ashes and it stiongly

(impregnated with guano which can also befound upon all the plants and stones. Thepungent smell of guano pervades the atmos-phere even to the highest point of Ihe Island.

Mr. laeger who had brought a number ofgrowing plants and a variety of seeds, wasunable to land Ihem ou account of the heavy

tea, but fortunately some other members of theparty were able to carry seeds ashore, whichwere planted in the most available placet.

Mr. S. E. Bishop, who waa lb scientist ofthe party, waa tent by Ihe government to ob-

tain as correct a survey aa possible of the island.Ha wax joined by Mr. W, E Rowell of Wai-sac- a

and the two, with iHt auittiance of uatives,establish! several po.ntt, and obtained lbdata from which It la soped a correct map can beatvad. The altitude l nearly double what waasupposed by Captain Paly and others who hadvisited Nihoa. It la to be hoped that Mr.Bishop will give to the truths the rttulit --fhtoUetvUiasst from a sciealiac poitU taf.viesf,taos aaWsto tax Uaati ttsM faajasl,

Mi t le if med lo .It l.ere wast llrrea of gold buried some where near iheshore, and prthipt thai was Ihe reason why henilaimlh'r member of the putytiailed forth

1 1 ml berth to the left nf the bay. lint theonly out uomt from this tramp wat a mostdelightful bath In the magnificent taif thatcame rolling In on the tand, and the tlitcnvciyof His only good boil landing to be found onwhole coast. Had the advice nf the maieofthe twalant been taken when we first landed,the whole nfthe company would have benlanded at this point with very little trouble ordanger.

One of the nsllve in tramping over Iheisland, found, to llie left of Ihe sand beach, a

place in the rocks where fresh water could liefound in small quantities.

Most unfortunately, just before we left, afire was slatted, whether accidentally or notno one knows, ami it spread very rapidly alongthe middle lidge and down into Ihe little s

on each side. It is sad lo think of themany thousands of young birds which couM not

leave their nests and the older birds un theirrests which had never seen fire or smoke, now

burnt or smothered in the dense smoke thatcovered Ihe island. Many exciting incident!occurred during the embarkation, and tomecame near being very serious. Several boilsweie swamped and everything In them soakedwith salt water.

Most unfortunately Mr, Williams and Mr.Deverill had their photographic Instrumentsand most nf their negative spoiled in gctlinffrom Ihe fsland to the steamer. At aboutthree o'clock Ihe Iwalani weighed anchor andsteamed away for Kaula, a bird Island about10 mile south-wes- t from Nihoa, This was

reached early the next innrnlng, and several

boat loads i.f passengers were larded on Ihe

lock edge that skilled the island. Six or

eight of the natives swam round and climbedup onto the slope, from which they ascended tothe top of the cliff Ihe set.

The birds al Kaula are not as numctous a

those at Nihoa, and there teem to be less of

the larger varieties. One boat containingPrincess Liliuokalaul, C. II. Wilson and a

number of men and women, entered a fine

cave running into the solid rock at Kaula, for

a distance of several hundred feet. The waterin the cave is very clear and deep, and is said

to be the dwelling place of tome very largesharks. Sharkt are very abundant around all

of these itlands. I omitted to mention that a

case, laige enough to admit a boat, runs clear

through the eastern end of Nihoa, and we

coulil sec through it as we came away.Also thai in the of Nihoa arc to lie

found a number of stone walls or terraces,built up to the height of from three 10 six feel,

evidently for Ihe purpose of retaining Ihe soil

for the purposes of cultis'ation, showing thatthe native from Kauai or Niihatr must formerly

line visited the island to fish or catch birds.The trip was one long to he remembered, on

account of Ihe many incidents that occurred,and the interest attached to the islands themselves and the interesting birds that were to beseen there.

The steamer touched also at Nlihau, wherea feast hail been prepared for ihe princess andher friends. Some of the tourists rode up toMr. Gay's residence, about a mile and a halffrom Ihe landing. The island is covered withbeautiful rnaniania grass which furnishes most

excellent pasturage for the large flocks of sheepand the herds of cattle there. Upon leavingNiihau the steamer passed very close to andnearly round the island of Lehua, which is

uninhabited, except by rabbits, which at timesare very numerous.

The Iwalani reached Honolulu, Sundaymorning, July 26th, and all were glad to geton "Ire agtin, alter llie hardships ol Ihe

ag.1 W. W. II.iVCnolulu, July 29, 1885.

ll'io Sr I Fire lo Mlhou ?

".luld )oii tell me," meekly asked a Pressreported as he stepped into the office of San-for-

11. Dole the other morning, "who set fire

to Nihoa? They say you are an inveteratesmoker and I thought" The inquisitivescribe dodged several law liooks and wonder-

ing "whal'smattcr I" succeeded in untanglinghis tegs and immediately fled. Gatheringcourage, he presented himself at the office ofthe Mutual Telephone Company and was re-

assured by the smiling face of Mr. Jaeger wholooked al' the rcportoriai interrogation iwintand winked to himself. "Do) on know whoset fire to Nihoa, Mr. Jaeger?" "Yes," said

Mr. Jaeger, smiling still more complaisant!)'."Who?" asked "Well now,look here," said Mr. Jaeger, "I could tele-

phony talc aliout that fire, but I never give mycrowd away. That's why Mrs. Dominiswouldn't let any of )ou newspaper fellows

The Press man thought he didand glided to the-- side walk. "Well I'mblessed! there' Kev. Scrcno Bishop j I'll getit now 1" exclaimed ye scrilic as he crossed Ihestreet and put his fore finger into Mr. Bishop'sbuttonhole. "Have you any idea, sir, who

set fire to Nihoa? do you smoke Mr. Ilishop?"The reverend gentleman wa dazed for n

moment and leaned against the wall, gaspingfor breath. Finally he broke away, glared atthe audacious reporter without speaking andwalked rapidly away. Marveling greatly thePress man called on Jimmie Williams,thu photographer, and whispered in his

eari "WHO SF.T FIKK TO NIHOA?""Gel out I I didn't do it, I was too wet,"

said Mr. Williams, in a bland voice, Mr. W.V. Hall, treasurer of the American Board ol

Foreign Missions, declared that in hit opinionMr. Bishop set fire to the grass, while diivinga survey peg, by holding his spectacles in hishand to avoid losing them, thereby convertinglitem into a Major Baker wipedhis sweats and said sternly, " Aide wau I ike.",Mauy others of the party were interviewed;some. thought-I- was caused by spontaneouscombustion and others were ol Ihe opinionthat the birds sc. fire to the grass to ccltbraleihe advent of royally Uun that island,

".I l"twi-- r

'1 office devil dropued hit .i,

'llie bffic .Kllt sailed "II l fAs through lh offc roartlif cam

Thi uvast sonorous self name J turn t"Cicatuapicr f

Tli dudclct clerk the hamier look,qit tacrtJ sanctum h forsook,

AimI ralMDii up his IxdUbeU feet.

It cried hloiuc lh du.ty alrtet I

''Grrattutiler fTt mighty editor vf--

,

And brushed 1h brain cruotL front Ids states,II dun; hit ihujgM .tuij en the flaor,

And sUvulaJ Irom th oiea door :

"Jrltirder t,'

From Denmark' craggy heights, th Dan

Caught up th cry that ftred his Uatn ;AihI LLuoned itb hi gooj right hand,Trurs isordt upon Ms ted hat hand t

'GttpLer tlti Uslcaing evhoe aarMklll fled

from Waien to Diamond Head,A lh giat papat' tsssa UU ulu,StAtetvaa-cou4-. b(w)UJ down h ,a ;

"Greatpapier I

Th ilea catcher , Uu adecp.Tell 114 sluaaUr yet axcr deep,Aod drwaacd hr stood Wsi.l Isia be4.Sir CUos, vno eu,ueed kia tutnd Re! aatd t

" Great papMf 1"

lis Mial prwasif , rauaiag, biard.Zi, school la Ug vtd,T)Maaat " If ly rot that kjr ruleTUtM tit oat treat 'aod will la '(ava"

" taeJAUia- -

COM MLllCTAInlloNoilii cusl I, l!Jt

Hit wralher the i Week ha been m wel

and tiiitmy a la materially affect trade ami

enmtnrrcT generally, ami rrttlrsB tjnffsr ksmtal- -

rta t stand agMt al wed umtlxr far inhltrimmer. Hie nroswrntrH. of evMJtm were all

delayed mi Monday ami Imslnetm in generalwit tmpemtetl. 'lire Klrrtn w delayed tillThurstiay, and In ciitxequenee, a. special triphat been arranged for her for volcano tourists,which will allow them more lime at llllo andIhe soleano, returning nn Saturday the Slh

inslanl.batch of Chinexe immigr.tm ar-

rived on ihe 291I1 ultima, by the Oceanic, viaSan Fiancisco, and would seem lo show thatour foreign office edict reslticting these people intwcniy-fiv- c In any one vessel excepting re-

turning Chlnee with permit I a hollow

mockery, a delusion and a snare. TheOceanic biings us San Francisco dates to the21st instant and rcportsn slight decline in sugargain.

The foreign shipping movements have Ijeen

light for the werk, the arrival being Imt theEureka and Oceanic from Sjn Francisco. Indepartures we note the Planter for San Fran-cisco, Oceanic for Hongkong, Yamaihiro Mamfor Yokohama, and Amelia for the Sound. Ofthese vessels none took freight from this portexcept Ihe Planter j her cargo being valued at$8,092, The Alameda will get off atIhe usual time, with a fair freight and largelist of parsengers. She will be followed by tbeAustralia, due from the Colonics to morrow.

Vessels Expected Irom foreign Ports.SvDNXV,llril . a. AuaTltAUA Ohe't

true AugiKt s.

NawCattLi, N. S. W.Am. Ik Khr.koDue August

Navakxo Rivna, Am, athr J. II. I.ErM,,,. .'

tn Inly icsItrlt Lie JurtTXa

Due Selemjf-- Agents.GLAUinw. lint ItV LlzllR UpiiALr

Sailed Julr 17. t. A. Schaefer Co., Agent,.Naw VotlcAm likMaaTiM IIaviv Ilensoi.

DueOct s. C llrewcr&Co., Acerit.llsv, blc P SThomi-ho- Potter

lluejiilj- - 16.

San Fhamciico, Am. Utne V. It. Maim.. ..PaulDue July 13.

San Francisco, Am. bklnc Discos Kltt PrrrimanDue July 98.

Sviinrv, llrit. a ZAtANiiA , WeblierDue August 1.

Merchant Vessels Now In Port.Am Litre Kurfka..., ..'.....beeAm IjgtncUiNsuRLO.. ...CousinAm s a Alasikoa MoraeAm I Ic Akiv 'IUr-ier- . ...NellIttlue Ams.Ha ..NeuhallIlk I'llRFsr IjfKhN. - ...NelttonNor. Lk poitrn . r'lorcnaan

tllltll'AIJl.Saturiiav, July 25 -

Stmr Lclm-- i from MauiStmr Waimainlo, from Wnimanalo.Sch Manuokatvnl from Koolau

SliNllAV, July 26

Stmr Kinau from Maui and HawaiiSlmr Iwalani from Kami and NihoaAm bktne Kureka from San FranciscoSlmr James Makccfrom KauaiSell Nellie Merrill from LihalnaSch Uhukai from WaialuaSell Waimalu from MalikoSch Waiclni from KauaiSell Kawailani from KoolauSch Lcahi from llanaleiSch Mokuola from Uvta

Wp.riNF.ilMV, July 30Schr Kavvalani from KoolauSchr Kmina from Olowalu, Maui

Nul:,manu Irom ll.imakua.IIawaiiS S Oceanic from San Francisco

TiiursimV, July 30Slmr W. G. Hall, from Maui, Kona and Kau

Friimv, July 31 --Slmr James Makee from Waialua and KauaiSlmr C It Bishop, from llamakua

imi'AUTVItKI.Saturday, July 25

Slmr Planter for San FranciscoSchr Liholiho for Kauai

Tuksimv, July 28Slmr Jamcs'I Dowselt for MolokaiStmr Lehua for KahuluiSchr Catcrina for WaimanaloSchr Manuokawai for KoolauSchr Kainliow for KoolauSchr Sarah and Elba for KoolauSch Rob Rov for KoolauSlmr Mokohi lor MolokaiSell Haleaknla for PecekciSch Ka Mol for Laupahochoe

Wednf-mmv-, July 29Schr Nellie Merrill for LahainaSlmr Iwalani for KauaiS S Oceanic for HongkongSlmr James Makie, lor Knpaa

Thursday, July 30Stmr Kinau lor Maui and HawaiiSlmr Yamashiro Maru for YokohamaSlmr Waimanalo, or Waimanalo,Slmr K.ipiolan! for Kwj,Schr Josephine for Kvva.

Friday, July 31

Sch Lcahi for I IanalciBklne Amelia for Poit Tow mendSchr Wailele for MalikoSch Kjaukcaoui for KnhalaSchr F.iiuna for OlowaluSchr Waioli for MalikoSch Fhukai for Waialua,Kchr Kavvalani for Koolau

I'ASSKStlKUS.A rrivalt.

From Kami and way ports, per slmr JamesMakee, Sunday, July 26- -J II paly anddaughter, M Dickson, Mrs A K Hapa! andchild, J Luscnmb and 40 deck passengers.

Km m Kahului, per slmr , Sunday,July 26 II P Baldwin, Captain Wilbur,Judge I Kalama and wife, E A Clark, ADias, Brother Paul, Mrs Chamberlain nndson, Mrs llalelakuliln and child, 4 prisonersand 30 deck passengers.

From Hawaii and Maui, per slmr Kinau,Sunday, July-26-- J Wright. Lieut II (Snivihc, F L Clarke, Thomas I Lights Jr. IIC Rolierls. S McCaulcy, C I.iilr, C Koki,Kev G Wallace, Mrs J Migulrc, C Magulre,Palmer Wuods, I Asen, W I. Ilolokaluki.Mist M Daniels, Mrs It S Putman. Mr C Mll)de, Mrs II Dickenson, Mrs II Mollcr,Master K Tuilon, V F.lsler, wife and child,Mist IN Needham, 0 A Jacksnr, and wife,Captain J Harrison, wife and 3 children, MissKcalnha, M Kuldj Ah Leong and 92 deckimsscngcr.

From Kauai per stmr Iwalani, Sunday l

III! Princess Liliuokilanl, C II Wii.son, Mis. S Sheldon, J Kfii it wf, Mr W 1.Wilcox, A laeger S son, Mr V Ward, KevSK Bishop, W W Hall, Hon j T Baker ck wf.J J Williams, U S Cunha wf son, K Hon",nung wf , daughter, Mrs J Lemon, Guv P PKanoa, Kev JHcmphil! ik wf, S II Dole, ACrop, Ad llannebcrg, F Burr, J II Kulaau.kane, Kev O P hmerson, Dr I) Martin, Mllopic, Miss K Feiilss, Miss Fields, Mis ITanner, Master Dole (2) Hon Ktau .V wf.Mrt K lleckley, Dr II McGrcw.

From San Francisco per (.line Kuieka,Sunday-Jul- 26 Mcsrt J Ikirkc, II Young &Stow,

From windward pt.ru, per stmr WG Hall,Thursday, July jo--C A Sprrckcli and wife,

(1 Irwin, Mid Dorc, Mi S Iyer. Mrllorvo, K Jones. Mrt V V llaitlngs, J llaccTerheyden, W i: Stevens, Mitt HN Foster,E W Fuller, Mrs S II Davit, Capt L t,

G McLean and wife. V V Ashford, J LRost, J Y Jordan. Mr M U fjoake, KeyFather Celculne, J K Kahali and 66 tlece pas.tcngert.

VjMirrurr.For Kahului, n--r unit Lthuo, Morulay,

Julya8-M- Ltt llctlha Meyer. It W Meyer and2 children, Tito Campbell and wife, MixCaiupltell, Ben Meyer, Mid Finnic. J BAlexander, Kev Falhtr Sylvester, BrotherBertram. Judge J rUlaina. W Fcnnell, Mrt GW Smith audnudd, Mr A Unna. J Lucasami wife, G Aa.ne and about 100 deck.

Fur Kauai per stint Iwalani, Wednesday,July 271: L Guetrero wf & son, A Crnutt. YWilhclKi. A llinncilxrg, Mid ChrhiUn, UKoopp, Ills h Gov p P Kanoa & about itu

I 1 Kai inA way p iris ptrk'mrl'mMakie, WcliHvlav, luiy 29 Mr I Ma.fsrlanr a . h, Mi i.ldrmann. M Mahelona

f lletlleman 1 nfr, ill I loll , win, MrIt S Steward .V 4 ah, Mrs artewttt, S WHarms, J A MeCamtlew, M Dfekanrr, Capt JHey, Mr Gardner and aNwri 75 dk tttn- -

ettgtr.For the volcano and way pott, per ttesamei

Klnau, Thursdav. Itilv 10th Mr I Antler- -

on, A J Baldwin, wife and on, C II Murphy,J C Ward, Frank Ilustace, J F Morgan, Alexlloyil and wife, Geo Boyd, C Ntxtlorffe, F I'.

Atwaler ami wile, .Mis Hopper, A T Atkin-son, Miss May Atkinson, Mis May Alhertouand Mist J Lowtic, Mr P N Makre amidaughter, Mis Parke, A M Brown, Mis MBrown, Mr Phelp and child, Mis Mary AShaw, Mis Mary Kinoiki, Miss Lewis, MisII Brown, Mis Iclllc Drown, Arthur Fituim-mont- .

Master Arthur Rhodes. Ben P Zabl.tn.Jo ablan, J I, lllaivlell and bride, WalterHole, Knlieit Dole, Mis ull.l Hansen, MrKokl, C Koki, W K Seal, S Klnuwa, C P.

Coe, C i: Winston, It Cation, Joen Cook anilaliout 150 deck scngers.

The following passenger will leave for SanFrancisco, per simr Alameda, MrW (i Armstrong, Mrs A F Judd and J child-ren, Mi Geo Wallace, Mrs Dejean, Mr I

Simmon, Mrs V II llrown, Mrt Kirklsnd,Mr K It llcndty, Jn.-b- Toohey, Mis lloyl.Mill N Grifiiith, Mr A L hhaw and child, SDe llells, J Noll and wife, Mis and MasterIvtunn, A (, Alexander, BJnnct, W I, Hop-per, W A Ikiwcn, T I) Whiting, - T Griffith,lap! Wilbur, A Wcnncr, Lha McGuire,Palmer Wood. II Hoflnung, Dr Kecney, PaulNeumann, . K Meyers, Chas Ktilr, MaryBrekwlth, MaryCIIilicbrand, Rev Hemphilland wife, Mrs Ferris, Mis M J Allen, NilsKva Neumann, Mis Iloffniing, Mrs T ItFoster and 2 children, Mrs M Fay, Mrt M Clluriiettc, Geo A Jackson and wife.

.'.V'OI.I.For 'an Francisco per slmr Planter. Sat

urday, July 251,397 l"K '"gar, 56 bnchuanana. lAjmcsllc value, ja.txil.

10.11J r'.i KkaAan.uu.vTs,Band at Kmina Square at 4:30 p. M,

Sale of horse by L) on it Levey at 12 noon.

Gospel Tcmieraiice Prayer Meeting alIlclhcl Vestry af 7130 I'. M,

I'm Ititun VuhlU'nAll who have printing to do, in red or in

black or in blue, or other conventional hue ,

take' notice, and never forget, thai Ihe Prosoffice i limning jet the place of all place loget Ihe best, the most nitty and neat, at tmrshop, 29 Merchant street.

Wc call attention In Hie new advertiscnienof Mr, G. J. Waller, of the- - MctroiolilanMaikel, in our present issue. In consequenceof owners of 'slock having reduced their pricesfor cattle, Mr. Waller is enabled lo do Ihesame for his customer, nnd by dealing withhim the public may be assured nf having thevery finest meats front the Refrigerator at aslow prices as al any oilier establishment in thecity.

If this man had been wise hewould have appeased the widow's wrath andmade a friend of her by taking her out toMessrs. King Bros', new artist store, No. S,Hotel street, and presenting her with one ofthose beautiful paintings by Jules Tavernier,the "new Lake Volcano" or the "llalaniau-ma-

Crater," done in nil. Or he mighthave gratified her by having her portiaitpainted by the Michigan Portrait Co. Messrs.King Bros., the sole agents of this firm onthese islands, take order for portraits, enlargedfrom any sire of photograph, dene in watercolors, pastel, crayon, or Indian-ink- , whichare returned in two months beautifully ex-

ecuted. See specimens in vvinduvv.

A person called at the U. S. Land Office tofile certain papers, and had occasion 10 signhis name. His first initial i " U," and hewas required In sign his name in full. Hereplied that it was "Usual." Tiiis was thoughtto be a joke by the register, but the gentle-man insisted that it was his" true name, andgave Ibis explanation of how lie happened toreceive it. His father was greatly tlesiriou ofhaving a daughter, but as child alter child wasborn lo him he was a often disappointed.When the gentleman in question, who is theseventh child, was born, Ids father had greathope that lhal the desire of heart was lo liegratified; but when he saw the )oungstcr hewu compelled 10 exclaim: "A boy, as usual. I

gncss he vv ill have lo go through tile as Usual."It is "usual," in this community, when anyone wishes lo purchase s groceries andprovisions, lo go to II. IC. Mclntire& Bro.,corner Fort nnd King streets, whocarryalargcand fresh assortment of cvcr)thinj( in theirline of business, including Westphalia hams,imported direct front by steamer andrail, and Ihe new season's crop id teas, as wellas fresh roajjed and ground coflecs, prime but-

ter and cheese a specialty.

rcncr..l cbucrlisc.nciiiB.

npuRii M-- BINDERY.

Tins Topuumi Uindkuv, localcil at

107, l'ort Sited, will lie al.le in its set-tie- d

nuam-t- s lotluuvcniiiorcsatislactary

work tli.111 that which lias gained it such

liberal patronage and suclt willing ap-

preciation from the Honolulu trade.

Ir Anvr.KTisus No SPLCiAi.uih-s- ,

but is able to do am. soils, hizes,

and conditions ol

Rulinij, Lettering, and Paper culling

us well as in San l'raiicisiii, and at

moderate prices.

At This CoMi-urn- : Iiindkkv

newsiiapcrs, magazines, pamjililets, and

sheet muMC are, neatly and simply or

elegantly and sumptuously bound, as

taste and jiocket may demand. Old

books ate carefully anil firmly reUmniL

All IiLsc'kipriONS ar 1!i.ank

Hooks are made to order at as low

rates as are consistent with first :hs

work. The Ilinjcry is now ukiiig

Weston's "Record" and " ..wiser 'upcr for all first-clas- s work. .V large

nvoicc of this justly celebrated stock

lias just been received from New Vc-i-

Omukhs I.kvt at iiif, MmeiiAtrSlKKtir SlOKK WIM. IIAVB I'kOMHT

ArrtNnoi

Inppturj.

Steam Navigation Goiiip'y,

(LiMiTdb). !0:

stun: ir, a, milt (Miuii)llATM ,,

Will run rttttkirr to Maria, Mm, eta Rets andKh, HrwteH,

Mctnitri" riniitur (litht'fm)Cast anew.....

Na.rfl.lri evety SanHTaym 4 r. .,?rlf I loanulu, estty Aratty at j a. at.

.Slniuti'r lirnfnl.FaaasiAh

Win mrt rurHlarlr 1, Hants, Mtol, tsstt Relniliael Ibmr and l'an IlitwisU,

Slciuiirr C. II. HI'Iiiij),Ma Al iv ,.,,.Unt arr at A, at. fbe Takuiw.

twin, aau llanamaM Mlasna. num. IMti. 1 inM iTssry TatiSw at a p. at., aaJ KmchingVv aiAHM and WlMlNte WavhtaasBhwa. aaal a!!, a,

llimoluni tame day 11 4 K st,

Striiiiirr Jit in, Mnlien,Wna... H,t?otf.fl

Will run rrzuhvrty in Kaftxw, ritatt.

Veil- Itnntr lit II11 t'lirviM.s.tlirtaialt 'llrtaHe la lli t'rtlf-,- , t anj MlMu. jm . n.

he had al the ifllcfi tvt lha Inter i.l.,n.t k n,., .

litJi la. fotirUr mid other Ua.mg II t ,

Slemer "W. (i llatl" will I t.11 ." ,. P ualnn,wliere hrstba Hotel I nnw l r it ct.minsfrdattonar trevurin; theme !.v t'ftt'ro I jafwvr ,thence by Stag Coach lo Half way Hoti- - a

aa.1 Guide will b nllenilnu. t. onvlliem lo lit Volcano.

lly Hit route, list nxtn.1 Ittf. can Ik ma', m 7 druing relay ami a ntfhia! IM Vokanu.

Tklelt lor the rouml trip. Itwltid.- I .,?itce-- .(iibklc, and lodging, en.o

I or further twtlctilMt nvi"ht U tin oTTn e l liileiIl,s...f ClaJ. n.'nltail..j tlaklt..tsiaitw tiimiii aiHlXiiisji U I IpTWiPHIi

J. UNA, T. K. COJf fiK,lty-ss- Secretary. IWkU-t.- t

ILDKR'S STEAMSHIP COwIIOUTB AND TIMB TAMJt

ntn Kis.tttKino UmttiAKw

teTiivL it i?r followlaftluioa MjuLra, Ma1ileiia M1nikfM. Kw.!ilaaujtA)it1ie, Hilt) amiriiMJay, July tit, . ...rucfciny, Asiftut,! ), .ll.laMlMr I'hi.TiiotiU)', At iiu M 11 Vokrady HwirnetHlsy, Auiit i8,. . .irttofeM y pittisI uesuU) , At!u.t tj, . , . otsnNi And wtny-- I'.jrii'liie.), ,rtlHl1WRJ 1'wlvI'lleviay, September J, . .VOiCtrtOSInl Wft) ."Oil''IuMljy, e.icinUr ij, lUtoim.. wv tVn'liicMlay, jr,tr mUr tf, . . . Vola.uo flftt v PoiI'tietUay, September 99, . ., ftM. WAV l?. rir.

DaVIM , .Town ah nutLeave MomlaMftt 4 r. 41. for Kfttmlutat h.tiu

hit, lluelo, Hani Anil Ktialniiu; ami fW (UwKtf, Motut.111 ami Nun every other l. RtOP frig HI miai the ft10T tKtttft, ArtlviiiKtaWrl. Sal mil) olrtnifiie

Tor ii4fl un. inMt titter o4v.

rin:iai.AVV.A nmWttltMIITM HX!H--

ledum regutairly for lVuilsai,, KeUobh . OoV!.tKbVaUn, Ifonohina. 1ui.i)imcIio, IlnUati u m Onmea.

-

McOkfUjX , (V MAKl.flc.vs rach Morulay M 5 c u, ft KftiirwVW.

I'uttoo, laiultu, Moanul, KiiUvu.WwiUu, 'lui.u nnd Kabui . Ktlurtuu ItsavM I'uVou I'iMa

Paau.iQr Itutiutiilu. nMi SfiturtU moii, rfi.K. O. WILIIKK, Pre. b. It K08K, !Wy

t,i if

WlldBrt.

Steamship Company.

'New Route to the Volcano

Via Keaiiiion.

llie St an.ear KINAU, Kin, , ,!et.ve Honolulu un , June JrtJ, for Ktauttwu.

llie New Volcano tainlifitx, atij (Urvaftei im ih.Tirn 'l'uevlay RUer ttt nmval ef Ui AUrfwJn imlMariuu, tlu hem lU fith atul J of ttxU tWmKU

We offer j.ngen Titttiii v.n tikhtj. Ut O M.tnriflV lKLlli tiLy il.tS r4lt , p' irugcrp ttetni)-fuu- r ltKir tuiirnt il. V .' . ., Mt('rctuniin tu llwioltilu ou lSu.t t n.m

Owtv roi.MiKKH MiLi-- si mr vtim. hjh,VtiKAMt, oet A2ijlfo4'-Jitlu- ui lialt i..thof anj i,er ruutc.

Onall iTipteicrftVoJcniistj (rlj , ill. mi SAL i'irun her rrauur ii... ljnrrr.jti'e iw !' mi.n .tQ MCMivlulUlU K A. U. SlHlHsft.)lV ( u ll).,Iinfiirf frim jAU(tAltttlip inui uk. itHirf.iiFiujitniui. PisMmuMa tan trnuth i jr ij"tcr al litki until KihlAyC9 a. , n, it , , tw

All fmihrwilkitUrtivn at th ft..

WILDBK'S STEAMSHIP COMPANY

llmiolulu, June i l3j. .v (f

PACIFIC NAVIGATION(limited)

CO.

tUuttinu ttuft Cummtnutou 4tyruln.

Cr4t c?tVAA,V NUUANV, Uluth . &!KvkuW cmU to tlt(tUf4

MttliLopii iUu1,

IjtupalrtHlsue, Hcwioiniu IVuLaawkl Hit. wHawaii;

KAw, Uiu(ei ami U'auntAn-- i Kurt aitvlW'jUlua on OAhu,AtkUnywI.er fHt HricaLiY'iitefltrHt nr

Ptrtwfthav.iif freight fot miy (am 4 (.- - fUjaUt w

U fM iitl front han I'raiv Uco hj way J j f x.oU.lw,or diml .lj.iucmi fiwn Hbti&U wtt o r'U

(ml wftWPatlfx Nvflo Ctfc, UH Wallwj614 Krr Allien tettii,

(taaujs) liiUmleit fa klitinrr( tf aoy oi 'urrctvJ an-- untA fft of itfa i out tv"

ilslnn at any lime. Aiv't 4ttH n tr 1,

A. r. toou;nif &Iiuitcr Pacjiw Nvi):aiit4' t

pLANTBKS1 UUiiJOR 8AN

HUKWMl JC .UI'A. V, Aymt.ItervLaiiat.' rtjl tMuor Fre, ml l!mtm (tmad? vn vltl nwnH tv it U lin. u

(General ,bDcrtiocmcitte.

M RS. THOMAS LACK,

Mo. It Fort Btrst.t. Houtt.u.u.

Isirvart bu buSEW.NO MAOH1NKH

aau GKNl'l

I'm, Altrkm9HUt Oil anil Arifmurlf' TU.tH tu tua

Whit aaJiU Ntsr III Ma. Una.licraanl'i SImUm Nm.IUs ail HuJ,'Cwlkall't lvUlt, U all aaJtilslaeatlUituHi's l.lnH 'tbtead, .?(.11 1. It. N. 'I. alaluiaClluw- -

itwf. IMtmml't RiliMt Cut rftr Utcrmaau rvaiuAHuK.

alr ui Mi.taKatru

Cvm at 4 truartat, Owim,Jsatar, (Si!.., L'r,

Ail HttMXK Clt I ,

MKMUMKxm MTornu, u uii ,1,,.btmtf-Umtiiu- UtX tJ-- X UavKH-ura- ( iMtt

I'

fir

Page 4: ATURDAY P - evols.library.manoa.hawaii.edu · --K. m K V, i, "V S, If 4.1 hook.iiK'ir.vr. Mr I191 alre.nty ilone to efface the...ti.rul line in Ameriian politic.. Mi toceiu to and

ilMmon) I. !(( I ' I h al ; J.) I M.

tht Dnmri I'larter, ivhuh aailnl lot v,nFnacnni, last s'Mt morning, look 75

tttta nf ntfar for tallawt kI I JO ton 4 coal

M dor, ml nf thtch III l ud ml IhtIrtpnp,

Tt UpanR !( at KatfoJolaao Hiwtcn

ratsaafat tVajajtaja IMS ajrst 40 Haftr MtCfMn M

t RnpSr! MM tnC CNHOWtstsa Of noa pfWKTCT

tia ttM QatMaj, itoajtstarsa, its fnvtttjtfaja, Twraw wim vMtntvd oatt

MM 4 MTCNNf lonfl to tat" fCflMRMJVWI

"AM ptnoM avf apt to kr Bfnt Mvtrim

ilMfdviHtnlMlIna. JoarmlMM hi thattniw voriat ho Ibt MMMioWll ork pat

Mto BfMhf AMKtNMI pupCYO. A ffstvJat M

Mcatr anftmtaetd, wtlh only the tatdfat bet, and with no artMic tlaVnttinn of

The mum of th Mexican reader docsnot roclin Inward a inset, hail leu dot ktiftttni In lito asjaftlQa of MltajttBAata taiulllMa,

TV drtk I the batt ptoee the pmif r

Inttnles. IV mile of the family circle fFMrfy heard, and when h ft, ttvth ti rarelylost oj(frt of In an imermj terantble to be thenMlorihloHh."

m..;.n, .;; ?v..Oft account of the storm the Kinau wtll not

tallta-do- y.

Romof peihaoi the Jade lieth hat it thaithe Vamaahira Man has been delayed rttybecame IN premlre h In a dlnfontatlqne hot.

The ttetmett lernu and Mnkolli dM not

wit yettetday on account t the storm. At theweather dear they will Mil I hit afternoon un

theh Nanal route OO

Among th l,Nrt law rsfjalallivt (lie Frenchprs l net century old, winch threatent the npttMTreaslVr with death for even one Marnier.

.SWI dtettwi would cry havoc ami let !lp

the iky nf death In eeery I lonoluktn office.

The scientific epkrtion jmty which went

pi the Iwelant In llird't Island and remainedone da), retimed with very III lie science, li.nl

tvmMwhat of adventure, and cawed .1 coodleal of destruction on the Isljtid.

The effcett of the storm in the telephoneart vice eanaed great snwiyancs testcrdiiy.Many of the line were entiiel) titcle. Inthe Mutual office connection could sel.lom he

ITwteil and nothing heard ; in the Hell Co.'toffice connect lorn could be mvle lut littlecmilil be hcaril.

Mia Kale May '"I al ''" rethlenee of herbrothert Mr. Thcinaa Ma), daring Sundayafternoon. Miaa Mav hit lieen constantly fail

lug in health since the death of Mr. Henry May,

htr nncte, which occurriM ral mnnthago. Miaa May waa laotii in Knglanl a:v lui

been here about fi c tear. She learea reta-tiw- a

ami many friends.

The Uoyal llanaiian Hind did not play atUmiiM Square la niajht ow;nr to the pliytical)henornenm that "the Just became saturatedtoward evening." U lutkl and luminouiTwer I the pity f h i that Mr. Herger'a bnjwere not "abuot to approdtle the change."Ureal newtrHper I Great liialn ! 1'lai.e, O

Ilalletin man I if can, the literary buecai;uprm this repnrtorial whanKlooJIe.

The foHowing domestic cargoes hacairielin port slnrr I'rida : Per Mmr Kinau, fiom

Wiivlnard wrM, 4,3&6 bag sugar, to baleswool, S5 hides, I liorse, 220 plcg sundries;per strut ttmr Ixhua, from Kahului. 315 lugucar,SS bags wtatoe, 2S liagf corn, 6 horses,

5 oxen ; jxr stmr Iwalani, from Kauai andway (xrU, IJI ba(;s sugar, 64 lMg "ce, 24lugs nh, 25 hides, burse, 72 birds; per schrHalmLala, from repecVeo, 1,304 lugs sugar;per whr Ka Moi, from Laupahochoc, 750 lagssugar, 23 cords fircaotid; jKr schr Manuokawai, from Koolau, I.I03 bai;. rice, 200 bagmn; per Muir Jame MaV.ee, from Kauai,

510 baq augir, 2,053 K' !! So bagsice, Id hides.

Ilnlnrtilni, Julu auili.Ttw Steanxi Oceania from San Francisco

it oil port av c go to pre, hhe bring 50.3

Chinamen.

"1 Know," said a Fort-stre- Mis. inning'leu, yesterday, " I Know the P. C. A. is a

pr(e caper,' I celiac it say so ittelf."

The schooner Ijuka retumnl to port ycter'da). Slie came lacl. with her "main sail

, left" awl her jiu carried awa) . She sails again(onlay.

The fi.oe-.- of the late Kate Ma) tool place)eMeidiy afternoon from St. Andrew's proCathettial. Ue. Ale. MacMntnh snd Hev,

(.cvige Wallace officiated.

The Kinau leaves to morrow on the volcanortMIe ami w ill not return to Honolulu untilAugust 7lh. This arrangement will givetuainta tda)sat Ililoarvd two at the vol-

cano.

Mr. John I. HUleltll and Miss Matildaihc were marnol Monda) evening at the

, iiftMence of Mi. Tlwmat Hughe on KuluiMint. Mr. and Mrs. Hlaitdell will reside atKohaU, Hawaii, where they go by the Kinautkinuoaw.

TV following .sscnce have brrn Coolnlfar the VntCMW, to tail pit ttwj stmr KinautSMWiraw t A. T. Atkisnon, Mis. Anderson,A. J. lUKlwin wile and son. Ale. Hoyd, CMar, ) J. C. Weed, T. li. Alwaterand wife,Mr l i. Mis Hopper and (.surge H--)''.

7imi Mq, -- in aiHlt

Ihr IWtjiiU. liuie Iredale sailed fiom(tU w trilih.mt July 17.lt.

The wlf-U- Kawailanl lirought 49ubasin c and 4 caUe fium Kiulau last Tuesday,

Out of tha oJJ JapaneM sliipl fromII tw!lii to the vatioiM uanUtloia only 31were wimn,

ThcltihUh IA Jupiter, fiom Umtuil forHonolulu XJjy mVi, was sjvken June tClh,iii20 S. 37' Y., wild os of main and mlrrentop niaMv.

' They had named her Mirander, lictcondensed tlut into Mir, and so I came

to call her alto." ltut why M )uu call hit"Al-t,- " whydMnt you 01!. htr Mir: Too?

1 lunlVull Nssh's. Tf.-- Nooo.U Wm 'hi or." wU ittf Omi Uu,

A.t .(Makaatiawkliunaitvf 1c,illii'm Mkkr Mf 11MU1

tat utut In iika.A l U. iUrt u4 tnmml tal W au iAnl itiuaMuJ M tM ftaM U ku 64o ll.

I vcuit 'lot Jap4sas immigration to thisTun ty ha Ik.w st4iO(wl li ordct l the Im

fr.ii gwtctaruent, pcudiu the laturn toiun luKjraitmHHr lou)t, who wilt nil

on he aiiuvMiH Maru tavday. It it to bebore that the owiwiUiimur mil l aWc to

cta h. thtrsjaa amst us. If planterstuie acted unjustly, amends oojtit t brmaoe It wwhl V a ruiiunsl ctbmity tortatc .He uuaatgtltaM of Jafuaase larnuntl)

i

i Uw mat ml Wvog Tt ln (tiuuxrn n-t h Uii and UeuptM pHfvK-ua- lltttcsey i.i cmsffsaej-- , tcl, iaJi ,,Uce a

few days voce Msrtkal finHrlcHlfieti fromtie witness that he had rrajdjiywl Vsli lu he rrtjunmnmialhMi of Hit

This ta' na) nuke U a tnaltci u(tfcatei u ti ha tJi tore of au0IS.-.-1 wIimii ajtiiy luic found wliy of a uiy

ij ' 111 t laic t Ui t I.

.r.t At ur uial will nt help to whttcnhi Kara. r not rvrn if that retittesi shouldnt hating him mntmoed in nVe

"In today's unse we give, from the P. t

Advrntaer of Jime nth, 1SJ7. the ntRcatl reca

port of t ant. John I'aty, of an eaprorrirg evpe- -

dition he eownwndeil to the Wet anrltrgentry to Ihtt gtnttp. The itnteinefM will be

read with mtenat now that the eiptatttrf'tfrfrlt ia avaa apoai the hliatsjoiii. One itouMetMng it ressMia ht the tnwenutmity of aatwe ofthe oM charts of these ana. TV Captain: re--

rWttn 10 14 tlW pfMM CMWM-f- fMlltVwf m IIIC

banltint Vam of HWwe. ft Co." Saya IViMflMW Ol MNV MfN vt f rtW"JtWW COW

tetftferaty h jaet ow gemrMhtn oet of t he way.

I'rUtrtii, rltt.tll.TV barteMme AmcHa aslied for Pott

Towrr-eti- d y m ballMt.

TV Coosvero wai baatevi .'run th Jltmwhere sV wfll be Creannl ami

toTV Vamashho Maru aalh-- d yesterday at

noon for Yokohama, Japan. TV Royal Ha-

waiian Hand was in attendance.

TV heavy shower of tain which fell in thebmlrw-- at portion of town )etterday morningelendet only a shoit distance be)ond Here-tattf- a

sttret.

Arrive! at San Francisco Am. bUne MaryWrnVelman, 27 da)-- Irnm Honolulu Am.bglne Cliu Spr rcl cK 29 days from Honolulu;hklnc V. II DinMHul, 22 Utv from Kahului ;

chr Id Sthnauer, 29 day from Kahului.

"Jt4iawte rMwtnn I "

"iliflomstlc Iwtlman I"

Mna hvy lh mriy hojman tbst tlieu art !

tmy vflf a Kntfr eiw, a lUMiiwi and a Rod.man,

nd jp )our ihanileM rival fmint hii tokl htackheart '

The Chinete brought on the Oceanic were

all transferred to the qiuiantinc station, eccptthe1 women who, on some!od)' authority,were hmited on Nuuanu stieet under guard, it

it aahl. If the men ought to lie quarantined,why not the women ?

Hcniy llradly was senlenceil ly Justice Mc

Cully yesterday for hating opium in hit pos-

session to si month imprisonment at hardlalior and to pay a line of 5 3 50. Thit i Mr.llradley's second offence. His honor grantedthe prisoner n respite of ten day to settle hitlimine and he was releated on a luil Imnd

for .$5,000.

The following domctlic cargoe havcarritedIn wrl: per stmr, Waiminilo, from Wainianalo, Ooo big sugar ; per schr. haukcouli, 40cords firewood; per tlmr. W. 0. Hall, 3,241bag sugtr, 57 lugt awt, 3 bag coffee, 13

hide, 2 plgt grat sVs, 2 hortet, 129 pVgs sun-

dries and 32 hog.

Stnrnt ,Vfr.The surf on the reef)esteritayafternoM was

a sight not soon to be forgotten liv those w howitnessed it.

The smoVe slack of Raw lint' soap factor)was blown down )eslcrday, crathing throughthe roof of the building in its fall.

large tree near the Kaumakapili churchwas blown down early )cstc(day morningblocking the road until it was cleared away.

iMgernlu trees, fence, awnings and otherslight structure, show et idenect of the storm'st'verity, in various parts of the town, moreliticularily on the oatsUrt.

A section of the high fence w ithin a lot onHctc'aiiia street near Thomas Square, sur-

rounded the plot where Mr. C. C. Colemanhid his first ramie planK was blown downnight last.

Yesterday morning at 2 o'clock a large treemore than li feet in riianutcr fell upon theroof l the house of Steve Whitney on Gar-

den Iine. Mr Whitney wat in bed underthe place wheio the tree struck but the housetimber broke the force of the fall and lodgedthe tree within two feet of his face.

It will be in order now for the "oldestinhabitant" to inform us when such anotherstorm suited the metropolis as prciailedyesterday. Fiercer wind, perhaps prevailedat the Hopper fire of December, 1S77, and

Jheavier rains not long since deluged us, buttake the stnrm as it it, and for

wc know not its like.

(ir.rr iiml Aufr..

The many friends of Kcv. Klias lloml, ofKolula, w ill regret to learn that his health itsuch at to cum Del hU tchnqt ithiag all wmk.He it confined entiicly to the houc.

Snipe saloont are gelling plentiful in Iflloagain. Tbeic arc three of them in the newrow of seres lattly put up for Spreckclt &

Co. The new liquor saloon is not nuking afortune and the Chinctt and Portuguese con

tinue to seL

The Hawaiian School exhibition, Kolula,took place in the natitc church, 011 July 22ndod 23rd. Thcseof that Ainakcaand Makaula

iZnglith Sihoolt, iium!ering together some 160

odd pupilvtook place Jul) 24th, but the weatherduet not Mtor them. After tttcral da) ofveiy warm weather with only occasionalshowers thit one, (Friday July 24II1,) batcome In full of rain, to tat appiicntt) all day.

The !' leign Chutch gathering and friendsmet at the house ul Judg '. S. I.) man, In

Kilo, July 211. An unssaal large numberweie preterit- - There tle lecilatlortt by MitsMay Athciton and Mi.t Helen Settttnccileading by Mist Hall (f Punalkxi 1 vocal

duct by Howard Hitchcock and Ixti I.) man ;

or.n solo by Itrnctt I.) man ; ana an amuungtocal election entitled 1 lie M l;.i;.-- 1 by Mrs.

I.yman anl Mr. U Severance, ap'eaiing tettiectltcly k'.n charactctt of the old gcnlleiinnand hit wife, assisted by a chorus which watplendidly tcmletcil.

The tepoit jutt ittucd fiom the UnitedSlates Gcolog'r.l Suivcy ofticc un themlneial piuductt of lhat country foi (&4shout veiy plainly the effect of the businessleprctsinn which prevailed during the )ear.The value ol JI the metallic ami nonmelallictt.biance produced in the country last yearaggregated but $413,104,620, at against$452,204,625 In 1&.S3, withh in turn watsmaller by $3,Ci),Ouo ihar.ttvc total of IbSj.The decline wat due to a leduction In pucethan to a drs.reae In quantity, arul the pro-

duction In iwtcral nuKrUnt Industrie showeda decided gntwth. Thus the amount of copperplaced upon the nutket in I.V14 was 145,221-- ,

934 puuiuls and in 1SS3 ocly 117,151,795, but

the smaller outut U lhr;iliei year wat valueil

at $iS,o64.So7, against j,jS,CSj f.n theproduct of tSSj. In like inannrt the totalpiiltictKm uf coal showed a net gain in tonnavr of 4,038,326 ton over 1SS3. but a declinein value of $15,726,277, amhiacttc lutingfallen 25 cents pet loo.. The iKtiuleum in

duttiyi teeiiit to bate felt this Influence

met rif all, the production his ing risenfrom 23,400,229 baiitlt iu 1SS3 to 24.cA1.75S

uu elt In lSc!4, while the avenge price Ml off

fiom $l,totoS5crntl pel luiii-l- , so ltut thevalue of I lie laigvt vipply'wat ukmc thau fiveludlkvn, dultut less.

1 1 ti- - ninrmx mmMi it. nAr

San franciten neeilt and want a nw potofliie

Ok Jtrly I Jth the ship Earl of Iralheane,instill tome lime atnee in "tan

Her, had not been raited

Rev Joseph H?mphitl of Woorltwidge Prea- -

htivftaaj Cheniit San rtonafieoajif Weaoj tVPali Mail fiafitte won wtnug In It etpuame.

Matthew TatMi ol IVnleia, CoWbtnia, wiN

etwsstnence ohoftiy the cnttstvnctRMi of achoofrer of abnat je torn. It will he bastt

for owners on the HawnHan Mand.

Mr. IL C. MachVtlane, of tV San Fm- -

rmat Weap, ht anM otrt hit interest it) thatpaper to Mr. J.P. Jackson, (ormerly managingproprietor of t V "n PnmetVo Keening Pott. it

.HtanMaM eonnty, ( 'altfotfit.ate etvmtnaEting an Irrigating canal fiom theToolamne river that will be tony fort wide and tocairy fire feet ol water, ami be from thirty file lo

forty mile m length.

Spmdntroti.a vain Me horse leronging to Mr.

Cbrot SpreekeVt, and a half brother of the greatDetter, dleil lately at the Apto ranch. Thehone wat valued at $30,011 Mr. John Subtlran of this dtr, and tire writer of llii. Imehad many a spin liehind Sprcslation in hityounger day,

Mr. J. C. llcbbard, brother of Mr. II. T,

llcbbatd of (hit cits, wat recently admitted topractice in the United Stale Circuit Com It,California. Mr. llcbbard it a licenced practitioner of the California Supreme Court, anil

and one of the promiting memlicrs of theyounger generation at the California !wr.

CINfCAI. AMLKICAN NOT!..

Oencral Oram wa still aliic at last remtts.

Oen. S. S Ilurilettc, of Vashlngtnn, haslieen elected Commander inCliiel of the (!, A.lt.

Mural mislead says the Republicans will

caur Ohio this )ei; and Consul Oeneial Put-

nam it afiaid they will.

The Cheyenne tndiant arc becoming quiet,and there it a fasoiablc outlook fur the settle-

ment of I lie Indian difficulty.

The abuse of the system of allowing pay toemplo)ccs in the departments at Washingtondining sickness has Icil to a dioilion uu thepan of the Cabinet to discontinue the system.

Mrs. Klirabeth Clei eland hat written toMiss Sarah 11. Cooper, of Sin Francisco, in

appreciation tif the Kindergarten work donein lhat city -- in which Mrs. Cooper i.t pio

neer member.

At a public meeting in Toronto, Ontario,recently, the mayor presiding, resolutions were

pasttd that the further admission of Chineseinto Canada should V rigidly restricted, If nottotally prohibited.

Admiral Joulett, who had been in the sicinit)of Panama for the past three montht.w at onlcicdnoith on the 12th ultimo with the remainingvessels of the North Atlantic squadron sent tothe isthmus at the beginning of the rcct-n- t

trouble. The officers and crews were suffering

from sickness.

Sir Uichard Cartw right places Canadian fi

nances in rater an unfuvoral-I- light. Hethat there hat Iwcn an increase of $200,-000,0-

in the debt, for which there it nothingto show but two railwa)s, one of which h. s

been given away, while nobody cares for theother. Since 1S07 tin' population has In

creased but 30 pir cent., while the debt hatads anced zoo per cent., expenditures 150 percvnt. and taxation 150 per cent.

Enr.orKAN.

The Mrs. of Ireland, it what thsynow call I.ad) Chutclhll.

Reports that the l'oe is ill are false. HitHoliness it cno)ing excellent health.

There were 1,55s nest case of cholera re-

potted in Spiin on the 191b, and 653 deaths.

The Rothchildt hue adsanceil to theKg)ptian Government the sum of ,250,000, tobe paid back in September.

Servia hat formed an alliance with Aut'ria.If Austria should take Macedonia, Sen in will

tcceite a pustion of Hoginia.

The Parncllites suppoilcd the Knglith ('.us- -

eminent in a recent tote to exclude Hradlaughfrom the houc of commons.

The Frci-c-h Minister of Marine states thatmore than 30,000,000 franc will be requiredto lepiir the damage cajs-- d by the FrenchNavy in the recent wat with China.

Lord Salisbury's Cabinet contains thiitrcnincmbcis of the Iliitish aristocracy, who own

50,000 iicres of land and derive therefrom anannual income of aliout three million dollars.

A German school-matter- , who had servedfaithfully for upward of liltv-tw- )ears, statrecently ictired by the government uwn anannual pension of $36 and tcsen meters of fire

wood.

The medical adsUer of the Fnglish Government lias reported against sending a choleracommission to investigate l)i. Fcrran's inocu

lation in Spain. The belief prevails that ling-Un-

a all not be visited thit ) car by the epi-

dein.le.

During the lew sla)i preceding ihe 15th

instant the cemetery force at Valencia, Spain,

hat been so crowded thai the dead bodies arcin man) esse left ltnburiedain the homes for

two ami thiec days, despite the danger of in-

fection am) Ihe intense heal.

A woman quack hat lieen imprisoned inParis for selling at a cuie fur hcait disease a

concoction made by Iwlling )nippy dogt andled earth for nine da)t in oil. Puce, $1 for asmall iot. That chcciful kahuna ii'glit tosuit Honolulu and teeffrc high lulronagv.

FtirtSJ Ilitmatck It toon to have a confeience rA Salliliurg wilh Count Kamoky, Aut-- t

Ian Minister of Foreign AlU'rs, in iclationto the vend question of the Austro-Gcrmi- n

custom. Ilieie U a very billet feeling inAustria in coaw jui-c-

e of the incjetse ofduties by Gcimany,

Dr. Chibict, 1 French oculist, icorti to theAcademic dc Medicine thai, having, beenobligesl to remove a dlteatesl eye fiom a younggill, he replaced it with one taken fccm a

rabbit. At the time of hit statement Ivnicenda)t had clapcl, and thesl;)e had retained iltvitality, rum wat doing well.

Gladstone's voice has failni. Ilcnulongetappeart in pailiameri. He addresses teltcitto hit colleagues wnis.li lS:y read at if they

weie royal documents, (lit doctor hai ttikllyfoiUddcn hit tjicaklng and allow t hit pulientlo cunterse ualy in whlipco. He proinitcthat liljulttone't voice wilt be tettoicd Iu a

few weeks.

The Dutch CluuiU't liat votetl in ofIhe mairucnancc of the public lottery. Thitwill beat hcnccluilh Ihe caie of "State

Ihe ling being oppiseil to u on pnncipie, and nut w idling to fuvrt It callal anylonger "Kojal Uxteiy." It Iu hilhttlayielded to the govetnuient as annual profit uf

490,000 llorins.

Ol the one bundled tuspectt who were in KI

uuiubani tail, Dublin, with Mr. Paruell thieeycuitago, llurvlusn Utu tungesl. seven aiedud, ten have betu kui to iouiI witUinJe foe

III ll IT'S Jlf 11 ' lih I' '

in htsago. Bn kiyn ml New ik Al I

tlsrm hail grmt Imstneitri nt pMfetiKins ut

Itad tu leave Irettnil in rllneouefs-- , ol ll

iwTcrrty 'if tV Crirfe Act brmtght on I

own acts.

TV rear new- - sent to tV " great pfipmrea ta Kate been a great lie. The itnatinn c f aNain at last arleieea wtn about a

follosea 1 TV Haadam ttere VArterf to harrtwrnrantlr oecttpted three unaHlutli un Pet- -

atan terrttiey, lying between SeiaaV and PelrV IMthh ClsTsremittent Vt notl-nn- l

Rwosla tVt any increane In tV Rn ianfoeees in Ih dtrretion nf XaWkar wM be

aa an unfriendly act.

TV ehaaei 1 seats by the Conattratireand IJbcrah in tV Mirth tons uf Common

creating on end uf ciavfoston. IVte waa

imreii drmealtr on nights of great delute ami

divitii.n lor ihe Oiipinition vmf Parnelliiet toobtefn teats; bat now, while tV tatter hold

tVit Ortpoettron places-- the IJVtal havefind tenia where the Canaervatlrea, whom

they Rteatly ontnmnber, ntest lo Sit, and it itfound Impossible to provide them.

At the Kxeter Hall mrelihgjn Iimlon,nly 17th, Gen. llooth read alellerTwrillen by

Mrs. Hooth lo IJiiren Victoria and a reply tothe nirfe from the Dutches nf Itosburghe,who had been askeil by the queen 10 acknow-

ledge Mrt. llooth 't letter, The dowager said

thequrcn fully symphallilied with Mn. Ikmlhon the (iilnful subject of the perils to which

young girts arc exposed, and had already communicjteri Ihereon with a lady connected withthe government, to whom Mrs. lloolh't letterwou'd lo inutiediately forwarded.

Woilh, the Parisian man milliner, hat precipitated a socivlcritu all over tlm woild by

publishing a black list of persons who cheathim and hit fellow dress makers. The list

includes 2,000 name, divided into clastc A,II and C. Class A arc cheats and bankluplt; class II order moie from vanity thinthey can pay for, and the clast C require theirbills to be colleidtsl by law. The last clastincludes 21 princesses, about 100 duchessesand inuntcstct, 1 1 acticvics and (0 Parisiancouttctant who possess their own hotels.

Il it proposed to construct a new ironclad(the fourth) at Nicolaieff, Russia, destinedfor the defense of the (Hack Sea coasts. It Is

to be ol sleel nml irnn, the under portion be- -

ing cased in wood. The center portion will bearmorid; fur the defense of the enginet andmachinery a portion of lite deck will becovered witli armor-plate- s tvso inches thick.Willi engines of 8,000 horse-powe- r indicated,llic speed of ibis new Ironchd will reach, it ithoped, sixteen knot. 'I lie armament it lo be12 inch guns, firing en lkttt from a coupleof turret on the upper deck. The estimatedcost it 4,000,000 millet, or, in round ntimliers,

.400,000. The machincr), s.lc, will beby tin-- llaltic factor).

Tilt. RtST THE OF VVORIIl.

The Chinese crop prospects are gloomy. '

Petroleum and new gold mines have rccentlybeen discovered in Japan.

IXirthquakc skocks of great force occurredon the 19th ultimo at m)rna anil Chetmc, inAsia Minor.

Japan it is rumored In promicri In helj'

China if the Russians continue to encroachupon the Corean coast.

Feart of a diplomatic mitunilerttanding between Chili and the Uniird States are hintetlat by American papers.

As a result of the recent eailMuuJ.es in

Cashmere, 3,oSt persons lost iheir nit' ., 70,.000 holiscs (were laid in" mint, and 33,000animalt lost their lives.

Negotiations are pending with tvyo greatGerman banking-houtc- s for a loan of 0

to China for Ihe construction oi rail-

ways, telegraphs, wharves and other tradeimprovements throughout the Celestial Um-

pire.

A day has now been fixes! for tne JapaneseLand Chinese troops to leave Corea simultaneously, In accordance with the tcrmtol thetreaty recently concluded. Rumors of intriguesin Corea to place the whole peninsularunder Russian protection arc gradually receiv-

ing credence.

The Arabs of the upir cUi believe that Ul

Mahdi is dead. I.uplon llcy, with his son,has arrived at Scnaar. This Cimine in Kordo- -

fan hat become terrible, and has extended toKhartoum. Hostile Arabs will not advance toDongola for several months.

The Japan Postal Bureau contemplateslo acting tho rate of postage on newspaper, asdbooks and InlifKlucing the parcel post system.

The notification announcing the resumptionof specie pa)inentt from next Januaiy hat lieen

icceiveil with general rejoicing-b- thec1at.es in Japan.

The daiiuge caused by a recent overflow ofthe Vodo river in Oiaka Fu, Japan, it to ter'ou lhat, with the single ditlrict of Higathinarl coil, it is ttatcil to lie at follows t Fort)one villages, containing 5,631 houtes, weietlooded, and fields totlmxlenl of about 2J.ICO

acres were more or lest damaged.

Tli AmirjnitUiH .Sfirr.The llotton Cvening Jouinarof recent date.

ijM "Hie iionoiulu s.oiiimcrcui Aitvcr-titc-

In a recent issue, tiuhlithetl the follow

Ing t 'Wc have lieen inlormcd from n vclialdc

source that Daggett ha Isreii In-

trusted with a commission to Washington liyhi uiilestv on mattert of itiiooitance con

nected with the affiirs of this UnL'jijfii.' Injan Interview un the alwvc tubjecl, jnihlisholin the San 1'iancitcn livening I'ntl, Mr. Dag-

gett, who arrived here from Honolulu vestcr-daj-

itf)uolcd at sa)ing t 'It h true I havelieen intrutled with a 'coininlrfoii hy KingKa'alaua to the United Slates Clovcrniucnt,hut I am not at lilietty to stale itt object.'It hat heen atccrtalncd from other sourcesthat Mr, Daggett's secret mittion It liclievcdto 1 for the punniM uf ojKning negotiationtfur tho annexation of the Sandwich Itlandt tothe United States.

Commenting uiwn topic, th Siena CountyTribune of July loth, tayt : " TliatDaggett heart a commission fiom King Kali-Lau- a

with thit em In view it eatieinclyWhat does the United

States want these barren volcanic eruptionsfur They produce tugai and lunaiut. Allthingt else are irurirteil. Wc cannotconjecture what benchlt wouM accrue lo theUnited Stale, by annetation, an I venture thenrcdiclltM that Ciaut Sreclctt and the Itcatyhare more to do with Daggett't tecttt mission

than King KalaVaiu."

lialph Mimir, the well known ttatittldanwn'.ev. tu the Timet that the wilhdiawsl afdirect mail teivice between San IiJiM-isc- an.)

the Auttttliaa colonies nest NoveinUti It fif

a ruoie tei'iout rutuie than mant eplimigiue. Since 1S74 U. ". iiui.utt luve U

ciMtci) alaiut I jo pet cent,, while U. S. eiKKtthate irtcteatcd over 240 jki ceut., etclutire ifijclt. "Wc do not ful such a ratlyifc IncrraacIn oat domestic etrnHtt to any l.f tho lest olthe wuild, duiinn Kn ycait ; still 001 1, thecipuclt lo lhk cot.Hiirs are of a niluie tlt.cuuiprtws ahuott tvety ankle uuuufluitl la

vOcnfr.U JttiDrrliocmculo.

"hilJJCulie5iifij&o0ii.

No. 42 Queen Street.

Have riw hmsttnir

Per Alameda U John D, Sprrtki:,

uanr mnrattrt or

Assort Oil Mri'phu tUtinn

sViWWlltjJ pPf 9H

Mfe FW, OoMw rtiie.Ht. rtosw. TI Itttsttt. '

artt Wkaai, ItVtj,itack IwitW nnl,

Saett 'ni, IVtsr, sVMt,SttU V.J"7claal,

SarVt Hn, faamraaa' lite.Srt titans, Willi r,

rat:t LVaM. Itnl.Satli Ittam. ttatswi.

art Itnsaa, HorK--.

, wsi tkttrtt, IJatt"Wis Oitlana. I tout M.r SVai,

Juts fatutrt, IVnii In riawtHM,

Case Mtmars,Csw hilra Soil rrMltrt,'

Cave Mcttliifn llftwil,Last LvarVeit heat, te Its, lalta,

tastCom Matt, wfctst Mutates.Canat Jtt. lulUhtf,

La- tm tttaiekCast Htie Mam,

task 11A Hams,IVes K. I'. Ibeon.

Caw Faiitutal' ltrJ,I, 1 1U j. I,(, Blrliaiik t Ijtnl. It. tIL

Cam IVirl-An- Llfil, 10 Ik rail.

Cw Wlt.tiwj- - lluiirr. In m,lUlftUl. lluttrr, I'ltUe lioll,

(jr. I.U. Mutlrr, IWlf Hoi!.Ilatrfiikitw fluttrr,iiH lU.(tc.

(jr. firUnt Ikitlcr. (lilt cr,Ca iS'tw Cli'',

lativtr. Bfttl Ml. Sail Ctxlfisili,I'.IU fierce Columbia KivrrSalmm

Ca-r- rli I cgf,CuttTA IdUittlry Siiftvht

IU.xc lfoAn Ijiumlry Suap,iWtni llrixnn.,

t'ur Java CoiTm, HtutieJ am) OrouoJ, t Ik tltn.Sact(.rn CrtlTce,

CItet Jjian'Itj. t Ik iMwrt.Chwti Jfuti tei, H Ik pajvcni

IJotes tfauii;, IxnJoti i.irtf.JC taict Uatmiw, IajiiJoh Iyen,

J( to,c lUKtnt. l4MJm. ljtcr,ltuct lliilttipf, IMuatt4.

nntm Ciiron,Itovei Currantt,

Ca Chooobte,Cnve Mled ricltcs

irt jJtpicvfta oI Ir,1 'ili Mtnce Mculi AltiMrtta.

Stck jilih Walnut.Sa. li fvifi Shell AI.non.Ii,

Sackt'lexa IV . , extra largf.

Ca Culifyrnla Hone), i Ik linCu'tM KiiiiT, Moms Cu'. frtilicai.iitfil

Prutl, Jtllie4ar.il VeKelablM.11al4 WrapDinj 1'jpT, extra .(iialitj.

A LAITuK AS90RT1RNT Vf

Ih'st California Lvuthuv

lnjT, l!evnii, SVIrtins ami Ufpcrt.Frrncli ami Vinencan Calf-Li-

bht-v-ij bkim. (toat Mm.Ifawniiaii .SaJJIe 1 rte.

And other good too numerous to mention.

trc very low, andhe oTd at

LOWEST MARKET RATES.

H, W, KcCHEiNSV I SON,

315-i- No. 42 Qnoon Strong

G. BHEWER & 08.,OiTer fur jie to per

I'AHIC AiMY TURN Kit,Fron IIo4oii, due

1, 1SS5,FrartLIin Sto.e Coal in Catlta

H tll. truvhtd Sunar,Cav raier' Ale OnraNc

Cases llttc llaudleft,Itlk No. i Kmin,

CitMT tKetLurrnwii.

XKSTS TlilfXKS,I lay Cullers

lax laclinjr,Ji tU. Wiltn'niftnilar,

Wddintftton I'tich,Hale Navy Okum.

i!ax x I ard (Jit,(Ir.UtiktM.es Irvn $

FARMER'S BOILERS,I.I J. lU'u) &ll.

,UlJi. Ceiiirftt, ij a?l s In Ok Howt,Cae. Axe aril I ul Handles

Canal llanowslltU Kx I'riiue I'tnl,

Kei;i Not U(Ciinilatrbinl Coal tn Uillr,

jm.vi,.i coisjuai:.Sial Cordage.

Oak. lAiinbvr,Miiie WakI I.umUr,

Walnut (flutter,AJi Lumlarr,

jstcrn Mme I'uie I.umUr,KtfrtfVSorb,

Tinned 1 omatoei.

Electric & Downer's Kerosene OilKeltvliupAJui CodhU I)lfa

Cu Clamrili CoJTtinJ Glicrkius

Cue faua i leat.- if... I...' t'.n.a,. Va,nW":a) itus.ts.iiiB i uiimiu "ni'i

Cum HuLu' MmU ruitl) Poup,Caia--f lluekia'tt Ox tail Shj)j,

ltiX.HS U.i? m Itoardi. "

da Chairs Colltaia Wa4((.m. tit, Meial Mttatl.tii.

Krz'i dtuw t.1. Mieaifcin.t V-- ls

lltU Iwtiw. lUlt Uiui.Hide I'oiton, Ltttwcd Od,

Catcvtlurpcniioe

tUtHv Jtrown Soap,HtUvMuieral 1'aUt.

Mamnvolh K(j,ker,IkxA CS Aot1rd.

V,itiHon lopCarriafi, JCaVMCutled Hair.

Iruni'CasU4aC Soda.

t. rlio. oisxt.rj?ar9

AND K IN

BOOTS Se SHOJS,FRENCH DRESSING.

No tMI rrt Knat. MatsaUlss, H. J.

4 JT laa L(M aoi Wd aMunatrw f

Latls-t- , GcalUauw't aat CruUr.a't

B.lt, Sbossv Slij parr, naatiat Puairit, ttr.

ToWfondMiaa tslaAst,

liLaa aa a. as tti.twi fu. auaitar iiaal.lt vlUM MsHltiaatM u4 miVf aai-M-l'l

Piciicv.u Jbbcrltoctuctito.

LJ OLLISTHR & CO.,

ivrirn nil' .ifrUSTim rt fin:

1'iwFjtf ,Mw?vri jimkttutffii

Jaaa.aBBstsabtaaaliiBk. attaaaftLataaaahKaa. wiwf nil Mr

ntrymioini'S ritninrM m: r,

JKsi nnlfiil. TM. It mIhiWIM

l lyt tt fHRWm (taT4Mhl9 M tnt

wo-- j. Aiurw itar.dtt netjr ffIwt tjr

Collulnlil Triiw(all wrntpcR and Ml)

S urn I nnl Intniinnlf111(1. SiitUnn

and Ihe lirgfM and ttMMt oam.tctc tltxk tf

DRUGS,

CHBMICALS.

PATENT MKDICINKS,

ever Vrf-- t In id! KInKdont. a

targe Involvr of

ism:n Mi:iin:mt t. ;.i.v srusai:

direct from Kur,f f' ftoin

tAiid or dirt. Acriit for

PARKK 11AVIS & CiVS

IMiarmacetittcal I'riparatlousl

J. C AYll & GO'S

t Patent Medicl'.iei,

lloriefcril's Ac'd Phosphates,

Groeu'i August Fluvcr St. German Syrttp,

AUcock Pnrout IUaittr Co1,

Murray Si Lnninan Florida Vitcr

Verba Buena lUttfri- -

OLL1STER & CO.,Hare alio Proritton and MannUc

fjcturerf of tlie cekttated

Khcunnllc Llmtntiii s -

EUCALOFO R.TVL

Aacntt fur Win S. Kinibjll & CV

'riiiroiil I'miltii I'atr,

Tubiucn ii.lft iUttitvettvt

which have nu l Ilia

largest .ittuitiricllt f

TLUG TOBACCO AND CIGAIti; IN

THE KINGDOM.

OUR GIKGF.X ALE & SODAW'AT ER

Ins aUayt Ueii iecaisiiiil at llie i

' Usl In the matVet.

OVK ttKCKK ALK F.XW.ICT

tciiiff mauurlureU frf.ui mir civil

iiriYtlt furmnla In-

Ntw Viiflt.s

AUKA I KI) WAI (IRS in I'alenl or Cm It

Slilrrcit Uitllet as ileirJ.

WIIOUISAI.K a Kt.r.MI,,9 NUUANU ST.

KKfAtl, Oi. I OKI'NasrJ

LUCAS,f

, CONrKAClOU awl HUII.DhK,

sti:am i'j,Axrxa mu.m.s.'if.rHriite, Jf0firifin.

Maiiuractur rfl Llrlt of

Mouldings,"" "lif'ackets,

Window framei,. Blinds, sashes

and Doors' and all kinds of wond-wo.- lt f.alsli.

TurultiK, croll, itud liwald auwiui;.

tit lliall U Itaoin. anj Saniitjl, atoitldiiSiarHl Tin1 lailrts.

OliDF.ItS I'KOMI'II.V ATTKNIli10 tSiiWOKK r.llAKANILtl)

llrilrt fr.HH lli raUr lUamJt uJlcltad. tii'tCIIAS. SjNUTH,

No. 16 Kl 4 Sr., Ilovbu tu, II, I.

ruTicii wiw. m w misz,C9ffr asd HiMt Ira& Worktx

TuTTrTAT--, ROOFER.KA.NGES, TINWARE, Krc

HT Alt ' (tuaKlaa4 and tat twsttrt &llJaHtallaiMladtts, P1aaWsiinbrMsailacUla

I KTT8K HBADi AND BILL HKADai

IVtMlwJ ikMllr at4 al rssaiaasaUc lalf. tt lt 5awtirrtaiuiu

Jtv ilbbciliociiirnlo.

JOHN,jUiu

Kjij .y' 2MT,

TWWataWMaatWaaWaaBaar"aalar',''Jj3.. aiaA. WHlaV tkaMKaalaBaaJaaiaLJBB

sZlf. J ttmMtir ti Sj-- ' saaooaal j.bIBK

uSSttBKiKlW3UKUKtt aaaaal

Al (ho Old Stand, No. 8 St.,niloUlU! Will (h! tit IN At t IIIFIUtM IMIKdVlll

ss rr r i"a s v tv .i- - i. v iv s. je i-- ,

tlnmke Iron Wv, llala and Nkl.l-ltHe- J V

Ita Wai, af alt liistts ;t flomooltttt I

linrwMd iMirrmt ,

IMimihiiijj, Tin. CoppiirOrsU I. KlNt,

bbcvliocincnlo.

"'rjtiMMMMMMMMMMW

k.ialium.tnu Honolulu,

Atr A varlilt of Moose KumUhlnt (loodl too puinrrcu to nmtllon.

E. 0. HALL- - & SON, (Limited.)Have jutt ncciviil 'i: Uiik Mimlota nlul other miivalt

HostonCard Matches. Dovt iter's Kerosene Oil, Fram'n Axlc.Grcasc,Cotton Waste, Ice Crrnm Freezers, (all sties),

Eddy's Refrlfjcrntors, (all sizes), Lawn Mowcts, ,lton Agate Vntc

s rl? O A" J U S A IVa may

Hall's

PLOWS AND BREAKERS,Ol AI-- SlI.s- - -

Htr Owing to Ihe umtMiat ikmaml for Hit aloe our tuck tin liaiitl ma. very nuu.liictlucrd, ami i fchipmiMU hnn artivnl just in lime lor the present Tor Mints anil suetsec (kscrii'.ivr catalogue, ,cnl on ti(Miratioii.

UK CONSTANTLY ON UANU

--A. Xi.A.:RQ-:E- - stock: - - -iNci.uniNCColgate's Toilet Soap, 1 lames Soap, No. I Laundry Soap (In case),

Sterling Soap (in cr.se), Ktasne Koup (in case),Iloilcd nnd liaw I.insced Oil,

I.ard Oil, hkidegate Oil, 1'canul Oil, Neatt Foot Oil, Castor Oil,T U K 1' i: N T I N i: , c "

PA1XTS OF IIVBUY J)UKCJUPTWX,And a very hupciior Stock of all Kinds of

H AEE 7 ABE,All to he had nt Ihe

lowust ivrjncp'r bates., E. O. HALL & SON,250-;- Ci Corner Toil nnd King Slreils, lloniilulii, II. I.

Clotlima,

414, 4K,

.s

NOTT,

HaKU(BH I

naltstttrisMjftai aad I sttil I'm.aWft IadlfecftrtIWW.5IM. IVi?fll

Vmid Shoot IroiibiVoi

ArillNHt.D 10? .

.1 V IV 12 fi ,i.oi ui

Celebrated

OF SO-A-F- S,

1

..'. imiis.iiw.,hiaiiotter. Wra,llooU ami Slioen, Good,'I'rtinks, )'Xc,lfiirnishing ('.otitis, Kir,, n

Pacific Hardware CompanyXiI3VIITE3D.

Successors to Dillingham & Co., and Samuel Nott.

, IMPORTERS .DEALERS IN

Hardware, Atrlculfitnt! InijiJaiiiciits,House. Jitnilsihif Omuls. .l Ooiicnif JlvrchamliHt'.

Just received lMdy's Ittfrigtrator and Ice C'liestt, new-- stvlc of Chandclitis Jml I.iluai)I.nns Stovi and Itangc, Kcrottiic Oil Slnvrt,

FVi,I3?iDBA.JTI2,S 5c HOWE'S SCATjES.All of which arc mfered iiin faviir.il.lc let int.

PACIFIC HARDWARE COMPANY."

3st-- lf

COMPLETE OUTFITTERS.. -

Wc am Coiti Ictc Oulfittcrs for Men, Utiles ami Children of ail ages, anil ,

all Mations in life. -it'

of the Hawaiian I&laiuU will it nf advantage to tend fur ourlarge Illustrated Catalogue, descriptive of llic latest U)lcs in

tS.... .. rS.....t. I h...... C?......lt. It'll. U ftTltlt9 Ilyicaa tivnnts, uiiiisw jo'iis-h- ,

Millinery,DuineMia., Mat,iVhitti C,oods, Noiiom,Neckwear, Ilit)tlcs,Undetwear, Jlainiuorks,

l'.u - .rM

'

iSent. i"ro, 1?om. piiUl to imy Vdli'ea.c

We aim to lute our irirca lower Own lliow of,all tHlicr dWf. Ci'- -

lometa oidvr from tu through ihe mails, get tl.c taim gootk at irira. itaif t.reetit at our counters. T Z,J- -

. 'Suull ordet filled uiih'tJic mihc care and atlcnlion ai laijj mm.

400. 412, 4N,

bit:i. ;SL., u'

.W.vt.V..ij'jl j&jzM rjui

s,8-t- ;j

It. CJ-

x.w.nv.,

Fanty

Ktc,

AND

find

.

-

lf.&'Klr,

vtho

Mherwarc,

5 Ta""

1 LUHL r

K ST., ttoaiitajHta aTaM

WEWSTOCK

o

i'a'!'JcJ'J;al"Jl.vl-"- ,,

ins:

Chi