fithtt lit ma ft - evols.library.manoa.hawaii.eduf i if ithtt1 1 1t:ifld rd ms ay a a yikhidh 4x a...

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i if f itHtt 1 1 1T: iflD rd MS AY A A yikhidh 4X Ma I I a 0 .1 lil! lit iK ! v ii kb .j a j i at r vi ' j it a ft Si VOL. V. NO. 44. HONOLULU, HAWAIIAN ISLANDS, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 188(5. PRICE 5 CENTS. 33uslnf.ss tfatfls. THE DAILY gusuuss ar&s. bcrtistmtals. Sdrcrtisennts. gdcertiscments BESTAIBASTS. TO PLANTERS. MONTHLY PAYMENTS. Pacific Commercial Advertiser IS PUBLISHED Every Morning Except Sundays. IMPORTANT Real Estate Sale UNION Fire and Marine Insurance Co. Of New Zealand. CAPITAL, : 1 0.000,000 Established an Asreury at Having: lor the Hawaiian Island, the un- dersigned are prepared to accept risks against Fire in dwellings, stores warehouses and merchandise, on favorable terms. Marine risks on cargo; freights, bottomry, profits and commissions. Losses promptly adjusted payable. 82-I- wtf WM. G. IKWIX A CO. , GREAT WESTERN INSURANCE C031PANY. 50 WALL STREET, NKW YOiia fllhe above Company bavin? eslab A lushed an Agency at Honolulu, for the Hawa- iian Islands, the undersigned Is authorized to accept and write IVJFtIIVl: RISKS ON Merchandise, Freights. Treasure, Commissions, and Hulls. AI current Rates. WM. C. IRWIN & CO., tf Manager for Hawaiian iMlauds SUN FIRE OFFICE OF LONDON. PIONEER Steam Candy Factory AND BAKERY. F. HORN, Practical Confectioner, Hotel ft re t. 78 tf Telephone 74 ROOMS TO LET. AND COM tuUTAHLfc rmswutu NEAT at No. 3 Kawalahou lane, a few steps from the Government building. A man and wife can also have comfortable furnished rooms, or two rooms unfurnished, and aeconiuiouawons to cook for themselves. MRS. WARD. 195-- ATTORNEYS-AT-I.A- CURKMCK W. VOLN KY V. ASHKORl". ASHTOKD. Ajnfrd A AMllorl, ATTORNEYS, COUNSELLORS, SOLICITORS, ADVOCATES, ETC. OlHce Honolulu Hale, adjoining tho Post Office. Zb.uwu BROWN. ATTORN AND CECIL Public, Campbell's Block. Merchant street. ui J. Til. MONSARRAT, ATTORNEY AT LAW v AND NOTARY PUBLIC. Keal Estate In any wart ot tne UAnirhi sulil urn! Teased on Com mission Loans Negotiated and Legal Documents Drawn XO. 37 MERCHANT STREET, Gazette Block, Honolulu. f WENNER & 00. 93 Fort Street. Have on hand New Foreign aud Homemad Jewelry. JWutches, Bracelets, Necklets, rins, Lockets, Clocks, And ornaments of all kinds. Silver and Gold Plato, FJeiraut Solid Silver Tea Sets. Suitable for Presentation. ENGRAVING AND NATIVE JEWELRY A Specialty. Revalrlux In all Its brandies. tST Role Agents for King's Eye Preservers. 6 -- mart -- 1 vC lie Forest Meat Market, HOTEL ST., Opposite the Fashion Stables. Bornhold l Co. Proprietor. Keep the best Beef and Mutton these Islands af ford. Also, the very iesi sausages mnur. discount from any other maker. Give us a trial. 382decl4 tf WM. McCANDLESS, No. 6 Queen Street, Vlh Market. Dealer In choicest BEEF, VEAL MUTTON, FISH, etc. Family and shipping Orders carefully attended to. Live Stock furnisuea to vessels i non notice, and vegetables of all kinds suppnea to order. 2 tf Metropolitan Market KINO MTAEET, O. J. WALLER, PROPRIETOR. Cnoleest Meats from Finest Herd Families and shipping supplied on SHORT NOTICE and at the Lowest Market Prices. All meats delivered from this market are thor- - i i.i,in,i . immAttatlv . . .tor Icillfriz . hv means l llliii v. u. - j - - 1UUIIT p.udi Drv Air Kefrizerator. V' "...r:." .,7 I,. Inlcv orooertles. I. l'iH4TEEn TO KEEP IX)NGER .prt riKUVERY THAN FRESHLY- - KILLED MEAT. I43tt M. THOMPSON, A TT 0 KN EY - A T -- 1, A W , And Solicitor in .Chancery. Office. Campbell's Block, second story, rooms 8 and 9. Entrance on Merchant street, Honolulu, H. I. 40j tf We have Just received, by the steamer ALA MEDA, a consignment oi Automatic Trash Feeding Furnaces, t-- .. .., an.t flvn tnnt fiiriincs. complete with rrt hr. bearers and trash carriers. Machines of this make are now ir. successful operation at Spreckelsviile, Makee Sugar Company and other plantations. PLANTERS AND OTHERS Interested are requested to cull and examine the above, tor prices anu luriner inuwuwn "f ply to Wm. (t. Irwin & Co., 295tf A Kent (titem ,t- - Edinhnrgh Streets, WHOU'SALK A HKTAtL Dealers I HAY AM) K A I , Telephone No. 175. Goods deliver,"' promptly. Ilnuil Order Kolielteil. 91if TELEPHONE 55 PNTERPRISP 3 PT.Attti FT7iT Li Alnkea. near Queen St. C. J. HARDEE. Proprietor. Contracting & Building. MOULDINGS AND FINISH ALWAHS ON HAND. for sale Hard and Soft stovewood, Cut I and Split. 21-- tf GRAHAM PAPER COMPANY, St. I. .ll4. Jt . Manufacture and Supply all kliwls of Hook. News. Flat antl Eabcl Papers, irimlpm' HoartlM. Twines, Etc. W. G. RICHARDSON, r RESIDENT AGENT, 205 IeiIeslorir Street. Telephone No. 47. SAN FRANCISCO. v ir u aiu AiieutioH trtven to A. mm. ..h rniilrartD. 5S tf&W Eastman's Royal Perfume ALOHA FOR SALE BY ftanson. Smith & Co. Sample bottle free. TRY IT. 68 tf I.. COKKf. I.. J. LYONS. LYONS & COHEN, .Auctioneers AND General Commission Merchants Beaver Block, Queen St., Honolulu CJales of Furniture. Stoek, Keal Estate . O and General Mercnanoise properiy h.m.--iu Sole Ak fp American & European Merctadise. 19I-t- f T. J. SPEW r Special Agent for the Michigan Portrait Co. Producers of the finest grades of INDIA INK. WATER COLORS. CRAY ON AM) FAr.L. "a.. office AT J. WILLIAM'S Pliotoxrapn allery. 102 FORT STREET. Honolulu Hawaiian Islands. Where a lar?e variety of specimens can be seen at all times. Mr. T. J. Spence will frequently visit the several Islands of the group, when he will he pleased to show specimens and take orders for same. 369 Claus Spreckels. Win. O. Irwin. CLAUS SPEECKELS & CO., BANKERS, HONOLULU, HAWAIIAN ISLANDS. Draw KxchRUge on the principal parts of the world. Will receive deposits ou open account, make collection;! and conduct a general banking and exchange busiiiesH. Deposits bearliie IntereBt received In tbelr Sav inga Department 8ubect to published rules and ... ?. rultt" - ia - 1- 1- M. PHILLIPS & Co., autl Wholesale IeIer In importer Boots, Shoes, Haw, Men's Furnish- ing and Fancy Goods. No. 11 Kaahumanu Street. Honolulu, ii. l. WH-w- u OLACS 8PRK0KBI3 wu. a. IBWIK. WM. Q. IRWIN & Co., aftiAtt I'ACTORN aud CouimlNttlou H. HACKFELD & CO., COMMISSION AUEXTS. GENERAL Queen St., Honolulu. H.I. bannins. W. MAKRTKNS. ED. HOFFSCHLAEQEE & CO., Tiu porters & Commission Merhants. JL vtueen street, Honolulu. H. I. U-- u A. S. CLEGHORN & Co., I mporters and W liolesale and Ketall dealers in uonorui iiiuiunaiiuisc, Corner Queen and Kaahumanu Su. 15-- tf : MACFARLANE & CO-- . - prrrilOLENALE DEALERS A3TI UEN. f eral Jobbers In WINES and LIQUORS. No. IS Kaahumaun Street, HONOLULU. 19-- U M. S. Grinbaum & Co., IMPOBTKBA OF Oeneral Merchandise and Commls slou Merchants, Honolulu, II. I. No. 124 California street, San Francisco, Cal. 104-Jyl-- ly J. M. Oat, Jr., & Co., STATIONERS & NEWS DEALERS, Hawaiian Gazette Block. 27 Merchant Bt., Houolulu. II. I. 65 t THOMAS LINDSAY Manufacturing Jeweler, No. 6i Kwisnu Street, Honolulu, II. I. Particular attention paid to repairing. 22tf ALYIN IS. BASEMAN, BOOK BINDER, Paper Ruler and BlauU Book Manufacturer. nDnnbkiniIni, nf ill rioofrf ntlon uRf 1 v knd V. - - - ' r ar promptly extcutea, ana reiuuuwHe iuir. Gazette Building, 07 tf MERCHANT 8TB KKT. j. c. johnson & co., LEATHER, HARNESS, SADDLERY, FIREMEN'S EQUIPMENTS, SaQ Kranclac0t Ch, itiaw itanf r Tanneries. Hole i ...... ... Harness and all otner Kinas oi ieamrr 15Us-- IV m. M. GOTO, lnyirlau and Surjceon, i .,,. .vr,.(iii and skin disease a spec- - the residence of Hon Jas. n.. .trut Virmlimi. Honolulu. OthVe hours, 1 to 5 p. m. fcundays, 8 to 12 a. m. Paitles on the other islaudscan consuu uj iei LEVI STRAUSS & CO., 14 and 16 Battery street, San Francisco, Cal. Importers of Foreign and Domestic Drygoods, Hosiery, umies auu ucui a c ui uuuum uuuus. Sole Proprietors and Manufacturers ot the cele artcd FATtN i nivtitu ilviauu, 479 an26 87 All accounts for Advertising and Job PrlntUf at the Pafiflc. Tommerelal .t. tlaer Office will from thU late be present fo Pay- ment monthly. Honolulu. March 2. 18S. Fulton Iron Works, HINCKLEY, SPIERS & HAYES, Of San FrwuelHeo. All kind- - Of Machinery and Boliem. MACHINKHY, KpecialU. WK AND REFRIGERATING COKLIKH ENG1M. "AW1M.K BOILERS. DEAN K Al It. A( jjj' KA" . LLl.WEI.I.-V.- STEAM PUMI-S- . ETC.. ETC. iiHf-i.1-- . 'OW" .. UnANv K. B. U STANLKV. Spruance, Stanley & Co., Importers and Jobbers of Fine WHISKIES, WINES and LIQUORS, 410 rout St., San rraM4-lrs- . 57 tf A w S. DP. Taylor & Co. Agents South Coast Paper M'10" Pioneer aud San Geronlmo l'aper MtlU. 8TRAW TArEIt. BOOK. MANILA, ETC. Manufacturers and Ix-ale- 411 and 410 Clay street, Kan Frunclhco, Cal luHjylOly Jo.. I. HALL & SON Commission Merchants, NEW YORK, SAN FRANCISCO, SYDNEY. w ; Diiiiiiiin,CaiTigaii & Co. HARDWAKE, IRON AND HTEKL MK11C1IAKT8 San Francisco, Cal. Deminc: Palmer' Milling Co., OF THE CAPITOL MILL I Offlce 202 and 204 Davis street, San Francisco Manufacturers or and Dealei all kinds. Oatmeal, Bran, MfcUtlins. V0"'! Ground and Rolled Barley, Crar ked beat Cracked Buckwheat Flour, O. Cak; Ml Hominy, Etc., EU;. Jll " .- - KUL.IJSr3i! fc CO., Imiortcrs of HATS and CAPS. Nos 20and2SBatiery Street, H. E. Cor. of Pine, . MANFRA 'CIMCO. LLIS & MI K Wnd Commission Dealers In Hay, Grain and Feed 25 and 27 KPEAR STREET, Between Market and Mission. SAN FRANCISCO, a- - Order Hollrlted. 423dec29-l- y Whittier, Fuller & Co., Manufacturers of PIOJS'EER WHITE LEAD, PACIHC RUBBER PA 1'NT PAINTS. OILS, WINDOW GLASS and Alt- - TIWTS' MATERIALS 21-2- 3 Front St., t Sa FraueUco. 424-d2i-- ly nuiciiiau uAvnuuv iiuivi, Sanwome Street, Opposite Wells, Fargo A Co.'s E press, mi doot from Bank of California, HAN FRANCISCO, CAL. This Hotel Is In the very center of th business portion ol the city, and has been renovated and newly f urnlbhed throughout. Boi one block from . . uumahiii (Jomnanv's ofllcw. The I UK ji rsun ' r - traveling public will Mud this to be the most con- venient, as well as tha most comfortable and Hotel In the city. Board and Room, 'l and 81 23 ier day Hot and cold baths free. None but the most ob- liging white labor employed. FREE COACH TO AND FROM THE HOTEL. MONTGOMERY BROS., 350decl Proprietors. DR. C fJ-"WES- T'S FAMOUS ELECTRO MEDICAL BELT forms of dl' Cures all ease with out ruedl-lall- y all the clue, espec forms of Impurity of the hlool and sexual aliments In cither sex. Moi powerfnl Belt and only one In the world charged with water. Full directions sent Wsend to DR. C. N. WEST, No. C52 Market st. San Francisco, Cal. Sole Proprietor and 1'aten tee. 51 A.F.HINZ. WM. PLAGKMANN YOLO MILLS, NE. Corner Mission and Main Streets, HAN FRANCISCO, Cal. Telephone No. 5flS. IlJnz A IMag-etnaim- , Manufacturers of Extra Family, Graham, Rye Buckwheat and Rice Flour; Rye, Oat. Corn aud Feed Corn Meal; Sago, Tapioca, Farina, Bnck-wheatGroa- Hominy, Cracked Corn, Pearl Bar- ley, Ground Feed, etc., etc. Dealers In Grain and Fed of all kin Is. Grinding done i order. 125 ana y SUBSCRI PTIONS : Daily 1 C. Advertiser, one year ,..6 00 DAILY P. C. ADVICKTISICK, SlX inontbS.. ... 3 oo Daily P. C. Aovebtiskk, three months. ... I 60 DAILY P. C. ADVF.KTISKK, ptT inOUtil 60 ufvt.-u't- v o i' i kve-r-tink- one vear 5 00 .. -- ., U..hu.rinti.M ..r . , W P I'. A. , (InflUdtllK postage) - w ow Payable lnvariuhly in Advance &tluerli$emeni5. TO LET. A TWO STOKY HOUSE, EIGHT KOOMS. IX. Apply at C. atKii'M noe Store. 4HJ If ANOTHER TEST. i B. Wil-hi- re Jfc Co,, Agents MACK E ALE & UltBAN SAFES, 20G California Street, Sau irancisco, oai.: nontiomon Tn renlv to vonr iuauirv con cerning the opening of the Burglar-Proo- f Cheat in the sale oi ine omce oi me the Supreme Court now so well known as The jVIcCartliv Safe, I will uaj that I took charge of the office on wednettday, the btn instant. v- - mmo lava nrtvioiis. nnaucceasful at tetupta had been mado by various experts to pick the iock. un iuursuajr, iuiwci similar efforts were made with the same re- sult by Mr. Ensign and other noted experts, at.t. nv WHOM FINALLY DECLARED THAT THE LOCK COULD NOT BE PICKED, and that the ?afo must be opened by force. of your competitors, who did faithful and 0?:h'tr "'pr;u w. be.un. And this niorbing (Wednesday), FOUR I DAYS AFTilR, the expert sut-c-eede- in drilling through the door and opening the a a f A I consider it was an extraordinary severe test, much beyond what a imrgiar couiu possibly employ under any circumstances, and can assure it has inspired me with the highest confidence in tue securny ui j""1 Bnrglar-Proo- l Hales, aiu " y LOCKS ARE PICK-PUUU- - Auaiaoi THE BEST EXPERTS. ift,..n,VtTii tn-- anmA hnrirSOn tne IOCK, one expert said that he had found that V , vti nnA Attir. &nri anotner iuto vu-- . On examination, neither oi tnese letiern ap- - reared in the combination. Yours, truly, Clerk of Supreme Court. San Francisco, January 1J, ibbo. Tho above was a Macneale A Urban No. 8 Fire Jt Burglar Safe. C. O. BERGER, lm General Agent, Hawaiian Islands. ETJEEKA ! We have receive a consignment o the most Economical a&J Valuable Feed for an kinds of Stock, viz.: COOKED LINSEED MEAL. It Is the greatest Flesh former, Milk and Butter producer In use. Oil Cake Meal shows about 27 per cent, of nu rltlve matter; this nearly 39 per cent. 100 ts. ol thla meal Is equal to 300 . of oats, or 318 B8. of corn, or to 767 Its. wheat bran. For Sale in Lots to Suit. Ah. out Unrivalled MIXED FEED, as well as our usual supply of the best kinds of Hay, Oats, Wheat, Corn, Etc., Etc. IAINE &, CO. IS tf International Hotel. vrn u--i' T. ntF. A FIRST- - 1 class Restaurant In the International Hotel, Hotel street, on THURSDAY, the 11th Instant We solicit a share of the public patronage, trust- ing that we will satisfy our customers by serving only the best tne marie tiAnAinin rhmvT 10th. marlO L. G. SRESOVICII & CO., Commission Merchants and Wholesale Dealers In . n.i rtrmsri Fruits.' rreen and dried; ?oX Oranges and Cocoauuw, uts oi au and Smyrna Figs, . . Faking rrultforeiporueo perience in sn.pp.nK wn r. n.., ;T - nulu imporwa uirni uj ' ' r - " - Kr.nrh Honw.HM Francisco, r. O. do i f. Honolulu, H. I. P.O. box 120. 413, 41S and 417 Washington street, opposite Post OQlce; 412, IM anu 416 Aiercaani sirwi. 479feh26 87 SAN FRANCISCO. N. CUltltY & BUOTlIEll, AND DEALERS IN SHOT IMPORTERS and Pistols. Colt Winchester, Kennedy and Martin Magazine Kifles. Reming-tonVshar- ps and Ballard sporU: g lti; Agents Colt. Parker and Remington W W Greener. Wesson PIstoLs. N. Cl W ) 110 - "f" some street. San Francisco, Cal. NOTICE. MY ABSENCE FRM TI" DURING Mr. M- - D. Monsarrat wi" act lor me under full power ofrDXSA5BAT. Honolulu, February 13th. lw -- IN ETOTSTOLTJJLTJ, Hawaiian Islands. ARTIES DESIRING A GOOD INVEST-liien- t 1 in the Hawaiian Islands will have a rare opportunity in the purchase of the Rose Ranch property, lately owned by Captain James Mkee, on the Island of Maui. This estate comprises over eleven thousand (II,-00- 0; acres of land held in fee simple, and about ten thousand (.10.000; acrf-- s held under le-- se to run six years longer. The stock on the estate com- prises about 3.S00 head of cattle, includ- ing 100 yoke working caul- - and :i00 milch cows and HO horst's and mules. The buildings consist of a main dwelling house, guests' cottages, ottlce, billiard room, chapel, dairy and het-- f houses, sti.re, overseer's house, servants' quarters, etc., etc. There are between three and four hundred thou- sand tree: on the estate of varieties of eucalyptus, ueucia, cypress, Pride of itidia, cedar and cin- chona. The cisterns for water are 12 in number, the argest capable of holding 15,0tK) barrels. steamers from Honolulu stop at tne landing of the estate once a week. The passage from Hono- lulu to the landing is made in 12 hours by steamer. Hundreds of citizens of California and the Eastern States have experienced the hospitality of the late Captain Makee, who will bear willing testimony to the natural beauties of the estate and to the sa- lubrity of the climate. ALSO TO BE SOLD, The fine residence in the city of Honolulu belong- ing to the Makee estate, together with the furni- ture belonging to the house. 1 he sale of the above-name- d properties will be held in the city of Honolulu MARCH 1, 1SS. For further particulars apply to JOHN 1. S1RKCKELS BROS., San Francisco, . A i.o i- - WM. G. IRWIN A CO., 411 marl d-- w Honolulu. The Risdon Iron & Locomotive Works, Corner of Beale and Howard Streets, SAN FR A N CISCO CA LIFORN IA W. H. TAYLOII President JOS. MOO K E .Superintendent OF STEAM MACHINERY, IN 1)U1LDERN branches: Steamboat, Steamship, Land Engines and Boilers, High Pressure or Compound. STEAM VESSKLS, of all kinds, built complete with Hulls of Wood, Iron or Composite. ORDINARY ENGINES compounded when ad- visable. STEAM LAUNCHES, Barges and Steam Tugs constructed with reference to the trade in which they are to be employed. Speed, ton nage and draft oi water guaranteed. SUGAR T.IILLS AND SUGAR-MAKIN- G MA CHINERY made after tne mosi approveu plans. Also, all Boiler Iron Work connected therewith. WATER PIPE, of Boiler or Sheet Iron, of any size, maue in siiiiuoit? ienKiu-- i iur together, or Sheets Rolled, Punched and Fucked for shipment, ready to be riveted on the ground. HYDRAULIC RIVETING, Boiler Work and water 1'ipe maue oy vnis esiauiisuiurin., tlvo,.! Hi II .rif,tulif. T It tl Intr Afji. hlllpr V. that quality of work being far superior to nana wor&. uuin wrwrtr .. uMnnml S.onm f'.innlAiis. .. Steam Ull I 1 I , 1 2 - v t r wincnes, Air aim iia-uuuui- s uma, umuv after the most approved plans. SOLE AGENTS and manufacturers for the Pa- - c lie Coast oi tue Heine saiety ouer. Direct Acting Pumps, for Irrigation or PUMIS .... ... . . . I.I. . ..1 . ! CltV WOrKS purposes, OUlll WILII iuc tTr,r- - bra'ted Davy Valve Motion, superior to any other pump. J. N. S.WILLIAMS Honolulu Room No. 3, upstairs, spreciceis jiioch.. ( Agent for Hawaiian Islands ) 22t;se30-l- y BEAViiB SALOSri. NO. t FORT STREET. Opposite Wilder & Co.'s H. J. Hoito, Propr. OPKN TOM 3 A. M. Tlt-- 10 P. ! FIBST-CLAS- S LIXCIIES. COFFEE. TEA, SODA WATER, C1XGER ALE, Cigars and Tobaccos OF BEST BRANDS Plain and Faucy PIPES personally selected from the Manufacturers, and a Irge Variety of BEST QUALITY SMOKERS' ARTICLES. Loverso BILLIARDS will find an Elegant BRUNSWICK J CO. BILLIARD TABLE on the Premises. The Pioprietor would be pleased to receive a call from his Friends and the Public generally who may desire a I.FXCII. A SMOKE. OK A OAJIE OF BILLIARDS. H. J. NOLTE. 36-t- I ESTABLISHED 1710. EFFECTED Ul'O.N EVEin INSURANCES property at the current rates of premium. Total sum Insured in 1884 - - 318,599,310 Claims arranged by the local aents, and paid with promptitude and liberality. The Jurisdiction of the Local Tribunals recoguized. G. W. Macfarlane & Co., lOdAwtf Agents for the Hawaiian Islands. ROYAL INSURANCE COMP'Y OF LIVERPOOL. CAPITAL ttlO.OOO.OOO UNLIMITED LIABILITY. T?lre Insurance oi an nrwnni J; will be effected at Moderate Kates of Prrinl ' WM. G. IRWIN fe CO. tf Managers for Haw. Islands C. 0. BERGrElt, GENERAL AGENCY NEW YORK LIFE INSURANCE CO., Assets ?wi,uw,uu CITY OF LONDON FIRE INSURANCE COMPAMX, (LIMITED). Capital. ,.f 10,000,000 SOUTH BRITISH AND NATIONAL IN SURANCE CO. r IRK AND MARINE. combined capital i0,000,000 HARTFORD FIRE INSURANCE CO.. Asset ouv,uw COMMERCIAL INSURANCE COMPANY, Fibe and Marine. Capital 30u,ww MACNEALE & URBAN SAFES! Fire Proof, Burglar Proof, Fire and Burglar Proof. THE CELEBRATED SPRINGFIELD GAS MACHINE. Gas Fixtures of Mitchell, Vance & Co. C. O. BERGER, 10 Omy29 HONOLULU, II. 1. i im t nn ifl mm AND Ice Cream Parlor -- And- Confectionery, Hliijf Ntret't. LluffiJbi lilok. 0"A fine assortment of CANDIE.S i and CAKES always on hand. Parties I supplied. 141-tf-d-- w

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Page 1: fitHtt lit Ma ft - evols.library.manoa.hawaii.eduf i if itHtt1 1 1T:iflD rd MS AY A A yikhidh 4X a 0.1 lil! lit iK! Ma I I v ii kb .j a j i at r vi ' j it a ft Si VOL. V. NO. 44. HONOLULU,

i if

f itHtt 1 1 1T:iflD rd MSAY A A yikhidh 4X

Ma I I

a 0 .1 lil! lit iK !v ii kb .j a j i at r vi ' j it a ft Si

VOL. V. NO. 44. HONOLULU, HAWAIIAN ISLANDS, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 188(5. PRICE 5 CENTS.

33uslnf.ss tfatfls.THE DAILY gusuuss ar&s. bcrtistmtals. Sdrcrtisennts. gdcertiscments

BESTAIBASTS.TO PLANTERS. MONTHLY PAYMENTS.Pacific Commercial Advertiser

IS PUBLISHED

Every Morning Except Sundays. IMPORTANT

Real Estate Sale

UNIONFire and Marine Insurance Co.

Of New Zealand.CAPITAL, : 1 0.000,000

Established an Asreury atHaving: lor the Hawaiian Island, the un-

dersigned are prepared to accept risks against Firein dwellings, stores warehouses and merchandise,on favorable terms. Marine risks on cargo;freights, bottomry, profits and commissions.

Losses promptly adjusted payable.82-I- wtf WM. G. IKWIX A CO.

, GREAT WESTERN

INSURANCE C031PANY.

50 WALL STREET, NKW YOiia

fllhe above Company bavin? eslabA lushed an Agency at Honolulu, for the Hawa-

iian Islands, the undersigned Is authorized to acceptand write

IVJFtIIVl: RISKSON

Merchandise, Freights. Treasure,Commissions, and Hulls.

A I current Rates.

WM. C. IRWIN & CO.,tf Manager for Hawaiian iMlauds

SUN FIRE OFFICEOF LONDON.

PIONEERSteam Candy Factory

AND BAKERY.F. HORN, Practical Confectioner,

Hotel ft re t. 78 tf Telephone 74

ROOMS TO LET.

AND COM tuUTAHLfc rmswutuNEAT at No. 3 Kawalahou lane, a few stepsfrom the Government building. A man and wifecan also have comfortable furnished rooms, ortwo rooms unfurnished, and aeconiuiouawons tocook for themselves. MRS. WARD.

195--

ATTORNEYS-AT-I.A-

CURKMCK W. VOLN KY V.ASHKORl". ASHTOKD.

Ajnfrd A AMllorl,

ATTORNEYS, COUNSELLORS, SOLICITORS,ADVOCATES, ETC.

OlHce Honolulu Hale, adjoining tho PostOffice. Zb.uwu

BROWN. ATTORN ANDCECIL Public, Campbell's Block. Merchantstreet. ui

J. Til. MONSARRAT,ATTORNEY AT LAW

v AND

NOTARY PUBLIC.

Keal Estate In any wart ot tneUAnirhi sulil urn! Teased on Com mission

Loans Negotiated and Legal Documents Drawn

XO. 37 MERCHANT STREET,Gazette Block, Honolulu. f

WENNER & 00.93 Fort Street.

Have on hand New Foreign aud HomemadJewelry.

JWutches, Bracelets, Necklets,rins, Lockets, Clocks,

And ornaments of all kinds.

Silver and Gold Plato,FJeiraut Solid Silver Tea Sets.

Suitable for Presentation.

ENGRAVING AND NATIVE JEWELRYA Specialty.

Revalrlux In all Its brandies.tST Role Agents for King's Eye Preservers.

6 --mart -- 1 vC

lie Forest Meat Market,

HOTEL ST., Opposite the Fashion Stables.

Bornhold l Co.Proprietor.

Keep the best Beef and Mutton these Islands afford. Also, the very iesi sausages mnur.discount from any other maker. Give us atrial. 382decl4 tf

WM. McCANDLESS,No. 6 Queen Street,

Vlh Market. Dealer In choicest BEEF, VEALMUTTON, FISH, etc.

Family and shipping Orders carefully attendedto. Live Stock furnisuea to vessels i nonnotice, and vegetables of all kinds suppnea toorder. 2 tf

Metropolitan Market

KINO MTAEET,

O. J. WALLER, PROPRIETOR.

Cnoleest Meats from Finest Herd

Families and shipping supplied on SHORT

NOTICE and at the

Lowest Market Prices.

All meats delivered from this market are thor- -

i i.i,in,i .immAttatlv. . .tor Icillfriz . hv meansl llliii v. u. - j - -1UUIIT p.udi Drv Air Kefrizerator.

V' "...r:." .,7 I,. Inlcv orooertles.I. l'iH4TEEn TO KEEP IX)NGER.prt riKUVERY THAN FRESHLY- -

KILLED MEAT. I43tt

M. THOMPSON,

A T T 0 K N E Y - A T -- 1, A W ,

And Solicitor in .Chancery. Office. Campbell'sBlock, second story, rooms 8 and 9. Entrance on

Merchant street, Honolulu, H. I. 40j tf

We have Just received, by the steamer ALAMEDA, a consignment oi

Automatic Trash FeedingFurnaces,

t-- .. .., an.t flvn tnnt fiiriincs. complete withrrt hr. bearers and trash carriers. Machinesof this make are now ir. successful operation atSpreckelsviile, Makee Sugar Company and otherplantations.

PLANTERS AND OTHERSInterested are requested to cull and examine theabove, tor prices anu luriner inuwuwn "fply to

Wm. (t. Irwin & Co.,295tf AKent

(titem ,t-- Edinhnrgh Streets,

WHOU'SALK A HKTAtL

Dealers I

HAY AM) K A I ,

Telephone No. 175.

Goods deliver,"' promptly.

Ilnuil Order Kolielteil.

91if

TELEPHONE 55

PNTERPRISP3 PT.Attti FT7iT

Li Alnkea. near Queen St.C. J. HARDEE. Proprietor.

Contracting & Building.MOULDINGS AND FINISH

ALWAHS ON HAND.

for sale Hard and Soft stovewood, CutI

and Split.21-- tf

GRAHAM PAPER COMPANY,

St. I. .ll4. Jt .

Manufacture and Supply all kliwls of

Hook. News.Flat antl Eabcl Papers,irimlpm' HoartlM.

Twines, Etc.

W. G. RICHARDSON, r

RESIDENT AGENT,

205 IeiIeslorir Street.Telephone No. 47. SAN FRANCISCO.

v ir u aiu AiieutioH trtven toA. mm. ..hrniilrartD. 5S tf&W

Eastman'sRoyal Perfume ALOHA

FOR SALE BY

ftanson. Smith & Co.

Sample bottle free.TRY IT. 68 tf

I.. COKKf.I..J. LYONS.

LYONS & COHEN,

.AuctioneersAND

General Commission Merchants

Beaver Block, Queen St., Honolulu

CJales of Furniture. Stoek, Keal Estate.O and General Mercnanoise properiy h.m.--iu

Sole Ak fpAmerican & European Merctadise.

19I-t- f

T. J. SPEWr

Special Agent for the

Michigan Portrait Co.

Producers of the finest grades of

INDIA INK. WATER COLORS.

CRAY ON AM) FAr.L. "a..office AT

J. WILLIAM'S Pliotoxrapn allery.102 FORT STREET.

Honolulu Hawaiian Islands.

Where a lar?e variety of specimens can be seenat all times. Mr. T. J. Spence will frequentlyvisit the several Islands of the group, when hewill he pleased to show specimens and take ordersfor same. 369

Claus Spreckels. Win. O. Irwin.

CLAUS SPEECKELS & CO.,

BANKERS,

HONOLULU, HAWAIIAN ISLANDS.

Draw KxchRUge on the principal parts of theworld.

Will receive deposits ou open account, makecollection;! and conduct a general banking andexchange busiiiesH.

Deposits bearliie IntereBt received In tbelr Savinga Department 8ubect to published rules and... ?.rultt" -ia - 1- 1-

M. PHILLIPS & Co.,autl Wholesale IeIer Inimporter Boots, Shoes, Haw, Men's Furnish-

ing and Fancy Goods. No. 11 Kaahumanu Street.Honolulu, ii. l. WH-w- u

OLACS 8PRK0KBI3 wu. a. IBWIK.

WM. Q. IRWIN & Co.,aftiAtt I'ACTORN aud CouimlNttlou

H. HACKFELD & CO.,COMMISSION AUEXTS.GENERAL Queen St., Honolulu. H.I.

bannins. W. MAKRTKNS.

ED. HOFFSCHLAEQEE & CO.,Tiu porters & Commission Merhants.JL vtueen street, Honolulu. H. I. U-- u

A. S. CLEGHORN & Co.,I mporters and W liolesale and Ketall

dealers in

uonorui iiiuiunaiiuisc,Corner Queen and Kaahumanu Su. 15-- tf

:

MACFARLANE & CO-- .-

prrrilOLENALE DEALERS A3TI UEN.f eral Jobbers In WINES and LIQUORS.

No. IS Kaahumaun Street,HONOLULU. 19-- U

M. S. Grinbaum & Co.,IMPOBTKBA OF

Oeneral Merchandise and Commlsslou Merchants, Honolulu, II. I.

No. 124 California street, San Francisco, Cal.104-Jyl-- ly

J. M. Oat, Jr., & Co.,

STATIONERS & NEWS DEALERS,

Hawaiian Gazette Block.

27 Merchant Bt., Houolulu. II. I.65 t

THOMAS LINDSAY

Manufacturing Jeweler,No. 6i Kwisnu Street,

Honolulu, II. I.Particular attention paid to repairing. 22tf

ALYIN IS. BASEMAN,

BOOK BINDER,Paper Ruler and BlauU Book

Manufacturer.

nDnnbkiniIni, nf ill rioofrf ntlon uRf 1 v kndV. - - - 'r ar

promptly extcutea, ana reiuuuwHe iuir.Gazette Building,

07 tf MERCHANT 8TB KKT.

j. c. johnson & co.,LEATHER, HARNESS, SADDLERY,

FIREMEN'S EQUIPMENTS,

SaQ Kranclac0t Ch,

itiaw itanf r Tanneries. Holei ...... ...

Harness and all otner Kinas oi ieamrr15Us-- IV

m. M. GOTO,lnyirlau and Surjceon,

i .,,. .vr,.(iii and skin disease a spec- -

the residence of Hon Jas.n.. .trut Virmlimi. Honolulu. OthVehours, 1 to 5 p. m. fcundays, 8 to 12 a. m.

Paitles on the other islaudscan consuu uj iei

LEVI STRAUSS & CO.,14 and 16 Battery street, San Francisco, Cal.

Importers of Foreign and Domestic Drygoods,Hosiery, umies auu ucui a c ui uuuum uuuus.

Sole Proprietors and Manufacturers ot the celeartcd FATtN i nivtitu ilviauu,

479 an26 87

All accounts for Advertising and Job PrlntUfat the

Pafiflc. Tommerelal .t. tlaer

Office will from thU late be present fo Pay-

ment monthly.Honolulu. March 2. 18S.

Fulton Iron Works,HINCKLEY, SPIERS & HAYES,

Of San FrwuelHeo.All kind- - Of Machinery and Boliem.

MACHINKHY,KpecialU.

WK AND REFRIGERATINGCOKLIKH ENG1M. "AW1M.KBOILERS. DEAN K Al It. A( jjj'KA" .LLl.WEI.I.-V.-STEAM PUMI-S- .

ETC.. ETC. iiHf-i.1-- .

'OW" .. UnANv K.B. U STANLKV.

Spruance, Stanley & Co.,Importers and Jobbers of Fine

WHISKIES, WINES and LIQUORS,

410 rout St., San rraM4-lrs- .

57 tf A w

S. DP. Taylor & Co.Agents South Coast Paper M'10"Pioneer aud San Geronlmo l'aper MtlU.

8TRAW TArEIt. BOOK. MANILA, ETC.

Manufacturers and Ix-ale-

411 and 410 Clay street, Kan Frunclhco, CalluHjylOly

Jo.. I. HALL & SONCommission Merchants,

NEW YORK, SAN FRANCISCO, SYDNEY.w ;

Diiiiiiiin,CaiTigaii & Co.

HARDWAKE,IRON AND HTEKL MK11C1IAKT8

San Francisco, Cal.

Deminc: Palmer' Milling Co.,OF THE CAPITOL MILL

I Offlce 202 and 204 Davis street, San FranciscoManufacturers or and Dealeiall kinds. Oatmeal, Bran, MfcUtlins. V0"'!Ground and Rolled Barley, Crar ked beatCracked Buckwheat Flour, O. Cak; MlHominy, Etc., EU;. Jll " .- -KUL.IJSr3i! fc CO.,

Imiortcrs of

HATS and CAPS.Nos 20and2SBatiery Street, H. E. Cor. of Pine,

. MANFRA 'CIMCO.

LLIS & MI KWnd Commission Dealers In

Hay, Grain and Feed25 and 27 KPEAR STREET,

Between Market and Mission. SAN FRANCISCO,a- - Order Hollrlted. 423dec29-l- y

Whittier, Fuller & Co.,Manufacturers of

PIOJS'EER WHITE LEAD,PACIHC RUBBER PA 1'NT

PAINTS. OILS, WINDOW GLASS and Alt- -

TIWTS' MATERIALS21-2- 3 Front St., t Sa FraueUco.

424-d2i-- ly

nuiciiiau uAvnuuv iiuivi,Sanwome Street,

Opposite Wells, Fargo A Co.'s E press, mi dootfrom Bank of California,

HAN FRANCISCO, CAL.

This Hotel Is In the very center of th businessportion ol the city, and has been renovated andnewly furnlbhed throughout. Boi one block from

. .uumahiii (Jomnanv's ofllcw. TheI UK ji rsun ' r -traveling public will Mud this to be the most con-

venient, as well as tha most comfortable andHotel In the city.

Board and Room, 'l and 81 23 ier dayHot and cold baths free. None but the most ob-

liging white labor employed.

FREE COACH TO AND FROM THE HOTEL.

MONTGOMERY BROS.,350decl Proprietors.

DR. C fJ-"WES-T'S

FAMOUS ELECTRO MEDICAL BELT

forms of dl'Cures allease with out ruedl-lall- y

all theclue, espec

forms of Impurity of the hlool and

sexual aliments In cither sex. Moi

powerfnl Belt and only one In theworld charged with water. Full directions sent

Wsend to DR. C. N. WEST, No. C52 Market st.San Francisco, Cal.

Sole Proprietor and 1'aten tee. 51

A.F.HINZ. WM. PLAGKMANN

YOLO MILLS,NE. Corner Mission and Main Streets, HAN

FRANCISCO, Cal.

Telephone No. 5flS.

IlJnz A IMag-etnaim-,

Manufacturers of Extra Family, Graham, RyeBuckwheat and Rice Flour; Rye, Oat. Corn audFeed Corn Meal; Sago, Tapioca, Farina, Bnck-wheatGroa-

Hominy, Cracked Corn, Pearl Bar-ley, Ground Feed, etc., etc.Dealers In Grain and Fed of all kin Is. Grinding

done i order. 125 ana y

SUBSCRI PTIONS :

Daily 1 C. Advertiser, one year ,..6 00DAILY P. C. ADVICKTISICK, SlX inontbS.. ... 3 ooDaily P. C. Aovebtiskk, three months. ... I 60DAILY P. C. ADVF.KTISKK, ptT inOUtil 60ufvt.-u't- v o i' i kve-r-tink- one vear 5 00.. -- ., U..hu.rinti.M..r . , W P I'. A. ,(InflUdtllK

postage) - w ow

Payable lnvariuhly in Advance

&tluerli$emeni5.

TO LET.A TWO STOKY HOUSE, EIGHT KOOMS.

IX. Apply at C. atKii'M noe Store. 4HJ If

ANOTHER TEST.i

B. Wil-hi- re Jfc Co,, AgentsMACK EALE & UltBAN SAFES, 20G

California Street, Sau irancisco, oai.:nontiomon Tn renlv to vonr iuauirv con

cerning the opening of the Burglar-Proo- f

Cheat in the sale oi ine omce oi methe Supreme Court now so well known as

The jVIcCartliv Safe,I will uaj that I took charge of the office onwednettday, the btn instant.

v- - mmo lava nrtvioiis. nnaucceasful attetupta had been mado by various expertsto pick the iock. un iuursuajr, iuiwcisimilar efforts were made with the same re-

sult by Mr. Ensign and other noted experts,at.t. nv WHOM FINALLY DECLAREDTHAT THE LOCK COULD NOT BEPICKED, and that the ?afo must be openedby force.

of your competitors, who did faithful and

0?:h'tr "'pr;u w. be.un.And this niorbing (Wednesday), FOUR I

DAYS AFTilR, the expert sut-c-eede- indrilling through the door and opening thea a fA

I consider it was an extraordinary severetest, much beyond what a imrgiar couiupossibly employ under any circumstances,and can assure it has inspired me with thehighest confidence in tue securny ui j""1Bnrglar-Proo- l Hales, aiu " yLOCKS ARE PICK-PUUU- - AuaiaoiTHE BEST EXPERTS.

ift,..n,VtTii tn-- anmA hnrirSOn tne IOCK,

one expert said that he had found that V,vti nnA Attir. &nri anotner iuto vu-- .

On examination, neither oi tnese letiern ap- -

reared in the combination. Yours, truly,

Clerk of Supreme Court.San Francisco, January 1J, ibbo.

Tho above was a Macneale A Urban No. 8Fire Jt Burglar Safe.

C. O. BERGER,lm General Agent, Hawaiian Islands.

ETJEEKA !

We have receive a consignment o the most

Economical a&J Valuable Feed for ankinds of Stock, viz.:

COOKED LINSEED MEAL.It Is the greatest Flesh former, Milk and

Butter producer In use.

Oil Cake Meal shows about 27 per cent, of nu

rltlve matter; this nearly 39 per cent.

100 ts. ol thla meal Is equal to 300 . of oats,

or 318 B8. of corn, or to 767 Its. wheat bran.

For Sale in Lots to Suit.

Ah. out Unrivalled MIXED FEED, as well as

our usual supply of the best kinds of

Hay, Oats, Wheat, Corn, Etc., Etc.

IAINE &, CO.IS tf

International Hotel.vrn u--i' T. ntF. A FIRST- -

1 class Restaurant In the International Hotel,Hotel street, on THURSDAY, the 11th InstantWe solicit a share of the public patronage, trust-ing that we will satisfy our customers by servingonly the best tne marie

tiAnAinin rhmvT 10th. marlO

L. G. SRESOVICII & CO.,Commission Merchants and Wholesale Dealers In

. n.i rtrmsri Fruits.' rreen and dried;

?oXOranges and Cocoauuw, uts oi auand Smyrna Figs, . .

Faking rrultforeiporueoperience in sn.pp.nKwn r. n.., ;T -

nulu imporwa uirni uj ' ' r - " -

Kr.nrh Honw.HM Francisco, r. O. do i f.Honolulu, H. I. P.O. box 120.

413, 41S and 417 Washington street, opposite PostOQlce; 412, IM anu 416 Aiercaani sirwi.

479feh26 87 SAN FRANCISCO.

N. CUltltY & BUOTlIEll,AND DEALERS IN SHOT

IMPORTERS and Pistols. Colt Winchester,Kennedy and Martin Magazine Kifles. Reming-tonVshar- ps

and Ballard sporU: g lti; AgentsColt. Parker and RemingtonW W Greener.

Wesson PIstoLs. N. Cl W ) 110 - "f"some street. San Francisco, Cal.

NOTICE.MY ABSENCE FRM TI"

DURING Mr. M-- D. Monsarrat wi" actlor me under full power ofrDXSA5BAT.

Honolulu, February 13th. lw

-- IN

ETOTSTOLTJJLTJ,

Hawaiian Islands.ARTIES DESIRING A GOOD INVEST-liien- t

1 in the Hawaiian Islands will have arare opportunity in the purchase of the RoseRanch property, lately owned by Captain JamesMkee, on the Island of Maui.

This estate comprises over eleven thousand (II,-00- 0;

acres of land held in fee simple, and aboutten thousand (.10.000; acrf--s held under le-- se to runsix years longer. The stock on the estate com-prises about 3.S00 head of cattle, includ-ing 100 yoke working caul- - and :i00 milch cowsand HO horst's and mules.

The buildings consist of a main dwelling house,guests' cottages, ottlce, billiard room, chapel,dairy and het-- f houses, sti.re, overseer's house,servants' quarters, etc., etc.

There are between three and four hundred thou-sand tree: on the estate of varieties of eucalyptus,ueucia, cypress, Pride of itidia, cedar and cin-

chona.The cisterns for water are 12 in number, the

argest capable of holding 15,0tK) barrels.steamers from Honolulu stop at tne landing of

the estate once a week. The passage from Hono-lulu to the landing is made in 12 hours by steamer.Hundreds of citizens of California and the EasternStates have experienced the hospitality of the lateCaptain Makee, who will bear willing testimony tothe natural beauties of the estate and to the sa-

lubrity of the climate.ALSO TO BE SOLD,

The fine residence in the city of Honolulu belong-ing to the Makee estate, together with the furni-ture belonging to the house.

1 he sale of the above-name- d properties will beheld in the city of Honolulu MARCH 1, 1SS.

For further particulars apply toJOHN 1. S1RKCKELS BROS.,

San Francisco,. A i.o i- -

WM. G. IRWIN A CO.,411 marl d-- w Honolulu.

The RisdonIron & Locomotive Works,

Corner of Beale and Howard Streets,

SAN FR A N CISCO CA LIFORN IA

W. H. TAYLOII PresidentJOS. MOO K E .Superintendent

OF STEAM MACHINERY, IN1)U1LDERN branches: Steamboat, Steamship,Land Engines and Boilers, High Pressure orCompound.STEAM VESSKLS, of all kinds, built complete

with Hulls of Wood, Iron or Composite.ORDINARY ENGINES compounded when ad-

visable.STEAM LAUNCHES, Barges and Steam Tugs

constructed with reference to the trade inwhich they are to be employed. Speed, tonnage and draft oi water guaranteed.

SUGAR T.IILLS AND SUGAR-MAKIN- G MACHINERY made after tne mosi approveuplans. Also, all Boiler Iron Work connectedtherewith.

WATER PIPE, of Boiler or Sheet Iron, of anysize, maue in siiiiuoit? ienKiu-- i iurtogether, or Sheets Rolled, Punched andFucked for shipment, ready to be riveted onthe ground.

HYDRAULIC RIVETING, Boiler Work andwater 1'ipe maue oy vnis esiauiisuiurin.,tlvo,.! Hi II .rif,tulif. T It tl Intr Afji. hlllpr V.

that quality of work being far superior tonana wor&.

uuin wrwrtr. . uMnnml S.onm f'.innlAiis.. . SteamUll I 1 I , 1 2 - v t r

wincnes, Air aim iia-uuuui-s uma, umuvafter the most approved plans.

SOLE AGENTS and manufacturers for the Pa- -

c lie Coast oi tue Heine saiety ouer.Direct Acting Pumps, for Irrigation orPUMIS.... ... . . . I.I. . . . 1 . !

CltV WOrKS purposes, OUlll WILII iuc tTr,r- -

bra'ted Davy Valve Motion, superior to anyother pump.

J. N. S.WILLIAMS HonoluluRoom No. 3, upstairs, spreciceis jiioch..

( Agent for Hawaiian Islands )22t;se30-l- y

BEAViiB SALOSri.

NO. t FORT STREET.

Opposite Wilder & Co.'s

H. J. Hoito, Propr.OPKN TOM 3 A. M. Tlt-- 10 P. !

FIBST-CLAS- S LIXCIIES. COFFEE.

TEA, SODA WATER, C1XGER ALE,

Cigars and TobaccosOF BEST BRANDS

Plain and Faucy PIPES personally selected from

the Manufacturers, and a Irge Variety

of BEST QUALITY

SMOKERS' ARTICLES.Loverso BILLIARDS will find an Elegant

BRUNSWICK J CO. BILLIARD TABLE

on the Premises.

The Pioprietor would be pleased to receive a call

from his Friends and the Public generally

who may desire a

I.FXCII. A SMOKE. OK A OAJIE OFBILLIARDS.

H. J. NOLTE.36-t- I

ESTABLISHED 1710.

EFFECTED Ul'O.N EVEinINSURANCES property at the current ratesof premium.

Total sum Insured in 1884 - - 318,599,310

Claims arranged by the local aents, and paid

with promptitude and liberality.

The Jurisdiction of the Local Tribunals recoguized.

G. W. Macfarlane & Co.,

lOdAwtf Agents for the Hawaiian Islands.

ROYAL INSURANCE COMP'Y

OF LIVERPOOL.

CAPITAL ttlO.OOO.OOO

UNLIMITED LIABILITY.

T?lre Insurance oi an nrwnniJ; will be effected at Moderate Kates of Prrinl' WM. G. IRWIN fe CO.

tf Managers for Haw. Islands

C. 0. BERGrElt,GENERAL AGENCY

NEW YORK LIFE INSURANCE CO.,

Assets ?wi,uw,uu

CITY OF LONDON FIRE INSURANCECOMPAMX, (LIMITED).

Capital. ,.f 10,000,000

SOUTH BRITISH AND NATIONAL INSURANCE CO. r IRK AND MARINE.

combined capital i0,000,000

HARTFORD FIRE INSURANCE CO..

Asset ouv,uw

COMMERCIAL INSURANCE COMPANY,

Fibe and Marine.

Capital 30u,ww

MACNEALE & URBAN

SAFES!Fire Proof, Burglar Proof, Fire and

Burglar Proof.

THE CELEBRATED

SPRINGFIELD GAS MACHINE.

Gas Fixtures of Mitchell, Vance & Co.

C. O. BERGER,10 Omy29 HONOLULU, II. 1.

i im t nniflmm AND

Ice Cream Parlor

--And-

Confectionery,

Hliijf Ntret't. LluffiJbi lilok.

0"A fine assortment of CANDIE.S i

and CAKES always on hand. Parties

I supplied. 141-tf-d-- w

Page 2: fitHtt lit Ma ft - evols.library.manoa.hawaii.eduf i if itHtt1 1 1T:iflD rd MS AY A A yikhidh 4X a 0.1 lil! lit iK! Ma I I v ii kb .j a j i at r vi ' j it a ft Si VOL. V. NO. 44. HONOLULU,

PACIFIC COMMERCIAL ADVERTISER FEBRUARY 22, i6S6.

THE SUGAR MARKETS.A Terrlbl Aruly or Ants. )

rvst Af-- c L tv.lOn the fifth nisrht of our stay at the ,

THE DAILY THE CRAWFORD-DiLK- E CASE.

The Unbnd Get a Divorce and SirCnarles Acqaltted.

Our advices from the Coast are farfrom encouraging to sugar growers. OnPacific Cokercial Advertiser

preserving order in London at the doorof the Home Oilke. He also predicteda Bpeedy breakdown of .Secretary Morleyin Ireland. This gentleman's speech atNewcastle, when he was seeking ion

after accepting office, pleased neitherthe Irish nor English.

the 4th February the California Refineryissued a circular quoting at net cash the NOTICE!

factory we received an eveaing call whichmight easily have been the last to morethan o-i- of our number. The party hadsettled down as usual to reading, writing,talking, or card playiug. when suddenlya great clamor ari.se in the courtyard, inthe mi-ls- t of which was heard a cry asominous of evii in the ears of a westAfrican as that of uBagh hai!" (Tigerhere!) is in those of a Bengali Hindu:

following: (A) pat. cube sugar, 6s ; (A)crushed, 6- ; extra powdered, 6 ; finecrushed, 62 ; dry granulated, 64 ; con

IS PUBLISHED

EVERY MORNING.The Chinese question in the States is

assuming a far more menacing aspectthan ever before. The expulsion of Chi-

nese from Seattle, W. T., brought the

fectioners' A, 6, being a drop of one centall round ; also the cheaper grades at a To the Ladies & Gentlemen of Honolulu !

Territorial militia and the people intodecline of to . On the 11th anothercircular was issued by the California Re-

finery notifying the trade of a 10 centdecline all round on syrups ; and on the12th, the day following, another centdrop on all grades of sugar was an

THE FIRM OFTERMS OF fil BSritlPTIOr.

Per annum ..J 00

collision, and several of the latter werehurt by a volley from the troopa.Throughout California, Nevada, Oregonand the entire Pacific Slope the anti-Chine- se

agitation has spread to the pointCOHjSTS.

London, February 12th. The trial ofthe divorce case of Donald Crawfordagainst his wife, in which Sir CharlesDilke is was begun to-day. Great interest is felt in the caseand the Court-roo- m was crowded whenit was called. Dilke arrived early andtook his seat in the Court-roo- m withoutbeing recognized by most of the peoplein attendance. The petitioner's counselstated that the first intimation his clienthad of his wife's unfaithfulness was onthe receipt of several anonymous letters,the writer of which warned Crawford tobeware of "the Member from Chelsea"(Dilke). Crawford thereupon made aninvestigation into his wife's habits andfound that she had been correspondingwith one Captain Forster. This offensehe had condoned. Receiving furtheranonymous letters, Crawford taxed hiswife with infidelity. She admitted herguilt and made a full confession. Shesaid she had remained two nights withSir Charles Dilke. His attentions to

& CO.,

FASHION,TEMPLE 01nounced by the same refinery.

There has been great excitement inSan Francisco consequent upon these de-

clines. The American Refinery does notpublish any price list and sells privatelyto buyers. It is consi lered absolutelycertain that the American must sell at a

fctx mouths . 3 00

Per month 50c

Payable AIajinAdvaure.

Communications from all parts of the Kingdomwill always be very acceptable.

Persons residing Id any part ft the United Statescan remit the amount of subscription due by PostOGiee money ord.r.

Ifalter lutended for publication lu the editorialcolumns should be addressed to" ED1TOB PAtmC COMMKRCIAL ADVERTISER.

Business communications and advertisementsshould be addressed simply

P. C. AUVEBTUKB,"And tot to Individuals.

when resistance to it will soon be im-

possible. The people recognize thatover 8,000 Chinese contrabands werelanded last year despite the Treaty andRestriction Act, and understand thatabsolute exclusion alone is a practicalsolution of the difficulty. The sale of

Custom House certificates and passportscontinues ; the detention in transit dodge,smuggled entrance from British Colum

"The drivers! the drivers'."The very name of these formidable antsthe most dreaded and destructive of all

African insects, at whose approach theresidents tiy from their houses as the solechance of escape from those terrible jaws,whose bite nothing living can resistbrought us all out in a body upon the lit-tle step-ladd-er leading down to the yardfrom the front door. As we came fortha broad glare of light broke upon us, revealing a strange and startling spectacle.Amid the utter blackness of night threeor four figures in violent motion wereweirdly outlined against the inky back-ground by the fiames of the cracklingtorches with which they were sweepingthe ground on every side of them,scorching up. as we could guess by theirmovements, thousands of the invadingswarms at every stroke, only to see themreplaced by fresh thousands the next mo-

mentMeanwhile we stood watching with

gloomy interest this battle with adversa-ries, which, though a man might crushhundreds of them at every step withoutbeing even conscious of it, were as for-midable in their own way as the bestarmies of Napoleon. fehould the antaouce reach the house, as we well knew,we should be forced to fly from it as hur-riedly as we had tied from the wreck livedays before, and to spend the night onthe open beach, which would be littleshort of certain death to the ladies, ill asboth already were utterly unprovidedwith any means of shelter from the tor-rent rain which midnight was certain tobring with it More than once all seemedlost, an first one and then another of ourdefenders lowered hi3 torch while striv

FuruMdn and Hat Busii.eMS, lu order to makeAre retiring from the Clotulnj, Cieatsroom for their large Importation of

DRY GOODS.And offer for sle at GENUINE BARGAINS their entire stock of

MENS' SUITS, HATS, CAPS, ETC., ETC.

YOUTHS' SUITS, HATS, CAPS, ETC., ETC.;

BOYS' SUITS, HATS, CAPS, ETC., ETC

bia and Mexico, habeas corpus and per-

sonation have been worked to such pur-

pose as to nullify the Act of Congress.her, she said, had commenced directlyafter her marriage. He professed to ad- -THE And by their Diplomatic and Consular

loss at present prices. Their new andold works are all disconnected, and costmore than the California to run.

NEW YORK MARKET.

Latest advices from New York statethat the market had ruled dull and easyduring the past three days, no businesshaving transpired either on the spot orin cargoes to arrive. Refiners appearedindifferent to all solicitations to buy.The absence of demand and unwilling-ness of buying or even to bid for freshsupplies, coupled with an easier marketin Cuba, and not altogether encouragingadvices from Europe, caused sellers toentertain lower views, and business has

agents the Chinese are making a bigfight to capture the Slope. Consul Dee,Pacific Commercial -- Advertiser

Klrgance and Variety In this Klugdom.Vn surpassed Inan American not unknown in this KingH. Cohn from San Kraueslco,tht arrival of our Mrdom, advises the Chinese to remain at

who M personally superintend and conduct this Urand Clearaoce Wale

Come ana be convinced.Now is your chance for a new suit.Is now for sale daily at the Following Traces :

J. M. OAT A CO .-- Merchant streetCRYSTAL. SODA WORKS --Hotel streetN. F. BURGESS ....... ... King streetWOLF A KDVAKl)8...Cor King and Nuuanu stsC. J. MCCARTHY......... --..Hotel street

Five Cents per Copy.

NEW GOODS. NEW GOODS.

Now Heady for Inspection

been possible at concessions ofcent from our previous quotations, butthe resolute manner in which refiners

mire her because of her resemblance toher mother. The wife of the petitionerhad attributed the anonymous letters tothe vindictiveness of her mother. Peti-tioner's case rested solely on his wife'sconfession. The servants of Crawford'shousehold, counsel said, would give evi-

dence showing that their mistress hadbeen absent from home on the eveningsshe 6tated she had been with Dilke.

The petitioner, Crawford, was called tothe witness stand, and gave testimonysupporting the statements of his counsel.Crawford said he had been startled byhis wife asking him whether he wouldforgive her if she had been unfaithful tohim. His wife's sisters had been shownthe anonymous letters, and agreed thatthey were in the handwriting of theirmother. Counsel for petitioner submit-ted evidence against Mrs. Crawford, but

Truekee, California, although no onewill employ them ; and by advice alsosuit has been brought against the mu-

nicipality of Eureka, California, for $57,-00- 0

alleged loss of property sustained byChinese who were requested to leave theplace. Reference to the sworn assess-ment returns, however, place the aggre-gate Chinese property before expulsionat a trifle over $2,000, upon which $22taxes in all were paid. The Anti-Chine- se

State Convention at San Jose has re-

solved to institute a comprehensive sys-

tem of boycotting, and several of thetowns in the Bay counties have notifiedthe Chinese to get away quietly.

MONDAY February 22d.-- AT THE

ing to brush oil the countless enemiesthat had fastened upon his bleeding armsand limbs. But little by little the steadyperseverance of human efforts began toprevail over the blind ferocity of animalinstinct. By the time the full moon rosein its splendor over the dark woods behind us the struggle was over, and weretired to lay our heads upon our mailbags, with hearts lightened of veryheavy load.

A BUDGET OF NEWS- -

Popular Millinery House,

have kept out of the market renders thesituation very uncertain and almostwholly nominal. There have been sell-

ers on the basis of 5 7-l- 9-- 16 centsfor Fair to Good Refining, and 6 centsfor 90 test Centrifugals, but yesterdaythese prices were unobtainable. The re-

ceipts of consumers by direct importationduring the past three days have beenquite liberal, and these supplies, in con-

nection with recent purchases and re-

serve stocks in bond, have relieved their

"We publish a supplement to-da- y

taining a selection of the more promi- -

nent news items to date of sailing of theAlameda from the Coast. The death ofGeneral Hancock will be regretted by

Honolulu104--. Fort Street

N. S. SACHS, Proprietor.submitted none against Dilke. TheCourt granted Crawford a divorce fromhis wife and dismissed the chargesagainst Sir Charles Dilke.

The feeling against the Chinese hasbeen strengthened by the annual reportof the San Francisco Chamber of Com-

merce, which shows that $23,716,085 incoin were shipped to China during the

-- :o:-

opened, an entire new stock, consisting of LACES, IIANDKERCHIEt S,Justpast three years in excess of the verylarge sum demanded by China in settle-ment of the trade balances between the

HOSIERY , WHITE COLORED ALLrOVKK MlliKUiui'du, aoii- -, LAWNS, FANCY DRESS GOODS, SILK llAMDKhKtiUMH.fUK- -MERES

SETS. GLOVES, MITTS, ETC

present necessities and placed them in amore independent position. An easiermarket in Cuba has resulted in bids be-

ing solicited on the basis of 3 9-1- 5 cents,cost and freight, for 96, and 3 for 95test Centrifugals, without leading tobusiness. Beet has ruled dull, with sell-

ers at 14s 9d, cost and freight, for Firsts,and 12s 6d for Seconds, but no transac-

tions reported. There has been a slightreaction in the London market, which is

The consensus of opinion is that thefilthy revelations made in the trial andthe failure to attempt either to deny ordisprove the charges against him practi-cally ruin Sir Charles Dilke. AlthoughSir Charles Dilke escaped under thetechnical plea that Mrs. Crawford's un-

sworn confession was insufficient evi-

dence, the whole tenor of the trial has

two countries. Speaking of this constant--Immense assortment of--

all true Americans. His war record wasgood, and in every relation of life he boreh ire self as a good citizen and true soldierof the Republic. As a candidate for thePresidency on the Democratic ticketagainst Garfield, General Hancock madea gallant fight. Indeed, there are notwanting those who believe that his elec-tion would have been secured ifJohn Kelley had not traded Tammanyvotes with the Republican machine, inexchange for the control of New York

. City affairs. Be this as it may, he wasdefeated, and has since then quietly de-

voted himself to the performance of hismilitary duties. His death will openpromotion in the United States army inthe higher grades.

drain of coin from the States, chieflydrawn from the wages fund of the coun- -

LADIES' 3IJSL1N UNDERWEAR.trv and renresentinz the savings of theChinese, the San Francisco 4 'Chronicle"truly says : "It is no more possible for anation to stand such drains as the Chi

-- :o:-

fROYALfSWSf J nJ

jiggifirmer and a trifle higher. The onlysales made public since our last issuecomprise two cargoes of PhillipineIslands sold on Tuesday, 52,531 mats

nese are constantly making upon thiscountry than it is to cultivate land con The nVEillinery Department

Is the most complete in the Kingdom. Latest styles of LADIES' ANDCHILDREN'S HATS now on hand. Immense assortment of FEATHERS,Cebu at cents, and 26,859 do. Iloilo,

5 cents. FLOWERS, TIPS, ORNAMENTS, ETC. Native straws sewed into any snap.The direct imiortations on refiners' Mrs. Mellls Dressmaking; Department on the premise.

213

Governor Seymour's death likewiseremoves from the sphere of Americanpolitics a man of worth and distinction.

account since our last issue haveamounted to 402 hhds, and 59,861 bags,and the estimated stock in first handsTwice Governor of New York State, and

ence Democratic candidate for PresidentGrant, Horatio M. Seymour was

tinually without applying fertilisers."

Congressman Morrow of San Fran-cisco has introduced an anti-Chine- se

bill. Governor Stanford is said to beworking for it in the Senate. We sus-pect the Morrow-Stanfor- d bill will hardlygive satisfaction to the people of the Pa-

cific Slope. Indeed, it appears to be avarnishing of the existing lavr. SenatorMitchell of Oregon has introduced amuch more sweeping measure. It pro-

poses to repeal all existing treaties withChina in so far as they permit Chinese

THE LATEST AMERICAN INVENTION.

produced a profound and universal con-viction of Dilke's guilt. Justice Butts insumming up described the respondent'sstatements as clear and distinct, andsaid they compelled him to conclude thatthe adultery charged was actually com-mitted. If the woman had been put inthe witness box and had given the sametestimony there, she would have beenevidence against Dilke.

Dilke's position was further damagedby his refraining from giving testimony.The Attorney General's defense "Werewe to put Dilke in the witness box, hiscross-examinati- on would be on the indis-cretions in life from which no man isfree" was taken as a frank admissionthat Dilke was unable to give an explan-ation. That part of Mrs. Crawford'sconfession describing the depths of de-

bauchery between Dilke and her is unfitfor publication. The trial has caused apainful impression throughout the coun

a man of mark and influence in hisparty. His advice was usually asked byNew York Democrats when they wantedto make a straight party fight, and theywere successful exactly as they followedit.

Absolutely Pure,A marvel of purity,This rwwdcr n over varies.

More economicalUinda.and cannot tesd in com-

petitionthan the ordinary shortwith tho multitude of low-te- st,

European affairs are not so pacificlooking as they might be. Greece and cans. Rotaij BA&isa i'owttu. Co.. luO WalteW

N. Y.9d--

try in regard to society morals.New York, February 13th. The HaWtlliail 0)GTtl HOUSe.

yesterday consisted of 14,006 hhds. and529,298 mats and bags.

Refined. There has been some im-

provement in the demand, and somegrades sold on Thursday at a shadehigher prices, but yesterday the inquiryfell off. There has been some demandfor export, and about 5,000 bbls. havebeen taken at a shade less than 64cents.

LONDON MARKET.

This leen an exceptionally dull week,with but little business in any descrip-

tion. Beet root has been slow of sale atdeclining rates, more particularly forforward sugars, the quotation yesterdayafternoon for 88 per cent being 14s 7deither for prompt or January to March.At auction on Tuesday about 1,420 tonsgrocery crystallized met but a slow saleat a decline of 3d to Gd per cwt., exceptfor the finer lots, which sold at full rates.Yesterday there were no public sales,but the few sales done privately were onthe basis of the lowest rates of Tuesday.Afloat the following is reported: The"Noddleburn," 1,000 tons Java, at lGs9d, quay terms Liverpool.

Our latest quotations are:

"Herald's" London correspondent says

immigration to this country, and rendersit unlawful for Chinese merchants, aswell as Chinese laborers to land in theStates. It also proposes to make it un-

lawful for Chinamen already in the coun-

try to remain. Tiiis is facing the issuesquarelj If Bismarck's theory regard-ing the expulsion of Poles from EastPrussia, their home and birthplace innot a few instances, be good and valid,no possible argument can be urgedagainst the expulsion of Chinese fromAmerica. They are "aliens in race,language and religion," and enjoy thehospitality of the States under treatywhich denies like hospitality to Ameri-cans in China.

ggT TO-NIG- HT ! EG" TO-NIG- HT !

Positively THE LAST PERFORMANCE.

GRAND CHANGE OF PROGRAMME !

the decision in the Dilke case puzzles lay-

men and divides legal opinion, and thatthe general opinion is that the result ofthe case is the outcome of some specialarrangement, not to say a judicial scan-

dal.

A BIG LAND CLAIM.

CROWDED! IMMEN3E SUCCESS!

Servia are in a fighting mood, and thegreat Towers are not united in theirpolicy regarding the Hellenic Kingdom.

. Russia refused to join the naval demon-- Ie a

etration against Greece, and the GermanV .fleet ha3 been ordered to remain at

Malta. The fall of the Tory Governmentwill likewise modify England's foreignpolicy, and Lord Roseberry, the newForeign Secretary, will hardly followthe course marked out by Lord Salis-bury. It is said that Servia and Bul-

garia have come to an understanding,while the latter Power and the Portehave patched up some kind of an ar-

rangement by which the Turks securethe right to garrison several places inEastern EoumeIia.vIn Armenia thepeople are ready to rise against theTurks, which event would at once bringRussia- - 'into the field in Asia Minor.While Bismarck is busied creating a newIreland in East Prussia he cannot de- -

Read this Great Bill of Novelties:

First time of THE ELECTRIC BELLOWS.

First time of THE DANCING SKELETON.To-niff- ht MR. NORMAN in NEW SONGS,Probable Suit or n ('uicajro Woman

Tor Estates lit Hawaii.To-nle- ht WASH NORTON' in new Solos and hisSpeaking about the Chinese trade, the

"Chronicle" remarks: "The trade with celebrated specialties.Viral .tinearance of IIENESY LEROYLE in hisChina is not worth considering. Three

fourths of it is in Chinese hands already original sketch, KNOCK MB DOWN.

THE VICTORY OF ELECTRICITY.Since Electricity lias been applied for lighting purposes, all efforts of inTentom have

been directed to construct a lamp for general domestic use. The reason why this prob-lem has till now not been solved, is that none of the inventors could rid themselves of thidea of gas lighting, and that all have adhered to the system of producing the electricityin some central place, or by large machinery, instead of first laying down the principlethat a lamp which should ever become generally useful aud popular, mast be portablelike an oil lamp, and contain the generator of electricity in itself, i. e., in the foot of thelamp.

The Norman Electric Light Company has at last succeeded in completely realizingthis ideal of electric lighting, and there is no doubt that this most important invention,will bring about a complete revolution in all branches of lighting.

Our Electric Lamp needs neither machinery, conductors, nor any expensive outlayand is neither complicated or disagreeable in manipulation; all that iB necessary is to.refill it every four of five days with acid. The cost of lighting will be as cheap as gas (.cents per hour), and it has before the latter the immense advantage of neither producing;heat, smoke nor carbonic acid, owing to which the air is not impured, and remains at thsame degree of temperature. It is further, absolutely inodorous, and does not need to bekindled by match or otherwise, but simply by turning the key, thus avoiding all danger otfire, explosion or suffocation, as in the ease of gas, if the key is left open; and it must bo con-ceded that this advantage alone is invaluable. It is further preferable to any known kindof lighting for the following reasons:

1. Its manipulation is so simple that any child can keep it in order.2. That the lamp is portable, and can be removed like any oil lamp, from one plaee

to another.3. That it neither requires the disagreeable fixing of the wick, or the cleaning of the

cylinder, as in the case of oil lamps.4. That the light produced is a soft and most steady one; that it never flickers, and

the flame, though being equal in power of lighting to gas, fan be regulated to any degree.5. That every danger of fire Is absolutely excluded, as the light will extinguish im-

mediately, if by any accident the glass surrounding the burner should be broltta.6. That it will burn, even in the strongest wind, completely unaffected, thus being

invaluable for illuminations, lighting of gardens, corridors, etc.This lamp is constructed for the present in three different sizes:

A, small size. Height of complete lamp, 14 inches; weight, about 5 pounds; for light-ing rooms, cellars, storage houses, powder magazines (or similar places where explosivesare kept), coaches, illuminations, gardens, mines or any other industrial purpose. Price,XI.

Per lamp delivered free to any part of the world.B, medium size. Serves all domestic purposes for lighting rooms, houses, etc. - TLis

lamp is elegantly decorated, and has removable white ground glass globe.Price per lamp (inclusive of bronze foot and globe, richly and elegantly constructed),

2. delivered free to any part of the world.C, grand size for parlor, hall, saloon, public building, etc. The lamp gives a most

brilliant and steady light, has large removable white globe, decorated most tastefully.,and the workmanship is both first-clas- s and elegant. Trice, 4.10. .

Foot of lamp in either bronze, Japanese, faience or silver oxide.Any special size or design made to order. Estimates furnished.All lamps are ready for immediate use, and will be sent, securely packed in strong

wooden box, with printed directions for use, a quantity of chemicals sufficient for severalmonths' lighting, and one extra burner for size A, and two for sizes B and C. TL neces-sary chemicals can be purchased in any drug store, even in the smallest village.

Every lamp is accompanied by a written guarantee for one year, and will Le ex-changed, or money refunded if the tame should not give complete satisfaction.

On all orders for six lamps and above, a discount of six per cent will be allowed. Noordors from abroad filled, unless accompanied by a remittance to cover tiae amount, orfirst-clas-s references on a New York or Philadelphia house.

The best method of sending money is by draft on New York, which can be procured ofany banker, and everywhere, or enclose the amount in bank notes, gold coins or postagestamps of any country of the world.

All orders, the smallest as well as the most important, will receive the same particularattention, and will be forwarded without delay.

L7"Our Electric Lamps are protected by "law, and all imitations and infringementswill be prosecuted.

K7"Agent s, salesmen on commission, and consignees for our lamps wanted every?where. No special knowledge or capital required.

A fortune to ba made by active persons.

Don't fail to see this 8 parkling programme,We are shipping to China in coin a largeRemember. FAREWELL APPEARANCE f theRenowned MERRYMAKERS.

Box plan now open at the ofllce of J. E. Wise-man. Rpsprved seats. 1: Balcony, 75c; Gal

sum 'of money every year over andabove the regular trade balance. In1885 we thus shipped over $10,000,000.

SO

r.K

lery. 50c.ono7T Doors open at 7:00; performance commences at

This represents the earniugs of Chinese 8 o'clock. Carriages may be ordered at 10:15.

IIENESY LEROYLE, Manager.Vote much attention to Balkan politics, in this country remitted to their homesacross the sea. Chinese industry in this ocand is laying the foundatio for a heap

f trouble for his successors. 93 Fresh. Groods on Ice.State operates much as absentee land jo

O355sa

lordism does in Ireland. The proceedsJust Received per S. S. Alameda,

Cala. Roll Butter. Celery. Cauliflower.of labor go abroad to sustain foreign communities." H

HH

Artichokes. Red Cabbages..Horseradish Roots. Dutch Sausages

Oregon Cream Cheese.Inland Boys Abroad.The following exhibit shows the stand

ing of the Princes and T. P. Cum Swiss Cheese. Bloaters.aa Eastern Oysters, in shell and tins.3

O

HO

3

mins at St. Matthew's Hall, San Mateo,California, for the month ending Febru Fresh Asparagus, the first of the season.

Mallard Ducks. Teale Ducks, Quail, Fresh Salmonarv 3d : D. Kawananakoa Punctuality,

Chicago, February 13th. Thefact wasannounced to-da- y that a Chicago ladyclaims an interest in large estates in theHawaiian Islands and has retained aChicago law firm to prosecute her claim.It is based on her blood relationship toJohn Young, who married into the royalfamily of the Islands, becoming Gov-

ernor of Hawaii and grandfather of thelate Queen Emma. John Young died in1835 at an advanced age, leaving to hisdaughter an immense fortune in landsand cattle.

The last descendant of Kamehameha,Queen Emma Kaleleonalani, died lastApril, leaving no issue. She was thedaughter of Fanny Young Kekelaokalini,who was the daughter of Kaoanaeha andJohn Young. Queen Emma was bornin Honolulu in 183G. She married Kame-hameha IV. and on his death she be-

came Queen. From the other branch ofJohn Young's family the living descend-ants come from Parmelia Crane, who wasthe daughter of John Young's sister.Mrs. Crane died on November 6, 1885,aged 92 years. She was born in Massa-chusetts. Her first husband was CharlesAdams. She was a warm personalfriend of Cardinal McCloskey. Mrs.Farmelia Crane's daughter is Mrs. Jose-phine Smith of Chicago, and her daugh-ter is Mrs. Josephine Fisher of 203 Mor-

gan street. Mrs. Fisher proposes toprosecute the claim of the family to anestate in the Hawaiian Islands rightfullybelonging to the heirs of John Young.

The foregoing is a condensed dispatchto the San Francisco "Chronicle." The"material allegation," as it were, will benews to old residents of the Kingdom.

Frmh Smelts. Fresh Shad. Also, a new lot of"tinf saOUtrjonf)deportment, military conduct and writ n3

oa5

S3

aing, 100 each ; French, 90 ; reading, 89 ;Oregon potatoes.

LEWIS & CO., GROCERS,67 and 69 Hotel street, Honolulupractical arithmetic. 88; algebra and" - 'A

music, 85 each; spelling, 90. E. A' 1 "qaj suonwiono

T, NEW ZEALAND OATS.cKeliiahanui Punctuality, deportment,military conduct and writing, 100 each ;

French. 98: music. 89: reading andAddress: THE NORMAN ELECTRIC LIGHT CO.grammar, 85 each; geography, 80. J

387marl6 d-- w PHILADELPHIA, U. S. OF AMERICA.K. Kaliananaole Writing, military con

The English Cabinet is clearly a com-

promise one. Lord Granville i3 sent tothe Colonial Office, where he will muddlethings worse than Lord Derby did; andthat is saying a good deal. He was triedin the Colonial Office before and made avery bad record for himself and the Lib-

eral Government. Earl Roseberry inthe Foreign Office gives hope of a vigor-

ous policy. Lord Aberdeen's nomina-tion to the Irish Viceroyalty is a boldexperiment, and Mr. John Morley's ac-

ceptance of the Irish Secretaryship willeither make or mar a good reputation.It was also very risky to make Sir W. V.Harcourt Chancellor of the Exchequer.His administration of the Home Depart-ment was neither successful nor brilliant,and while he is an authority upon inter-

national law he has never displayed anyskill in finance. The Parnellites aresupporting Gladstone, and doing whatthey can. to pacify Ireland.

London was in the liands of a mob of

50,000 people for several hours, and nota little consternation resulted therefrom.The demonstration was partly an out-

pouring of the unemployed, but severalthousand of the criminal classes at-

tached themselves to the workingmen's- movement for the purpose of plunder.Fortunately comparatively little violenceof this kind was committed. A commit-

tee appointed by Childers, Home Secre-

tary, is investigating the riots. LordLord Randolph Churchill has attackedthis committee, laying the blame of not

duct and practical arithmetic, 100 each ;

TOmrtnalitv. deportment, spelling andSUPPLY OF THE ABOVE NEW CROPA lust, received. A choice article for seed or

feed, in lots to suit.473 jy23 LA INE & CO.

BSE

a.3

3o

9 35

JO uopipuoo

x - 'history, 93 each ; geography and music,81 each ; reading, 80. T. P. Cummins-Punctu- ality

and drawing, 100 each;military conduct, 98; deportment andspelling, 97 each ; grammar, 94 ; writing,geography and Spanish, 90 each; practi-

cal arithmetic, 89. The standard of per-

fection is 100.

H. ID. jVIcIntyre & JBro.,IMPORTERS AND DEALERS IN

Grroceries Provisions and. FeedEAST CORNER FORT AND KING STREETS.

New Goods received by every packet from the Eastern States and Europe. Jresh CaliforniaProduce by every steamer. All orders faithfully attended to, and Goods delivered to any part of tbmcity free of charge. Island orders solicited. Satisfaction guaranteed. Postoffice Box No. H6Telephoue No. 92 . 76 apl"

STOVE COAL!New York Refined A Crushed, 6 1316, 6T&.

Granulated, 6 6.

Standard A, 6 1 16.

OUSEKEEPERS TAKE NOTICE!HFRANKLIN STOVE COAL, Co-Partners- hip Notice.

Major A. S. Bender returned to Hono-lulu by the Alameda from the EasternStates, whither he went several monthsago in search of health. The Major, weare sorry to say, has not benefitted by thetrip; indeed, his health is about the sameas when he left. He felt the cold verymuch, and is glad to get back to where it

Our San Francisco correspondent writes,under date February 13th, that the Ha-

waiian bark Kalakaua was 12G days out,from Panama, and believed to belost. The San Francisco ''Chronicle"of January 20th reported her as havingbeen spoken by the steamer Colinia. Sincethen nothing had been heard of her.

FOE SALE.FEW FISE BUILDING LOTS ON BERE- -

For

To-da- y is the anniversary of the birth ofGeorge Washington. A salute will be firedfrom the shore battery at noon. TheRoyal Hawaiian Band will serenade HisExcellency George W. Merrill, UnitedStates Minister Resident, at the AmericanLegation from 12 to 2 o'clock.

The BEST LOT ever brought to this market,sale In quantities to suit by

EORGE P. AND JAMES B. CASTLE AREXjl tania street, VJT admitted aa partners In our firm, dating& COOKE. Apply toM. D. MONSARRAT,

27 Merchant street. COOKE.from January 1, 1886. CASTLECASTLEmarlO lra fel-l- wHonolulu, February 17, 18.is warm

Page 3: fitHtt lit Ma ft - evols.library.manoa.hawaii.eduf i if itHtt1 1 1T:iflD rd MS AY A A yikhidh 4X a 0.1 lil! lit iK! Ma I I v ii kb .j a j i at r vi ' j it a ft Si VOL. V. NO. 44. HONOLULU,

PACIFIC COMMERCIAL ADVERTISER, FEBRUARY 22, 183G.

SUotrUsrmrius.BY AUTUOKm. LOCAL AND GENERAL.

His Excellency Governor P. P. Kanoa

head cattle, i horses, 30 pigs, 15 bides and 1? pack-ages sundries from Molokal February iOth.

The schooner Manuokawai brought 5t0 bagsrice, 149 bags sugar and 50 bags rice fleur fromKoolau, Oabn, Februaty 20tb.

The steamship Alameda sailed for the Colonies 1

Executor's and Trustee's Sale!

THEGREAT REAL ESTATE

AND

General Business (IcesOF

J. E. WISEMAN,IlOXOLl 1,1 , If. I.

P. O. BOX 3l. TELEPHONE IT J

t:tnbltfchl lH7f..

a rial or CJeueral Ilaneoek.New York, February 13th. At about

9 o'clock this morning the coifin con-

taining the remains of General Hancockwas placed on the Cht-.ste- r A.Arthur, and carried from Governor'sIsland to the New York shore. Mrs.Hancock remained on the island. Themarch up Broadway was made withoutmusic, and at 10 o'clock Trinity Churchwas reached by the carriages containingthe pall-bearer- s, who followed the re-

mains to the sacred edifice in this order :

Hon. Thomas F. Bayard, Secretary ofState; General Sherman, LieutenantGeneral Sheridan, Major General Scho-fiel- d,

General Franklin, Brigadier Gen-

eral Fly, Brigadier General Ferry, Briga-

dier General Miles, Brigadier GeneralNewton, Brigadier General Wilcox, Gen-

eral Francis Walker, Mr. Hartshorn,Colonel Wilson and Major Miller.Trinity Church bore no traces of mourn-ing save a white cross on a black groundwhich rested upon the pulpit.

When the procession reached thechurch Rev. Father Hill and Rev. Auke-ti- ll

met at the door and preceded thecasket. It was lxrue up the aisle, fol-

lowed by the pall-bearer- s. The casketwas borne by eight soldiers. On thecasket were General Hancock's sword,its golden scabbard and his chapeau.Following the pall-beare- rs came Lieu-

tenant Griffin with his wife, who led herfour-year-o- ld daughter by the hand.With her was Russell Hancock, grand-son of the dead General. The casketwas deposited on a catafalque in front of

the altar. The choir chanted, "Lord,Let Me Know My End," after whichRev. Goodwin of Governor's Island readthe lesson. The services concluded bythe reading of the Lord's Prayer by Rev.Morgan Dix. The procession then re-

formed, marching down the aisle to themain entrance, where the casket oncemore was placed in the hearse. Thefuneral cortege returned in the sameorder as before to the barge office , wherethe steamer Osseo was in waiting to con-

vey the party to Norrist own, Pa. Prompt-ly at 11 :50 the train drew out of thestation.

Norristown, February 13th. --The cere-

monies here were carried out as pre-

viously arranged, and the services at thegrave consisted simply of a salute ofthirteen guns, followed by three salvos.The body was placed in the tomb, afterwhich the mourners dispersed.

New York, February 13th. The fundfor Mrs. Hancock now amounts to $16,-96- 0.

The following contributed $1,000each: George C. Childs and J. A.Drexel, Philadelphia ; J. Pierrepont Mor-

gan, J. W. Drexel, Morton, Bliss & Co.,J. J. Astor, August Belmont, Winslow,Lanier & Co., Brown Brothers & Co.,Andrew Carnegie, Cyrus W. Field, D.O. Mills, J. and W. Seligman & Co. andJoseph Pulitzer of New York; W. W.Corcoran of Washington.

lIit'e't'ourt.BEFORE I'OUCK JUSTICE BICKERTOX.

Saturday, February 20th.Luluka forfeited bail of $6 :;or drunk-

enness.John Kanui was charged with being a

common nuisance by permitting a fero-

cious dog to go abroad. He was foundguilty and fined $3 and $3 50 costs.

.

The Alameda did not sight the Mariposaon the trip down.

A COLONY OF LUNATIC3.

ani Colonel Z. S. Spalding arrived fromKauai on Sunday by the Iwalani- -

Wing On Wo & Co., 32 Hotel street, havegot a fine lot of XXX Manila cigars forsale.

The book of the season. The HosolcluAlmanac and Directory for Price,GO cents.

West, Dow & Co. have just-receive- ex.St. Paul, a large lot of mouldings, f rame,corner and wall brackets, furniture, musicgoods and toys, w hich will be sold at lowestcash prices.

By the Alameda yesterday Lewis & Co.,Hotel street, received a splendid consign-ment of fresh goods on ice, full parri-'ular-

of which are given in an advertisement.Orders should be left early this morning.

Mons. Henri Feer, son of the FrenchCommissioner, arrived by the Alamedafrom Paris.

Some workmen from the Honolulu IronWorks were blasting old iron on Saturdayat Kakaako, near the shore batter-- . Anative working on the dump at that pointhad a very narrow escape, as a large andheavy piece of iron fell within a foot ofwhere he was standing.

The Oceanic Steamship Company willdispatch the fine steamship Geo. W. Elderfrom San Francisco February 27th for thisport. She may be looked for about March7th.

Master Gavin Blackburn, eldest son ofthe Kev. Thomas Blackburn of Port Lin-

coln, South Australia, formerly rector ofSt. Andrew's Cathedral, has recentlygained the first prize for music in a largecollege at Adelaide.

No book ever published contains so muchreliable and valuable information regard-ing the Hawaiian Islands in such smallcompass as the Honolulu Almanac andDirectory, 18SG. Price, 50 cents.

The tern W. S. Bowne arrived at SanFrancisco February 7th, after a passage oftwelve days. The W. G. Irwin arrived onthe 9th, making the trip in eleven and ahalf days. The latter had a large mailaboard.

Mr. and Mrs. Geo. II. Collins of Oak-land arrived by the Alameda, and will re-

main in the Islands several weeks.John DeG raves, who was fined $200 and

sent on the reef for having opium in hispossession, has noted an appeal to the In-

termediary Court. It will be heard onThursday. A. C. Smith appears for him.

The Y. M. C. A. bookkeeping class meetsat 7 o'clock this evening.

Purser Sutton of the Alameda has thethanks of the Advertiser for a late file ofCalifornia papers.

Miss L. Irwin, sister of Win. G, Irwin,Esq., was a passenger by the Alameda.Miss Irwin has made quite a lengthy visitin the States, and her many friends areglad to welcome her back to her Islandhome.

On Tuesday, March 23d, Messrs. E. P.' Adams & Co. will hold an important saleof real estate, by orderof A. J. Cartwright,executor and trustee of Queen Emma'swill.! Mr. D. D. Baldwin of Lahaina. Maui.advertises Hawaiian ferns and land shellsfor sale.

The arrivals at the Hawaiian Hotel during the past seven days number exactlyone hundred.

Miss M. Gove, Miss F. Gove and Messrs.C. G. Gove and W. C. Compton, well-know- n

society people of Cincinnati, arrivedby the Alameda, and are at the Hotel.

Mr. G. W. Morgan, a horse breeder,known all over the State of Kentucky, ar-rived by the Alameda and is staying withhis wife at the Hawaiian Hotel.

The Japanese immigrants, domiciled forthe present at the Immigration Depot,were strolling around town yesterday.

Two Chinese were arrested at Pawaa yes-terday morning by a native police officerin the act of smoking opium. They weretaken to the Station House along withopium, pipes and other paraphernalia.

Vassar College has received a gift for itsbotanical department of a full collection ofHawaiian ferns from Mrs. Emily TalbotWalker of San Francisco.

Mr. John T. Dare, Assistant District At-torney, San Francisco, arrived by the Ala-

meda for a short visit to the Islands.The schooner Eva left San Francisco

February 12th for this port with a miscel-laneous cargo, valued at $4,989. The brigHazard also left the same day for Hilo, hercargo being valued at $1G,1G0. She has tenmules on board.

"Christ a King," is the subject at thetent to-nig-

' A C'aptalu iu Trouble.One of the arrivals at Hilo during last

week was the tern Excelsior with lum-

ber from Puget Sound. The CustomHouse officers boarded her, and in look-ing over the store list found an entry often tins of opium. The Captain was ar-

rested and taken before the District Jus-tice and charged with importing opium.He was fined $100 and sentenced to im-

prisonment for five days. He statedthat he had not the least idea that hewas in the wrong, and it is reported thathe has appealed to the United StatesMinister Resident. His Excellency Mr.Merrill informs us he has not receivedany communication from the Captain.The opium has been confiscated.

9Ian-fW- ar Movements.H. B; M. S. Triumph, flagship of the

Pacific station, is to leave Esquimault,B. C, the latter part of March for Hono-lulu, where she will meet H. B. M. S.Satellite and Heroine, both of which arebound from Callao for Hongkong. Aftera short stay here the flagship will pro-ceed south, while the two other shipswill sail for Hongkong, where theircrews are to be paid off and sent home.

Tbe Merrymakers.The audience at the Hawaiian Opera

House on Saturday on the occasion ofthe second performance of the Merry-makers was a very fair one. The pro-gramme gave much satisfaction from be-

ginning to end. This evening the troupewill give their final performance with anentire change of programme. Seats atWiseman's.

JIIKANALINE.

ThU remedy In prepared Irom the Papal tree,fer the cure of

DYjPEPIa.INDIGESTION,

BILIOUSNESS,

And All Dlrdin AriAlur from tb

It has been proved to be oue of the most rflV nulremecfi.es ever offered the public for tbee d --

ease. Alt who have ud 11 trcotumeod It highly.Put up by

I. H. HITCHCOCK.Hilo, Hawaii.

FOR MALE bv HOLLISTKR A CO.. Hono-lulu.

Parties living on the othr IsUnds can have Itsent to them direct on application to the proprie-tor.

Patented December, 4HtniyJ

Wm. G. Irwin & Co

OFFER FOR SALE

Sugars.DRV ORANULATED

In Parrels,Half Barrels,

And Poxes.

CUBEla Half Barrels

And 5 pouud Boxes.

I11 Boxen.

GOLDEN C. (COFFEE,In Hulf Barrels

And Boxes.

Teas.ENGLISH; BREAKFAST

JAPAN.OOLONG.

POWCHONU

Soap.B LUEJMOTTLEDi

FAMILY LAUNDRY.

Salmon.CASKS l- - TINH,

CASES 2-- TINS'

HALF BARRELH.

I1AKRKW.

Flour.FAMILY ;U quarter sacksX,

-- .i5R'S EXTRA naif sacks)

Cases Medium Bread.

Lime and Cement.

MANILAAnd

SISAL CORDAGE.

Keed's Felt Steam Pipe

aud Boiler Covering.

23 "A" TENTS, (suitable for camp-ing and surveying parties.)

US J

BONE MEAL!!

The undersigned are now prepared to receive orders for this Celebrated Fertilizerfrom the manfactory of Duck & OhlandtSan Francisco:

The following is a report of the compo-nent parts, as obtained by Chemical analy-si- s:

Water 8.10 per centOrganic Matter 29.18 "Silicions Matter , 4.65 "Lime 31.70 "

23.11 " "Phosphoric AcidOxide of Iron 85 " "Carbonic Acid 1.89 "Alka Baits 52

100.00Nitrogen 2.7 per cent.Order8 Received will have Prompt

and Careful Attention.

W. G. Irwin & Co.,Agents or the Hawaiian Islands.

85tf

FLOIJB ! FLOUR !

-- WELL KNOWN- -

BUCKEYE-- AND-

PIONEER

A ant-rU- n BAKERS' AND FAMILY FLOUR,for sale by

CASTLE & COOKE.roayU

soon after ml lnigbt February 2lst. She took inabout 400 tons of coal.

The American brigantine Courtney Ford, Cap-tain Miller, anchored in the stream February 21st,49 days from Newcastle, N. H. V., with about 6T0

tons of coal.The American bark FerrU S. Thompson arrived

at Kahului, Maui, February Htb, with generalmerchandise from San Francisco. The schoonerJ. C. Ford arrived on the 15th from San Francif.-o-.

and the tern Joseph Russ arrived on the lsth inballast from San Pedr.

The steamer Lehua brought 2,450 bags sugarfrom llamakua, Hawaii, February 21st. On her nptrip she cruised In Hawaii channel in search of theschooner Domitila for two days, but was unsuc-cessful In her search.

The American barken tine Geo. C. Perkins, Cap-tain H. Acterruan, arrived in port February 20tbfrom Port Townsend, via Kahului, Maul. Shedischarged 250,000 feet of lumber at the latterplace--, and came here to unload the remaining250,'XJO feet lumber. She la consigned to Messrs.K. G. Wilder t Co., and is docked at the foot ofFort street.

The American tern Excelsior arrived at Hilo,Hawaii, last week with lumber from Puget Soundfur Mr. W. II. Holmes; and the schooner EmmaClaudlna, Captain Matson, also arrived at Ililowith a cargo of general merchandise for SanFrancisco.

The steamer Iwalani brought 2,643 bags sugar,2s bags pia, 24 bides and 50 packages sundriesfrm Kauai February 21st. The sugar will betransferred to the barkentlne Eureka to-da- y.

The steamer James I. Dowsett brought 400 bagssugar from Pala aud Kuau, Maui, February 20th.

The steamer Kinau brought 3,471 bags sugar,40 bides, 1 horse and 60 packages sundries fromwindward ports February 20th. She leaves at 4

o'clock tbis afternoon with passengers for theVolcano and. way ports of Hawaii.

The Oceanic steamship George W. Elder willleave Kan Francisco February 27th and may beexpected her about March 7th.

The steamer Llkelike brought 3,003 bags sugarfrom Kahului, Maui, February 20tb, She will notleave till or the next day in order toundergo repairs to her boilers.

The schooner Nettie Merrill brought 1,550 bagssugar from Lahalna, Maui, February 20th.

The British bark Conference and the Americanbarkentlne George C. Perkins were towed fromKahului, Maui, February 19th by the steamerLlkelike. The former was in ballast for Hum-boldt Bay, California, and the latter vessel was forHonolulu.

The American brlgantlne Selina, from Mexico,via II onolulu; the American steamer Ida Schnauer,from San Francisco; and the Araei lean barkentlneWrestler, from Newcastle, N. S. W., via this port,were off Kahului, Maul, when the steamer Like-le-ft

there on the evening of the Instant.Captain Duncan has been appointed to the com-

mand of the tern Ke Au Uou: and Captain Under-wood takes command of the schooner Canute.

The brlgantlne J. D. Spreckels, the barkentlneEureka and the barks Virginia and Chilena allexpect to leave for San Francisco.

The Ocennic Company's barkentlne W. H.Dimond, Captain H. C. Houdlette, arrived In portearly February 21st, W,i days from San Fran-cisco, the best passage made for a long time bysailing vessels. Sailed from San Francisco Feb-ruary 9th. Experienced light winds and pleasantweather the entire passage. Arrived off DiamondHead rt midnight February 20th. She brings afull cargo of general merchandise, Including ma--

terial for bridges at Kauai. She brought one pas-senger, Miss Duoit.

The steamer Iwalani reports that the weather aNlihau, where the steamer Planter is ashore, wastill rough when she left for Kauai February 19tlThe Iwalani landed the diving; suit and a largescow for conveying machinery from the wreckedsteamer to the shore. The schooner Liholiho leftWalmea for Nlihau February 20th with the Interntion of bringing salvage from the Planter to Hono-lulu.

The German bark Furst Bismarck sailed fromBremen January 19th for Honolulu.

The tern Excelsior arrived at HUo Febru-ary 16th from Port Townsend. Full cargo of lum-

ber for W. H. Holmes.The American schooner Emma Claudlna, Mat-so- n,

Master, arrived at Hilo February 16th,days from San Francisco, with a full cargo ofgeneral merchandise, 7 mules, 2 cows, 1 horse andCO hogs. She brought the following passengers:Mrs. L. Baker, Mrs. J. T. Coan, and Messrs.Greeley, Knowles and Horn.

Arrival of tbe Alameda.The Oceanic Steamship Company's

Royal Mail steamer Alameda arrivedsoon after G o'clock Sunday morning, sixdays and twelve hours from San Fran-cisco. She was detained one day wait-fo- r

tlm English mails. She broughtthirty-fiv- e cabin and twenty --two steer-age passengers for this port, and hadsixty-nin- e in transit for the Colonies.Her cargo was manifested at the follow-ing values : For Honolulu, $34,631 ; toAustralia, $27,927; New Zealand, $10,-68- 5

; Fiji, $250. Total, 73,493. She alsobrought $50,000 in United States goldcoin for Bishop & Co., and thirty-tw- o

bags of mail for the Post Office. Thepassage down was very pleasant, fineweather being experienced after the firsttwo days. After discharging her cargoand taking in coal and the mails, theAlameda proceeded on her voyage toAuckland and Sydney at an early hourthis morning.

iarneir Threat to ReiKu.London, February 13th. The "News",

states that Farnell at Galway threatensthat if Ilealy and Biggar do not permithim to have his own way in giving theparty nomination to Captain O'Shea, in-

stead of Mr. Lynch, the local choice, hewill resign and retire from political life.Commenting on this fact the "News"says that the Irish leader made it clearthat he meant just what he said. Thepaper adds: "But this game cannot beplayed too often. This threat is Mr.Farnell's last card, and it may some daybe trumped by acceptance, and then befollowed by the necessity of resignation."

Hawaiian Hotel.The following were registered, at the

Hawaiian Hotel yesterday: A. S. Ben-der, Honolulu ; J. Uallanen and wife, J.T. Dare, Jose Aurrecoeche, wife and son,Miss M. Garat, San Francisco; F. B.Tarbon, C. M. Rowley, wife and son, H.L. Shippy, New York; G. W. Morganand wife, Harrodsburg, Kentucky ; Win-thro- p

M. Merrill, Boston, Mass. ; GeorgeII . Collins and wife, Oakland; W. row-e- ll

and wife, Ottawa, Canada; Col. Z. S.Spalding, J. M. Hays, Kauai; E. Kruse,Kohala; G. Knudson, Waimea; J. S.Allen, Hartford, Ct. ; Miss M. Gove, MissF. Gove, C. G. Gove, W. C. Compton,Cincinnati.

OF- -

REAL ESTATE

Notice is hereby giveu that, by order ofAlexander J. Cartwright, Sr., the Executorand Trustee of the last will and testamentof Emma Haleleonalani, deceased, and un-

der license of the Supreme Court, we areauthorized to sell at public auction, at oursalesroom, ou Queen street, in the city ofHonolulu, on

Tuesday, March 23, 1886,

At 12 o'clock noon, all the right, title andiu (erect of the said Emma Haleleonalani, of,in and to the following described lands :

1. The Ahupnaa of WAIAHA 1. situatein Kona, Island of Hawaii, and containingan area of 273't acres, and beiui; more par-ticularly described in It ova! Patent 1,930.

2. The land known as KOLOAKIU, sit-uate in Waipio, District of llamakua,Island of Hawaii, containing an area of3G GO 100 acres, and being Apana 3 of ItoyalPatent 1,GG5, Land Commission Award8,515 B.

3. The land situate at KULAHUIIU, La-hain- a,

Maui, containing an area of4 468-121- 0 acres, aud doncribed in lloyalPatent Grant 432.

4. The Ahupuaa of ULAINO, situate inthe District of Koolau, Island of Maui, andbeing the same as appears by Itoyal Patent2,237, Laud Commission Award 3,513 B.Area unknown.

5. That certain piece of land situate atPUIWA, Honolulu, Oahu, and containingan area of 55-10- 0 of au a err, and being moreparticularly described in lloyal PatentGrant 2,400.

G. That certaiu land situate at KAHULUI,Kona, Hawaii, containing an area of 1 9-- 10

acres, and more particularly described inRoyal Patent 6,277 A, Land CommissionAward 7,496 B.

7. Those certain pieces of land situate atPUAKO, Lahaina, Maui, and containing anarea together of 1H acres, and being Apanas4 and 5 of Royal Patent 6,777, Land Com-mission Award 5,433.

8. That certain land situate at PUERU--EHU, Lahaina, Maui, aud containing anarea of 23 perches, and being described inRoyal Patent 1.707, Land CommissionAward 6,875.

0. The Ahupuaa of KAHULUI, situate inKona, Island of Hawaii, and being Apana 2of Royal Patent 1,669, Land CommissionAward 3,516 B. Area unknown.

10. The Ahupuaa of Kalama, situate inKona, Island of Hawaii, and being Apana 2of Royal Patent 1.CG9, Land CommissionAward 3,516 B. Area unknown.

11. The Ahupuaa of PAnOEIIOE, situatein Kona, Island of Hawaii, and being thesame as described in Land CommissionAward 8,519 B. Area unknown.

12. The Ahupuaa of WAIAKA 1, situate atWaimea, District of South Kohala, Island ofHawaii, and being Apana 1 of Royal Patent1.6G6, Land Commission Award 8,516 B.Area unknown.

13. That certain piece of land situate inPAKALA, Lahaina, Maui, and containingan area of 1 acre 22 perches, and beingdescribed in Royal Patent 1,876, Land Com-mission Award 8,519 B.

14. That certain piece of land situate inPAKALA, Lahaina, Maui, containing anarea of 38-10- 0 of an acre, and described inRoyal Patent 1,196, Land CommissionAward 10,427.

15. That certain land situate at MAKILA,Lahaina, Maui, containing an area of 7xiacres, aud described in Royal Patent 1,112,Land Commission Award 10,427.

16. That certain land situate in MAKILA,Lahaina, Maui, containing an area of 1 rood19 rods, and described in Royal Patent 3,537,Land Commission Award 10,427.

17. The Ahupuaa of MAUNALEI, situateon the Island of Lanai, and containing anarea of 3,442 33-10- 0 acres, and being tbesame as described in Royal Patent 6,775,Land Commission Award 8,519 B.

18. That certain piece of land, with thebuildings thereon, situate on Hotel street,in the City of Honolulu, Island of Oahu,and known as KUOIIA, containing an areaof 83 fathoms and 16 feet, and described inRoyal Patent 146, Land Commission Award118 B.

19. That certain piece ef land with thebuildings thereon, situate on Queen street,in said Honolulu, containing an area of615-100- 0 of an acre, and being Apana 1 ofRoyal Patent 6,778, Land CommissionAward 8,515. And also

20. That certain piece of land with thebuildings thereon, situate on said Queenstreet, containing an area of 0 of an acre,and being described in Royal Patent 3,566,Land Commission Award 6,423 B.

For further particulars apply to

E. P. ADAMS & CO.,

Auctioneers.Or to A. J. CARTWRIGHT, SR.,

Executor and Trustee.

TO LET.

rpHE PREMISES ON PUNCHBOWL STREETL heretofore occupied by the German Club, con-sUU-

of Club House, Bowling Alley and exten-sive grounds well laid out. Entrance from Punch-bowl and Emma street (.

Apply to H. A. WI DEM ANN,521marl or J. F. UACKFKLD.

HAWAIIAN FERNS

-- ANI-

Land Shells.

SALE, HAWAIIAN FERNS, MOUNTEDI7OR unmounted, aa may be desired, at fI0 percomplete set of 115 species, or at 10 cents perspecimen for any number required. The ternsare named and put in neat cases sufficiently se-cure for mailing to any part of the world. Also, Ha-waiian land shells for able at from 10 to 20 centsper species. Each specie named and representedby from one to five pairs of shells. Please address

D. J). BALDWIN,spt tf Lahaina, Staui.

la order that there may be no drlay in doming

tn accounts at the Hawaiian Treasury for thefiscal period eniiluK March 31, ail personstiavlutf moneys on account of the Government arerequested to make returns promptly, and all em-

ployee of the Government, or other persons towhom moneys may be due, are also requested topresent vouchers for settlement on or bc-for- the3lst of March, 1836. F. . PRATT.

60Jdftwmar31 Registrar Public Accounts.

Teudeni Wanted for Lighting theMtreet of the City or Iloiiolulii.

Scaled tenders will be received at the InteriorOffice till 12 o'clock noon of Saturday, March 13,

IS8G, for keeping in repair and lighting the s'reetlamps of the city of Honolulu, now numberingone hundred and elKhty-flve(H- 5j more or less, forthe term of three (3; years from March 15th,proximo.

The bids will be for each lamp per month, withthe understanding that the number may bechanged, aa circumstances may require, at thepleasure of the Marshal.

The contractor will be paid monthly, on the lostday of each calendar month, on the written cer-

tificate of the Marshal or his Deputy that the ser-

vice has been satisfactorily performed.A bond in the penal sum of two thousand tire

hundred dollars (200) with approved surety willbe required as a guarantee of the fulfillment of theterms of the contract.

Tenders should be plainly marked on the outsideOf the envelope, "Tenders for street lighting."

The Minister of the Interior does not bind him-

self to accept the lowest or an) tender.CIIAS. T. GULICK,

Minister of the Interior.Interior Office, February 8, 1986. feb8-t- f

PORT OF HONOLULU, II. 1.

AKKIVALS.Saturday. February 20.

htmr Klnau, King, from Maul aud HawaiiNtuar Llkellke, Lorenzen, from KahuluiHtmr Mokolli, McGregor, from MolokalHtmr Jas I Dowsett, Dudoit, from Pala, MaulHtmr Walmanalo. Neilson, from WalmanaloHcbr Manuokawai. from KoolauAm bktne Geo C Perkins, from ban Francisco,

via KahuluiSunday, February 21.

R M 8 8 Alamedi (Ann H G Morse, 6 days and12 hours from San Francisco

Am brgtoe Courtney Ford, Miller, 49 days fromNewcastle, N M V

Am bktne W II Dimoud, 11M Ironi SanFrancisco

stmr Iwalani, Freeman, from KauaiHtmr Lehua, Davles, from llamakua, HawaiiStmr Kllauea llou, W'eisbarth, from llamakuaAm bktne Mary Winkleman, C Bachus, from

San FranciscoScnr Kaiukeaouli, from Kohalaftcbr Ehukal, from WalaluaBchr Mile Morris, from Lanai

DF.PA RT I'll KS.Hatcrday, February 20.

Am brstne Consuelo, K B Cousins, for SanFrancisco, at 10 a m

Schr Maiolo, for IaupahoebooHchr Waiehu, for KamiSchr Leahl. for llxualei

Monday, February 22.

KMSS Alameda (Am) 11 G Morse, for theColonies

Vessel Leaving To-I)a-j.

Stmr Kinuu. King, for Hawaii and Maui, at 4

p mStmr Mokolii, for Molokal, at 5 p niStmr James I Uowsett, Dudoit, for Paia,

Maui, at 5 p mStmr Walmanalo. Ne!lson?for WalmanaloAm bktne Mount Lebanon, Nelson, for Hong-

kong at 3 p mTern Ke An llou, for Kau. HawaiiSchr Nettie Merrill, for Lahainaischr Ehnkal, for WalaluaHc.hr Manuokawai, from Koolau

chr Kaulkeaoull, for Kohalafticnr Emma, fromOlowalu, Maul

FOKE1UN VESSELS IS 1'OBT.Am bktne Eureka, J Lee, from San FranciscoAm bktne John Smith, Kustel, from Newcastle,

NSWHaw tern Ke An Hou.Lo veil, from Jaluit.SSIAm schr Canute, Johaunassen, from San Fran-

ciscoAm bktne Mount Lebanon, C H Nelson, from

Hongkong.Bark Virginia, Fettlgrew, from Newcastle, N

H WHaw brig Allie Rowe, J Phillips, from Hongko-

ng-Brithark Chilena, Davies, from Liverpool

Am bktne Forest Queen, J C M Winding, fromKan Francisco

Am bktne John Worster, C Kittschen, fromNewcastle, N W

Am bk Majestic, Alex Bergman, from PortTownsend. W T

W tMel Expected rroiu Foreign Porln.Am bark Hope, D W P Penhallon, from Port

Townsend, W T, due Mar 15-3- 1

Brit bark Natuma, from Glasgow, due Marchu.0-- 31

Brit ship Stirlingshire, Alexander, from Liver-jxki- I,

via Madeira, doe March 23-- 31

Am bktne Nellie M Slade, from New York,--due vl 30

Brit bark Tycoon from Sydney via Newcastle,N S W. dun March -

Am bk Sonoma, Howes, from Newcastle, N SW. due February 18-- 23.

Brit S S Australia, V C B rough, from the Colo-nies, en route to San Francisco, due Feb 20

Brit bark Lapwing, De Gruchy, from Liverpool,due May 20-8- 1

Nor bk Cap, Christiansen, from Newcastle, N SW, due April 10.

Brit bk Star of Devon, from Newcastle, N S W,due March 15-- 31.

Haw achr Jennie Walker, B Anderson, fromFanulug's Island, due Feb 20 24

EXPORTS.For San Francisco, rer brgtne Consuelo, Febru-

ary 80th W G Irwin fc Co, 7,650 bags sugar; Hy-sn- an

Bros, 610 bags rice, Total tounage, 413 tons;domestic value, (39,575 24.

PASS EX UK UK.arrivals.

From Sao Francisco, per steamship' Alameda,February 21st Colonel W Powell and wife, J SAllen, Mrs E C Damon, J Halilnati and wife, JseAurrecoechea, wife, son and servant, Major A SBander, Mrs J M Cooke, Mrs S T Alexander anddaughter. Miss J E Lamb, Henry Feer, C WGray,W M Merrill, C M Rowley, wife and son, P Mad-so- n,

H Uoger, CI) as Michiels. Mrs WG Armstroagand infant. Miss II C Carpenter, Miss L Irwin, GH Collins and wife, Miss F Gove, Miss M Gove,Miss B Chillburn, J T Dare, T J McLaughlin, 22In the steerage and 69 passengers iu transit.

From windward ports, per bteamer Kinau, Feb-ruary 2Uth Mrs W U Wilkiuson, Mrs C F Hart,Miss S Hart, W J .Brodie, F P Hastings, W HCornweli, J O Carter, H F Glade, W G Needham,W Y Horner, Don Llm, A See and 73 deck pas-sengers.

From Kahului, per steamer Llkelike. February20th W H Halstead, Robt Lewers, JC Baldwin,Miss M Baldwin, Mrs J Torbert, Miss E Torbert,K A Bielenbers and 60 deck passengers.

From Molokal, per steamer Mokolii, February30th D Kaluokaiani, W Tell, Miss Tell and 55deck passengers.

From Kauai and Niihau,per steamer Iwaltnl,February 21 His Excellency Governor P P Ka-no- a,

Colonel Z S Spalding, W L Holokahiki, MrsP Richmond, Kruse, Rev J B Uauaike, J Hay,J Kauwl, V Knudsen and 2 daughters, J N.Wil-cox, S M Damon, J J Williams. W B Bellows and93 deck passengers.

DEPARTURES.

For Auckland and Sydney, per steamship Ala-meda, February 21 P W Pearce, Mrs E C Pit-man, Mrs F A Barker, Capt Bu.sh.-II- , Capt Sheet.Steerage. H O Rollage, W D Masney, W Neagle,B Napoleon, WPeakuam and fami.y.

N1IIPP1.U SOT1S.The Oceanic Company's Royal Mail steamship

Alameda, Captain II. G. Morse, arrived at a. m.February 21st, 6 days and 12 hours Irom San Fran-cisco. Sailed from San Francisco February 14that 2:30 p. m. and discharged pilot at 4 p. m. First4S hours had strong N.K. winds and heavy N.W.well; thence fine weather to port.The steamer Mokolli brought 213 bags sugar, 10

TU fiUwli various brandies of busine.sa wl'.l

enable the public on the laUmU ami from abroadto gain general Information on all mattrr In lbfollowing-- department:

Real Estato DepartmentBuys and otlla Real K.tat iu all parta of tbe

Kingdom.Values Real Estate and Froperty in city and

suburbs.Rents and lease Iloum-s- , Cottages, Rooms and

Lands.Attends to Insurance, Taxes, Repairing ana

Culler ting of Rentals.Draws legal papers of every nature Searches

Titles, Records, Etc

Employment DepartmentFinds Employment in all branches of lndn:ry

connected with the Islands.

General Business MattersKeep Books and Accounts, collect Bills, loan

or Invest Moneys. IVmuaiiship, Engrosslu andall kinds of Copying done.

Procures Fire and Lift insurance.Advertisements and corrtwpniidetM attended to.Information of evfiy dewrltioii conuected

with the island couiitiir irom abroad f il yanswered.

Custom House Broker.Merchants will find this Department a special

benetH to them, as I attend to oUtiiufC goodsthrough power of Attorney and delivering thesame at a amall commission.

Kollfltiiic A pen I for the "MLTt'AL LIFEINSURANCE COMPANY OF NEW YORK,"the largest, grandest and soundest InsuranceCompany In the world.

AOENT for the

"rent ItMrllutrtou Hallway ltoufe,In America. .Travelers Journeying by rail luAmerica will rind this route the most eomfortftbland moHt delightful. The scenery is the grandemgoing East, and with the PULLMAN PALACESLEEPING CARS and good meals along th trip,polite attention, from employees and reason-able fare ao route can excel this.

AGENT for the

Honolulu Kojsl Opera Houte,Managers ot first-clas- s companies abroad will

address me for terms, etc.

DEPARTMENTS.Real Estate Broker.

Cimtom lloase Broker.Money Broker,

Fire and IJI'e IiiHuraue Agent.Employment A (rent,

KallroaU Acent anil(General liuslne Agent

ADDRESS :

J. E. WISEMAN,8tmy6-8- 6 HONOLULU. H. I.

PACIFIC

Commercial Advertise!

8TEAM BOOK AND JOB

PRINTING OFFICEIs prepared 10 do t il kinds of

Commercial & Legal Work

CORRECTLY AXD WITH DISPATCH.

llavingjust Received a Complete and NewAssortment of

Job Types and Ornaments

Of tfie Latest Styles, from tbe most Oldbra ted Foundries of the United States,

and employing only Experienced

and Tasty Workmen, we are

prepared to turn out

Letter Head.BUI HeadM.

flreulars.Note Ifeals.

Htaten.ent.Jim or rMiiair,Contract),

Mortgage Blank.Eeae,

Nlilpplnir (VintrarU,(In Hawaiian A Kngllthj

Calendar.Blank 4'heekN, if

Bonds.Hek CerlilieateM.

Bnsluess Cards.Meal Cheek.

Milk Tieket.Bank Check

Order.Receipt.

Marriage Certltieate.Diploma.

Catalogue.Blotting Pad.

Druggist Eabel.Envelop,

Shipping Itecelpls.Ball Programme.

Theatre Programmes.And in fact everuthinq which a Fir&t-Cla- a

Office onn do.

P. C. A. Job Printing (lie

How rati ii ts Are Cared for la BelgiumThe System In Krlef.

tTiicajro Times Translation.In Gheel each patient has not one or

two persons only to watch over him, butseveral thousand. In an ordinary inclosedinsane asylum a small number of guardsare sufficient to watch over a relativelylarge number of insane people; but theinsane are never watched in asylums ex-

cept by those specially charged to do so.In Gheel the entire population are inter-ested prominently or remotely in the kindtreatment of the patients. The nurse hasalways rivals who would not delay tolodge a complaint against him if he shouldbe guilty of violence or brutality towardthe unfortunate creatures under hischarge. Besides, every resident of Gheelis acquainted with the entire colony, orvery nearly so. He knows where everypatient lives and his disease, and feels aainterest or at least sympathy for him.

Seventy-tw- o per cent of all the insaneat Gheel are engaged in some u-ef- ul oc-

cupation. They are generally employedby their nurses, and receive on Sunday asmall sum for their work of the week. Inwinter the insane ma3r leave their roomsor houses and go oa the street from 8o'clock in the morning until 4 in theafternoon, and in summer from 6 in themorning until 6 in the evening. Onlyquiet lunatics are allowed to frequent thecafes. The sale of spirituous liquors tothem is forbidden.

The insane population of; Gheel in 1840was 717; in ld3 it was 1,663. The na-tionality of these varies. The majorityare, of course, Belgians, then come theDutch; there are a few French, and notmany Germans or Englishmen. Severalof the insane at Gheel have passed thegreater part of their lives there. Casesin which patients have spent from fortyto fifty years in the colony are not rare.

The Gheel system consists essentially inthis: The lunatic is removed from his ha-bitual environment, from the society ofthose among whom he fell a victim to dis-ease. They are only a memory to him.They are not near him to recall to hismind a subject which can be only a sadone to him, and to afford food to thecurrent of thought which besetshim. A new life opens to him, withnew faces, in a new country; everythingdistracts him. He has not the feel-ing created by the inclosed asylum, bythe threshold which is never crossed, andby the wall beyond which the eye neverreaches. He is not in perpetual contactwith other lunatics, and does not experi-ence the depressing influence such com-pany exerts for say what wemay, in insane asylums proper the delirium of onepatient reacts on the delirium of theothers. In the one case, compulsory liv-

ing in the midst of lunatics, listening totheir wanderings or turned back uponone's self; in the other, physical activity,life in the open air. among sensible peo-ple, who continually divert the patientfrom his own troubles. Isolation withoutsolitude such is the system of Gheel, andno better system for lunatics not danger-ous can be conceived.

A stockman at Fort Benton, .Montana,says the prairie fires are caused by thesmoking of cigarettes by the cowboys,who throw the stubs recklessly about ontbe grass.

Page 4: fitHtt lit Ma ft - evols.library.manoa.hawaii.eduf i if itHtt1 1 1T:iflD rd MS AY A A yikhidh 4X a 0.1 lil! lit iK! Ma I I v ii kb .j a j i at r vi ' j it a ft Si VOL. V. NO. 44. HONOLULU,

PACIFIC COMMERCIAL ADVERTISER, FEBRUARY 22, I860.

- ' - -77 - I

Smrrtistmtnts. .abfrtistnurtis.

ir nr ir raTicaTPV c OA"T1U. Y. MCtinJ!i01M!il CV OVL

Chemically Pure AMBER SOAP-Chemic- ally Pure.

E. E. MAYHEW,

Contractor and Builder,

e Hotel Htrtt, Honolulu, II 1.. ,

(Opposite Fashion Stables).G0LDBEKG,M.Don't Too a Clamra

CO CD

COU3

have received;

May 8th. Per Mariposa, 1,754 Packages ;

May 22d Per Alameda, 1,922 Packages.;

To Arrive Per Consuelo. 332 Packages,

BFXL TELEPHONE 53.P. O. BOX 315.

All work In mv line faithfully done. Plans andaTiMfltttion nud- - Jobhlnz in nil details done

CAMPBELL'S BLOCK,

Corner of Fort and Merchant Streets,at abort notice. Uood work and low charges Ismy motto.

3

q

OS3

Oil

1

lias just onod out a Urpe and - nil" 2 latSfin jgoods, custom-mad- e clothing, and Hats and Caps

For Sydney and Auckland.

and be satisfied with inferior articles, just because youhave used them for years. Wake up and look around, ,

and see what are the latest and best soaps in the market.Vie know that you have been using soaps for washing andcleansing purposes manufactured from soapstone, pitchand diseased fats, that give all kinds of diseases, such asitch and salt rheum, and make the skin full of pimples.You did not know that these diseases were the result ofimpure soap being used in washing your clothes. We

know you did not. You thought that your blood was outof order, and you have been trying to rid your system ofits impurities by taking all kinds of medicines, and at thesame time the "system has been absorbing poisons fromyour clothes being washed with impure soaps.

The "Amber," Washing and Cleansing Soap is Chemi-

cally Pure, and it is the only chemically pure soap in themarket. It is manufactured from a recipe endorsed bythe highest medical" authorities as a Pure Soap.

FOR SALE BY ALIi OROCEItS.

terns. . , ( f flouts Kcckwaro.

ASSOKTED GKOCEKIES,

WHICH

Will bo Sold at tlie .Lowest Af:vket Rates.

Particular attention is caueti 10 an f-K- -4!tf

The new and floe At steel stt amsliip

99ALAMEDA, CO

M. "W. McOhesney fc Son,COS3

Of the Oceanic Steamship Company, w ill bedue at Honolulu from San Francisco

or or about12 ami 44 Queen Klreet, Honolulu.lyFebruary QOtli, chemically Pure. AWISER SOAP Chemically Pure.

And will have prompt dispatch w:h malls andDtu'senarers for the above ports.

For freight or passage, having SUPERIOR AC- -COMMODATIONK, apply to

-

Wm. Gr. Irwin & Co.,AGENTS.

COMMERCIAL WORK.

'Artis tic Co lor Prin tin .laiteiilNOW READY. NOW READY. it .

GLOSSED LABELS.

INTER-IST.AII- D

1888.1886. Third Year of Publication.

ITI-lI- S HONOLULUSteam Navigation Co.

(LIMITED.)

ALMANAC AND DIRECTORY! VHliBBSTEAMER W. G. HALL,

(MALULANI.) 2!3I MAIN ST.,rH(ttliTTSTRATED.)

For the Year of Our Lord 18S6, Containing anBATEH..... Commander

W'Ui run regularly to Maalaea, Maul, and Konaand Kau, Hawaii.

Astronomical, Civil & Ecclesiastic'! CalendarSTEAMER PLANTER,

FOR THE YEAR AN

B. F. EHLEES & CO.,(LILINOE,)

CAMJCRON .Commander

Leaves every Tuesday at 5 p. m. for Nawillwill,Koioa. Steele and Walmea. Kf turning-- , will leave Official and Business Directory of HonoluluNawlltwlli every Saturday at 4 p. m., artlving-- at mi,:a .Honolulu every Sunday at a a. m.

TOGETHER WITH DRY GOODS IMPORTERS,XIoiiolxilii XI. I.STEAMER IWALANI,

Full Statistical and General Information.CommanderFREEMAN.Will run regularly to Hamoa, Maul, and Kukul-hael- e,

llonokaa and Vaauhau, Hawaii. All the Latest Novelties in Fancy Goods Eeceived byRELATING TO THE HAW'N ISLANDS.

230-oc- tl 86Every Steamer.STEAMER C. R. BISHOP, Great pains and expense have been gone to by the Publishers tomake this Almaxac and Directory the most useful and comprehen-sive work of the kind ever published in the Hawaiian Kingdom. Itwin ho r.innrl invnlnnhlA to men of business, travelers and tourists,

MACAULEV Commander

tavM every Friday at 8 a. m. for Walanae,Oanu, and Han ale! and KUauea. Kauai, Return-u- g,

leaves Uanalel every Tuesday at 4 p. m., andteaching at Walidua and AVaiauae Wednesdays,and arriving t Hoaolulu same day.

B. F. DILLINGHAM, JAMES O. SPF.NCER,Secretary and Treasurer.and is guaranteed a wide circulation at Home and in Foreign Couu- -

t naPresident and Manager.

Its Court and Official Calendar carefully corrected to the lates'

'1 value to the Islands have oeen prepared by ex

STEAMER JAMES MAKEE,. WKIR - Com mander

; WIU run regularly to Kapaa, Kauai. ;

PACIFIC HARDWARE COMPANY,(LIMITED),

NurceHSon to IiIIInsIain k Co. and hBumel Kott.

Fort Street : : : Hoixolnlupert writers, which are well calculated to beget great interest iu

their condition ana prospect aDroaa.

JElegantly Illustrated.T. K. FOSTER, President.

J. ni, secretary.

-- :o:-

WILDER'S STEAMSHIP CO.,

Llmltrdb "WHIPS.A large invoice, Eastern make, at very low prices. Superior Riding Paddles.

The Hickok Calcium Burner,MANILA CIGAES

STEAMER KINAU,

--60--CANDLE POWER- -(King, Commanaer),

leaves Honolulu a per following schedule,G0--In Bond or Duty Paid.

The most iwwerful light ever introduced into this market. KEROSENE OIL, ex- -

A verv CHOICE LOT just received. The best in the market.

touching at lanaina, aimuw:.,kona. KawaihaelAUpahoehoe. HUo and Keaunou:

CommenclDg on MONDAY. October 12th, andthence on the first Monday following the arrivalof the "Alameda" and Mariposa," on the 8thand 22d of each mouth:

make the VOLCAJ.OThe steamer Klnau will: - 1.1.. irnnhmi tn Wodneadav morn- -

ira quality, irvwn ami m k'-- 1 " Uv.v..v.w

CHANDELIERS AND LAMPS of the latest designs All the novelties in

WAUE, AGHICULTUKAL IMrLEMKKTS, HOUSE F OOlS

iy PACIFIC HARDWARE COMPANY, Honolulu.HOLLISTEE & COlag. giving tourhu two.days and two nighto atthe VOUJ AN O HOUSE.

When the 8th and 22d of the month fall onMonday, the Klnau will leave that day.

TICKETS FOR THE ROUND TRIP TO THEVOUCANO. FIFTY DOLLAR. WHICH PAYS

Tlnau'lll arrive in Honolulu Sundaymornings on Volcano trips. On Hilo Wp wUl He trots the air. The Earth rings when he touches it. The

hasest liorn of his hoof is more musical than tlie pipe of Herm es.

Shakespeare.

leave Honolulu on l uesunj a, uu inu... 'morning.

iASSTCXfiER TRAINS will connect with theKlnau at Mahukona.

The Klnau WIIX TOUCH at Honokala andPaauhau on down trips from HHo for Passengersif a signal is made from the shore. WILDER fe CO.,

IMPORTERS AND DEALERS IKLEWIS & CO.,

"Wholesale arid Hetail Grocers,G7 and C9 Hotel street. F. O. Box 297. Old and New Telephone, 240.

NEW HOODS JUST RECEIVED ON ICE. Fresh California Fruits. Fresh California Fish

and a full line of Fancy and Staple Groceries. Goods delivered to nil parts of the city free of charge

AND SATISFACTION GUARANTEED. 75 ap!6

STEAMER LIKELIKE.lLorenzen, Commander), JUniTilDer and. Coal,

Doors, Hash and Blinds. Ail kinds of BUIL1KK8 XIABDWAKK. Taints. Oile, Glass, Matting

Corrupted Iron, Portland Cement; STKEL NAILS, much superior to Iron, and cost but littly

more-- .

Leaves Honolulu svery Monday at 5 r. u. torKfcanakakal.Kahulul, every week: lluelo, liana

'':; ;

Jteanae.MOKuiau buu Jand KJpahuiu. . .i, tA.rnnr will tno at the alKtve TTnlTAT TTT TT Til AAT ITTTl 1 r C1 nil

For mails and passengers only.

llnve eonilelel ami offer for Kale tlie following Boilern. viz:. - r.mTlIU -- TT HTlH t fjallft WaV Boiler. 19f t. 6in .X6ft

IfPA I i (H)Mr(JLlM) STilirilj liUlljilltO i Tubular Boiler, 15ft.6in.x6ftSTEAMER KILAUEA HOD,

(Welsbarth, Commander),

Will leave regrularly for Paauhau, Koholalele,Ookala, Knkaiau, Honohina, Laupahoehoe, Haka-la- a

and Onoraea J Oil 1ST NOTT, The Trotting Stallion1 Combination Boiler, 12 ft. x 5 ft. 0 in.

1 Combination Steel Boiler, 12 ft. x 4 ft., alsoSTEADIER LEIIUA. 1 Second-Han- d Tubular Boiler, 12 ft. x 4 ft.

io5-je2-- -8 Apply to Tlio Honolulu Iron Works Co.(Davies, Commanaer

i f r iWill leav reeularly for aame rorta aa KilaneaHon.

A I?it

FRANK GKRTZ,fiftl T in. nn

i i.i. s

TlHTiNTrriJREWill stand for the Season of 1880 at N. F. BURGESS' stable, Kius street (formerly thePony Stables), seaaon to commence February 1st. and end July Int.

Terms reduced to $30 for tbe season ; insurance at special rateB.

VENTURE is, in size, style, color, disposition and gait, as desirable a horse as erercame to the country. He is remarkably vigorous and very sure. Most of tbe marea bredto him last year are now heavy in foal, and hi voting foals are perfect models of beautyand symmetry, and are very highly prized by their owners. His success as aCalifornia before coming to this country was remarkable, and it is said that to-da- y most ofthe fine roadsters and driving horses in and about Oakland are claimed by their owners tobe by VENTURE. When we remember that be stood lor many years in the above namedplace at $100 for tlie reason, he surely ought at the low price now charged for his servicescommand a liberal patronage from the public : and added to ibis his peerless Lreeding, itis no wonder that bis get are so valued.

His pedigree is well known bv all horsemen, but I will refer to it briefly : By Bel-

mont, back seventeen more thoroughbred crossea to thedam by American Bov, runningBurton Barb mare, his eighteenth dam. In conclusion, I will quote a few lines from avery valuable work entitled Horse Breeding," just issued the past year:

"If you breed from a horse of pure blood, no matter if the female is of commonstock, you are breeding up ; but if you breed from a horse of mixed blood, you are breed-

ing back."For any additional particulars call on

C. B. MILES, Proprietor.

Of all Descriptions of

BOOTS & SHOESfry Orders from the other Islands solicited.

Jin. 114 Fort St., Honolulu

LIGHT! LIGHT!

No More Darkness.Just received, ex MARTHA DAVIS, from Boston,

Downer's Kerosene Oil.

Standard Kerosene Oil.

Water White Kerosene Oil.

FOR SALE BY

J. T. WATERHOUSE.33S

STEAMER MOKOLI1.

(McGregor, Commander),

Leaves Honolulu each Monday at 5 p. m. forKannakakal. Karaalo. Pukoo.Lahalna.Lanal,

and Kalanpapa. g,

leave Fukoo Friday 6 a.m. for Honolulu,arriving Baturday morning.

The Company will not be respooslble forany tretght or packages unless receipted for, norfor personal baggage unless plainly marked. Notresponsible for money or Jewelry unless placed Incharge of the Purser.

All possible care will be taken of Live Stock, butthe Company will not assume any risk of accident.

SAM'L O. WILDER, President-8- .

B. ROSE, Secretary.PFFICE Corner Fort and Queen streets.

69--It Mr 80

Stoves, Ranges and Housekeeping Goods.

A. ROSA,AT LAW AND NOTARYATTORNEY with th. Attnrnev General. Alii

Plumbing, Tin, Copper and Sheet Iron Work71 '

olanl Hale, Honolulu, H. 1. C7 mr26-12-t- f 1

Page 5: fitHtt lit Ma ft - evols.library.manoa.hawaii.eduf i if itHtt1 1 1T:iflD rd MS AY A A yikhidh 4X a 0.1 lil! lit iK! Ma I I v ii kb .j a j i at r vi ' j it a ft Si VOL. V. NO. 44. HONOLULU,

(Dn o(MwemUmm'DEMPSEY FIGHTS FOCARTY.A FIENDISH PLOT. A SLASHING SENSATION.DEATH OF MRS. BAYARD.THE WIDE WORLD. BRITISH POLITICS- -

New Nomination Tor Wlice MorleyKea:Iy for Ircl.iu.l.

The Court Circular announced that Mr.Gladstone in his audience wtth th e Queenon Monday, was appointed Prime- Miniver.Mr. Chamberlain receive the ofdeof Fir tLord of the Admiralty . Mr. Colling willbe given pn important post. Mr. Morleyhas accepted the Chief Secretaryship i

Ireland, Earl Roseberry tho Foreigu port-folio, Mr. Charles Rnssel th- - Attorn--y-Generalship- ,

and Mr. Cohen tho S dicitor-Generalshi- p.

It is rumored that JohnNcish wiil be Lord Chancellor of Ireland.The MacDermott Attorney General of Ire-land, and Mr. Hemphill Solicitor-Ge- r.ilof Ireland. Lord Richard Grosvenor, theLiberal whip, will be promoted iu office,and Mr. Arnold Mosely will succeed him aswhip. Gladstone will be returned to Par-liament for Midlothian, without oppositionin the on necessitated by his ac-

ceptance of office.Preparations are already making for

Morlev's on for Newcastle. lie willproliably go to Ireland at once. lie i- -

regarded by all as extremely plucky to takea position of the greatest possible difficulty,which has been called " the grave of repu-tations," at the outset of his official career.It will be a very popular appointmentamong the Irish party.

A Billiard Challenge.Schaefer has issued a challenge to play

any man in the world a fonrteen-inc- h halk-liu- e

billiard game of :J0Ot) points for $r,r:0or $1000 a side, the winner to take all thereceipts and the loser to pay all the ex-

penses.

February 4 th.Further reports of tho killing of Captain

Crawford by the Mexicans show that it wasthe direct outgrowth of a deliberate systemof persecution adopted towards Americans inthe Northern States of Mexico. In tinPerkins-Baldwi- n breach of promise suit atLos Angeles, the plaintiff told her side oftho storv. A boat containing a midshipmanand ten Austrian sailors was run down by atug in tho North river and five of the menare missing. oteinitz eieteateu zaiKcrtorrin the chess game at St. Louis. A snow-storm prevailed at Washington. John C.Maynard will probably ba appointed UnitedStates Marshall for California. The HouseCommittee on Public Buildings is discussing the propriety of bringing in an Ouini'jsbill. Three petitions from Pasadena, pray-ing for the privilege of establishing a Na-tional bank, have been r ceived at Wash-ington. The bill forfeiting the Atlantic andPacific land grant was favorably reportedto the House. In the Senate Loganstrongly advocated the admission of Da-kota as a State.

Foreign Affairs,The composition of the new British Cab-

inet has been officially announced. Franceand Germany have reached an amicableagreement regarding their colonial posses-sions. Striking weavers made a riotousdemonstration at San Quentin, France.Lord Dufferin has gone to Burmah in theinterest of tho British Government. Snowfell near the City of Mexico. The Popehad a slight attack of syncope. Tho MostRev. George Butler, D. D., Bishop of Lim-erick, is dead. Prince Leopold, hereditaryPriuce of Arhalt, died at Cannes.

A Miliar Failure.The suspension of the Nova Scotia Sugar

Refining Company of Halifax is announced,with liabilities of $500,000, of which $250.-00- 0

is due to the Merchants' Bank of Hali-fax.

The Bilkc Scandal.The outlook i3 very dark for Dilke. All

the evidence to be produced, in favor of thedivorce, consists of two points first, a re-

sponsible witness will be produced, whowill swear he saw Dilke and Mrs. Crawfordtogether tinder circumstances of great sus-picion. Second Mrs. Crawford's confes-sion to her husband, which she afterwardsrepudiated. So bitter is Crawford that heoffered to Show Whitmore, Dilke's Tory-opponen-

at the ' Che Iseft general election,all the papers in the case. "

THE BRITISH EMPIRE.

Official Announcement of the NewCabinet.

The new Cabinet is officially announcedas follows : Gladstone, Prime Ministerand First Lord of the Treasury; Sir FarrarHerschel, Lord High Chancellor ; EarlSilencer, Lord President of the Conucil;II. C. Hv Childers, Home Secretary; EarlRoseberry, Secretary for Foreign Affairs:Earl Granville, Secretary for tho Colonies;Earl Kimberley, Secretary for India; II.Campbell Bannermann, Secretary for War;Sir William Vernon Harconrt, Chancellorof the Exchequer; tho Marquis of Ripon,First Lord of the Admiralty ; JosephChamberlain, President of the local Gov-ernment Board; George Otto Trevclyan.Secretary for Scotland; A. J. Muudell,President of the Board of Trade; JohnMorley, Chief Secretary for Ireland. Thefollowing appointments have been madeunder tho new Administration: Earl Sid-ney, Lord Steward of the Queen's House-hold; Andrew Morley, Patronage Secretary;Charles Rnssel, Attoriu-y-General- . .Thecomposition of .the Cabinet has causedgreat surprise. It is thought to showmarks of a compromise.

February 51h.Congressman Morrow has called Secret

ary Bayard's attention to the fact that Con-

sul Withers at Hongkong is issuing Consular certificates to Coolies in defiance ofthe instructions of the Treasury Depart-ment. The House Committee on PublicLands will probably report a bill forfeitingthe unpatented portion of the northernPacific land grant. Stanford's bill provid-ing for the purchase of a postoffice site inSan Francisco has been favorably reportedto the Senate. Senator Stanford presidedat a meeting of American viticulturists inWashington. The Count de St. Yulhr,member of the ireneh henate, is deaa.- -

New York yesterday experienced the worstsnowstorm since 1S?S2. The Porte supportstho demand of tho Bulgarians for a war indemnity from Servia.

iu (.eriuany.A motion is being prepared in the Reich-

stag requesting Prince Bismarck to nego-tiate with the Powers concerned for the es-

tablishment of a double monetary stand-ard.

Ite ior ted Asasisiiiatiou.Advices received from Mr. Frazier of

Rio Platte state that President Salomon ofHayti was assassinated in his palace atPort-au-Princ- e.

The Fi?ht for R,ooo Between JackBonHwy and Jir4 Fosarty TookPlace at Xew York.

The parties who were to see tho fightass moled at the place selected and waferson the result wi re made. Deinpsey wasthe favorite at $ 100 to $S0. Bv the'termsof the match the winner was to take thet niire amount at stake, $G000. Alf. Pow-ers, and Dave Cainpb-1- 1 seconded Demp-?e- y.

and Chambers aud Billy Edwardslocked out for Fogarty. Fogarty wastrained by Arthur Chandxrs of Philadel-phia, and Dompsy hy Tom Ch ary of Cali-fornia. Tho contest was one of the

t on record, and was governed by theLondon prize ring rules. The men foughtone hour and forty-seve- n minutes, and fin-

ished in twruty-seve- n rounds. In the lastround Pi mpsey broke Fogarty s jaw, andfinally knocked him out by breaking hisnose.

Fogarty, after the right, was taken rightaway to the hotel and received a Turkishhath. His face was twice its natural sizeand his split upper lip hung down. Demp-se- y

showed no marks of punishment on hisface, hut his body had not escaped Fogar-ty s blows. Two knuckles of his left handH- - re broken and his riht hand was puffed,lie went home to liis mother's house, inWilliamsburg, where a doctor bandaged hishands. Later he came back to town andreceived the $i'.000 stake. Ho gave $250 ofit to Fogartv.

The European Troubles.The Greek Government, replying to the

second note from the Powers, considers anyrestraint offered to the free disposal of theIbllenic forces incompatible with Greekindepunh nee, and, therefore declines theresponsibility' for an eventual conflict.

The Turco-Ihilgaria- n agreement confirmsthe appointment of Prince Alexander asPermanent Governor of Eastern Roumelia,provides for mutual help to ivp 1 a foreigninvasion, and gives Turkey control of someMussulman villages in Roumelia by meansof a commission appointed under the. sanc-tion of Prince Alexander.

A majority of the vessels b longing tothe European squadron desiguated to pre-vent. Greece from attacking Turkey haveassembled in Suda bay.

Auti.!:inee.At the Anti-Chine- se Convention in San

os". O'Donm-lt-. who attenuated to distributc circulars advocating his cJ.ihns for theGovernorship was denounced; the sen i

m :nt was in favor of boycotting. AntiChinese meetings were held in severaltowns and measures taken to institute avigorous boy cott. The Executive Committ- eat San Jose adopted the f tllowing pledge,50,000 copies of which are to be printed atonce and placed with the leagues for gen-eral circulation: "The Chinese must go.We, the undersigned, hereby declare thatwe are in favor of the adoption of all lawfulmeans for the exclusion of the Chinesefrom the Pacific coast ; and wn In r bypledge that we will not employ Chinamen,directly or indirectly, nor purchase tho pro-ducts of Chinese labor." -

From Feejre to TutiiHlIand.Sir George W. Desvoeux, Governor of

Feejee, has been appointed Governor ofNewfoundland.

FRENCH AFFAIRS.

insult of the Debate oil tlie Sale of theCrown Jewels.

The Chamber of Deputies agreed that thecrown jewels should be sold to providefunds for aged workmen. The Radicalsgave notice of a motion to expel the princesof former reigning families. In the SenateM. Goblet, Minister of Public Instruction,made an doqueiit speech in favor of elment-ar- y

secular education. By a vote of 181to 7G it was resolved that copies of thespeech be placarded in all the parishes ofFrance.

The debate on the sale of the crownjewels was attended with great excitement.The Count do Lanjuiuais predicted that therepublic would bo speedily overthrown.His predictions were received with howls.It hTiinliluated that the jewels will produce$1,0:10,000. "hGIl?ithat are of historic in-

terest will go to the Ld'V,l'.conectiou.

GLADSTONE'S ADDRESS.

lie Oiilliues Hie lo!iey of the SrwKrilish iUinisiry.

Gladstone has issued his election addressto the voters of Midlothian. The PrimeMinister states that the new Governmentwill institute inquiry as to the entire landquestion in Ireland and into the questionwhether there exists any necessity tor theintroduction of specially coercive measuresiu legislation for the Irish people; but themain policy of the Government shall be toendeavor to reach the source and seat ofmischief generally admitted that exists iuthat country. Following is one of the sen-tences which indicates pretty jjainly theoutlines of Irish policy decided upon byGladstone: "Although the difficulties ofthe task make it impossible to anticipatesuccess with confidence, we shall draw com-fort from tho knowledge that we are engagedin n great work of peace.'' The Premiersay s that there are three questions concern-ing Ireland which demand the attention ofParliament: The question of social order,the question of land reform and the ques-tion of sclf-- g Jvernment. The desire for

must necessarily be subjectto the law of imperial unity. The Govern-ment hopes to lind a safer and more ffec-tu- al

method than coercion for the remedyof social troubles.

The Queen, acting upon the advice ofGladstone, will appoint a successor to EarlCarnarvon, Lord-Lieutena- nt of Ireland.

lorfisn Air;iiri.The Gladstone Ministry is completed with

the selection of the Earl of Aberdeen asViceroy of Ireland and Baron Wolvertou asPostmaster-Genera- l. Lord Salisbury addressed a delegation of unemployed work- -

mgmen m Jjouuon. Alpnonse JJatiaet is illin Paris. Reports from Sonera cive manycases of depredations bv Arche scouts.t, iDavid II. Scott, a forger of Winnipeg, wasarrested in Anevo .Laredo, .Mexico. mereis no security for life or property in theMexican Mate of lamaalipas.

The Eastern Trouble.The rowers, with the exception of Rus

sia, have verbally sanctioned the TnrcoBulgarian agreement. The Government atBelgrade has ordered all merchants amimanufacturers under the age of 40 to jointhe active army service. The Powers havesent a thirel note to the Greek Governmentadvising caution.

The Ijtet development In the Hmderon Method of Nan Franrlveo.

The latest sensation was the attempt byMrs. John Kerrigan to slice off with razorthe head of Mrs. Emma L&throp, a lodging-hous- e

keeper at 309 Dapont street. Astriking peculiarity abont the crime is thefact that every one connected with it oraffected by it is either divorced or engagedin proceedings for divorce. Mrs. Kerriganis sneiug her husband fordivorco; Mrs. La-th rop is being sued for divorce by her hus-band, who was previously divorced from anOakland woman ; Annie Carpenter ia adivorced woman, fcnd Mr. Bird ia beingsued for divorce by his wife two of the divorces being instituted because of the influence of one woman who is being aued for adivorce by a divorced man. Mrs, Lathropis dangerously wounded, and her assailantis lodged in the city prison, seemingly onlya utile bored at being the center of so muchinqiury. The assault occurred aoon afternoon. It seems most probable that MfF.Kerrigan was mistaken in supposing thatMrs. Lathrop was the mistress of her hus-band, and there is a question whether sheis at all times in the full possession of hermental faculties.

February 6th.The testimony of the plaintiff in the Perkins-

-Baldwin suit at Los Angeles was notshaken in cross-examinatio- n. GovernorMurray has vetoed another Mormon billwhich had passed the Legislature. Sixmen were badly burned in East St. Louisby some unknown person who poured oil onthe ir fire. Three men were killed and onewas badly hurt in a collision at Williams-vilk- -,

Md. John McMahon, a defaulter ofJersey City, who stole $51,000, was sen-tenc- etl

to five years in the penitentiary.Steinitz won the ohesa game in St.Lotiix.It is intensely cold in New York aud miff r-i- ng

is reported among the jmoi-- .

American 1'olilic.Senator Stanford has been busy in ma-

king converts in the Senate to Morrow 'aanti-Chines- e) bill. Senator Dolph thinksthe-- chances are good for tho admission ofWashmgtou Territory. Congressman Mor-rison believes that the tax on grape brandyused in fortifying Hweet wines should boremoved. The House Committee ou Mili-tary A ffnirs has n ported favorably on thebill to raise a volunteer force for the pro-tection tf Arizona and New Mexico againstthe Indians. After ft long. debate the Sen-ate passed the bill admitting Southern Da-kota us. a State ami making the northernpart a Territory under the name of Liucedn. "

Capture or a 'JhllUf.The notorious nihilist Ivanoff has been

captured. The man who located him hasbeen rewarded with 3000 roubles.

England and Ireland.Michael Davitt, speaking at nolloway,

said he believeel that Gladstone was thoonly English states nan who had the cour-age and ability to grapple with the Irishproblem and establish pence between Eng-land and Ireland. The Premier, Mr. Dav-itt flnid. ltn1 alwanAy j44lvVI iLiv j.vtH IvsU Offreligious inequality, and had made anhonest attempt to solve the land problem.His failure to eleal in a satisfactory manuerwith the latter question was due to the factthat he had not gone to the root of the mat-ter.

Archbishop Croke approves of the. schemeto buy out the Irish landlords. The Arch-bishop believes that the rental of the wholeof Ireland is tinder 7,000,000, and far-ther, that as the Irish tenantry will not ac-cept the scheme of giving the landlordsanything like twenty years' rent for pur-chase, the estimate, he, thinks, of'XlCO,-000,00- 0

is too high. He believes that thepresent imperial expeneliture iu Ireland of

4,000,000 is ample to meet the interest outhe funds required for the purchase of land.Tne Irish leaders do not ask for confisca-tion, only fair play. They do not dream ofseparating from England.

A Pair of Fools.Wallace Ross aud Fred Plaisted say they

will make an attempt next August to gothrough the Niagara whirlpool in a boat.They claim that Captain Webb was drown-ed through an accielent, and that the" boajthey have contracted for in the United.States will carry them through safely.

'Pt""ary 7th.Iu tho Perkins-BaftHi'- J trial at Los An

geles, Mr. Baldwin accused a newspaperreporter of nusreporting tho tcstiiiiSIijJ&ndtin re was a lively scene; the reporter re"fns--eel to back down, however; on complaint ofi. w. Welts, liaMwm s consel, lloracan il, editor of the Portrupine, was arrested

on charges of criminal libel, but was releas-ed on his own recognizance. The ChineseSix Companies offer to send poor Mongo- -lans home Irom victoria and pay a portion

of their passage money At Youngtown, O.,Mrs. Grace D. Lane was granted a divorcefrom William R. Lane, and awarded $2000alimony. The British steamer Castle Craigfailed to obey her rudder at New Orleans,and nearly wrecked four vssels and awharf before she was anchond. A fire inth synagogue of B'nai Jerushnm. in NewYork caused about $5000 worth of damage.

Five men were flogged and .ne was confined in the pillory at Newcastle, Del.Six of the Poles implicated in the religiousnot at Tolcelo, (J., in June last, have beensent to the penitentiary.

Political AfTalr.The House Committee will report favora

bly the bill to forfeit the Southern Pacificland grant. Governor htoneman wants tobo restored to his former place on the retired list of tho army. The Department ofState will order consul Withers at Hong-kong to stop issuing Consular certificates toChinese. Gladstone's Cabinet is generallyregarded in England as having been formedwith elirect reference to dealing with thequestion of home rule; the new Ministersreceived the seals of office. Bismarck'sSpirit Monopoly bill will be withdrawnfrom the Reichstag, owing to strong oppo-sition to the measure.

Senator Miller Better.The operation of paracentesis ifioracis

(tapping the thorax), an exceedingly deli-cate operation in surgery, was successfullyperformed on Senator Miller of California.A large quantity of fluid was drawn fromthe cavity of the pleura, giving the Senatorgreat relief, and his condition is much im-proved.

Iohh or a Schooner.The schooner Empress of India, from

Liverpool for San Francisco, foundered atsea January 2Cth. Her pumps were chok-ed. The crew are at Madeira.

The wire of the Secretary of fitateluietly Expire.

Mrs. Bayard, wife of the Secretary ofState, died at her residence in Washingtonon January 31st. The immediate cau3e ofher death was congestion of the brain,brought on by the shock of her daughter'ssudden death two weeks ago. She was thedaughter of the late Josiah Lee, head ofthe Baltimore banking house of J. Lee &Co. She was born on February 4, 1831,and married in 1850. She was a woman ofcharming character, but never minglodmuch in society.

The I'oweri Decide on Ieace.By their latest collective note the Powers

agree to prevent any warlike steps in theBalkans or territorial modification.

Adrift on Floating Ic-- .

In a tempest which prevailed some tendays ago all over the Gulf of St. Lawrencefour hunters of God bout had a miracnlonsescape from death, having drifted for someninety miles during the forty hours on apiece of floating ice. They had nothiug torat but two froz n ducks, and frequentlythe ice broke away beneath them.

CJteeee nnI England.The King of Greece has refused the re

quest of the British Minister to cancel thealleged fanciful account published in asemi official newspaper, which stated thatthe British Minister m imparting to theGreek Government Premier Salisbury'snote, informing Greece of England s attitilde, used language tending to break therelations existing between England andGreece. The Minister denies having madeany offensive remarks on the occasion, andhas referred the matter to his Governmentat London.

February It.The Dakota bill and tho Electoral Count

bill are both unfinished business in theSenate. Louttit will introduce a bill appro-priating $75,000 for a Land Office buildingat Stockton. Professor Taylor of theAgricultural Department claims to havediscovered an uufailing test for puro butter.

Four Montreal firms made assignmentsyesterday. A sleet storm has done muchdamage in New Hampshire. Eleven coloredconvicts made an attempt to break jail atChester, S. C. It is announced that Hart-ingto- u

will not join Gladstone's Cabinet.Osmau Digna is said to be advancing onMassowah. Liberia has abandoned herattempt to negotiate a commercial treatywith tho United States.

The Telegraph in Tonqnin.A dispatch from Tonquin says that a

public telegraph line has been opened toLaugson.

A Rrntal Prize Fight.A long-standin-g feud between Patrick

Friel and John O'Rourke, two West Endmiddle-weigh- ts of Boston, was settled ac-

cording to the London Prize-rin- g rules at alocal sporting resort. The fight was afiendish exhibition. It lasted thirty min-utes, at the end of which time both menwere exhausted. Both were terribly punished. In tho tenth round O'Rourke fellupon Friel's prostrate form and nearlycrushed out what little life there wa3 left inhis body. Friel failing to come to time,the fight was given to O'Rourke, who alsoreceived a purse of $100.

Mad ltg.Gsorgo P. Fangel and Joseph Clark, the

latter a boy of 12 years, were both bittenby a St. Bernard dog at Jersey City. Theywill bo sent to Paris to be treated by M.Pasteur.

Cheek and Ear Cutters.A partv of moon-lighte- rs attacked a pro

cess-serv- er at Tralee, aged 70 years, cuttingoff one of his ears and a portion of onecheek.

February 2d,It is proposed at Sacramento to arrest the

owners of buildings whose Chinese tenantsviolate the cubic-ai- r ordinance. Threemen were buried by a snowslide near Frisco,Col. On March 1st 1000 convicts, now letout on contract, will be returned to theKentucky penitentiary. Congressman Morrow is preparing a bill to prevent Chinesemade cigars from being sold as the work ofwhite labor.

BRITISH POLITICAL MATTERS.

Gladstone left London for Osborne inresponse to the command of the Queen.At the railway station he was greeted withcheers by the people who had gatheredthere. Ho received an ovation on his ar-

rival at Portsmouth. He made remarksthanking the people for their cordial recep-tion and saying his future life was certainto be very short. On arriving at Osborne,Gladstone received the personal commandof the Queen to form a Cabinet. It isofficially announced that Gladstone kissedthe hand of her Majesty on receiving thecommand.

OFF FOB OLD IRELAND.

All the Farnellites were given fortnightholidays, and arcsetting out for Ireland orhave already gone. They return to theirconstituents under instructions to urge theIrish National Land Leaguers to moderatetheir opposition to landlordism, in orderthat Gladstone may be able to show to theEnglish people that the country is in apeaceful condition, and thereby stimulatethe English nation to agree to his homerule proposals.

Mntmyiou a Reformatory Shin.A mutiny occurred among the lads on the

reformatory shin Clarence. Ivinc in theI Mersey. At a preeonc rted signal the ladsm a body attacked the ofheers with belayingpins, firearms and other weapons. Theofficers drew their revolvers and fired. Theboys continued their assault and at lastcompelled the officers to seek shelter intheir cabins. The lads then lowered theboats, into which they crowded, and drifteddown the stream with the tide. The Clar-ence's officers, after the departure of theboys, made signals to the authorities ashore,and several boats filled with police put outand called upon the boys to surrender.The youngsters, deeming resistance to beuseless, gave up and were taken back to theship. The ringleaders were placed in irons.Eighteen lads aud two officers receivedwounds in the fight. Two years ago thelads confined on the Clarence set fire to theship.

A Scheme to Overthrow the overnmeat r Uttateniala.

A most diabolicel plot to overthrow theGovernment has been discovered in Guate-mala. It was to set fire to the Grand Hoteland theater at a given time, when theremight be a full house. In the panic theintention of the conspirators was to takepossession of the barracks without any greatrisk to themselves, then to niunler President Barillos and his family, next to attackall the foreigners, and finally to sack thecity. The discovery of the plan led to thearrest of about fifty persons, including someColonels in the army, and they are nowundergoing trial.

Never Too Old to Mil ST.

Jenny Lind, whose voice has lost noneof its sweetness and retains much of itspower, has yielded to the solicitations offriends and will reappear in concert inLondon in the summer.

VOLCANIC DISTURBANCES.

etructlou or n Central AmericanVillaire.

A Government commission has been sentfrom Guatemala to report upon the proba-bility of an outbreak of the Pacaya volcano.The report announces the ioil destructionof the village of San Vincente de Paciya.Some forty-fou- r tile-roo'e- d houses com-pletely collapsed, making such a cloud ofdust as to create the belief that a new craterhad opened. The hot springs surroundingLake Amititlan emit a larger volume ofweter at a higher temperature than usual.The crater of Pacaya remains uuchanged,while that of Fuego has been very lively.

A TELEGRAPHIC MARVEL

Sending? and Keeelviiisr Messages on aTrain in Motion.

The Railway Telegraph and TelephoneCompany gave an exhibition on the StatenIsland railway of the new method of send-ing and receiving telegraphic messages ona railway train under full headway. Thebattery was in ono of the passenger cars,with a ground wire connecting with theaxle of the wheels and the track. Theother wire was connected with the tin roofof the car. The car roofs were connectedby an insulated wire. The common electriomagnet, worked by a Morse key, was used.From the car roof tho messages were trans-lated, by induction, to the permanent wiresalong the line of the railroad, a distance of25 to 30 feet. . Messages were sent to andfrom New York and other points with per-fect facility, while the train was running atthe rate of thirty miles an hour.

A BAD BANK BREAK.

Depositors Likely to tJet Only TwoBits on the Dollar.

Ritzinger Brothers' Bank, at Indianapolis, established in 1867, and which hasdone a large business among Germans,made an assignment. The papers wereexecuted after midnight. The liabilitiesare, in round numbers: Deposits, $350,000;other debts, $100,000. The assets are:Real Estate, scheduled at $2QO,000, andother securities, which are semi assets, andare largely held as security for money advanced, $107,000. When the debts aredischarged for which these are held theywill probably be exhausted, leaving $200,- -000 of real estate to pay $350,000 of deposits. Under tin present condition of thereal estate ni.tiki. t the probabilities are thatdepositors will not realize more than 25cents on the dollar.

.. February, 3rd.The prospects are good for a large gather

ing at the Anti-Chine- se Convention to beheld in Sacramento in March. It is proba-ble that, the creditors of Krug, the insolventviticulturist, will receive about 4 cents onthe dollar. Two trains were wrecked andone man killed by a railroad collision atStaunton, Va. Louis T. Haggin is an ap-plicant for the Austrian Mission. The billappropriating $100,000 for a Postoffice sitein San Francisco will be favorably reportedto the House. The Japanese Governmenthas decided that it cannot return the Sono-ma murderer to the United States. Gen-eral Theodore S. West of Wisconsin hasbeen appointed Special Treasury Agent forthe Pacific Coast District.

Foreign Affairs.Diplomatic relations between Italy and

the United States of Colombia have ceased.Before proposing his home-rul- e scheme

Gladstone will introduce a bill to stopevictions. Baron Haussmann has beenarrested at Paris charged with attemptingto murder Count Montauzan. As a resultof Bismarck's Polish policy vast estatesbelonging to Poles in Prussia are offeredfor sale. Several thousand silver miners inthe Mexican State of Hidalgo are out ofwork. Representatives of Turkey and Bul-garia have signed an agreement relative tothe Bulgarian union, and have notified thePowers to that effect.

Marriage or Miss Mary Uladstone.Miss Mary Gladstone, daughter of Mr.

Gladstone, was married in London, toRev. Harry Drew of Howarden. The ceremony was performed in St. Margaret'sChurch, Westminister, uladstono gavethe bride away. Among the persons ofnote present were the Prince and Princessof Wales and their sons and Lord Rose-berr- y.

The bride's dress was of whitemuslin with Brussels lace. She wore awreath of orange blossoms and lilies. Acrowd gathered outside the church andcheered the wedding party on their arrivaland departure. The weather was verypleasant and the snn shone brightly.

Bavaria's Bankrupt Kin sr.

The King of Bavaria has ordered hissteward and the Bavarian Finance Ministerto examine his finances. His debts, whichamount to $1,000,003, can easily be paidby the sale of property and securities. TheMunich Bank offers the King a loan tomeet his urgent demands. An examinationreveals the careless administration of hisaffairs. In the future the care of hisfinances will be intrusted to new hands.Altogether the eccentric King has ably dis-charged his duties, and his subjects do notdesire to dethrone him.

Cholera in Italy.Eight cases of cholera are reported at

Battaglia, near Padua.

Full Particulars of theBritish Political

Crisis.

GLADSTONE'S MINISTRY.

Witnesses Disappearin tho Dilke Pi-- .

vorce Case.

THE FICHTIMC FEVER.

The Murderous Meth

ods of 'Frisco In-

creasing.

A London Riot of theUnemployed.

A VERY SICK SENATOR.

Volcanic EruptionsfnnoQ TlnT7QofQ finer

Destruction.

NIHILISTIC NOTHINGS.

January 31st.Anti-Chine- se meetings have been held at

Santa Rosa, Trnckeo, Hollister and severalother places, and the prospect for the ex-

pulsion of the Mongolians is good. Moredamage has been done by the flood atRoberts island; grain fields havo beenruined which it is estimated would haveyielded upwards of $000,000. The GrandJury at Salt Lake City has returned anumber of indictments for illegal cohabita-tion. A part of Scraper mountain, nearSterling, Ala., slid into the valley below.Schaefer defeated Vignaux in the billiardmatch at New York, with a score of 3,000to 2,838.

American Politics.C. A. Wetmore is at "Washington working

to secure the passage of a bill to protectAmerican wine makers against spuriousimitations of their products. The Demo-

cratic Senators have resolved to sustain thoPresident in his attitude toward the Senate.

Cleveland has pardoned S. M. Waite, thecrooked President of the First NationalBank of Brattleboro, Vt. The Senate billto repeal the Pre-empti- on and TimberCulture laws will be favorably reported.Over $3,000,000 of the called bonds havealready been received for redemption.

Foreign Affairs.Gladstone will visit the Queen at Osborne.Parnell has said that he will not accept

a Cabinet position. "The crew of the shipFrank N.Thayer mutinied, killed CaptainClarke and burned the ship off the Cape ofGood Hope. It is reported that the Kingof Greece will soou abdicate. It is pro-

posed to connect .Prince Edward's Islandmoinlftnil Vv means of a tunnel.

Another revolution is threatened on theIsthmus of Panama. The Poles are makingarrangements to boycott German trade, asan acf of retaliation for Tolish expulsions.

A NIHILIST PLOT.

A Proclamation to Have Keen IssuedIn the Ciar'H Name.

Tho nihilists aro at their old games and. ' Tl"ll rli - V. r ,i w 1 1

false irum mo --

wasa prociamaiiou

to have been issued on February 19th,

lias lauen imo - -it the Czar is made to say that he is vir-tual- lv

the peasants to risea prisoner, urges.1 tr the neasant.

ami iree mm fc."-- ,Th chief conspirators were arrested alterdesperate resistance.

France and Madagascar.Dispatches from the capital of Madagas-

car state that a treaty of peace has beensigned between France and Madagascar.France waives all claim to a protectorateover the island or to indemnity. Madagas-

car agrees to pay and France agrees to ac-

cept 2,000,000 for a release, which is todeliver all foreign claims against Madagas-

car ln)th those antedating the recent war

and those growing out of it. France is toTauiatav until the money is paid.occupy France to stationalso empowers

iFrencn resident in the country until thebetween the two Government are

iarly defined, and in the meantime to oc-

cupyc

the league limit around Diego Suaruzbay.

Page 6: fitHtt lit Ma ft - evols.library.manoa.hawaii.eduf i if itHtt1 1 1T:iflD rd MS AY A A yikhidh 4X a 0.1 lil! lit iK! Ma I I v ii kb .j a j i at r vi ' j it a ft Si VOL. V. NO. 44. HONOLULU,

BRITISH TOPICS.THE LONDON RIOT.RIOTERS IX SEATTLE,El'ROPEAX TKOLULES.FOREIGN NEWS.

"I tijien ttonatr trAar we r tunrrw tmy

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tilalstone9 Laud Scheme The I

way Election.

Gladstone Is preparing a bill providingfor the expropriation of land in Ireland bymeans of State funds. This bill will precede the other Irish measures which theGovernment intends to present to Parliament. The discussion of the home rulequestion has been postponed until nextsession. Six hundred police recruits navebeen engaged by the Government for service in London. The new men will go onduty at once, and while- - waiting for theiruniforms will wear plain clothes with abadge on the left arm. The movement forthe relief of unemployed workingmen isspreading to the provincial towns. Twothousand rations and a large quantity ofclothing ire distributed in Glasgow daily.That the existence of the distress is owingto the severity of the winter is undisputed.

The Bank of England end Glynn, Miles& Currey, bankers, have donated 1000each towards the relief of the unemployedworkingmen of London. The relief fundnow amounts to 100,000. Subscriptionsare being collected' on the Stock Exchange.

Ilawaliau Mwww.Vassar College has recently received a

gift for its botany department of a full collection of the native ferns of Hawaii. Thedonor is Mrs. Emily Talbot Walker of SanFrancisco. The ferns ar ""--ik" 14 ousheets of Priaioi board, eighteen incheslong and twelve inches wide. While eachsheet exhibits, for scientific purposes, oneconspicuous central fern, tne ooiamcainame of which is printed below, the bas. ofeach specimen is surrounded by sprays ofvarious ferns and mosses, so arranged as toproduce an artistic effect. The collectionembraces seventy-tw- o sheets, exhibitingtwenty different genera and seventy-si- x different species, some oi wmcn are quite rare.

Greece and the Powers.Two more classes of the Greek naval re-ha-ve

been summoned into active ser- -

viv The Greek fleet in the gulf of Volo,Tlioccnl nv. has been ordered to return toSalamis, in the gulf of gina, near Athens

The Bulgarian Government has sent cirMilra in the Powers saving that in consequence of Servia's warlike preparationsBulgaria is compeuea rouiouniio uu omjj.

King Milan has summoned the entireServian army to enter the field, fully equip-ped for war, to undergo six weeks drill.

A Royal Marriage Compact.Senor Corvo, the Portuguese Embassador,

has presented autograph letters from theKing and Queen of Portugal to the Countand Countess of Paris, formally asking thahand of their daughter for the Crown Princeof Portugal. The Count and Countesshave given their consent to the proposedunion and the marriage will take place inLisbon.

February 13th.An informal vote in the House Coinage

Committee showed not a single man in favorof the suspension of silver coinage. Feltonproposes to prepare a mneso um wmuuwill take ground midway between Morrow'sand Mitchell's bills; the Treasury Department has ruled that consular certificatescannot be received. Secretary vvnnneyand Admiral Porter gave their views onnaval reconstruction before tho .HouseCommittee.

Foreign Affairs.: Crawford was granted a divorce from hiswife and the charges against Sir CharlesDilke were dismissed. Strikers at Leicester sacked several houses and took posses- -

fsion of the town.-- A deputation of the lra- -falgar-squar- e rioters called on Oladstone todemand his policy toward the workingmen.r Eleven lives were lost by the wreck of anAustrian bark on Barnegat shoals. TheNew York cigar-maker- s' strike is ended.

Horatio Seymonr Dead.Ex-Senat- or Seymour died at 10 n'-io- ot

Wohmarv 12th. mo residenceof his sister, Mrs. ?e ponkling. Hebegan to fail orceptibly onnf(1fir, ktJiuoon. Shortly afterward horallied a little, but soon relapsed into totalunconsciousness. lie expired without astruggle and as peacefully as if fallingasleep. Horatio Seymour was born atPompey, Onondaga county, N. Y., May31, 1810.

CHINESE EXCLUSION.

Felton to Prepare a Bill Which WillNot Injure the China Trade.

The Mitchell bill is exciting considerablediscussion among the Californians in Wash-ington. Congressman Felton, who hasstudied the question as much as any oneelse in the delegation, says that the Mitchell bill would destroy all communicationand trade between the United States andChina. He thinks that-thi- s would be anevil that might very easily be avoided,without diminishing tho force of the stringency of the exclusion clause. He favorsthe abrogation of the Burlingame treaty andthen the enactment of a thorough-goin- g

law prohibiting tne immigration of ChineseHe favors the adoption of the old commercial treaty, which would permit Americansto reside in treaty ports in China andChinese to live in certain designated Amer-ican ports, for the purpose of trade onlyHe would forbid the Chinese engaging inany other occupation than that of international commerce.

Felton has not introduced a bill on thissubject because the other members of thedelegation thought it might impair thoprospects of the Morrow bill, but now thatMitchell has brought forward a bill, whichFelton thinks has some bad features, hehas determined to embody his ideas in abill. The Felton bill stands midway be-tween the Morrow measure, which may bedesignated as preferring the present law,and the Mitchell bill, which cuts off alltrade and practically all communicationbetween the two countries.

Consular Certificate!.Congressman Morrow has achieved the

first victory in Washington in the directionof keeping the Chinese out. One of thethreatened evasions of the Restriction Actwas a ruling of the Treasury Departmentwhich permitted Consuls to issue certificatesto Chinese which entitled them to land inthis country. Morrow has at last secureda cancellation of that ruling.

Paddy Ryan's Cltimatnm.Paddy Ryan mailed John L. Sullivan a

challenge to fight eight rounds in publicwith small gloves, Queensberry rules, for thegate receipts, 80 per cent to the winner and20 per cent to the loser. The challenge isin the shape of a long letter, declaring thatSullivan has not answered Ryan's accept-ance of a meeting in private; that Ryan isunable to raise money for a large stake,and that unless Sullivan now replies Ryanwill never consent to challenge or answerSullivan in any way.

mm m . r ' . ft .

. .isnr-na-ij wo yrrcwus as tne j""" wrOmar A Auyyam.

Wine, Joyous wine, who would not hymn thy frla.In gratitude for thy ail potent aid I

Thy cherring chalice every heart upraise.Raising the bear to a kingly grade;Teaching the rhymer's tongue unwonted phraaea.When Tegasus is like to prove a Jade;But Btay 'tU wrong to dub thee royal doubly canThy claim be proved.to propertiee republican I

Ry or anibet, sparkling, too, or still.Thou Undent In no need of votariesSince serpent cinctured SI annul worked thy willOn Orpheus, who dared thy cultMeeplbe,Or since Semitic Koah drank his All

To reproduce his dreams of Paradise;Mankind is still the same. When cares attack us,It's tn to one we prove our faith in Bacchus i

Tis wiser, sure, to make the best of Fate,Creating life one dole far nioite;With wine anejong and Jest you close the gateOn nineteen troubles out of every twenty.Why should our ears be stunned, cariy and late.With that most dismal of all cries, " Repunt ye 1"

Why then assume a voluntary clog T

Is wine forblJden.by the Decalogue?

From old Anacreon down to Thomas Moore,

Thy praises have been sung. Why not to day ?

This generation has not grown so pureThat truth should not be spoken, so I sayThy worship lives yet, and it shall - - -

...u me curuun tans upon mo iij.Man still is fallible; when sorrows sadden, heSeeks consolation as did Arladuo

Is it worth while to pen a bitter truthTo tell folks Vhat Is little to their crodlttYou get your troublo for your pains, forsooth,No matter whether men deride or dread It.

From sour crabbed age to callow youthIt shames them even to admit they read It.Fashion says " Nought Is new beneath the sun ; "

And said it years before King Solomon.

Win e is a mocker ! " Who is there believes it T

Experto erede; Tis far otherwise.Proverbial philosophy receives H

As Solomon's wisdom does It reach the wije T

The high-tosse- d wave of modern knowledge heaves itHigh on the beach of stark Silurian lies.

Figure Sol's conversation after supperA pestilent, malignant, Martin Tupper t

If wine bring out a man's bad qualities,Let him drink on for should they not come out?Wine ne'er begot & coward, no 1 It flies

In his head, and, willy-nill- y, he grows stout ;

It strikes the mean man's pocket, and the else

Of hi9 donation grows and grows ithoutThe stimulus of baser argumentThan (hat of grand old Bacchus, Heaven-sen- t f

The rich Falernlan rarely crowns my table.Like Horace, I'm content with common Sabine ;

Of course I d drink the better, were I able

The humble bard lives in an bumble cabin.No mansion mine to tower aloft like Babel,

Just big enough to entertain Queen Mab inAn epicure I'd wish to live and dieAs did Omar Khayyam and Hatim Tai.

How prone our present age to self-dece- !

Conslence indeed can surely not enjoy herHoodwinked position: insecure her scat.She asks : " Am I the servant or employer T

My Jailor, man, dares not In his conceitDeceive his doctor or mislead his lawye-r-Then verily it seems to me damned odd

lie Juggles with the being he terms his God

The grand old honesty Is lost, I fear.Our strong old language, too, Is out of date ;

The coarseness of the Bible shocks our ear,Our forefathers were to IndelicateOf Rabelais (save by stealth) we dare not hear.While Swift and Shakespeare we emasculate,With honesty by prudery outweighedOf course we cannot call a spade a spade !

W. J. Carr, in .?. P. Merchant,

Oysters Enough flr Once.

"I never had enough oyaters at onemeal excepting on one occasion,'' remarkeda Denver gentleman, and that was jastafter the war at Norfolk, Va. I had been aprisoner at Andersonville, and was one ofthe very last to be tlt,edJ, I was on myway North, and you can imagine 4hat Iwasn't very rich or very fat. I took my.time getting toward the North, and' so Istayed around Norfolk for some time wait-ing for health and money enough to pro-ceed on my journey. Two or three timesI got pretty hungry on my way to Norfolk,but I wasn't hungry after I got there.Early the first morning I went down towhere the oyster boats lay. I had just tencents in my "pocket, and you know thatoysters are as cheap as mud there. I sawan old darky sitting on the side of anoyster schooner and nobody else around.

"I asked him how many oysters hewould sell me for the dime, and he said Icould have as many as I wanted to eat. Igave him the money and got on board theschooner. I commenced to eat raw oystersand throw the shells overboard.

" After a while I ate all the oysters abovethe hold, and then I began to dig downinto the hollow part of the vessel . Thatmade the distance too far for me to throwthe shells overboard, so I just threw themup on to the deck. I was careless about itthough, and I threw too many on one side,and it was the side of the boat furthestfrom tho wharf, and long about noon theweight got too much and the schooner cap-sized. Over she went, just as I had gotenough and was thinking it nearly time togo up town and rustle around for a dinner,as I'd spent all of my money. I got anawful ducking, and I never came so neargetting drowned in all my life." S. T.O'Len.

The Late Mr. Walton.

We regret exceedingly to learn of thevery sudden death of Mr. Frank N.Walton,the Secretary of the Hawaiian Commercialand Sugar Company and the Oceanic Steam-

ship Company. Mr. Walton's official posi-

tion had brought him into contact with theleading business men of San Francisco andthe Hawaiian Islands, and there is nof, oneof them that can say he ever received anybut the most courteous and prompt atten-tion at the.handsof the deceased gentleman.He was an honorable and upright man, afavorite with all who knew him and de-

servedly respected. nis loss will beseverely felt by the Spreckels family, whoregarded Frank Walton more as a confidantthen an employee, especially as he was thefirst gentleman in their employ whose un-

fortunate death has to be recorded.Mr. Edward H. Sheldon, who has for

several years past occupied an importantposition in the office of the California SugarRefinery, will succeed the late Mr. Walton.

Mob of 50.000 Men Hold PonsfMlonof the City for Six Honrs.

Colonel Henderson, head of the Metropolitan Police Force, has been in corner- -

ence with Childers, Home oecreiary, inrelation to the riots. The various socialistic and labor reform societies threaten tohave a monster demonstration at HydePark, to be attended by contingents oflaborers from the country. A mob assem-bled at Deptford and marched five miles toSouthwick, where it finally dispersed, xnismob, on its way toward the Thames, swungthrough Kent road and Newiugton causeway. They sacked several small shopsalong the way. Th-- y stopped at tne mam-moth establishment of Win. Tarn & Co.This establishment covers the ground fromand including 5 to 21 on Kent road and looto 173 on Newington causeway, and is de-

voted to the trade in linen, silk, men's andwomen's clothes, boots and shoes, carpets,

i r rrv.ironware. Deoamg. iurniiure, eio. xuobuilding was under police protection, outthe mob overrun the officers, sacked thestore, and when they retired left the buildrct VmrUv wrecked. A crowd that num

bered many thousands gathered in Cumberland Market. The lowest criminal classesof London were represented by a strongcontingent, intent upon harassing and insuiting the police. Hyndman Williams andntlier socialist leaders appeared and weregreeted with uproarious shouts of welcomeAs the crowd slowly dispersed cheering foi

the socialist leaders the di3orW!y clementagain manifested itself. The police werejeered at and stoned, but easily drove theirassailants from the ground. Three regi-ments of the foot guards, two of cavalryand a battery of artillery were confined intheir barracks all day in readiness to rallyat a moment's notice. The scare is with-out a parallel in the history of London.Tens of thousands of desperate men weregathered in the streets, and only neededsome one more reckless than themselves tolead them to commit the wildest excesses.

Greece to Keep Quiet.. The Greek question has been temporarilysettled by an arrangement between Glad-stone, the Earl of Roseberry and Delly- -

hannis, the Greek Prime Minister, thatGreece shall keep quiet now, on conditionof securing the execution of the 'lreaty oiBerlin in a short time.

The Fighting Fever.The following. telegram was sent in ans--

tt n ii- - li: n 1 AAwnr to .in llll It. nuilivau a uiiuunium iuPaddy Ryan:

To John L. Sullivan,, ISoston li teiegraphic report of your final challenge tome this day is correct, I will meet you inprivate, with gloves, for $2500, time,place and referee to be agreed upon here-after . Paddy Ryan .'; Ryan's reply to Sullivan's challenge wassent to Newport, where Sullivan is, and to-

night a reply came to . Sullivan's brotherMike saying: " That goes. Make it insideof four weeks. Private: five men on aside.'' Dempsey, in anvwor to a circularletter of George Leblanche, the Bostonmiddle-weigh- t, explains how his efforts toarrange the fight failed, and says: I willmeet Leblanche as soon as my hand getswell, I am down to box Joe Ellingswoithon the 22d and Pete McCoy on the 24th.I will not meet Ellingsworth and box onlyMcCoy. Then I will go for the Marine."

Japan.His Majesty, the Mikado, has accepted

the resignation of Prince Sanjo Sanetomi,President of the Court Council, who hasbeen allowed an annual pension of 5000yen for life.. Sanjo Sanetomi occupied theoffice of the Baijo Daijin for eighteen years,and was founder of the Government afterthe restoration. A revision of the presslaw now in force is expected to be effectedshortly. In the present law the writer ofany defamatory note or article in a newspaper is punished, no matter whether hisnote or article is founded on fact or not ;

but in the expected revision he will be madepunishable only when he cannot prove thetruth of what he published. A new ofiice,to bo entitled the Emigration Bureau, willbe established at the Agricultural XT'

;,.va-rren- tl the seat of the officeWill be at Hakodate. The telegraph authorities allow females to be employed atthe oihce8 as operators. Experiments weremade with a submarine boat newly completed at Yokosuka. The boat is capableof running at a speed of 120 yards a minuteunder water at a depth of four feet fromthe surface. Lieutenant Ikebata has madea machine gun on a modification of theKrnpp and Armstrong guns with successOn a trial made of the new gun it wasfound that the range was very great andthe utmost precision could be secured.According to a recent return of the FinanceDepartment the total amount of currencyin circulation on the 31st of December lastwas 88,3-15,09- yen, showing a decrease of5,035,137 yen compared with the amountOn the corresponding date of the previousyear. Shinagawa was the scene of a largeconflagration on January 7th. A strongwind was blowing at the time of the outbreak and the flames spread with alarmingrapidity. The fire was not subdued beforeover three hundred houses had been con-sumed.

British CaDinet .Notes.Sir William Vernon Harcourt, Chanoellor

of the Exchequer, has been re-elec- ted toParliament from Derby. John Morley,Chief Secretary for Ireland, has started forDublin to take the oath of office. Sir FarrarHerschel, Lord High Chancellor, has beenraised to the peerage with the title of BaronHerschel. The Earl of Aberdeen has leftfor Dublin, where he will be sworn in immediately as" Lord Lieutenant of Ireland.

To Colonize the Congo.Director Hahn of the Lander Bank and

King Leopold of Belgium signed a contractat Brussels for the first loan of 5,000,000for an international syndicate to colonize theCongo State.

February 12th.The boycott has been formally lifted from

Sisson, Crocker & Co. at Truckee. Anti- -Chinese meetings were held in Merced,Los Gatos, Petal ama and other towns.- -

Hugh S. Go wans, Joseph H. Sesion andHerbert J. Foulger were convicted of un-lawful cohabitation at Salt Lake. SenatorStanford's friends say that he would resignif a llepublican could be chosen to succeedhim. The House Committee on PublicLands agreed to forfeit most of the NorthernPacific land grant. The San FranciscoPostoffice bill was reported to the House.In the Senate Mitchell of Oregon introduced a stringent Chinese Restriction bill

Fifty-eig- ht horses were burned to deathin Mullaly's livery stable at St. Louis.The strike of cigar-make- rs at New York hasvirtually ended. Quiet has been restoredin London. Captain O'Shea was elected toParliament from Galway. The GermanReichstag has adopted a resolution urginga new inquiry into the currency question.

The Chinese Trouble at Seattle hasEnded In a Riot.

The excitement in the streets did notabate after midnight. Daring the earlymorning hours it was expected that a con-

flict would ensue when the agitators shouldattempt to place the Chinese on the 4

o'clock train for 1'ortland, as tne nngieaa-er-s

declared would be done. The railroadcompany

.prevented this. by sending the

" " - ii itrfim nnt two hours ahead oi me usualschedule time.

Soon after the departure of the tram themilitia and the home guard proceeded tothe ocean dock, where the coolies had beenconfined during the night, under guard ofthe Citizen's Committee. The Mayor hadcaused warrants to be issued for the arrestof the ringleader's of the Citizen's Committee, and sometime before daylight thesehad begun to be served and before 8 o'clocktne prisoners were lodged in jaii. menus,however, at once came forward with bail.and in a few moments all were at liberty.

" BBINGIKO CHINESE TO COUBT.

The collision between the militia and themob occurred as follows: Agreeable to awrit of habeas corpus, the bi Chinese onboard the Queen of the Pacific were broughtinto the courthouse at 7:15 o'clock in themorning. There were very few people onthe streets, and hence there was little excitement except jeers from the idlers wholined the sidewalks. When the Chinesecame into Court Judge Greene addressedthem through an interpreter, stating thatthe authorities would protect them to thebest of their ability. Then he asked eachseparately :

" Do you prefer to stay here under such'protection as we cud offer, or do,, you prefergoing to ban rancisco i '

Sixty-eig- ht prcferii d to go, while sixteendeclared that they chose to remain. Thelatter were then escorted to thd( hall andprotected by a guard,

THE MARCH TO THE WHAKiK

Two companies of Home G nurds, numbering 100 in all, then inarched to thesteamship wharf, and the Chinese who hadbeen confined there were informed' that thecity would pay the fare to San Francisco ofall who desired to go. auoui no aeciueuto co and 75 to stay. After about 100 hadboarded the steamer Captain Alexanderannounced that he had as many as the lawwould allow him to carry, and from 80 to100 who wanted to go wejre left. Thef" Home Guards ' fSvred these Chineseescort t UiGlr abodes

K LAWLESS MOB .

This was about noon. The crowds onthe street were getting larger, wilder andnoisier and more unruly every moment.The center of the crowd was at the inter-section of Main and Commercial streets,and when the Guards approached jeerswere heard from all sides.

The guards had received orders not touse the bayonet and not to fire. The crowdin front of them was so dense that theycould not proceed. Then the mob sur-

rounded them on all sides. The militiaused the butts of their muskets and bruisedseveral in the crowd, and matters were ata stand for the space of a minute or two,the guards holding their own, but no more.

THE BILLED AND INJURED.

The crisis came when eight or ten men,more hot-heade- d than the rest, attemptedto force their way through the line and at-

tack the Chinese. Shouts went up on allsides: "Go it, boys ! They won't shoot !

Don't be afraid!" The mob then at-tempted to wrest tho guns from the militia,when the order came to fire. Five menfell.

There was only one volley. As soon asthe shots were heard Company D, whowere at the wharf, and the Seattle Rifles,who were at the Courthouse, came up onthe double-quic- k. All formed a hollowsquare with the Chinese in the center. Inthis condition matters stood for half anhour, when the crowd sl wly dispersed andthe Chinese were escorted unmoleated totheir old abodes.

February 10th.Troops have been ordered from Van

couver to Seattle on account of tho Chineseriot. The Chinese have to leave SantaJsosa py aiarcu isi. iJW-rj()- for the pur.ine oiii ar-gi- to for ft postomce ia San

?5&isco; also a bill appropriating $350,- -000 for a custom house at Portland, Or.-

Senator Stanford made his first speech inthe Senate on the San Francisco postofficebill in reply to Riddleberger s objections.- -

Lewis L. McArthur has been nomiuxted tobe United States Attorney for the district ofOregon. Commissioner Sparks has appropriated $17,500 for public surveys m Callfornia. General J. C. Rowley died at Chicago.

Irnssiau Poland.The Government bill for colonizing Prus-

sian Poland with German settlers who areto replace the exiled Poles provides for onehundred million marks to defray the ex-

penses of colonization. It also namesMinisters to regulate affairs of the newlypopulated territory, tho members of bothchambers of the Diet assisting.

Lieutenant Greeley's Condition.Lieutenant A. W. Greeley is shortly to

undergo a surgical operation, which hisphysicians think is necessary in their treat-ment of the spinal disease from which hehas suffered ever since his return from theArctic regions. The exact character of thooperation has not yet been determinedupon.

Damage to a Steamer.The steamer Queen, which arrived at

Halifax from London, experienced terribleweather. While the sea was running veryhigh an'immeuso volumn of water rushedover her. crushing her turtle back, damag-ing the ste't-rin- gear and filling the wheel-hous- e.

A qhantity of water got into thecargo.

February 11th.Several companies of United States

troops have arrived at Seattle. Everythingis quiet there, though the feeling againstthe militia who fired on the mob is verybitter. In tho Perkins-Baldwi- n case someof the witnesses for the defense made apoor showing on cross-examinatio- n. Sena-tor Dolph has introduced a bill permittingvictims of Indian wars to bring suit fordamages in the Court of Claims. Christo-pher Franks has been nominated to beUnited States Marshal for California. Sec-retary Lamar has postponed the hearing ofthe Pacific Mail subsidy case until February26th. Steinitz again defeated Zukertort atSt. Louis. Another match has been ar-ranged between Schaefer and Vignaux.The steamer Cambridge has been wreckedoff the Maine coast. W. E. Forster, ex-Chi- ef

Secretary for Iieland.is seriously ill.Servia has decided to purchase more armsand ammunition. The Americans on theisland of Foehr have again been ordered toleave.

Turkey Wives Greece Another Excusefor Hostilities.

It is sttted on authority that Greece willimmediately disarm and cease preparationsfor hostilities, provided that turkey cedesEpirus, in accordance with the treaty oflrhn. The Government has issued aukase ordering that two full divisions ofthe army go into camp immediately, andcalling upon the regiments of the Landstrum to hold themselves in readiness toractive service. Servia, in the event of therenewal of hostilities, will be able to put80,000 men on the frontier within ten days

February 9th.A reward of S500 has been offered and

active efforts are being made at Salt LakeCity to secure the arrest of George QCannon for illegal cohabitation with inumber of " wives." The Chinese atWindsor, Sonoma county, have agreed toleave the place within ten days. Henleyintroduced a bill providing that a settlermav have 640 acres of desert land, provided he irrigates and cultivates it. Thestriking coke-worke- rs engaged in a seriousriot near Bradford. Pa. A railroad trainran off the track in St. Louis and did considerable damage to houses along the sideof the track. Bismarck says that he hasno personal feelings against the Poles, butthat Prussia must be German. The chessgame between Zukertort and Steinitz, atSt. Louis, was a draw.

Saved From the Sea,The steamer William Burbitt arrived at

New York from Rio Janeiro, reports thaton February 1st. in latitude 32 deg. 30min. north, longitude 72 deg. 50 min. westshe picked up a ship's boat, containing thecrew oi tne American ong ttiimo u. ii""jIxmnd from Rio Janeiro for New Yorkwhich had foundered on the preceding dayTho rescued . men consisted of CaptainWhite, Mr. Walsh, a passenger, two officersand seven seamen eleven in all.

A Casket for a Iilu&rAn American company has completed a

casket intended for the final disposition oftho remains of the late King Alfonso ofSpain. The casket is made of bronzeplates, one-four- th of an inch thick, relivedby twelve panels, the corners of which aredecorated with tiles, each one leaf in thegenealogical tree of the royal family. Untho four corners arelion TCpjctiaTTnheayxAeeT"The cover is topped withfour massive crowns. The lilts ana otnerdecorations are emblematical of the historyof the Spanish monarchy.

Roehefort Bwi)tn.M. Roehefort tendered his resignation in

the Chamber of Deputies because of therejection by that body of the proposition toextend amnesty to political offenders.

Engagement of Earl Cairns.Earl Cairns is engaged to Miss Adele

Grant, the handsome daughter of a promi-nent New Yorker. Earl Cairns attainednotoriety while Lord Garmoyle, throughthe breach of promise suit brought againsthim by Miss Fortesque, a London actress.

Another Excuse for War.Under the pretext of searching Greek

vessels in Constantinople harbor for muni-tions of war the Turks have insulted theGreek flag, and it is feared that the actmay be accepted in Athens as intentional,and that it will aggravate the seriousnessof the situation.

Senator miller's Sickness.Dr. Pope made the statement that the

complication of maladies which afflict Sena-tor Miller will, in the end, prove fatal. Hisdeath may be deferred six months; he mayvet be able to ride out on a bright day: itis quite possible that he may be helped intothe Senate, where he may occupy his chair,but his getting well or recovering strengthto perform the duties of his office, is out ofthe question. A surgical operation was per-formed on Senator Miller, by which threequarts of water were drawn from the cavityof tho pleura. This water had oppressedhis breathing, and since its removal hisbreath comes easier, but the operation w'nafford only temporary relief.

DEAD.

Expires Suddenly Jii New York.

New Yokk, February 9. At 4 o'clockthis afternoon official notification of thedeath of General Hancock was received.It stated that he died at 2:35 o'clock, andwas the result of a malignant carbuncle onthe back of his neck, wdich had confinedhim to his bed for several days . No seriousalarm was felt, however, until shortly be-

fore he expired. The death of the Generalwas a surprise to his family, as to hisfriends. Twenty days ago he started on abusiness trip, connected with the Depart-ment of the Atlantic, to Philadelphia, wherehe remained two days. He then proceededto Washington, where he had business. InWashington a boil developed on the backof his neck. It was lanced on January 30thand as the General was much inconveniencedby its presence he returned to New Yorkseveral days earlier than he had designedto do.

PBOGBESS OF THE DISEASE.

During the first week in February theboil developed into a malignant carbuncle,which suppurated constantly and preventedrest or sleep. Dr. Janeway was called in,and it was not until marked weakness re-

sulted from the presence of the carbunclethat the surgeon discovered that GeneralHancock was sufferiug from diabetes andkidney trouble. Dr. Janeway called in con-

sultation Dr. Sutherland, Medical Directorof the Department, and Dr. D. M. Stimsonof New York. The medical men concludedthe case was assuming a very serious form.Before going away, Dr. Janeway found thepatient in good spirits and able to assisthimself, and left him apparently improved.

THE FATAL ATTACK.

At 6:10 o'clock on the morning of Feb-

ruary 9th Mrs. Hancock dispatched anorderly for Dr. Janeway, as the Generalwas sinking rapidly. The doctor camespeedily and found the General in a coma-

tose state, with a feeble pulse and all thepremonitory symptoms of death present.He summoned the two physicians alreadynamed. Hypodermic injections of brandyand ether and carbonate of ammonia andbrandy were administered. These, how-

ever, only alleviated the suffering of thesoldier, who gradually sank until deathcame at 2:35 p.m. The three physiciansand the hospital steward only were present.Mrs. Hancock was in an at! joining room.

The General leaves his widow and threegrandchildren, two girls and one boy,named Mora, Ada and Gwynee, the issue ofthe General's son Russell, who died De-

cember 26, 1884, and whose loss the Gen-

eral ever since mourned bitterly.

A Serious Chinese Riotin Seattle.

DEATH O F HANCOCK.

The Grecian TroubleStill Unsettled.

JAPANESE JOTTINGS.

Tlie Oafs, Ibe Ins and the Irish.Lord Salisbury and the other members of

the retirine Ministry were hooted at i orismonth while returning from Osbornewhither they had gone to deliver the sealsof office to the Queen.

The two most popular appointments inthe new British Government are Sir FarrerTTfirahfil. Tjord Hieh Chancellor, and LordRoseberry, Foreign Secretary. The distribution of the other offices is almost eccentrie. - Sir William Harcourthas his apprenticeship to finance to serve, while framinga stupendous budget. Lord Ripon iswithout experience in the Admiralty. LordGranville, as Colonial Secretary, revivesthe traditions of the neglect and alienationr.f t,a nlsinia- - Tnrd Kimberlev is notmore than a respectable Secretary for India,thnnch familiar with the office. Childers,it ia honed, mav make a passable llomeSecretary. Campbell Bannerman owes hispromotion to the war Umce to tne aearcnof Ministers of the first rank, but gave

Rtprlinf? Qualities while IrishRftftTv. Mnndella Las earned the Presidency of the Board of Trade by hard andgood work. Altogether, the Cabinet, thoughable, is a makeshift. It could not be other-wise when so many Liberal leaders holdaloof. Lord Hartirigton and his friendswill support the Government where it isnoBsible to do so. but nobody ventures topredict the result of a test vote in thepresent House on home rule.

The Parnellites express hope rather thanconfidence. They will do what they can tostrengthen the Ministry by discouragingoutrages in Ireland and by moderate courseslii jr tuutuutut. xiiu 1 f oland discusses tne wnoieJSrrnrwitu ex- -

'STTTiladstone himself is in thelughest spirits and full of confidence.

THE D I LICE SCANDAL.

Disappearance of the witnesses forCrawford.

Sir Charles Dilke's friends are boastingthat the Crawford divorce case, in which Sir

will collapse whenCharles isit is called up for trial. Several of themost important witnesses upon whom Mr.Crawford relied to prove a liaison betweenMrs. Crawford and Dilkehave mysteriously

nnared - most of these witnesseswere domestics, their voluntary exue cannothave cost much cash. Mrs. Crawford her-

self is very ill. A number of unsignedletters in the handwriting of Mrs. Crawfordand very strongly worded will be producedto show that she several times confessedher misstep while laboring under remorseproduced by her shame at the discovery.The defense will insist that these writingswere made by the lady while suffering fromhysteria.

THE EUROPEAN TROUBLE.

Ureece and Servia Still Spoiling for aFlfrht.

The cool and evasive reply of Servia tothe joint note of the Powers requesting herto disarm.in which she simply acknowledgedthe receipt of the note and said that shewould think about it, is explained by thestatement that just before sending the replyRon?i. Tiad received from Greece a confidential telegram of an important characterIt is surmised that Greece offered to joinServia in resisting the demand to disarm,as it is known that previous to the receiptof the dispatch Servia had drafted q,aae-ver- y

different from the curt note v

quently sent. ' stone's adviceGreece declines ejfeason for suspecting

to disarm. Therre not wholly united onthat the PQW11ussia has refused to takeJfcrtan the naval demonstration, and theGerman ironclads are ordered to remain atMalta. .

A revolution is fomenting in TurkishArmenia. The jails in the city of Van arefilled with political prisoners and an extra-

ordinary number of arrests are made everyday.

FebrnarylSth.Richard Robert Maden, the English auth-

or is dead. Earl Dufferin received anovation at Rangoon, especially from thenatives, who are grateful for Lady Duffer-

in' a efforts in behalf of the native women.Sylvester Sams, who was bitten by a

rattlesnake near Jasper, Ga two years ago.has developed symptoms of rabies, exceptthat he makes a rattling sound instead ofbarking. About 200,000 cattle were lostin the Texas panhandle country during therecent storm. Two of the leaders of theCarthagena revolution will be executed, andone will get ten years' imprisonment.

prominent merchant of St.John Gibbs, aJohns, N. F., has fled after committingseveral forgeries. Chairman O Neil, of

the House Committee on Labor, is heartilyin favor of excluding all Chinese and of put-

ting an end to their competition with whitelabor. Ex-Minis- ter John M. Francisthinks American trade with Austro-Hungar- y

in petroleum and other articles is threatenedby tho Keiley episode.

Trouble for Uladstone.The appointment of -- Mr. Broadhurst as

Under Home Secretary has caused a sensa-

tion in English political circles, that gentle-

man being the first workingman that hasever risen to the Ministry. The appoint-ment is taken as an indication that it isMr. Gladstone's intention to rtly upon themasses against the influence-o- f the aris-tocracy. The Liberal clubs are divided inopinion on tho subject, the Reform andDevonshire disapproving of the appoint-ment and the National Liberal enthusias-tically approving. The hostility of the"Whigs to Mr. Gladstone 13 intense. Thisis shown in the difficulty experienced bythe Premier in filling the peeresses' postsin the Queen's household. Tho duchessesof Bedford and Westminster have refusedappointments, and others will follow theirexample.