3 Jc M ti Invl vwv 'lit - University of Hawaiiuu K to,-e 34.1 M Jc-4 tiI 1 Invl vwv y y v v v-t ill...

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uu K to , - e 3 4.1 Jc - 4 M ti I 1 Invl vwv y y v v v - t ill - ' . : r i 'lit . . .... - -- i. r : CtMUliet lull X, IbSn. vol. xix. xo. ;:(;iiT. HONOLULU, HAWAIIAN ISLANDS. MONHAV. MAHCK fi, LV.I-- 3 liinj'mcvja aichj. bclwicij the iimunt Peruvian aud ibc Polym.-!.- , but Jae .liUiul "M IQRSEMFII OF THE PACIFIC, M. E. (Tiossumn, D.D.8. I lie Now Jewelry Store HAWAIIAN HAUDWAHK CO., n Aiin wa a hi, Cutlery and Glassware J, liii'ii do niucij uliKe, but I hey of the iuJJie u.e m-vv- i tlit it People oOjil.w: jooj tlOpictiJ iliiUd ait'i ulUunAihg ex:t ou u d litte yt WJU'ie tbeic iV t'Viii, voUld be apt to uudefo njf ideiiible uodi fauilion in the UJav uei t.UoJut'. The tui-- of the i!jvbjpeltfof of Ocuuic a belooy to thc-m- ynuuS divjtioJj A Mittij,kjjid i4 the js'vrth Aleri.-ui- i liidiwiJ, bejn of u op-peJ-- y vitol , v.;lh blu'k eye uud rUitjfbt 1lu.ek htir. 'j he ot iyiiiut'jr of the 4iuiueee A Ihu jV-ifi- c 7jiJlLjfy tvr iontg, yoy.esdoubk'eiiuoe which wce built i ike wU-ri- ) Ut w v u i if . TAiey fc.ifd vtry fwftly, and a-'- .f the two ittt tA-rvi- 'i in the plaoe of uu outrider for the oth, x. rucJL u yuft would carry tityr teveuty people. 'J'he huiL'Ua bad wi-r- y uiU4de Atsa terial ut fAiiud for .fivot ruction - bi5 ijir, ft mm fibre Xor t wju und tor jjj iy-et- , jijie 4tljuivf the th .Sei-- s tre Jjke fco iuuny Kur dejjJ: of l'Art), lurujebinjf their occu-psi;;- U with every t bire.; tbey mt without irjuch iti-bor- - A tyj-'ic- ! canoe ot Ue ort wjt of blue!: fend riKiT w 'it b u juat-- t a lrbajjufr mij vf brd-- d puif Jaf, vvbiejj wits pjuced vtjtb the sifie.i!: downward, Wbcu tUv wj.nd wtAmry or the wentbtr y-r- y I'ouU, the wtd aud aji;.w-J- e probu bfy ijijfcbjp;el, foldrj up and J.ub;dio jtbecrv jie..e- - which vld Ibe two ;auoe toetl-.e- r J'rore would tUeJU dejx-.jj-- d on te padjle, TJUere were fceat t'.r forty jpaddljjuicii eittiiig t wo on a. bei.. Ml'ith) M a a ;nied lAuiform fevrend by juuat., ior the ebitf, bifc .ajud the o&ioer. Among tbe lut M'ere a prlwt, jun atrouo;r;er aud uavigttor a taJJiug rastter aud a lruny;.eter. Jt It r'fy i titer kXiuz to couuiare th,U deayrj;-Uv- a with thai of ai ViJLing Ti-t- e jeri'd eiobracJn the twelfth and thirteenth oeuturietf wu one jf great viiret and ooiatavtuu lliroajcb-o- ut tlie itlaud woTiS oi IlyiitsBia. Sorxie femaeut vae at worl: to 5tbr vp the etiergl arid j.mriou of wJid and lrirDitive iuen. It sasy laart. beext the jjrefei2ie A 3uradlng x;dlU.oii arriving froa liie Went, jz the outbreak of xziUtu&J 3jlyutdeeii.ufl Ljirryinns of 4ioirt2guoufc ajjd lioulilt? trite. The laud la ut;t liave beeja vrit-u- t. Io Teil cwitetioa H'itleiiDe the ocesia to mauy buenes of taddeu departure and 4iMae.tr.oute Sight. Ac-cejjt- ing tL.e evidence of traditicjj vof the i.efiod, it a ticir of zauch jaii-- d ling about an.d Mtlling to and Itd in canDeb aa 'tra of long voyage be-lw- eLi wjoely epiirtXed rroujs f iliinc; and J veuturettoiDe ez.jecLi-uone- It W2i at Juboui thin iiu.it ihat the Hervey Iklands and rCew Zealand were colonidL The lapse of lirne an liie hiviarj tbefe people is with reuoi-ab3- e rtairity by the tradition wlutxh liave been banded down to liie 7reeiit day notably the unwritten genealogi- cal records brought from tre South Pacific and! preferred an Hawaii. Eventually it carae about that com- munication 14 ween Hawaii and the mother country d and after awhile Tahiti faded in tbexcindsof the Hawaiian into a ftortof xnytJb-3&- nd a region of mvHtery and icfcgit, fall of marvels, Inn hi tared try Kujer-natur- &l teings. One of the Hawaiian traditions reat to an ancient nnvigator named Pauniikna, who vcyaged'all tbe-wit- y to Tahiti and brought back wit h him two white men of priesTly ofSce, called Kaekaa and Ivlalin, together with a projihet named Maleia. his j Ast was a wizard who ha5 power ove?r the winds, a function not in thi-js- rltys, "when the whole contents i Ko'JnO cave wmld le kept in one small ealfc'bhfch along with a dead man's boo-.- . Iht flev:rip-tio- n of these rr.j-s:eri- -' :s Ktrarj;eTs us fair an-- ? tail, stout a fd ruddv, with sparkling eyes is ve of Vikincs of the Saxon type; but the priest iy function 'does rot wern tr be in keeping with the character of the piratical Norsemen. The agriculture of Ve ancierd Polv- - nesians was nifciTily r;e taro, ine rtXi o; wfnc.'i wras grocod ir.io floor and raade into all orfs of cskes ?;nd other TiLtri lions oimbes When the crop was ripe, the occasion was usually celebrtted by a ljuman sacrifice. Hence the storv of the "fatal taro p.Hch., Kvefvborfv it familiar wiih the T'lact with )mfn green, neart-snape- d leaves which is n!-- d for decorative purposes in parks andalvot fountains. 4K)ephant leal" is a common name for Thht is the taro, imported from the South Pa- ct no.. Human fi'-- n f;ces were veiy com mon among the Polynesians, some families devot-- d for gerrer.ntion f ft er- gon era t ion to fnrr.ish such ofTerintrs Ti-.- o priests being regarded us embody- ing the various deities and hence-temie- ,4god ooves," oou'ld designs. re anx body they disliked ftf a suirM.je ictim. After K-in- g slain, the b.t.'er -- as nsnallv dc-vonre- d. 'i?je TT.'JCice o cannioansm was c thai parents would ev n est their o wn cni i a re n . t ro m t h ; s t. nh h '. r h -- appetite for "long pic" the mission-ar- i s have done their best to wo.4n the islands oi tod .ay. These people' only ned the O' w .nd arrow to kill rats w.'th. Tbey fought with clubs ard spoors. Clothing they made by beating ot.t the inner trk oi the ninllerry tree. T.v;ey invented a mcThori o: rii-- h using fcr that pools amovig the eomi rofs, which M'cre prepared (y dim- ming the inlets r.nd scraping rhe bottoms smooth. Toshes caught ;n the sea - the hooks rr, ployed ir a r;"o barbs and did not dr i n i n ry 'bv 'tearing the g-il- ls were transferre-- i to th ar:o; m pic mentis voee rue poi lis hod stone and from the HAWAIIAN Abstract and Title Go. NO. MtCItCJlXVN'r fcT.11. tlOMLULl tl. i. Jf. M. tiatcu Cecil Brown W. 14. Ciiitlw Snerettu-- J. t JJrowa, Tais Couipauy is prv'prU to tdroh records and turuiah abstract! o( titla to all rai property la th KiaKclom. Fartii piaciuf; loans ou, or contemplat-l- the purchase of ral estate will Audit to their adtautae to consult the company in regard to title. iT All order aMended to with pronipt-neu- s. ri- - I. O. Vcj. C. BKEWEK & CO., Li- - QC3E STllSKT, UOSOLULC, U. I. aXCiicrT wit Uawaiiiia Aicaltural Co. Oaomea 6ur Co. llonoma Suar Co. Wailaiu Suar Co. Waiheo 6unr Co. Make uar Co. UalcaiaU Kneh Co. Kapap&la Kanch. PLan tars' Line s?an Francisco Packets. Chas. Brewer x Co.'a Line of Boston Packets. Agtsntd Boston Board of Underwriters. Agents Philadelphia Board of Underwri- ters. List or Oxncxza: Hon . J. O. Carter, President & Manager George H. Robertson - Treasurer E F. Bishop - Secretary Col. W. F. Allen - - Auditor Chas il. Cooke ) H. 7aterhoase Esq. Directors. 8. C. Allen Esq. ) National Iron . Works QUEKN STREET, Between Alakea and P.ichard Streets. UNDERSIGN" 'D ARE PRE THE to make all kinds of Iron Rm Rmnze. Zinc and Lead Castings ral Renair Shoo for .Steam Ric:e Mills. Corn Mills. Water Wheel. Wind Mills, tc. ; Machines for the cleaning of Cotfee, Castor uu t.eans, Ramie, Sissal, Pineapple - Leave3 and nthpr rlhrnng nlants : also. Machines for Paper 8tock, Machines for extracting otarcn irom jianiocs, j.rruw jhwi, jjX All orders promptly attended to White, Ptitman & Co. THE PASSENGER DEPARTMENT OF THE Oceanic Steamship Co. In San Francisco has been removed from 327 Market street to 138 Montgomery Street (KXDBR OCCIDENTAL. IIOTEL..) JCCTTrom this date all communica- tions pertaining to the San Francisco Passenger Easiness should be sent to the new office, 138 Montjjomery Street. m. G. IRWIN & C0n L'D, General Agents, Oceanic 8teamship Co. at Honolulu. 3n(Vlm Election of Officers. THE ANNUAL MEETING OF AT the Haleakala Ranch Company held this day, the following namd per- sons were eJectod to serve as officer. of the corporation named for the ensuing year, viz. : If. P. Baldwin President J. O. Carter Vice-Presid- ent (i. If. Robertson Treasurer W. O. Smith.... Audirt r E. F. Bishop Secretary The above named also constitute the Board of Directors of the Com puny. E. K. BISHOP, Secretary, Haleakala Ranch Company. Honolulu, January 29, 1S(J. :.VMm Alassafice. VTR8. PRAY WOULD ANNOUNCE 1YJL that she will attend a limited num- ber of patients. Address at H. M. Whitney'a, Kinj? Pt. ; Boll Telephone 75, 3223-t- f Polynesian h'aviators Vim coyer fed the Iglaudis. L0m VOYAUKti IX FfiAIL CAKOKS, I .; i; IU tulhHitf tivutk Was in J'Vb, i, I'roU.-tw- Alexander, tb Jfuwajjuii lUtmmU i iiow jn VibiiiK"" Lsw ii bis pocaesbJl u lot Of lOOfct ioUK-feti- ll fards ttbout tii woiidiuj u vljat.rs who orlpfjnaJly t'tAotiiwi lhi rin.'i' wJch Ibl'ttidtf, 1 1 irtliti tb.tt III lb- - tWtrlftlj .'rHUi;', t4t tb tii whJil tbi VJiii w; pi-rf- mlii .tir.U hMi:i ;ZiAo)t it) ibt; ,N'odl Atluntb; await, uvit;it of another r.va wmrt mixYu Jr'Ut-- r U.dlbiV;m;lU oi tb? tbrf .di of tb uorJd. 'J'lxrw mr, of Mai-lay- nn hlojk, having tartI from !oiitIi-uiti- r Atb-- , wtrnt til :'Jv-.rU- ) and popiilatln th r:ld jJjixr .f tin? Houtb-r- n Pacific, vthU:U u 'Vt tljat tlm? bad b:iri urdfjbabiti. 'Jliy wi ; tl? aiic;;dori of the J'oJyifJja of today. Tb?y bad lnv:fjUrd tb? d?rj-ktrl- yl canoe, with and outrlzr. 'VU boat wan f.barp at Joth f:j'i. 8or?-tlij- e it wan duj out of a hiugUi W: or, If thfcre wa not a bl ?nough trw bandy, plankw were w;w tttfr with u braid of cocoanut fibr.' callel "ftlnntt." One of the rjioitt irrj;yrtarjt feature of the craft wa the outrider, by which It wa enabled, though w long and narrow, to stand up aaifiisl the wind. AVben It blew bard tise 8ailor.s would climb out ojion thl to ateady her, jut an. rnen rnano-uvr- e for the fcame purpose 'm board of a moIern yacht. It is easily imagined how the race which originally ropulated the archi- pelagoes of Oee'aniea began the hvai-nes- 3 of voyaging in a fcraaU way, il-dlin- g about from one coral ;le to another at easy difctances. As the:r nkill of navigation iucreaiHed they ventured farther on the ea. and thus group after group was discovered and peopled, each new island blooming a fresh starting poiut for exploration. When people have improved their apparatus beyond their opportunities they seek larger opportunities. These savages found themselves at length provided with means for making voy- ages of indefinite duration with safety. So the time arrived, in the twelfth century, when more than one Pol3nesian Columbus deliberately et forth in his frail canoe across thou- sands of miles of unknown and track- less sea in search of rew lands. These "Norsemen of the Pacific," as Professor Otis T. Mason calls them, did not fear the sea. Why should they? Being as much at home in the water as ou tanu, n ioe noai ups-e-i they would right her, bail her out with cocaanut shells and get aboard again. They did not hesitate to at- tack the biggest man-eati- ng shark in the lish's native element. Ilaviuc learned to make flour from the Saro mot, they couid carry in small com pass provisions for a long voyage. The ocean upon which they thus fared forth is eleven thousand miles wide. Compared with it. the Atlan- tic is a mere pond. With only the sun, moon and stars to steer by, it is marvellous bow thr-s-e untutored rjavi- - irators, having c,u-- e c-o- t;xn such isolated bits of ter?a flrma as Kaster Island and the Hawaiian group, should have been able to find their way home and make trip to and fro, as they did, carrying new colonist on each voyage out. 1 t her a ed originally to the discovery of tiesr and other lands by the fiichts of l.jr.s. 1 lie people wo iirsT iant;e-- i o.s me Hawaiian Islands came all the way from Tahiti a voyosre to the north of more than 1?: m i 1 es, t V n cei ve w bat the subse-juen- t passenger traffic be- tween those islands and Tahiti must have been to furnish progeners for the population of lour hundrei thousand souls which Captain Cook found when lie visited Hawaii. Similarly, Easter Island, though but a block of lava thrown up from the depths of the sea and hawngan area ot only thirty-tw- o square ml'es, once had "a population of twentx-thousand- . It is literally honey-eombe- d with caves formeii by bubbies of expanding gases during volcanic action, in which the inhabitants for- merly dwelt. When they died their bom" were stored in the caverns, jireat numbers of which today are found crowded with innumerable skeletons. OJigamic stone images and other works of att left behind by ibis vanished people remain an enduiing evi.1cv.ee of a won.derful senii-civiii-zatio- n. Hytiietime of Captain Co k thi a!vt nturct; race b.ad occupied every island in me I'acijio ti-.a- t was ca pat if t of suppoTtiufir life. New Zealand was disciiwretl and porrdatod V.v them.. Thev actnallr made vovaces to rad.i- g:iscar, the present inhaV it ants c Inch, the Hovas, are tlieir descr r. i ants. -- Mam- scicntinc men arc ot tV., opinion tnai tney were tne m-s- t c.is-coveici- -s of America the ancestor f the ancb-n- t Pern i:r.s and ctV r trih-- s of Soutli America, if not of the Xortli American Indians. There arc marked ethnic differences ro:i b'ltrt dirtiiH, Mil.VU IN lUttlit IINU. Souvonir Spoons! a bpocUlty. Alat, i.u buml u lino tabu k of iuipitrttiit kVKIl I ttt:; IN 1 11 K LATENT lKhl(iS.j. JtXST"Ul.iiid oidfi'j rmkitly attctttlbd to, P. t. BOX US7. MU l'll L T K L K P 1 1 ( M E 4M. E. A. JACOBSON Man Chouo Restaurant BSliUL SIKKW, HONOLULU. BlCtWhlttN JUNU ANI mnitL HTKKKTh, j The Best 2-l- st Meal vt Town ! Clw'" Fowl in Koasou on VuHilay, Fri- day and Suntlay ; Bmiloil Chicken every Sunday Morning. TICKETS FOR Ji MEALS $4.50! rryit! 3ol7-t- f Criterion Saloon Another Invoice of tlu celt?bratel JOHN WIELAKD EXTRA PALE Lager Beer Ainu, a fresh Invoice of CALIFORN7V OYBTKlt FOB OYSTER COCKTAILS L. H. DEE, -- . Proprietor. 3406 CASTLE & COOKE LIFE 1ST 13 FIRK INSURANCE: AGENTS AGENTS FOR NEW ENGLAND MUTUAL Life Insurance Co. OF BOSTON, iEtna Fire Iiismauce Co. IIAKTFORD. HTJSTACE A Civ. Dealers iy WOOD AND COAL Also White and Black Sand which will sell at the very lowest, market ra;-- , 37"BSLL TULKFHOWB No. 414. EXS' Mutual. Tblbphonr No. 414 3493-l- y FOR SALE. I Adams' Power Press siri rj,.TKN' 00x40 in., IN; GOOD WORKING ORDER ! And now in dailv ue. Tiiis ProQ1 is complete in all its pTts ami only otleied for sain tn make nom ff ra nw Pre1"' of more recent invention and bettor ndaptpil for the increasiriij work of our otlice. fLV Apply to Hawaiian Gazette Co. s.v.N i.'ir-t- f :lt? ititl ttUr.it. J, M. DAVIDHOH, 1 Attorney ted Ccunaellor-it- -l J M. WAICEFIIILD, Attorney m Counsellor at L&w TtiujjKjrttry Oftii with V. W, Aftliford, Merchant Htrnt, Honolulu. WILLIAM 0. I'AUKK, ATTOJiNKY - AT I ,AW OI0 No. 18 Knuhuiuniiu Hir-n- , llout, lulu.j 1.1. LEWER3 a U00KE. (tfaceoaaor to Lwra LlekfiO) lruiMrter nuit lcilrw In ,niabi Ana all KIndi of UalMJna MtterUla. No. 83 ITUUT HTltKrr, Honolulu it. W. M'Cll BfitiEt . J. H. a r. Vt. M'Clia JitY. 124 Clay St., 8. F. 40 (iueen Ht. llono. M. T7. McOHESNEY & 80Nb. Wholosale Groctrs, Connnlssion Mer- chants and Importers 40 Qaeeu tit., Honolulu. LEWIS & CO., Wholesale and Retail Grocers, 111 FORT STREET. TtUphnm CO. P. O RpgjtgT BEAVER SALOON, tort Street, Opposite Wilder Co. B. J. NOLTE, FBOPEIET03. yirct-ola- ei Lnnchu Served vrttb Tw, Cpff Bod Water, Qlsger Alt or MJli Open From 3 a. m. till in . 3TSraoter'Bcn3iltrB Puecljilty TORN T. WATERH0U5K Importer ni 75ei.. - GENERAL SIERO H AIJDI8E. No. 25-8- 1 gcoen Street, Honolnlc H. HACKFELD ft CO.. General Commission Aire)? Oar. Knr Onftn 8t.. HonolT'iTj E0N0LULU IRON WORKts uu.. Steam Eninon. Collerv, Hnsfnr Pftlly, fwlfrj rr And machinery of every description rarule to order. Particular atterdion pai,I tt Bhips' blackpmitliine. Job work excuted on the ebortept notio. 1) ) YOU FEED THE BABY ! The Skin needs foo-4- . If the Corn plexirn is sallow, roneh, poaly, pimply, it is b'ause it is not fil with LOLA M0XTEZ C1IE31L gThe Skin Feed and Tissue Builder,! positively the fitly safk and reliable ar- - tide lor me v. oimvexion. AOfoitiieiT barmlet5?, oeiis the pores, increases the natural nnd necessary secretions cf tbt- - skin. IU sterns the tlesu to firm healthy state of Tonth. I revents wrinkle?. Gooil for burns, cha; ptni lips and hand.4. l5?"Tct lasts thtt t months. PltlCfi 75 CENTS. Ask jour drupjr-- t for HOW CAN : YOU TOLERATE Freckles, Tim-pie- s, Blackheads, yellow cr mud- dy Fhin, mouth Wrinkles or ant form cf facial dis-f.ptire- tit when Mis.Nk: tik H ar- rison gtv.ranb-e- s focnfTC'i. Dou t I consider your i : cace a heirless Mrs. Hnrricn tre?" lnii Torsli de fects of fare Rnl firire. Tl-- . i"rjinn-nn- t remotnl of" siipernuous linir Mlv'S. NETTIE ITVI?l?lSOT Vi:ifrioM I?aiity Doctor. (icarv Street, Snn Francisco, Cal. r.Vcr saV br !RM.L1T1 U v- - CO., Prupcists, 10'. Fort Ft., Honolulu. "tf-t- f w hotjcl stain. HjrOrifU'i Houu9a. m. to 4 r. u, DR. R. I. MOORE DENTIST. OSes: ArliD'toa 3o!i3s. Hotel St., Pttbr i. JIT-G- as Adtni.'iiMrttrtid. Orru'v Ibi'ut: 9 tt and 1 327 Mm "SANS SOUl'l" HOTEL SEASIDE RESORT, ilI desire to Jlul no quieter haven than the lSa7is Souci', and may well add with the poet: ln a more sacred or fetjuentered bower, Nor nymph nor Faunus haunted.' ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON." P. C. Advertiser Oct. 7, lSy.J. T. A. Simpson, !," i rivi nut? C. B. KIPLEY, ARCHITECT Offics Newr afe Deposit Building, Hosoluxu, H. I. Plana, tipecincations, and Snpertntflnd-enc- e givsn for every description of Build- ing. Old Buil-lm- s successfully remodelled and enlarged. Designs for Interior Decorations. Maps or Mechanical Drawing, Tracing, and Blueprinting. S Drawings foi Eoho or Newspapr Illustration. f Willi S J.OOO m A J Pioneor Steam CANDY FACTORY and BAKERY r. HORN Practioal Uoniectfoner, Pavtrv Cook and Baker. No. 71 Hnr t Tlerhone. CENTRAL MAKKET ! X7TJA2SrTJ 8TREKT. First-clas- s Market in every respect; be- sides carrying a full line of Meats, we make a specialty of 3Efrelcfat Stmsages, Presnwl Corn JF?ff. WESTBROOK & GARES, PROPRreTOR. Tlie Planters' Monthly. CONTENTS FOR IJKHIitJ- - An Ajp-icultur- Station for Hawaii. Cotton Cultivation in Hawaii. Profits in the Peet Stiar Industry. Reet Sugar. Annual Meeting of the Planters' Labor and Snppl v Co. Twelfth Annual Report of the Secretary of the Planters' Labor and Supply Co. Report of Committee on Cultivation. Report of Committee on Fertilizers. Report of Committee on Ramie. Small Iudustries for Hawaii Long Staple Cotton and Experiments in Rais- ing it at Kaneohe, Oahn. Oranire Culture. Ryan Expert. Review of the Sugar Market for isr3. List of Officers and Committes of the Planters' Labor and Supply Co. Meteorological Summary by Weeks for the Year ISM. Subscription L"0 a year. Foreign Subscript! on $3 a year. Round Volumes 3 f'f Back Volumes bound to order. JHf Address GAZETTE PUBLISHING CO., 46 Merchant St.. Honolulr. IS t f 0

Transcript of 3 Jc M ti Invl vwv 'lit - University of Hawaiiuu K to,-e 34.1 M Jc-4 tiI 1 Invl vwv y y v v v-t ill...

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CtMUliet lull X, IbSn.

vol. xix. xo. ;:(;iiT. HONOLULU, HAWAIIAN ISLANDS. MONHAV. MAHCK fi, LV.I-- 3

liinj'mcvja aichj. bclwicij the iimunt Peruvian audibc Polym.-!.-, but Jae .liUiul "MIQRSEMFII OF THE PACIFIC,

M. E. (Tiossumn, D.D.8. I lie Now Jewelry Store HAWAIIAN HAUDWAHK CO.,

n Aiin wa a hi,

Cutlery and Glassware

J,

liii'ii do niucij uliKe, but I heyof the iuJJie u.e m-vv- i tlit it

People oOjil.w: jooj tlOpictiJ iliiUdait'i ulUunAihg ex:t ou u d litteyt WJU'ie tbeic iV t'Viii, voUldbe apt to uudefo njf ideiiible uodifauilion in the UJav uei t.UoJut'.The tui-- of the i!jvbjpeltfof ofOcuuic a belooy to thc-m- ynuuSdivjtioJj A Mittij,kjjid i4 the js'vrthAleri.-ui- i liidiwiJ, bejn of u op-peJ-- y

vitol , v.;lh blu'k eye uud rUitjfbt1lu.ek htir.

'j he ot iyiiiut'jr of the 4iuiueee AIhu jV-ifi-

c 7jiJlLjfy tvriontg, yoy.esdoubk'eiiuoe which wcebuilt i ike wU-ri- ) Ut w v u i if . TAieyfc.ifd vtry fwftly, and a-'- .f thetwo ittt tA-rvi- 'i in the plaoe of uuoutrider for the oth, x. rucJL u yuftwould carry tityr teveuty people.'J'he huiL'Ua bad wi-r- y uiU4de Atsaterial ut fAiiud for .fivot ruction - bi5ijir, ftmm fibre Xor t wju undtor jjj iy-et- , jijie 4tljuivfthe th .Sei-- s tre Jjke fco iuuny KurdejjJ: of l'Art), lurujebinjf their occu-psi;;- U

with every t bire.; tbey mtwithout irjuch iti-bor-

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a lrbajjufr mij vf brd-- d puifJaf, vvbiejj wits pjuced vtjtb the

sifie.i!: downward, Wbcu tUv wj.ndwtAmry or the wentbtr y-r- y

I'ouU, the wtd aud aji;.w-J- e probubfy ijijfcbjp;el, foldrj up and J.ub;diojtbecrv jie..e- - which vld Ibe two;auoe toetl-.e- r J'rore would tUeJU

dejx-.jj--d on te padjle, TJUere werefceat t'.r forty jpaddljjuicii eittiiig t woon a. bei.. Ml'ith) M a a ;niedlAuiform fevrend by juuat., ior theebitf, bifc .ajud the o&ioer.Among tbe lut M'ere a prlwt, junatrouo;r;er aud uavigttor a taJJiugrastter aud a lruny;.eter. Jt It r'fyi titer kXiuz to couuiare th,U deayrj;-Uv- a

with thai of ai ViJLingTi-t- e jeri'd eiobracJn the twelfth

and thirteenth oeuturietf wu one jfgreat viiret and ooiatavtuu lliroajcb-o- ut

tlie itlaud woTiS oi IlyiitsBia.Sorxie femaeut vae at worl: to 5tbr vpthe etiergl arid j.mriou of wJid andlrirDitive iuen. It sasy laart. beextthe jjrefei2ie A 3uradlng x;dlU.oiiarriving froa liie Went, jzthe outbreak of xziUtu&J 3jlyutdeeii.uflLjirryinns of 4ioirt2guoufc ajjd lioulilt?trite. The laud la ut;t liave beeja vrit-u- t.

Io Teil cwitetioa H'itleiiDethe ocesia to mauy buenes of taddeu

departure and 4iMae.tr.oute Sight. Ac-cejjt- ing

tL.e evidence of traditicjj vofthe i.efiod, it a ticir of zauch jaii-- d

ling about an.d Mtlling to and Itd incanDeb aa 'tra of long voyage be-lw-eLi

wjoely epiirtXed rroujs filiinc; and J veuturettoiDe ez.jecLi-uone-

It W2i at Juboui thin iiu.it ihatthe Hervey Iklands and rCew Zealandwere colonidL

The lapse of lirne an liie hiviarjtbefe people is with reuoi-ab3- e

rtairity by the tradition wlutxhliave been banded down to liie 7reeiitday notably the unwritten genealogi-cal records brought from tre SouthPacific and! preferred an Hawaii.Eventually it carae about that com-munication 14ween Hawaii and themother country d and afterawhile Tahiti faded in tbexcindsofthe Hawaiian into a ftortof xnytJb-3&- nd

a region of mvHtery and icfcgit,fall of marvels, Inn hi tared try Kujer-natur- &l

teings.One of the Hawaiian traditions

reat to an ancient nnvigator namedPauniikna, who vcyaged'all tbe-wit- y

to Tahiti and brought back wit h himtwo white men of priesTly ofSce,called Kaekaa and Ivlalin, togetherwith a projihet named Maleia. hisj Ast was a wizard who ha5 power ove?rthe winds, a function not

in thi-js- rltys, "when thewhole contents i Ko'JnO cave wmldle kept in one small ealfc'bhfch alongwith a dead man's boo-.- . Iht flev:rip-tio- n

of these rr.j-s:eri--' :s Ktrarj;eTs us

fair an-- ? tail, stout a fd ruddv, withsparkling eyes is ve ofVikincs of the Saxon type; but thepriest iy function 'does rot wern tr bein keeping with the character of thepiratical Norsemen.

The agriculture of V e ancierd Polv--nesians was nifciTily r;etaro, ine rtXi o; wfnc.'i wras grocodir.io floor and raade into all orfs ofcskes ?;nd other TiLtri lions oimbesWhen the crop was ripe, the occasionwas usually celebrtted by a ljumansacrifice. Hence the storv of the"fatal taro p.Hch., Kvefvborfv itfamiliar wiih the T'lact with )mfngreen, neart-snape- d leaves which isn!-- d for decorative purposes in parksandalvot fountains. 4K)ephant leal"is a common name for Thht is thetaro, imported from the South Pa-ct no..

Human fi'-- n f;ces were veiy com monamong the Polynesians, some families

devot-- d for gerrer.ntion f ft er-gon era t ion to fnrr.ish such ofTerintrsTi-.- o priests being regarded us embody-ing the various deities and hence-temie-

,4god ooves," oou'ld designs. reanx body they disliked ftf a suirM.jeictim. After K-in- g slain, the b.t.'er

--as nsnallv dc-vonre-d. 'i?je TT.'JCiceo cannioansm was cthai parents would ev n est theiro wn cni i a re n . t ro m t h ; s t. n h h '. r h --

appetite for "long pic" the mission-ar- is have done their best to wo.4n the

islands oi tod .ay.These people' only ned the O' w .nd

arrow to kill rats w.'th. Tbey foughtwith clubs ard spoors. Clothing theymade by beating ot.t the inner trk oithe ninllerry tree. T.v;ey inventeda mcThori o: rii-- h using fcrthat pools amovig the eomirofs, which M'cre prepared (y dim-ming the inlets r.nd scraping rhebottoms smooth. Toshes caught ;nthe sea - the hooks rr, ployed ir a r;"obarbs and did not dr i n i n ry 'bv 'tearingthe g-il-

ls were transferre-- i to thar:o; m pic mentis voeerue poi lis hod stone and from the

HAWAIIAN

Abstract and Title Go.

NO. MtCItCJlXVN'r fcT.11.

tlOMLULl tl. i.

Jf. M. tiatcuCecil BrownW. 14. Ciiitlw Snerettu--J. t JJrowa,

Tais Couipauy is prv'prU to tdrohrecords and turuiah abstract! o( titla toall rai property la th KiaKclom.

Fartii piaciuf; loans ou, or contemplat-l-the purchase of ral estate will Audit

to their adtautae to consult the companyin regard to title.

iT All order aMended to with pronipt-neu- s.

ri-- I. O. Vcj.

C. BKEWEK & CO., Li- -

QC3E STllSKT, UOSOLULC, U. I.aXCiicrT wit

Uawaiiiia Aicaltural Co.Oaomea 6ur Co.

llonoma Suar Co.Wailaiu Suar Co.

Waiheo 6unr Co.Make uar Co.

UalcaiaU Kneh Co.Kapap&la Kanch.

PLan tars' Line s?an Francisco Packets.Chas. Brewer x Co.'a Line of Boston

Packets.Agtsntd Boston Board of Underwriters.Agents Philadelphia Board of Underwri-

ters.

List or Oxncxza:Hon . J. O. Carter, President & ManagerGeorge H. Robertson - TreasurerE F. Bishop - SecretaryCol. W. F. Allen - - AuditorChas il. Cooke )

H. 7aterhoase Esq. Directors.8. C. Allen Esq. )

National Iron.

Works

QUEKN STREET,Between Alakea and P.ichard Streets.

UNDERSIGN" 'D ARE PRETHE to make all kinds of IronRm Rmnze. Zinc and Lead Castings

ral Renair Shoo for .SteamRic:e Mills. Corn Mills. Water

Wheel. Wind Mills, tc. ; Machines forthe cleaning of Cotfee, Castor uu t.eans,Ramie, Sissal, Pineapple - Leave3 andnthpr rlhrnng nlants : also. Machines forPaper 8tock, Machines for extractingotarcn irom jianiocs, j.rruw jhwi,

jjX All orders promptly attended to

White, Ptitman & Co.

THE PASSENGER DEPARTMENT

OF THE

Oceanic Steamship Co.In San Francisco has been removed

from 327 Market street to

138 Montgomery Street(KXDBR OCCIDENTAL. IIOTEL..)

JCCTTrom this date all communica-tions pertaining to the San FranciscoPassenger Easiness should be sent to thenew office, 138 Montjjomery Street.

m. G. IRWIN & C0n L'D,

General Agents, Oceanic 8teamship Co.at Honolulu. 3n(Vlm

Election of Officers.

THE ANNUAL MEETING OFATthe Haleakala Ranch Companyheld this day, the following namd per-

sons were eJectod to serve as officer. ofthe corporation named for the ensuingyear, viz. :

If. P. Baldwin PresidentJ. O. Carter Vice-Presid-ent

(i. If. Robertson TreasurerW. O. Smith.... Audirt rE. F. Bishop SecretaryThe above named also constitute the

Board of Directors of the Com puny.E. K. BISHOP,

Secretary, Haleakala Ranch Company.Honolulu, January 29, 1S(J.

:.VMm

Alassafice.

VTR8. PRAY WOULD ANNOUNCE1YJL that she will attend a limited num-ber of patients. Address at H. M.Whitney'a, Kinj? Pt. ; Boll Telephone 75,

3223-t- f

Polynesian h'aviators Vimcoyer fed the Iglaudis.

L0m VOYAUKti IX FfiAIL CAKOKS,

I .; i; IU tulhHitf tivutk

Was in J'Vb, i, I'roU.-tw-

Alexander, tb Jfuwajjuii lUtmmUi iiow jn VibiiiK"" Lsw ii bis

pocaesbJl u lot Of lOOfct ioUK-feti- ll

fards ttbout tii woiidiuj u vljat.rswho orlpfjnaJly t'tAotiiwi lhi rin.'i'wJch Ibl'ttidtf,

1 1 irtliti tb.tt III lb- - tWtrlftlj .'rHUi;',t4t tb tii whJil tbi VJiii w;pi-rf- mlii .tir.U hMi:i ;ZiAo)t it)ibt; ,N'odl Atluntb; await, uvit;itof another r.va wmrt mixYuJr'Ut-- r U.dlbiV;m;lU oi tb? tbrf.di of tb uorJd. 'J'lxrw mr, of Mai-lay- nn

hlojk, having tartI from!oiitIi-uiti- r Atb--, wtrnt til :'Jv-.rU- )

and popiilatln th r:ld jJjixr .ftin? Houtb-r- n Pacific, vthU:U u 'Vttljat tlm? bad b:iri urdfjbabiti. 'Jliywi ; tl? aiic;;dori of the J'oJyifJjaof today.

Tb?y bad lnv:fjUrd tb? d?rj-ktrl- yl

canoe, with and outrlzr. 'VU

boat wan f.barp at Joth f:j'i. 8or?-tlij- e

it wan duj out of a hiugUi W:or, If thfcre wa not a bl ?nough trwbandy, plankw were w;w tttfrwith u braid of cocoanut fibr.' callel"ftlnntt." One of the rjioitt irrj;yrtarjtfeature of the craft wa the outrider,by which It wa enabled, though wlong and narrow, to stand up aaifiislthe wind. AVben It blew bard tise8ailor.s would climb out ojion thl

to ateady her, jut an. rnenrnano-uvr- e for the fcame purpose 'mboard of a moIern yacht.

It is easily imagined how the racewhich originally ropulated the archi-pelagoes of Oee'aniea began the hvai-nes- 3

of voyaging in a fcraaU way, il-dlin- g

about from one coral ;le toanother at easy difctances. As the:rnkill of navigation iucreaiHed theyventured farther on the ea. and thusgroup after group was discovered andpeopled, each new island blooming afresh starting poiut for exploration.

When people have improved theirapparatus beyond their opportunitiesthey seek larger opportunities. Thesesavages found themselves at lengthprovided with means for making voy-ages of indefinite duration withsafety. So the time arrived, in thetwelfth century, when more than onePol3nesian Columbus deliberately etforth in his frail canoe across thou-sands of miles of unknown and track-less sea in search of rew lands.

These "Norsemen of the Pacific," asProfessor Otis T. Mason calls them,did not fear the sea. Why shouldthey? Being as much at home in thewater as ou tanu, n ioe noai ups-e-i

they would right her, bail her outwith cocaanut shells and get aboardagain. They did not hesitate to at-tack the biggest man-eati- ng shark inthe lish's native element. Ilaviuclearned to make flour from the Saromot, they couid carry in small compass provisions for a long voyage.

The ocean upon which they thusfared forth is eleven thousand mileswide. Compared with it. the Atlan-tic is a mere pond. With only thesun, moon and stars to steer by, it ismarvellous bow thr-s-e untutored rjavi- -irators, having c,u-- e c-o- t;xn suchisolated bits of ter?a flrma as KasterIsland and the Hawaiian group,should have been able to find theirway home and make trip to and fro,as they did, carrying new coloniston each voyage out.

1 t her a

ed originally to the discovery of tiesrand other lands by the fiichts of l.jr.s.1 lie people wo iirsT iant;e-- i o.s meHawaiian Islands came all the wayfrom Tahiti a voyosre to the north ofmore than 1?: m i 1 es, t V n cei ve w b a tthe subse-juen- t passenger traffic be-tween those islands and Tahiti musthave been to furnish progeners for thepopulation of lour hundrei thousandsouls which Captain Cook found whenlie visited Hawaii.

Similarly, Easter Island, thoughbut a block of lava thrown up fromthe depths of the sea and hawnganarea ot only thirty-tw- o square ml'es,once had "a population of twentx-thousand-

.

It is literally honey-eombe- d

with caves formeii by bubbiesof expanding gases during volcanicaction, in which the inhabitants for-merly dwelt. When they died theirbom" were stored in the caverns,jireat numbers of which today arefound crowded with innumerableskeletons. OJigamic stone images andother works of att left behind by ibisvanished people remain an enduiingevi.1cv.ee of a won.derful senii-civiii-zatio- n.

Hytiietime of Captain Co k thia!vt nturct; race b.ad occupied everyisland in me I'acijio ti-.a- t was ca pat if t

of suppoTtiufir life. New Zealand wasdisciiwretl and porrdatod V.v them..Thev actnallr made vovaces to rad.i-g:iscar, the present inhaV it ants c

Inch, the Hovas, are tlieir descr r. iants. --Mam- scicntinc men arc ot tV.,

opinion tnai tney were tne m-s- t c.is-coveici- -s

of America the ancestor fthe ancb-n- t Pern i:r.s and ctV r trih-- sof Soutli America, if not of the XortliAmerican Indians.

There arc marked ethnic differences

ro:i b'ltrt dirtiiH,

Mil.VU IN lUttlit IINU.

Souvonir Spoons!a bpocUlty. Alat, i.u buml u lino tabu k

of iuipitrttiit

kVKIl I ttt:; IN 1 11 K LATENT lKhl(iS.j.

JtXST"Ul.iiid oidfi'j rmkitly attctttlbd to,

P. t. BOX US7.

MU l'll L T K L K P 1 1 ( M E 4M.

E. A. JACOBSONMan Chouo Restaurant

BSliUL SIKKW, HONOLULU.

BlCtWhlttN JUNU ANI mnitL HTKKKTh, j

The Best 2-l- st Meal vt Town !

Clw'" Fowl in Koasou on VuHilay, Fri-day and Suntlay ; Bmiloil Chicken everySunday Morning.

TICKETS FOR Ji MEALS $4.50!

rryit! 3ol7-t-f

Criterion Saloon

Another Invoice of tlu celt?bratel

JOHN WIELAKD EXTRA PALE

Lager BeerAinu, a fresh Invoice of

CALIFORN7V OYBTKltFOB

OYSTER COCKTAILS

L. H. DEE, -- . Proprietor.3406

CASTLE & COOKELIFE 1ST 13 FIRK

INSURANCE:

AGENTSAGENTS FOR

NEW ENGLAND MUTUAL

Life Insurance Co.OF BOSTON,

iEtna Fire Iiismauce Co.

IIAKTFORD.

HTJSTACE A Civ.

Dealers iy

WOOD AND COALAlso White and Black Sand which

will sell at the very lowest, market ra;-- ,

37"BSLL TULKFHOWB No. 414.

EXS' Mutual. Tblbphonr No. 4143493-l- y

FOR SALE.

I Adams' Power Press

siri rj,.TKN' 00x40 in.,

IN; GOOD WORKING ORDER !

And now in dailv ue.

Tiiis ProQ1 is complete in all its pTtsami only otleied for sain tn make nomff r a nw Pre1"' of more recent inventionand bettor ndaptpil for the increasiriijwork of our otlice.

fLV Apply to

Hawaiian Gazette Co.s.v.N i.'ir-t- f

:lt? ititl ttUr.it.

J, M. DAVIDHOH,1

Attorney ted Ccunaellor-it- -l

J M. WAICEFIIILD,Attorney m Counsellor at L&w

TtiujjKjrttry Oftii with V. W, Aftliford,Merchant Htrnt, Honolulu.

WILLIAM 0. I'AUKK,

ATTOJiNKY - AT I ,AW

OI0 No. 18 Knuhuiuniiu Hir-n- , llout,lulu.j 1.1.

LEWER3 a U00KE.(tfaceoaaor to Lwra LlekfiO)

lruiMrter nuit lcilrw In ,niabiAna all KIndi of UalMJna MtterUla.

No. 83 ITUUT HTltKrr, Honolulu

it. W. M'Cll BfitiEt . J. H. a r. Vt. M'Clia JitY.124 Clay St., 8. F. 40 (iueen Ht. llono.

M. T7. McOHESNEY & 80Nb.Wholosale Groctrs, Connnlssion Mer-

chants and Importers40 Qaeeu tit., Honolulu.

LEWIS & CO.,

Wholesale and Retail Grocers,

111 FORT STREET.TtUphnm CO. P. O RpgjtgT

BEAVER SALOON,

tort Street, Opposite Wilder Co.B. J. NOLTE, FBOPEIET03.

yirct-ola- ei Lnnchu Served vrttb Tw, CpffBod Water, Qlsger Alt or MJli

Open From 3 a. m. till in .

3TSraoter'Bcn3iltrB Puecljilty

TORN T. WATERH0U5K

Importer ni 75ei.. -

GENERAL SIERO H AIJDI8E.No. 25-8- 1 gcoen Street, Honolnlc

H. HACKFELD ft CO..

General Commission Aire)?

Oar. Knr Onftn 8t.. HonolT'iTj

E0N0LULU IRON WORKts uu..

Steam Eninon.Collerv, Hnsfnr Pftlly, fwlfrj rrAnd machinery of every description raruleto order. Particular atterdion pai,I ttBhips' blackpmitliine. Job work excutedon the ebortept notio.

1) ) YOU FEEDTHE BABY !

The Skin needs foo-4- . If the Cornplexirn is sallow, roneh, poaly, pimply,it is b'ause it is not fil with

LOLA M0XTEZ C1IE31LgThe Skin Feed and Tissue Builder,!positively the fitly safk and reliable ar- -

tide lor me v. oimvexion. AOfoitiieiTbarmlet5?, oeiis the pores, increases thenatural nnd necessary secretions cf tbt- -

skin. IU sterns the tlesu to firm healthystate of Tonth. I revents wrinkle?.Gooil for burns, cha; ptni lips and hand.4.

l5?"Tct lasts thtt t months.

PltlCfi 75 CENTS.Ask jour drupjr-- t for

HOW CAN : YOU TOLERATEFreckles, Tim-pie- s,

Blackheads,yellow cr mud-dy Fhin, mouthWrinkles or antform cf facial dis-f.ptire-

tit whenMis.Nk: tik H ar-rison gtv.ranb-e- s

focnfTC'i. Dou t

I consider youri : cace a heirless

Mrs. Hnrricn tre?" lnii Torsli defects of fare Rnl firire. Tl-- . i"rjinn-nn- tremotnl of" siipernuous linirMlv'S. NETTIE ITVI?l?lSOT

Vi:ifrioM I?aiity Doctor.(icarv Street, Snn Francisco, Cal.

r.Vcr saV br !RM.L1T1 U v-- CO.,

Prupcists, 10'. Fort Ft., Honolulu."tf-t- f

w hotjcl stain.

HjrOrifU'i Houu9a. m. to 4 r. u,

DR. R. I. MOORE

DENTIST.

OSes: ArliD'toa 3o!i3s. Hotel St., Pttbr i.

JIT-G-as Adtni.'iiMrttrtid.

Orru'v Ibi'ut: 9 tt and 1

327 Mm

"SANS SOUl'l" HOTELSEASIDE RESORT,

ilI desire to Jlul no quieter haventhan the lSa7is Souci', and may welladd with the poet:

ln a more sacred or fetjuentered bower,Nor nymph nor Faunus haunted.'

ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON."P. C. Advertiser Oct. 7, lSy.J.

T. A. Simpson,!," i rivi nut?

C. B. KIPLEY,

ARCHITECTOffics Newr afe Deposit Building,

Hosoluxu, H. I.

Plana, tipecincations, and Snpertntflnd-enc- egivsn for every description of Build-

ing.Old Buil-lm- s successfully remodelled

and enlarged.Designs for Interior Decorations.Maps or Mechanical Drawing, Tracing,

and Blueprinting.S Drawings foi Eoho or Newspapr

Illustration.

fWilliS J.OOOm

A J

Pioneor SteamCANDY FACTORY and BAKERY

r. HORN Practioal Uoniectfoner,Pavtrv Cook and Baker.

No. 71 Hnr t Tlerhone.

CENTRAL MAKKET !

X7TJA2SrTJ 8TREKT.First-clas- s Market in every respect; be-

sides carrying a full line of Meats,we make a specialty of

3Efrelcfat Stmsages,

Presnwl Corn JF?ff.

WESTBROOK & GARES,

PROPRreTOR.

Tlie Planters' Monthly.

CONTENTS FOR IJKHIitJ--

An Ajp-icultur- Station for Hawaii.Cotton Cultivation in Hawaii.Profits in the Peet Stiar Industry.Reet Sugar.Annual Meeting of the Planters' Labor

and Snppl v Co.Twelfth Annual Report of the Secretary

of the Planters' Labor and Supply Co.Report of Committee on Cultivation.Report of Committee on Fertilizers.Report of Committee on Ramie.Small Iudustries for Hawaii Long

Staple Cotton and Experiments in Rais-ing it at Kaneohe, Oahn.

Oranire Culture. Ryan Expert.Review of the Sugar Market for isr3.List of Officers and Committes of the

Planters' Labor and Supply Co.Meteorological Summary by Weeks for

the Year ISM.

Subscription L"0 a year.Foreign Subscript! on $3 a year.

Round Volumes 3 f'fBack Volumes bound to order.JHf Address

GAZETTE PUBLISHING CO.,46 Merchant St.. Honolulr.

IS

t

f0

- : .

o TITE PACIFIC COMMEKCLiL ADVERTISER: HONOIiXJIiU, MARCH 5, 1894.

(i shell of the giant clam, which cuts THE CAPTAIN, THE COCK AND THE COOK General 3oomi3num la.OB

THAT RIDDLE READ.tered in the march of civilization, the If National Cane ShredderCREOLE.'The il;gli-Ck- ss -:- -

Ballv! Kally! Rally!

REPRESENTATIVE GOYERNM 2NT 3D

DISTRICT, RONOLULU.

Tlwiniin

Tl.flow

Tltrasiand '

Tltinie

Tttagtlab

i

ing--

Tl;irate .'tin fcomakiresnlgesti

ti;fore i

ThDr sotakittiriu

ThScialvogu

Thand topeneacbbetra

Than thzrovr

Tb-- !

yourn exTb;

resse."Th:

in anplace

Tbblack

zQmiiThi

placethe v

Tiiiideaatric

Tbiingand J,

Theaatioisomein a c.thatx

Tb

Tbxlwajlat. h

dair 'The

;remerazer

i

)r. Hi

Fann :

ion iibiaelTbo

I.D.Juakrith 1

iWcaotbeettlerjand,ractiforkf heiam, V

bat tiTwc

)r."W

Polynesians have succumbed to alco-hol and the diseases of the white man.The native Hawaiian population istoday only one-ten- th as numerous aswhen Captain Cook sailed. Thanksto that pi eat navigator, mo9t of theislands of Oceanica are overrun withplg9, his rule having been to leave a

of them wherever he landed. No1air mammals are native to thoseisolated islands, because they couldnot reach them.

The savage Polynesians even nowcommonly call the white people "sky-breaker- s."

They think that theheavens shut down over the earth atthe horizon, and that the pale facesmuat have burst through the wall ofsky from beyond in order to reachtheir islands. They believe that theworld is a cocoanut shell of enormousdimensions, at the top of which is asingle aperture communicating withthe upper air whero human beingsdwell. At the very bottom of theshell is a stem gradually tapering to aDoint. which renresents the beirinuinirof all things. This point is a spirit ordemon without human form, wnosename is "Root of All Existence." Byhim the entire fabric of creation issustained.

In the interior of the cocoanut shell,at its very bottom, lives a femaledemon. So narrow is the space intowhich she is crowded that she isoblixred to sit forever with knees andchin touching. Her name is "TheVery Beffinnincr." and from her aresprung numerous spirits. They in-

habit five different floors, into whichthe great cocoanut is divided. Fromcertain of these spirits mankind isdescended.. The islanders, regardingthemselves as the only real men andwomen, were formerly accustomed tolook upon strangers as evil spirits inthe guise of humanity, whom theykilled when they could, offering themas sacrifices.

Hades, or the land of ghosts, is sup-posed to beinsidethe mighty cocoanutshell, beneath the surface of the earth,which is merely a thin crust over avast hollow. Some of the islands, be-

ing of volcanic origin, are honey-combed with caves and frightfulchasms, down the deepest of whichtbo corpses of the dead are thrown,so that the survivors not unnaturallyimagine the entrance to the netherworld to be flown one or more of these

its. Existence in this strange spiritand is pursued by the immortals very

much as people live on earth. Theyare numerous and thtir ways aremostly far from engaging. Some tribesof them are cannibals, whose delightit is to entrap and feed upon the soulsof mortals. Others only have one eyeapiece.

To these natives of the South Pacificthe cocoanut Is a vegetable product ofthe utmost importance. Its originwas divine. Tnere was a youncr woman, daughter of a goddess, who livedin a cave, close by which ran a streamthat was filled with eels. One daywhile bathing she was surprised by ahuge eel, which rapidly assumed theform of a handsome youth. He in-formed her that he was the god of theeels. They became lovers, but finallyhe was compelled to bid her farewell.Before doing- - so, however, he appearedin his eel shape and directed her tocut off his head and bury it. She didso, and it sprouted into a tree. Fromthis tree all the cocoanuts in the worldwere derived, and on each nut are in-vari.i- bly

found the two eyes andmouth of the young man. The whitekernel is commonly referred to inPolynesia as his "brains."

Bene Baciie.

Amongst the Solomon Islanders,A vessel has arrived from the

Solomon Group after a tempestuousexperience. A hurricane set in, andgiant seas swept the vessel's decks,and also swept overboard her cook-house or galley, cooking stove, andall the paraphernalia therein. Itwas lucky for the cook that hochanced to be out. Letters receivedfrom the islands contain the usualreferences to tribal marauding. AtRendova, New . Georgia, a greatuorisinff has taken place. The coast

'; men had suffered severely from theattacks of tribes from the hills, andhad started on a retaliatory exped-

ition Thin vsms. hflintr carried on inM W M - w - "

a fiendish manner, and it is stated inthe letters received that it would bea truly humane act if a British man- -

! of-wa-r would vibit the place, and puta stop to the barbarities. It isbelieved that rich mineral depositsabound in the Solomon Group, and aDartv (described as a scientific mi amg party) from New Caledonia has

land exploring undertaking. A small'coasting vessel had driven ashore onIthe coast of New Georgia, near CapePitt, bnt was iloated without muchdanger. In the German portion ofthe islands said to be the largest

jand richest in the group very littlelis to be seen in the way of settlemeLt:of any kind by white people. AtY8abel, as well as at Choibeul andBougainville, the natives are con-stantly at war. Some recruiting forthe French stations in New Caledoniaia done,' also for the German com-jpany'- s

stations in New Britain and'.adjacent islands, but British vesselsare prohibited from engaging in'trade at these islands, and aremulcted in heavy penalties shouldthey infringe the regulations. Inthe other parts of of the group theQueensland labor vessels get manyrecruits; indeed, one account saysthat nearly half the young fellows inthe islands have at some time orother worked on the sugar stationsof the Northern colony. SvdneyHerald, Feb. 1C.

i John Adams lived to a greater agethan any other President of theUnited States, being 91 when helied.: The United States has dwellinglouses valued at 14,200,000,000.containing furniture valued al$7,200,000,000.: The first formal treatise on the artind science of navigation wasrritten by Pedro Nuner, tt PortuHiese, in 1537.

There was a cantain. small hut bold.Who sailed from Boston West;

There was a cock both lean and old,Who troubled that captain's rest.

A cook there was at Hawaii,A Chinaman, Ah Coup,

(I need him in this tale, for hePut that cock in the soup).

The captain, who at eight o'clockSought quietly his rest,

Was nightJy by this fighting cockWith constant crow distress'd.

The captain moved from cot to cotAll over Honolu,

And wheresoe'er the captain gotWent cock-a-doodle-d- o.

The captain raved and tore his hair,Then moved to Waikiki;

But still came on the midnight airThat doodle-cock-i-de- e.

Now desperate the captain grew;This was his constant moan:

"If I can't make that cock in stewI'll have to hasten home."

He sought at last the cook, Ah Coup,Who bis bold cockship slew,

And served him up as chicken soupTo stop his doodle-do- .

Now joyous went the cap to Led,With hours of rest in view,

But nearly lost his aching headWhen "Cock-a-doodle-do- !"

"The same old cock? it cannot be;I saw it in the Dot.

No rooster's ghost can crow," said he,"But yet it does, Great Scott:"

For long and loud the crowing grew;It seemed one mighty roar.

The captain pack'd and bade adieuTo Honolulu's shore.

EX FIN.The cock that haunted Captain P.

Was certainly a game;

Till he runs down again. Hayne.

HAMAKUA NEWS.

Honokaa, March 2. The steamer Waialeale arrived Wednesdayfrom Honolulu, and was eagerlyawaited on account of her havingthe foreign mail. Many kamaainasof the district grew sad when toldof the disaster of the "Kearsage"as a number of them are "Boys ofthe Sixties.' "

More rain has fallen, and fortwo days the wind has blown veryhard. Hail has fallen about threemiles from here towards the moantain. JMaunakea is almost completely covered with snow, and foryears past it has not presentedsuch a striking and beautiful appearance.

A slight earthquake shock wasfelt on Tuesday at 12 m.

l

All the Hamakua mills aregrinding and it is a very busyseason.

The arch-erect- or of the Kamo- -uli bridge at Kalopa is a late arrival from Madeira, and an ex-perienced stone mason.

Xo clew has been obtained tothe identity of the persons whorobbed the Post Office consequent-l- v

the way to detect the criminalis very hard.

A number of subjects of theMikado are making their headquarters in town as hardly a daypasses without four or hve ol themarriving and taking up their abodenear the Japanese gambling dens.

The police are very quiet,only onearrest having been made this weekand that a sturdy Luso from Ku- -

kaiau, for whipping a native. Hewas put on bail and his case willbe heard next Monday.

The illustration in the Advertiser and Gazette of the proposedrestoration of Lil. created quite asensation in this district. Ourformer representative J. K. Kauna-man- o,

who on the steps of the latepalace thirsted for the blood of thethen cabinet is unfortunately omit-ted.

1 f t

BURNING GRASS AT WAIKIKI.

Prompt Assistance Prevents a Se-

rious Conflagration.

About 11 a. m. on Saturdaymorning the grass on the Prattpremises at Waikiki was' discov-ered to be on fire. A high windwas blowing at the time, and itlooked for a while as though theresidence would take fire. CharlesWarren, with the aid of some Jap-anese, extinguished the blaze, butnot before two acres of grass wasburned and a large number ofcocoanut trees were scorched at thebase. The fire department wascalled, but the danger was over be-

fore the engine arrived.

Illinois is first in corn, oats, pork,distilled liqiors and railways :second in coal, wheat and hogs;third in cattle.

In 1G70 the Dutch owned and oper-ated one half of the world's ship-ping; now about 1 per cent of thewhole.

The ADVERTISER is the lead-ing paper of the Hawaiian isi-aud- s.

It has a larger circulationand prints more live news thanany other island paper. 1'rice 50cents per month, in advance. Ringnp telephone,No. 88

You Wish

To

Keep Up With the

Times,

You Must

Read

The News.

The

Subscription Department

Of the

Haw'n. News Co., L'd.

Will

Supply You

With m

Any

Publication

In the World

At a

Reasonable

Rate.

Subscribe Now.

New GoodsA FINE ASSORTMENT.

TILES FOR FLOOR !

And for Decorating Purposes;

Mattiwo of all Kinds,

Manila Cigabs.

Chinese Fire Crackers. Rockets andborabs, Japanese Provision and Soy.

H&nd-p&in- tsd Porcelain Dinner Set,

A few of those fine hand-embroider- ed

and SATIN 8CRHEN.EBOIvTY FRAMES,

Assorted colors and patterns of OrepeSilk Shawls. Elegant Tete-ateCn- ps

and Saucers. A fine lot of

BOATS AND ACCESS0EIESA few of those handy Mosquito Urn

Also, an assortment of new styles of

Kattan Chairs and. TablesAlso, a small selection of JAPANE8K

COSTUMES.

WING W0 CHAN & CO.

Wo. C uuodu Strot.

THEDAI NIPPON

STOREHAS RSCEIVED BY THE THE STEAMER

OCEANIC FROM JAPAN

ANOTHERLARGE

INVOICEOF

Silk and Fancy Goods!

ALSO

White "Star" ShirtsMade by S.I.Yamatoya of Yokohama,

Sirs. J. P. P. 'Jollaco,PROPRIETRESS.

0006-t- f

! PATENTED UN D Ell THE LAWS OFTHE HAWAIIAN ISLANDS.

The attention of Plantersand Agents is called to thefollowing letter from Mr.John A. Scott, Manager ofthe Hilo Sugar Co., regardingthe working of the NationalCane Shredder, which he hasjust introduced into the Millof that Company:

Wainakc, Hilo, Hawaii, )

January 22d, 1S94.JHox. Wm. G. Irwin, Honolulu, H. I.

Dear Sir: In reply to yours of the16th inst regarding the National CaneShredder furnished by t Ut nivrrsalMill Co. of New York, ami erected bythe Hilo Sugar Co. this past season,

I would beg to say, that it has now beenin operation day and night during the pantthree weeks working on plant cane, andalso hard ratoons.and it is giving me thegreatest satisfaction. The more I see ofits capabilities, the betier pleased 1 amthat I put it in, as I am satisfied that itwill repay the original outlay in a shorttime, in saving of labor, hig'her extrac-tion, etc.

It is shredding from H50 to 400 tons ofcane every 22 hours with the greatesteae, and it could shred a much largerquantity if necessary. It delivers theshredded cane in an even uniform feedto the three roller mill, which receives itwithout the intervention of any labor,and aa the cane is thoroughly shreddedor disintegrated it relieves the mill of agreat deal of strain, thus reducing theliability of broken shafts, gearing, etc.

There is a saving of four (4) men dailyon the mill, as only one man is requiredto regulate the amount of cane deliveredby the carrier to the shredder. It hasincreased the extraction from 4 to5 per cent.

The economical nso of steam is gene-rally a serious consideration in addingnew machinery, as in most mills theboiler power is taxd to its highest limit,as it was in this mill, and any increaseddemand necessitated an additional boil-er. But 1 find that the shredder and thethree roll mill engines combined use nomore steam than the three roll millengine did when working on whole cane,while doing better work and more of it,and owing to the uniform feed on themill, the engine demands very littleattention.

The iJegass from the shredded canemakes superior fuel, and the firemenhave lets difficulty in maintaining a uni-form pressure of steam than formerly.

I will be pleased to have a call fromparties interested, as it is necessary tosee the machine at work to fully appre-ciate its capabilities.

I remain, very truly yours,(Sig.) JOHN A. SCOTT,

Manager Hilo Sugar Co.

&3iTTlans for erection ofthese shredders may be seenat the office of the Agents,where prices and other parti-culars may also be obtained.

ft G. Irwin i Co. L'dSOLE AGENTS FOR THE

HAWAILVN ISLANDS.3594-3- m

Hawaiian

Electric

Company.

NOTICE TO CONSUMERS !

The new works of the Ha-waiian Electric Co. being nowcompleted, notice is herebygiven that from and after Jan-uary 15th the Company isprepared to supply incandes-cent electric lighting tocustomers.

In a few days the Companywill also be prepared to fur-nish electric motors for power,and of which due notice willbe given.

.The Company further an-nounce that they are preparedto receive orders for interiorwiring and can furnish fixturesand all fittings in connectionwith new service.

Printed rules, regulationsand Company's rates can behad on application to themanager.

Wm. G. Irwin,35S6-t- .f PKKSIPKNT H. E. CO.

HONOLULU SKATING RINK

BERETANIA ST., NEAR PUNCHBOWL .ST.

SKATINGEvery Monday, Thursdav andSaturday Evenings. 361S-1- 0t

-:- - Standard-Bre- d Stallion

" CREOLE ""Will Stanti th Season at the

CLDB tTABLES.

RACE RECORD : 2 :15, made at Stock-ton, California, September 23, 1893.

TE-RJVX-S

: S SOPayable at time of service.

3605-- 1 m

NEW SHIRTS!White Linen Shirts,

$2.25 apiece Jwith collars andcuffs; first-cla- ss finish.

Crape ShirtsWith Ties, $1.75 apiece; stiffbosom finish ; new patterns.

w

Crape ShirtsWith Ties, $1.25 apiece; whiteor colored ; best quality ; strongand comfortable Shirts.

Silk Shirts,$4 apiece; fine-- patterns;splendid finish.

lECSThe abov complete stock ofShirts received by the latest steamerare ready for sale by

ITOHAN9Sole Agent of the well-know- n Shirt-make- r.

Yamatova. 3618-lm- tf

THIS SPAC1

RESERVED FOR

A. F. COOKE,MANAGER, HAWAIIANFERTILIZER CO.

Book Your OrdersAt Once!

Messrs. Kohler & Chase ofSan Francisco have kindly con-sented to allow us the ser-vices of the leading man intheir Tuning Department (fora limited season only) whowill arrive in Honolulu inFebruary.

We are now prepared tobook orders for Piano Tuningand Repairing, same to be fill-ed in the rotation as received.

notwithstanding the extraexpense incurred by obtainingthis experienced man, theusual Honolulu prices willprevail.

The public will recognizethe fact that this is an oppor-tunity seldom offered them;the name of Kohler & Chasebeing a sufficient guarantee ofthe man's experience and goodwork.

B. We beg to in-

form those parties who leftorders with us for Mr. Bensonto fill upon his return fromMaii, that we have receivedinformation of Mr. Benson'sdeparture for San Franciscolast week.

BOTH TELEPHONES 190.

Music Department.The Hawaiian News Co., L'd.

3587-t- f

All loyal supporters of the ProvisionalGovernment residing intbe 3d District,1st and 2d Precincts, are requested tomeet at the

DRILL SHED,ON

MONDAY EVENINGThe 5th day of March, at 7 :30 o'clock, toform the 3d District Club of the UnionParty of Hawaii.

PER ORDER OF THE COMMITTEE.

Third District. That territorvlying west of the first district, andbounded by a line aloDg School, Fort,Beretania and Richard streets to theharbor. The first precinct embraces allof the district north of Beretania street,and the second precinct all south of thatetreet.

?.G27-- lt

TheClubNo.2

Starts from March 1,

and the drawings will

be made every other

Saturday. .

Start now, pay $2.50

a week from the dateabove named, and you

will soon be the posses-

sor of the finest Bicycle

ever made.

It costs you $15, when

you get your wheel, the

balance is paid by the

week in amounts thatanyone can afford.

Cheaper than carfare.

COLUMBIA

BICYCLE

iGENCY.

BOOK-BIN- D I m.

Have YourMusic covered;Shabby Books made to look new ;Library lettered with your name ;Hymn Book, Pocket Book,Card Case, etc. lettered.

HAWAIIAN GAZETTE COMPANY

TV. H. KICE,STOCK RAISER and DEALER

BHEEDEB OF

Fine Horses and CattleFrom the Thoroughbred

Standard bred Stallion, Nutwood by Nutwood, JrNorman Stallion Captain GrawlNative bred Stallion Boswell

ALSO A CHOICE LOT OF

Bulls, Cows and CalvesFrom the Celebrated Balls

Sussex, Hereford, Ayrshire & DurhamA TiOT OF

Fine Saddle and Carriage Horses

FOB SALE.

HEREFORD BULLS FOR SALE

Tourists and Excursion Parties desiringSinele, Double or Four-in-han- d Teams oxSaddle Horses can be accommodated at W.II. llice'a Livery Stables.

.3 All comTrinnicaUong to be addressed toTS93-l-y W. H.RICE, Liihue, Kauai.

i

S. Lczfirst Aa modi

Dr.ltion atgradmYork 1

"Wozaetor ofpractiiOrlear)womaionly of

indomilished I

and ewon fc

Bhe wjthe prireprest

Theiin her ibeingfcer u

hi xnedxnemrxHomectneoptt"Bociet:au honasaoda

, leal b

Daik-cnt-

l

Tim PACIFIC COMMEKCIAIi ADVEIITISK: IlONOIUIiU, 3XAKC1I o, 1S1U. aA GRAND SUCCESS. THE YELLOW FLAG FLYING.

HAWAIIAN GAZETTE CO.Sib

The Kawaiahao Concert Nets aGood Sum.

The concerts given by the pupilsof Kawaiahao Seminary are alwayslooked forward to with considerableeagerness. The spectacle presentedby the 120 girls, clad in a simpleuniform of white, marching in, to

2. 7 VW.;Vv7 "Z.tA

';i

mmMr

Ox- - hi Is'"

NTE

A Whaler Arrives With Saall-po-x

on Board.

The whaling bark Horatio, withGeorge L. Donaldson in temporarycommand, arrived off port on Sat-urday morning with the yellow Hagliving. She was boarded bv C. B.Reynolds, the agent for the Boardof Health, who soon discoveredthat small-po- x was almost epi-demic on board. In all there arethirteen. ca.-e-s of the terrib'escourge, six of which are quite vio-

lent, while the other seven men arein a convalescent state. It wasalso learned that two of the sailorsdied on the way down from thedisease. Mr. Reynolds made ar-rangements to remove six of themen to the Quarantine Station, inorder to prevent any further spreadof the disease on board of the ves-sel. This was accomplished yes-terday by using the ship's boats.It is expected that, it will takeabout a month for the men to re-

cover, and in the meantime thevessel will remain off port await-ing the arrival of her regultir cap-tain. The vessel left San Fran-cisco on the 'Sod of November last,and on the 2Gth uf December sheput in at a port on the Californiacoast.

PRI.,t )$''

V. I. 3LCIIAN.VN. J. B. SUJL.

TWO NEW MIX1STEKS.J. M. 15. Sill, well known ia MicL-i.a- eucational circles, was reoently

noniinatt-t- l for Minister to Corea. Our ik-- ..limscer to the Argentine RepublloL Wiliim I. Buchanan, of Sioux Citv, lo-.va- . He was chief of the departmentof Hrieukure, forestry and live stock as thf World's Fair tad is one oi thebest iviio v u amuse meut managers in thi wnc.

2Cstc

JOHNif Nc. 46i MerchantjSStreet.

T r." " 1

V& r:' .

PopLilar Pnblicatioii

OF

HAWAIIAN

E "R. A.I

AND

NDER

o- -

THE

GAZETTE CO.

Through Hawaii.

Copy; Foreign, 75 Cents,

Steel and Iron Hanges, Stoves and Fixtnres,HOUSmZPLfS GOODS 1M HTCHCC UTI53ILS,

AGATE WAEE IN GREAT VABIETY,White, Gray and Siiver-plate- d.

jmmh

mmmm

- 'fit ''y's 'J,-.- . ,s .y.v

reacnteiiti?

NOTT.

1

KOBE ?

--o

aad 37 KXKQ

1893.

Life Ins. CoYORK

President

3175,084,1-56.61- .

policy or :.ny particulars concerning theLife Insurance Company may

S. B. ROSE,Genera! Axat, Hawaiian Islands.

Ste.unship LinePACIFIC JtAILWAY.

E7""For Freight and Pa?aze and allgeneral information, apply to

iTheo. 11. Dnvies & Co.Amenta for Hawaiian Island?,

a musical measure. and arrangingthem selves tier upon tie accordingto height. of i ei; unique enouguand pretty enough to dra.w a crowd.When, in addition to the singiin:of the girl:? and the aid of amateurtalent, there comes the work of art-

ists of the rank of Mr. and Mrs.Turner, there is good materialenough to "furnish forth'' half adozen concerts.

Old Kawaiahao wa3 well filledon Saturday evening last, the bodyof the house being entirely takenup, while there were large numbersin the galleries. The careful train-ing which the Seminary girls havereceived for several years shows itsresult in a steady impruvenien : , andthey never sang better than Satur-day night. The ''Spinning Song,"from the "Flying Dutchman,'' wasrendered by the full school, with aforce and vicacity and in a timewhich were remarkable. The littlegirls also, under the leadership ofMiss Dice, acquitted themselvesadmirably, and they were heartilyapplauded. Miss Paty's violinsolo earned a rousing recall, towhich a gracious response wasmade. The feature of theevening was, of course, thesinging of Mr. and Mrs. Turner.Both were received with the great-est enthusiasm. Mr. Turner sangbetter than he has since coming toHonolulu, and his splendid tenorahow3 no signs of wear. The duetfrom Lucia, was received with aperfect storm of applause, and thelatter part of it was kindly repeated.Mrs. Turner sang the Flower Songfrom Faust with perfect finish,following it with "Way down uponthe Swanee River," which she gavewith the simple truth and feelingwhich are really products of thehighest art.

The marks of Mr. Berger's musical intelligence ana unwearyingzeal were as usual omnipresent,and as for his orchestra, it simplyoutdid itself.

The returns from the sale oftickets ' are not vet all in, but theconcert probabiv netted about$250.00.

COURT NOTES.

Twenty-fourt- h and last day ofthe February term.

John Kaimi was granted a divorce from Dinah Kaimi, on theground of defendant's adultery.C. W. Ashford for libellant ; no ap-

pearance of or for the defendant.Judge Whiting ha3 decided in

favor of plaintiff ?3 motion to dis-

miss the appeal in T. B. Murray vs.John F. Colbuxn. Defendant willhave to pay the judgment of thelower court, which is $02.50, be-

sides commissions and costs. E.Johnson for plaintiff; C. Creightonfor defendant-appellan- t.

W. G. Smith, editor of the Star,defendant in the five libel caseswhich were on the calendar of thelast term, has been granted a dis-

charge, the time for presenting in-

dictments having lapsed.In the gross cheat case against

Domingos Gomes, the Attorney-Gener- al

has declined to present anindictment, and defendant wasthereupon discharged.

During the last week cf the term25 cases have been disposed of, a3follows : 20 criminal cases, 2 jurywaived and three divorce cases. Ofthe 20 criminal cases, there were 8

con' i' on?, 2 acquittals, 5 nolleprocciwd and o appeals with-drawn or dismissed. Cost for theweek for attendance cf jurors, $344.

Total costs for the term are as fol-

lows :

Paid Hawaiian jurors ?

Paid foreiiru juror -Witnesses in criminal cases... 10' DO

Other expenses - 00

Total - - .51,6T.S iv)

j

3frt With an AccidentA. Gil filial, the freight clerk on

the steamer Claud ;e, met rcith apainful accident yesterday n;orn-in- ;i

shortly after the steamerdocked. He directii:; the un-

loading of iome stock, and. whilehis back wa.-- turned. h? wasknocked down a chute hy th care-lr-.-r.e- ri

ot" a driver of a truck, whobacked up hi.j vehicle without giv-ing any warning. Mr. Gilfillan re-

ceived some very severe bruitsa.nd at the time it was thought thatseveral of hia rib bones were frac-tured. He will be confined to hisbed for several day3 to come.

Pacific Commercial Advertiser,RUBBER

LIFT AND FORCE PUMPS. WATEE GLUSSTS. HETALS,

Plumbers' Stock, Watr at;; Soli iipe.

Plumbing, Tin, Copper and Sheet iron Work,

(Eight Pages.) Issued Every Morning, Except

Sunday. 50 Cents per Month. Delivered by Car-

rier to any part of the City.

The Board of Health has heldtwo special meetings in regard tothe matter, and another one will beheld today. Every precautionwill be taken to prevent any in-tercourse with the whaler from theshore, and watchmen will be sta-tioned alongside of the vessel bothday and night to enforce the rulesof the Board.

FOUR STEERAGE PASSENGERS.

They Arrive on the Warrimoo andAre Allowed to Land.

But four steerage passengersarrived for this port oq the War-

rimoo, and according to the provis-ions of the new immigration lawnow in force, they were examinedby the Custom House authorities.The men gave a satisfactory ex-

planation in each case, and theywere allowed to land. It i3 under-stood that the law will not bestrictly enforced for the present, oruntil the foreign agents of thesteamship companies have beennotified.

In speaking of the new law anofficer of the Wanlmoo said yes-terda- v:

"Of course this countrvhas a perfect right to frame anylaw it chooses, but we certainlywould consider it a hardship if theauthorities refused to land the foursteerage passengers we broughtwith us. When the new law wasbrought to our attention yesterdaywe made a request that the men beallowed to land. If it had beenrefused we would naturally havehad to carry the people to Van-couver, and their return then tothe starting point. If that hadbeen the case we would havelooked to this Government for re-

imbursement, and also would haveheld them responsible for any dam-age suit that might have- - arisenowing to the company's inability toland the passengers as agreed."

THE MARIPOSA'S PASSENGERS.

Lord Folkstone and His Lady Are inthe List.

The Mariposa was to leave Sydney on Feb. 19th, or two day3 laterthan the Warrimoo. The follow-

ing list of her passengers is takenfrom the Sydney Herald : Lordand Ladv Folkstone and servant,Madame Gunson, Mr. and Mrs.Taylor, Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Bry-so- n

and child, Mr. and Mr3. E. G.M'Conr.ett. Mr. and Mrs. Webster,Mr. and Mrs. Roberts, Rev. J. W.and Mrs. Wright and three children. Capt. Thorndike, Rev. O. A.Olsen, Mr. E. Heath, Mr. E. J.Ashford, Mr. J. A. Wylie, Mr. H.Bienssen, Mr. T. S. Cipplegate, Mr.R. W. Scott. Mr. E. H. Baker, Mr.Gerricsen, Mr. L. Turner and Mr.H. P. Gillard.

London, Feb. 15. A disastrousconflagration has taken place at

i

red houses were burned down.London, Feb. 16 A Cairo news-

paper states that Riaz Pasha, the i

I

the hgyptian Premier, threatens to i

resign in consequence of theKhedive, Abbas Pasha, having re- - j

!

fused to dismiss four officials con- - j

nected with the Khedive's palace, jj

In the museum at Mannheim there Ij

wa a skeleton of a pike which ji

measured 10 fet, and had a ring j

round it with this inscription in j

Greek: "I am the fih which wad j

iir-i- t of all put into the lake by the j

nanus of tne . uovorcor or.me uni- -

r r..verse, t rMPncu ia.. ine oia kjcio- -

br. 12.W The fib, having been i

canght in 1407, was 267 yeara old. j

DIMOND BLOCK, 95

1843.Hawaiian Gazette, Semi-Weekl- y.

SEMI-CENTENNIA- L,

ft

r

5 Per Cent. Debenture Policy (Eight Pages). Issued Every Tuesday and Friday

Morning. 50 cents per month; 5.00 per year;

foreign, postpaid, $0.00.

--ISSUED BY- -

The Planters' Monthly:

Th.e MutualOF NEV

Richard A. IfcCurdy,

Assets -Information regarding this form ot

various other forma of policies issued by Thebe obtained of

(anadian Instraliai)IN" CONNEC-

TION WITH CA5AWA5

Subscription, S2.50 per Year; Foreign, $13.00

Tourists' Guide

Price 00 Cents per

fncl riding Postage.

Ths Famous Tourist Route of the World.

Ticlcet ir Canaiian Iaoifio liailway arn5 Second Class and $10 Pirst Class.

Less than Yy XJnitel States L,i nps.STEAMSHIP SERVICE MONTH LY.

XZrTHROUGFI TICKETS issued from Honolulu to Canada, Unxtzd Statesani Echope; also, to Brisbane and Stdnk7.

fOP. BRISBANE AND SYDNEY Steamers Fail 23r.l each month . FOR VICTO Weekly Kuokoa,RIA AND VANCOUVER, B. C Steamer? Bail Fpb. 3d, Ffb. 23th,April 1st, May lt, May 31st, July 1st, July 31st, 103.

o-- '

FREIGHT AND PASS.- - AGENTSD. McNieoll, Montreal Canada;Rrht. Kerr. W nniDez. CanlaM. M. Stem, San Erancipco, Cal. ;G. McL. BroTi, Vanconver, B. C.

Issued Fvery Saturday, in the Hawaiian lan-

guage. SubscripiioD, $2.00 per Year.

0

THE PACIFIC COAOEEKCIAIi AJ)VltTISEB: HOKOIAJIO, MAJtCII 5, 1S94.

THE HAWAIIAN TANGLE.bukc from his official superiors, 307iJnion Partyof the Hawaiian Islands

Having purchased the entire stock of

Drugs, Medicines Chemicals,

Toilet Articles and

Photographic Supplies

of Messrs. Hollister & Co., so long and favorably known to the

public of Honolulu and the islands, we respectfully solicit

a continuance of your liberal patronage.

JA cordial welcome is extended toold and new friends.

Hollister Drug Co., L'cL

523 Fort Street,

FUBN1TURE !

-- o-

JUST RECEIVED A.

FURNITURE andOF THE LATEST

Bedroom Sets, Wicker Ware,Cheffoniers and Chairs

TO SUIT ALL AT THE LOWEST PRICES; ALSO, ALL KINDS OF MANU-FACTURING DONE IN FURNITURE, BIDDING AND

UPHOLSTERING, AND BEST QUALITY OF

LIVE GEESE FEATBERS, HUB, MOSS AND EXCELSIOR

KEPT ON HAND; ALSO THE LATEST PATTERNS OF WICKER WAREIN SETS OR SINGLE PIECES.

XGCSpecial orders for Wicker Ware or all kinds of' Furniture to .suitat low prices.

f ATI nr1ara fmm tVio rtfViar ialat.rlfl will rfroiv nnr nromnt ftftftntinn andFurniture will be well packed and goods sold

--O-

J. ft. jcr

3493 1499

whatever the grievance of Hawaiimay be.

As for the attitude of this Gov-

ernment, it has of course had ampleground for sending Mr. Willis hispaseports, and if the AmericanMinister had shown, in the dis-

charge of his peculiar mission, anyanimus against the members of theProvisional Government, the Gov-

ernment would doubtless havestood strictly upon its rights. Mr.Willis, however, has betrayed nofeeling of the sort. He has treatedthe members of the Cabinet withuniform courtesy. His despatchesindicate that he has formed somevery juBt estimates of men andparties here, and he has shownhimself, in the qualities of judg-ment, moderation and impartiality,to be a man of much larger calibrethan his predecessor Mr. Blount.In fact there is no better correctiveto the distorted picture of Hawaii-

an Affairs contained in the reportof the Commisssioner Paramount,than is to be found in the publish-ed despatches of the present Am-

erican Minister.There is no demand at this end

of the line for the recall of Mr.

Willis.

SEDITIOUS PUBLICATIONS.

Attention has frequently beendrawn to the seditious tone of theroyalist dailies, and also to thatadopted by various royalist news-

paper correspondents, such asTheo. H. Davies. If the problemfor the Government were simply tomake a good case in law againstthe offenders, the matter wouldpresent no difficulties, for there canbe no manner of doubt that Mr.

Davies, the Holomua, etc., etc.,have exposed themselves to thepenalties of the statute, not onetime, but a dozen.

The question, however, is not soeasily settled. Laws are oftenmore useful potentially than actually, as a weapon to which recoursemay be had if necessary, but towhich recourse is seldom neces-

sary, just because they are thereready for use. Their operation isin terrorem, the fear of them operates as a wholesome restraint.There can be no doubt that thepresent sedition law has had a mostbeneficial influence in this regard.The tone of the Holomua, for instance, is extremely mild almostgentlemanly, in fact in comparison with what it was nine or tenmonths ago. As for Mr. Davies,the mere citation of the statute,coupled with a few pertinent quotations from his published writings,seems to have had a quieting effectupon his literary activities. Un-

doubtedly the mere presence of thelaw in the books works as sooth-

ingly as a charm.The Government should be armed

with every statute necessary to en-

able it to deal effectively with itsenemies, whenever the occasion for

self protection may.

arise. The1 !lweapon once given, nowever, it

should be very sparingly used. A

man with a pentup grievance is adangerous creature. It is far betternot to sit on the valve of the en-

gine. The steam, which would elsehave gone off in smoke, remains toburst the boiler. The Holomuapeople feel relieved, quieted, almostamiable probably, after the publi-

cation of a violent article. Sup-

press the article and you inflamethe man. Out of a harmless pam-

phleteer you make a potential revolutionist.

We believe the best course for theGovern ment is that which it hasfollowed to treat the seditiousebullitions of the royalist presswith a good natured contempt, re-

serving the rigors of the law for anoccasion which really needs them ;

but using them then in a mannerwhich will effectually overawe evildoer3.

Private execntions are condnctedin eight countries as follows:Bavaria, hangiDg; Brunswick, axe;Hanover, gnillotine; Prussia, sword;Saxony, guillotine; Switzerland, intwo Cantons, guillotine; UnitedKiDgdom, hanging, and the UnitedStates, hanging.

An eminent statistician estimatesthat duriug the course of a lifetimethe average man consumes sevenfour-hors- e wagon loads more foodthan is good for him.

(By J. E. Rankin, D D.. President of How-ar- d

Univer-it- y, Washington. 1. ..)

Recent eveuts make it necessary for

this great people to understaud theprinciples of international law. It is

a mortifying thing for a nation to

make mistakes in the eyes of all theworld, and as to rules which affect thewelfare of all nations. . Let us call

them by no harder name than mis-

takes, and look at the Hawaiian tan-

gle in that light.1. It was a mistake to withdraw the

treaty already submitted by PresidentHarrison to the Senate. The truestcourtesy to the nation and to the Sen-

ate would have been a message recom-

mending the non-appro- val of the pro-

position of annexation.2. It was a mistake to suppose that

any question of arbitration was eversubmitted to this nation. It takes twodiffering parties to make an agree-

ment to arbitrate.3. It was a mistake to appoint a

Commissioner with the powers givento Mr. Blount, without the concur-

rence of the Senate. As to the ques-

tion of annexation, it was proper tosend a commission, but not as to thequestion of the povernmental author-ity of the Provisional Government.

4. It was a mistake to suppose thatour Minister to the Provisional Gov-ernment could play the double part ofMinister and advocate to the deposedquten.

5. It was a mistake to suppose thatthere was any authority to subvertthe Provisional Government withinthe lines of peace.

a. It was a mistake to conceal thereal purpose of the Executive fromthe Senate and the people of the na-

tion.7. It was a mistake to suppose that

the final judgment of the nation wouldnot side with the heroic band that haddone without bloodshed what ourfathers did in the Revolution.

-- 8. It was a mistake to suppose thatany international wrong had beencommitted by our Minister to Hawaii,when the great nations had not re-

monstrated, but .had at once recog-nized the Provisional Government.

9. It was a mistake to suppose thatsecond-rat- e statesmanship at home orin Hawaii was any match for the se-

rene and long-heade- d wisdom of theProvisional Government.

What is due Hawaii is the immedi-ate recall of our present Minister, afrank apoloey for our mistakes, therecognition of a Republic, if it shouldbe established, and the ultimate an-

nexation of the country, if she wantsit, to the State of California. Noth-ing could have been more helpful tothat end than our series of mistakes.

There is a fireproof covering foronmnosed of asbestos sheets.

softened by steaming, embossed byrollers, and dried or pamtea orotherwise decorated.

VERY

hiatest lniDortations

-- OF-

Cloth,

Serges,

Diagonals

and Tweed !

are always to be found at;

L. B. Kerr's

STORE,

47 tym Street

t3PThese Goods are of the

best English and French

make and comprise the new-

est styles and patterns, will

be sold in quantities to suit

purchasers.

3552

February 2, 28 4,

The beauty of HavilandChina lies m its decorationsand texture; its advantageslie in the fact that, (whenbought from us), if you have aset there is no reason why itshould not be complete. Wesell you one piece or a full set,as you wish and we have dup-licates in stock of every piecesold. You see the advantageover btying other kinds ofChina; if your cook or stewardhappens to break a piece youcau procure another frpm usjust like it. If you want tobegin with a half dozen cupsana saucers or the samenumber of plates it's agree-able to us because we knowthat it is the foundation of afull set that you will event-ually buy from us. If youbuy a full set at once we giveyou a discount of twenty-fiv- e

per cent, from price chargedin small quantities.

The popularity ot the JonesLocked Fence is growingevery day not a week passesbut some land owner feels thenecessity for it and sends usan order: the economic leveris spreading with the fenceand vice versa. Why should'ntit? Unless it be a matter ofsentiment where is the manwho will not buy a superiorarticle at a less coast when hecan. You will not find himamong the people who haveacquired wealth and it's use-

less to look elsewhere becauseeconomy is not to be found inthe vocabulary of the poorerpeople.

AVhen there are indicationsof permanency in clearweather there will be a rushfor paints, people will want to.improve the appearance oftheir houses, Hendry's ReadyMixed is the best paint for useanywhere. It is cheaper inprice, a better spreader andwill retain its color and lustrelonger than that which iscompounded by a painter.We have sold a great manygallons of Hendry's ReadyMixed Paints in Honolulu andon the other Islands. Everyone is satisfied.

Send for a color card.

The Hawaiian Hardware Co.,

307 4

Fort Street. Honolulu.

Stocks and Bonds

FOE S-A.XJ-E.

A FEW SHARESOF

HAWAIIAN SUGAR CO. STOCK

Hawaiian Agricultural Co. Stock.

Olowalu Sugar Co. Stock.

ALSO

Hawaiian -:- - Government -:- - Bands

G Per Cent. Interest.

Ewa Plantation Co. Bonds (first mort-

gage) 7 per cent, interest.

Heeia Agricultural Co. Bonds (first mort-

gage) 8 per cent, interest.

fiTTor particulars, apply to

The Hawaiian Safe Deposit

AND

Investment Company.3613-l- w

1?A1 Wni'kCalifornia lClllllLU

J. E. Miller, Manager.

High. Oracle 2rtilizers and

DIAMOND 51 FERTILIZERS.

have on hand alimited supply oi the above for shortnotice requirements ot riamers.

C. BKEWLH & CO , L'D..

Agriitd. California Fertilizer Works.3614-l- m

For the promotion of the best in-

terests of all the people of theHawaiian Islands and for the organ-

ization of a party having only thisobject in view, the following isadopted as a declaration of theprinciples npon which the organiza-

tion to be known as the "UnionParty" is to be established, and upon

this platform we invite the co-operat- ion

of every friend of good govern-

ment.1st. Repbesextative GoyeenmestThe Union Party is unalterably

opposed to any form of monarchicalGovernment in the Hawaiinn Island,and declares its fall allegiance to theProvisional Government, endorsingthe proposal for a constitutional convention looking to the extension ofpopular representation in the Gov-

ernment.2d. Political Union -- We declare

our leading principles to be theaccomplishment of a political unionwith the United States of Americaand the maintenance of a stable andhonest government.

3d. Public Lands Ve favorsuch legislation as will promote theoccupancy of all public lands, includ-ing those heretofore known as'crown lands," by small holders, andfoster the development of varitd in-

dustries, believing it to be of vitalimportance that "many acres"should be for "many men."- -

4th. Citizens' Bights "We declare that all citizens are equal be-

fore the law and we are opposed tomono plies or privileged classes,favoring participation in the govern-ment by every loyal citizen.

5th. Labor We favor such legis-

lation as will substitute American,Portuguese and other Europeanimmigration, for Asiatic immigration,thus securing a class of immigrantsfor labor puposes which willultimately bo of permanent value tothe country as eettlers.

6th. Public Works We favor theimmediate establishment of a com-prehensi- ve

system of public improve-ments that shall be of permanent val-

ue to the country and afford neededemployment to the laboring classes,but we declare against importationof labor and material of any kindwhatsoever for use on public workswhich can be obtained in the homemarket, and materials which mustbe obtained from abroad should beobtained through local dealers inopen competition.

7th. Public Offices We holdthat no person should occupy anyposition of trust or profit under theGovernment who is not loyal to thesame.

8th. Prison Labor We opposethe employment of prison labor inany mechanical pursuits.

9th. Tax System We favor a revision of the tax sytsem whereby allproperty, improved and unimproved,hafl be taxed on an equitable basis.

The Pacific Commercial Advertiser

lasued Every Morning, Except

Sunday, by the

Hawaiian Gazette Company

At 2o. 318 Merchant Street.

E-- N. CASTLE, EDITOR.

MONDAY, MARCH 5, 1894.

Th b American League announces

its intention to hold an open meeting

this evening, when addresses willbe made by Joseph Marsden, Mr.Dillingham and others. This is astep in the right direction, as everystep in the direction of openness is.TVia onenifMnns which are felt ofthe League in so many quarters aredee solely to its secrecy, and theabandonment of thi3 puerile andchildish piece ot buncombe will go

far to remove the cloud of a doubtwhich now hangs over the organi-

zation.

SHOULD HE BE RECALLED?

We publish this morning fromthe Independent's Hawaiian symposium a brief but very pithy arti-

cle from the pen of J. E. Rankin,President of Howard College,Washington, D. C. The articlesummarizes the mistakes which

have been made in the Hawaiianmatter, and closes with a demandfor the recall of Minister Willis.

If President Cleveland intended

to make some radical change in hisHawaiian policy, such as would be

;nlved in a treaty of protec- -

nr annexation, it might

be proper to mark the change of

policy by a change uion the:a ,rtwever. no reason

part of the Administrate"-- .for Mr.

,tt:ik oll He has failmuliy

carried out the inactions underv,; he was sent, anc--. nas ce

to merit a re--tainly done nothing

Eoyal Insurance Co.,OF LIVERPOOlv.

"THE LARGEST IN THE WOMjD."

Assets January lst; 1892, - 142.432,17400

Honolulu, H. I.

NEW LINE OF

UPHOLSTERYPATTERNS IN

at San Francisco prices.

& CO.,74 King Street.

WALKER,Agent for Hawaiian Islands.

Cents per Month

CARRIER.

FashionHotel Streets.

IN

GOOD-- o-

TCHStreets, Honolulu, H- -

c3Fire riss-- s on ah Kinas of Insurable property tafcen at Current ratesby

J. S.3140-l-m

Daily Advertiser, 50

DELIVERED BY

em of

Corner Fort and

9

P

- 1)

1

!?

1

I!

!

iii!Ht1

M

h

r?

II' 5

. i

?--

5 j

i. i

Great Reliction Sale'

DRESStf"For the next tea days I will offer great bargains in

Dress Goods. Ladies please tke notice.

--o-

EHCorner Fort a-n- H!otel

J,

hi. y ' n. r ,

: xs: iu i,VJSL31;LiUlJLla ADVERTISER: HONOLULU, .MARCH r, 1891.

If LATEST H EVS FROM MAUI, NEVER GIVES UP ITS DEAD. TtiD CUtomisnnents. 25ciuro! UterruscmcnU. (Enteral ctrtwrnimU.Cajuc Lk. Prom Which No DrntrncdPeraon Va Krrr Recovered.thev ibuccf-e.- l'If JUST ARRIVEDanous Items of Intact i? RECEIVED !

bodies of In&tructor Merriam and Missi eargin from the depths of Cayuga lakeby means of electricity, as I Bee they in-tend to try to do' Paid a gentleman who

That Island. ex Mark Inntarit, XHIS SPACANOTHER CARGO OK

'A TWELVE - POUNDER PINEAPPLE. r ES I HAY -:- - KESERYED FOR A NEW ADVERTISEMENT BYJ. T. Waterhouser e GRANAND" l oiitioal am! limine.. KvenU-Ne- w l'a.eneer Coacht ... No. 10 Store B. F. Ehlers & Co.wie kahului i:llroal-A- n

I'ruvea aj to Treat Cane Juice,BOUGHT MY US PERSONALIA WHILE IX

J CALIFORNIA.

WE DEA.L, I2ST

HAY AND GRAINAND KEEP NOTHINGIJUT THE BEST!

grew np on the shores of Cayuga lake,"it will be the first time in the historvof the lake that the body of any persondrowned in its waters was ever seenagain. I always had a liking for geolog-ical research and indulged it for manyyears in investigating the bottom of Cay-uga lake.

"My experiments satisfied me that thebottom of the lake is a series of largeopenings and cavities, many of themcraterlike. Some of these are 100 feet indiameter. These craters, as I believethem to be, lie at different depths, sr.rather, their raised edges are of differentheights. Their depths are fathomless.They have undoubtedly become the re-ceptacles of the bodies of the hundredsof people who are known to have beendrowned in the lake since that countrywas settled and of the undoubted tho-san- ds

of people killed in the fierce bat-tles that were frequently waged on thachores of the lake between hostile tribesof aboriginal warriors during the cen-turies preceding the coming of the whiteman.

"It was in Cayuga lake that the fiend-ish murderer Rulofl lowered the bodies

GET YOURCOLLARSDOGCalifornia Feed Co.

Maci, March 3. Some of the fo-llowing notes were kept out of lastweek's paper by accident.

Curing Wednesday evening, Feb.21st, the long-herald- ed Wailuku min-strel entertainment took place at thefckating rink. Paia, Sprecklexville,Kahului and the townspeople fairlyfilled the large auditorium and muchappreciated the following well-render- ed

programme:PART I.

1. Opening Chorus Company2. Song "Hard lo He a Nigger"

- George Groves3. Native Song By Puu4. "Folks That Put on Airs"

Queen and NuuanuOffick : CornerStreets.'

LADIES AND GENT'S

BATHING SUITS !

Ladies' and Children's Cloaksand Jackets,

Children's Pinafores,

Silk, Shetland and Wool Shawls

KID GLOVES,

CHAMOIS GLOVES,

DOG CHAINS-- AT THE--

Warehouse: King Street, near OahuRailway and Land Co.'s Depot.

Telephones : Office 121 ; Warehouse 53.

OTPROMPT DELIVERY. Pacific Hardware Company, LU5.

of his wife and child, 00 years ago, afterhe had murdered them. The bodies wereinclosed in a chest, as' he confessed be-fore ho was hanged at Binghamton foranother murder. The weeks that werespent in dragging the lake for this chestwere simply wasted, for it was sunk intothe mouth of one of those bottomlessopenings, and, if it is not sinking yet, isstill floating about in those mysteriousdepths.

"Within half a century more than 100persons have been drowned in Cayugalake, to recover the bodies of whom the

That Joyfu Feeling

- Moses Kamahu"If You Love Me, Darling,Tell Me With Your Eyes"

T. B. Lyons"Golden Wedding".... C. Heflernan"Down Where We Roamed To-gether" C. A. Yarick

"I'se Gwine Back to Dixie"George Copp

"Climb Up, Children, Climb"...

7.

8.ladies' ad children's

Will be experienced by everyone un-fortunate enough to be obliged to wearspecially ground Hats anil Bonnets !W.T. Robinson

a . a ' grappling iron and drag were used in--

A large variety suited to all sorts of dogs, from a JapanesePoodle to a Mastiff.

Since we introduced the Little Giant Rat Traps, five yearsago, we have sold hundreds of them. They have caught mon-goose as well as rats.

A new lot of that superior Galvanized Fence Wire andBarbed Wire.

New Goods to hand by the Martha Davis.A large assortment of first quality Agate Ware direct

from the factory.The best Ready Mixed Paints; Staple and Fancy Goods.

dustnously, but m vain. If it were pos-sible for one to make the rounds of thislako's craterlike bed, he would, withoutdoubt, encounter hideous charnel housesbeyond number caverns where hosts ofgrinning skeletons have found sepulcher,submarine catacombs without end. Per-haps the electricians exnlorinj? th laV

Spectacles orEye Glasses

on reading that we are now fullyanythingbottom with their intpnsA liVhts. na ih equipped to manufacture

purpose doing, may make some nch dis-- I and everything in the

u unaie to uie overture a prize-lig- ht

between Corbett and Mitchellfor aurse, of $250.00) made a livelyending.

PART II.1. Farce "Dutch Justice"2. Stump Speech "Ualdheaded- -

ness" K. B. Carley3. Farce-- "A Desperate Situation"

The farce "Dutch Justice" and the1 stump speech deserve special mention.Thirteen men sat in the horseshoe up-on a fine large stage especially con-structed for the occasion. E. B. Car-le-y

was interlocutor, and G. Groves,C. Hetferman, W. T. Robinson andM. Kamahu acted as eudmen. Theboys were somewhat" handicapped bythe desertiou of their musical directorat the last moment, though they areloud in their praises of Mrs. W. T.Kobinson who proved a most accepta-ble pianist.

tovent-s- .Jt'osi-ixpres- s.

MILK INSTEAD OF FLOUR.

TRIMMED AND UNTRIMMED,

Dress Goods in preat variety,

Rainbow and EmbroideredCrape,

Feathers and' Flowers

New Curtain Materials,Silk and Velvet Ribbons,

Leather and Silver Belts,

Novelties in RuchingChiffon Handkerchiefs and

Optical Lineno matter how complicated. Joykll,because the Ions: wait of six weeks or

Pacific Hardware Company, Limited' 4QQ AND IQ4, FORT STREET,

Dress Goods and Dress Trimmingsthe largest and beet assortment can be found at

Farmers V.'Iio Say That It Pays Tliem toVeeil Wheat to Their Cows.

Philadelphia milk consumers mayprobably be interested in an experimentof tho farmers of the Schuylkill valley,whence that city receives large quantitiesof its milk. Recently increased ship--WiAnffl st 1. n a ."1 TTT1 A.

more in sending away for your glassesis done away forever. Those who havesuffered by this wait will know best whatit means. Much time and money hasbeen ppent to ensure perfect success.

My Machinery

ui liiiirw uavo ucc ll ixiiLUC. . Ileal,Iiuvuia figures, sells at less than G5 IN. S jl CH8-- ,

Honolulu.Fort Street,cents, and owing to its low price manyfarmers are chopping theirs and feedingit to cattle. They say that bran is acent a pound, corn nearly a cent a pound,oats a cent a pound, and wheat a cent apound, and that, as wheat has at least

Ties,

LACE AND EMBROIDERED-- o-

LATEST DRESS MATERIAL8 IN

FLOUNCINGS ! WOBSTED -:- - AND.-:- - WASH -:- - FABRICS

is the' newest in use in all ofthe larga factories of the East, andbeing thoroughly conversant with allmanner of complicated work, we claimto be able to turn out as perfect work ascan be obtained in any part of theworld.

The distance from optical centres andthe long delay in sending away forRptcial work lias prompted us to addthis special department to our already

352S All Wool Oamellette in all colors, '

Newest Plaids and Stripes in Wool Dress Goods,All Wool Crape in Cream and Black,

one-ihir- d more milk producing qualities,it is cheaper at present prices to feed itthan corn or anything else.

By actual test it was learned that CO

pounds of wheat make more milk and ofbetter quality than the same quantity ofcorn, or almost any other class of feed,and it is stated that since Schuylkill val-ley shippers are feeding wheat to theircows their milk is pronounced of a higherstandard of excellence. Farmers say thatthey cannot afford to raise wheat forflourmaking purposes unless they get 90cents to $1 a bushel. Reading Cor. Phil-adelphia Ledger.

A FINK ASSOBTMENT OF

large optical business, and we hope lo

STRAY SCKIBIJLINGS.

Wailuku people much appreciateda sermon by Rev. E. G. Beckwith, ofMakawa , during Sunday evening,two weeks ago.

Dr. Tremann, a German chemist,has been a recent visitor at Spreckels-vill- e

and llaleakala. The doctor, whohas just completed a tour of Cuba andother sugar-raisin-g countries, is thediscoverer of a process whereby more

Juice can be obtained from cane thanby machinery now in vogue.

W. von Gravemeyer, manager ofHamoa, is visiting on this side ofMaui.

During the evening of February123d, a most enjoyable progressive eu-chre party was held at C. 11. Dickey'sresidence, Haiku.

Posters announce the approachingsale at Wailuku, of $10,000 worth ofdry goods belonging to Chas. J. Fisheiof Honolulu. E. R. Blven Is to usethe gavel of auctioneer.

A pineapple of the sugar loaf varie-ty, raised by D. D. Baldwin at Glen-sid- e,

Haiku, has ilfty-seve- n slips, onecrown and two suckeis, a total of sixtyyoung shoots. The fruit with itscrowu and slips weighs twelve pounds.

During Friday evening, the 2d iust.,a pleasant party was given by Mrs. H.G. Alexander at Haleakala Hall.

During Wednesday forenoon, Feb-ruary 2Sth, Messrs. Isenberg, Bishop,Glade, R. Spreckels and C. A. Sprec-el- s

arrived per Claudine, aud wereconveyed by special train to Spreck-elsvill- e.

A crown-u- p sou. of Roland Wilbur

be favored with a liberal share of theLadies' Cloth and Serge in all Colors

Only a few Suits left of the Rainbow Combination, Hopsacking and Shot Serge,work done in Honolulu. Prices the ITQHAN.same as in San Francisco, and on somework a little lower. New French. Sateen? ! New Dimities IWholesale and Retail

assortment of White and Fancy Figured Wash Materials at(f Mark Twain.

Mark Twain's hair has grown whiteand his physique is not so stalwart as itxeas. n. f(Txr wriT ikm lint. hi mirnl ia o a

An immensevery low prices.Oculists

juvenile as ever. He has a hacking Prescriptionsaccurately tilled. Telescope, held,

OUR DRESS TRIMMING DEPARTMENT !IS VERY COMPLETE I., EVERY WAY.

Silk Pasaamenterie Trimmings in black and all colors, Silk Pabeainentene Bets andand Ornaments, Jet Passamenterie Trimmings and Ornaments in great variety,Fancy Braid Trimming in black and colors. ,

FULL LINE OF

J4PANESE GOODSSilk aad Cotton Dress Goods,

SILK, LINEN AND CREPE SHIRTSof complete stock made by Yama-toy- a

of Yokohama.

marine or opera glass lenses repolishedand adjusted.

One trial will give yon more of that,jcyful feeling than anything we can

cough, which, when he gives way to it,is almost convulsive in its tendency, butthe humorist seems entirely indifferentto its violence. He sat in a prominentNew York club a few days ago, runningspasmodically from one story to anotherand" commenting upon the talk of hiscompanions, with a perpetual smile lurk-ing around the corners of his mouth.Yet at short intervals he was bent overalmost double under the violence of hiscough. When his companions referred

think of.Straw Hats, Neckwears, ENTERPRISE PLANING MILLSashes, Shawls, etc.

PETER HIGH & CO.,PROVISIONS in general. Proprietors,TEAS OF LATEST IMPORTATIONH.F.WICHMANT

to it, as they did on one or two occasions,Mr. Clemens stemed quite unaware ofthe fact that he had been arousing a gooddeal of sympathy as well as incessanttaughter. Exchange.

On Alakca and Richards near Queen Street, Honolulu, H. I.Etc., Etc., Etc., Etc.When you are in need of any line of

Japanese Goods, give us first call andsave your going all around town.

M! O XJ X. 23 1 1ST Gr S ,Doors, Sash, Blinds, Screens, Frames,Manufacturing Etc.ITORA :sr

Had Season For I,ondon Hotels.This has been a rather bad season for

some of the London hotels, particularlyfor one or two of the larger ones. "Birdsof passage" have been scarcer than hasbeen the case for years. The great bodyof traveling Americans staj-e- d at home,not. nnnnrnntlv fnr the nnnvmp nf nrlflinr'

TURNED AND SAWED WO KIT.Optician. Importer of Japanese Goods

has recently come from the Coast andis learning sugar boiling under pater-nal tutelage at Hamakuapoko mill.

PORT ITEMS.During Sunday afternoon, Feb. ISth,

the brigantine Cousuelo, Jacobsenmaster, arrived at Kahului. Her timewas twelve days from San Francisco,and her cargo ballast. She was towedto sea on Wednesday, Feb 21st, by theClaudine, bearing away a cargo ofHaiku and Paia sugar valued at

. 007. So.During Feb. 19th the schooner Maid

of Orleans, Neil J. MacLeod master,arrived, seventeen days from SanFrancisco. Her full cargo of mer-phaudi- sc

was consigued to A. F.Hopke, the Waikapu and WaiheeSugar companies. She departed onFriday, Feb. 23d, with H. C. Co.'sproduct, valued at $14,176 90. A. P.Jeghe-- s was a passenger on the down-ward trip.

The schooner was gay with buntingduring Washington's birthday.

The three-mast- er Glendale, John-so- u

master, also arrived on Feb. 19thwith 1o) tons of coal on board as

206 Fort St., near Custom House.3395-t- f

EJtmT Prompt attention to all orders.

TELEPIIONE8to the wealth of Chicago or of making Are You a Royalist,the rVilnmhi.iTi PTliihiHon an rjnrar.illfiltl I

MUTUAL 55. EZJ BELL 498.success, but simply on account of a lack An Annexationist, Kaneohe Eanch

THE MOST COMPLETE STOCK OF MILLINERYOr In Favor ofA Republic?

of money. The absence of visitorsamong w,houi Americans are probablythe most profitable had a depressing ef-

fect upon many kinds of business, butnone suffered more than some of the larg-est hotels. Pall Mall Budget.

GOOD PASTURAGEBY THE MONTH OK YEAR.

lSAll Horses will be well lookedDESIRE TO RECEIVE FREEW after and kept in paddocks.and open expressions of ooinionfrom the inhabitants of the HawaiianIslands, upon the questions of Annex TIIK STAXDARD-BRE- D

ballast. She made the run from Ho-

nolulu in three days, aud sailed intoport so close behind the Maid ofOrleans that you could easily have

IN ALL ITS STYLES AT

J. J. Egan's, 514 Fort Street.irru.f ors?- - ?rtme,nt of, Woolen Dress Goods, Storm Serge in Blue, Black anvvnite; Scotch, English and American Ginghams in large quantities.

A FINK LINE IN

WHITE AND FANCY-FIGURE- D WASH GOODSA complete stock of Striped and Checked Flannels. Thia is the nlaceto buy yours. Laces, Embroidery and Hosiery, cheap ; a complete line.

Baltimore's New Monument.Baltimore is about to put np another

monument. The young Irish are at thehead of the movement, and they havenot yet decided on the hero to honor. Sofar the vote favors, in the order named.Emmet, O'Connell, Grattan, Tone. Burkeand Parnell, and the choice will be madefrom this half dozen. Contrary to theorder of such thing9, the money is al-

ready provided. Baltimore Letter.

Trotting Stallion "Nutgrove"

ation, the restoration of the Monarchy,or the formation of a Hepublic.

This is desired for tne information ofthe people of the United States. Thename of each correspondent will not beused, and will be regarded as confiden REDORD 2:32 JN HONOLULUtial if so requested. Address "Will Plaice the Season at ThisAMERICAN NEWSPAPER SYNDI

LlirOWII 11 b IU 11 C lium uuc new 'other. She departed during Feb. 2Sthheavily laden with H. C. Co.'s sugar.

The barkentine George T. Perkins,Maas captain, arri-e- d in harborduring Wednesday, Feb. 2Sth. Herlog-boar- d showed fifteen days fromSan Francisco and she brought simplyballast.

The schooner Auna, orberg mas-ter, made port yesterday, the 2d iust.

CATE, Ranch Until July 1, 1894.Terras S30.

Description: Foaled 18S6, blooJ bav.

W. Ten Evck Hardenbrook, M'gr.,2315 M. Street, N. W

Washington, D. C, U. S. A. 16 bands high and weight 1160 pounds.

Rothschild' 3Iueuni Opened.Mr. Walter Rothschild, son of Lord

Rothschild, has completed and openedhis zoological museum at Tring, in theChiltern district, England. The museumis wholly and entirely devoted to zoolog-

ical matters and includes many rare

Peoigree . Bv "Grosvenor," by "Ad361b 1526-l- m

Lost.She brought a handsome new Dasseuser coach for the Kahului Railroad ministrator," by "Rysdyk's" Hamilton- -

lan iu. JJam oy jiutwooa, record2:18.Company.

WoflfhPf-Hp- .iw local rains during

Dressmaking Done in all its BranchesBY THE WELL-KNOW- y DRESSMAKER, MRS. RENNKR

HAWAIIAI -:- - GAZETTESEMI-WEEKL- Y.

Issued Tuesdays and Fridays.

specimens. Mr. Rothschild is an enthu- - heck jjq. 1G52, DRAWN ON BISMonday; cool, windytand threateningthe week.the rest of

ECFor further particulars, apply to

Joseph P. Mendonca,astic amateur naturalist ana nas speuc hop & Co ?

by L rloy in favor of cmuch money in establishing his museum, .vai and by him endorsed over to Wing

Man Chan has been lost, and pavmentAsia occupies over 4,000,000 squaremiloa mnro thAH ftHV Oiner OI IUO Kaneohe, or

SCOS-l- m

Uaily ADVERTISER, w tenia per mereon nas neen slopped,month. Delivered by carriers. I Honolulu, Feb. 24, imm.osrtb. 1 3021-- 1 wt C. Bolte, Honolulu.principal laud divisions of the

Tlli: PACIFIC COMMJSIJCJLAi AI VJSltTISEIi: IIOKOLUIiU, lAIJCH 5, KSSM.

FREDDIE GEBHARD'S FIANCEE. Xciu CAui'crUscmruttt

Hardware, Builders and Genera! ,

always cp to the times In quality, styles and prices.

Plantation Supplies,a'full assortment to suit tho various demand .

m

Steel Plows,made expressly for Island work with extra parts.

CiiliiYalor's Cane Knives.

Agricultural Implements,Hoes, Shovels, Forks, Mattocks, etc., etc

Carpenters', Blacksmiths'and Machinists' tools

Screw Plates, Taos and Dies, Twist Drills,

Paints and Oils, Brushes, Glass,Asbestos Hair Felt and Feit Mixture.

Blake's Steam Pumps,Weston's Centrifugals.

SEW1HB frlaCHIh'ES, Wilcox & Gibbs, ana Remington.

Lubricating Oils ,n uaIlty SSLencsr surpaSed

General Merchandise, lirT

oL5J

o .2o COo

tu oos

O

oS

there is anything you want, come and ask for it, you will bepolitely treated. No trouble to show goods.

BabyGive the

FOR ANDI M FA NTS

A Perfect Nutrimentfor growing children.Convalescents,

Consumptives,dyspeptics,

and the Accd, andIn Acute lllnrnfl andall Wastins Diseases.

THE

Best Foodfor Hand-fe-d Infants.

OUR BO OK for the instructionof mothers, "The Care and Feed-in- s

of Infants," will bo mailed rto any addrese, upon request. .

DOLIBER-GOODALE- T COBoston, Mass., U. s. AJ

INVALIDS.1 SwSSssS'

TRAD EO R A. E T.-;-L A B 0 RAmARK.

BENSON, SMITH & CO.,Solo Agents

ORDWAY & PORTER1

WARVCK CASTLE.A. Iep Into the Famous EnclUh 1'alace of

the "Kingmaker."One could ppend days looking at tho

pictures at Warwick and at tho eculp-tur- o

and curios. Thero is a table, thofelab of which is made of fine marblemosaic, lapis lazuli, and precious stoneswhich belonged to Marie Antoinette. Intho red drawing room are rare speci-mens of Limou.sin enamels, also Bohe-mian glass and Venetian crystals. Thisroom I ads to tho cedar drawing room,wJiomj walls are 10 feet in thicknf?.s.Un: of tho many valuable and beautifulf rnaiiH-nt-- s in this room is a bust ofPrcwc-rpine- , by our American EculptorPower.

The "living rooni3" of tho castlo ex-tend C30 feet in length, and each win-dow gives charming vicw3 of thoground.?. In one of these rooms, thogilt drawing room, is a Florentine mo-ia- ic

table, enriched with precious stones,brought from the Griinani palace inVenice. tU value is 10.000, which,please remember, is $50,000 of Yankeemoney. Tho Grimani arms, tho pope'striple crown, lion of St. Mark, doge'scap, koys of St. Peter and cardinal'shat aro illustrated in jasper, onyx, am-ethy.- -t,

malachite and cornelian on itssurface.

A moment after leaving the gilt draw-ing room and wo are in tho state bed-room, whero good Queen Anno slept,and in which her big dreary lookingbed still stands. We don't seem to knowmuch about Queen Anne's belongings,thus her bed and traveling trunks at itsfoot arouse our interest. In these trunkswere her majesty's clothes. They arosensible, ponderous trunks, covered withbrown leather and studded with brassnails. Even an American baggagesmashing porter would have foundQueen Anne's trunks "too largo an or-der" to destroy. George Hi presentedthis bedstead, with its faded crimsonenrtainsandits 15 feet high posts. Overtho fireplaco hangs a fino portrait of thoqueen herself painted by Sir GodfreyKneller. It is in this state bedroomthat Queen Victoria slept when shevisited Warwick castlo with tho lataprinco consort. I don't know whethersho occupied Anne's bed, but if so Ihopo it was moro comfortablo than itlooks.

From tho bedroom is a boudoir, lit-erally crammed with paintings. Herois Holbein's "Henry VIII j" "A BoarHunt," by Rubens; "A Dead Christ,"on copper, by a follower of Correggio ;

"Charles IPs Beauties," by Lely; a"San Sebastian," by Vandyke; "CardPlayers," by Tenisrs, and a SalvatorRosa landscape.

The castlo's state dining room wasburned out in 1871, but it has been re-

produced on the old lires and is a trulyroyal apartment. On either side of themassive fireplace, where many a Yulelog has slowly burned itself out to whiteashes, thero are gilt Venetian figures.Above the fireplaco hangs Ruben'ssketch of lions. There is also in thisroom a droll portrait of George III inthe arms of his mother.

The castlo boasts a Shakespeare room,designed and added by the late earl,and to which the county of Warwickpresented tho Kenilworth buffet in an-

cient oak. Into this room havo been col-

lected all procurable Shakespeare rel-ics, and resting on an old claw footedoak table aro all tho works, with theadmirable edition of Shakespeare ofthe late Halliwell Phillipps.

The place has been called the castloof the kingmaker. Who can visit thishistoric house and not desire to rereadLord Lytton's or Bulwer's, as youplease "The Last of tho Barons,"whoso text of composition is furnishedby tho annals of this wonderful castleand its wonderful earl, Richard Nevil.

Boston Herald.

Your Bct Tounr Man.You can't always just tell what your

best young man is going to develop in-

to." said the girl in the bluo jacket."Now, I know a young man, and whenI fin-- t met him 1 said to myself: Atlast! Here he is! A real live manwithout a fad. And I was happy inthe thought that he wouldn't talk foot-

ball or t'beosopby to me. But it didn'ttake mo long to find out my mistake.Of all tho fads I ever heard of thatman's fad is tho very worst.

"Ho does tricks with cards and canjuggle things," continued the girl intho blue jacket, as her eyes grew brightand her cheeks pinkish. "At luncheonshe fishes his handkerchief out of mymult and finds his gloves in my jacketpocket. If you hand him a glass of water,he'll turn it upside down and ask youblandly why the water doesn't run out.At homo ho makes life miserable for me.and when ho goes away I call in thegirl and have her sweep up tho r&m-nan- ts

of tho teacups that he breaks.Ho balances, parasols, guitars, vasesin fact, everything that he can find onthe end of his nose. I can't do any-thing with him. I am trying very hardto make him angry so he'll quit call-ing, but ho is so absurdly good naturedthat I fear I shall never succeed." St.Louis Republic.

Uutler and I"atbr Kyan.When General Butler was in com-

mand at New Orleans during the rebel-

lion, he was informed that Father Ryan,priest and poet, had been expressingrebellious sentiments and had said hewould even refuse to hold funeral serv-

ices for a dead Yankee. General Butlersent for him in haste and began round-ly scolding him for expressing suchun-Christi- an and rebellious sentiments."General," tho wily priest answered,"you have been misinformed. I wouldbo pleased to conduct funeral servicesfor all the Yankee officers and men inNew Orleans." San Francisco Argo-naut.

IVnereln They Vfere Alike."My money bought those horses,'

6aid tho millionaire wife to her impe-

cunious husband as tho family turnoutdrove up to the steps.

Ycs; it bought mo too." NewportNews.

Daily Advertiser 50c. per month.

MJa Morris, the lUltimora UMty MTiomM Will Soon Wed.

Liko Barkis, Frederick Gebhard, theapparently incorrigible bachelor, club-toa- n,

horseman and erstwhile admirer oftho Jersey Lily, is at last ,4willinw to ex-change the irresponsibilities 0f celibacyfor the care and responsibilities of Ben-edict. Miss Louise II. Morris, the so-ciety Pe-o- tty who has won his heart, isa Baltimore belle, tall and divinely fair,blue eyed, brown haired and poase&sinsinch exquisitely chbeled features thatiho 3 eaid to closely referable the pret-tiest and most queenly woman Du Man-lier draws. She is the personification ofyouth, health and vitality, and as ehc iscredited with pcnaefuixig a sparkling witthero is doubtless much more humor inher than is to be found in the picturesho i3 said to resemble.Her parents are Mr. and Mrs. John B.

Morris of Baltimore, and since her debutabout tlireo years ago, when sho was twoyears beyond weet 1C, she has been oneof the most admired women in New

MW3 LOUISK M0RUI3.

York, Newport and Baltimore society.At tho tableaux vivant3 given in thoMadison Square assembly room3 forcharity in New York last April, MissMorris impersonated Queen Louise ofPrussia. The living picture eho appearedin was arranged after Muller's celebrat-ed painting, which was afterward amongthe exhibits in. tho, Art building at the"VVorld'a fair. In tho tableaux Miss Mor-ris represented tho beautiful queen ar-rayed in an empire gown of surpassingloveliness and standing in a most pictur-esque poso on a marble stairway.

She was rapturously applauded, andher beauty created a furore among theeociety people present. The Morris fam-ily is one of the oldest and wealthiestfamilies in Maryland, and as Gebhard isa millionaire the young couple are wellprovided with this world's goods. SinceGebhard was first smitten with the ori-ole beauty's charms three years ago hohas been a changed man. lie is reputedto have forsworn all malt and spiritu-ous liquors, turned his back on fast liv-ing and beeOhio as steady as the pro-verbial clock. In other words, he has en-

tirely retired from the wild oats business,and as he is said to be a young man ofactual ability and worth 'as well aswealth he will doubtless fill the role ofBenedict very acceptably.

SMOKELESS POWDER.

Dr.ronch Seek to Establish It Manufac-ture In Tbl Country.

. Dr. Ottakar Porsch, an Austrian chem-ist, i3 the man who made the productionof smokeless gunpowder in largo quanti-ties possible by perfecting the method ofmanufacturing acetone, the powder'8main ingredient that is to say, it is themain ingredient of the best smokelesspowder, such as is used in Austria andGermany. The French use ether of ace-

tone in their mellinite, but this has beenfound to be hygroscopic that is to say, itabsorbs moisture from the atmosphere,thus creating an opaque vapor or gasthat is almost as annoying as smoke.

The French are still experimentingwith' mellinite, hoping to perfect it, butthe Austrians have already got rid ofthe hygroscopic quality, thanks to thediscovery of Dr. Porsch, who is now inthe United States with the object of es-

tablishing the manufacture of his pow-

der here. Hitherto our government hashad to buy all the smokeless powder ithas used from European manufacturersat a much greater cost than it couldhave been made at home if any one hereknew how to make it.

The raw material for the manufactureof acetone exists in the United States inuntold quantities. It is simply a productof the dry distillation of the wood of tho

DB. OTTAKAR FOKSCH.

beech tree, and in all those parts of

America where beeches grow m large

numbers its manufacture is perfectly

feasible and ought to be highly remuner-

ative. How to do it properly s wha.T)r Porsch comes over to show ns.

The doctor is a native of Vienna andof age. He studied

i about 43 yearsthe Polytechnic academy at

Prague Sad took his degree of doctor ofpSosophy there. He is an anttonty on

industrial chemistry and has written anwork on the methods of dye-Imprinti- ng

and finishing textile fabrics.

Hebas devoted some years to Practicalin the process of dry distilla-HorT- S

wood- -a process containing un-- ;

fcWed possibilities for the futurersachemical manufactures are con- -'

cerned.

Daily Advertiser, 50 cents per

THE PACIFIC

Commercia

ISThe best and biggjstf

Daily paper in the Ha-

waiian Islands.

isIn favor of annexation,

first, last and al.1 the

time.

ITRepresents all business- -

interests and all sec

tions of the Islanda

Gives the best value to

both (advertisers nd.

subscribers.

HASThe largest and most

general circulation in

the Hawaiian Islands.

The most thrifty and

desirable class of read-

ers, a great many of

whom take no other

local paper.

WENeed and deserve your

subscription and adver-

tisement and will give

you the worth of your

money.

Gazette Publishing Company.

Kobinson Block, Hotel Street,

Furniture,AND

CAJBIISTET

Joseph RubySon of nrry K. Iiuby, of Columbia, P.,

Suffered From BirthWith a Severe Form of

Scrofula Humor" Until my boj was six years of age he waa

from birth a terrible sufferer from scrofu-lous humor. Sores would appear on him andspread until as Large as a. Dollar and thendischarge, followed by others, so that the largerBart of his body was one mn of sores all

time, especially severe ou his legs and backof his ears and onhls head. The humor had arery offensive odor, and caused

Intense ItchingWo cannot tell how that poor boy suffered inall those years. Physicians did not effect acure. At last I decided to give him Hood'sSarsaparilla, as my druggist recommendedIt. In about two weeks the Sarsaparllla beganto have effect. The sores commenced to healup; the flesh beean to look more natural andhealthy. Then the scales came oil and all overhis body new and healthv flesh and skin formed.When he had taken two bottles he was entirelyfree from sores, having only the scars to showwhere thy had been. These have all disap-peared, wo are unable to express our thT)iclor the good

Hood's Sarsaparillahas done our little boy." IlAititv K. Ruby,Box 35G, Columbia, Pennsylvania.

HOOD'S I'lLXS cars Constipation by reatoto tb psrUtAltla action of ths siimsatary canal

HOBKON, NEWMAN & CO.,33S Vhol'sha.'. A.iKNra.

THREE COFFEE

Pulping Machines

Oijthie Uest liind Just lieeeivetl.They Will I?iilr From 30 toGO Sushels of Ripe Coffeeper Hour.

A ruLi ee similar to these is in use bythe Coffee and Tea Company at Kona,and the parchment coffee turned ontfrom this machine is a joy to behold,not a kernel broken !

Now is the time to purchase, so as tobe prepared for the coming crop. ThesePulpers are made very strong; arepacked in a compact form and can easilybe transported either in a wagon or onmule or cattle back.

Besides these Pulpers, which are thefirst ever offered in this market, we havejust rereivd a fine assortment of poodsround Cape Uorn ex Martha Davis fromNew York and Boston and the Villaltafrom England. Among which willbe found

WIRE NAILS,Cut Nails and Spikes, Galvanized Nailsand Spikesj asst. Ash Oars, Cases CardMatches, C. C. Irons, Cases Turpentine,Barrels Rosin and Pitch. Bales Oakum,Wire Door Mats, Straw Wrapping Paper,Cases Naphtha, Blacksmiths' Bellows,Bales Cotton Waste, Bales Cotton SailDuck, a large lot of Sisal Hope, a largeassortment of

JVTanila Rope,Pick and Hoe Handles, Lawnmowers,Fodder Cutters, Horse Shoe Nails, HorseRasps, Hand Screws and Alden's PatentBrooms, Ma sou's Blacking, Door Locks,Padlocks, Clothes Pins, Scrub Brushes,Sand and Emery Paper, Boat Nails,Hall's Cane Knives, Gonda Batteries,Sash Cord, Smokeless Gun Powder,

Hall's Plows and Breakers,

Hasps End gllinges, Ox Bows, Axes,Hatches, Crowbars, Pickaxes and Mat-tocks, Grindstones, Mops, Hoes, etc.,Coils Flexible Steel Wire Hope andTopsail Sheet Chain, all sizes; SheetIron, Galvanized; Shoe Elastic,

POCKET CUTLERYELECTRIC LAMPS, all Sizes.

ET"For sale by

f i r i r nh 1 1 j I to SONLI, Vt HIlULi W'

CORNER FORT AND KING

STREETS, HONOLULU.

election of Officers.

A MEETING OF THE STOCK-holde- rsAT of the Hollisler Drug Co.,Limited, held February 23d, 1S94, thefollowing cllicers were elected for theensuing year :

H. R. Hollister PresidentW. O. Lackland.. Vicr"sidentJ. W. Winter Secretary

m. v oon lrea surerII. A. Parmelee Auditor.

J. W. WINTER,SC21-- 3t Secretary.

Keep your friends abroad post-ed on Hawaiian affairs by sendingthem copies of the HAWAIIANGAZETTE, semi-weekl- y.

1f

P

I

I I"

ELEGANT DESIGNS IN

WICKER WAKE, ANTIQUE OAK,

BEDROOM SUITS, CHEFFONIERS,

SIDE-BOARD- S, ETC., ETC., ETC.

ST"Matting laying a specialty. AH orders attended to.

for trie Hawaiian Inlands.

between Fort frnd Nuuanu.

Upliolstery

M:AJK: i 3STG-- .

MUTUAL G45.

DEALER il

KING STREETS.

from the Eastern States and Europe.All orders faithfully attended to, and

free of charge. Island orders solicited.No. 145. Telephone No. 92.

t3F BELL TELEPHONE 525.

EL E. McIKTyRE & BRO.,

lJPOSTEE8 AND

Groceries, Provisions and Feed

EAST COF.NKF. FOH'i AND

New Goods received by every pack.; ; ob California Produce by every stean-.er- .

ooda delivered to any part of the cirSatisfaction guaranteed. Post Office Bo

JTTST ARRIVEDPER BARK C. r. BRYANT.

BABY CARRIAGES of all styles.CARPETS, RUGS, and MATS in the latest patterns,

cc Household 39 Sewing MiachiriesHand Sewing Machines, all with the latest improvements.

Also on handWestermayer's Celebrated Cottage Pianos

Parlor Organs, Guitars and other Musical Instruments,tS"For sale by

ED. HOFFSGHLAEGER & CO 9

King Street, opposite Castle & CooKe,

montn, ueu cu

TILE PACIFIC COlQIDKCLUi ADVERTISER; HONOLULU, MAIICH r, lvSIU.LOCAL BREVITIES. EXILE HARDEN. IN JAIL. SPECIAL BUSINESS ITEMS. (General afcrrrtisrmrnis. v!nirrui Dpfrlisriiifnta. rnrral SUrcrrtLormitiJu.

a eitua- -m

A horse trainer desirestion. CASH PAIDzx in response to numerous

requests, a Beginners' or A B C Class TWOis due tomorrowThe Oceanicfrom the Coast. FOR

Magnificent Residences for Sale.lawman Staiius

of Theosophy, one evening a week,free of charge, will be started in theHall of the Theasophical Library,Foster Block, Nuuanu street, as soona twenty adhesions have been re-ceived. .Students wishing to join arerequested to notify the Librarian atthe earliest convenience.

A Rare Opportunity toPurchase a Home at

HONOLULU

OTCLEETH. G. WOOTEN ; - Prop.

HS UKMOVJBD

from if AnooM , Heretania street to

107 Khar Street

He Takes a Hand in a Row onHotel Street.

Francis Leo G. Harden who isaccording to his own statement,the only royalist in Honolulu, whowill fight, was run in on last Sat-urday night by Captain Klemme.It seems that a row was in progressin a Chinese restaurant on Hotelstreet, and when several nativepolicemen made their appearanceto quell the disturbance, Harden,it is claimed, gave orders to thepeople present to jump the officers,rinally Klemme made his appear-ance and now Harden languishesin jail on a charge of obstructingjustice. He will appear in Courtthis morning to tell the judge allabout his trouble and a very inter-esting time may be expected asthe young man has been nrrotrl

ev:J. ouy forc-rs- h large or mallquantit;es of ued Hawaiian PostageStamps at the following prices perhundred : a Bargain.

The Pioneer Building and LoanAssociation will meet tonight.

he)Varrimo Ieft for Victoria a

after sunset last evening.' cox and Deputy SheriffDevenll of Kauai are in town.

Hawaiian Lodge, No. 21, F. andA.mM.9 will hold a regular meetingthis evening.The band will play at Emmasquare tonight. The programmeappears elsewhere.

rAec tenant F- - c- - Grover of H. B.S. Champion, left last night

IOr V anrnnvor nn iw. T :

S5So50

"The Song of the Steeple,"with chimes, at the Phonograph Par-lors, Arlington Block, Hotel street.

X? For Bargains In New midSecond-han- d Furniture, Lawn Mow-e- i,

Wicker Chairs, Garden Hose,etc., call at the I. X. L., corner ofNuuanu and King streets.

1 75No I,

1 cent violets $1 cent blue1 cent green- cent vermillioa . . . . . .'J cent brown .......2 cent rose2 cent vio!et, 1S91 issue. . . . . . .5 cent dark blue .5 cent light t lue '.

0 cent green10 cent black ".'.10 cent vermillion10 cent brown12 cent black12 cent mauve15 cent brown13 cent red

OpKite the Arlington.

S540

1 751 102 754 755 252 75ti 50G 505 25

Mothers ask for the Mother'sw.v. v mo urriinuu. I

Amnnif iha r'i..,i:f.. n

House and lxt facing ontireen street. Grounds ele-gantly laid out with lawnsand terraces; fruit and or-namental tree. The houseJ6 handsomely finished, con-lain- s

8 rooms and spa.ciousverandas. Unsurpass-e- viewof the ocean A fernery,barn, stable and servant'quarters comprise the out-buildings. The area is 1 3-- 4

acres.

oclf ycaieruay were Ci. I. WilderFriend Shirt Waist, the latest im-provement in Boy's shirt Waists. Nomore buttons to sew on. For sale atN. S. Sachs.

sp many times, that he is now ableto, do his own talking instead ofhiring a lawyer to defend him.

.4UU 21. uenterand Paul Tsen

10 5025 cent purple 10 50WILL JOIN FORCES. Ladies' Diamond Black

oerg.

J. Ouderkirk and family returnedyesterday on the barkentine S. NiCastle. Mr. Ouderkirk is well-know- n

in this city.

ou cenweu 2G 00$1 carmine 2G 00Stockings, absolutely fast, only2octs.

a pair, at X. S. Sachs. No. 2.DStamns whir.h ar torn ar nnt2 im , -American Enameled Bat'

wanted at any price. Address

PHILATELIST'S EXCHANGE,

The Union Party and the AmericanLeague Have a Conference.

The Union Party and the Ameri-can League will yet be as one, ifthe proceedings th fit. VPfm Yamm

Two steamers are expected thisweek, the Oceanic from San Fran-cisco tomorrow and the Mariposa

ton-Ho- le Buttons for Sale at theI X L.

House aod Lot facing onThurston avenue. Househas 7 rooms, wide verandas.There is a barn, stable, ser-vants' quarters and fernery.Has a commanding view ofDiamond Head and theocean.

P. .0. lOX 441.V. 0. Box 443,Washington, I. C.

ujtj colonies on Wednesday. 2&22-- UThe Pacific Hotel, cornerI " " ivwaw fcSVlAAA

A A O- - 2 1)1 C'VcTc r 11 Vina l- - yesterday are carried nnf A JCT" MUTUAL TEL. 275,Wanted.of Nuuanu and King streets, is theplace you can obtain the. best ofWines, Beers and Spirituous Liquors.

Edw. Wolter. Manager.

started. It costs you only $15 mittee from each met at the roomsto join. When you get your wheel of the Annexation Club, theatCts.Can Paid in8ma" P-- P-of taking the firsti to--

WhMi 1 a th to do niluow. preparedkind of

These two residences arethe property of Mr. K. I.Lillie who has placed themin my hands for sale. Forfurther particulars, apply to

T. W. HOBRON

TOSITiONS BY COOS, WAITKR,--1. gardener, chambermaid, nurse,hoseeworker, storb y and laborers ofevery kind. Japanese EmploymentOffice, 540 Hotel fitrevt, P. O. Box219.

353fi-1- m

Lawn Movers

Bicycle and General lipping

warc tne amalgamation of the par- -C. A. and Rudolph Spreckels and i7- - No definite plan was decidedtheir party returned to town yes- - on at the meeting, but those pres--

terday on the Claudine. C. A. ent would not say just what hadSpreckels expects to depart for San Deei done. It is understood, how- -rancisco soon. ever, that the affair i nrnrrrpcoin rr

&ST If you want to sell outyour Fitkniture in its entirety, callat the I. X. L.

Bedroom Sets, Wardrobes,Ice Rosea, Stoves, Hanging Lamps,Bugs, Bureaus, Chiffoniers, Steamerand Veranda Chairs, Bed Lounges,Sofa-?- , BabV Cribs. Clothe Tfci..!rf.

in a way satisfactory to bothit Short Notice and Reasonable Rates.

f?PrWorVroin t,,e ol,,er islandsto and promptly leturned.

It is said that Colonelwill be nuietlv wedded

(UhANEIJ, SHAUPENED ANDrepaired ; duplicate pieces famished ;

Lav.n Mowers broken beyond repair

Assignee's Notice.Public Concert.The Hawaiian Band, under the

Julie Albu in San Franciscoshortly, and that they will returnhere to settle soon after theirmarriage.

Sewing Machines,

rtougnt at a lair price; Axes, Knives andSeizors ground. Saws liled and set bvG. W. HELT.IKSHN,

At l he Bell Tower,3600-- 1 Engine Housw No. 2.

7 - i Whatnots, Meatleadership of Professor Berger, will 8afes Trunks, etc., sold at the lowest

Casu Price at the r. X. I, corner ofI

--Nr.l.lor,,, 1 TTl .vucuu xxiujj aireecs. liemoved.It cive a public concert this (Mon-nig- ht"was reported on Saturday

that Edmund Norris, the day'' evening, at 7:30, at Emmaeditor of the Holomua had been ar-- Square. Following is the pro-rest- ed

for usinc seditious lanirnnrrft gramme:tr rv-- -r wxit rciurus ruaae on

COOPER HAi5 REMOVRl)Dmuoous eoxa 3n commission at thein IMS nfirwr 'Vha ronr.t -- , I is olrices and rsniAnn tn thaPART I. I. X. .be incorrect. Urown premises, corner Alakea andHotel streets, opposite Masonic Temple.Office hours: lu to 12 a. m., 2 to 4 p. m.,Sundays 9:30 to 10:30 a. m. EveningOffice Hours: 7 to 6 p. m. Both Tele-phon- es

No. 154. 3C00-l- m

X ni 'AoiuTt?semfru7.jThere will be an open meetingthis eveninc of the AmpnVon

rPHE UNDERSIGNED HAVING1 this day been appointed assigneeof the bankrupt estate of William H.Aldrich of Honolulu, Oahu, by the HonH. E. Cooper, second Judge of the Cir-cuit Conrt, First Circuit, hereby givesnotice to all persons having claimsagainst the said bankrupt estate, topresent their claims within six monthsfrom date or they will be forever barred,and all persons owing said estate, arehereby requested to make immediatepayment to Henry Davis at the office ofHenry Davis & Co., No. 505 Fort street,Honolulu.

HESRY DAVIS,Assignee of the Bankrupt Estate of W.H.

Aldrich.Honolulu, February 20th, 1894.

3616-t- f

A FULL. LING OF

Columbia Bicycle Partsy

ON HAND. ALKO

Xmmp, Hells, Whistle.Bundle Carriers,

IatarioatiiiK Oil,llluininatina: Oil,

Trouser GuurUs,Tire Tape ana

KulVber Cement

1. Overture "Esmeralda".... Herman2. March "The Klfle Regiment"

(new) Souza3. Fantasia "Cocoanut Dance"...

r,7"V: ..Herman4. Selection "Marltana, ".... WallacePART II.

League at the hall on the corner ofjving ana ixuuanu streets. Sub-jects of interest will be discussed

PIONEERand Loan Anchtion. For Sale.Building

o. 'Reminiscences of Offenbach".. - tlrulfravDy prominent speakers.

The confirmation services at Sf I 61 March " Washington Postf"SouzaTHE HOUSE AND LOT IN

Pauoa Valley, lately occupied byMrs. 1. Opfergelt, known as the

Premises. For nArrimilars amiAndrew's Cathedral last evening '( t. Waltz --Liove'suiaHweetsong"were witneesed by a larce con pre- - w:',Y'"'"mx BucaT Naone

8. Polka "Come Alnnf RohmnH terms, appl' toO .U4"Hawaii Ponol."

mm

rpiIE HEGULAR MONTHLY MEET-- iinj; will be held at the Chamber ofCommerce. MONDAY EVENING, Mar.5. at 7:30 o'clock.

Flereafter, for the convenience of thosewho cannot attend the meetings, payments will be reeiwd at the rooms ofthe Association AND 1 ilERE ONLY,from 2 to 5 r. m. Saturdays prior to each

gation. Twenty-thre-e candidateswere presented by Rev. Alex. Mack-intosh. They were confirmed byBishop Willis.

W. F ALLEN,Over Bank of Bishop & Co.

February 24th. 3520-- 1 wLAST

Kentucky is the foremost Statein the production of hemp, and hasbeen known to produce 35,000 tonsin a year. It produces nearly two--

J or Kent or lor Sale.BENEFIT

All loyal supporters of the Gov--ernment residing in the Third Dis-trict, first and second precincts, arerpnnpfltpil ' t r moot V J o ATAn!r

iniras oi me American tobannn

AGENT jPOK THE1

CELEBRATED AMERICAN

Rambler SafetiesFitted with Elliptic sprockets and G Acorrugated air tub ti TOO TKaa a:

lueeiin.ST"Payments are required in Gold

J. G. ROTHWKLL,3626-2-t Secretary.

To the Public.crop, growing in 18SU 2S0,000,000

SEVERAL COTTAGES CENT- -the drill shed, at 7 :30 o'clock, to pounds.rally and pleasantly located, com- -

SALEorganize the Ihird District Club ofthe Union Party of Hawaii. piete wun isainrooms, Hardens,Notice. bervants7 Houses, Stables, etc. For

farther partjculars, applv at rov office.Mate Arnett and the seamen of " wiT2i.ii na ti r t fwrecked barkentine Hiln dul iu. iu .uefcnani ireet.

ti. STANGENWALD, M. D.355M-3- m

Truthful Statements.Call at the New Millinery Store on

Fort street and see our goods. We havegot the finest line ever shown in Hono-lulu. Also will receive orders for fancysewing.

- to anythey are practically puncturrprolf Jo'note! in on wpt mni.Anv (!MiM.. ::::"uo' are very last

get away on the Australia. They HPUERE WILL BE AN OPEN MEET- -will be sent to San Francisco as ,1i?,?ti?,American Leaae, at its... , I Hall THIS EVKNINO. to vchinh all o

I. w zvr can ne lurnisbed withthese wheels from No. 56 to 80Leased the store to Mr. L. Traev whoNOTICE.iuot ua accominouauons can DO I . The erves of Miss Jessie McGowansecured for them on outBoinB sail- - &sn,SS,"t' .-

- wni be B.adwill occupy the same March let,

lS94with an entire new stockof Gent's Furnish-

ing Goods.will nnf. Rnf7Vr fnr nrtrri n?nor I ine Kepublic. AVING SOLD OUR ENTIREH R44IBLEK WORLD'S RECOKD ISIOCK lO Mitl--p nn.1 ynr OUR ENTIRE STOCK36J7-- U Secretary American League. Oev.eete, our Ftock vri!l be solii out .atM. MANNA,.

No. 152 Fort Street.3G24-t- f greatly red need prices till March 31st GO-:- -BY MARCH 1, 1894.

next when ks Mail will ppasp hnsinoHawaiian Lodge, Ko. 21, F. k A. M. and ba succeeded by the above firm.Notice. To accomplish our purpose quickly, werealize uie necessity ot;making

THERE WILT. "RR A MRS. G. E. BOABDMAN,A Stated Meetincr of Hnwni Tremendous

Dr. Gilbert Foote, who has beenvery ill for some months, was car-ried on a stretcher to the Australia

-- on Saturday. Before he was takenill he weighed about 240 pounds ;he now weighs about ninety. Hisfriends are of the opinion that hewill not live to reach San Fran-cisco.

The meeting of the Women'sBoard of Missions tomorrow after-noon at the Central Union Churchis expected to be more than usually

Lodee No. 21 F- - .fc A.

DURING MY ABSENCE FROMmy brother Chin- - Wai

Hon will act for me in all matters relat-ing to my business.

Dated Honolulu, Marca 1st, 1S94.SG23-1- 0t ' C. AHI.

3616-t- d Proprietress. Markdown !M., at its hall, Masonic Temple,corner of Hotel and Alakea streets,THIS MONDAY EVKXINfi. MmY

They have had ail their aaj andcomes the copper rimmer. Little BliZand little Dirnberger do big thingB.

At Nashville Tennv November 15, 1893?APIlS3 Wlth a

rode 100 yarda in 8 4-- 5 aecono! &X. VmibeTKer with a flvine nt'rtrode 100 yards in 5 seconds flat.I . Bliss with a standing start, rodoH oi a mile m 1G4-- 5 seconds. M.Xrnberger with arode mile in 54 Fecon ifat. J.1 . iJhaa with a standing f;tart, rodewith1!6,? 5Gr3-5sJ-

H. J.p'.BiTsaTn A start, rode K milo? i thby reducing

record?. 7 ' and Johna

Lost. CX5F"Come in and convince yourselfand see what we are doing.

5th, at 7:30 o'clock forWork in the First Degree. To Let, i SMALL. HEART-shapk- d finr.n V AN WITT. AMn THE! UTTOrnMembers of the Lodge Le Procres and t pin. Finder wdl b3 rewarded by

reuirninir to m..- - -- an; of Advekare iraternally :et rid of our stock by March 1, 1894.au uretureninteresting. Miss Mary Green will invited

sojourningto be present.

A MOST DESIRABLE,nicely furnished Residence on TiSERi-lliC- 4587--U"

reaa a paper on "uenerai fleeting.

Bv order of the YV. M.T. E. WALL.

3527-- 1 1 Secretary .in the Olden Time." and Mrs. Information Wanted has. J. FishelMaxwell will cive an address on

leretania street, near ThomasSquare, for a term of 3 to G months.Possession pi ven on or about June t,1S94. Apply to

"TOURIST,"or,23-l- m p. o. Box 33S.

"Some Personal Experiences of i NY INFORMATION CONCERN- -Wanted.Missionary Life in India."Corner Fort and Hotel Streets.

3497-- tf

Election of Officers.At Birmingham, Ala., December 12--J.xa- - m Joun eek who worked fiveyears aio on a stiar plantation near

TY A COMPETENT MAN LATELY Sllit Of ROODIS to LiGtA7a . 8tan(Jng start,in i r -- ,e'

' 4 m! e' 8tandiS startn 1 G2-5- ; mile, standing start,IN DISTRICT I. Honolulu, will be welcomed by "W

Advertiser office.3i22-l- w

JLD from the Coast, nositinn trainerand driver of trotting and pacing horses,or those desirincr to have thpir lmispn C. BREWER cVc C03IPANVTwenty-thre- e Names Added to the

At eamo place, December 12 and 14LIMITED.JFor Sale.Union Club Koll. develop-- d at either gait, would addressJ. J. P.," this office. 3627-- 1 wt

E-LH.UA- FUKNISHED SUIT OFrvooms, suitable for gentleman andwife, or single, with private familv, no

children. Address ii. W. MOOKK,S6L'3-3- t Advertiser OfBce.

r jjirnoerger roile 1 mile, stand- -T THE ANNUAL MEKTTN7; fiwAThe First District Club, Union theC. Brewt-- r Cnmnanv l W

--sii.mm; 4 miieI a2' 'ii 55 ; & mIle standinlSf5'!?H55H "He standingNotice. A NUMBER OF TRI-POT- S, WATERJr. Cask?, iron bound, L'oOtral ions each.Party, held its second meeting at otiui, in u:jj 4-- d.

hel l this day, the following named wereelected as its officer? for the eneuingyear, viz :the Government Nursery' Saturday rwiHE MEMBERSHIP KOLL OF THE &el Estate for Sale. v.orai not-.- in quantities to suit, deliver-

ed one mile from Posto!2ce at 75 centsjr load. .ApplvT. W. RAWLINS,

T O T TT" T inigut. I union i any oi me ist ana -- a rre- -a . ounce, xcj x resioent I

Geo. II. Robertson, Esq.... ilanager M3 World S Recordsi cincis, nil jjisinci, win open every1 wentv-thre- e names were added vnim? at the AnnPiation f?nh Rm, 7. VALUABLE PIECES

.J uik rf ill T T l nk-in-ir uni Ml 1 1 ;i ic. i iih 11 wvu w --v. oi improved Property, locat Bell Telephone 55. P. O. Box No. 4SC21-2- WPER ORDER. es in umerent parts of the MADE ON

E.F. Bishop j otcreiary anaTreasurer

Col. W. F Allen AuditorC. M. Cooke, FgqH . Waterhouse, sq DirectorsC. L. Carter )

r. Cl . 1 t ! I ice cuy oi uonoiulu; all bar-train- s.

ADDIv for full rnr-H--aiier consiaeraoie aiscussion. To Let To i.et."That it ia the sense of this meet RAMBLER RACERSculars to

BRUCE A A. J. CARTWRIGHT3550-t- f

ing that the Central Committee E. F. BISHOP,Secretary, C. Brewer & Companv, L'dHonolulu, February 7, 1S94.

take such action as will secure thenomination of a candidate or can- - COTTAGE TO LET ON

street; all modern improveL . 33. DEE,COTTAGE IN TOWN OF

five rooms and yard. Apply toJ. A. MA GOON.

"61'5-l- walaates, to fill the vacancy at pres-ent existing in the Advisory JOBBER OF

ments. .i?o Barn, fc'tabies andServants rooms. Applv to

3G04-t- f N S. SACH. Fort street.

Stock for Sale.Meeting: Notice.

Amotion was adopted that the Draft LiOSt Or Stolen.

At W aslungton, D.C.,November 13, 1893atman of the Washington

Road Club, riding a No. 5 Rambler,fitted with Corrugated U. & J. Raing Tires covered 311 miles in 24hours, therebv creating new Ame-rican 24-Ho- ar Safety Road Record,beating the previous record 173miles.

BXT" 1S94 American RamblerSafetiesh;iVM all the lut'ht imorovemr to o,i

Wines, Spirits and BeersHOTEL STREET,

hud meet every.

omer inureuaya -

yilE REGULAR ANNUAL MEET--inc of the stockhold ern of tha Infor.

T - I . . 1 Oi X-: A.JlDRAFT NO. 1049, $22.80, ORDER W.

dated Januarv 9th. 1S94.uiamencing tnis weeK.After fb forrnloT rntitinft lmsi Cl HARES OF MAKAWELI SUGARBetween Port and JV:on F. A. fcchafer & C , Honolulu. JKin- - uuann.

'""ni'i i.aviganon jo., (L'a.) willbe held at the office of the Companv onTUESDAY, March 6th , at 10 o'clock a.M. W. H MrI.. 1 V

Stock. Annlv rnpess was transacted, the club ad Pluilip a. ictor,der pleafe return tojourned. C61G 1523-- 3 n--tillw J AS. F. MORGAN,

ao4U-- tf Oueen Sticet. cblb-t- d pcretarv . . vj1 are reMucel iu price.

.

TUK 1'ACIFIC COMMEUCIAL ADV-ERTISISK- : IlOXOIuTIX,!!, MAltCH- - 3, 1894.8

WHARF AND WAVE. Shipping.SHIPPING INTELLIGENCE. Diplomatic and Consular Repre-sentatives of Hawaii AbroadTHE PROVISIONAL GOVERNMENT !OAHO HULWAY 4 LAliD CO.'S

TIME TABLE.AMD AFYKFl JUNE 1, 13C2.

Strong Winds and Heavy Seas

Retard the Warrimoo.

Diamond Head, March 4, 10 p. m.

Weather cloudy; wind fresh,northeast.

The C. A. S. S. Warrimoo ar-

rived in port yesterday afternoonfrom Sydney and way ports. Sheleft Sydney on February 17th andexperienced a strong northeast galefor two days, which retarded thevessel's progress. She arrived atSuva at 1 a. m. on February 24thand left at 9 a. m. of the same da'.She experienced very strong north-east trades, which continued withheavy seas up to her arrival at thisport. At 7 :30 p. m. on February28th she met and passed and ex-

changed night signals with theA. S. S. Arawa.

The barkentine Georere C. Per--

kins, Mass captain, arrived at Ka-hul- ui

on the 24th ult., 15 days fromSan Francisco. She came down inballast. The schooner Anna reachedthe sam3 port on last Friday.

James Huddart, the managingowner of the Canadian-Australia- n

line of steamers, is now in Canada.He is attempting to organize a fastAtlantic steam service betweenCanada and England, to connectwith the Vancouver line.

The barkentine S. N. Castle,Hubbard master, arrived yester-day, 18 days from San Francisco.She brought a light cargo of gen-eral merchandise. She made fast

Allen & Robinson's wharf.Five stowaways are on board of

the Warrimoo. While the vesselwas in port last night the men werelocked in a bathroom. They passedthe time singing "Daisy Bell" andother songs.

The wharves at the foot of Forttreet were lined with sugar steam

ers yesterday. If unloaded in timeseveral of them will depart againthis afternoon for island ports.

NjThe whaling barks Mars andHoratio arrived off port on Satur-day morning. The former was 42days coming from San Franciscoand the latter about 100 days.

The Wrarrim6o brought but littlefreight for this port. After takingon 1880 bags of rice and other

. TKAINBTO SWA MILL.

B B A D

a.. r.u. r.u. r.u.Leave ilonolnla. . .8:45 1:45 4:35 5:10Leave Pearl City.. 9:30 2:30 5:10 5:50Arrive Ewa Mill . . .9 :57 - :57 5:36 6:22

TO HONOLULU.

O BA.M. A. if. P.M. P.M.

Leave Ewa Mill.. 6:21 10:43 3:43 5:42Leave Pearl City..6:55 11:15 4:15 6:10Arrive Honolulu. .7:30 11:55 4:55 6:45

A Saturdays only.B Daily.O Sundays excepted.D Saturdays excepted.

The Pacific Commercial Advertiser

Issued Bvery Morning, ExceptSunday, by lie

Hawaiian Gazette Company

At So. :ilK Merchant Street.

EIGHT PAGES.HUIISCICIPTION KATES:

The Daily Pacific Commercial Advertiser (8 PAOK8)

Per month : 50Per year - 6 00Per vear. nostpaid Foreign 10 00Per year, postpaid to United States

of America, Canada, or Mexico.. 8 00

Hawaiian Gatette, Semi-Week- ly (8rAQES)-r- -

Peryear $5 0Per year, postpaid Foreign 6 00

l'ayahle Invariably In Advance.

II. M. WHITNEY,Business Manager.

MONDAY. MARCH 5. 1894.

Xdti ADVERTISE CALENDAE.

March, 1894.

.KItI VALvSatueiy, March 3.

Am whaling bk Horatio. Donaldson, from(cruise). San Francisco.

Am whaling Lk Mars, McComber. from(cruise). Wan Francisco.

stmr Mokolii. McGregor, from Moiokaiami Lanai.

Stmr Mikahala. Chaney, from Kauai.tnir Pele. Peterson, from Makaweii.

Stmr James Makee. llaglund, fromKauai.Stmr Waialeale, Siuythe. from llama-kua- .

Sunday. March 4.

CASS Warrimoo. Perry, 13 davsfrom Sydney, via Fiji.

Am bktneS N Castle. Hubbard, IS daysfrom San Francisco.

Stmr Claudine. Cameron, from Maui.Stmr Iwalani, Freeman, from Kauai.

DKPAUTUKKS.Saturday, March 3.

OSS ustralia, lloudlette, for SanFrancisco

Sunday, March 4. .

C.CASS Warrimoo, Perry, for Vancouver, r--i

British, Columbia.

VKSSKLS LEAVINO TO-DA- Y.

Stmr Mokolii, McGregor. for Moiokaiand Lanai, at 5 p in.

Stmr Waialeale, Smythe. for Lahaina,Kakuihaele and Honokaa, at 12 noon.

Stmr James Makee, Halund, for Kapaa,at 4 p m.

ICriSlSL. ITS fK1.NAVAL VlfcoZLa.

U S FS Philadelphia, Barker, Callao.(JSfi Adams, Nelson, from Samoa.II B M S Champion. Kooke, EsquimauHUMS Naniwa, Togo, Jlapan.

MERCHANTMEN.

OSS Australia, lloudlette, San Francisco.Br sh Vilialta, Harland, Liverpool.Br ship East Croft, llimiuer, N S W.Am sh B P Cheney, Mosher. Nanaimo, B C. toAm bk Matilda, Sweneon, Departure Bay.Am schr Carrier Dove. Brandt, Newcastle.Am bkt Irmgard, Schmidt, San Francisco.Ger bk Galveston, Jacobsen. Amoy.Am bkt S N Castle. Hubbard, San Fran.Am wh bk Mars, McComber. San Fran.Am wh bk lloratia, Donaldson, San Fran.

::1v.wis. Wher from.Am bkt Discovery SF Due- -

Bk Xantippe N S W DueAm fccbr Salvator N S W Du0Schr Lvman I) Foster.N S W April 12Am M is bk M'rn'g Str..South Seas. Mar S-- 15

Am bk Amy Turner. ..New York.July 1-- 10

Am schr W S Phelps.. Gray's Har..Feb 13Am schr O M Kellogg. Gray's Har..Feb 21Am schr Stanford N S W Feb 20Am schr Geneva N S W Feb 21AmbkC D Bryant San Fran.... Mar 3AmbktSG Wilder. . ..San Fran.... Mar 4Am bkt Planter SanFran Mar G

Am sh Occidental Departure B..Feb 28Am schr Cyras King ..N S V Mar 1

Haw bk Helen Brewer (sldNov7)NY.Marl-- 5

M Hackfeld(sld Sept 25).. L'pool.Mar 25-3- 1

O & O S s Oceanic San f ran 6Ger bk J C Glade Liverpool.. Apr moAm bk Alex McNeill ..SF... Feb 19Am sch Maid of Orleans. S F ( Kah). . Feb 20Am brgt Consuelo 8 F (Kah).... Feb 22P M 8 S China S F April 17Am brgt W G Irwin. ..S F March 3Am bkt W II Dimond.S F Feb 28Am bk AnnieJohnson.S F(Hilo) March 2Am schr J G North . S F(Mah) March 5Am bk Ceylon S F March 10

CASS Warrimoo SF ....March 2311 M S S Mariposa Sydney ...March 8It M 8S Alameda.... S F March 15

Am schr Golden Shore.N S W April 19Am sch W F Witzman.N S W March 25

IMPOKTS.Per stmr Iwalani 4405 bags sugar irom

Kauai.Per stmr James Makee 1699 bags sugar.

Prducts she departed forryer at about 7 o'clock last night.

Bl. M. Tu. W.

li 12 13 14

"IT 19 20 at"S" "aT '.7 28

IN THE UNITED !TATKS.

United Slates Ilia Kx h A Thureton,Envoy Extraordinary and MinisterPlenipotentiary, Washington, D C.

Secretarj ami Charge d' Atlaiies ad in-

terim F P HasMiitsNew York E H .Mien, t'onsul-Genera- l.

San Franeifco C T Wilder, Consul-Gener- al

for the Pacific States: Cali-fornia, Oregon and Nevada andWashington J F Kojer,Consular Clerk

Philadelphia Robert H Davis, ConsulSan Diego, Cala Jas W Girvin, Ccii'jUlBoston G D Gilman. ConsulPortland Or J McCraken, ConsulPort Townsend, Wash James G Swan,

ConsulSeattle G R Carter. ConsuTacoma, Washington J T Belcher,

Acting Vice-Cons- ul

MEXICO, CENTRAL AND SOUTH AMERICA.

U S of Mexico, Mexico-C- ol W J DaGress, Consul. K II Baker, Vice-Cons- ul

Mauzanillo Robert James Barney, Cosul.

Guatemala Henry Tolke, ConsulPeru, Lima F S Crosby, Acting ConsulCallao, Peru S Crosby, ConsulChile. Valparaiso, D Thomas, Charge dr

Affaires ami Consul-tieuer- al

Moi?" VhJeo, Uruguay- - Conrad Hughes.nsul

Phi:.piuo Inlands, IloiJo George Shel- -

meruine, ConsulManila Jaser M Wood ConsulCebu George K A Cadell Consul

GREAT BRITAIN.

London Charge d' AffaireSecretury of Legation, Mauley Hop-kins, Consul-Gener- al

Liverpool Harold J anion. ConsulBristol Mark Whitwell. CoiimiIHull W Moran, ConsulNewcastle on Tyne E Biestereld,

ConsulFalmouth C R Broad, ConsulDover (and the Cinque Ports) Francis

William Prescott, ConsulCardiff H Goldberg, ConsulSwansea II Bovey, Vice-Consu- l

Edinburgh and Leith E G Buchanan,Consul

Glasgow Jas Dunn, ConsulDundee J G Zooler, ConsulDublin II Jas Murphy, Vico-Cons- ul

Queenstown Geo B Dawson, ConsulBelfast W A Ross, Consul

BRITISH COLONIES.

Toronto, Ontario J K Thompson, ConsulGeneral; Geo A Shvf Vice-Con- sul

Montreal Dickson Anderson. ConsulKingston, Ontario Geo Richardson,

v ice-Cons- ul

Rimouski, Quebec J N Pouliot Q C.Vice-Cons- ul

St John's. N B Allan O Trookshank,Consul

Yarmouth, N S Ed F Clements, Vice-Cons- ul

Victoria, B C tt P Ritffet, ConsulVancouver, B C E M Beattie, ConsulSydney, N S W W E Dixon, Acting

ConsulMelbourne,Victoria G N Oakley, ConsulBrisbane, Queensland Alex B Webster,.

ConsulHobart, Tasmania Captain Hon Audley

Coot-- , ConsulLaunceston Geo Collins, Vice-Cn6- ul

Newcastle. N s W W H Moulton,Consul

Auckland, N Z D B Cruikshank, ConsulDunedin, N Z Henry Driver, ConsulHongkong, China Hon J Johnstone

Keswick, Acting Consul-Gener- al

Shanghai, China Hon J Johnstone'Keswick

PRANCE AND COLONIES.

Paris Alfred Houle, Charge tP Affairesand Consul-Gener- al ; A N II Tey ssier,Vice-Cons- ul

Marseilles G du Cayla, ConsulBordeaux Ernest, do B. isnao, ConsulDijon, 11 H Vcilhomnne, ConsulLibourne Charles Schaessler, ConsulTahiti, Papeete A F Bonct, Consul

GERMANY.

Bremen John F Muller, ConsulHamburg Edward F Weber, Consulf rankfot-on-Main- e Joseph Kopp, Con- -

sulDresden Aucustus P Russ ConsulKarlsruhe H Muller, Consul

AU8TKIA.

Vienna ffui'o on Schonberger, Consul

SPAIN AND COLONIES.

Baict.'cj.a Kiirifjuu Mingut-z- , Consul-Ge- n

eralCadiz James Shaw, ConsulValencia Julio Solar, ConsulMalaga F T Do Navarra, Consul ; F

Gimenez y Navarra, Vice-Cons- ul

Cartegena J Paris, ConsulLas Palraas, Gran Canaria Louis Fal-con- y

Quevedo, Consul ; J Bravo deLaguna, Vice-Cons- ul

ConsulArecife de Lanzarotte E Morales y

Rodriguez, Vice-Cons- ul

PORTUGAL AND COLONIE8.

GeneralOporto Narciso T M Ferro, ConsulMadeira F Rodrigues. ConsulSt Michaels A de 8 Moreira, ConsulSt Vincent, Cape de Verde Islands

O Martins, Vice-Cons- ul

Lagos M J Barbosa, Vice-Cons- ul

ITALY.

Rome James Clinton Hooker, ConsulGeneral

Genoa Kaphael de Luchi, ConsulPalermo Anjielo Tagliavia, Consul

NETHERLANDS.

Amsterdam D H Schmull, Consul-Gener- al

Dordrecht P J Bouwman, Consul

BELGIUM.

Antwerp Victor Horge, Consul-Gene- ral

Ghent E Coppieters, ConsulLiege Jules Blanpain, ConsulBruges Emile Van den Brande, Consul

SWEDEN AND NORWAY.

Stockholm C A Engalls, Acting Consnl- -General.

Christiania L Samson, ConsulLystil - H Bergstrom, Vico-Con- sul

Gothembmg Gustav Kraak, Vice- -Consul

JAPAN.

Tokic His Excellency R Walker Irwiu,Minister Resident

Hiogo and Osaka C P Hall, Coneul

OCEANIC

STEAMSHIP CO

Australian Mail Service.

For San Francisco:The New and Fine Al Steel Steamship

" "MAEIPOSAOI the Oceanic Steamship Company willbe due at Honolulu, from Sydney andAuckland, on or about

MAECH 8th,And will leave for the above port withMails and Passengers on or about thatdate.

For Sydney & AucklandThe New and Fine Al Steel Steamship

l.a:m:kd.a. 99

Of the Oceanic Steamship Company willbe due at Honolulu, from San Francisco,on or about

MAECH 15th,And will have prompt despatch withMails and Passengers for the above ports.

The undersigned are now preparedto issue

THROUGH TICKETS Tl! ALL POINTS

IN THE UNITED STATES.

j2?"For further particulars regardingFreight or Passage apply to

Win. G. Irwin & Co., Ltd.,GENERAL AGENTS.

OCEANIC -

STEAMSHIP CO

Time Table.LOCAL LINE.

Arrive Honolulu Leave Honolulufrom S. F. forS.F.Feb. 24 Mar. 31.Mar. 24 Mar. 3Apr. 21 Apr. 28Mav 19 May 26June 16 June 23

TflEOUGH LINE.From San Fran. From Sydney for

for Sydney. San Francisco.Arrive Honolulu. Leave Honolulu.ALAMEDA Mar 15 MARIPOSA Mar 8MARIPOSA Apr 12 MONOWAI Apr 5

lMO SO WAI May 10 ALAMEDA May 3ALAMEDA Jun 7 MARIPOSA May 31MARIPOSA Jul 5 MONOWAI Jun 28MONOWAI Aug 2 A LAMBDA Jul 26A LAME DA Aug 30 MARIPOSA Aug 23MAKIPOSA Sep 27 MONOWAI Sept 20MONOWAI Oct 25 ALAMEDA Oct 18

3314-3-m

r 1 s aFor X OKOIiaJHa. !

THE FINE JAPANESE STEAMER

Mo Man

Due here on or about tin-- end of March,will be despatched with Mails andPassengers for the above port on orabout

APRIL 9 th.gSTFor further particulars regarding

Freight and Passage, apply to

K. 0GILRA & CO.,

3G0S-2- m AGENTS.

CE1S. BR1W2& 6 C0.'8

Boston Line of Packets.

ShiDDers will please takenotice that the

AMERICAN BARKAMY TURNER

will load in New York for Honolu.u, tosail about FEBRUARY. 15. 1S94, ifsufficient inducement is offered.

SJT For further information, apply toChas. Brewer & Co., 27 Kilby St., Boston,Mass., or to

C. BREWER & CO. (L'D.),Honolulu. Agents.

Crown Flour

Castle & Cooke35S3 1514-lm- tf

Daily Advertiser, 50 cents permonth, delivered by carrier.

Th. tt. 8.j MOON'S PHASES.

l 2 3 Nw MoonMarch 7- -

"8 9 10 m Qu'r3 March 14."IT "IT 17 Frill Moono March 21

22 33 24 Lt Qv't20 30 31 March 29.

Meteorological Becorrt.

T THB rfOTEaNMESTT SV1T. rUSLZSBEO' EVEBT MONDAY.

alBOH. :agM g o

Official List cf Members and Loca-

tion of Bureaus.

Exkcctxvk Council.8. 15. Dole, President of the Provisional

Government of the Hawaiian Isl-ands.

F. M. Hatch, Minister of Foreign Af-fairs.

J. A. King, Minister of the Interior.S. M. Damon, Minister of Finance.W. O. Smith, Attorney-Genera- l.

Advisory Coo'cil.W;C. Wilder, Vice-Preside- nt of the Pro-

visional Government of tho HawaiianIslands.

C. Bolte, John Erameluth,Cecil Brown, E. D.Tenney.John Nott, W. F. Allen,John Ena. Henry Waterhouse,James F. Morgan, A. Young,Ed. Suhr W. C. Wilder.Jos. P. Mendonca.

Chas. T. Rodgers, Secretary-- Ex. andAdv. Councils.

SuPREiiit Court.Hon. A. F. Judd, Chief Justice.Hon. K. F. Bickerton, First Associate

Justice.Hon. W. F. Frear, Second Associate

Justice.Henry Smith, Chief Clerk.Geo. Lucas, Deputy Clerk.C. b Peterson, Second Deputy Clerk.J. Walter Jones, Stenographer.

Circuit Judges.

VFirst Circuit: ; 0al.D.Second Circuit: (Maui) A.N. Kepoikai.Third and Fourth Circuit: (Hawaii) S.

L. Austin.Fifth Circuit: (Kauai) J. Hardy.

Offices and Court-roo- m in Court House,King street. Sitting in HonoluluThe first Monday in February, May,August and November.

DEPAKTMENT OF FoiiEIGK 7FAIRS.

OfSce in Capitol Building, King street.His Excellency F. M. Hatch, Minis-

ter of Foreign Affairs .Geo. C Potter, Secretary.W. Horace Wright, Lionel Hart, Clerks.

Depart2I3:;t of the Interior.Office in Capitol Building, King

street.His Excellency J. A. King, Minister of

trie interior.Chief Clerk, John A. Hassinger.Assistant Clerks: James H. Boyd. M. K.

jveouoicaioie, James Anolo, StephenMahaulu, George C. Ross, Edward8. Boyd.

Bureau or Agriculture and Forestry.President : His Excellency the Minister

of Interior. Wm. G. Irwin, AllanHerbert, John Ena. Joseph Mars-Ue- n,

Commissioner and Secretary.

Chiefs of Bureaus. Interior Department.

Surveyor-Genera- l, W.D. Alexander.Supt. Public Works, W. E. Rowell.Supt. Water Works, Andrew Brown.Inspector, Electric Lights, John Cassidy.Registrar oi uonveyances, T. U. Thrum.Road bupervisor, Honolulu, W. H.Cum- -

mings .Chief Engineer Fire Dept., Jas. II. Hunt.Supt. insane Asylum, Dr. A. McWayne

Department op Finance.Office, Capital Building, King

street.Minister of Finance, His Excellency S.

M. Damon.Auditor-Genera- l. George J . Ross.Registrar of Accounts, W. G. Ashley.Clerk to Finance Office, E. A. Mclnerny.Collector-ljiener- al of Customs, Jas. B.

Castle.Tax Assessor, Oahu, Jona. Shaw.Deputy Tax Assessor, W. C. Weedon.Postmaster-uenera- i, J. Mort Oat.

V Customs Bureau.Office, Custom House. For:

street. "

Collector-Genera- l, Jas. B. Castle.Deputy-Collecto- r, F. B. McStocker.Harbormaster, Captain A. duller.Port Surveyor, M. ii. Sanders.Storekeeper, George C. Stratemeyer.

Department of Attorney-Generaj- l.

Office in Capitol Building, Kingstreet.

Attorney-Genera- l, W. O. Smith.Deputy Attorney-Genera- l, G. K. WiideiClerk, J. M. Kea.Marshal, E. G. Hitchcock.Clerk to Marshal, H. M. Dow.Deputy Marshal, Arthur M. Brown".Jailor Oahu Prison, J. A. Low.Prison Physician, Dr. C. B. Cooper.

Board op Immigration.

President, His Excellency J. A. King.Members of the Board of Immigration

Hon. J. B. Atherton, Jas. B. CastleHon. A. S. Cleghorn, James . G.Spencer. Mark P. Robinson.

Secretary, Wray Taylor.

Board op Health.Office in grounds of Court House Build

ing, corner of Miliiani and Queenstreets.

Members Dr. Day, Dr. Miner, Dr.Andrews, J.T.Waterhouse, Jr., JohnEna, Theo. F. Lansing and Attorney-Gener- al

Smith.President Hon. W. O. Smith.Secretary Chan. Wilcox.Executive Officer C. B. Reynolds.Inspector and Manaeer of Garbage Ser-

vice L. L. I. a Pierre.Inspector G. W. C. Jones.Port Physician, Dr. G. P. Andrews.Dispensary, Dr. H W Howard.Leper Settlement, Dr. R. K. Oliver.

Boaud op Education.Court House Building, King street.

President, Hon. W. R. Castle.Secretary, W. James Smith.Inspector of Schools, A. T. Atkinson.

District Court.Police Station Building, Merchant streetA. G. M. Robertson, Magistrate.Jamas Thompson, Clork.

(XX bags paddy, and 7 pkgs sundries, fromSW e gcoongr Lyman D. FostetyKpUerlstmr lewcastle, N. S. W on Febru- -

w.ial.ale-84- 00 bags sugar,

gK K not - So rr

B B

C4 78 0.03 75 363 79 0.10 72 5--

63 77 1.00 77 6fitt 78 0.00 95 9G3 74 0.6 75 669 77 0.22 ?0 363 75' 0.061 71 5

o 7

Ban. 35Moo 28Tae 27Wed .'8Thu 1

rl. 2Bat. 3

HICO Srs3 1

30.1330.05 lso.io!3o.r& W NE 1-- 5

30.1230.04 1

30.20 30 H W KK '2

30.20 30.131 NE A

tn .i 'trt 1 tl NE S

30 24 30.171 NE 5

Barometer corrected for temperature and ele-

vation, but not for latitude.

T'i. on auA Moon.

r LB

o o a9Q 4 . a- er

BHo-- l! X

p.m.9. 0 6.17

10.20 6.1611.40 6.15a.m.

6.150.40 6.141.30 6.132.40 6.12

D1 ?toer

Mon... &

Tnea... "Wed...Thar... 8

rrt.. 9

8t... lbdan.... 11

.Purser J. Monroe of the Warri-mb- o

is one of the best-like-d pursersthat touch at this port. He is veryobliging and in every way is acredit to the handsome vessel.

The Australia left on Saturdayat noon for San Francisco. A largecrowd of people was present to seeher off. She carried away quite aheavy cargo.

Six policemen armed with papersseized a native fisherman's boat fordebt ' on Saturda morning atBrewer's wharf. I

ary 12th for this port with 124otons of coal.

Schooner W. F. Witzman leftITewcastle for this port on the 2dult. She has a cargo of 2U tonsof coal.

According to the officers of theWarrimoo the vessel left Sydneyon schedule time.

The Mikahala's departure hasbeen deferred until tomorrow.

Three, island steamers will de-

part during the day..

The racific Cable.

London, Feb. 15. Mr. AudleyCoote, M. L. C, of Tasmania, whois visiting England in the inter-ests of the projected Pacific cableand the Tasmanian Exhibition tobe held at Hobart, states that hehas arranged a scheme for the con-

struction of an international Pacificcable. Seventy per cent, of thecable would pass through Britishterritory.

Mr. Audley Coote will proceedto Paris on Wednesday to pushforward the Tasmanian Exhibition.He sails on his return to Australiain the Messageries Maritimessteamer Australien, and will sub-mit his scheme to the colonial Gov-ernments directly he arrives.

London, Fel. 16 Mr. SandfordFleming, C. M. G., in replying tothe strictures of the Hon. JohnKidd, Postmaster-Genera- l of NewSouth Wales, upon his Pacific cablescheme, asserts that Mr. Kidd isthe only public man in Australiawho is opposed to the scheme.

The Boston and Maine road hasinaugurated a reform in its trainservice that represents a savins ofabout $2,500 a day.

Outside of John Cully, M. P., ofEDcland, John Morrissey was theonly pugilist who obtained parlia-mentary honors.

Mt. Hercules, Island of Papua, isthe highest in the world, its altitudebeing 32,780 feet. Mt. Everest,India, is only J,U0l2 feet high

Tho estimated number of cats inthe United Kingdom is about7,000,000, and the yearly productionof kittens between 18,000,000 and19.000,000.

59 9

a.m. p.m a.m9.20 S.20 10. 0 6. 5.204. 0 3.50 io.: 6. 7 6.54.30 4.10 10.40 6. 7 6.35

a.m4.50 6. r 11. 0 6. 8 7.296.40 5.2C 11.20 6. 8 8.246.30 6. 0 11.40 6. 8 9.217.10 16.30 Vi. 0 6. 9' 10.22

New moon on the 7t!i at 3b. 47m. a. m.otowa at lh. 25m. 34a. p.m. of

HSoalau2;. Mch la tbe aame a. 12b. on.. 0..of Greenwich time.

1000 feet of distance of the observerFor everyallow one aecond for

lrrn"m?..fon ofm.ound.or 5 aecond. to a .Utote.die.

"

FOKEION MAIL SERVICE.

leave for and arrive fromSTncisTon the following date., tillthe close ot 189.

from Kauai.Per stmr Pele 2719 bags sugar, from

Kauai.Per stmr Mikahala 1829 bags sugar. 120

bags rice, 10 baga peanuts and 9 bdls hides,from Kauai.

Per stmr Claudine CG28 bags sugar, 273bags potatoes, 130 bags corn, 100 hogs, 51hides, and CI pkgs sundries, from Maui.

Per CASS Warrimoo 32 cs merchan-dise, GO bags fertilizer, 9 cs pine suckers.

EXPORTS.For San Francisco, per S. S. Australia.

March 3 Dr Trousseau, 1 bdle ostrich (80lbs), feathers; Geo Lvcurpus, 2G6bncbs ba-nanas; M Phillips & Co, 730 bags rice; FFPorter 310 bnchs bananas, 207 bdls greenhides, 9 bills goatskins. 2 bdls deerskins;Wm G Irwin ic Co, 16,096 bags sugar; HopHinc it Co. 70 bdls sugar cane; Sam Wo. 5Vvrs iiptpl. leaves: Sinir Sine. 47G bnchs bananas; D McLean. 156 bnchs bananas;Charles Wilcox. 1041 bnchs bananas; Yl.nm Sincr. 197 bnchs bananas; W Costa. 41hncl.o hnnnriA: J no fchaw. 400 bnchs bananas ; Campbell , Marshall & Co. 2tt3 bnchsbananas; LB Kerr, Ct bags coffee; PGramnrinos. t hxs fruit: O It UishOO, 3bnchs bananas.

Fnr Vancouver. Ti C. ter CASS Warri- -ttirkn March 4 1SSO bacrs rice. 32 bbls mo- -Iaosps. 128 bnchs bananas. 2 cs mercbanffi .V hatrs of coffee, and 494 crates ofbananas.

I,ASEKH.ARRIVALS.

From Kauai, per stmr Waialeale, March3 A Smith, and 2 on deck.

From Kauai, per stmr Mikahala, March3 G N Wilcox, C P Green, C Adams. F GCornich. F Hams, Tam Huug.Tong King,llebecca Panee, and 32 on deck.

From San Francisco, per bktne S N Cas-

tle, March 4 John Ouderkirk, wife andchild.

From Sydney, per C A S fc arnmoo,March 4 Miss C Morrell, Miss H Morrell.W 1 Morrell, Major-Gener- al Cunliffe. ACrane. J Chase, 11 T Bachelder, and 27 intransit.

From Kauai, per steamer Iwalani, March4F E Lynn, and 4 on deck.

From Maui, per stmr Claudine. March 4C A Spreckels, II Spreckels, Paul Isen-ber- g

H V Glade. G P Wilder and wife, J AKodanet. II Center. J T Cunningham JCunningham. T B Bishop. F F tolhs. AS

E Bond, J J Drnmmond, Mis Kahala, MrsManasse, Miss E Pihi. Kikoo, and 21 ondeck.

DEPARTURES.

For San Francisco, per OSS Australia.March 3 Mrs C A Adams. Mr. Mary Ai-la- u,

Hon Chas II Bishop, Mis Brand, HonCecil Brown. J K Brown. CC Coleman. MissLDick. B 11 Foss, Dr G oote. l)r E AFoote, M Green, B llalstead. Mrs AdmiralIrwin and daughter. A B K"apa UatXLarimore, Mis Lariniore. 11 Morgan, G

zur Oeweste, E 11 Scott, C J Steedman andwife.

For Vancouver, B. C, per C A S S Warri-moo, March 4 Lieut F C G rover. L bchutzand wife, F P Hemen, A Shepherd, wifeand daughter, J Schiemer.

Lkavk HonoluluFor tAK Frakcipco

or VascocssbOn or About

Australia.... Mar. 3Mariposa Mar. 8China Mar. 'MAustralia Mar. 31Arawa April 1Monowai Apr .

Australia.... Apr. 23

Warrimoo.... Mav 1

Alameda -- May,-7

Gaelic Mav 1

Australia.... May 2bMaripoja May 31Arawa ,JaneiAustralia June!Monowai June 28W-irrimo- o. . . - J nlAustralia... July -- 1

Alameda.... Jnly 2G

Arawa Aug. 1

Australia.. ..Autf. ISMariposa.... Aug.23Warrimoo Sept. 1

Australia... Sept. 15Monowai Sept. 22Arawa UctAustralia Oct. ioAlameda.... Oct. 1

Warrimoo.... ov.lActrnlia... J'iOV. 1U

Mariposa... Nov. 13

Arawa ..Dec. 1

Australia.. . .Dec. 8Monowai... . Dec. 13

Warrimoo.. .Dec 30

AR. at HonoluluFM.SANBAlCCI8CO

ob VakcouverOn or About

Oceanic. -- Mar,fAlameda.... Mar.-- Varrimoo...Mar.Australia Mar. -Mariposa.... Apr. zChina fpr.17Australia.... Apr. -- lArawa Apru 5

Monowai.....May 10Australia.. is

Warrimoo... May -Alameda June'Australia JuuelOArawa ilnVMariposa ,JVly,Australia J"1.1Warrimoo... J uly;Monowai AnrAustralia. . . . Aug. 11

Arawa AuK-- ,

Alameda.... Aug.Australia.... Sept.Warrimoo.. bepU --5

Mariposa... Sept. 2Australia .Oct. C

Arawa Rcl'BMonowai "ct- -Australia.... ov.3Alameda ov. f--Warrim':o...ov.23Amtralia....-D-c- . 1

Mariposa.... prc. v23Arawa Dec.

Australia.... Dec. 29