FIVE J. Q. WOOD. SPECIAL IN at...

8
l, 'v V Vh 1 1 Established Jaly 44, IS.V. iVOL. XXVL, NO. 4750. HONOLULU, HAWAIIAN ISLANDS, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 2S, 1897. PRICE FIVE CENTO. NOW IN NEW YORK A NOTED EDITOR J. Q. WOOD. Attorney at Law, notary public. riage Saturday of Sir Edwin Arnold, the poet and editor, to a Japanese lady, show that the ceremony took place at St Matliias Church, Earlscourt, this city, in the presence of Sir Edwin's brother, Sir Arthur Arnold, chairman of the London County Council, the Japanese Minister and their wives. Sir Edwin and Lady Arnold will reside on Bolter Gardens, this city. The bride was brought from Japan and was edu- cated in England. Her name is not mentioned. SPECIAL BUSINESS ITEMS. IF YOU BUY A SINGER, You will receive careful instruction from a competent teacher at your home. You can obtain necessary accessories direct from the company's offices. You will get prompt attention in any part of the world, as our offices are ev- erywhere and we give careful attention to all customers, no matter where the machine may have been purchased. You will be dealing with the leading company in the sewing machine busi- ness, having an unequalled experience and an unrivalled reputation the strongest guarantee of excellence. Sold on easy payments. Repairing done. B. BERGERSEN, Agent 16 Bethel Street, Honolulu. The City Carriage Company possess only first-cla- ss hacks and employ only careful, steady drivers. Carriages at all hours. Telephone 113. JOHN S. ANDRADE. ceding the civil war was in a degree clue to the development of Mr. Dana's genius for journalism. , The great struggle of the Tribune under Greeley and Dana was not so much for the overthrow of slavery where it already existed as against the further spread of the institution over the unoccupied territory, and the ac- quisition of slave-holdin- g countries outside of the Union. Mr. Dana's first book was a volume of stories translated from the German, entitled "the Black Ant" (New York and Leipsic. 1848). In 1855 he planned and edited, with George Ripley, the "New American Cyclopedia." The or- iginal edition was completed in 1863. It has since been thoroughly revised and issued in a new edition under the title of "The American Cyclopedia" (16 volumes, New York, 1873-76- ). With General James H. Wilson he wrote a life of Ulysses S. Grant (Springfield, 1868). His "Household Book of Poetry," a collection of the best minor poems of the English lan- guage, was first published in 1857 and has passed through many editions, the latest, thoroughly revised, being that of 1884. "He also edited, with Rossiter Johnson, "Fifty Perfect Poems," (New York, 1883). In 1S68 Mr. Dana organized a stock company that bought out the New York Sun, whose editor he became. Mr. Dana, the Nestor of American journalism, was trenchant and sarcas- tic; as a critic, able and opinionated; as a politician, bitter and erratic, writh a constant eye to business. His ability and industry were unquestioned. He remained in control of the Sun up to his fatal illness. 1 v .J I More Yellow Fever. NEW ORLEANS (La.), October 20. All previous records as to the number of new cases of yellow fever were broken today. Early In the evening fifty-thre- e new cases had been entered on the books of the Board. At the same time there had been six deaths. These had all occurred during the early morning hours, and It was char acteristic of the day's events that al- though there, had been six deaths re- ported up to 7 o'clock not a single one of them had occurred since noon. The weather today has been not unlike that of the entire week. It has been cool and sultry during the nights and early mornings and especially calcu- lated to produce fatalities. Of the deaths today two or thre were the result of poor treatment. FOR THE CABINET. Nathan GoflT or W. J. CaHiouuMay Bo Attorney-Genera- l. NEW YORK, October 15. A special to the Press from Washington says: In the retirement of Justice Stephen Field the opportunity is given for the Kenna to the Supreme bench, but the vacancy in the Cabinet will not cause V-- a general reorganization of the Presi dent's official family. Nathan Goff of West Virginia, .who served In Congress with Mr. McKin- - ley, and who declined In February last to leave the United States Circuit bench for the Cabinet, has again re ceived an offer, of the position of At-- . torney-Genera- l. It is not believed he will accept. W. J. Calhoun of Illinois, who was Special Commissioner to Cuba, Is next in President McKInley's mind for Mr. v McKenna's place. It will be remem- bered that Mr. Calhoun, after his re- port on the Cuban situation, declined the Controllershlp of the Treasury. INDEFINATE LEAVE. L.I Hung Chans; Given an Extended Leave of Absence. TACOMA, October 17 Li Hung Chang has obtained from the Chinese Emperor an indefinite leave of absence from his official duties as Grand Sec- retary of the Inner State Council at Peking, on account of ill-heal- th. For two or three months his rheumatism and other maladies have been getting worse, and he now "desires to retlro permanently, leaving the carrying out of reforms in China to a younger statesman. OFFICE: Corner King and Bethel Streets. Dr. C. B. High Dentist Philadelphia Dental College 1892. Masonic Temple. Telephone 318. A. C. WALL, D. D. S. Dentist. iiOVE BUILDING, Fort Street fil. E. GROSSMAN, D.D.S. Dentist. 8 HOTEL STREET. HONOLULU. Office Hours: 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. DR. A. J. DERBY. Dentist. CORNER FORT AND HOTEL STS. MOTT-SMIT- H BLOCK. Telephones: Office., 615; Residence, 789. Hours: 9 to 4. CEO. H. HUDDY, D.D.S. Dentist. fORT STREET, OPPOSITE CATHO- LIC MISSION. Hours: From 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. DRS. WAUGHOP & WAUGHOP. OFFICE: Masonic Temple. Tel- ephone 943. RESIDENCE: 416 Punchbowl St John W. Waughop, M. D. 9 to 11, 2 to 4, 7 to 8. Sundays 9:30 to 10:30. Philip R. Waughop, M. D.ll to 1, 4 to 5:30. Sudays 2 to 3. C. L. GARVIN, M.D. Office: With Dr. F. R. Day, Beretania Street, near Fort Office Hours: 1 to 4 p. m. . Residence Telephone, No. 393. DR. G. WALDO BURGESS. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Residence: 438 Punchbowl St. Tel. 852. Hours: 10 to 12 a. m.; 1 to 3 and 7 to 7:30 p. m. dr. t. McMillan. Of the Royal Colleges of Physicians and Surgeons of Edinburgh, Etc OFFICE: Beretania Street, Opposite Hawaiian Hotel. HOURS: 9 to 10 a. m., 1 to 3 and 7 to 8 p. m. Telephone 244. samuel j. macd0nald. Counsellor at Law 204 MERCHANT ST. (One Door from Fort Street.) Honolulu. J. L. KAULUKOU. J. M. KANEAKUA. KAULUKOU & KANEAKUA. Attorneys at Law and notaries Public Also, Titles to lands in any part of the Republic of Hawaii are searched and per- fect abstracts therefor are furnished. Office: Occidental Hotel, Cor. Klne& Alakea Sts LYLE A. DICKEY. Attorney at Law. 14 KAAHUMANU STREET. Telephone, 682. william c. parke. Attorney at Law AND AGENT TO TAKE ACKNOWLEDG- MENTS. Office: Kaahumanu St., Honolulu. LEWERS & COOKE, Successors to Lewers & Dickson. Importers and Dealers In Lumber And All Kinds of Building Material. NO. 82 FORT ST.. : : HONOLULU. f . O. Box Telephone 480 0 2 478 New and First-Cla- ss SECOND-HAN- D FURNITURE OF ALL KINDS-SO- LD CHEAP FOR CASH. Highest Cash Price paid for Second-Han- d Furniture at g Corner Kin5 and Nuuanu Streets. Princess Kaiulani anfl Her Fattier - ArriTB on the Paris, IT IS HOT A POLITICAL VISIT Mr. Cleghorn Announces to the Press. They Will Sail From San Fran-cls- co on Australia of November 2d. NEW YORK, N.V., Oct. 16. Hawai- ian Princess Kaiulani, niece of ex-Que- en Liliuokalani, arrived on the American line steamship Paris today. She figured on the passenger list under her English name of Cleghorn and was accompanied by her father, A. S. Cleg horn. The Princess is tall,; willowy and very fair, with big, wistful eyes. She wears a simple gown of black with collar and revers in broad stripes in black and white and inside cuffs to match. The Hawaiians will be at the Hotel Albemarle until next Thursday, when they go direct to San Francisco and thence to Honolulu by the steam ship Australia. Mr. Cleghorn said: "We are not meddling with Hawaiian politics. We are not in politics. We are not going to Washington as reported to protest against the annexation of Hawaii, but if the question were put to a vote of the islands, not one in ten would be found to favor it. What they want is not annexation, but the moral Support of an American protectorate." He also said that the Princess was not going to Hawaii to claim a throne. He said they would leave San Francis co on November 2 on the Australia for Hawaii. SENATOR MORGAN RETURNS. Much Pleased With Ills Trip to the Hawaiian Islands. The Call of October 20th says: Sen ator John T. Morgan of Alabama, who went to Hawaii an annexationist, re turned from the Islands yesterday strongly confirmed in his opinion. He spent several weeks on the Isl and of Oahu and practically all of his time in the city of Honolulu. The Misses Mary E. and Cornelia I. Mor gan, who accompanied their father, took the opportunity to see the differ ent Islands, enjoy their beautiful scen- ery and visit the sugar plantations and the young coffee groves. In Honolulu three large receptions were given in honor of Senator Mor gan one by United States Minister Sewall, one by Mr. Ballou, whose guest he was, and one by President Dole, at which there were over 3,000 persons. The Morgans are at the Occidental Hotel, where they will remain until Saturday or Sunday. Then they will resume their journey to their home In Selma, Ala. They will visit on the way San Diego and St. Louis. Of his investigations in Hawaii Sen- ator Morgan said: "Annexation would be the best thing for us and the best thing for Hawaii. Hawaii could sustain a population of 2,000,000 without any of them being in want of the essential comforts of life." 4 MAY GO NOW TO HAWAII. . The Adams Put Back to L.and the 111 Surgeon. A dispatch from Washington says that t the Navy Department has been informed by telegraph that the U. S. S. Adams, which left San' Francisco a day or two ago on a cruise, had returned to that city in order to land and place in the hospital the surgeon, Dr. Stone, who had been taken suddenly ill. The vessel was to start away again imme- diately. She was bound originally for Mazatlan and other points on the lower Pacific Coast, and thence she was to cross to Hilo, on the Island of Hawaii. Probably owing to the loss of time in returning to San Francisco the Adams will now proceed directly to Hawaii. Her movements have no significance, inasmuch as she is a training ship for apprentices, who make up her crew, and her cruises are arranged without reference to the Navy Department. Sir Edwlti Weds a Japanese. LONDON, October 18. The particu- lars obtainable concerning the mar- - A. Daia Dies at His Home in Glen Cove, N. Y. HAD EXTRAORDINARY INFLUENCE Was for Many Years Edi-to- r of the Sun. Fatal Illness Comes Upon Him at His Summer Residence on Loner Island. NEW YORK, October 17. Charles A. Dana, editor of the New York Sun, died at 1:20 o'clock this afternoon at his home, at Glen Cove, Long Island. The cause of Mr. Dana's death was! cirrhosis of the liver. On June 9th he j CHARLES was at his office apparently strong and healthy. The next day he was taken ill and he never afterwards visited New York. His death had been ex- pected for several hours, and his fam- ily and physicians were at his bedside when the end came. His condition had been such for several months that the members of his family had kept them- selves in constant readiness to go to his bedside at any moment. Charles Anderson Dana was born in Hinsdale, N. H., August 8, 1819. He was a descendant of Jacob, eldest son of Richard Dana. His boyhood was spent in Buffalo, N. Y., where he worked in a store until he was 18 years old. At that age he first studied the Latin grammar and prepared him- self for college, entering Harvard in 1839, but after two years a serious trouble with his eyesight compelled him to leave. He received an honor- able dismissal, and was afterward giv- en his bachelor's and master's degrees. In 1S42 he became a member of the Brook Farm Association, being asso- ciated with George and Sophia Ripley, George William Curtis, Nathaniel Haw- thorne, Theodore Parker, William Henry Channing, John Sullivan Dwight, Margaret Fuller and other philosophers. His earliest newspaper experience was gained in the management of the Harbinger, which was devoted to so- cial reform and general literature. After about two years of editorial work on Elizur Wright's Boston Chronotype, a daily newspaper, Mr. Dana joined the staff of the New York Tribune in 1847. The next year he spent eight months in Europe, and af- ter his return he became one of the proprietors and the managing editor of the Tribune, a post which he held until April 1, 1S62. The extraordinary influence and circulation attained by that newspaper during the years pre- - it is reported uy tne native pa.p?r-,J- k at Peking that Li Hung Chang Uftvgl continue to ask for sick leave urjtjj' the Emperor gives him permission to-'- t GUIDE IB THROUGH HAWAII. BEAUTIFULLY ILLUSTRATED. FOR SALE BY ALL NEWSDEALERS WOMAN'S EXCHANGE. 215 Merchant St. Hawaiian and Micronesian curios in great variety lauhala and cocoanut hats, calabashes, fans, hula drums, seed and shell leis, etc, etc. Home- made poi, jellies and jams a specialty. Floral designs or cut flowers furnished on half a day's notice. Manicuring and glove cleaning. Tel. 659. Best Mineral Water in the Market. E. R. ADAMS, Telephone 184. ' 4-0-7 Fort St. H. HACKFELD & CO. Ml Man Agents, Corner Fort and Queen Sts., Honolulu. VI. W. McCHESNEY & SONS -:- - WHOLESALE GROCERS AND DEALERS IN -:- - Leather and Shoe Findings. AGENTS Honolulu Soap Works Company and Honolulu Tannery. LEWIS & CO., line ono Riii b 111 FORT STREET. Telephone, 240. : : P. O. Box, 29. JOHN A. BAKER. Office with A. G. M. Robertson, Mer- chant Street, opposite Post Office. Real Estate Broker, Collector and Employment Agent. O. B. BRADDICK, Stenographer. Law Cases, Depositions, Etc., Reported. Correspondence Given Utmost Secrecy and Despatch. With Paul Neumann. : Telephone, 415. CHARLES F. PETERSON. Attorney at Law AND NOTARY PUBLIC. 15 Kaahumanu St. i only Gipleie Pfioif opli Parlor IN HONOLULU. J. J. WILLIAMS, The Photographer. FORT STREET, : : HONOLULU. HONOLULU IRON WORKS CO., Steam Engines, BOILERS, SUGAR MILLS, COOLERS, BRASS AND LEAD CASTINGS, And machinery of every description made to order. Particular attention paid to ship's blacksmlthing. Job work executed on the shortest notice. COOK'S MUSIC SCHOOL Piano, Voice, Singing, and Harmony. Love Bldg., Fort St E. COOK. Thurston Talks for Annexation. ST. LOUIS, Mo., October 15. Lorrin A. DANA. A. Thurston, Special Minister to the United States from Hawaii, spoke be- fore the Economics Club on the sub- ject of annexing the Islands to the United States. He spoke at the Mer- chants' Exchange today on the same subject. WILLIAM TO VISIT VICTORIA. The Two Hulers Have About Come to an Understanding. LONDON, October 16. The rap- prochement between Queen Victoria and her grandson, Emperor William of Germany, is proceeding apace, and it is now highly probable that His Majesty will pay a brief visit to Bal- moral in November, traveling on his yacht from Kiel to Aberdeen. In connection with the Emperor's yacht, it is said Queen Victoria is so enamored of the internal arrange ments of the Hohenzollern that she has ordered the plans of the latter to be adopted in building the new royal yacht, which has just been commenced. BALTIMORE NEARLY READY. The Cruiser Will Como Down From Mare Island Today VALLEJO, October 19 The United States steamer Baltimore, which has been lying at Mare island for several days taking on ammunition and stores, completed the former this afternoon, and at 4:30 o'clock an order was issued to the clerks of the storehouse from Commandant Kirkland to use all haste in putting on the remainder of the stores. The storehouse workmen were ordered to return to the navy yard at 6 o'clock, after supper, and continue the work until it was finished. It is expect- ed that this will necessitate working till midnight. Captain N. M. Dyer of the Baltimore has been ordered to pro- ceed to San Francisco early tomorrow morning. The ship will finish coaling in San Francisco. permanently reside at his home, ct An Hin. The rebellion in the Huan and Ku-ang- si provinces is assuming more seri- ous proportions. Government agents who reached Canton last report that bands of Insurgents, aggregating 15,'-0-00 men, are now laying waste those provinces and doing everything possi- ble to overthrow the existing Govern- ment. In August one gang broke through the city walls of Kwong Yang and massacred hundreds of the inhab- itants. 4 THE CABINET'S RESIGNATION. Reasons AsMhrned for Intervention of United State. NEW YORK, October 14. The Her- ald says It has come into the posses- sion of important facts which, if true, lay bare the diplomatic relations be- tween this country and Spain with reference to Cuba. They also explain the real situation in Spain why there was a change of Ministry and what the policy of the new Cabinet will be to- ward this country and in the prosecu- tion of war in the colonies. The exact nature of Minister Wood- - Royal makes the food pure, wholesome and delicious. Absolutely Puro OOVAl BAktNO POWOfH CO.. NfW VOWK. "":'v.

Transcript of FIVE J. Q. WOOD. SPECIAL IN at...

Page 1: FIVE J. Q. WOOD. SPECIAL IN at EDITORevols.library.manoa.hawaii.edu/bitstream/10524/41657/1/1897102801.pdf · "He also edited, with Rossiter Johnson, "Fifty Perfect Poems," (New York,

l,

'v V Vh 1 1

Established Jaly 44, IS.V.

iVOL. XXVL, NO. 4750. HONOLULU, HAWAIIAN ISLANDS, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 2S, 1897. PRICE FIVE CENTO.

NOW IN NEW YORKA NOTED EDITORJ. Q. WOOD.

Attorney at Law,

notary public.

riage Saturday of Sir Edwin Arnold,the poet and editor, to a Japanese lady,show that the ceremony took place atSt Matliias Church, Earlscourt, thiscity, in the presence of Sir Edwin'sbrother, Sir Arthur Arnold, chairmanof the London County Council, theJapanese Minister and their wives.Sir Edwin and Lady Arnold will resideon Bolter Gardens, this city. The bridewas brought from Japan and was edu-cated in England. Her name is notmentioned.

SPECIAL BUSINESS ITEMS.

IF YOU BUY A SINGER,You will receive careful instruction

from a competent teacher at yourhome.

You can obtain necessary accessoriesdirect from the company's offices.

You will get prompt attention in anypart of the world, as our offices are ev-erywhere and we give careful attentionto all customers, no matter where themachine may have been purchased.

You will be dealing with the leadingcompany in the sewing machine busi-ness, having an unequalled experienceand an unrivalled reputation thestrongest guarantee of excellence.

Sold on easy payments. Repairingdone. B. BERGERSEN, Agent

16 Bethel Street, Honolulu.

The City Carriage Company possessonly first-cla- ss hacks and employ onlycareful, steady drivers.

Carriages at all hours.Telephone 113.

JOHN S. ANDRADE.

ceding the civil war was in a degreeclue to the development of Mr. Dana'sgenius for journalism.

, The great struggle of the Tribuneunder Greeley and Dana was not somuch for the overthrow of slaverywhere it already existed as against thefurther spread of the institution overthe unoccupied territory, and the ac-quisition of slave-holdin- g countriesoutside of the Union.

Mr. Dana's first book was a volumeof stories translated from the German,entitled "the Black Ant" (New Yorkand Leipsic. 1848). In 1855 he plannedand edited, with George Ripley, the"New American Cyclopedia." The or-

iginal edition was completed in 1863.It has since been thoroughly revisedand issued in a new edition under thetitle of "The American Cyclopedia"(16 volumes, New York, 1873-76- ).

With General James H. Wilson hewrote a life of Ulysses S. Grant(Springfield, 1868). His "HouseholdBook of Poetry," a collection of thebest minor poems of the English lan-guage, was first published in 1857 andhas passed through many editions, thelatest, thoroughly revised, being thatof 1884. "He also edited, with RossiterJohnson, "Fifty Perfect Poems," (NewYork, 1883).

In 1S68 Mr. Dana organized a stockcompany that bought out the NewYork Sun, whose editor he became.Mr. Dana, the Nestor of Americanjournalism, was trenchant and sarcas-tic; as a critic, able and opinionated;as a politician, bitter and erratic, writha constant eye to business. His abilityand industry were unquestioned. Heremained in control of the Sun up tohis fatal illness.

1 v

.J I

More Yellow Fever.NEW ORLEANS (La.), October 20.

All previous records as to the numberof new cases of yellow fever werebroken today. Early In the eveningfifty-thre- e new cases had been enteredon the books of the Board. At thesame time there had been six deaths.These had all occurred during theearly morning hours, and It was characteristic of the day's events that al-though there, had been six deaths re-ported up to 7 o'clock not a single oneof them had occurred since noon. Theweather today has been not unlikethat of the entire week. It has beencool and sultry during the nights andearly mornings and especially calcu-lated to produce fatalities. Of thedeaths today two or thre were theresult of poor treatment.

FOR THE CABINET.

Nathan GoflT or W. J. CaHiouuMayBo Attorney-Genera- l.

NEW YORK, October 15. A specialto the Press from Washington says:In the retirement of Justice StephenField the opportunity is given for the

Kenna to the Supreme bench, but thevacancy in the Cabinet will not cause V-- a

general reorganization of the President's official family.

Nathan Goff of West Virginia, .whoserved In Congress with Mr. McKin- -ley, and who declined In February lastto leave the United States Circuitbench for the Cabinet, has again received an offer, of the position of At-- .

torney-Genera- l. It is not believed hewill accept.

W. J. Calhoun of Illinois, who wasSpecial Commissioner to Cuba, Is nextin President McKInley's mind for Mr. v

McKenna's place. It will be remem-bered that Mr. Calhoun, after his re-port on the Cuban situation, declinedthe Controllershlp of the Treasury.

INDEFINATE LEAVE.L.I Hung Chans; Given an Extended

Leave of Absence.TACOMA, October 17 Li Hung

Chang has obtained from the ChineseEmperor an indefinite leave of absencefrom his official duties as Grand Sec-retary of the Inner State Council atPeking, on account of ill-heal- th. Fortwo or three months his rheumatismand other maladies have been gettingworse, and he now "desires to retlropermanently, leaving the carrying outof reforms in China to a youngerstatesman.

OFFICE: Corner King and BethelStreets.

Dr. C. B. HighDentist

Philadelphia Dental College 1892.

Masonic Temple. Telephone 318.

A. C. WALL, D. D. S.

Dentist.iiOVE BUILDING, Fort Street

fil. E. GROSSMAN, D.D.S.

Dentist.8 HOTEL STREET. HONOLULU.

Office Hours: 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.

DR. A. J. DERBY.Dentist.

CORNER FORT AND HOTEL STS.MOTT-SMIT- H BLOCK.

Telephones: Office., 615; Residence, 789.Hours: 9 to 4.

CEO. H. HUDDY, D.D.S.

Dentist.fORT STREET, OPPOSITE CATHO-

LIC MISSION.

Hours: From 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.

DRS. WAUGHOP & WAUGHOP.

OFFICE: Masonic Temple. Tel-ephone 943.

RESIDENCE: 416 Punchbowl StJohn W. Waughop, M. D. 9 to 11,

2 to 4, 7 to 8. Sundays 9:30 to 10:30.Philip R. Waughop, M. D.ll to 1,

4 to 5:30. Sudays 2 to 3.

C. L. GARVIN, M.D.

Office: With Dr. F. R. Day,Beretania Street, near Fort

Office Hours: 1 to 4 p. m.. Residence Telephone, No. 393.

DR. G. WALDO BURGESS.

PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON

Residence: 438 Punchbowl St. Tel. 852.Hours: 10 to 12 a. m.; 1 to 3 and

7 to 7:30 p. m.

dr. t. McMillan.Of the Royal Colleges of Physicians

and Surgeons of Edinburgh, EtcOFFICE: Beretania Street, Opposite

Hawaiian Hotel.HOURS: 9 to 10 a. m., 1 to 3 and 7 to 8

p. m. Telephone 244.

samuel j. macd0nald.Counsellor at Law

204 MERCHANT ST.(One Door from Fort Street.)

Honolulu.

J. L. KAULUKOU. J. M. KANEAKUA.

KAULUKOU & KANEAKUA.Attorneys at Law and notaries Public

Also, Titles to lands in any part of theRepublic of Hawaii are searched and per-fect abstracts therefor are furnished.Office: Occidental Hotel, Cor. Klne& Alakea Sts

LYLE A. DICKEY.Attorney at Law.

14 KAAHUMANU STREET.Telephone, 682.

william c. parke.Attorney at Law

ANDAGENT TO TAKE ACKNOWLEDG-

MENTS.Office: Kaahumanu St., Honolulu.

LEWERS & COOKE,Successors to Lewers & Dickson.

Importers and Dealers In LumberAnd All Kinds of Building Material.NO. 82 FORT ST.. : : HONOLULU.

f. O. Box Telephone480 0 2 478

New and First-Cla- ss

SECOND-HAN- D FURNITUREOF ALL KINDS-SO- LD

CHEAP FOR CASH.

Highest Cash Price paid for Second-Han- d

Furniture at g Corner Kin5and Nuuanu Streets.

Princess Kaiulani anfl Her Fattier

- ArriTB on the Paris,

IT IS HOT A POLITICAL VISIT

Mr. Cleghorn Announcesto the Press.

They Will Sail From San Fran-cls- co

on Australia ofNovember 2d.

NEW YORK, N.V., Oct. 16. Hawai-ian Princess Kaiulani, niece of ex-Que- en

Liliuokalani, arrived on theAmerican line steamship Paris today.She figured on the passenger list underher English name of Cleghorn and wasaccompanied by her father, A. S. Cleghorn. The Princess is tall,; willowyand very fair, with big, wistful eyes.She wears a simple gown of black withcollar and revers in broad stripes inblack and white and inside cuffs tomatch. The Hawaiians will be at theHotel Albemarle until next Thursday,when they go direct to San Franciscoand thence to Honolulu by the steamship Australia.

Mr. Cleghorn said: "We are notmeddling with Hawaiian politics. Weare not in politics. We are not goingto Washington as reported to protestagainst the annexation of Hawaii, butif the question were put to a vote ofthe islands, not one in ten would befound to favor it. What they want isnot annexation, but the moral Supportof an American protectorate."

He also said that the Princess wasnot going to Hawaii to claim a throne.He said they would leave San Francisco on November 2 on the Australia forHawaii.

SENATOR MORGAN RETURNS.Much Pleased With Ills Trip to

the Hawaiian Islands.The Call of October 20th says: Sen

ator John T. Morgan of Alabama, whowent to Hawaii an annexationist, returned from the Islands yesterdaystrongly confirmed in his opinion.

He spent several weeks on the Island of Oahu and practically all of histime in the city of Honolulu. TheMisses Mary E. and Cornelia I. Morgan, who accompanied their father,took the opportunity to see the different Islands, enjoy their beautiful scen-ery and visit the sugar plantations andthe young coffee groves.

In Honolulu three large receptionswere given in honor of Senator Morgan one by United States MinisterSewall, one by Mr. Ballou, whoseguest he was, and one by PresidentDole, at which there were over 3,000persons.

The Morgans are at the OccidentalHotel, where they will remain untilSaturday or Sunday. Then they willresume their journey to their home InSelma, Ala. They will visit on the waySan Diego and St. Louis.

Of his investigations in Hawaii Sen-ator Morgan said:

"Annexation would be the best thingfor us and the best thing for Hawaii.Hawaii could sustain a population of2,000,000 without any of them being inwant of the essential comforts of life."

4

MAY GO NOW TO HAWAII. .

The Adams Put Back to L.and the111 Surgeon.

A dispatch from Washington saysthat t the Navy Department has beeninformed by telegraph that the U. S. S.Adams, which left San' Francisco a dayor two ago on a cruise, had returnedto that city in order to land and placein the hospital the surgeon, Dr. Stone,who had been taken suddenly ill. Thevessel was to start away again imme-diately. She was bound originally forMazatlan and other points on the lowerPacific Coast, and thence she was tocross to Hilo, on the Island of Hawaii.Probably owing to the loss of time inreturning to San Francisco the Adamswill now proceed directly to Hawaii.Her movements have no significance,inasmuch as she is a training ship forapprentices, who make up her crew,and her cruises are arranged withoutreference to the Navy Department.

Sir Edwlti Weds a Japanese.LONDON, October 18. The particu-

lars obtainable concerning the mar--

A. Daia Dies at His

Home in Glen Cove, N. Y.

HAD EXTRAORDINARY INFLUENCE

Was for Many Years Edi-to- r

of the Sun.

Fatal Illness Comes Upon Him atHis Summer Residence

on Loner Island.

NEW YORK, October 17. CharlesA. Dana, editor of the New York Sun,died at 1:20 o'clock this afternoon athis home, at Glen Cove, Long Island.

The cause of Mr. Dana's death was!cirrhosis of the liver. On June 9th he j

CHARLESwas at his office apparently strong andhealthy. The next day he was takenill and he never afterwards visitedNew York. His death had been ex-

pected for several hours, and his fam-ily and physicians were at his bedsidewhen the end came. His condition hadbeen such for several months that themembers of his family had kept them-selves in constant readiness to go tohis bedside at any moment.

Charles Anderson Dana was born inHinsdale, N. H., August 8, 1819. Hewas a descendant of Jacob, eldest sonof Richard Dana. His boyhood wasspent in Buffalo, N. Y., where heworked in a store until he was 18years old. At that age he first studiedthe Latin grammar and prepared him-self for college, entering Harvard in1839, but after two years a serioustrouble with his eyesight compelledhim to leave. He received an honor-able dismissal, and was afterward giv-en his bachelor's and master's degrees.In 1S42 he became a member of theBrook Farm Association, being asso-ciated with George and Sophia Ripley,George William Curtis, Nathaniel Haw-thorne, Theodore Parker, WilliamHenry Channing, John SullivanDwight, Margaret Fuller and otherphilosophers.

His earliest newspaper experiencewas gained in the management of theHarbinger, which was devoted to so-

cial reform and general literature.After about two years of editorialwork on Elizur Wright's BostonChronotype, a daily newspaper, Mr.Dana joined the staff of the New YorkTribune in 1847. The next year hespent eight months in Europe, and af-ter his return he became one of theproprietors and the managing editorof the Tribune, a post which he helduntil April 1, 1S62. The extraordinaryinfluence and circulation attained bythat newspaper during the years pre- -

it is reported uy tne native pa.p?r-,J- k

at Peking that Li Hung Chang Uftvglcontinue to ask for sick leave urjtjj'the Emperor gives him permission to-'-

t GUIDEIB THROUGHHAWAII.

BEAUTIFULLY ILLUSTRATED.

FOR SALE BY ALL NEWSDEALERS

WOMAN'S EXCHANGE.215 Merchant St.

Hawaiian and Micronesian curios ingreat variety lauhala and cocoanuthats, calabashes, fans, hula drums,seed and shell leis, etc, etc. Home-made poi, jellies and jams a specialty.Floral designs or cut flowers furnishedon half a day's notice. Manicuringand glove cleaning.Tel. 659.

Best Mineral Water inthe Market.

E. R. ADAMS,Telephone 184. '

4-0-7 Fort St.

H. HACKFELD & CO.

Ml Man Agents,

Corner Fort and Queen Sts., Honolulu.

VI. W. McCHESNEY & SONS-:- - WHOLESALE GROCERS

AND DEALERS IN -:- -

Leather andShoe Findings.AGENTS

Honolulu Soap Works Company andHonolulu Tannery.

LEWIS & CO.,

line ono Riii b111 FORT STREET.

Telephone, 240. : : P. O. Box, 29.

JOHN A. BAKER.Office with A. G. M. Robertson, Mer-

chant Street, opposite Post Office.

Real Estate Broker, Collector andEmployment Agent.

O. B. BRADDICK,Stenographer.

Law Cases, Depositions, Etc., Reported.Correspondence Given Utmost

Secrecy and Despatch.With Paul Neumann. : Telephone, 415.

CHARLES F. PETERSON.

Attorney at LawAND

NOTARY PUBLIC.15 Kaahumanu St.

i only Gipleie Pfioif opli Parlor

IN HONOLULU.

J. J. WILLIAMS, The Photographer.

FORT STREET, : : HONOLULU.

HONOLULU IRON WORKS CO.,Steam Engines,

BOILERS, SUGAR MILLS, COOLERS,BRASS AND LEAD CASTINGS,

And machinery of every descriptionmade to order. Particular attentionpaid to ship's blacksmlthing. Jobwork executed on the shortest notice.

COOK'S MUSIC SCHOOL

Piano, Voice, Singing,and Harmony.

Love Bldg., Fort St E. COOK.

Thurston Talks for Annexation.ST. LOUIS, Mo., October 15. Lorrin

A. DANA.

A. Thurston, Special Minister to theUnited States from Hawaii, spoke be-

fore the Economics Club on the sub-ject of annexing the Islands to theUnited States. He spoke at the Mer-chants' Exchange today on the samesubject.

WILLIAM TO VISIT VICTORIA.The Two Hulers Have About Come

to an Understanding.LONDON, October 16. The rap-

prochement between Queen Victoriaand her grandson, Emperor Williamof Germany, is proceeding apace, andit is now highly probable that HisMajesty will pay a brief visit to Bal-moral in November, traveling on hisyacht from Kiel to Aberdeen.

In connection with the Emperor'syacht, it is said Queen Victoria is soenamored of the internal arrangements of the Hohenzollern that shehas ordered the plans of the latter tobe adopted in building the new royalyacht, which has just been commenced.

BALTIMORE NEARLY READY.The Cruiser Will Como Down From

Mare Island TodayVALLEJO, October 19 The United

States steamer Baltimore, which hasbeen lying at Mare island for severaldays taking on ammunition and stores,completed the former this afternoon,and at 4:30 o'clock an order was issuedto the clerks of the storehouse fromCommandant Kirkland to use all hastein putting on the remainder of thestores. The storehouse workmen wereordered to return to the navy yard at 6o'clock, after supper, and continue thework until it was finished. It is expect-ed that this will necessitate workingtill midnight. Captain N. M. Dyer ofthe Baltimore has been ordered to pro-ceed to San Francisco early tomorrowmorning. The ship will finish coalingin San Francisco.

permanently reside at his home, ct AnHin.

The rebellion in the Huan and Ku-ang- si

provinces is assuming more seri-ous proportions. Government agentswho reached Canton last report thatbands of Insurgents, aggregating 15,'-0-00

men, are now laying waste thoseprovinces and doing everything possi-ble to overthrow the existing Govern-ment. In August one gang brokethrough the city walls of Kwong Yangand massacred hundreds of the inhab-itants.

4THE CABINET'S RESIGNATION.

Reasons AsMhrned for Interventionof United State.

NEW YORK, October 14. The Her-

ald says It has come into the posses-

sion of important facts which, if true,lay bare the diplomatic relations be-

tween this country and Spain withreference to Cuba. They also explainthe real situation in Spain why therewas a change of Ministry and what thepolicy of the new Cabinet will be to-

ward this country and in the prosecu-tion of war in the colonies.

The exact nature of Minister Wood--

Royal makes the food pure,wholesome and delicious.

Absolutely Puro

OOVAl BAktNO POWOfH CO.. NfW VOWK.

"":'v.

Page 2: FIVE J. Q. WOOD. SPECIAL IN at EDITORevols.library.manoa.hawaii.edu/bitstream/10524/41657/1/1897102801.pdf · "He also edited, with Rossiter Johnson, "Fifty Perfect Poems," (New York,

THE PACIFIC COMMERCIAL ADVERTISER : HONOLULU, OCTOBER 2S 1897.

pened four times. In the second half AT- -ford's instructions from President Mc-Kinl- ey

to the Spanish Queen is em-

bodied in a statement that however--anxious the President might be tomaintain kindly relations between theUnited States and Spain he cannotreeulate the actions of Congress, which

wr'MBS0RDAWSA Chance for the Children.

We have just received a few dozen of theneatest thing in the wav of a WIRE JUMPINGROPE, and we are going to sell ail of this lotat Ten Cents Each. The regular price in New

York stores on this article is 15 cents, and un-

der usual conditions would cost more than thathere; but this lot goes for 10 but only a fewdozen. Let the little ones Skip and hi happy.

E. 0. Hall & Son, LI

Bramd New Bicycles

For Reet!AH Descriptions of Repair Work

Executed by a PracticalMachinist.

J. T. LUND, Fort Street,Opp. Club Stables.

Startling Announcement!The next Australia, Nov. 9th, will bring us a large shipment of wheels.

Our space is limited and we must make room for them. We are going to giveyou a chance to secure a HIGH GRADE WHEEL at the price of a low gradewheel. It will be the chance of a lifetime, but will last only until Nov. 9th.First come, First served.

"Overland Specials" $85. Grade, S65."Sylphs" - - $100. Grade, - - $75.

Honolulu Bicycle Company.Telephone 909. DOll'T MISTAKE THE PLACE. 409 Fort St.

When Gambrinus, on a keg of beer, unfurled hisstandard to the air he looked around the place and said:

Schlitz Is Boat!

three touchdowns were scored, two ofthem owing to poor passing by New-ton's quarter-bac- k. Cochran kickedevery goal. The playing of the Harvardteam showed a marked improvementin offensive work.

PHILADELPHIA. October 20. ThePennsylvania football team, composedof seven regulars and four substitutes,defeated the State College team thisafternoon, 20 to 0, in twenty-minut- e

halves. Three touchdowns were madein the first half and two in the second.The heavy rain of last night and todayput the grounds in bad condition.Gains through the lines, by Pennsyl-vania's comparatively light team werealmost impossible.

KAISEK AND CZAR MEET.Russia's Ruler Visits the Emperor

of the Germans.WIESBADEN, October 20 The Czar

and the Grand Duke of Hesse arrivedhere at 12:30 p. m. on a visit to Em-peror William. They were met at therailroad depot by His Majesty and thePrince of Schaumberg-Lipp- e. The twoEmperors cordially embraced andkissed each other. After the usual pre-sentations their Majesties drove to thecastle, warmly cheered by the crowdslining the route.

DARMSTADT, October 20. TheCzar and the Grand Duke of Hesse re-

turned here this afternoon from Wies-baden, where they visited EmperorWilliam. The latter will return theirvisit tomorrow.

4

Russia's Great Port.VLADIVOSTOK, October 15. The

foundation stone of what is intendedto be the great commercial port ofRussia in this part of the world, waslaid today with considerable cere-mony.

If you visit Egan thisweek, you will see the latestfads and novelties. Chiffon

fronts in black, white andcolor. Silk fronts in all

shades.

The latest thing in neckRouching, Ladies' ShoppingBags, Ladies' Chiffon andSilk Ties, White Kid Belts.A new line of Shirt Waistsin choice patterns. A large

line of Ladies' Linen Hand-chie- fs

in hemstitch and em-

broidered.

We also have a large

line of Ladies' Black Hose,

Hermsdorf dye, which weare offering at exceptionally

low prices for this week.

J. J). EQAR9Fort Street, Honolulu.

GRAND

I 60 B--AT-

CYCLOMERE PARK.

SEASON OF THREE WEEKS

Saturday, October 30,AT 2 AND 8 P.M.

DOORS OPEN AT 1 AND 7 P. M.

MATINEE: Admittance, includingGrand Stand, 25 cents.

General admission, 25c. Admissionand Grand Stand, 50c. Boxes for par-ties of six or nine.

Seats on sale at Wall, Nichols Co.

'BUSSES RUN TO THE GATES.

FOR

NATIVE

JEWELRYIN

BEAUTIFUL DESIGNS,TRY

H. Q. BIART'S.404ft FORT STREET.

(j

STAMPED DOYLIES AND TEACLOTHS, NEW PATTERNS.

HONITON AND BATTENBERG LACEBRAID.

LINEN LACE THREAD, DRAPERYSILKS.

ROMAN STRIPE AND PLAID RIB-BONS.

KID GLOVES, NEW SHADES, FULLASSORTMENT OF COLORS

AND MAKES.

SPECIAL MENTION.

We Have at the Present Time theLargest Stock Assortment of Ruga

Ever Shown In Honolulu.

All the Above Are Fresh

Importations.

E. I. JORDAN'SWo. i o sgg?T

lurata & CoCor. Nuuanu and Hotel Sts.

M 9 E3A- MATTING

atReducedPrices

CREPE SHIRTS.STRAW HATS. Murata's Straw

Hat Manufactory, Nuuanu Street,Next to Ahana's.

MURATA & Co.HONOLULU

NYW. W. Wright, Proprietor.

Carriage BuilderAND REPAIRER.

All orders from the other Islands inthe Carriage Building, Trimmings andPainting Line will meet with promptattention.

P. O. BOX 321.

128 AND 120 FORT ST.

City Feed Store.L. H. DEE & CO.

FRESH STOCK OF ALL KINDS OF

Hay, Grain and Feed,Sorghum Seed, Alfaifa

Seed, Kaffir Cornfor Seed.

ALL BRANDS OF FLOUR.

Punchbowl and Beretania Streets.Telephone 921.

Central Meat Market.214 NUUANU STREET.

CHOICE BEEF, VEAL, MUT-

TON & PORK ALWAYSON HAND.

SAUSAGES, LIVER, BREAKFASTBOLOGNE AND HEAD.

CHEESE.

H. E. CARES, Propr.TELEPHONE 104.

WING HING L0Y.

Imported Dry Goods!English, American and Chinese.

DRESSMAKINGA. Specialty. Low Prices to suit the times.

Come and see our new stock and store.NUUANU STREET, NEAR HOTEL.

(Opposite W. W. Ahana.)jylhis firm was formerly known as

Shim Ley, Fort street.Telephone 157.

1

A Model Plant Is not complete with-out Electric Power, thus dispensingwith small engines.

Why not generate your power fromone CENTRAL Station? One gener-ator can furnish power to your Pump,Centrifugals, Elevators, Plows. Rail-ways and Hoists; also, furnish lightand power for a radius of from IS to20 miles.

Electric Power being used, saves thelabor of hauling coal in your field, alsowater, and does away with high-price-d

engineers, and only have one engine tolook after In your mill.

Where water power is available itcosts nothing to generate ElectrioPower.

THE HAWAIIAN ELECTRIC COM-PANY is now ready to furnish ElectrioPlants and Generators of all descrip-tions at short notice, and also has onhand a large stock of Wire, Chande-liers and Electrical Goods.

All orders will be given prompt at-tention, and estimates furnished forLighting and Power Plants; also, at-tention is given to House and MarineWiring.

THEO. HOFFMAN, Manager.

P. C. JONES. E. A. JONES,THE

Ufll II n linn vnin iinnnnii nnnnu mill cue utuifiii uim

IRIIIMI CM!.BROKERS AND FIRE INSURANCE

AGENTS.

Stocks and Bonds bought and soldon commission.

Parties desiring to either buy or sellBonds and Stocks would do well toconsult us, as we have facilities forpurchasing or selling at the best pre-vailing market rates.

Safe Deposit Boxes to rent by themonth or year.

Money to loan on approved security.

t. II I CO., 10.Queen Street, : : Honolulu, H. L'

AGENTS FORHawaiian Agricultural Company, Ono--

mea Sugar Company, Honomu SugarCompany, Wailuku. Sugar Company,Waihee Sugar Company, Makee Su-gar Company, Haleakala Ranch Com-pany, Kapapala Ranch.

Planters' Line, San Francisco Packets;Charles Brewer & Co.'s Line of Bos-ton Packets.

Agents Boston Board of Underwrit-ers.

Agents for Philadelphia Board of Un-derwriters.

LIST OF OFFICERS:P. C. Jones, President; George H.

Robertson, Manager; E. F. Bishop,Treasurer and Secretary; Col. W. P.Allen, Auditor; C. M. Cooke, H. Water-hous- e,

G. R. Carter, Directors.

WM. C. IRWIN & CO.,LIMITED.

Wm. G. Irwin.. President and ManagesClaus Spreckels Vice PresidentW. M. Giffard. Secretary and TreasurerTheo. C. Porter... Auditor

SUGAR FACTORSAND

COMMISSON AGENTS

AGENTS FOR THEOceanic Steamship Companj

Of San Francisco, Cal.

Henry St. Goar. Edward Pollitz. -Members Stock and Bond Exchange

EDWARD POLLITM COMPANY

COMMISSION BROKERS ANDDEALERS IN INVESTMENT

SECURITIES.Particular attention given to pur-

chase and sale of Hawaiian Sugar

Bullion and Exchange. Loans Ne-gotiated. Eastern and ForeignStocks and Bonds.

403 California St, : San Francisco, CaL

BEAVER LUNCH ROOMS.Fort St, Opp. Wilder & Co..H. J. NOLTE, Prop.

First -- Class Lunches ServedGi?ger Ale or Milk. Open

from 3 a. m. till 10 p. m.Smokers' Requisites a Specialty

seems bound to take definite steps atits next session to settle the contro-versy over Cuba in one way or another. Under these circumstances theGovernment of the United States ten-

ders its best offices to mediate betweenSpain and Cuba so as to bring the warto an end on such terms aswill be hon-

orable to both parties.This Government expresses the hope

that Spain will reply by the end ofOctober, so as to give the President achance to report to Congress by thetime it convenes. Minister Woodford'sfirm but polite words notifying theQueen of the determined stand ofCongress are also believed to have hadconsiderable weight.

The real circumstances that led tothe downfall of the old Cabinet havenever been published. They are as fol-

lows: "Nearly all of the Spanish bondshave been floated in France, and recentloans were placed there, but the latestapplication for further loans has notbeen favorably responded to. The onlymeans, therefore, of raising money wasthrough the Bank of Spain, to whichapplication was made at the rate of512,000,000 a month in order to carryon the war in Cuba and the PhilippineIslands. The Bank of Spain declinedto make further advances to the Gov-

ernment The Cabinet then tried toreduce the interest rate on the bonds.Then came a howl from France. It--was the last play of the old Premier,Azcarraga, and it failed.

4

VITAL CHANGES IN THE EAST.

Klnc or Korea IIn ProclaimedIII mi-el-f Emperor.

WASHINGTON, October 15. TheKorean Legation received an official

cable today saying: "The King pro-

claimed himself Emperor from thisdate, October 15, 1897."

The King is a member of the Pro-

gressive party and shares the wish of

that party to bring Korea up to mod-

ern standards. The opposition elementis known as the Conservative party,and is desirous of preserving the oldtraditions and governmental system ofthe country. Mr. Soh, who recentlydied here, was the leading figure of theprogressive element. The present Ko-Te- an

Minister is a member of the Con-

servative party. The step taken bythe King in proclaiming himself Em-peror after today is regarded as a final

;.,8troke of the progressive and modernelement.

The change also has another aspect.China long has asserted a suzeraintyover Korea, and it was this claim thatbrought on the China-Japa- n war.While the claim is dormant, yet Chinahas never relinquished what she hasTegarded as a hereditary sovereigntyover Korea. With the latter country akingdom some apparent assent wasgiven to the claim of an imperial au-

thority by China, but Korea herself,advancing to the rank of an empire,throws off every evidence of depen-dence on any outside power.

This independence would apply alsoto Japan and Russia, which have beenseeking to gain influence and controlIn Korea, owing to that country's ex-

tensive coast line and valuable har-

bors on the North Pacific. To Russia,in particular, the acquisition of Ko-

rea's Pacific coast line has been re-

garded as of great strategic import-ance, as Russia's present ports on thePacific are closed by ice during thewinter, while those of Korea are openthe year around. The advances madeby Russia and Japan in Korea have ledto much conflict between the two coun-

tries, the last move being a protest byJapan against the assignment of Rus-

sia's officers to drill the Korean army.With Korea an empire, it is felt that

she gives unmistakable evidence toother aspiring nations that she has nointention of becoming-absorbe-

d or be-

ing a petty kingdom of any other em-

pire, but will exercise imperial au-

thority herself.ft

ON THE GRIDIRONS.i

Four Notable Games Played byEastern Collet Teams.

NEW HAVEN (Conn.), October 20.

The surprise of the season in the foot-

ball world was furnished by Brownhere today when they broke throughthe Yale line almost at will and ranup a total score of 14 points to Yales'18, scoring three touchdowns againstthe home team, the largest score evermade on the Yale field against a Yaleeleven.

Yale secured no more touchdownsthan did the visitors, but her goalkicker, Guard Cadwallader, was suc-

ceeded in trying for goal, while Hill,who made the attempt after the Browntouchdowns, failed in all but onechance.

It was a terrific sfeock for Yale to seeher line swept away by the Brownbacks after the manner in whichPrinceton found it all holes last fall,but the medicine was swallowed withthe hope that it will be beneficial.

PRINCETON (N. J.), October 20.

Princeton rolled up the biggest scoreof the season on the university gridi-

ron this afternoon and defeated thePennsylvanians by a score of 54 to 0.

Franklin and, Marshall's averageweight was 158 pounds, that of theTigers 194. At no point in the gamewas Franklin and Marshall able tohold the ball. Princeton's forwardsfrequently broke through and downedthe backs for losses. The visitorsquarter-bac-k was also slow in passingthe ball, so that several of Weisner'spunts were blocked. Throughout thegame a continual drizzle made the fieldand pigskin heavy and slippery.

CAMBRIDGE (Mass.), October 20.

Harvard defeated the Newton AthleticAssociation's eleven on Soldiers' fieldtoday, 24 to 0. In the first half Har-vard scored but once, and that was ongood long gains down the field in thefirst two minutes of play. During therest of the half the ball would be work-ed gradually down to Newton's fifteen-yar- d

line and then lost on downs andthe work began over again. This hap

There are many kinds of

But Beer

That Is Beer

Is

SCHLITZ

BEEiMACFARLANE & CO., Ltd.,

99r,Beer;

THE BEER THAT MADE

MILWAUKEE FAMOUS.t

lift EQUALLED FOR TABLE USB,

AGENTS.

SCREEN

King St., Next Castle & Cooke's.

New Goods.EX "DORIC"

SOLE

Call and SeeThe New Revolving Copper Wire

w1HD0WG. W. LINCOLN'S PATENT,

At King and Alakea Sts.

Japanese Bazaar.'K. ISOSHIMA.

Fans, Lanterns, Vases, Crockery Ware, FancyArticles in Endless Variety.

' New Hats in Latest Fashions. New Furnishing Goods. Underwear, Etc.

Page 3: FIVE J. Q. WOOD. SPECIAL IN at EDITORevols.library.manoa.hawaii.edu/bitstream/10524/41657/1/1897102801.pdf · "He also edited, with Rossiter Johnson, "Fifty Perfect Poems," (New York,

THE PACIFIC COMMERCIAL ADVERTISES : HONOLULU, OCTOBER 28 1 189T.

TO VIEW ECLIPSE (Qostom MakesGrand Introductory Sn

BEGINNING THURSDAY, OCT. 21ST. Prof. W. W. Campbell andParty on S. S. China.

TABLE$80,000 Worth-Pin- e Slices Sent Out From Lick Observatory.Will Visit Inte WARErior India.

At 40c. to 60c. on the Dollar.

btraege LawsIX tlio matter of dres. It was not so long ago that if a

man wore a white collar with a colored shirt, his friends ex

once came to the conclusion that it was an old shirt, the collar

to match which was worn out-- Now if a man were to wear, acolored collar to match his colored shirt, his friends would think

that ho was wearinpr a "back number."

The colored shirfi has become the shirt of business, and since

white collars are the proper things to wear with them they are

more popular than ever.

Wo are showing an exquisite line of colored shirts in styles

exclusively our own, each of which we can guarantee has thebest quality possible for tho money.

Tt is lust about two years ago thatthe yacht Coronet came into the har-- i OF every description, from a

bor with the Amherst astronomical spoon to a candleabrum. Consult &. . . . , , w (Si

0 our large stock.

Branch Store a largeWe make this sacrifice to secure for our Honolulu

PaThegsWright Peters & Co John Foster

manufacturers as Laird, Schober & Co..& Co., J. Wichert & Co., and other standard brands. Ae offer.

LADIES' TAN OXFORDS AT 60c. 75c and 05c PER PAIR.

LADIES' FINE FRENCH KID. TAN AND CHOCOLATE POKMlasts, with L X V Heels. Former price.

AND SOUTHERN TIES, on new

If you do not find it there, there'llparty, headed by trotessor ioaa, u

route to Japan to take an observationof the eclipse of the sun. At the sametime there were gathering at various

be very little need of looking else

where0points within a distance of a hundred15.00 and $6.00; CUT 'iO lm. .uu " 0 editions from vari- -

-D- .ES- FINE , B.ACKFHKNCH KID --,

sToUeg. and observatories ta the

opera id com t dn'oice; genteel goods, formerly sold at $4.00. ?5.00 and United States, England and France

Lots of new pieces have lately 0come in, many new wrinkles,which we will be glad to showyu- -

In another week or so, H. F.WICHMAN returns from hisannual purchasing trio, and we

S6.00. Durine this Bale will be sold at i.of 1 UC CAlrtli; " - w x .

were borne by A. C. James, on whoseyacht they came, and it was no inconsiderable sum. On the steamship Chi- - M. McINERNY.

HABERDASHER.r

0 have indications of an unusuallyattractive line of

LADIES' FINE KID OXFORDS AND SOUTHERN TIES, with commo-

n-sense toes and heels, hand-turne- d soles and patent tips; genteel andWe sell them in all sizescomfortable. Former prices from 13.00 to $5.00.

at $1-2- 5, $1.45, $1.65 and $1.95.and coin toes, cloth andFINE DONGOLA OXFORDS in narrow, square

kid top, patent tips AT 95c to $1.45.Worth more than double the price asked.

Equal bargains offered in INFANTS'. CHILDREN'S AND MISSES'

SHOES.BOYS' MEN'S SHOES of standard makes, in Ox-Blo- od, Chocolate,

Tan and Black" in new toes and standard lasts, at one-ha- lf usual prices.

first-cla- ss Shoe House in Honolulu andto maintain aIt is our purposeto sell shoes at Eastern prices. Mr. E. J. Murphy and Mr. James S. Lynch,

I management of this Branch Store, are both gen-UenT- en

of long Ixperience in the shoe business, and have been in our em-

ploy as managers of other Branch Stores for some time.We solicit the patronage of the Island people.

ForNewGoods

Years20including soma not heretofore car- -

Quality you know, we never

Inix Hon sacrifice for price, and all goodsnow on the way will be up to thefull standard; the highest gradei426 and 426 Fort St., Corner of Hotel St.

E. J. MURPHY and J. S. LYNCH, Managers.It'll be worth while waiting for

them.

."

"We have maintained a reputation second to none for ex-

cellent material and workmanship in all branches of our busi-

ness. Experience has taught us that while many dealers

may reap a big profit from "cheap and nasty" goods, there is

but one way to secure the confidence of the public and that is

by turning out only the best article. Our Harness has stood

the test of time and wo guarantee everything about it

PROF. W. W. CAMPBELL.

EX "IRMGARD:" mmna, now in port is another party,

though a small one, bound for India,

in charge of Professor Campbell of

Lick University, with the same objectin view. These expeditions are madeonce in two years; sometimes the reA New Shipment of

the Famous C. R. COLLINS.sult is satisfactory, and again it is not.

In Japan the observation was a failure,owing to cloudy weather; but in India

the chances of success are greater, ow-

ing to the percentage of clear days.

Professor Campbell was seen by a re !2n King St., near Mann St., Hoittali.TELEPHONE 662.P. O. BOX 496.

MqwqII.And Q-- t Mlloporter for the Advertiser and ques-

tioned regarding his trip. Asked re-

garding his destination he said:"We go direct to Bombay, making

direct connection at Hong Kong with at Rr o steamer, and it is so arrangediimh gig

BUDIEISER BEER.holuster & ca

that we will make but one transferbefore reaching Bombay. From thatpoint we journey to the interior aboutonn miiPs There we will find the very

okecoistsIf You Wantthe Best Wheelon the Market-b-ar

noneTake a

best location for an observation. Ourparty is a small one, consisting of mywife and Miss Beans, an amateur as-

tronomer of San Jose. When we reachour destination I will require several

esictants. and these I will procureGuaranteed to be Absolutely WithoutAdulteration- -

Cor. Fort & Merchant Sts.,from the nearest British garrison."Oh no; I do not apprehend any

personal danger. If I find there isdanger I will apply to the commandantof the nearest garrison for an escort.We have with us several tons of ap-

paratus, including 250 pounds of pho- -A CHOICEH. HACKFELD & Co., HAVE JUST RECEIVED

ASSORTMENT OFSOLE AGENTS. tographic plates, rnrougu iu

ness of the officers of the China thenlates have been stored in the baggage sirs1STOACUSE ! H

from the factories of

room where there is no aaugei ui menbeing broken through the motion of thevessel. We have five spectrescopes andfour cameras for the purpose of pho-

tographing the corona. The longest of

these is 40 feet and the shortest onefoot. With the longest I expect to se-

cure an image of the corona 14x17

inches. The course of the shadow willu b Afrina. over the Indian

ROBERT CATTON.212 Queen Street. Honolulu.

AGENT FORTHE MIRRLEES, WATSON & YARYAN CO., Ld. .

La Intimidad,J)"Crimson Rii

Quality!UC c. v' voj - j

Ocean, passing over India and endingin China somewhere about Mongolia.

La Espanola,La Africana,

Henry Clay & Bock & Co.

A Great Variety of

"This expedition of ours in me in-

terest of science and for the benefit of

Lick Observatory was arranged andthe money provided by the late CharlesF Crocker a short time before hisdeath. He took a great interest in theobservatory, and during his life as-

sisted it in many ways. This is my

first expedition, and naturally I amHighest Grade,Best Material

OUgfcir lVlcHJMliic:i y 4

WATSON, LAIDLAW & CO. ..... ... ........... .

Centrifugals and Cream Separators.JOHN FOWLER & CO. (Leeds), Ld

Steam Ploughs and Portable Railway.THE RISDON IRON WORKS General Engineering!

MARCUS MASON & CO., Coffee and Rice Machinery.J.HARRISON CARTER Disintegrators.

Catton, Neill & Co.FOUNDERS AND HACHINISTS,

213 QUEEN ST. HONOLULU,

andconcerned in the result, me ianuof the Japan party was due entirely toclimatic conditions. The chances forcloudy weather in Japan at this seasonare about nine out of ten. In India itis about one in ten, so that we arenearly certain of success. The eclipse

will occur January 22d next, and afterandStoves RangesLongest Life

of Any Wheelit is taken we will continue our jour-ney around the world, visiting all theipadinsr observatories before getting Made! OUR LIST:READback to San Jose.

"We regret the storm of this after-wnii- se

we had arranged a pro--Invite Enquiries for General Ironwork.SHIPS' BLACKSMITIIIN-G-

. gram for the day; now we will !haveIRON AND BRASS CASTINGS.

Repairs Will Be Promptly Attended to.TELEPHONE NO. 410

to crowa i. iie ecuwtomorrow." .

Professor Campbell has been at lickObservatory for the past six years, andis now second in charge. This is thefourth expedition sent out under theauspices of Lick.

KING MANHATTAN Ranges, ALPINE, BRICK and

ELECTRIC Stoves. The BOSS Range, the RIVALMANHATTAN, DERBY, NEW MEDALLION, NEWMODEL, POLO, RIVAL, TOPSY, GIPSY QUEEN,WREN, UNCLE SAM, WESTWOOD, WINTHROP, and

the MONITOR Steel Range. LAUNDRY STOVES,PANSY STOVES and RANGES, and the CelebratedCHARTER OAK STOVES and RANGES.

Choice Eggs ForHatching!

PRICE,$80.Police Court Notes

In the police court yesterday mornEggs Supplied from the Following

ON HAND:A SHIPLOAD OF

NITRATE OF SODAAn Excellent Fertilizer for

Rattoons and Early Cane,And in the Dry Season.

Advance orders filled as received fromthe wharf.

Pure-Bre- d Fowls ing the District Magistrate had a veryBrown Leghorn, White Leghorn and loncr calendar to trv. Most of the cases

?a"fd $ 7.5..?.er were postponed and nolle pross'd. Farmers' Boilers and Extra CastAndulasian and Wyandotte-Dorkin- g , !nfeb V-- nlnings for all Stoves.i

Cross, at ?3.00 per dozen; English S. cne w. r 'd until Octob er 2

G. Dorking, $5.00 per dozen; Pekin postponeDuck, $1.00 per setting of 10. FraA enner fand J;. Kb?Z ofand chargeFavors from the other Islands will fined $50 on

receive careful packing and be filled in running a gambling game,

the order in which they are received. Ka0 was sentenced to six monthsA few choice fowls for sale. imprisonment at hard labor on the

For further details address

Hawaiian Fertilizing Company

A. F. COOKE, Manager.P. O. Box 136. Honolulu.

Correspondence solicited.W. C. WEEDON Charge oi larceuj in xne setuuu TEL. NO. 3175-7- 9 KING ST.QUEEN STREET.Honolulu. gree

Page 4: FIVE J. Q. WOOD. SPECIAL IN at EDITORevols.library.manoa.hawaii.edu/bitstream/10524/41657/1/1897102801.pdf · "He also edited, with Rossiter Johnson, "Fifty Perfect Poems," (New York,

THE PACIFIC COMMERCIAL ADVERTISER : HONOLULU, OCTOBER 2Sf 1897.

THE PACIFIC

--rrn-i " " - - 1 1 1 11111 (l1 j

W. N. ARMSTRONG. - EDITOR.

OCTOBER 2STHURSDAY1

WASHOUT IX .JAPAN".

Railroad Train l'rfeJpatetl Downau Embankment.

Dispatches from Japan, via Victoria,contain the accounts of a serious rail-

road wreck in Japan on the TokaidoRailway, in consequence of the severefloods. The floods also did great dam-

age to property.According to the official estimate on

October 5th there were 12,000 housesunder water, 100 houses and 20 bridgeswashed away in Aichl, and severalplaces, namely, Kaito, Kaisa, Xaka-f-hirn- a,

Xiva and Haguey, were sub-merged up to the roofs of the houses.

Out of the 430 emigrants raised bythe Hiroshima Emigration Companyfcr Hawaii, the 213 yet remaining in

Induced by the otuse coca, opiate or nar-cotic compounds is bad, decidedly bad.It undermines the health and shatters theconstitution and the patient is steadilygrowing into a worse condition oftenresulting in the terrible slavery andmisery of the cocaine and opium habit.Sleep induced by the use of Hood's Sarsa-saparil- la

may not come a3 quickly, but itcomes more surely, permanently and is

A UOOD AUTHORITY.

enterprise? Have they not always fol-lowed the flag? Have they not fol-lowed it up the Mississippi and theMissouri and over the Rocky Moun-tains, and across the Plains, and downthe Pacific Slope? Ae they not fol-lowing it today even over the ChilkootPass and up the distant Yukon? Whywill they not follow it into Hawaii?

Furthermore, the population of Ha-waii is not utterly "alien and incon-gruous." It is so largely composed ofAmericans and those in accord withAmerican ideas that they have a gov-ernment modeled after our own. Thepopulation of Hawaii today is less in-congruous with our own than that ofLouisiana, Florida, Texas, California,Nevada, Utah, New Mexico and Ari-zona at the time of their respective an-nexations. The influx of emigration,trade and enterprise will make Hawaiiequally American long before the timecomes when she will knock at the doorof the Union for admission as a State.When that event happens we shallstill have the same power that we havetoday of saying "Yes" or "No." Canwe not safely trust ourselves to decidethat question rightly when it may pre-sent itself? Or shall we reject a val-uable addition to our domain becausewe are afraid of our own shadows?

FREDERICK W. SEWARD.Montrose-on-the-Hudso- n, October 2,

1897.

i'

sf.kE &

"law rrwffifnTT' 1 1 1 rTi I'J uu u uu'ti Atti t h M f I : TljDEALERS IN

Japan are making their way on foot toYokohama from Shizuoka, fromwhence railway communication hasbeen interrupted by recent floods.They will leave Yokohama for Hawaii

A.nd refreshing because it is realizedthrough nature's great restoring and re-juvenating channel purified, vitalizedand enriched blood. This feeds the nerveswith life-givi- ng energy and builds up thesystem and constitution from the veryfoundation of all health and life theblood pure, rich, red biood.

at the end of the month, together withanother company of 300 emigrants.

4

IN" MADAGASCAR.FIGHTINGNatives Attack a French Garrison

eftreslhiiiiD;and Kill Many.PARIS, October 20 An official dis-

patch received here from General Gal- -Real Estate and Financial Agents,

" I was generally run down last spring,3U FORT STREET, HONOLULU.Telephone 678.lieni, the French commander in Mada-

gascar, announces that a strong bandThe Baltimore-America- n has a of Sakalavas has attacked a French

appetite was poor and I could not sleep.Hood's Sar3aparilla built me right up,gave good appetite and I was soon able toget a good night'9 rest." G. F. Whitney,Merchant, Yeomans St., Ionia, Michigan.

post which was recently established at

We are ready to purchase Large Estates near Honolulu and Hllo, andCoffee Lands on Hawaii.

Loans placed and negotiated; Estates taken charge of and managed.Choice Lots for sale at Kewalo, at Punahou and the growing City of HHo

on the installment plan. Houses built for Investors. No trouble to showproperty to intending purchasers.

Air. Frederick AV. Seward, theson of that great statesman andannextioniit, Wm. II. Seward, andAssistant Secretary of State, dnr- -

ing his fathers term of olliee, lias

recently published a letter in theX. Y. Tribune, which we copy.He has a large acquaintance withthe leading men in the Orient.lie may not have had the long andripe experience in public affairsthat some men in this town havehad. .But he is a strong annexa-

tionist, and some of us do not de-

spise his' oponiohs. It is, perhaps,a singular fact, that while he is

strongly committed to annexation,he does not think that abusing theJapanese, and charging them withunspeakable wickedness in theirforeign relations, is so very neces-

sary to aid the cause. He eventhinks that the charge made thatthe Japanese are bullying Hawaii,is an anti-annexati- on scheme,made in the interests of Liliuoka-lan- i.

There are two decided opin-

ions afloat. One is that a chargeof Japanese aggression will aidannexation. The other is, that itwill prevent it, by creating in Am-

erica a belief that it will compli-

cate affairs. Air. Seward seems tobelong to the latter class. ForLira to say, in the N. Y. Tribune,

large influence in the State ofMaryland. It is a Republican pa-

per, but its influence is increasing,v

runLTU Want to Smoke

Good Cigarettes?

a point on the Tsiirhibina river, inWestern Madagascar, killing many ofthe garrison, including three officers.

4

Australian Crop Prospects.SYDNEY, N. S. W., October 15. In

his speech on the presentation of thebudget of New South Wales, last even-

ing, the Premier, Sir George H. Reid,referring to the drought of the lastthree years, said it has cost the colonythousands of head of cattle and 23,500sheep, but, he added, the prospects ofagriculture were better, the wheatarea extending over a million acres.

SarsaparillaIs the One True Blood Purifier. All druggists. $1.

fj j OSII. cur livei ills, easy to takeliOOU S rlllS easy to operate. 23 cents.

HOBRON DRUG COMPANY,Wholesale Agents. CO.The JOffl B LLIM

HAVE APPOINTEDTIMELY TOPICS HOLLISTER & CO.

As Their Agents for the Distributionof Their

Destructive

Japanese

Beetle

and to the great American publicthat the Japanese are "properlyinsisting upon the protection ofthe rights of their emigrants," is

to say that which is declared to be

as the old party lines disappear.In one of its recent editorials onHawaii, it says:

The annexation of Hawaii is notsought because of the wealth of theIslands, though that is considerable,but on account of the strategical im-portance of the group, and the im-

mense value it may be to this countryin the future. A statesman who neverlooks beyond his nose may be a verysuccessful one, and receive a vastamount of credit from his contempo-raries, but he who looks into the fu-

ture, and makes provision for thegrowth and expansion of his country,and the expansion of the world's civi-lization and commerce, is a very muchgreater man, even though he may notget as many hurrahs as the former.The United States has had in prospectthe annexation of Hawaii for manyyears, and has at last determined toact, because not -- to do so will be toplay the er, towardsthe rest of the world, and because oth-er nations may not always be so com-placent as they seem to be at present.With European disputes adjusted, itwould be an easy matter for one ofthese naval powers to turn towards Ha-waii, and it would be difficult for thiscountry to defend an imaginary inter-est in the Islands.

The Island of Hawaii is a strategicpoint more in the sense of its protec-tion to our commerce than as an aux-iliary in fighting an enemy. Americancommerce is small at present, even onthe Pacific; but the day must come,and there is hope that it may be near,when that reproach will no longer ex-

ist when the seas, as of old, willswarm with our ship's. Republicanpolicy, faithfully carried out, willbring about such conditions in a muchshorter time than the most sanguinehope for. The commerce of the Pa-cific is growing very rapidly, and itwill increase in geometrical progres-sion in the course of a few years. Ha-waii seems built for the guardianshipof commerce. A few armed vesselsthere would obviate the necessity ofa large navy, and extend absolute se-

curity not only to American commerce,but to the ships of the world.

Sun Insurance Office

Imperials""Sports"

And

"Sultans'CIGARETTES.

Hand Made and Wrapped in Mais Paper.

Previous to four years ago the gar-

dens in and around Honolulu present-ed a picture to lovers of flowers andfine shrubbery; in fact, it was a verycommon remark by tourists that theresidences of Honolulu were withoutrival from a plant-lif- e standpoint.

Spray 3l

WHOOPINQ COUGH, CROUP,ASTHMA, CATARRH, COLDS.

TINT WftW Both Rice andUU01 HUM Sugar Plantersare forming plans for the en-suing season and lookingabout for. the best imple-ments for preparing theirlands for next year's crop.

Orders are coming in fastfor the famous ADVANCEDouble Furrow, roller Coul-l- er

plow, voted last year thebest implement for the pur-pose ever introduced onthese Islands.

Profiting by previous ex-perience, we have ordered anew supply, in anticipationof a run upon them.

We also carry the wellknown "Perfect" doublemould board plows in threesizes, viz: 12, 14 and 16 inchfurrows and also the "Per-fect" breaker plow in 12, 14and 16 inch sizes.

The merits of these plowsare too well known to needbooming up. They performtheir work in the mannertheir name implies.

We have a large assort-ment of Rice plows, in sizesranging from a 6-i- nch to a1 5-i-

nch cut, also Cultivators,Harrows, and a full line ofAvery's sugar land imple-ments, including stubblediggers, cultivators, fertili-zer distributors, etc., etc.

Planters are invited toopen up a correspondencewith us or call in and lookour stock over.

How does it look today? Ask thelady of the house, who formerly tookgreat pride in the appearance of thegarden and grounds surrounding thehome, and she will shake her head indisgust if you remark about the no-

ticeable change. She has given up try-

ing to have a fine flower bed or growfine plants, simply because the Jap-anese Rose Bug has repeatedly killedher plants.

CRESOLENE being- - administered by inhalation,gives tho safest and most effectual means of treat-ing the throat and bronchial tubes. Its efficiency imWhooping Cough anu Croup is wonderful. Its anti-septic virtues render it invaluable in contagiousdiseases, as Diphtheria, Scarlet Fever, etc. De-cripti- ve

booklet with testimonials free. Sold bydruggists.

HOLLISTER DRUG CO., Honolulu, H. I., Agents.

infamous political heresy in andabout Fort street. But Mr.Seward is widely listened to.To the Editor of The Tribune:

Sir: One of the "most impressivefeatures of the marriage service is thatwhen the clergyman makes a solemnpause after saying, "If any man canshow just cause why they may notlawfully be joined together, let himnow speak, or else hereafter foreverhold his peace."

That is just what the Administra-tion and Congress have wisely done inregard to Hawaii. They have madeand published the treaty of annexa-tion, and then, before taking final ac-

tion, have paused to hear any objec-tions that may be made, by anybodyin the United States or any nation inthe world.

And now the long pause draws to-

ward a close; Congress assembles in afew weeks, and will have to say def-initely whether we accept or reject Ha-waii.

The nations, European and Ameri-can, have not interposed objections.Some look upon it with favor, as tend-ing to promote commerce and peace.Some acquiesce in it as an inevitableand natural gravitation of republic torepublic. It was hoped at one time bythe opponents of annexation that ourgood friends, the Japanese, might as-

sume a bullying attitude toward us onaccount of it. But the Japanese, withtheir customary urbanity and goodsense, declined to be made cat's-paw- s

to pull Queen Liliuokalani's or any-body else's chestnuts out of the fire."While properly insisting upon protec-tion of the rights of their emigrants,they say they prefer to adhere to theirtraditional friendship toward the Unit-ed States.

So there are no objections fromabroad. At home there are some, buthardly so many as might have been,expected. Several having been made,

i.

f .

t

tv.

I- -r

t- -.

i x' q i

YourOF LONDON.

UNDED A.I7IO. Pearls loutfiheillThe scientific person knows that forevery pest there is an enemy, and theresult of application will effect a rid-

dance, j

We have learned from a very reli-

able source that by spraying the plantswith a solution of WHALE-OI- L SOAPthat the Rose Bug, and, in fact, all in-

sects, will either die or leave the plant.

The largest and oldest purely Fire In-

surance Company in the World.

Capital $12,000,000

Net Surplus : : . ; : : : 8,coo,ooo

CLEANSES AND PRESERVES

the Teeth and leaves them

White and Beautiful.

Hardens the

Gums and Imparts

PlantsBISHOP & CO.,Agents for the Hawaiian Islands.

. - , "tgigiirand after discussion dropped from consideration, only one still seems to be

The practice is cheap and simple,We have a convenient package, con-

taining sufficient of the soap to spraya full acre, the price being only 25c.

seriously urged. That is, that if we1annex Hawaii we shall be having "a

State with an alien population of di A DELICIOUS SWEETNESS

TO THE BREATH.HONOLULUNOTICE.verse nationalities sending Senators

and Representatives to Washington." Hawaiian islands;This might be an argument having

t 111 lire Iweight, if the question was as to the Owing to the illness of Jas. Nott,Jr., his tinsmith and plumbing busi-ness will be closed until further

admission of Hawaii as a State. But itis not proposed to admit the Islands as Prepared Only By

286 FORT STREET.a State only to annex them as a ter-ritory, to undergo a period of develop fMilment and probation, like other Tern Benson, Smith & Co.tories a period which with some haslasted five or ten and with others thirtyor forty years.

It is not a valid argument against

We Are In the wmnniOur importations by the S. S. Australia, are far and away ahead of anything ever introduced into this market.

We Are Right Up-to-D- ate

OUR SHIRT WAISTS AT 55 CENTS, 75 CENTS 95CENTS, SI AND $1.10, ARE ALL CUT IN TIIF t.atokt

their annexation; for if it proved any-thing, it would prove too much. Itwould prove that no nation should an-

nex outlying territory unless alreadypopulated with its own citizens anabsurdity on the face of it. This ob-

jection, however, has always beenraised when annexation of territoryhas heretofore been proposed. If ithad been accepted as valid we shouldstill be only thirteen States along theAtlantic Coast for the Valley of theMississippi and the Rocky Mountainscontained "an alien population" ofFrench, Spanish and Indians. It wassaid of Florida that the Spanish wouldgo away, and then the populationwould be only "Seminoles and alligat-ors." So in like manner Californiawas objected to as being inhabited onlyby "wild cattle, Indians and Greasers,"and Alaska was denounced as being thehabitation of "icebergs and polarbears."

Is there no such thing as the spreadof American population and American

L. B.

KER R,

We Provide for the PeopleOUR LADIES' COLLARS AND CUFFS, BELTS POCKET

BOOKS AND UNDERWEAR HAVE BEEN PURCHASEDWITH THE GREATEST CARE AND ARE WELL WORTHYAN INSPECTION.

APPROVED STYLE AND ARE MARVELS OF CHEAPNESS.

THE PEOPLE'S PROVIDER

i

Page 5: FIVE J. Q. WOOD. SPECIAL IN at EDITORevols.library.manoa.hawaii.edu/bitstream/10524/41657/1/1897102801.pdf · "He also edited, with Rossiter Johnson, "Fifty Perfect Poems," (New York,

--r ....

THE PACIFIC COMMERCIAL .'ADVERTISER.: HONOLULU, OCTOBER 28, 1897. K

fl - IIWI

FOUEKJX NEWS NOTES. iiAwardedHighest Honors World's Fair.

Gold Medal. Midwinter Fair.

IDIRL

C. D.JMASE.

Real Estate AgentMediumPricedGoodsJust arrived, a nice line

of medium priced

OakBedroom Suites,

DownPillow Cushions,

Any size made to order.

Art Tickingfor Draperies

Upholstering a Specialty

We have chairs and tablesof good quality, to hire forballs, parties or entertain-ments.

J. HOPP & CO.Furniture Dealers.

KINO AND BETHEL STREETS.

Suit Clubs, $1. Per Week.

medeirosIdeckerTHE HOTEL STREET TAILORS.

Waverley Block, 11 Hotel St.

SPRINGFIELD

ire on Mori Insurance do

The Largest Massachusetts Co.

ASSETS 14,105,374.75

W. F. WILSON, Agent.43 QUEEN ST., : : HONOLULU.

(L. B. Kerr's.)

liflCI Livery ond BoardiRg IItins

Cor. Merchant and Richards Sts.

LIVERY AND BOARDING STABLES.Carriages, Surreys and Hacks at all

hours. TELEPHONE 400.

A LOT OP

Matting and Wicker ChairsWill come by S. S. City of Peking on

September 14th. Call and examine.

YEE SING TAI.FORT STREET.

H. MAY & CO.,

illae ond n Grocers

-:- - 98 FORT STREET.22. : : : P. O. Box, 470.

WICKER CHAIRS.Tables, Couches, etc; White and

Colored Matting, Fancy Goods, Man-ila an Havana Cigars.

WING WO TAI & CO.214 NUUANA ST.

LIMITED- -

OFFER FOR SALE:

llEFLNED SUGARS

Cube and Granulated.

'ARAFLN'E PA 1ST CO.'S

Paints, Compounds and BuildingPapers.

PAIXT OILS,

Lucol Raw and Boiled.Linseed Raw and Boiled.

ISDUKLNE,

Water - proof cold - water paintInside and outside; in white andcolors.

FERTILIZERS,Alex. Cross & Sons' high-gra- de

Scotch fertilizers, adapted forsugar cane and coffee.

N. Ohlandt & Co.'s chemical fer-tilizers and finely ground BomMeal.

STEAM PIPE COVERING,

Reed's patent elastic sectional plpacovering.

FILTER PRESS CLOTHS. '

Linen and Jute.

CEMENT, LIME' & BRICKS.

AGENTS FORWESTERN SUGAR REFINING CO

San Francisco, CaL

BALDWIN LOCOMOTIVE WORKS,Philadelphia, Penn., U. 8. 11

NEWELL UNIVERSAL MILL CO.(Manf. "National Cane Shredder"),

New York, U. S. A--

N. OHLANDT & CO..San Francisco, CaL

RISDON IRON AND LOCOMOTIVDWORKS.

San Francisco, CaL

JAPANESE EMPORIUM

OUR NEW GOODS HAVE ARRIVEDAND ARE NOW READY FOR

INSPECTION AND SALE.

Silk Dress Goods,Silk Handkerchiefs

Other Silk Goods. New Designs inBeautiful

Plates and DishesSILK AND COTTON

KIMONOSIn sue noli is

All at Bedrock Prices. Call andInspect.

S. OZAKI.Wavkbley Block. Hotel Street

J. M. WebbOF THE

GOLDEN RULE BAZAAR

Has displayed in his FORT STREETSHOW WINDOW a BEAUTIFUL

LINE of

Hawaiian Souvenir Pins

and Guff ButtonsMade of HAWAIIAN SILVER COINSENAMELED in COLORS. Tako a lookat them when on Fort Street. SchoolSupplies, Books, Stationery, Office andTypewriter Supplies.

ALL PRICES 'ffiSP

The Japanese Government will beforced to go abroad to float a publicindustrial loan. Out of 67,1000,000 yen.only 3,000,000 was subscribed in Japan.

The negotiations in the revisedtreaty between Japan and Australiahave been resumed. The chief diff-iculty has been regarding the customstarili.

It is rumored in China that the nextbudget of the Hong Kong Governmentwill increase the taxation -- 3 per centper annum.

BUENOS AY RES, October 19. TheGovernment, it is said in official cir-cles, intends to increase the exportbounty on sugar.

MADRID, October 18. A dispatchfrom Corunna says that Marshal Blan-co, the newly-appoint- ed Governor-Gener- al

of Cuba, sailed for Havana to-day.

WASHINGTON, . October 20. TheLegation of Guatemala has receivedthe following official dispatch: "Rev-olution subdued; order restored allover the country."

CHICAGO, 111., October 19. GeorgeM. Pullman, the palace-ca- r magnate,died at his residence, Eighteenth streetand Prairie avenue, in this city, at 5o'clock this morning.

BERLIN, October 18. The LokalAnzeiger says that Count Tolstoi, theRussian author and social reformer, issuffering from an illness which willnecessitate the performance of a serious operation.

WASHINGTON, October 18. Admiral John L. Worden, retired, diedin this city today. Pneumonia was theimmediate cause of Worden's deathHe was 80 years of age, and up to lastSaturday was in very good health.

LIVERPOOL, October 16. The Cunard Line steamer Lucania, CaptainMcKay, which sailed from this port forNew York today, has on board amongher passengers Dr. Nansen, the Arcticexplorer; William K. Vanderbilt andBishcp Perry of Iowa.

MENTOR, Ohio, October" 20. ZebRodolph, father of Mrs. James A. Garfield, widow of the late President, diedthis evening at Lawnfield, the Garfieldhome, of old age. He was 94 years ofage and had been in feeble health forsome time. Two children besides MrsGarfield survive him.

LONDON, October 16. The DailyGraphic says that it hears that the recent reported illness of Cecil Rhodesat Inyanga was due to the shock frominjuries received at the hands of hostile natives beyond Salisbury. It appears that Rhodes lost his way and hada narrow escape from death.

It is rumored in Hong Kong that 16,000 rifles have been shipped to thePhilippine rebels from there to Shang-hai. As the rebels have kept up a sortof guerrilla warfare for some monthspast, and recently fought two desperate battles with the Spaniards, thestatement is generally given credence,

DENVER, Colo. October 17 A special to the Republican from CrestedButte, Colo., says: A snow stormstruck this locality 36 hours ago, whichhas broken all records here for thistime of year. In addition to 36 hours'continuous downfall it is still snowing, with no indication whatever of alet-u- p.

LONDON, October 16. It is understood that for the poem which is to bewritten for the first number of Litera-ture, which is to be issued under theauspices of the London Times, Rud- -yard Kipling will be paid $1 a wordIt is entitled "White Horses," is in 10stanzas of eight lines and is appropriate for Trafalgar day, but without aword of politics in it.

LONDON, October 19. Cavendishthe nephew of the Duke of Devonshirewho with a companion, Lieutenant Andrews, has been exploring SomalilandEast Africa, at the head of an expedition composed of 90 Ascaris, and whowith his party, was reported to havebeen massacred by the natives, has arrived safely in London from Zanzibar.

LOUISVILLE, Ky., October 20. KP. Sheedy, the high diver, leaped fromthe Louisville and Jeffersonville bridgeinto the Ohio river yesterday, a dis-tance of 108 feet He made the jumpat the request of a number of friends.He. was not injured in the least, andwhen pulled into a boat that was waiting said he would leap from the tallest tower on the bridge Saturday.

LONDON, October 18 The Marquisof Salisbury telegraphs from HatfieldHouse, Hartford, that there is abso-lutely no truth in the story publishedby the Daily Chronicle of this city to-day, saying the Premier is anxious toretire on account of ill-heal- th andanxiety respecting the health of theMarchioness of Salisbury, and that anearly reconstruction of the Cabinet isprobable.

A CRISIS IX SERVIA.

The Cabinet Declared Out of Officeby the Premier.

VIENNA, October 20 The NeueFrei Presse today publishes a dispatchfrom Belgrade, Servia, which says theServian Premier has declared that theCabinet resigned because of thestrained relations existing between thePremier and ex-Ki- ng Milan, makingthe conduct of business impossiblewhile the latter remains at Belgrade.

A dispatch from London says: TheLondon papers dealing with the crisisat Belgrade variously attribute it tothe political disagreements betweenKing Alexander and his Ministers tothe arrivavl of ex-Ki- ng Milan at theServian capital and to the disclosuresmade during the recent trials of 200brigands and receivers of stolen property at Tschaischag, where the evi-dence has revealed systematic plundering and murdering of members of

--AN

Notary Public.407 Fort Street Telephone 184.

WANTED.

A nicely furnished house for a fewmonths for a very desirable tenant

A House containing 9 or 10 roomswith good yard.

A House containing 5 rooms withstable in yard.

HousesFor RentBuilding

tLotsFor Sale.

C. D. CHASE.

Real Estate Agent andNotary Public.

407 Fort Street Telephone 184.

The Queen HotelNUUANU AVENUE.

Large and well ventilated rooms, hotand cold baths. Excellent table andattendance.

TERMS: $7.50 and Upwards.

CARL KLEMHE,Manager.

Telephone, 809. P. O. Box, 461.

the latest conceits inseason. THEY WILL

and come only in 12

a suit.for LADIES CLOTH

We have these in

year.

style chenille curtains

Co

Yench

CREAM

mummmm

MOST PERFECT MADE.A pure Grape Cream of Tartar Powder. Freefrom Ammonia, Alum or any other adulterant.

Tn all the treat TTfttMs. the leadingClubs and the homes, Dr. Price's CreamBaking Powder holds its supremacy

40 Years the Standard

lewis & CO.,Agents. Honolulu. H. I.

NOTED JAPANESE DEAD.

Baron YaiwaJI, twux Marshal, Passes Away.

VICTORIA, B. C, October 19. Advices from the Orient today reportthat Lieutenant-Gener- al Baron Yamaji, Field Marshal of Japan, died October 3d at Mitajiri. He was en routefor Yanaguchi when he was seizedwith congestion of the brain and paralysis of the heart He was 57 yearsof age.

General Yamaji was one of the he-

roes of the Japanese war with China,earning fame at Port Arthur and onother fields.

While in his boyhood he met with anaccident when climbing a tree and hadhis right eye severely injured. Hethen thrust his finger into his eye anddug it out of its socket. Both in theWar of the Restoration and that ofSatsuma he was highly distinguished.When the latter civil war was suppressed he was promoted from Lieutenant-Colon- el to Colonel. The capture ofPort Arthur was largely due to hisstrategy and bravery. When he leftJapan to .invade China, he declaredthat he would not set his feet againon his native soil unless he capturedPeking, and it quite likely that if peacehad not been declared he would havekept his word.

Mrs. Edward has arranged to givean entertainment at Y. .M. C. A. hallfor school children Saturday night.

It is stated that Japan intends short-ly to order 5,000 catties of Australiancoal for experimental purposes.

FramedAnd

Unframed

PICTURESEASELS,WINDOW POLES,WALL BRACKETS.

D 01 l iCOLORED AND UNCOLOHED.

ARTISTS' MMERIRLS.

PICTURE FRAMES MADE TO ORDER.

KING BROS'Art Store.

no HOTEL ST.

AUCTION SALEOf the Property of the

Hawaiian Mies i Tea Co.

KONA, HAWAII.

I have received Instructions to sell atpublic auction at my sales-

room in Honolulu, on

SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 20,AT 12 O'CLOCK NOON,

All the property of the atove Com-pany comprising about 790 acres ofleased lands and 482 acres in Fee Sim-ple. Of the above area, about 200 acresare planted in coffee, the trees varyingfrom about 1 year to 5 years in age.

There Is a large mill on the place,fully equipped, from which an In-

come can be derived in cleaning andmarketing coffee from the adjacentplanters. The place is well equippedwith water tanks, tools and Imple-ments, wagons, horses, mules, mana-ger's and laborers' houses, piping, of-fice furniture, etc., etc.

The coffee fields are well fenced androads built to the various portions ofthe estate.

A large portion of the coffee treesare now in bearing and are nearingthe age to produce maximum crops.

For further particulars in regard toleases and all necessary information.apply to

JAS. F. MORGAN,

OreandieIn entirely new designs, are

Goods for the presentIN PARIS NEXT SPRING.

patterns are exclusivelengths just enongh for

DressBE NEW

Theyard

Ourandbeautifulbeautiful.securedworn on

store is headquartersCOLORED CASHMERES.

shades, the bottle green being especiallyThis line is entirely new. We have

advance shipments and they will not bethe Coast until next

to replace the old

Our New PortierresImportedthat are to be found everywhere.

These Are New GoodsSHADES and DESIGNS. If you arenow is the opportunity to secure

HANDSOMErefurnishing,absolutely new styles.

Refrigerated PoultryAND

Fresh SalmonCONSTANTLY ON HAND.

Metropolitan Meat CompanyTelephone 41.

3o F, EhlersFort Street the Liberal party. 4718-t- d AUCTIONEER.

Page 6: FIVE J. Q. WOOD. SPECIAL IN at EDITORevols.library.manoa.hawaii.edu/bitstream/10524/41657/1/1897102801.pdf · "He also edited, with Rossiter Johnson, "Fifty Perfect Poems," (New York,

I

THE PACIFIC COMMERCIAL ADVERTISES ; HONOLULU, OCTOBER 23 , 1897.

DISTINGUISIIED VISITORS.Odds The KLONDIKE.1

i"Worth Their Weight in Gold."

TheWalter A. Wychoff writes in the August "Re-

corder" that these are eminently the Shoe of the Day.They are built from the welt up, on the highest perfectionof manufacture.

Wychoff is the American authority on stock style,and construction of Shoes, and a trial of a pair will con-

vince you that he knows whereof he speaks.

Iclnerny Mammoth Shoe Store;

The leads!SterliiGeorge Sharrick takes one First and one

Second.George Martin takes Second place in the

Third of a Mile.Fred Damon takes second place in the Mile

Amateur.Kirk Porter won the Novice Race Saturday.

They all ride STERLINGS: The strongestand lightest-runni- ng wheel made.

HOUSEHOLD SUPPLY DEPARTMENT-- OF-

Castle & Cooke, Ld.F. C. ATHERTON, Agent.

WE HAVE JUST RECEIVED.A SUPPLY OF THE

SPECIAL

minum

Prominent California SocietyPeople En Route.

Among the passengers en route toJapan and China on the S. S. Chinanow in port are Major and Mrs. JohnA. Darling, Miss Hasting and maid.

Major Darling was, until June lastattached to the 5th artillery, U. S. A.and was stationed on the Pacific Coastfor 20 out of the 3G years of his ser-vice. His wife is a daughter of thelate Chief Justice Hastings of Cali-fornia and is prominent in societycircles in San Francisco and vicinity.Major Darling is enjoying his retire-ment to the fullest extent and willremain in the Orient with his partyduring the next three months. Ontheir return trip they will stop overin Hawaii several weeks visiting allthe points of interest. Besides enter-taining occasionally in San Franciscotheir home in Napa Valley is visitedby the prominent society and literarypeople of California.

Hotel Arrivals.Hawaiian Dr. and Mrs. T. C. War

ner, Miss Warner, R. Seykora, H. . C.W. Blyth, Baron von Rumerskuch, H.N. von Kemen, Rev. H. Miller, W. F.Callender, Dr. G. F. Little, Miss C.Miller, H. S. Gaffon, Mr. and Mrs.James T. Low, Miss Low, Miss LauraLow, Russel L. Dunn, San Francisco;Tampukre Auckcanopre, Mr. and Mrs.C. T. Osborn, Connecticut; Mr. andMrs. Henry Pagot, San Francisco; Mr.and Mrs. Sydney, Col. Chester, Eng-land; Mr. and Mrs. R. Schnud, Yoko-hama; Mrs. L. F. Watson, Mrs. H. B.Bridgman, Dr. E. Jennings, C. Vree--land, J. Tochetinian; Mr. and Mrs.Wm. Webster, Philadelphia.

Arlington A. Fries, Makaweli, Kauai; A. Omsted, Hana, Maui; Wm. Bell,Dayton, Ohio; A. Sausjen, Hamburg,Germany; H. Stock, Berlin, Germany;George E. Albrecht, wife and family,Japan; Robert H. Hunt, Shanghai,China,

Some Sugar Statistics.The Bureau of Statistics of the

Treasury Department has prepared astatement showing approximately theamount and value of sugars, which lastyear were imported from the countriesnow paying an export bounty on sugar,and upon which the department hasdeclared a countervailing duty equalto the bounty paid. The statementshows the total imports of dutiable sugar during the last fiscal year to havebeen 4,288,572,584 pounds, testing notabove No. 16 Dutch standard and valued at $80,973,652, and 92,831,103pounds testing above 16 and valued at$4,928,150. Of these totals, 1,604,233,071pounds, valued at $29,844,019, were imported from Germany; 105,138,128pounds, valued at $1,957,027, from Aus- -tro-Hunga- ry; 46,940,759 pounds, valued at $915,477, from Argentine Republic, and 92,169,241 pounds, valued at$1,421,317, from France. The sugar imported from the Argentine Republicwas cane exclusively, and that fromthe other countries was exclusivelybeet sugar. Commercial Jews.

CIIAIXL.ESS WHEEL. HAS COME.

But the Price is an Advance onOld Style Wheels.

NEW YORK, October 20. The long--

heralded chainless 1898 bicycles will beput on the market tomorrow. A bicycle manufacturing concern of this citywill place them on sale simultaneouslyat its branches throughout the country.Thousands of wheels are said to beready for delivery. The price of thenew wTheel is $125.

In the matter of speed, the thingabove all others considered by thoseof scorching proclivities, it is pointedout that the chainless wheel securedthe 24-ho- ur record on the Continentof Europe, and that in August anotherchainless wheel won the hill-climbi- ng

contest in England.The new machine weighs about 2

pounds, and the construction is verysimple. There is a wheel with thegear on the inner edge, driven by ped-als, to which it is attached in the samemanner as in the old high safety. Theteeth of the wheel fit into the gear onthe end of the rod, which, with its covering, is similar to the lower bracesof the frame of any ordinary chainwheel.

The rod, which is of steel, and everypart of the wheel where there is likelyto be friction, is run on ball-bearin- gs.

At the other end of tne rod andthergear fits its teeth on the rear axle. Arevolution of the pedals turns thebig wheel of the gear and that turnsthe rod which runs to the rear wheel,the axle of which it in turn revolves.

An easily adjusted casing of nickeledtubing holds the parts in place. Thedriving mechanism is such that eachset of gears has fixed bearings inde-pendent of the side shaft and maintaina fixed operative relation, irrespectiveof any misalignment of the side shaft,and thereby the difficulties experiencedin former geared bicycles are obviated.Invention provides in connection withgears adjacent to the pedal shaft aflexible driving rod capable of rotatingone set of gears from another, andadapted to lateral and longitudinalmovement. Each set of gearing hasnormally fixed but relatively adjustable bearings. The gearing is absolutely level and accurate. Several firms, itis said, will soon have similar wheelson the market

REMAINS A FRENCH VASSAL,.

The Kinar of Slam-- UnsuccessfulMission.

LONDON, October 16. The Pariscorrespondent of the Daily Mail saysThe attempts of the King of Siam toobtain an abrogation of the clause inthe treaty between Siam and Prancewhich reduces him to the position ofa King without subjects, have entirelvfailed. The other European powershave refused anything but moral sunport, and the encroachments of theFrench upon Siamese territory arelikely to increase.

and

ndsOur offer to sell cent

glasses at 25 cents per dozenmet with ready acceptanceof the people. What wasthe result? In less thantwo hours we had sold oodozen tumblers. People arebeginning to realize that ourstore contains the greatestbargains ever offered in Honolulu. If one line goes toyou cheap why not an-

other? We are offering forthe balance of the week aline of pressed Glass Goods,

- 1so nearly resemDiing tnegenuine cut glass thatthere's no fooling. Here'sthe leader:

Pickle dishes y cents,former price ij cents.

Finger bowls, 10 cents.Salad or berry bowls, 25

cents.Milk pitchers, 15 cents.Wine glasses, f cents.Toothpick holders, 5 cents.Goblets, 10 cents.Fruit plates, 1 j cents.

These are new patternsand the price has neverbeen equalled.

W. W. DIHOH) Sl CO.

VON HOLT BLOCK.

EX "DORIC:"

Ladies' and Gents'

K MOiAll Sizes and Prices in Crepe

or Silk.

Table NapMns,In Beautiful Designs.

K. IWAKAMI.Hotel St. Robinson Block

In men's attire fashion Is absolute.There Is no latitude.Taste and grace are the only limit for

boys' wearAnd there is danger of gaudy display.The very best styles arealways characterized by quiet gentility.Those who have had our goods thisseason, are in touch with the best in

the marketA call is solicited.

--AT-

9 Hotel St., Waverley Block.

Agents for Dr. Deimel's Linen-Mes- h

Underwear. Send for Catalogue.

SHIRTS MADE TO ORDER.

CLUB STABLES COMPANY

Livery and Feed StablesHak Stand Telephone, No. 319.

Stables Telephone, No. 477.C. H. BELLINA, Manager.

(.."I"

V

tI

t

'.I-

'll

ttr ,rr

I.

rrr

vV

r

PHOTOGRAPH CO., Ltd.,Is open for business. Portraits of

ripsrriDtion uocri the bestPapers, Platinum, Iridium, Mezzo-tin- t,

Carbon, and all other papers known inPhotography. Best work guaranteed atmoderate prices.

CABINETS from $6.00 per Dozen.Pictures made Life Size direct.

Appointments made by Telephone 492.Sole proprietors of the Bas-Reli- ef andIridium processes. Large collection of re-

cent Island Views.Specimens can be seen on the ground

floor, Mott-Smit- h Building,COR. FORT & HOTEL STS.

Gingersnaps!Gingerbread!

To lovers of hard, crisp Ginger-snap- s

and nice, soft Ginger-brea- d, we wish tostate that we have them to perfection.We also carry and make cakes of allkinds.

Give us a trial. Our goods are not aconcoction of cheap talk and ignorance,but are the result of 16 years of ex-perience, and only good material Isused.

Our Bakery is kept scrupulouslyclean, and you certainly will appre-ciate this.

Yours, the

GERMAN BAKERYThe Only Progressive Bakery In

Honolulu.Manufacturers of Quaker, Steam,

Ralston Health and Rye Breads.833 Fort St. Telephone 677

M. R. COUNTER,

Practical Watchmaker, Jeweler

and Optician,

Begs to state to the citizens of Hono-lulu and the Islands that he is preparedto manufacture any article in the Jew-elry and Medal line, fit Spectacles to allsights, repair fine and complicatedWatches; also, ordinary Watches,Clocks and Jewelry.

Prices as low as the lowest consist-ent with good workmanship and qual-ity of material. All work guaranteedto give satisfaction and done promptlyon time.

Mall orders solicited. P. O. Box, 287.607 FORT ST. : HONOLULU, H. I.

4727-l- m

1 i in itLIMITED.

Subscribed Capital .. ..Yen 12,000,000Paid Up Capital .. " 7,500,000Reserve Fund K. AC A AAA

HEAD OFFICE: YOKOHAMA.

BRANCHES AND AGENCIES:

Kobe, London, Lyons, New York,San Francisco, Shanghai,

Bombay, Hong Kong.

Transacts a General Banking andExchange Business.

Agency Yokohama Specie Bank:New Republic Bldg., : Honolulu, H. I.

ORIGINAL

SINGER'S BAKERY.Established 1874

King Street, near Thomas Square.

Home-Mad- e BreadiarServed Fresh Every Day--W

Cakes and Pies to Order.

H. F. SINGER,TELEPHONE 872. Sole Propriotfti

CHINESE BAZAAR.

NEW RATTAN CHAIRS;FINE PORCELAIN CUPS AN

SAUCERS;'CHINA AND JAPAN SILKS;

MATTING;EMBPOIDERIES AND CURIOS.

WING W0 CHAN & CO.210-21- 2 Nuuanu 8t.

CHONG FAT.

Contractor and Builder,Carpenter & Cabinet Maker.

Furniture of all kinds constantly onhand and made to order.

1S7 Nuuanu fit, cor. Kukul lane.

Sonsoli soda lei iLIMITED

Esplanade, Cor. Allen and Fort Sts.

HOLLISTER & CO., - - AGENTS.

K- - MIYAMOTO.Umbrella Maker

9 BEFwETANIA ST.

Umbrellas and Parasols of All Descrip-tions Made to Order, Repaired

or Re-covere- d.

SATISFACTION GUARANTEED.

r '

Which we have had manufactured for this market. It islight, well balanced, and specially tempered.

The great success attained by the

NEW IMPROVED

Planters' HoeGives us confidence to recommend this new Cane Knife.

We have lately received a large supply of Carpenter's andMechanics' Tools, Shelf Hardware, Portable Forges, Anvils,Vises, Road Scrapers; Stone, BlackSmlth and Drill Ham-mers, Etc. Also a line of

'Cleveland' I

4b

4?

s4b Tandem4b

4b4b

4b4b

4o Isi4b

4b

4b4b4b

4b4)

)

Dandy!4b

J?4b

I4b ' Allen Jones, paced by George4b4b Sharrick and Dan Whitman on the4b 'Cleveland" Tandem, : lowered the4b

Professional Half-mil- e record i sec-

ond.4p4b

4b4b Wm. Lyle, paced by the same I4b machine and manned by F. Damon

and H. E. Walker, lowered theAmateur One -- Third Mile record2 seconds.

4bLyle also won the One Mile

4p

Handicap on a "Cleveland" No. 29. !4b4b They cost no more than the

r

S others.4b4b4b4b.

4b4b

4bH. E. WALKER,

4b4b Masokic Temple. AGENT.4b4,44.

4b4b4b

?4b4b4b4b

eHowLimited.

MERCHANT ST., HONOLULU.

Stationers,News and Music

Dealers,Have just received ex S. S. Australia:

SCIENTIFIC KITES,

BICYCLE PUZZLES,

POCKET KINETOSCOPES,

Official Intercollegiate Footballs,

Bates' Automatic numbering Machines,

Hammocks, Tablets, Envelopes,

MUSIC GOODS,BALL BEARING INKSTANDS, Etc., Etc.

All of which we offer you at

REASONABLE RATES.Not Below Cost.

WASHINGTON FEED

Has removed to the commo-dious building formerly occu-pied by W. S. Luce, Auctr.COR. FORT & QUEEN STS.They have on hand a choice

and fresh stock of flour, feed,etc., and will be pleased to seeall their old customers andmany new ones.

WASHINGTON FEED

Honolulu, Oct 4, 3897.

MRAiiPflMli

The undersigned is Drenared to furnish fine and coarse salt in bulk or inbags, at from ?6.00 to $10.00 per tonof 2,000 pounds. J. I. DOWSUi 1.

Honolulu, October 16, 1897. 4740-l- m

Toledo Razor-Blad- e Pocket Knives.KINDLY CALL AND EXAMINE OUR STOCK.

Pacific Hardware Co., Ld.

IMPROVED

Cane Knife

Thrum'sBook

Store.We are making great headway, in

our reduction sale of Books; want toclean them all out before our new stockarrives. Have you heard our

GRAMAPH0NE

If not, call in and we will make itsing or talk to please you. It is adecided improvement over the Grapha-phon- e

and Phonograph.Per Australia: New Books, Crepe

Tissue and all the Latest Novels.

Thrum'sBook

Store

To the Public

PABSTBREWING

CO.'sFAMOUS MILWAUKEE

BE ERIS NOT offered to the public

in competition withcheap brands.

It Is Absolutelythe Best!

And for purity, it stands un-challenged, and is sold

at fair market rates--BY-

u.) AH J 6

f

Limited.

Sole Agents.Sift4

i

Page 7: FIVE J. Q. WOOD. SPECIAL IN at EDITORevols.library.manoa.hawaii.edu/bitstream/10524/41657/1/1897102801.pdf · "He also edited, with Rossiter Johnson, "Fifty Perfect Poems," (New York,

THE PACIFIC C0M1IEBCIAL ADVERTISER : HONOLULU, OCTOBER 28, 1897.

I I -LOCAL BREVITIES. his duties at the station. The train

started off and McGuire jumped on thesteps of the last car to proceed on his The Clan hpn

uU. Witt.way. His foot slipped and he fellhats and toques at Miss ; Uy on the ties causing very severe

Cahill s. bruises about his legs and jarring himComnanv D's links takes nlace on the considerably. He was brought un to (Limited.)AAA ool BellScOF THEthe city and taken immediately to the13th of November,

Queen's hospital for treatment. McGuire is a first rate conductor and losing his services for even a few daysis a great loss to the company.

G0MI8SI0NmmIs heard in the land. Little hearts are flutter Hi

Agentsing, little feet are pattering. The call to duty is gladlydiscussed by the children. They are buckling on their

We Have Been So Busy of LateSelling the

Members of Company A are request-ed to meet tonight for drill.

Read what II. E. Walker has to sayabout the Cleveland tandem.

Regular monthly meeting of NuuanuChapter No. 1, Rose Croix, tonight.

Regular meeting of KamehamehaLodge of Perfection tonight at 7:30.

Regular session of the Commission-ers of Education at 2:30 p. m. today.

Two Japanese were arrested lastnight on the charge of drunkenness.

A Japanese employe at the WhiteHouse had his hand badly bitten by amonkey, yesterday.

Some one entered J. I. Dowsett'schicken coop Monday night and stole

armor and proposing to fight life's battles; and all theyym iiwyMwatLuiin. The Gennta all br tMiand Siiti for AStrletTrvU-Mar-k. BetwKind cf FueL AEvery

( Imitation.need now to complete their equipment is, good unde-rstandingsin other words, good shoes. We have enoughto shoe them all.Diamond Head,

October 25, 1897.

Weather clear; wind, light N. E.DM GOODS,

HARDWARE,(IT Wholesale and RetailDealers inShoes.Here's a Chance! JlU L I)

GROCERIES.

FOR A FEW DAYS ONLY!

And which we keep on selling, that thefollowing facts have been temporarily

thrown In the shade:"Dagger" BrandMAPSPURE : IRISH : LINEN,

Half-inc- h hem,

HEMMEDSTITCHMullet.

HANDKERCHIEFS

FOR $1.90 PER DOZEN.SchoolChildren

K. C. BakingPowder.

30 high-bre- d fowls.Annual meeting of Pacific Sugar

Mill today at 10 a. m. at the office ofF. A. Schaefer & Co.

The Japanese overdue steamer Rir-jun-Ma- ru

arrived yesterday afternoonwith 500 immigrants.

Owing to the illness of James Nott,Jr., his plumbing business will beclosed until further notice.

Attorney George A. Davis is gettingalong so well at the hospital that heis able to sit up a bit every day.

Mr. and Mrs. Gerrit P. Wilder ar-

rived on the China yesterday. Mrs."Wilder has completely regained herhealth.

Two lads, preferably Hawaiians, arewanted at the Government Nursery,King street Must not be under 16years of age. .

H. F. Wichman is expectefl homesoon from his Eastern purchasing" tour.See preliminary announcement in thesecolumns today.

Major Mulhauser has been placed ina private ward in the Queen's Hospital.He has almost recovered from theeffects of his wound. S'

Willie Savidge has lost hjsvbeautyand is willing to pay a liberal rewardfor its return. Beauty, by the way, isa small black and tan dog.

There will be a meeting of the Kilo-han- a

Art League at 1:30 p. m. Satur-day. Reports will be read and otherimportant business attended to.

Four noted hula dancers are herefrom Kauai on their way to Hilo todance on the occasion of the first an-

niversary to the death of Nawahi.The Asada Company is a new firm

on Hotel street, (Robinson block),dealing in furnishing and fancy goods,general merchandise, etc. New pricesand new stock.

Mrs. Fairchild and Miss Beesly,well known to society people here,came on the China yesterday for an-

other visit to Honolulu. They arestopping at the Hawaiian.

N. S. SACHS,

20 Fort street, Honolulu.

Moveswill receive with each purchase a beautiful litho-graphe- d

map of the Hawaiian Islands. This Manilaoffer to hold good until our supply of maps

exhausted.is Cigars

JIIIOilL

'Our maps are very convenient for refrence,

and are particularly useful to children studying

Hawaiian geography.

Free to anyone else purchasing a bottle of

I Aloha Tooth Wash or Powder.

Union Express Co.TELEPHONE GO.

Office, King St. Opp. Wall, Nichols Co.

We move Safes, Pianos and Furni-ture. We check Baggage at your Resi-dence, and place Small Baggage InStaterooms. We remove Garbage andYard Sweepings by the month or load;haul Freight from and to Steamers.We have large Wagons and smallWagons, large Drays and small Drays.

IE WILL MOVE ANYTHING 1I0VIBL&Competent men and low prices.

W. LARSEN, Manager.

A few local records made on theSterling are announced today by F. C.Atherton. agent for that wheel. Headquarters at household supply department of Castle & Cooke, Ltd.

The maps alone are worth what you're asked

for the best Tooth Powder and most delightful

Tooth "Wash ever sold. Pure and wholesome.Joe Kaimihau. Dolice clerk, went

down on the other side of the islandyesterday, being called there by thedangerous illness of his sister. Hisplace at the Police Station was taken Price cents.by Robert Parker, Jr

There was no meeting of the Board O) Are Preferred by many on account ofof Health yesterday afternoon. Dr Honolulu Sanitarium.

1082 KING STREET.Day was busy aboard the Japanesestpnmpr. Keliinio was unable to bepresent. The meeting will be held at

Hobronthe usual time this afternoon. Drug Go.Little Heat,Quick Work,

and

Perfect Safety,

A quiet, hygienic home, wherecan obtain treatment, consistingKing & Fort.

BUTTERICK PATTERN 9254. of Massage, "Swedish Movement,"Baths (both Electric and Russian) ad-ministered by Trained Nurses.,oAoAoAoAoAoAoAoAoAoAo,The Above or Any Other Pattern of

BUTTERICK'S CObTUMES to be had of

Court Officer Oscar Cox had quite anexperience with a Chinaman Tuesdaynight He and other officers were outon a che fa raid. Cox was stationedin the back yard. A Chinaman camehurrying out and the officer grabbedhim." The prisoner reached ar jund to-

ward his hip pocket. Cox thought hewas after che fa tickets, and held himsecurely. Upon being searched at thePolice Station a loaded revolver wasfound upon his person.

New Society.

Mrs. M. HANNA. Being supplied by drop feed. There areStrict attention given to diet.DR. C. L. GARVIN, in Charge.DR. S. C. RAND, Manager.

Telephone, 639.Fashionable : Milliner.O

now in use on the Islands about ONEHUNDRED AND SEVENTY-FIV- E ofthese Stoves, without a single reportof accident

o9JOIN "THE d THE PEOPLEWE ARE

qOH ACCOUNT OF OVERSTOCKBEST WORKWHO DO THE1DI 111CLUB!

Dandruff Killer!A New and ThoroughlyEfficient DestroyerFor All

DANDRUFF IN THE HEAD.Guaranteed to Cure the ScalpOf All Skin Diseases.Put up in one size bottle only.

For the month of October, we will sellthis line3AND CHARGE THE LEAST MONEY3

t: At costiWALL, NICHOLS CO., Proprietors.

? BETTER WORK CANNOT BE DONEA good chance for a bargain.

Greatest Amount of Knowledge for

J AND YOU MUST PAY HIGHER PRICESCRITERION BARBER SHOP,

PACHECO & FERNANDES, Prop.Fort St., Opp. Pantheon Stables.

the Least Money.

ONLY SLOOa WEEK2

9GAnd You Soon Become the Owner of ELSEWHERE. NO MATTER WHAT

THE TROUBLE IS WITH YOURThis Great Work.d IS ill

. Mrs. Walter Frear and other ladiesof the city are the prime movers in theorganization of a society to be knownas the Hawaiian Woman's Club. Theobject of this society is to gather to-

gether the young English-speakin- g

Hawaiin ladies of the city once everyfortnight in the houses of various la-

dies of the city and there to read, chat,indulge in original research pertainingto matters Hawaiian, and to do otherthings useful to know about in dailylife.

In response to invitations sent outby Mrs. Frear, about 40 Hawaiian, la-

dies gathered at the home of Mrs. Dil-

lingham. Punahou, Tuesday afternoon,and there listened to the reading ofparts of the life of Joan of Arc. Thenbits of history and legends were readand discussed. The ladies, many ofwhom were from Kawaiahao Seminaryand Kamehameha School, listened withgreat interest and expressed their in-

tention of attending the meetings reg-

ularly.

Greenhorn Race.Following are the entries in the one

mile greenhorn race, to take place atCyclomere track Saturday afternoon,October 30, 1S97:

X BICYCLE, WE CAN MAKE

h as GOOD AS NEWHUSTACE & CO..

DEALERS IN

Wood and CoalALSO

White and Black SandWhich we will sell at the very lowest

market rates.

Telephone No. 414.

expert TYPEWRITERAND QUN WORK DONE PROMPTLY.

3

33

3 mmmHawaiian Cycle & Mfg. Co.312 Fort St. . Opposite Lewers & Cooke.

oFirst neat E. B. Berger. J. Lloyd, ! H. W. Schmidt & Sons !N. Murray, N. Kubey, P. Gleason, R"Ross.

Second heat A. Mackintosh, J. N.Tavlor. J. J. Reynolds, A. S. Prescott,

STANDARD DICTIONARY.F. Atkins. J. Hedemann.l lite!!lieFirst two men in each heat and the (HAS NO REAL COMPETITOR).

24-- 7 Editors;301.S65 Vocabulary Terms;

5.000 Illustrations;

HAVE RECEIVED PER "AUSTRALIA"

New Goods in Every Line.Also, Another Large Shipment o!

WHITE SEWING MACHINES.And a Supply of Extra and Spare Pieces, Belts, Screwdrivers,

Machine Oil and Cans; Needles for "White," "Domes-tic," "New Home," "Singer" and "Household"

Machines, Etc., Etc., Etc.

2.t i33 -- Quarto Pages.

Books on Exhibition and Further In

fastest third to qualify for the final.Final heat to be paced by Nigel

Jackson.First prize; trophy valued at $10; sec-

ond prize, trophy valued at $5.

Accident to Conductor.Jock McGuire, conductor on the O.

R. & L., met with an accident yester-

day that will keep him in the hospitalfor several days to come. He was athis usual duties at Pearl City on themorning train and had just finished

formation at

Gents' Furnishing Goods, Fancy Goodsand General Merchandise.

ASADA "COMPANYWALL, NICHOLS COMPANY.

N. B. Our solicitor, Mr. H. E. Kelsey,will soon eall on you with pros- -

ROBINSON BLOCK.HOTEL ST.pectut.

Page 8: FIVE J. Q. WOOD. SPECIAL IN at EDITORevols.library.manoa.hawaii.edu/bitstream/10524/41657/1/1897102801.pdf · "He also edited, with Rossiter Johnson, "Fifty Perfect Poems," (New York,

THE PACIFIC COMMEKQIAL ADVERTISER : HONOLULU, OCTOBER 2S , 1897SMl " I I I "

A.ATTENTION, COMPANYCoinm Gonadion - Australian Rop

Mil HP fill

same time. The Albert has proved hersuperiority by beating them all intoport.

Once more was the bark DiamondHead reported off port yesterday, bthe winds were baffling, and. like " --

day before. Captain Ward was una .'.1

to make port.

Oceanic Steamship Company.

TIME TABLE:The Fine Passenger Steamers of This Line Will Arrive at and Leave

This Port as Hereunder:

FROM SAN FRANCISCO:

AUSTRALIA NOV. 9

ALAMEDA NOV. 18

AUSTRALIA DEC. 7

MARIPOSA DEC. 16

FOR SAN FRANCISCO:

MARIPOSA NOV. 11

AUSTRALIA NOV. 17

MOANA DEC. 9

AUSTRALIA ..' 1. DEC. 15

In connection with the sailing of the above steamers, the Agents areprepared to Issue, to intending passengers, coupon through tickets by anyrailroad from San Francisco, to all points In the United States, and fromNew York by any steamship line to all European ports.

For furthur particulars apply to

Wm. G. IRWIN & Co.LIMITED

General Agents Oceanic S. S. Co.

Pacific Mail Steamship Go.AND

Occidental & Oriental Steamship Go.

Steamers of the above companies willor about the dates below mentioned.

FOR SAN FRANCISCO:

COPTIC ..Oct. 30

RIO DE JANEIRO Nov. 9

GAELIC Nov. 19

DORIC Dec 10

CHINA Dec. 19

For freight and passage and all general Information, apply to

H.Hackfeld&Co.AGENTS.

Issued Every Morning, ExceptSunday, by the

HAWAIIAN GAZETTE COMPANY,Von Holt Block, King Street

C. G. DALLENTINE,Manager.

SHIPPIKS liilELLIGEIiCE.

VESSELS IN PORT.

NAVAL.U.S.S. Bennington, Nichols, Cruise.U. S. Gunboat Yorktown, Commander

Stockton, Yokohama,. October 16.TJ. S. Gunboat Wheeling, Sebree,

Cruise, October 22.

MERCHANTMEN.(This Hat does not Include Coasters.)

Am. bktn. W. H. Dimond, Nilson, SanFrancisco, October 10.

Am. schr. Spokane, Jamison, PortTownsend, October 11.

Am. bk. Columbia, Gore, Seattle, Wash.,October 14.

Am. bk C. D. Bryant, Colly, LaysanIsland, October 15.

Br. bk. Aethelbert, Garriock, Junin,Chile, October 18.

Am. bktn. S. G. Wilder, McNeill, SanFrancisco, October 21.

Am. schr. Maaweema, Smith, Seattle,Washington, October 22.

Am. sp. Tillie E. Starbuck, Curtis,Newcastle, October 23.

P. M. S. S. China, Seabury, San Fran-cisco, October 27.

Jap. S. S. Rirjun-Mar- u, Japan, October27.

VESSELS EXPECTED.

Vessel: From: Date:Schr. John G. North, 'Frisco... Sept. 5

ARRIVALS.

Wednesday, October 27.

Jap. S. S. Rirjun-Mar- u, from Japan.P. M. S. S. China, Seabury, from San

Francisco, making record trip of 5days, 22 hours and 50 minutes.

Stmr. J. A. Cummins, Searle, fromOahu ports.

VESSELS LEAVING TODAY.

P. M. 8. S. China, Seabury, for Chinaand Japan, at 5 p. m.

Am. bktn. W. H. Dimond, Nilson, forSan Francisco.

PASSENGERS.

Arrivals.From San Francisco, per P. M. S. S.

China, Oct. 27 Mr. and Mrs. G. P.Wilder, Mrs. C. Fairchild and servant,Miss Beasley, Mr. and Mrs. H. Kell-ne- y,

Miss Kelley, Miss M. Bohlan,Mr. and Mrs. R. Schmidt, C. C. Ken-nedy, Jno. Watt, R. J. Lillie, S. W.Wilcox, A Hansen.

Through Rev. Geo. Albrecht, wifeand two children, Miss Albrecht, P. J.Alexander, E. W. Brown, H. C. A.Blyth, Dr. W. M. Bell, Rev. C. Beard,Miss Rowena Beans, Mrs. H. L. Bridg-man- n,

Mr. and Mrs. S. Coe, H. Cloete,Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Campbell, F. W.Callender, Major, and Mrs. Darling,Miss M. Leithauser, Miss C. J. Miller,Rev. H. Miller, Capt. Edw. Matthews,S. Nieyama, Mr. and Mrs. C. F. Os-

borne, Mr. E. Onoutchi, Mr. and Mrs.H. Parjot, Baron Rummerskirch, Dr.J. Rosenstein, Hon. J. W. Ragsdale,wife and two children, Mr. and Mrs. R.Ragsdale, Mr. R. L. Dunn, Miss M. B.Daniels, Mrs. Farey, Mrs. L. Granger,Miss G. Granger, Miss E. Hastings andmaid, Miss E. J. Hewett, Mr. H. Hunt,Mrs. R. T. Hall, Dr. J. E. Jennings,Mr. H. N. Van Keuren, Mr. and Mrs.T. Low, Miss L. Low, G. W. Little, F.B. Lane, Rev. E. Reid, H. Stock, H. Y.Stafford, Miss A. Southard, Y. Shina-gaw- a,

Mr. Sykora, Dr. H. H. Shumak-e- r,

J. Tschetinian, E. H. Voegeli, C.Vreeland, Mr. and Mrs. W. R. Web-ster, Dr. and Mrs. L. C. Warner, Mrs.L. F. Watson, Miss Warner, Mr. andMrs. II. Wilcoxson, Miss Wilcoxson."

WHARF AND WAVE

DIAMOND HEAD SIGNAL STA-TION, October 27, 10 p. m. The weath:er is hazy; wind, calm.

The China sails for the Orient at5 p. m. today.

The bark Ceylon sailed from Seattlefor this port, October 14th.

The Albert Meyer will load fertili-zer at Killisnoo for this port.

The ship A. J. Fuller arrived in NewYork from this port, October 13th.

The forest Queen has been charter-ed to load merchandise for Kahului.

The ship Tillie E. Starbuck hashauled over to the fishmarket wharf.

The barkentine Amelia has beenchartered to load lumber at PortBlakeley for Honolulu.

The W. H. Dimond is ready for seaand will sail for San Francisco witha full load of sugar today.

The S. S. China was first sighted yes-terday by Henry Crane from one ofthe high points at the Pali.

The Albert, S. N. Castle, Transit andAloha have been chartered to load gen-eral merchandise for this port.

The S. G. Wilder and W. H. Dimondwere both engaged taking on sugarfrom the Mauna Loa yesterday.

SAN FRANCISCO, October 18. BarkS. C. Allen On October 12, 37 35 N131 52 W, carried away foretopgallantmast and lower foretopgallant yard ina NNE gale.

The P. M. S. S. China, Seabury com-mander, arrived in port and hauledalongside the Pacific Mail wharf short-ly after noon yesterday, after a recordtrip of 5 days, 22 hours and 50 minutesfrom" San Francisco. She brought alarge number of through passengersand will continue on her way to theOrient at 5 p. m. today.

SAN FRANCISCO, October 15. Theschooner Aloha and the bark Albertboth got in from Honolulu yesterday,the former making the run in thirtynd the latter in sixteen days. The

Mauna Ala, S. N. Castle, S. C. Allenand . Albert all left Honolulu at the

T - Ariuorv Corn pa nv A, First Regi- - jA ment, N. . H. V

U Honolulu, Oot. 2, 197.)'. .yy Every member of this Command is

hereby ordered to report at the DrillShei THIS (THUKSKAY) EVENING,Oct. 23, at 7 :30 o'clock for drill

PAUL SMITH,Cap tain '.'oinmatKiing.

CHAS. BREWER & CO.'S

New York Line.The Bark AMY TURNER will sail

from New York to Honolulu, on orabout

JANUARY 15th, 1898.

If sufficient inducement offers. Ad-vances made on shipments on liberalterms. For further particulars, addressMessrs. CHAS. BREWER & CO., 27Kilby Street, Boston, or

C. BREWER & CO., Ltd.,Honolulu Agents.

FORSALE.House and lot on Young street; lot

has a frontage of 75 feet, by a depthof 155 feet 4 inches; house containsparlor, 3 bed rooms, hallway, largelanai, dining room, kitchen, pantry,patent w. c, bath and servants' quar-ters; stable on premises, 28x30 feet,containing box stall, open stall androom for three carriages. Inquire at

L. H. DEE & CO.,City Feed Store, Punchbowl and Bere- -

tania Streets. 4744-- tf

NOTICE TO CREDITORS.

In the Matter of the Estate of E. A.Jacobson, of Honolulu, Oahu, aVoluntary Bankrupt.

Creditors of the said Bankrupt arehereby notified to come in and provetheir debts before such Judge of theCircuit Court of the First Circuit asshall be sitting at Chambers, at theJudiciary Building, on Friday, the 5thday of November, 1897, between thehours of 10 o'clock in the forenoonand noon of said day, also to elect anAssignee of the said Bankrupt's Es-tate.

By the Court:J. A. THOMPSON,

Clerk.Honolulu, October 25, 1897. 4748-t- d

NOTICE.

The California Fruit Market (P. G.Camarinos & Co.) will purchase allkinds of produce, fruits and poultry Ineither large or small quantities. Per-sons residing on Oahu or any of theother Islands having turkey, chickens,eggs, butter, oranges, limes, aligatorpears or any other kind of marketableproduce, fruits or poultry, can sendthe same to them and get the marketprice.

Honolulu 7th Sept., 1897.4707-- tf 1897--tf

NOTICE.

During my absence from the Islands,W. T. Robinson of Wailuku, Maul,will act for me under special power ofattorney..

YOUNG HEE.Wailuku, Maui, Sept. 23, 1897.

4724-l- m

NOTICE TO STOCKHOLDERS.

The annual meeting of the Halea-kal-a

Ranch Company will be held atthe office of C. Brewer & Co., Ltd., onSaturday, October 30th, at 11 o'clocka. m. GEO. H. ROBERTSON,

Treasurer.Dated Honolulu, October 23d, 1897.

. 4746-l- w

NOTICE TO STOCKHOLDERS.

The annual meeting of the OnomeaSugar Company will be held at theoffice of C. Brewer & Co. on Saturday,October 30th, 1S97, at 10 o'clock A. M.

WM. A. BOWEN,Secretary Onomea Sugar Co.

4742-t- d

NOTICE TO STOCKHOLDERS.

The annual meeting of the HaikuSugar Company will be held at theoffice of Castle & Cooke, Ltd., on Saturday, October 30th, 1S97, at 9 o'clockA. M. WM. A. BOWEN,

Secretary Haiku Sugar Co.4742-t- d

NOTICE TO STOCKHOLDERS.

The annual meeting of the PalaPlantation will be held at the office ofCastle & Cooke, Ltd., on Saturday,October 30th, 1897, at 9:30 o'clockA. M. T. W. HOBRON,

Secretary Paia Plantation.4742-t-d

NOTICE TO STOCKHOLDERS.

The annual meeting of the KohalaSugar Company will be held at theoffice of Castle & Cooke, Ltd., on Saturday, October 30th, 1S97, at 10:30o'clock A. M. WM. A. BOWEN,

Secretary Kohala Sugar Co.4742-t-d

COTTAGE WANTED.

An unfurnished cottage, with at leastthree bedrooms, parlor, dining room,etc., and stable, handy to town, iswanted to rent. Apply Z,4744-2- w This Office

TO RENT.

The Cottage on Judd Street, knownas the Dickson Cottage, recently occupied by Mr. S. M. Ballou. Apply to

W. F. ALLEN,Over Bishop & Co.'s Bank.

4732-l- m

ART FDffl

The Occidental and Oriental Com-pany's Belgic, as a general rule, getsin ahead of time, but on the last occasion she broke the record by fifteenhours. The smart ocean liner came infrom China, via Yokohama and Hono-lulu, two days ahead of time, makingthe run from Honolulu in six daysthree hours and fifteen minutes. S. F.Call, Oct. 21.

SAN FRANCISCO, October 17 TheHawaiian steamer Claudine paid an-

other visit to this port yesterday. Onthe last occasion she brought the newsof the overthrow of the monarchy andthe establishment of a ProvisionalGovernment at Honolulu. On this oc-

casion she come for an overhauling,and as soon as the Quarantine Officershad- - passed her, Captain Cameronsteamed direct to the Union IronWorks. The steamer came up in bal-last, and when it is removed she willgo on the drydock and in a few weekswill be turned out as good as new.

CLAUDINE LIBELLED.

Sailor in San Francisco Sues forDamages.

Charls Robison yesterday libeled theHawaiian steamship Claudine in theUnited States District Court, askingfor $5000 damages. On April 15, 1896,

near the Island of Maul, he was a. sea-

man on board the barkentine C. C.Funk, in tow of the Claudine. By rea-son of the bad handling of the Clau-dine, as the libelant claims, the hawserparted and broke his leg. By leave ofcourt he sues as a poor man. SanFrancisco Call.

San Francisco Shipping.Sailed October 14: Brig W. G. Ir-

win, for Honolulu. October 15: BarkAndrew Welch, Honolulu. ArrivedOctober 14: U. S. S. Philadelphia, 9

days from Honolulu; bark Albert, 16

days from Honolulu; barkentine S..N.Castle, 16 days from Honolulu; schoon-er Aloha, 30 days from Honolulu. Oc-

tober 15: Schooner Albert Meyer, 21days from Kahului. October 16:Steamer Claudine, 9 days from Hono-lulu. October 17: Bark S. C. Allen, 19days from Honolulu. October 19: S. S.Belgic, 6 days from Honolulu.

The FavoriteIS THE FAVORITE place for the

finest liquors only, and the best dis-

tillers of the United States Can-

ada and Great Britain are represented.Best brews of Beer, either on draft orin bottles, may be had at all times.

W. M. Cunningham, Proprietor ofthis well-know- n resort, has been inthe business for many years, and is aconnoisseur in liquors. His establish-ment is always orderly, and, with theservices of his assistant, Mr. Thomp-son, customers are promptly supplied.Bethel and Hotel streets is a Favoritecorner for the lovers of cold Beer orfine Wines and Liquors.

BORN.

FARRINGTON. In Washington, D.C, October 15, 1897, to the wife ofWallace R. Farrington, a son.

DIED.HARE In San Francisco, October 18,

1897, Theresa J. Hare, mother ofMrs. T. H. Hatch and J. H. and M.Augusta Hare, a native of Virginia,aged 73 years. (Hilo papers pleasecopy.

The regular monthly meeting of Nu-ua- nu

Chapter No. 1, Rose Croix, .willbe held at the Masonic Temple THISTHURSDAY EVENING, Oct. 28th,1897, at 7:30 o'clock. All sojourningBrethren are cordially invited to at-tend.

By order of the M. W. M.A. B. SCRIMGEOUR,

4750-- lt Secretary.

MEETING NOTICE.

Kamehameha Lodge of Perfection,No. 1, A. & A. S. R., will hold a reg-ular meeting at Masonic Temple at7:30 this (Thursday) evening.

C. L. CRABBE, Secretary.

LOST.

A small black and tan dog. Answersto the name of "Beauty." A reliablereward will be paid upon return to

WILLIAM SAVIDGE,4750-t-f Advertiser Office.

WANTED.

HAWAIIAN'S Two boys, not under16 years of age and not afraid of work:those familiar with the care of plantspreferred; will have an opportunityto learn forestry. Apply

GOVERNMENT NURSERY,4750-- 3t King Street.

FOR RENT.

Offices to rent, corner Queen andFort streets. Best location in the city.Inquire WASHINGTON FEED CO.,Phone 422. 4746-l- m

RESIDENCE FOR SALE OR TO LET.

Fine residence on Green street, nowoccupied by Dr. G. P. Andrews.Grounds, 1 acres; beautifully laidout Commands fine view. Vacant 1stAugust R. I. LILLIE.468-t- f Theo. H. Davies & Co., Ltd.

Steamers of the above line runniagin connection with the CANADIAN-PACIFI-C

RAILWAY COMPANY be-

tween Vancouver, B. C and Sydney,N. S. W., and calling at Victoria. B. C,Honolulu, Suva (Fiji) and Wellington.N. Z., are

Due at Honolulu:On or about the dates below stated, viz:

From Sydney, Wellington, H.Z.,and Suia

For Victoria and Vancouver, B.C.

WARRIMOO NOV. 5

AORANGI NOV. IS

MIOWERA rEC.

From Vancouver and Victoria, B.C., For

Suva, Wellington, N.Z., and Sydney.

MIOWERA OCT. 26

WARRIMOO NOV. 23

AORANGI DEC. 21

Through tickets Issued from Honolulu to Canada, United States and Europe.

For Freight and Passage and allgeneral information, apply to

T. II. DAYIES & CO., LD.,GENERAL AGENTS.

LIFE and FIRE

L IIULIUU

AGENTS FOR

Hi Will in li lite l

OF BOSTON.

Eli fire Insurance Gompany

OF HARTFORD.

A. V. GEAR,

u e and ire insurance Aoen

AGENT FOR

ail III connoi New York

Tne Greenwich Fire Insurance Rompony

of New York

210 King St. Tel.-N- o. 256

ESTABLISHED IN 1858.

BISHOP & CO.Bankers

TRANSACT A GENERAL BANKINGAND EXCHANGE BUSINESS.

Commercial and Travelers Letters ofCredit Issued, available In all the

principal cities of the world.

CLAU8 SFRECKKL8. WM G. IBWIK.

CLADS SPRECKELS & CO.,

Bankers,HONOLULU - . - N H. L

San Fbancisco Agkntb The Nevada Bankof San Francisco.

DRAW EXCHANGE ONSan Francisco --The Nevada Bank of 8an

Francisco.Txndon The Union Bank of Loudon (Ltd.).New York American Exchange National

Bank.Chicago Merchants National Bank.Paris Comptolr National d'Escompte de

Paris.Berlin Dresdner Bank.HonKkong and Yokohama Hongkong andShanghai Banking Corporation.New Zealand and Australia Bank ofNew Zealand.Victoria and Vancouver Bank of Brit-

ish North America.

Transact o General BanKina s Excnanoe BusinessDeposits Received. Loans made on Approved

Security. Commercial and Travelers' CreditIssued. Bills of Exchange Bought and 8old.Collections Promptly Accounted For

REAL ESTATE FOR SALE.

J. M. MONSARRAT has for sale thefollowing properties:1. Premises off Vineyard Street, Ho-

nolulu, with two Cottages thereon.This is a fine property. Cottages willlet for $15 and $12 per month, respec-tively.

2. Premises on Ewa side of LilihaStreet, between School and KuaklnlStreets. Has a frontage of 137 3 feetand a depth of 170.8 feet. One Cottageon mauka end of the lot. Lets for $15per month.46S0-- tf J. M. MONSARRAT.

Just: --to Hand:We are displaying at our Showrooms an elegant line of

artistic furniture in

Reed and Rattan.Comprising Couches, Tables, Chairs, Rockers, Easels,

Lounges, Cots, Etc., Etc., in the most uniquedesigns.

call at Honolulu and leave this port onrx-TCt- F -

FOR JAPAN AND CHINA:

BELGIC Nov. 6

COPTIC v Nov. 25

RIO DE JANEIRO Dec 4

CITY OF PEKING Dec 25

nnIRE.

H. WILLIAMS, Manager.

quick returns. We must sell to make room

L. S. MATHEWS, Proprietor.

2

TELEPHONE 92.

'he City Furniture Store.LOVE BUILDING, H.FORT ST.

New Furniture StoreFort and Beretania Sts. (late H. H. Williams).

NEW AND GOOD FURNITURE AT SAN FRANCISCO PRICES.BARGAINS FOR THIS WEEK ONLY, TO MAKE ROOM FOR FRESH

ARRIVAL.We will offer this week Full Bed-roo- m Set (7 pieces) in Oak, Ash, Maple

or Birch, extra large Beveled Mirror (square or chevahl) for ?21.00; withbest quality Wire and Wool Mattress, only $27.00, the lot worth $35.00; theBureau alone is worth $12.50.

Same Sets (4 pieces) only $17.50. Only a few left.Fine New Double Beds, $3.00.Fine New Double or Three-Quart- er Wire Mattress, $3.00.Fine New Double or Three-Quart- er Wool Mattress, $4.00.Fine New Double or Three-Quart- er Wool Mattress, $3.50.Fine New Single Wrool Mattress, $1.50.Extra High Heavy Oak Dining Chairs, $1.75.One Hundred Wool and Floss Pillows, 90 cents each.Double Hair Mattress, $6.00.Forty-Poun- d Gray Hair Mattress (silk tick), only $20.00; worth $30.00.Fine. Large Rugs. 75 cents each.

IK

A

: tf.P

OUR MOTTO: Small profits,for new goods.

H. E. Mclntyre & Bro.EAST CORNER FORT AND KING STS.

IMPORTERS AND DEALERS IN

Groceries, Provisions and Feed

New and Fresh Goods Received by Every Packet from California,Eastern States and European Markets.

Standard Grades of Canned Vegetables, Fruits and Fish.

Goods Delivered to Any Part of the City. Satisfaction Guaranteed.

Island Trade Solicited,

o n ROX 14S.w ' - - - - -a a

'. 4 ;

'