1 ifIfpf m · 2015. 6. 2. · J ft! 1 ifIfpf mIt rrli ,.ii.hii,.,.. g i,r'. VOL. XIX., XO....
Transcript of 1 ifIfpf m · 2015. 6. 2. · J ft! 1 ifIfpf mIt rrli ,.ii.hii,.,.. g i,r'. VOL. XIX., XO....
1 ifIfpf mJ ft !
... , .,..It rrli ,.ii.hii gi ,r'. "
VOL. XIX., XO. HONOLULU, HAWAT1AX ISLANDS! TlilTHSDAV. MAY IO. 1801. 1MOOK: 5 ;knts.Dusiiirsa Cara. cutrol tmtrtiociucntaf.
LATEST NEWS FROM ABROAD.executing the procensts of UnitedStates Court,
Special order have been ient to ru-capt- ure
tho train seized at Troutdaluand now on the way Kat. "
The prisoner taken at Forsythe,Mont., will be escorted by the mill- -
M. E. Grossman, D.D.S. HAWAIIAN HARDWARE CO.,
IIAKDWAR1C,Cutlery and Glassware
307 Fort Htret.S575.1y
HAWAIIAN
Abstract and Title Co.
HONOLULU. H. I.
K. M . HatciiOcil Brown Vlce-lreaiile- iit
W. K. 0stlJ. F. Brown, Trea-iar- r A Mtirr. Auditor
ThU Company is prepared to searchrecords and fumiab abstracts ol title toall ral property In the Kingdora.
Parties placing loans on, or contemplatetag the purchase of real estate will find itto their adtantage to consult the companyin regard to title,
--Ah orders attended to with prompt-cess- .
ttH TVItHq" 5T5- - P.O.Box 15.
C. BREWEll & CO., LLWED
Qaeen Street, Uonolala, H. J.
AGENTS FORHawaiian Agriealtural Co , Onomea
Snar Co., Honouiu 5auar Co , WailukuSugar Co., Waihee Sugar Co., MakeeSnjcar Co., llaleakala Kanch Co., Kapa-pa- la
Kanch.Planters' Line San Francisco rackets .
Chas. Brewer & Co.'a Line of BostonPacket 3.
Agent3 Boston Board of Underwriters.Agents Philadelphia Board of Under-
writers.HI3T OF OFFICERS:
P. C. Jokes.. PresidentGso. H. Robektsox Manager"R K Rsnop. Tres. and Secy.Col. W. F. Allex AuditorC M. Cookjs )H. WATKsaorsE. ..Y .... -.- DirectorsC.X. Cabtsr )
National Iron Works
QTJKEJf STREET,Between Alakea and Richard Streets.
UNDERSIGN ED ARETHE to make all kinds of Iron,Brass, Bronze, Zinc and Lead Castings;also a general Repair Shop for SteamEngines, Rice Mills, Corn Mill3, WaterWheels, Wind Mills, etc ; Machines forthe cleaning of Coffee, Castor Oil Beans,Ramie, Sissal, Pineapple Leases andother fibrous plants ; also. Machines forPaper Stock, Machines for. extractingStarch from Maniock, Arrow Root, etc.
JTAll orders promptly attended to.
WMte, Bitman & Co.42-t- f
New GoodsA FINE ASSORTMENT.
TILES FOR FLOOR!And for Decorating Purposes ;
mattcx9 ct all. kctds,Masxla Cxqaes.
Chinese Fire Crackers, Rockets andbombs, Japanese ProTision and Soy.
Emd-piin- Ud Poitalnn dbniT Sit.
A few of those fine hand-embroider- ed
STEK and 8ATTN BCJ&HUdXTS.
FRAMES,Assorted colors and patterns of Crepe
Silk Shawls. iegani a eie-- a setupsand Saucers. A fine lot of
BOATS AND ACCESSORIESA few of those handy Mosquito Urn
Also, an assortment of new styles of
Rattan Chairs and TablesAlso, a small selection of JAPAHZ3Z
COSTUMES.
WING WO CHAN & CO.
rfo. SK3 Nananu Stvtm
HUSTACE & C6..D2ALZS3 a
WOOD AND COALAlso White and Black Sand which w
will eeU at the rery lowest market rates.
CUT 2zll Tausrno No. 414.
2Z7m2dcrcA.v TxLxmoya No. 414.
DR. C. B. COOPER.OrFiCK IIii!RMt8:30 to 10 a. m.: 2 to
4 r. m.; 7 to 8 p. m.Sundays :9:30 to 10:30 a. m.
tOll AI. VKKA AND llOl l.K HTItr.KTS.
CCTBoth Telephonca 154. S(7Mm
F. M. WAKEFIELD,Attorney and Counsellor at Law
Temporary OQlce with O. W. Ashford,Merchant Street, Honolulu.
J 3394-- 1 y
B. W. X'CHKSNEY. J. M. A F. W. M'CHl HT.124 Clay St., Si F. 40 Queen 8t, liono.
M. W. LIcOrXEaNEY & SONS,
Wholesale Grooers, Commission Mer-
chants and Importers.40 Queen Bt., Honolulu.
LEWIS & CO.,
Wholesale and Retail Grocers,
111 FORT STREET.
BEAVER SALOON,
fort Street, Opponllo Wilder A Co.n. i. NOLTE, FBOPBIETOB.
rint-ola- ii Lnnobe. SorTed with Te, Ooffeaoam water, Ulngei Alt or Ullk.
Osii From 3 a, m, till 10 . m.3rBrDokeTi'neqnltte8peolftlty
JOHN T. WATERH0USE,
Importer and Dealt in
GENERAL MERCHANDISE.No. 35-- 31 QxieenBtreet. nonolnln.
H. HACKFELD a CO.,
General Commission Agents
Oor. vrtfc Quean 8ti..Honolnln.
HONOLULU IRON WORKS CO.,
Steam Engines,Boilers, Sugar XSllIs, Coolers, lTrasa
and Jead Casting,And machinery of every description Etadeto order. Particular attention paid toships blacksmithinsc. Job work excutedon the shortest notic. "
ARTHUR HARRISON,
Builder and ContractorHaving a large quantity of Granite
Curbing, to save removal of same, willsell ct reduced rates.
BELL TELEPHONE 319.3G67-- lf
O YOU FEEDTHE BABY 1
The Skin needs foo. If the Com-plexion is sallow, rough, scaly, pimply,it is because it is not fed with
LOLA M0NTEZ CRE3IETrie Skin Food and Tissue Builder,
positively the only safe and reliable ar-
ticle for the Complexion. Absolutelyharmless, opens the pores, increases thenatural and necessary secretions of theskin. Kestores the flesh to firm healthystate of youth. Prevents wrinkles.Good for burns, chapped lips and hands.
E2!"Tot lasts three months.PRICE 75 CENTS.
gCJAek vour druggist for it.HOW CAN YOU TOLERATE
Freckles, Pim- -pies, Blackheads,yellow or mud-dy 8kin, mouthWrinkles or anyform of facial dis-figurement whenMrs Nettie Hahkibon guaranteestocureyou. Don'tconsider your
4 AtJ. caPO a "opelesf- -..... one.Mrs. Hrrison trti ldis forill de-
fects ot face end figure. The perma-nent removsl of superfluous hairguaranteed.
i.moric5rt Uonuty Doctor.26 Geary Street, Kan Frnncisco, Cal
f3TFor fle by HOLL1HTEU DRUGCO. 109 Fort St., Honolulu.
Sfifttt-t- f
Massage.f KH. PP.Y WOULD ANNOUNOH
iVI that phe will attend a limited nuinIwr of patipnt9. Addr? t H. MWhltney'p. KinK Pt. ; TlMr:iiP 7fi
Tltn AVVIiRTtNiiU It dr livercd by currier ft uny prt ofthr city for 75 cftitH n month, Innityanre. ttibcrlh mow nnd kcrpup with the ttrw yenr. Ring tipIclephon No. tiH.
Terriblo Earthquake, With Loss of
Many Lives, In Grocco.
SUGAR TARIFF UNDER DISCUSSION.
OermaiiV Will Hold 8aino.HmtorMorcan'ft Wlfo InI rire In NewOrleans Curbett'a Hurcril In Knjflnnd Ailiiilrnl la C3aius' ItecptioDIn Montevideo MIc-llsneo- u Items.
WASiiiNaTON, April iS.Tho Dem-ocratic Senators who have been en-gaged in preparing a tarill compro-mise have been couriering the sugarduty today and decided, besides fixinga tarifrof forty cent ml valorem on nilsugars and one-eigh- th of a cent addi-tional on refined sugar, to impose afurther duty of one-tent- h of a cent onsugar Imported from countries payinga bounty to sugar producers. Thislai-- t provision is suppos-e- to be aimedat Germany, where a bounty Is paidon beet sugar.
It has been decided also to extendthe time when the sugar scheduleshall take effect until January 1, 1893,which will insure the bounty underthe McKinley law for this season'scrop. It is understood these two propositions have been inserted in response to the earnest solicitations ofthe Louisiana Senators.
Athens, April 28. At 9:20 o'clocklast night, during the usual Fridayprocession in the cathedral here, aviolent snock occurred tnat seeminglyshook the building to its very founda-tions.
, The duration of the shock was fif-teen eeconds. The cathedral wascrowded with devo ees, who when theshock began were on the verge of apanic. An exH-wasliurried- ly thrownopen and the people dispersed.
The shock was felt with the greatestseventy at Thebes and Atlanta, bothof which places were extensivelydamaged by the last shocks.
Both cities were completely destroyed, not a single house being leftstanding. Incalculable damage Jwasdone at Jbamai, larrasia, Volo, uhalirsand Patras.
At Lamai the walls of the prisonfell down, and many of the uninjuredprisoners made their escape in theconfusion prevailing.
In addition to the many personsrendered homeless by the previousshqeks, there are now thousands ofothers who will have to depend on theGovernment for shelter and susten-ance. ' ;
, There Is little doubt that there hasbeen great loss of life. '
Germany Will Bold Samoa.Berlin, April 28. Inquiries have
resulted In information to the effectthat the German Government willunder no consideration consent to anyproposition which would diminishGerman mlluence In Samoa or elsewhere, and a change from the presentattitude of the German Governmenttoward Samoa would therefore onlybe in the direction of a German pro-tectorate over the Samoa inlands. Onthe other hand the German Govern-ment is willing to grant to the UnitedStates by treaty any demands whichwould secure to America her presentcommercial rights and standing inSamoa. This is the standpoint ofGermany, and it is looked uimu an in-volving the houorof the German Kin-p- i
re.Uncle Sam Interferes.
! Washington, April 23. Govern-ment olTicials today received a num-ber of telegrams from United StatesCourt ofllcials and others in theNorthwest of very disquieting, if notalarming nature.
Lawless band of Coxeyites are con-centrating along the Union Pacific inOregon, ami trouble seems imminent.
One mob captured a train near Port-land, and, an Governor Pennoyer onan appeal by an otlicial of the roaddeclined to interfere, application hasbeen made for Government lMojs toassist in mnintuiulni? the peace andIn the execution of Federal processes.
In North Dakota a similar condi-tion exit. A report from Devil'sIjake states that the, strikers refuse toallow tle train carrying the UnitedStates malls to move.
Altogether the situation Is becom-ing serious and to meet H the Govern-ment will use every means within itspower.
No inohs will be permitted to inter-fere with the movements of mailtrains and the United States Inmpswill assist In serving the prooews ofUnited States Courts in the disturbeddistrict".
If the lawlessness continues tlmspengaged In it will be made to feel thepuwf-ro- tlu Government In a waytht may t t be nlilied.
General H'bntleld this nfternontis'iit mder 1 Cdnel S nine, in com-mand of the D'paitment of theInUtn, himI General Oils to ue I lt.l rtroop npon the-- nppth'ttHon of UnitedHl)e Mih!ihI m (be Htnte alongthu line of the Northern PaclUu In
tary to Jlelenu, wiiere mey win w
kept under military espionage untilthe courts shall have disponed of tlielrcaeH.
Jlrecklnrldgc Denied a NewTrial.
Washington, April 28. JudgoBradley today overruled the motionof the counsel for Representative W.P. C. Breckinridge for a new trial inthe Breckiuridgo-Pollar- d uult. Breck-inridge's counsel gave notice that anappeal would be taken, f
Telegraph Notes.
Senator Quay Is reported to be dan-gerously ill.
'Harvard won the Inter-coIIegla- te
debate held at New Haven.Industrial armies are still on the
move all over the United States.A dividend of 10 per cent, on all
World's Fair stock lias beeu declared.Kmil Henri, the French anarchist,
has been hentenced to death by theguillotine.
Queen Victoria left Cohurg byspecial train last evening and goea di-rect to London.
Two villages in Greece havo beentotally destroyed by an earthquake.Many lives were lost. ,
Mgr. Satolli lias decided that Kng-lis- h
be the language of all Catholiccathedrals in America.
Admiral Da Gam a, the Brazilianrebel admiral, has been shown markedattention in Montevideo.
The Canadian Government baa senta warship to prevent Americans fromfishing in Canadian waters.
The Dutch Ministry has resigned,owing to the defeat of the Govern-- iment at the recent elections.
A bill has passed the Cherokee: Legislature providing for distributing$6,740,000 among the Cherokees.
A sheepman of Texas' says thatthere is a herd of buffalo in the remotemountain region near the Rio Grandeborder.
Don Carlos deBorbon, the pretenderto the throne of Spain, was married.April 28th to Princess Marie Berthe deRehan." '- -
It is said that Eugene Field is writ-ing an opera, in which ex-Que- en
Liliuakalaiii is to be the principalcharacter.
A Mrs. Mary Finnegan, of Buffalo,aged 50, committed suicide by jump-ing into the American rapids a milefrom Niagara F'alls.
The well known St. Charles Hotel,in New Orleans, has beeu destroyedby lire, and the whole city i3 threat-ened by the flames.
W. C. van Fleet, of San Francisco,has been appointed to the SupremeBench of California, in place of JusticePeterson, who resigned.
'Lisbon, April 2S. Seventy freshcases of cholera were reported hereto-day-.'
There are 347 people reportedsuffering from the disease.
It is proposed to unite all labor or-ganizations of the United States. Aconvention is now being held iu Phil-adelphia with that object In view.
! The Public School Directors of Gal-latin, Cambria county, I 'a., have beenrestrained from employing six Catho-lic nuns as teachers in the schools.
An attachment has been placed onthe four stores of D. O. Catuariuos,the Greek Consul at Su FVaricisco,and a brother of Mr. Camaiinos, ofHonolulu.
Washington, April 2S. Mrs. Cor-nelia C. Weir Morgan, wife of Sen-ator Morgan of Alabama, died at theSenator's home in this city this after-noon of peritonitis.
Pauis, April 28. A dispatch fromVienna sa s that a beggar today stab-bed the head of the Rothschildsbranch banking houso in that city iuthe face on the street.
The value of the estate of DavidDudley F'ield, as shown by a sta:-me- nt
tiled by the executors. Is $400,-00- 0.
He also had a personal proportyto tho value of $70,000.
Troops have been called out InNorth Dakota, to suppress t lie strikerson tho Great Northern Railroad. Thestriking men had tried to derail atrain carrying a posfo of deputy mar-shals.
While sixteen coal miners were des-cending a shaft leading to a mine atBoisdu Lac in the Mons district, ltd-plu- m,
the cable broke, precipitatingthe whole party to the ground. Thtrteen of the miners were killed and thoremaining three injured,
In the Italian Senate, Minister ofFinance Sonnitm declared that Uwould be a mistake for Italy to renounce the Latin Union, which wasone of the links by which Daly couldestablish more active commetclal re-lations with ticighbotlng countries.
CorSelt has been Honlzeil br theLondoners, and has ervated a hi torewherever he has untie. He has lenottered f TkM a week by a Londontmislo hall, which he will probshlyb unable l accept, on account of bhiengapement In Ireland and Paris.
The King of Servla has lsued a.tiksee nmm)lln the tneastttvs of theformer regent nnd of tho Skiiptehinanj?ltit ex Ktnsr MPun rtnd ex QooenNhIjIIc, on the ground that ih---
tuet4.ures wer uo Mtltotlonl. TheUlmr teutons Ms parent tv cntl-futhm- al
tttthts as member of theroyal Mouse.
ID K 1ST TI S T,S3 EOTIL ST&m.
mgOrrics: Horas 9 a. sc. to 4 r. x.
DR. R. I. MOORE
0223: Arlington Eoas Eoial St, Pwlor 2.
SXST'O&s Administered.
Offics Homs : 9 to 12 and 1 to 4.
"SANS S0UU1" HOTELSEASIDE RESORT,
WAIIiUCI. : IIONOITJIXJ.
"1 desire to find no quieter haventhan the 'Sans SoucP, and may welladd with the poet:
In a more sacred or sequestered bower,Nor nymph nor Faunus haunted.
ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON."P. C. Advertiser, Ocf.7, 1S3.
T. A, Simpson,3523-- 1 y MANAGER.
C. B. RIPLEY,ARTHUR REYNOLDS,
ARCHITECTS.Omcs New Safe Deposit Building,
Hoboluxu, H. I.Plans. Specifications, and Superintend
ence given for eTery description of Build-ing.
Old Bull lines successfully remodelledand enlarged.
Designs for Interior Decorations.Mapa or Mechanical Drawing, Tracing,
and blueprinting.fijy Drawings for Book or Newspaper
Illustration.
WisesW
Pioneer SteamCA5DY FACTORY and BiKEBY
HORN Practical Comecticner,Paa try Cook and Baker.
Ho. 71 Hotel 8t. TfJrhone
CENTEAL MARKET!
First-clas- s Market in every respect ; besides carrying a full line ol 31eats,
we make a specialty of
J3reairfa.Bt Saasazes,Head Cheese,
Pressed Corn Beef.
WESTBROGX & GARES,
3437--q pKOPErrroK.
The Planters' Monthly.
CONTENTS FOR APRIL,1894.
Pearl Harbor.With Oar Readers.Hawaiian Commercial Statistics.HnmrnftrriAl FertiHaera.A New Paint for "nr Mill Machinery.Ijme for saar ;are oii3.Cold SttTARe of Froita.Caba and its ns?ar lndnatry.Banana Cultivation in Jamaica.Cane Fertilization.Hnrwrh-a- t Clirification.Tra ninjf and AfLer-Treatment- of the
Grape Vine.
SobcnVion $2.50 a year.Foreign fcabscription 3 a year.
Bound VolnmMi - GO
Back Volumes bound to order.m Addea r
O 1ZETTE PTJUUHHUJO CO.,
J, M. DAVIDSON.
Attornej, and Ccansellor-at-I- v.
Office S6 Merchant 8tr.WILUAM C. PARKE. .
ATTORNEY -- AT -- LAWAM?
Agant to tnka Aeknowlodgmanu.Oiricx No. 13 Kaahumauu Street, Uoiio- -
lulu. 11.1.
LEWERS A COOKE,
lsuccor to Lewett M Dickson)
Importer uil jHutlerw tu lniubtrAn! all Kindt of UctiainR MtriU.
K0.S3 FORT 8TRggT,nonolnln.
The New Jewelry. Storef503 Fort Street,
ARB PREPARED TO MANUFACTURE ANY-
THING IN TllklR LINE.
Souvenir Spoons!a specialty. Also, on band a fine stock
of imported
JEWELRY.XVXR YTHXKQ IS THE LATEST DESIGNS.
C7Island orders promptly attended to.
P. O. BOX 2S7.
MUTUAL TELEPHONE 468.
E. A. JACOBSON
Criterion SaloonPER AUSTRAIilA
Another Invoice of the celebrated
JOHN WKLAKD EXTRA. PALS
Lager BeerAlso, a fresh Invoice of
CALIFORNIA OY8TER8FOB- -
OYSTER COCKTAILS
L. H. DEE, - Proprietor.3406
CASTLE & COOKELIFE AND FIRS
INSURANCE
:AGENTSAGENTS FOR
NEW ENGLAND MUTUAL
Xiife Insurance Co.OF BOSTON,
JStiia Fire Insurance Co.
IIATITFORD.
PIANO NOTICE
As our Piann Taner and Repairer baanow arrived, we are prppard to takeorders for ork, which will lie executedin th very Kesl manner possible,without qieption we have fecnrel (in thepT9on ot Mr. O. H. Harrison) the mostrkiilfal and firrnhe.l A list in bis Tradewho has evrr vtdited the Islands.
AM. WOKK UVARANTKKI).
tkm;iiiok vh youh ionnnitfAT OSVK.
Jlusic J department.THE HAWAIIAN NEWS
COMPANY, LIMITED.ir, Mercbnt hi., fJonoIaSr.
i.V. .
THE PACIFIC COMMERCIAL ADVERTISER: HCXNOIiUIiCT, MAY 10, 1894.1M
s' HE SEARCHED THE SCRIPTURES. 23mrrel tttofrttsxmrnts. cu) lt)criu3emfnti3Ccro C3lODcrttsc:rttnts.
THE PACIFICTENTHAnnual Meeting
Coionicicial Advertiser
L k
VI--
IS
Siardivare, Builders and Gonsral,atr.'.yt r.p !: the Urues In quality, styles and price.
Plantation Supplies,a full assortment U ult the various lMt ;tr:d
Stes! Plows,made expressly for IsImhI work with extru .art
Cultivator's Care Knives.
Agricultural Implements,Hoes, Shovels, Forks, Mattock?, vie, ftc
Carpenters', Blacksmiths'and Machinists' Tools
Screw Plates, Taos and Dies, Twist Crflls,
Paints and Gi's, Crushes, Glass,Asbestos Hair Felt and Felt Mixturs.
Blake's Steam Pumps,Weston's Centrifugals.
SEWING MACHINES, Wilcox & Gibbs, and Remington.
Lubricating Oils ln ,luality nftney earraase4X
General Merchandise, tee""there is anything you want, come and ask for it, you will bepolitely treated. No trouble to show oods.
3278-tf-- d 14G2-tf-- w
C2
oo
too
c'S3COooO
CO
oO
oQ.E
FURNITURE !
JU8T RECEIVED A
FURNITURE ani-- OF TILE LATEST
IS
NEW LINK OF
UPHOLSTERYITPATTERNS IN
Bedroom Sets, Wicker Ware,Ciieffoniers and Chairs
TO SUIT ALL AT THE LOWEST PRICES; ALSO, ALL KINDS OF MANU-FACTURING DONE IN FURNITURE, BKDDING AND
UPHOLSrERLNG, AND BEST QUALITY OF
LIVE GEESE FEATHERS, HAIR, MOSS AND EXCELSIOR
KEPT ON HAND; ALSO THE LATEST PATTERNS OF WICKER WAREIN SETS OR SINGLE PIECES.
7"Speeial orders for Wicker Ware or all kinds of Furniture to suitat low prices.
0"A11 orders from the other islaiids will receive our prompt attention andFurniture will be well packed and goods sold at San Francisco prices.
I
I
V:
v
l
s,A
tIrI
r
X )
r
r4
i
4
iii
IT
Dr. TIarper of Clilrajr' Cnivemltjr HasLong Ien an lis port Hebrew Scholar.Dr. William Rainry Harper, president
of the Chicago nuivcity, tho institu-tion which John D. Rockefeller, thoStandard Oil magnate, so liberally cn- -
cowca, has re-
cently astoundidmany Baptisttheologians bythe promulgationof ideas in regardto tho Scripturesthat do not meetwith their ap-proval, and itwould not be as-tonishing if thecriticism to
DR. harper. which he hasbeen Eubjected should result in anotherfamous heresy trial like that of Dr.Brigjrs. Tho university is not a Baptistinstitution, though tho Baptist divinityschool is a part of it, and Founder Rocke-feller and President Harper both belongto that denomination. Still it i3 not im-possible that the church authorities maytako official cognizance of Dr. Harper'spublic utterances.
Though still a young man, Dr. Har-per has long had more than nationalprominence as a scholar and an educa-tor. He has worldwide fame as a He-brew scholar and teacher and began tofill responsible educational positions be-
fore he had attained his majority. Hewas born in Ohio, at New Concord, July26, 1856, and i3 of Scotch-Iris- h ancestry.At the age of 10 years he entered Mus-kingum college, in his native town andreceived his bachelor degree when hewas but 14, delivering an oration in He-brew at the commencement exercises.
As soon as tho age limitation permit-ted, at the ago of 17, he entered the grad-uate department of Yale and two yearslater received the degree of Ph. B. Hethen accepted the position of principal ofthe Masonic college at Macon, Tenn.,where ho remained but one year, havingbeen appointed to the principalship ofthe preparatory department of tho Den-iso- n
university at Granville, O.In 1879, when he was but 22, Dr. Har-
per was elected to tho chair of Hebrewand cognate languages in tho BaptistTheological seminary at Morgan Park,Ills., and one of the remarkable thingsrememtered in connection with his ac-ceptance of tho post is the fact that hewas younger than any member of thefirst class that he instructed. Whileholding this position he conceived andorganized the first summer school of He-brew, which has since spread elsewhere,and instituted the Hebrew correspond-ence school.
Chautauqua elected him principal ofher college of liberal arts in 1885 andmade him principal of her entire systemin 1891, though he had then accepted thepresidency of Chicago university. In1886 Yale claimed him for her chair ofSemetic languages, and three years later,after repeated requests, he went to Chicago.
AN IDEAL PAWNSHOP.
A New Form of Philanthropy Tried by Dr.Greer.
It is a novel and peculiar sort of loanbureau that has lately been set in opera-tion by the Rev. Dr. David H. Greer,pastor of the fashionable Episcopalianchurch of St. Bartholomew in New Yorkcity, and many persons whose opinionsare at least worthy of consideration donot hesitate to predict its failure to ac-
complish the object for which it was es-
tablished. Those who have the bureauin charge, however, think that they havealready done some good, and the projectwill not be abandoned till it has beenthoroughly tried.
Tho bureau is not a pawnshop, thoughit has been so called by some of the met-ropolitan newspapers. Neither is it acharitable institution in the sense of giv-
ing something for nothing. It is con-
ducted on business principles and ad-
vances money to worthy persons whoare in temporary financial distress, tak--
RF.V. DAVID II. GREER. D. D.
ing chattel mortgages upon householdfurnituro and similar personal propertyfor security. Au agreement is madewith each borrower that tho money is tobe repaid in regular installments, andthat on default of any payment thomortgage may be foreclosed.
There are "lots of money lenders inNew York who do a business very sim-
ilar to that conducted by the bureau,but not on such liberal terms. They usu-
ally charge at the lowest 3 per cent amonth on their loans and increase theirrates according to the borrower's neces-giti- es
rather than his ability to pay. Dr.Greer's bureau charges but 6 per cent ayear. It is conceded that this rate willnot be sufficient to keep the bureau on apaying basis, but the doctor's wealthyfj --.uotoWa iviriKhioners who haveanuadvanced the money necessary to starttho scheme expect to make good the in--
Dr. Greer, it will be remembered, wasat one time talked of as tneproDaDie suc-
cessor of the late Bishop Brooks of Massachusetts. He is an awe puipiw ,
narish work is im--i a. v.i;nM fhnf: moreportant than preaching. He has beenrector of St. Bartholomew's since 18S8.
The Vanderbilts and people of that ilkare among his parishioners, and he is ro-trat- ed
to be their almoner for amazingly
large sums aum
The Daily Advertiser, 75 centsmonth. Delivered bj Carrier
Are You Interested in
M GROSGOPY.
Several fine instrument jist receivedmay be worth your while to look at.
We carry in stock
MISCIIOSCOPISS,
FIELD,OPERA,
MARINE
GLASSES,
Telescopes,'
Thermometers,
Barometers,
Pedometers,
Compasses, etc.
Orders taken for any kind of scientific
instruments not kept in stock and promptdeliverance assured at Eastern prices.
We have also just received a numberof very high
GRADE SWISS WATCHES
with bulletins of rating of the Kew ob-
servatory, Switzerland, showing them to
be accurate and reliable time pieces.They are fully guaranteed and are sold
on theirmerits entirely.
H. F.WICHMAN
FERTILIZING CO.,HAWAIIAN and dealers in allkinds of Fertilizers.
A. F. COOKE,Manager and Proprietor.
ONE-MEA- L AND GUANO PHOSB PHATES in quantities to suit.Apply to
A. F. COOKE.
AND MURIATE OFSULPHATE direct from Strassfurt,Mines : always on hand and for sale by
A. F. COOKE.
OF SODA OR CHILENITRATR ; 100 tons just received.For sale in bags or barrels.
A. F. COOKE,Manager Hawaiian Fertilizing Co.
ARRIVE IN JUNE SULPHATETOOF AMMONIA; Cottou Seed Mealand Fish Guano; China 'ut Cake.Or 'era solicited to he delivered on arrival.
HAWAIIAN FERTILIZING CO.,A. F. CoeKE,
Proprietor.
Are You a Royalist,An Annexationist,Or In Favor ofA Republic?
YI7E DESIRE TO RECEIVE FREEV f and open expressions of opinion
from the inhabitants of the HawaiianIslands, upon the questions of Annexation, the restoration of the Monarchy,or the formation of a Kepublic.
This is denired for the information ofthe people of the United htites. Thename of each correspondent will not beused, and will be regarded as confiden-tial if so requested. AddressAMERICAN NEWSPAPER SYNDI-
CATE,W. Ten Eyck Hardenbrook, M'gr.,
2315 M. Street, N. W.,Wash ngton, I). C, U. S. A.
3til6 1526-l- m
Henioved.G. ARTHUR 1NGS. M. R. C. P.DR. M. R. C. P., Edinburgh, has
removed to No. , Emm street, nextdoor to James Cam j bell's residence.Office hours: S to 10 a. m., 1 to p. m.,6 to 8 p. m. 3678- - 2w
jr. hopp3493 1499
CY THE- -
HAWAIIAN-:- - -:- -
M -:- - CLUB.
JUNE 11, 1894
Official Programme !
MXJiacet to Commence at joa. m. Sharp.
Ist-BICY- CLE RACE.Prize: Silver Medal; 1 mile dash.Free for all.
2d HAWAII PLATE $- -
Running Race; mile dash. Freefor all.
3D-II0N- 0LULU PLATE
Trotting and Pacing, to Harness;2 :40 class. Free fur all. Mile heats ;
best 2 in 3.
4tii OCKNIC S.S CO.'S CUP, $
ADDED.Running Race ; 1 mile dash. ForHawaiian bred.
5tii PRESIDENT WIDE IIANN'SCUP, aLDED.
Running Race ; 1)4 mile dash. Freefor all.
6th kAPIOLANI PARK PLATE $ .
Trotting and Pacing; 2:40 classFree for all. Mile heats ; best 2 ii 3.Pacers to go to road cart.
7tu KALAKAUA PLATE $- - .
Running Race; i mile dash. ForHawaiian bred.
8th KAUAI PLATE $--
Running Race; 12 mile dash. ForHawaiian bred. .... .
9th JOCKEY CLUB PLATE $
Trotting and Pacing, to harnessFree for all. Mile heats ; best 3 in 5- -
IOth R03ITA CHALLENGE CUP,$ ADDED.Running Race ; 1 mile dash. Freefor all. Winner to beat record ofAngie A, 1 :45.
11th KAMEHAMEHA PLATE $ .
Trotting and Pacing, to harness. ForHawaiian bred; mile heats; best2 in 3.
12th PONY RACE $ .Running Race mile dash. ForHawaiian bred Ponies; 14 hands andunder ; catch weight.
13ui MAUI PLATE $ .
Trotting and Pacing, to harness ; 3minute class. For Hawaiian bred.Mile heats ; best 2 in 3.
23" All entries are to be made withthe Secretary, at the office of C. O.Bereer. on Merchant street, before 2 p.m.Wednesday, Jane 6th, 1894, at whichtime they will close: Entry fees to be10 per cent, of the purse, unless otner- -
wise specified.
gVT'XW races are to be run or trottedunder the rules of the Hawaiian JockeyClub.
iGT"All horc23 are expected to startunless withdrawn by 12 o'clock noon, onJune 9th, 1S94.
gpCAll horses must apper on thetrack at the tap of the beil from theJudges stand, otherwise they Millbo fined.
General admission 50 centsGrand stand lextra 50 cents and $1Carriages inside of course each. . .$2.50Quarter stretch badges $5.00
W. M. Giffard,Secretary Hawaiian Jockey Club.
35S4-2- w
FOR SALE!A FEW BOUND VOLUMES
)F THE
Planters' MonthlyFOR THE YEAR 1S93.
PRICE $3-- 5 A VOLUMEJES7Fer sale at this office.
SoSl-l- w
- Notice,BOUGHT THE STOCK
HAVING merchandise, chatties andaccounts due to the f.toio known as theMakapala Stoie, formerly conducted byManuel Luiz, at Makapala. all personpare notitied that the uudersinned willcarry pq said business unr the name of
JOHN LUIZ.Eohala, April 21, 1S94. 3o76-2-w
The beM and bigstUnity paper in the Ha- -
waiian island.
in favor of'azinexat ion.
first, laM iaid ai' the
time.
Represents all business
interests and all sec-
tions of the Islanda
Uives the best value to
both advertisers ai.d
subscribers.
The largest and mo DM
general circulation in
the Hawaiian Islands.
The most thrifty and
desirable class of read-
ers, a great many of
whom take no other
local paper.
Need and deserve your
subscription and adver-
tisement and will give
you the worth of your
money.
I i
"I
hi1H
ir
H. E. McXNTYRE & BRCX,
IHPOBTBB8 AMD
Groceries, Provisions and Feed
EAST CORNER FORT AND
& CO 5
74 King Street.
DEALS B8 Of
KING STREETS.
A Perfect Nutrimentfor growing Children,
Convalescents.Consumptives,Dyspeptics.
anI the Accrl,u!!din Arute I andoJl Wa'tiutr I)i-fnse-
THE
Best FoodOS. for Hand-fe-d Infants.
Orit HOOK for the fpptmrtionof mothers, The Care am! Ied-- fos of Indntn,"wiil be uiaiivdree
to amy address, upon request.
DOLIBER-GOODALE- T CCBO - .'ON. MASS.. U. S. A.
New Goods received by every packet from the Eastern States and Europe.Fresh California Produce by every steamer. All orders faithfully attended to, andGoods delivered to any part of the city free of charge. Island orders solicited.Satisfaction guaranteed. Post Office Box No. 145. Telephone No. 92.
Give the Baby
V3r V rvhurt AND
INFANTSfeljWALITRADE nOR'VTvlAeOAy MARX.
BENSON, SMITH & CO.,Sole Aeents for trie Hawaiian Islands,
JTTJST ARRIVEDPKK BARK C. JO, BIiYJV2S"T.
BABY CARRIAGES of all style?,CARPETS, RUGS, and MATS in the latest patterns,
fc Honseh-olc- l55 Sewinp; Machines
Hand Sewing Machines, all with the latest improvement.Alio on hand
Westerinayer's Celebrated Cottage PianosParlor Organs, Guitars and other Musical Instruments.5TFor sale by
KD. IIOFFSCHLA KGER & CO,,Kin Street, opposite Castlo & CooKe
Gazette Publishing Company
JU
TUK PACIFIC COMMKKC1AI. AOVKUTISKU: JtOXQIATTAI. MAY lO.'l.NSM. aXrtU 'ZtfVtlJ(UfUl.aECilOH HEWS FROM 10,
HAWAIIAN GAZETTE COPicturesque COMVIATK IN
EIGHT Portfolios
f lrl MAltir.
Hon, John L. Stevens,Fx V. S, Minister to Hawaii and
PROF. W. B. OLESONOf llovululii, Sverl Yrrt rrtilnl Jr
GENERA
rint:ersV ClIAKMlNCf UKSCIIIPTIO.V Of
Her Unique History, Strange People, Exquisite Climate,Wondrous Volcanoes, Luxurious Productions,
Beautiful Cities, Corrupt Monarchy,Recent Revolution and Provisional Government
Profusely Enriched With Rare and Beautiful Photographs !
o .
QONTENTS OF PORTFOLIOS
( ; i
AND
FVwSC VTA f o JlCONCAtY.
Tbo telrt jipb 'p:-ralc- wn tc)Hr:Th. tail who b.i hU k
iry &!l oxer tlu wu;:ttv lud tfc floor,Ycu a u:arv jo.Vc in tbo
ipow W he, "alvut tho cultnr ollton r.d tho l:.Vit xvplo h ir tlnhave cf uirr 1:, wcids and cvrnvti:rairrjar ar.d 11 that. Mvxst of youthiuk thst tlu joic h.tre i:o foauda-tio- a
ia fact. Xow, I kiKw Ktirr. Iwas rewiriasj clerk in tb WwtcruUnicoi ccx tbre a i;vxv n.jiny xoarsts and some of tbe tuos$avs baudtxlin to tae wen? ivrkcrs.
Oc snuiiaor I bad tK chVU win-de- w.
0::e day tu-- vua dressvd iablacar.d greatly in andinquired tb te p r wcrvl to London.I to4d tht-t-a it was ivnt. Tbey con-nl- tl
for a ninuto, ar.vl then one ofthcra atxl fcr a blank. I told thetuwhere the Masks were, and one cf themwroii a Kfs?ap; The other took it andrvd it two or three tinjcs.
Thea she canse over to the windowand asked again bow much it was awcrd to Lcsdcn. 'Twenty --eiirht cent.I told her. She looked at the messagadcbirasly. Tbe ether wciaan csuie upto her and said. 'Don't von like it?
'Xo,' she said. I dcnt like it.That fena is improper. You say thatCharles suicided this morning, when itshould b said that Charles com in it tedsuicide this morning.
t 4Bnt, said the other, if we put itia that war we will save cents.
'The woman who objected turnedthis picpositioa over ia her mind for aIcsg time. Finally she said, 'I doatthink that such syntax is cxcusaWe.
"The other took the blank and roadthe message a few dozen times. We'repoor, she said decisively after studyingit ia all its phases, 'and we can't save23 cents any easier.
"This partially convinced the womanwho objected. 'But vrhrd will ourfriends think? she ssked dubiously.
I suppose they will notice it." bntwo can't help that.' Then the two wom-en retired to cae ccrtier'and bad a consaltation. After talking earnestly for10 minntes they wrote out another mes-erg- e.
So help me, this is the way I gotit: 'Charles suicided this mcrning.False syntax csed lecaur it is cheaper.
"And they paid me S cents a wordfor it. All cf which continued tbetall operator, "illustrates one of thecurious ways in which a woman's mindworks. Buffalo Express.
FOKTFOLIO NO. 1 contains a concise
BINDERmoreman rvmarkaoie group oi lianas, early cmoo voyages, etc., etc.PORTFOLIO XO S ccntains a description of the people of tho Hawaiian Islands.
Tbe Native llawaiians, peculiarities of tbe Xatives, euif riding, Hawaiianfeasts, etc., etc.
rOKTFOI IO NO. 3 cortairs an account of the soil, climato, productions, etc.,icclndir.g tbe Im'cstml devtlopnieut of the Islacds, etc., etc.
PORTFOLIO NO. 4 ccrdair.p a crFciipticn cf HcnoluHi, Hilo and other chie'cities, primitive aprcaiarce of Ilcnoluh;, trar.sfoimntion into atxautiful cityof palms ard tiL)iial plants, the. htrbcis, their capacity and value lo
commerce, etc., etc.
rOKTFOLlO NO. 5 certains sn account of tho wonders cf volcanic eruptions, des-ciib'- rc
tie irnnv volcaictscf Hawaii, the origin of the island cronn. tlieir
No. 46 Merchant Street.rocr.ntain stit:ctuie, imn.trse depththe I&rfst active vclcsr.oin the vrorld,
rOKTFOIJO NO. e contains an account of the old monarchy, showing the eflvctsKsttclmchaV cci qctht, ltccniticn cf monarchs by the people, granting
f Ist-iis- , cte.ci atnt of ccarchical power, etc., etc.cfc
PopLilar PLiblicationsFOKTFOLIO XO. 7 ccntaii s a thrilling accennt cf the revolution, causes leading
tott i tvt-rd-, the racitirg Mti.tE-e- l Jvt u:iy 15, lb and 17, declaration of a
Prcisict&l bevtn ment, tturti.dtr cf the Queen, etc., etc.FORTFCI IONO. S contains a description of the Provisional Government, its
strc r.ftb with tl e people, its aims and objects, detire for annexation, advan-tajes- .to
the United States, Prtsident Cleveland's acticn. Paramount BlountVvisit and icport, the resultirg ccnroversy, the tiue inwaidr.ets of the lesi-den- t's
action, attempts to restore the Queen, President Dole's statemanlike reply.
OP
HAWAIIAN
Having been appointed sole selling agents for -- 'PICTURESQUE HAWAII,"we are now booking orders for early delivery of same. Price for full set
ON LY $2.50.ZJ Book ycur orders at once as tbe first edition is limited.
o
The Hawaiian News Company, Id.J
Ths Ketorzs Nearly &3
TOTS BT DISTRICTS JLXD
illr. Ku Thy.W V
iir-tjin- a b Mtwi 1" t TwoC a round-Kip- r" OlhrItem from Ull.
Hix-o- , Hawaii, My 7. Klectioudy bdL come ami gvue and quietr.anl con:Dttueut rvigti supreme onHawaii, with the exception perhapsof the Kohala district which willhare iso representation la the conven-tion, bwing to the masterful raauneria which the voting material of thefirst district, first precinct club washmdlpd. Ninety-seve- n notes vrerts
cast for one of the Hilo candidateswith the figure five against the name,sacrificing the other districts. Agreat number of the figures were puton with the help of a card boardstercih -
The following: is the total numberof votes cast on Hawaii for each can-didate:D. n. Hitchcock.- - JSSI S Lyman ... . .KahaulritoK.uaavieWui. H ruer - 1
II. 1. Holsttiu 570
The natives are very indifferentapparently iu tvcard to election mat-ters The Aloha Aina an t other nativepapers have supplied thetu liberallywilh a lot of stutTaud noueti iu theshape of reading matter, which haskept quite a iurut-- r tvf them fromregistering. Their faith in GruvrrCleveland and the Aoba Aina crowdis leiuidag to waver, and at thenext "Vfectiou if soniethuur tangibleLa net come out of some of the gtlteice proaiiM-s- , the chances are thenatives will turn out in a boly audreeoguize and give their hearty sup-port in forming and building up anew government, with its present3!eieut people at its head.Four native policemen were forced
to resign not having registered. Theysaid tbey were very sorry that theyhad not done so and certainly wouldhave registered if they had understood the situation. Four loyal na-
tives were installed ia the placesmade vacant.
The rock crusher that has beentie1 In building the Volcano roadwhile b --ing rolled back to town roll-ed otf the road, when within a mileand a half of iu destination and suf-fered considerable dam age. Honoluluauthorities wish the crusher there,but as we have plenty of work for ithere, an effort will be made to keep Itin its present sphrre of usefulness,
Tae Rev. Mr. Twooibly, of Hono-lulu, delivered a very eloquent sermonat the Firt r oreign Church on Sun-day cumins, 6th instant, taking asth text a verse ia Acts, about tue
Tne S hadow of Peter."Tbe Rev. Mr. Hill, of Benicia. Cali-- frnia, who was. a passenger on the S.
K. Ctle, is expected here on nextIvinau. and will fill the pulpit of theFirst Foreign Church temporarilyuntil Mr. Baker recovers his ht<b.
The Redmg Club is discussing Sir"Walter gcott's - Keailworth."
Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Hardy invitedtheir host cf friend, to a social at theHilo Court House Hall on Fridayevening, the 4th instant. A tfcotenreel was indulged ia by some of theScotch lads and lassies who werepresent, who teemed to enjoy it im-mensely, as did also the rest of theguests. Mr. James Gibb danced aScotch Sword Darce, and Mr. RobertForrest danced the Highland Fling;bota dances were well executed, audenthusiastically applauded. A fewfigure of the German, led by Mr. andMrs, Winter, were also a very pleasantfeature of the evening.
HUo ice is selling for 2 cents apound.
Ocomea Sugar Company's mill hasshut down for a few days to allow allbaa is to posh the planting ahead.
Mr. H. C. AuHin viait Honoluluthis week to be present at the
Board that meets thereahortly.
AIjONG Tim water front.The schooner J. X. Weatherwax
left this port for San Francisco on the3d instant with 12,SS hajr (LoooiOlbs.) sugar, valued at 342,0 L5.
The schooner Bansror left Hilo oaSaturday, the 5tb, for Saa Francisco,
--with 12,252 has (1,.4,450 lbs.) augar,valued at 512,29.10- -
No vessels ia port at this writing.The steamer Kinaa returns to Hono-
lulu with only two-third- s of a cargo,owing to rouga weather.
r ? f I"I 5? :
t ? r
PILACZ.3
? I 1 - :
1 5 I. O 0k'OiTj.il j ; k A' tl ft
Hrieo. ? A-- l 41. r. 4-- 5 oFA;iio3 1. 1- -! oHaona 7v no-- s
i T.KjliLa . " v 1
llytx i I; 4 v Zf.i ft.
if A 4
KoiI 1 TV 7-i- i 024 V
Il .trlAl.-B- . t t '. 4 a' ir 1 1I3T IU'; IfM ft
H rr.A j I
2vllFiA.a ...... 'A 4 ft
ST ILiii7- -r 5e
i i
tmra f jr not faeis? Eire-- 1 p-- r rwrJ. iBt-av- a
fcUot were airxl ft? Jr H. Intcri-- e
i nme. ltrtita were caarkAi'I fire for8. LjisAa.
Daily Advertiser, 75 ceat amoDtk.
Pacific Commercial Advertiser,
Hawaii !
but a graphic history. Describing this
cf siHroundiuj ocean, Kilanea.etc., etc.
Stocks and Bonds
FOR SALE.
A FEW SHARES- OF
HAWAIIAN SUGAR CO. STOCK
Hawaiian Agricultural Co. Stock.
Olowalu Sugar Co. Stock.
ALSO
Hawaiian -:-- Government.-- :- Bonds
G Per Cent. Interest.Ewa Plantation Co. Bonds (first mort-
gage) 7 per cent, interest.
Heeia Agricultural Co. Bonds (first mort-gage) 8 per cent, interest.
&mFoT particulars, apply to
The Hawaiian Safe Deposit
AJSI
Investment Company.2013-- 1 w
Now ReadyIN PAMPHLET FORM
SenatorMorgan'sReportonHawaiianAffairs.
copy1; PER io CENTS
Hawaiian Gazette Co.
(Eight Pages.) Issued Every Morning, Except
Sunday. 50 Cents per Month. Delivered by Car-ri- er
to any part of, the City.
0- -
TBE
GAZETTE CO.
Semi-Weekl- y.
per Year; Foreign, $3.00.
Through Hawaii.
Copy; Foreign, 75 Cent-p- ,
Hawaiian Gazette,
i :
i
tk
u
ii .
! ;
i -
i
(Eight'Tages). Issued Every Tuesday and Friday
Morning. 75 cents per month; $5.00 per year;
foreign, postpaid, $G.OO.
Wolfe Tone.A desultory and enormous reader of
plays and novels, with an impish hu-mor and a facility and felicity cf quota-tion which never deserted him underthe most terrific circumstances, Tone'sstyle is throughout literary and in thatsense artificial, but he had a passica forfact3anda healthy determination to seethings as they really were. He is per-fectly free frcm every kind of illusion,delusion and humbug.
He is very much alive to the humor-ous side of all things, including him-self. The diaries are full cf entries likethis:
I cannot help this morning thinkingcf Gil Bias when he was secretary tothe Duke of Lerma. Yesterday I dinedwith CamcL Today I should be puz-zled to raise a guinea.
Wolfe Tcne at the bottom cf his heartwas grave enough. His death is war-rant fcr this. Bet be belonged by thecrder cf his mind to the mockers.Tone's widow, though she had doubt-less a good deal to put up with, mourn-ed her husband's loss fcr 17 years, whenthe married cue who shared her venera-tion fcr Tone's memory. His son grewnp to be proud cf his father's sufferingsia what be was taught to believe was agood cause. Ireland has never forgottenTcne and probably never will. Con-temporary Review.
Illiterate Statistics.A few men were discussing the prog-
ress cf education in thi3 country.You're doing a good deal of talking
here," said cae, "but I'll bet any manla this crowd a new bat that here inLondon there are at least 50.000 per-os- 3
who can't speak a word of English.'Tbe crowd waa staggered at first, but
recovered in a moment, anQ bat betswere made. Then it was suggested thatscce one should gq after the statistics.
"Before joa do that," paid the maaTery coolly, "I want to hot 1 apieceall round that there are twice that num-ber that can't read and write."
Again tho crowd felt the pressure ofa blafz, but it rallied soon, and everyman who bad a sovereign put it np.The newspaper maa stood to wia eighthats, and 5. Tbe man to get the sta-tistics was about to start.
"Held on," said the maa with theirca nerve. "I can tell you now whothe first 50,000 are.
"Tell ua," was the nnanlmous com-mand.
"Eabies under one year," was the re-
ply, "and under four years for the other100,000." London Tit-Bit-s.
Maariog Brain Work.An apparatus for raeasnring: train
effort has ln made by J. L. Balbi,who suggests that the arrangementmight be made to point cut tbe properitudiesfoT children, or those which canbe pcr3ned with the least woTk and mostprofit, says an English paper. In thecenter of eome beat condncting mate-rial be places a thermo-electri- c pile,which is connected tyflezibls wire to asensitive galvanometer. The alihtestrise in temperature, dne to rash of bloodia the head, is Indicated by tbg galva-nometer, the effect, cf coarse, increasingwith tbe Intensity of the m&ntal work.
Pittsburg Dispatch.
Tb foanUln Fan.Joe Tbe?e fountain pen rnaker3 will
never be affected by the Inoome tax.Bob Why cot? yroa of tbera are
rich.Joe Because tbey never make enough
Ink come to be tared. Detroit FeeXres3.
The AfcTExnsxfc 75 cents nl'mlb.
3LAI5SIXAJVS SVIiE.
VIRTUE OF A WRIT OFBY issued out cf the FirstCircuit Court on the 5th day ofMay, A. D. 1S94, against I). J.Koii, defendant, in favor of S. C.Dwiebt, Trnsfee. lor tne sumfiiamtm,of JcS.10, 1 have and shallexpose for sale at the Police station, inthe District of Horolnlu, Island of Oahu,at 12 o'clock of WEDS EDAY, the 6thday of June, A. D. 1894, to the highestridde, all the right, title and interest oftbe said D. J. Koii, defendant, in and torbe following property, unless saidjudgment, interest, costs and my ex-penses be previously paid.
List of property for sale :1 Ad the said D J Koii's interest
to-wi- t: 1-- 15 undivided share in thatcertain piece or parcel of land situate atKalin, Honolulu, Oahu, and described inR P 5650, LC A 1042 to Unauna, con-taining an area cf i'SS square yards.
2 All the said D J Koii's interestto-wi- t: undivided share in that certainpice or parcel of land titn&te at Puako,Lahaina, Maui, and described in R P6326, L C A 5904, containing an area of5 acres, more or less.
JCSTTerms Cab.gXTFor farther particulars, apply to
S. K. Kasz, or toA. M. BP.OWN,
Deputy Marfhal, Hawaiian Islands.Honolulu, May 5, 1E94.
362-4- i 154S 2t
THE IHA COA L ME
i3 located in Fukuoka Ken in
the Island of Kinsbut, Japan,and was discovered about twenty
year3 ago. It was owned bythe government and mined sim-
ply for tbe government's me.
Great improvements, howeverwere made feince it was sold to acorporation about six years a go,
by importing mining machineryfrom Europe and America,
TAGAWA COAL,
Li used more than any otherJapanese coals Jn the following
countries: China, Manila andPtrait's HettlemeatM. It haw
found ita way even to Horn hay.
Two c&Tttop.n hre 1 cen im-
ported Into the f!awiian Islandsrecently, and it ha no np-rio- r
In thh market a stove or s'earucoal.
(J. E. J50AIIDMAN, '
Fole Ajknt for K. 0,nra A Co.
The Planters' Monthly:
Subscription, $2.50
Tourists' Guide
Price CO Cents per
Tncluding Postage.
Weekly Kuokoa,
Insucri Every Saturday, in tho Hawaiian Lau
gungo. Subscription, $CJ.00 per Year.
THE JLA,eiFIC COOIERCIAIi ADVERTISER; HOKOIiTJIiTJ, 3IA.Y 10, 1894,A
In the nature of the case it can be 2ktm SUtonrtiscmmts.307in my mina was, wneiner miwould not be a good time to putourselves in the van of" advancingcivilization, not, perhaps, by pass-
ing an Act to take immediateeffect, if our eolons should think
April 28, i8g4. THE MUTUALLIE
The Pacific Commercial Advertiser
Issued Every Morning, Except
Sunday, by the
Hawaiian Gazette Company
At No. 31 H Merchant Street.
We have a lot of Burnley iDry Batteries for electric LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY OF NEWwork that we will sell very YORKotherwise, but at least to incor
nt cheap. These batteries areporate in the constitution a prodoor . oxcvvhuy - - -adapted for using on President.vision which could be made to
bells, in telephones or any
no evidence of "Republican sim-
plicity," because it is not intendedthat the salary shall support theincumbent. He is expected tolive from his private means, andnot from earnings which are ex-
ceeded by those of many a me-
chanic.The plain fact is that the revolu-
tion has placed Hawaii on a basisof Republican simplicity, andthere can be no more convincingproof that it has done so than thebald fact that it has exchanged an$80,000 queen, who aspired to bethe people's master, for a $12,000President who is its, servant.
take effect at any time that publicopinion should demand it, without oiner eiecmcai vuriv uClo A&aeis ueceiuoer 31SI, lolJ3 : $ISG,707GS0 14EDITOR.H. N. CASTLE,tbe necessity of first passing au T.ne wey imwery ii"""BUS -- 0-ed. AVe have also a full stock
iIf
WAY 10, 1894.THURSDAY, amendment to the constitution.On election day I had a talk with A Good Record, the Best Guarantee for the Future.of insulated wire and incan-
descent lamps, which we sellat a trifle below the regularour candidate on the subject. Her
I usewas not prepared to entertain such market price. It youa proportion at the present time, electricity for lightingi your
stores or dwellings we woulduuj. ue may us uy me uuioConstitutional Convention gets to
PARTICULARS, ArPLY TO
S. B. ROSE,General Agent for Hawaiian Islands.
be pleased to supply you withwork and is called upon to con'PREPARED FOR 'EMERGENCIES. globes when your others burnsider it. - - I 1 tc : i e :i
A few hours after the aforesaid out. 11 you use neru&euu lyi u--We have heard, for several days conversation, I was in receipt of luminating and wish to give it
past, rumors of a proposed attempt mv'mail, and wa3 reading the in- - up and adopt more modemby the royalists to capture the Ex-troduct- ory article on that same methods W8 have'SOme blec- -
An enterprising merchant, who
is a long resident of Honolulu, andwho has a zeal for progress, is will-
ing to donate $10,000 to any com-
pany which will put a cable road,up Nuuanu Valley to the Pali. Itis to be feared that the $10,000will stay in his pocket. A cableroad would probably cost severalhundred thousands of dollars, andthe traffic on it would not pay in-
terest on the plant. At the sametime, the idea is by no means so
chimerical as might be imagined;'and it I3 not impossible that before'the century is out the "conditions"will be realized which would' makesuch a venture profitable.
ecutive Building by corrupting the fcU"J truiiera.. wiui hBiu iauiF; me of course, to see that article so them so that you will neverguards. It is quite natural that ROnn nftpr t hd nnken of this k ..u ah
EVERYBODY EZISTOWS
Geo. W. LincolnKE-ESTABL1SH-
ED AT 512 KING STJBEET
Ut3 UaUUb ILL IUC uai I. xxilthe attempt should be made, as it question myseli. I tbinfe in tms 0i0..fTfti;Ara flrt r,nf. hnvP. frmnow seems quite impossiDie lor tne case an eaucauonai quaimcauon ijerosene combination, OUTSroyalists to obtain an entrance by to V be tter than a have, consequently the bestproperty qualification. Otherwise
exA;re
lkhmcce:Snsi'
bIfi
Itf
many intelligent women with little --o-place to buy one is from us.Just as soon as this rainyor no property would be excluded.
The argument that "as men weather is over your willwant to give you house a
Have the Value of Your Property Kept up by Keepingit in Repair.
any other means...The loyalty of the commanding
officers of the troops which guardthe building may .be implicitly re-
lied upon. Even if some of theinferior officers should prove
have to conauer and bear thecoat of paint and Hendry'sresponsibilities they should govern
Increase the Value by Making- - Improvements.sounds rjlausible. but tnere areA SOLID CONTINGENT. iteady Mixed is tne coat youtimes when women's presence and We've sold hundredstre??8. there U no danSer of would be bficial, Alienst h, wn-rvot- e
naint and ita capture of the building. It is although that does not appear to g fffaction ECONOMY -'- - IS MY "-- 2-PO-O'P -- -. UVhblhardly to be expected that the en-- be the case with your Honolulu PLf We JVltSJv
The Hilo Portuguese seemquite as capable of voting'!
"united body as their brethren in street cars. tin of it and if you do notKohala.tire body of enlisted men are loyalto the Provisional Government. Itis quite probable that some of them
find it as we represent it return it to us and we will reCULTURE OP RICE. Eoyal Insurance Co.,fund the money. For people
r n ji t-- i t r--i i J I i t iiv iJi.ji.j. uiiA uiivy. u it uMoney imjm unni bus- -
co0rs we have a full stock of OF LIVERPOOL.ions in California. White Lead, Oils and Colors.Washington, April 2& --The agri The WertheiLLi bewmg
would "sell out and betray thecause, for it would be quite remark-able if there were no traitors in thecamp. . :
'
If the commanding o'fficers arevigilant, it will be difficult for anyconsiderable number of men to de-
sert to the enemy, but it would bewell for the officers to closely watch
Machine has taken the leadamong such articles here just
"THE LAKGFJST IN THE WOKLD."
imte January M. 1892, 42.432,1700'i2,B -
as it dia in Australia, wehave a few of the second lot
cultural appropriation bill, which.will, be presented to the House onMonday, will contain an item of
10,000 for continuing the work oncertain experimental stations inFlorida and California. These stations referred to are . making experiments' in - growing sugar cane .andrice and there has been some doubtas to whether enough money wasavailable to keep them going. . .
Honolulu. Mr. Loebenstein de-
vised an. impromptu stencil-plat- e
made of cardboard with a V cut init, and so placed that when imposedupon the ballot the V would comeexactly opposite the name of D.H. Hitchcock. The Portuguesemarched to the polls, cardboard inhand, with the result that 97 voterscast 485 of the votes which D. H.
. Hitchcock received. Thenents of Mr. Hitchcock are greatlyindignant at this procedure, butthere does not seem to have beenanything illegal about it. It is ashocking commentary, however,upon the weight which ignorancemay and does exert at the polls.The ballot is really a device similarto the lottery, and candidatesmight frequently as well be desig-
nated by chance. In this instance
left and more on the way. Amachine that will sew either
V's
tit ,t-3
t'i
the chain or locked stitch isthe movements of those connectedwith the force who have political orother reasons to be dissatisfied with
par-llr- e tisks on au Kinos of Insurable properry taKen at Current ratesthe one you want in your byhouse. The Wertheim will J. S. WAIjEER,More than half of the money will Jq
the Government.As the Citizens' Guard is in the
best condition for quickly assem-bling and connftntratintr at. nnv
S140-l-m Agent for Hawaiian Islands.The Hawaiian Hardware Co.,i)e spent at a station on tne oanJoaquin river in California, and " theinsertion of the word "rice" in the 307
vSi
S
A
Mill . A v V JO VOaV iUUU bUU OAgiven point, it is not probable that periments ingrowing rice would notthe royalists will care to provoke be within the provisions of the law.
Fort Street, Honolulu.
VERYit by any uprising, especially as itepresentative .Uaminetti . says be PLANING miuas uau ossuiauiiCB iiuui jjoibuub to--presenting over 300,000 facres . ofland "that, should sngar cane be PETER HIGH & CO.,found "adapted to " the soil of w the
it happens that the man whom theilliterates have voted into the Con-
vention will "be brie of its ablestand most useful members.
Proprietors.
Honolulu, H. tx.region around the experimental stat On
there is a large number of men,whonow rate as " dead shots " at longrange, who would not hesitate tomake some-goo- d scores on humantargets, if forced to do so. Mon-archy is dead, but if its carcassrises to the surface, enough lead
Alakea and Richards near Queen 'Street,ions, they would enter into raisingit.i -
Professor Ca9imir Perierand otherSTRANGELY INCONSISTENT. officials met a hostile reception from8
m ould rnsr gs ,Doors, Sash, Blinds, Screens, Frames, Etc.
TURNED "AND SAWED WORK.
the Catholics in Lyons because of therecent suspension of the stipendcan be put into it to keep it at the
. Thg Bulletin and its anonymoua re'stbottom for tlie of all time of the Archbishop of Lyonsand bis denunciation of tbe law forroyalist corresponaenxs, are masthe maintainanceof churches.
--OF-CORRESPONDENCE. Herbert Gladstone, replying to the 'CCnprompt attention to all orders.'tel'kphone'seditor of a religious paper, says thatbis fatber desires mm to say that Dr.
MUTUAL 55. - - - .De Witt Talmaere has his best wishes BELL 493,for his approaching celebration.
The bear and lion fight, which was Cloth,
inga great fuss' over the paymentof a salary of $12,000 a year toPresident Dole. They claim 'thisis very inconsistent with the re-
quirements of Republican simpli-city, and point triumphantly at theGovernor of the .great State ofOregon drawing 4 $15(Kfaryear. ?
Arguments like these come withsingularly bad grace from peoplewho wish to abolish a President at
to have taken place at Boone s arenaat the Midwinter Fair, was stoppedby the 'Society for the Prevention of
Letters About the Convention and. Women Suffrage.
Mr. Editor: One reason fre-
quently given for not registeringduring the present election for del-
egates fdr Ine estMis'HmtmV of theHawaiian Commonwealth has beenthe doubt that the oath might
HAM TON LADIES' WAISTS.Uruelty to Animals.
Ruction 5alrs.
cause men to lose citizenshio m
Serges,
DiagonalsBy Jas. F. Morgan,
THIS DAY.
Perfect fitting. Try our novelty Waist for children.
Undershirt and Waist in One for 50c.I3est value in town. Fast Black Hose: Ladies', Children'sand Gentlemen's, 25c. per pair..New Laces, Embroideries, Handkerchiefs, Gloves, Dress
(roods, Silks, Calicos, Ginghams ,Flannels, Flannelettes. NewGoods in every department.
AUCTION SALEOF
some other land.Such men should have no occa-
sion for doubt in'the future. Theyhave deliberately chosen to haveno part in the framing of our con-stitution. They have elected to bealiens in the land which has giventhem homes, and, in many cases,fortunes; and if they ever obtainthe franchise, it should be by an
and Tweed IFiiruHousehold
11UIU . B.
$12,000 a year in order to restore aQueen at $80,000. Is the allegedfact that $12,000 is too much ajjood reason for paying seven timesthat sum? The maxim of theselucid and reasonable opponents ofthe Provisional Government evi-dent- ly
is that whatever is, is wrong.The salary scale in every coun-
try grows up gradually, and is aresult of its general conditions.Hawaii pays her President andMinisters and Judges more thansimilar officers would be paid inthe United States, and in likemanner Hawaiian merchants paymore to clerks and book-keeper- s.
No doubt all employers would be
F. EHLERS & CO.,FORT STREET.
t
' to"
cietam. -
thwceixtno
pieJ
,ofair!rap,den:
i
all?pasapress
Thprivsmenttrain
are always to be found atOn Thursday, May . 10
AT lO O'CLOCK A. 31.,
oath unreservedly declaring theiropposition to a monarchical formof Government for Hawaii, andfulhj renouncing allegiance to thespecial Government in which theynow claim citizenship.
This course will stlle the Japan
At the Residence of H. F. GLADE, Esq., L. B. Kerr's TheI will eell at Public Auction, the House Club No.hold Furniture, comprising 2.UPHOLSTERED PARLOR SETese question, lor all the Japanese
claim is an eaual nolitipal ritrhfglad to get the same service -- with the citizens of other foreign 111 PIECES ;
Carved Ebony Bookcase,Ebony Center Table,
Rockers, Draperies,
done for "halfthe money, and the nations.fact that they cannot is evidence There seems no question that all
of which have registered and voted forenough a shocking ahuse, delegates to our convention for therealiijm the the anonymous masters of state-
craft who daily air their views in Oak Bedroom Cheval Set,llonolula.47 Queen Street
framing of a republican constitu-tion 'and' the establishment of anHawaiian Commonwealth, are, byvirtue of that act, citizens, and en-titled tov the franchise with or with
'Handsome Carved Oak Sideboard,'Lare Extension Dining Table,
the papers,, should provide a rem-
edy for at once. What remedy sobeautiful, so simple and so econo-
mical, as restoration ?
18 Leather Covered Dining Chair?,
Starts from March 1, and the drawings will bemade every other Saturday.
Start now, pay $2.50 a week from the date abovenamed, and you will soon be the possessor of thefinest Bicycle ever made.It costs you 15, when you get your wheel, the
balance is paid by the week in amounts that anyonecan afford.
Cheaper than car fare.
out further declaration, provided Crockery and Glassware,they can fulnl such conditions asmay hereafter be attached to the
railwifine ahe zahe mind dcft in iraned'teirte trjigiceeirfci
4Et5
Oak Washstands and BureausThe payment of salaries far be"These Goods are of theAnd the convention islow the value of the service rend-- franchise. ....unaouoteaiyrpr?. is a strikintr characteristic of competent to-s- o de- - best English and Frenchclare in the constitution.
make and comprise the newJ. Barsett.Kohala, Hawaii, May 7, 1S94.
Wilcox and Gibbs Sewing Machine,Refrigerator Meat tfafe.Garden Tool?,
ONE PONY,bs:to"
2 Sadiles, 1 Brake, etc.
est styles and patterns, will
the American Bystem. The sys-
tem may or may not be a wise
one. In the United States, it hasundoubtedly lowered the standardof character and efficiency in-- therinbiic service. The salary of
Wom.au Suffrage.Mr. Editor: I have several
times thought of 'wb'uoan'd suffragebe sold in quantities to suitpurchasers.
$1500 for the Governor of a State I in connection with the new consti- - Jas. F. Morgan,35S3 2c AUCTIONEER.
COLUMBIA BICYCLE AGENCY.3552is obviously merely hbimnal. I tution that is to'be. The question j
THE ."PACIFIC CCm:vniISCIAIi ADVERTISER: HOOIiUIiU, MAY 10, 1S94. 5
COURT NOTES. (Centred tf)rjrtlsniunts. entval Girctrtiscmmts. 53rnrral taccriiscrnnu.
JUSTHOMES RECEIVEDA TEASP00NFUL OF--rrZir ?7
Wednesday, May 9th.The report of yesterday was in
error as regards the trial of one It.Palau, being case No. 12 on thecalendar. It should have been for
case No. 11, the defendant beingPuaanui who was eentenced to pay$100 fine, for the offense of liquor
SPRING AND SUMMER
DRESS MATERIALS !
Immense Assortment! Latest Designs! Newest Materials I at
N. S. SACHS',Fort Street, .... Honolulu.
-- 0-
Latest Novelties in Wash Materials !
FIGURED ORGANDIES, STRIPED BELFAST LAWNS, DIMITIES,new designs in white and colored ground.
IMMENSE ASSORTMENT OF
SPOTTED -- : AND : FANCY -- : FIGURED -- : MUSLINS -- : AND -- : LAWNS
Striped and Figured Cambric?, Linen Percales, Drees Ginghams, immensevariety latest plaids and stripes.
Stripe Crinkles, Seersucker, Scotch GinghamsCOTTON CRAPES! COTTON CRAPES 1
In light blue, pink, cream, leghorn, lavender, cardinal ; also in dainty figures.
NEW CAMBRICS, SATEENS,AND DRESS FLANNELETTES.
M U 1 1INj uxl
Bf J '. 'r i
AT- -
Pearl City.
The Oahu Railway & Land Co,
OF Ft It Til K PIJIII.IC
Another Great Opportunity
To Secure Homes in One of the MostDcliglitfal Localities to te Foundin the I'aradUe ofj the Pacific.
A8 a healthly resort PearlCity has already established anenviable reputation. Many good
citizens in this community haveexperienced the wonderful effect pro-
duced by a few days sojourn in that dry,
cool atmosphere, and give grateful testi-
mony to the relief they have almost in-
stantly gained from severe and long
continued attacks of asthma. Physicians
acquainted with the climate of Pearl
City recommend it as a naturalsanitarium.
THE WATER SUPPLY
IS AMPLE !
And can be increased to meet the needs
ot a population equal to the largest city
in the world.Prof. A. B. Lyons of Oahu College is
our authority for stating that the watersupply is the purest yet discovered in
this country.
Special Inducements to Early Settlers
For ninety days from date we will sell
iiOTS on special terms favorable to bona-fi- de
settlers. For a term of three monthsfrom date, lumber and all building mate-
rials will be supplied, and delivered atPearl City at much lower price than ever
before obtained.For further particulars, call at this
office or on any of the lumber dealers in
this city. Those who now own lots aswell as those who propose to becomeresidents of that growing city, will do
well to embrace this opportunity. Thosewho avail themselves of this offer, within
the time name 3, will be entitled to, andwill receive the following benefits :
For a term of ten years, this Companywill carry such residents and theirfamilies from Pearl City to Honolulu in
the morning arriving a little before
seven o'clock, and from Honolulu to
Pearl City in the evening leaving Hono-
lulu station a little after fiveVclock, for
ten cents each' way, a rate less than one
cent per mile. The rates on all otherpassenger trains running during the day
or night "will be IK cents per mile firs- t-
class, and 1 cent per mile second class .
A good school is about to be opened
in the Peninsula, in the fine, large, newschool-hou- se erected by Mr. J. T. Water-hous- e.
Residents living at Pearl City
heights, above Pearl City station andthose having homes on the Peninsula,will be allowed to iide free on regular
trains between Pearl City stationsto and from the Peninsula.
Those who want to continue to send
their children to schools in Honolulu,
can have transportation on all regular
trains to an'd from Pearl City, for thepurpose of attending school at five cents
each way for each pupil. This is equal
to 24 to 26 miles ride for ten cents.Equal inducements for those desiring
o secure homes in this country have
never before been offered to tb.9 public.
This Company has been requested from
abroad to came the price of all their un-
sold land in "that locality.Should a clearance sale be made to a
syndicate, no opportunity like the pres-
ent would again occur 'for the purchase
of homes at Pearl City.
A Word to the Wise is'Sufficient."
Oahu Railway & land Co,
B. F. DILLINGHAM,General Manager.
S633-t- f
J. T. Waterkouse
No. 10 Store
LADIES AND GENT'S
BATHING SUITS !
Ladies' and Children's Cloaksand Jackets,
Children's Pinafores,
Silk, Shetland and Wool Shawls
KID GLOVES,
CHAMOIS GLOVES;
XADIES' AND CHILDREN'S
Hats ant Bonnets1!
TRIMMED AND UNTRIMMED,
Dress Goods in preat variety,Rainbow and Embroidered
Crape,
Feathers and FlowersNew Curtain Materials,
Silk and Velvet Ribbons,Leather and Silver Belts,
Novelties in EuchlngChiffon Handkerchiefs and
Ties,
LACE AND EMBROIDERED
PLOUNCINGS !3523
Wholesale and EetailFULL LINE OF
JAPANESE GOODSSilk and Cotton Dress Goods,
SILK, LINEN AND CREPE 8HIRTSof complete stock made by Yama-toy- a
of Yokohama.
Straw Hats, Neckwears,Sashes, Shawls, etc.
PROVISIONS in general.
Etc., Etc., Etc., Etc.When you are in need of any line of
Japanese Goods, give us first call andsaye your going all around town.
ITOHAN,Importer of Japanese Goods
20G Fort St., near Custom House.3395-t- f
NEW SHIETS !
White Linen Shirts,$2.25 apiece with collars 'andcaffs; first-cla- ss finish.
Crape ShirtsWith Ties, $1.75 apiece; stiffbosom finish ; new patterns.
Grape ShirtsWith Ties, $1.25 apiece ; whiteor colored; best quality; strongand comfortable Shirts.
Silk Shirts,$4 apiece; fine patterns;eplendid finish.
SSfThe above complete fctock ofShirts receive.! by the latest steamerare ready for sale by
Sole Agent of, the well-know- n Shirt-make- r,
Yawatoya. 3618-lm- ti
Steel and Iron lianges, Stoves and Fixtures.HOCSSZKSPINa GOODS iHD KITCHS3 OTEKSILS,
(
AGATE WARE IN GKEAT VARIETY;
White, Oray an4 Siiver-ptata- d.
selling without license. The caseagainst K. Palau for the sameOffense, waa nolle prosequied by
the prosecution. Kaulia for bothdefendants.
The vagrancy charge againstDavid Watson has also been nolleprosequied by the prosecution.Achi for defendant.
Kanohokai charged with larcenyin the first degree, and who reserved his plea on Monday, haswithdrawn his former plea andpleaded guilty. To be sentencedthis morning. Poepoe for defendant.
Pahupu for violating Section ly
Act 21 of the Provisional Governmerit laws (gambling), was found
: cruiltv and sentenced to pay a fineof $50 and $37 costs. Kaulia fordefendant.
Nakai for the same offense, hashad his case nolle prosequied bythe prosecution.
Paoo, for the same offense, haswithdrawn his appeal' from theDistrict Court where he was fined$30, and has been given till Mon-day next to raise the fine. Kau-lia for defendant.
Prosecution has also nolle pro-sequied the cases against Kahana-nu- i
and Kabeana, two minors whowere committed to the ReformSchool for the offense of maliciousinjury. Kahookano for defendants.
Lui Kamohai, for liquor sellingwithout license, has pleaded guiltyand a fine of $100 was imposed.Kaulia for defendant.
Aukai for larceny in the thirddegree, was tried and acquitted bya Hawaiian jury. Kaulia for de-
fendant.Kaluakini, a woman, was tried
and found guilty of liquor sellingwithout license ; fined $100. Kau-lia for defendant.
Ting Seng, an old opium fiend,has had his sentence suspendeduntil he has a chance of leavingthe country upon some Chinabound vessel.
MISCELLANEOUS.
Wong Ko, as administrator ofthe estate of Wong Kim, has filedan account covering the period ofsix months from the time, of hislast account. Receipts are $3997.-2- 5
; payments, $4860.37 ; balancedue the administrator, $863.12.Set for hearing on Friday next.Magoon for the administrator.
Wong Kwork Hang,of Honolulu,a bankrupt, has petitioned for-- ; adischarge from his debts and May28th has been set for hearing of theapplication. Magoon for peti-
tioner.An approved fee bill of $13
has been taxed in the case of C.-- A.
Brown vs.' the Bulletin PublishingCompany. C. W. Ashford for thefee.
The assumpsit case of W. H.Rickard vs. S. M. Kaaukai hasbeen settled out of court, and de-
fendant will pay the judgment ofthe District Court, which is $200plus interest, commissions andcosts. Kahookano for plaintiff;Achi for defendant-appellan- t.
In the equity case of H. G. Mc-Gre- w
vs. Fannie C. G. Campton,for mortgage and sale of a piece ofland in Leleo, Honolulu, defendanthas tendered in court the sum of$303.33 for principal and interest,and the case has been mutuallysettled out of court. Carter &Carter for plaintiff; C. Brown fordefendant.
Two Supreme Court decisionswere filed yesterday in. the follow-
ing cases :
Claus Spreckels vs. G. W. Mac-farlan- e,
foreclosure of a mortgagelien and sale of certain shares ofthe Waikapu Sugar Companystock given by defendant in secur-
ity for the payment of certainpromissory notes. This case hasbeen sixteen months in litigation.Defendant's appeal is dismissed,and the sale -- will now proceed.Chief Justice Judd is author of thedecision. Hatch for plaintiff;Hartwell-C- . W. Ashford for defendant-ap-
pellant.
In . re T. Ahung the Court de-
cides that' the bankrupt cannot besent to prison on the showingmade, and holds that Section 7 ofChapter 22, Laws of 1888, author-izing the commitment of a bank-
rupt to imprisonment, as unconsti-tutional. The bankrupt had failedto keep certain account books andJudge Whiting committed him toprison. C.W. Ashford for the bank-
rupt ; Hatch for J. F. Hackfeid, theassignee.
: Hawaiian jurors have been ex-
cused until further notified, andforeign jurors are required to at-
tend this morning.
in altfflcmilfccr$ic)ar& lYale
4y ttJc Craw15
rOrS&le vvefififocm byDrugUli.
THE AGENCY FOR
PERRY DAVIS
Pain KillerIS WITH THE
MISTER DRUG CO.;
LIMITED,
523 Fort Street,Where this invaluable household Heme- -;
dy may be obtained by the
Bottle, Dozen or GrossWe have also the largest stock of
--Drugs, Medicines,Chemicals, Perfumes,Toilet Articles andPhotographic Goodsto be found in the Hawaiian Islands
lltli June Races.
WE HATE SOMEOF THE CHOICEST
Wheat andOat Hay
AND--
NEW ZEALAND
--AND-
SURPRISE OATS
That ever came to Honolulu, so if theowners and trainers of good stock wantto be winners, they should send theirorders to the
CALIFORNIA FEED CO.
TELEPHONES 121.t
JEETDELIVERY TO THE PARK
EVERY DAY.
THEDM NIPPON
STOREHAS RECEIVED BY THE ' THE STEAMER
CHINA TROM JAPAN
ANOTHERLARGE
INVOICEOF
Silk arid Fancy Goods!
ALSO
White "Star" ShirtsMade by S.I.Yamatoya of Yokohama,.
Mrs. J. P. P. 'Jollaco,PROPKIE1RESS.
oo(5-t- f
BERLIFT' AND FORCE PUMPS. WATER CLOSETS, METALS
Plumbers' Stock, Water and Soil Pipes.
Plumbing, Tin, Copper and Sheet Iron Work,0
DIMOHD BLOCK. 95 and 87 KING STREET.
9
L. m AfMVj?,mM, ..JwU J i
HOSE!
YOUR
DOG CHAINSTHE- -
Company, L'd.
75 Cents per Month
BY CARRIER.
GET
DOG GOLLAESAN
-- AT
Pacific Hardware
A large variety suited to all sorts of dogs, from a JapanesePoodle to a Mastiff.
Since we introduced the Little Giant Rat Traps, five yearsago, we have sold hundreds of them. They have caught mon-goose as well as rats.
A new lot of that superior Galvanized Fence Wire andBarbed Wire.
New Goods to hand by the Martha Davis.A large assortment of first quality Agate Ware direct
from the factory.The best Ready Mixed Paints; Staple and Fancy Goods.
i o
Pacific Hardware Company, Limited402 AND --404 FORT STREET.
Daily Advertiser,
DELIVERED
THE PACIFIC COOTEIlC'IAIi ADVERTISER: HOyOLUIiU, MAY 10, 1894.6error ot valuation. An jiiks v.the Centnrv Dictionary, on the SEto SOomtscmxuts.f & '
Ui
THEHawaiianRevolution.
THEHawaiianEevolution.
s
MPoo
i
DEDICATED BY SPECIAL PERMISSION
Provisional
The Crisp photo process, by which ' The Histcry" will be illustrated, isacquiring a well-merite- d reputation for excellence, the productions beingartistic tnmuphs.
An instantaneous success ! ! ! The projectmen of Honolulu in a most enthusiastic manner.
Art connoisseurs warm in its praise. "An artistic gem of the purestray serene." TO BE PUBLISHED IN 1804.
The historians have commenced with the frame-wor- k of the construct-ion, setting forth tbe remote causes of eveDts and the motives of humanaction; and follow up their connection with other developments, and pre-sent the whole in a finished exterior of hich literary worth. The founda-tion principles of government, the predominant sentiments swaying humanminds at different eccchs, tbe tbvf-ica- l condition of different r.arts of tbland, the nature of different influencesbave all been closely studied, and tbe effects philosophically traced. Ac-curacy of statement, soundness of reasoning, clear presentation, and highliterary merit will be the commanding aspect of this ambitious effort. Itwill be published in an attractive form containing over 200 pager, fullyillustrated, supplied with many maps and plans, containing tables of usefulinformation and a complete index, it. comprises all the accompaniments nec-essary to complete a work of its character.
1
is
1.!
V
1--
m
MJ
MbH
HM1
H
TO THE
Government
received by the business
brought to bear upon the people,
of the Eevolution of 1893.
Letters to President Dole to
t-- iitepiy.
that arrangments
Executive, the Officers of the original
PEACOCK & CO , HAWAIIAN
W. HOBRON, HAWAIIAN
rr
it
if:if!in1 ii
i3
)
4
it-
ft-
i
1.y
J- -
t
1
4
V i'
i.r- -
syistcxpsis
Tn th Snnrema COUft 01 the
waiian Islands.
Mabch Teem. 1891.
TJVxrr H. PABKEB VS. JONATHAN
Shaw, Tax Assessor.
BEFOBE jpnn. as.. BICKEETON. A5D
FREAB, jj.
The Supreme Court has jurisdiction toher ca?es relating to iheof taxes, when it appears that a q:ie-ti- on
of the construction of the statuteis involved.
The rule of eight years rental tor theassessment of real estate 1?must be observed unless such valuationwould be manifestly, that is, plainly,obviously, uolair or unjust.
The qualification to the rule exists infavor of the Government as well as infavor of the person taxed.
The application of the rule in the presentcase, as shown by the fact, would bemanifestly unfair and unjust to theGovernment.
An assessment alleged to be excessivecannot be set aside by this Court,when the extess is due to a mere errorof judgment on the part of theassessor.
OPINION' OF THE COURT BY FREAK, J.
This is an action of assumpsit torecover 200 paid December 15, 1893,under protest, by the plaintiff to thedefendant as taxes alleged to havebeen illegally assessed upon a tractof land called " Waihee," in Koolan-poko- ,
Oabu. The land, which isleased for thirty years from March15, 18G9, at a yearly rental of 400was returned by the plaintiff at
3200, this being eight years rental ;
bat the aseesor increased the valua-tion to 20,000. The case comeshere on plaintiffs appeal from theDistrict Court of Honolulu. At thetrial in that Conrt the defendant wasnf t.h onininn that thu nrODertV wasworth 820,000, and the plaintiff ad- -
mitted that if umncumbrred by thelease it would be worth $15,000,whereupon the defendant acceptedthe admission for the purposes ofthis case.
The defendant contends that thisis at most merely a case of overvaluation, for which the only remedy isan aDDeal to tbe Tax Appeal Conrtprovided by . the statute (Laws 1892,Ch. LXI, Sec. 49.) Tbe plaintiffcontends that the case is one in f
which tbe construction of a statute isinvolved, and therefore cognizableby a court of law, as decided inKnudsen v. Stoltz, 8 Haw. 81. Weare of the opinion tbat the view ofthe plaintiff on this point is correct,but that it has not been shown tbatan erroneous construction was putupon the statute by the assessor.
The Question is whether theassessment should have been basedupon eight years rental, or upon thefail value of plaintiff's interest in theproperty. Tne tax law above cited prescribes the following rules for estimating the value of taxable property.
"Section 2G. Tbe full casb value ofall real property and all personal
mm Mproperty, ana or tue interest or. any--person in real or personal property,within the moaning of this Act,shall be estimated at a sumwhich such real or personal propertyor such interest therein might reasonaojy . De expected to orinsr at asale by public auction for cash.Provided, always, that when any realestate or house is leased or rented,the sum of eight years rental shallbe the assessment value of such realestate or bouse, unless such valua- -
tioa snail oe mamtestiy unxair crunjust.
. "Section 27. The interest of everyrjerson in any property shall beseparately assessed (except as hereinprovided in respect to shareholders
every person shall ba liable to tax- -
ation in respect of tiie full value ofhis interest in such property."
The proviso of bection 2G is thecart of the statute to be construed,It is argued by the plaintiff tbat thisis a positive rule of law requiring anassessment of eight years rental,subject only to tbe qualification "on- -
less such valuation shall be mamfestly uofair or unjust;" that thisqualification was made only in favorof the person taxed; or, if made infavor of the government as well,then the burden o proof was on. the I
government to show that it appliesto this case, a showing which, it isargued, has not been made. 1? or the I
defendant it is argued that this pro I
viso 13 a mere guide to tbe assessor,that it is not obligatory upon him, its I
XOrce oeiug uesixujfeu uv lut) quail ucation attached to it; or if more thana mere snide, the qualification applies in favor of the government as
Xl A J twell as in iavor ox me party, ana nasbeen shown to apply in tbis case. It
It seems to us tnat tne rule issomething more than a mere guide,Under the tax law of 1882 (Ch.XLIII. Sec. 2o) there was no qualihcation of this kind attached to theproviso. Under the law of 1SSG (Ch.XXXVII, Sec. 6) the proviso was al-
together omitted. In 1892, as aboveshown, the proviso was again enact beed, but, apparently to provide for
t legislatureadde "thqaahfiSaUon in queation.
111Tf will be noticed that a departure i
th rn! is authorized onlyion would be mani I
i n lj - -
mi. T
WZ nnfir or ULlQSt. J.U1S FUOWB
.'that the rule was intended to be ad-
hered to except in cases where to do orso would be evidently, plainly, obvi-
ously, unfair or unjust, where,perhaps, tnre could oe no reasuu-ifWpnc- e
of opinion., Se Alat- -
terouc
of-
Hermmance, 71 N. Y. 481, and J
Knudsen, 8 Haw. 19C, the landlord'sinterest was assessed at 35,000, theyearly lental being $750, an J thelease having several years to run. TheCourt held that it could not intefere.In Knudsen v. Stoltz, supra, it ap-peared, as it does not in this case,that the value was estimated on awrong legal principle.
The judgment of the DistrictCourt is affirmed.
F. M. Hatch for plaintiff; W. O.Smith, Attorney General, for defend-ant.
Honolulu, May 1, 1894.
2Tr. 2Z. XT. ChurchillML Vernon, Wash.
An Honest Medicine
Kbeumatism Cured-Health Butlt Up.Mr-- Chnrehin. formerly of; Churchill & Taylor,iurrvurs uuu ciii enquirers, xut. vcrnon,
VasI)in.ton. writes: "Southern Californiaras mv home for manv years. , When I cam
here I began to be aldicled all over withRheumatism
And also pains In ray back and a peneral feelingcX being used up. My business takes me out la
the elements all the time, and I found my-self unfit for work. Heading an advertise-ment of Hood's Sarsaparilla, and learningalso that the medicine was compounded Inmy own Strtte of Massachusetts, I concludedthis may be on honest medicine I tookit and am so much improved that I am out
Hood's Barsa-paril- la oresin all weathers and travel all day with nofatigue and tired feeling. To any one thatfeels bad all over I say take Hood's Sarsapa-rill-a.
It has cured me." B. II. ChubcbilxHOOD'S Pill.8 cure Liver Ills, Jaundioe,
BUtousae, Hick. Headache and ConstipationHOBRON, NEWMAN & CO.,
3336 W HOLES ALR AGENTS.
MP MM !
National and Citi'
zens' Guards.
Having now arranged forthe insertion of the ProcessnVinfno rn "f Vi r TTtotti-o-- v np rriTT-- c
itEvoLUTioN oi nearly all thesocial and nolitical hndips
I
, ... .uuuuecttju Aviui me xievoiUL- -
i
ion we feel that there is nobody
that deserves to be placedmore nisniy on record tnanthose citizens that at greatinconvenience banded them-
selves together to protect lifeand property during thestormy days of the formationof the Provisional Govern-
ment, and have decided to de-
vote a series of pages to theofficers and privates of theNational Guard and Citizens'Guard. Some thirty or fortynames have already been sentin and we shall be grateful ifany member desiring to ap-
pear will send word to Mr. &
Wellesley Parker care of thisoffice when he will imme- -
diately call and furnish full T.particulars.
Early attention to this IS
requested as the pictorial
Paes to the History mustpositively be closed npvr.
week.
The Hawaiian Gazette Co. red
Publishers or the Hiatory of the Ha-waiian Revolution.
Chapter 1 Prof. Alexander's History of King Kalakaua's
meaDing of the word ' manifest."Tne qualification applies in favor
of the government as well es in favorof the person taxed. There is noth-ing in the statute to indicate a con-trary intention; and, since the appli-cation of the eight year rule mightbe unfair in some cases to the publicas well as in other cases to tbeperson taxed, the qualification waspresumably made in favor of bothparties. This is also in harmonywith the general spirit and purposeof the tax law, which is that all property shall be equally taxed. Thestatute, in Section 11, provides for atax of one per cent, upon all property, real and personal, with certainexceptions inapplicable to this case.and in Section 27 and the first partof Section 26, above quoted, it pro-vides that every taxable interestshall be taxed separately at its fullvalue, that is, at tbe sum which itmight reasonably be expected to bringat a sale by public auction for casb.The proviso of Section 2G was notintended as an exception to this rule,out me legislature considering, as itapparently did, that the value ofreal estate is usually about etehttimes its fair yearly rental, and thatthe fair yearly rental usually doesnot vary much from tbe rental act-ually received, prescribed as a ruleof convenience and approximate cor-rectness in most cases, consideringhow difficult it is to correctly esti-mate values, that the value of thelandlord's interest should be estima-ted at eight years rental. It is ap-parent that the legislature intendedthat the value of the landlord's interest estimate in this way should be asa rule nearly equivalent to the valueat which it would probably be estimated in the absence of the rule.Bat while this might, usually be tbecase, it is evident that in some cases,by following the rule, the assessmentwould be much too high or too lowmanifestly unfair or unjust either tothe person tax.d or to tbe govern-ment. It was to provide for euchcases, where the unfairness or un-justne- ss
would be manifest, that thequalification was added: and the un- -
fairness to the Government might bejust as manifest as that to tbe persontaxed, lnis variation of tbe fullvalue from the eigbt years actualrental, might be due to a number ofcauses, temporary or permanent.One cause, suggested by tbe facts oftbis case, is the gradual increase ordecrease in the value of land underlease for a long term of years, whilethe rent remains constant. It wasargued by counsel tbat the question,so far as the government is concern- -
ea, is merely one oi apportionmentof the tax between the landlord andthe tenant, and that therefore thequestion of unfairnees to the govern-ment could not arise, since whatwould not be obtained from the land-lan- d
would be obtained from Abetenant. But this is not so. Thetenant's interest must be assessed byltseir ac us irue vaiue, irrespectiveof the assessmeBt of the landlord'sinterest. Now if, . for instance,during a long term the land shouldgreatly increase in value, the inter-ests of both tenant and landlordwould increase in value, but whilethe assessment of the tenant'sinterest would be increased, so far asJ 1 " imis cause is concerned, tne assessment of the landlord's interest, if theeight year rule were followed,would remain the same, and the in-crease in the value of bis interestwould not be assessed to anyone.Suppose, for instance, the land isworth, as agreed in this case, S15.000,and suppose
varatbe- - term
.is about to
expire. JLUe tenant's interest wouldthen be assessed at only a nominalvalue, if at all; the landlord's interest would be assessed at $3200, anda value of 11,800 would not beassessed to anyone.
It is unnecessary for us to decideupon whom the burden of proof liesin 4linn t.lmt. tVo trnlnnt Jrn rtf 01 rrVi t--
years rental is "manifestly unfair or
poses of this case that tbe burden ison tne assessor, it seems to us tbattbis has been shown. Tbe defend- -ant himself admits that the land unincumbered by the lease is worth
15,000. Its fair yearly rental esti- -
mated on the basis of tbe statutoryrule would bo "one-eigh- t of thisamount or 1875, an excess of '1475over the rent actually received. Thelease at the time as of which tbe landwas assessed, had about five andthree fourths years to run. Withouttaking the present worth of S1475 ayear for this length of time but,favorably to the plaintiff, taking thewhole amount, five and three fourthstimes 514i5, we find tbat not quite$8500 is the most that the plaintiffcoum say that the value of bis landis depreciated by reason of the lease.Ibis would leave not less than 6500as tne value of the land incumberedby the lease, or more than twice theamount at which it would be assessed on the basis of eight years rental.
is obvious therefore that to applymo iiue iu mis case wouia oe mam- -
festly unfair and unjust to the gov- -
ernment. It would be to allow atleast one half of the value of theplaintiff's interest to escape taxation.
The assessment of S20,000 whichwas made in this case would seem to
very unfair and um'ust to theplaintiff, and no doubt would havebeen reduced by the Tax AppealCourt if an appeal had been made to
. .it --r imai, uuuy. a-- ug ims excessive assessment is a wrong which we cannotrectify. The statute provides thattbe eigbt year rule shall not applywhere it would be manifestly unfair
unjust. Jut when tbe case isonce taken out of tbis rule, the landlord's interest is to be assessed likeany other interest at its estimatedvalue. As decided repeatedly bythis Court, we cannot rectify a mere
Chapter 2 Prof. Alexander's History of Liliuokalani's
PATENTED UNDER UE LAWS OVTHE HAWAIIAN ISLANDS.
The attention of PIantraand Agents is called to thefollowing letter from MrJohn A. Scott, Manager oftne ni 10 bugar uo., regardingtbe working of the NationalCane Shredder, which he hasjust introduced into the Millof that Company:
Waisaex, ITilo, Hawaii, )January 2J. 1S94.1
Uox. Wu. G. Irwin, Honolulu, H. I.Dear Sir: In reply to yours of ti a
16th inst. regarding tne National CaneShredder furnished by the I'niversalMill Co. of New York, and erected brthe Hilo Sugar Co. this past season,
I ould beg to sav, that it baa now beenin ration day and Dight during the pastthree weeks working on plant cane, andalso hard ratoons,and it is giving me thegreatest satisfaction. The more I see ofits capabilities, the better pleased 1 amtbat I put it in, as I am satisfied that itwill repay the original outlay in a shorttime, in saving of labor, higher extrac-tion, etc.
It is shredding from 350 to 400 tons ofcane every 'SZ hours with the greatestea-- e, and it could thred a much larger -
quantity if necessary. It delivers theshredded cane in an even uniform feedto the three roller mill, which receives itwithout the intervention of anv labor.and as the cane is thoroughly shreddedor disintegrated it relieves the mill of agreat deal of strain, thus reducing theliability of broken shafts geating, etc.
ihere is a saving of lour (4) men dailyon the mill, only one man is rpqu'ivdto regulate tha amount of cane deliveredby the carrier to the shredder. It hasincreased the extraction from 4 to5 per cent.
The economical use of steam is gene-rally a serious consideration in addingnew machinery, as in most mills theboiler power is tax--- to its highest limit,as it was in this mill, and any increaseddemand necessitated an additional boil-er. Hut 1 find that the shredder and thethree roll mill engines combined use nomore steam than the three roll millengine did when working on whole cane,wnile doing better work and more of it,and owing to the uniform feed on themill, tbe engine demands very littleattention.
Tbe Megass from tbe shredded canemakes superior fuel, and the firemenbave lef-- s difficulty in maintaining a uni-form pressure of steam than formerly.
I will be pleased to have a call fromparties interested, as it is necessary tosee tbe machine at work to fully appre-ciate its capabilities.
I remain, very truly yours,(Big.) JOHN A. SCOTT,
Manager Ililo Sugar Co.
at the office of the Agents,where prices and other parti--cularsmay also be obtained
G. Irwin Co. L'iSOLE AGENTS FOR THE
HAWAIIAN ISLANDS.3594-3-m
MH. HARRY ROBERTS
A Newspaper Artist, Late of the
San Francisco Evening Post
i
Is prepared to make illustrations for newspaper ad-
vertisements, or for book andjob work at short notice.
Cuts of buildings, portraits,real estate maps, etc., madeat Coast rates.
Fine pen work for labels-an- d
photograving. Musiccopied.
Address care of the Adver-tiser office.
To Let or LeaseFOR --A. TERM OF YEARS
eTHE PREMISES ON TUBof Kinjrand Alapai streets,
lately occupied by Dr. G. P,Andrews
The yard has a frontaee of 200 feel onKin Etreet and b 300 fet deep. Thehouse contains eicht rcomp, two habs;
ho a lar e kitchen , pantry, china closet,ba'h rxm, etc.. etc , besides all out-buildings that are necessary.
PcPBf spion given immediately. --
For Jurther particulars applv to3654-t- f CUAS. M." COOKE.
Reign.
Chapter 3 A Brief Account
Chapter 4 A Brief Account of the Provisional Government to date.
Chapter 5 Minister Willis'abdicate.
ygi i n t i i t--v iunapier o irresiaent juoie s
Chapter 7 Willis and Dole's Correspondence
Chapters Minister Thurston's Protest issued atvvasnington.
Chapter 9 Minister Thurston's Statement of the Hawai--ian Case.
Chapter 10 President Dole's Specifications.
Chapter 11 Morgan's Report to the Senate.
Chapter 12 The Senate's Action on Hawaiian Afiairs.
Mr. Wellesley Parker has the hoDor to announcehave been made for the insertion of the following Bodies
The Committee of bafety, tbeAnnexation Club, Onicers of the Citizens Guard, the Fire Department,the 1st Advisory Committee, Members of the Bar, the Consuls.
The following firms have secured positions: WILDERCO., H. HACKFELD & CO., ELITE ICE CREAM
PARLORS, CUNNINGHAM'S DOG KENNELS, SCHMIDT &SONS, OCEANIC STEAMSHIP CO., PACIFIC HARD-WARE CO., E. O. HALL & SON, J. T. WATERHOUSE, CASTLE &COOKE, LEWERS & COOKE, ELECTRIC LIGHT CO.,
G. THRUM, WM. G. IRWIN & CO., OAHU RAILWAY & LANDCO., JOHN NOTT, T. B. MURRAY, YOKOHAMA SPECIE BANK,CALIFORNIA FEED CO, ITOHAN, DAI NIPPON, ST. LOUIS ANDOTHER COLLEGES, F. J. KRUGER, COOK'S FERTILIZING
M j x & iSU2if WOUDliAWNWORKS, J. HOPP & CO., Wr. C."UrjfiL., bAJSS bUUUl UUlJSLi, MCUJtLtitO
FRUIT CO., CHAS. HAMMEK, TNEWS CO.
Special note to proprietors of Trades and Industries. There isnow only room for six or seven firms in the limited space devoted to therepresentation of Trades and Industries, and a great favor will be confer
if those desirous of giving Mr. Parker an interview with regard toinserting theirs between the pages of tbe beauty spots of the city andthose pages assigned to the early efforts of Hawaiian pioneers will intimatewhen to call.
r3 Hp:
.. .... ..
TITE PACIFIC COMMERCIAL ADVERT IS E It; IIOXOLYULYU. MAY 10, 1894.LOCAL BREVITIES.
HAWAIIAN OPERA HOUSE. TELE
trral SHmcrtisfmrnta
A NEW DEPARTURE
An Extensive -:-- -:-
Tobacco Store
UTTTP tot n rrs nn itmiPVTP
Two Men are Robbing Mr. Hayncof Honors and Money.
Last night the Star printed aninterview with Julian D. Hayne,41 a poet and a composer of lightopera." In speaking of an op-r- a
which ha3 been written by Mr.Hayne that gentleman is reportedassaying: "Yes, I got it off onthe last steamer, and if it takeswith the'publishers it will probablybe put on the stage at once. Ihave written a great many songsand operas though none have prov-en as successful as my 'Isle of Cham-pai- n
written at Vienna sometimeago and now being played by theRobin Hood Company."
If Mr. Hayne'd statement i3 afact then two other men are steal-ing the product of his brain. Thereis a comic opera called The Isleof Champagne" but up to now itwas commonly supposed thatCharles Byrne and LouisHarrison were the authors of it.Mr. Byrno is a well known NewYork journalist and Mr. Harrisoni3 a comedian at present with theLillian Russell Opera Company.They have rented the opera namedto Thomas Seabrooke who pays aheavy royality for the use of it.Mr. Hayne had better write tothem regarding the disputed owner-ship of the opera.
Lecture Postponed,The lecture on "Paris," an-
nounced to be given by Mrs. Ganson Friday evening next, has beenpostponed until the Monday night,May 14th, to enable the membersof the Hawaiian Historical Societyto enlist their friends and patronson behalf of the success of thislecture, as this society is to sharein the profits of the entertainment.Tickets can be obtained from thefollowing officers and members ofthe society : Rev. C. M. Hyde, J. S.Emerson, Prof. V. D. Alexander,W. R. Castle, H. N. Castle, GeorgeP. Castle, Dr. C. T. Rodger3 andDr. N. B. Emerson, and will alsobe on sale at the Hawaiian NewsCompany, Thrum's book store, Mr.C. Scharf's book store on Fortstreet, as well as at Hollister &Co.'s drug store and at the doorthe evening of the entertaiment.The usual prices will prevail 50c.for adults and 25c. for childrenunder 12. Further notices will ap-
pear.Thi3 will be the most attractive
lecture of the series, and not onlyon account of its merits, but forthe cause it seeks to benefit, shoulddraw the audience of the season.
Card of Thanks.CAPTAIN CHANEY WOULDMRS. this medium of conveying her
most heartieit thank3 to all the kindfriends who ministered to herself andfamily in their sudden bereavecent ofhusband and father, assisting at the fune-ral and contributing flowers thereto, andortherwise byword and deed manifestingthat true sympathy for the widow andfatherless which has the promise ofdivine reward.
36Sl--lt
2go. 290. 2go,
JC. QUINN AND M. BEIS OFUnited Carriage Co., are now
prepared to furnish the public withfirst-cla- ss Livery Tnrn-ont- s, suchas Bnsrgies, Sorrie, Wagonettesand Phaetons. Anyone wishingto take " a ride behind a first-cla- ss
horse and a stilish buggy can do soby ringing up 200 or call at theUNITED CAKRIAGK CO.'S OFFICE.King street, next to E. O. Hall & Son.
3683-- 2t
Uicycle for Sale.--f CLEVELAND BICVCLF, 1893x mod-- I, in per'ect condition. Pricetto. Apply at ofSce of
H. E. WALKER,SGT.Vlw Merchant street.
Lost,4 PAIR OF GOLD ROWED EYE
l glassy at the Feast of Nations,r inder will be rewarded by returning tothis office.
3- - 64-- tf GEO. II. PRI3.To JLet.
COTTAGE TO LET ON KI-na- a
street; all modern improve- -.t r a i imen is. aim tarn, cwyies ana
Servants rooms. 'Applvto:d604-- tf N. S. SAtTH. Fort Ptroet.
rown Flour
FOB SAXE 31T
Castle & Cooke1514 Imtf
SPECIAL BUSINESS ITEMS.
S.1 lady with references desiresposition as housekeeper, or to takecharge of house while parties areaway for the summer. No objectionto country. Addres X., this office.
Dan Lvods' Classes meetat Arion Hall every TUESDAY andFRIDAY EVENING, from 7 to 9o'clock; also, ou SATURDAY AF-TERNOONS at 2 o'clock. Tuition,
cents for each lesson. Satisfactionguaranteed or no charges made.
Ladies' Driving Gloves at$1.25 a pair, undressed; Mousquetairegloves, tan shades, at $1 a pair at N.S. Sachs, Fort street.
SoT'Pare Linen Lawnt 12 yards ina piece fcr $1.50; white fancy lace,seven inches wide, 20e. a yard at N. S.Sachs, Fort street.
If you want to sell outyour Furniture in its entirety, callat the I. X. Ii.
For Baigaina In New andSecond hand Furniture, Lawn Mow-ei- B,
Wicker Chairs, Garden Hose,etc., call at the I. X. L., corner ofXuuanu and King streets.
S7 Mothers ask for the Mother'sFriend Shirt Wafst, the latest im-provement in Boy's shirt Waists. Nomore buttons to sew on. For sale atN. S. Sachs.
JEC" Ladies' Diamond BlackStockings, absolutely fast, only 25cts.a pair, at N. S. Sachs.
SL The Pacific Hotel, cornerof Nuuanu and King streets, is theplace you can obtain the best ofWines, Beers and Spirituous Liquors.
Edw. Wolter, Manager.3567-t- f.
Bedroom Sets, Wardrobes,Ice Boxes, Stoves, Hanging Lamps,Rugs, Bureaus, Chiffoniers, Steamerand Veranda Chairs, Bed Lounges,8ofa3, Baby Crib3, Clothes Baskets,Sewing Machines, Whatnots, MeatSafes, Trunks, etc., sold at the lowestCash Prices at the I. X. I., corner ofNnuanu and King streets.
The Eagle HouseFOK SALE!
Tlie Lease and the Good Will of ThisFavorite Family Hotel.
THERE ARE FOUR DE--smLl taehed Cottacea annp-rp- to thA
ies. The main Building contains 20 BedRooms, large Dining Room, Parlor, etc.The Furniture is all elegant and in goodcondition.
The Gronnds are beautifally laid outin Trees, Flowers, Ferns and otherPlants.
This business can be brought at abargain on easy terms as to payment.
7 Apply toT. E. KROUSE,
368?--tf Arlington Hotel Office.
This Space -- : Reservedfob
H. H. WILLIAMSHOTEL STREET,
NEXT -:- - TO -:- - HORN'S -:- - BAKERY2679-- tf
RARE OPPORTUNITY
Until further notice the ttock of
Watches, Clocks and Jewelry
OF
WENNER & COMPANYON FORT STREET,
Will be offered for
CASH AT COST !
The stock contains some of the finestmaterial ever imported into the Islands.Snchan or portnnity will not foon againpresent itself and it will not lonz be keptopen. 3070-- 1 w 15-IS-2-
Situation Wanted.OF MR. W. A. EOWFN3'ONE cla33 ia bookkeeping desire3
employment as bookkeeper, assistantbookkeeper, cr copvjt. IJeet of refer-ences. Address S.,' thi- - office.
,y'-i-ff
Dividend lVotice.
DIVIDEND WILL "BE DUE ANDpayfcb a to th stockholders of the
Hawaiian tSnr Co. at the office of Wrn.G. Irwin A Company. L'd , on May 10.
WM. G. 1HWIN,2G323t Treasurer.
Monowai todcy.
May Blossom at the theatre to-
night.41 Billy " Corntvell is in town
3gain.
Mrs. Captain Chaney has a cardin this issue.
At last accounts sugar wasquoted at 2c.
A position as housekeeper i3advertised for.
Ladies social at Central Unionchurch tonight.
Miss Pauahi Judd returned fromHawaii yesterday.
The Councils will meet this after-noon at the usual hour.
. L. A. Thurston will give a yacht-ing party to Pearl City Saturday.
The Government Band will givea concert at Thomas Square thisevening.
The programme of the races totake place on June 11th, appearsin another column.
Dr. Tsvombly and wife and Mr3.W. V. Hall returned from theirvolcano trip yesterday.
Benson & Smith will soon moveto the store formerly occupiedby Ebrlich & Company.
Mrs. V. H. McLean and daugh-ter will leave for San Francisco to-
day cn the R. P. Rithet.
Captain Schmidt, of the barken-tin- e
Irmgard, has the thanks ofthe Advertiser for favors.
The sale of furniture at theGlade premises, will take placethis morning at 10 o'clock.
Judging from the amount of convictions eo far, the present batch ofHawaiian jurors is a good one.
The funeral services of JohnParker will be held this afternoon.He will be buried at Mana, Ha-waii.
The meeting of the Board ofHealth set for yesterday was post-poned until 4 o'clock this after-noon.
For many years a large wen hadbeen growing behind John D.Spreckels left ear. Two surgeonsremoved it recently.
H. F. Glade and family are theonly persons booked to leave forSan Francisco on the Gaelic, duehere on Monday.
The foreign news in today'sissue was brought by the Irmgard,which made the trip from SanFrancisco in ten days.
Mrs. Gans lecture on Pari3 thatwas to take place at KawaiahaoChurch tomorrow night, has beenpostponed until Monday.
John Thorn as "Waterhouse, Sr.,hasbought six more lots at Pearl City.He has a well founded confidencein the future of land in that neigh-borhood.
No date has been set for the firstmeeting of the Constitutional Con-vention. The matter will probablybe settled today at the meeting ofthe Councils.
Belasco's charming comedydrama will be presented tonight atthe Opera House by the Daileycompany, mere is a zooa reserved seat sale.
A private citizen of Honoluluoffers to donate $10,000 to anycompany which will undertake tobuild a cable road to the Pali, pro-vided that operations be commenced before January 1st, ISOo.
It i3 rumored that C. R. Bishopwill sell out his interest in theBank of Bishop & Co. to two California banks, and not to ClauaSpreckels. S. M. Damon will continue to be the manager of theestablishment.
The row of tamarind trees whichstands on the sidewalk in front ofof Emma Hall, on Nuuanu street,is dying, and presents a most for-
lorn appearance. It would be wellif the Government ordered them tobe cut down and removed.
Some time ago Clans Spreckelspurchased a lot on Market street,San Francisco, for hia daughter,iliss Emma Spreckels. The landcost $225,000. According to a lateSan Francisco paper, he intends toerect a building on the lot, to cost
200,000.
The A DERTISER is the lead-in- g
paper of the Hawaiian inl-
ands. It has a larger circulationand prints more live news thauany other island paper. Price 75cents per month, in advance. Ring
iop telephone No. SS
HawaiianSTAB.
Subscription Price
75c. A MONTH.6a A QUARTER,
PAYABLE IN ADVANCE
rUItLISIIKI) By TDK
Hawaiian StarNEWSPAPER COMPANY, L'D. .
3P51-- tf
THREE COFFEE
Pulping Macies
Of the Seat Kind Just lieoeived.Xhey Will Xrxlo From 30 toJO Uvisriels of Ripo Coffeeper Hour.
A pulier similar to these is in use bythe Coffee and Tea Company at Kona,and the parchment coffee turned ontfrom this machine ia a joy to behold;not a kernel broken !
Now is the time to purchase, so as tobe prepared for the coming crop. ThesePulpers are made very strong; arepacked in a compact form and can easilybe transported either in a wagon or onmule or cattle back.
Besides these Pulpers, which are thefirst ever offered in this market,: we havejust received a fine assortment of Roodsround Cape Horn ex Martha Davis fromNew York and Boston and the Villaltafrom England. Among which willbe found
WIRE NAILS,Cat Nails and Spikes. Galvanized Nails,and Spikes, aast. Ash Oars,;Cases Card,Matches,C. C. Irons, Cases Turpentine,Barrels Kosin and Pitch, Bales Oakum.Wire Door Mats, Straw Wrapping Paper,Cases Naphtha. Blacksmiths' Bellows,Bales Cotton Waste, Rales Cotton 8ailDnck, a large lot of Sisal Hope, a largsassortment of
Manila IrfccmePick and Hoe Handles, Lawn mowers.Fodder Cutters, Horse Shoe Nails, HorseRasps, Hand Screws and Alden's PatentBrooms, Mason's Blacking, Door Locks,Padlocks, Clothes Pins, Scrub Brashes,Sand and Emery Paper. Boat Naila,Hall's Cane Knives, Uonda Batteries,Sash Cord, Smokeless Gun Powder,
Ball's Plows and Breakers,
Hasps and Hinges, Ox Bows, Axes,Hatches. Crowbars, Piokaxes and Mat-tocks, Grindstones, Mops, Hoes, etc..Coils Flexible Steel Wire Kope andTopsail Sheet Chain, all sizes; SheetIron, Galvanized; Shoe Elastic,
POCKET CUTLERY
ELECTFJO LAMPS, all izes.
U-!T- or salo by
E. 0. ML i SON
CORNER FORT AND KING
STREETS, HONOLULU,
To the Public.Call at tho New Millinery Store on
Fort H?rft and eeo our goods. We haveg'jt the flfipst lino ever shown in Hono-lulu. Also will receive ordera for fancysowing.
Tho f ervices of Mian Jonnln Mrf3n-A-
have bfpn enenred, and she will be gladto w e all her old friends.
M. HANNA,352 Mf No. 152 Fort Ftreet.
Daily Advertiser, 76 cenla permonth. Delivered by Carrier.
Last Three Weeks !
DAWS STOCK CO.
THE KEIOMSO FAVORITES ! I
.TO-NIGH-T!
Uelasco's :- - (treat Cometly :- - Sucre
" MAY BLOSSOM."
Saturday Matinee and Evening
" UNCLE WS CABE"
Reserved seats now on pale at L.J Levev's store. S66Mf
REMOVAL !
EUSTACE & CO.
HAVE MOVED TO
Morgan's Auction RoomFor a short time. We are still selling
Departure Bay CoalCharcoal, Algaroba
KINDLING -:- - WOODIN ANY QUANTITY.
w' Both Telephones 414.
S676-l-
The Most Complete Millinery
IX ALL ITS STYLES AT
J. J. Egan's, 514 Fort St.
A large assortment of "Woolen DressGoods, Storm Serge in Blue, Black andWhite; Scotch, English and AmericanGinghams in large quantities.
A fine line in fancy-figure- d washGoods.
A complete stock of Striped aDdChecked Flannels. This is the placeto buy your Laces, Embroidery andHosiery, cheap ; a complete line.
Dressmaking done in all itsbranches by the well-know- n Dressmaker,Mr Fenner.
FOR SALE!TnOROUGDBRED STALLION
"MANOA BOY.""Manoa Boy " is out of "Lalla Rookh" by"Ivanhoe." He ia three years old andgives promise of being a speedy animal.
Apply to
James Carty,M EltCII ANT STREET.
2680-- tf
HAWAIIAN
BASEBALL ASSOCIATION
HawaiisVL1ISU8
Crescents.
SATURDAY AFTERNOON, MAY i2
AT 3:30 O'CLOCK.
ADMISSION : : 25 CENTS.3080-t- f
Election of Officers.
AT A MEETING OF THE STOCK-hold- rsof the Kilauea Cyclorama
Co., held thii day, the followinij officerswere elected for the ensuing year:
F. J. Lowrey PresidentW. U CaBtle . . . .Vice-Preside- nt
L. A. 1 hurston. . HfcrefaryT. W. Hobron.. TreasurerT. May AuditorTUp above officers a?s. constitute fh
Board of Directors of the Company.1j. A. 1 H UK -- TON,
h'ec rotary .Honolulu. May 4fh. .'ifKI-- t.
Keep your frienda abroad noit- -ed on Hawaiian affair hy pendingthem copies of the 11 A WAIIANGAZIiTTE, ficml'Weekly.
THE LARGEST
and finest assortment of Tobacco,Cigars, bnutTand Smokers' Articlesever offered in the Islands,comprising:
PLUG AND FINE CUT
Chawinjr, Twists, Plug and CutSmoking of all descriptions, such asLong Cut, Curly Cut, Granulated,Fuch well known brands aa Pet,Vanity Fair, etc., etc.
SOME FORTY
or more brands of Havana, Manilaand American Cigars; Cigarettes,such as Pet, Vanity Fair, Ad-miral, etc.
PIPES, CIGAR AND
Cigarette Holders. Look at the as-sortment, it is too large to enume-rate, consisting of Briar, Meers-chaum, Corn Cob, etc
PIPE STEMS AND
Mouth Pieces of Cherry, Amber,Horn, India Rubber, etc. Ourstock of Repairing Sundries Is large.Ask for what yoa want, we probablyhave it.
Handa Cigars in Bond
,1 We still continue to manufactureour celebrated Soda Water, Ginger Ale,etc., at our extensive works on theEsplanade.
COYou. will find our Store andOffice at Merchant and Fort Street3 .
H0LL1STER'
s CO.
CASH PAIDfor: :
awa an Stamps
We will bay for cash large or smallquantities of used Hawaiian PostageStamps at the following prices perhundred :
1 cent violet. $ 851 cent blue 851 cent green 502 cent vermillion 752 cent brown .-
- 852 cent rose 402 cent violet, 1891 issue 605 cent dark blue 755 cent light tlue 106 cent green 7510 cent black 7510 cent vermillion 2510 cent brown 2 7512 cent blaok G 6012 cent mauve 6 5015 cent brown 5 2518 cent red. 10 5025 cent purple 10 5050 cent red 20 00$1 carmine 20 00
Stamps which are torn aro notwanted, at any price. Address
. PHILATELIST'S EXCHANGE,
P. O. Eox 443,?.G22-t- f Washington, I. C.
EMPIRESALOON.
J3. X. IMSQUAhas now assumed the manage-ment of the above saloon.
Pineapple CocktailsA 8 1 K CIALT Y.
A SPLENDID ASSORTMENT OF
iittioitx2:rFAM1JL7Y" -:- - WIINES !
23 ytWB old. i&CJCall and pee.378-1- w
For Sale.
A LODGINU HOUHEof 27 nwi! p, situated int!i In-ar- t of tht City.Aridrtfu "A. rare of
;i(.G4-- tf
4
THE PACIFIC C030IEBCIAL ADVERTISER; UQXOLULU, 3IAY 10, 1894,o r-- :
I Sljippini. THE PROVISIONAL GOVERNMENTOABD RilLWAY & L1ND CO.'S
rfXE TABLE.Aru irritn june 1. isoa.
Diplomatic and Consular ItCpTe,aentativea of Hawaii Abroad,
tIN THE UNITED 8TATE8.
United States His Ex L ALnvoy Extraordinary and MhSSPlenipotentiary, Washington I) (JSecretary and Charge d'affaires' a, 1 lnterim- -F P Has-in-- s
New York E II Alien, Consul-Gener- al
ban Fran i.--co C T Wilder iv iGeneral for the Pacific Matw Calf"fornia. Ortgon and Nevada andWashington j pConsular Clerk coper,
PhiJadelphia-Kob- ert II Davis, ConsulSan DiefO. Caa Jas W Girvin, ConsulBoston Gorham D Gilman Pnr.eniHi?
8
a case of smallpox on board. Shewas ordered into quarantine. Shehad eighty-on- e Japanese for Hono-lulu. They will come on the Gae-
lic, due here on Monday.The bark R. P. Rithet will leave
for San Francisco this morningabout 9 o'clock with about 2000tons of sugar and the followingpassengers: T. B. Whitney, Mrs.W. H. McLean and daughter, MisaB. Orbell, Mrs. L. H. Dee and twodaughters, Miss Mary Saxton andL. Haseltine.
Miss Carey, daughter of CaptainCarey of the steamer Monowai,who is attending Mis3 West'sschool in San Fracisco, entertaineda number of her schoolmates atluncheon on the vessel recently..A portion of the deck was screenedwith flags and bunting and pre-pared for dancing. The officersput on their most resplendent uni-forms and explained to the youngladies all about the arrangementsof the ship.
The barkentine Irmgard, CaptainSchmidt, arrived last evening, tendays from San Francisco. Shebrought four passengers Mr. Brad-ley, wife and two daughters. Thecaptain reports a pleasant voyage.She brought the lollowing cargo:38 bbls and 50 cases salmon, 42.escoffee, 45,314 lbs rolled barley,77,372 lbs bran, 34 pkgs provisions,245 kegs nails, 34,000 lbs oats, 8590lbs salt, 106 cs soap, 222,00 J lbsfertilizer, 1000 cs coal oil, 20 bblslubricating oil, 70 cs lard, 50 cscondensed milk, 600 bbls flour, 240bales hay, and 1460 lbs beans.
IMPROVING THE -- TRACK.
TBAIH3TO 32 TV A KILL.
B B A D.M. P.M. P.M. P.M.
Leave Honolala...8:45 1:45 4:35 5:10Leave Pearl City.. 9:30 2;30 5:10 5:56
Arrive Ewa Mill... 9:57 2:57 5:36 6:22
TO HONOLULU.
C B B A
A.M. A.M. P.M. P.M.
10:43 3:43 5:42Ewa Mill.Leave -- 6:214:15 6:1011:15Pearl City..6:ooLeave
Arrive Honolulu. .7 :30 11:5a 4:55 6:45
A Saturdays only.B Daily.O Sundavs excepted.D Saturdays excepted.
The Pacific Commercial Advertiser
Issued Every Morning, Except
Sunday, by the
Hawaiian Gazette Company
At No. 318 Merchant, Street.
EIGHT PAGES.SUBSCRIPTION HATES:
The Daily Pacific Commercial Adve-rtiser (8 packs)
Per month in advance 75
Per qu uter in advance JJJPer year in advance 8 u
Per year, postpaid to United Statesof America, Canada, or Mexico.. 11 00
Per year; postpaid Foreign. . ; 14 00
Hawaiian Gazette, Semi-Weekl- y (8
pages Tue3Dys and Fridays)
Per year 104 numbers . . . . $5 00
Per year U. 8. and Canada 6 00Per year .other Foreign Countries. . 7 00
Payable Inrarlably in Advance.
H. M. WHITNEY,Business Manager.
THURSDAY. MAY 10, 1894.
THE ADVERTISER CALENDAR.
May, 1894;
11. Tu. W. Tn. Fr 8. 3o mook' rauu.T 5 6 Wp Moon
mmmm j ; L May &.
7 8 8 10 11 U 13 Kint Vu'rI May 11.14 is is " " i9 pr-Z-
un mSSIT
7T 15" IT 2? 16 17 May 19, .a-- 1,nt Ou'r
3D 99 30 81 W. May 27:
SHIPPING INTELLIGENCE.
ARRIVALS.Wednesday, May 9.
Stmr Kinau, Clarke, from Hawaii andMaui.
Stmr James Makee, Haglund, from Ka- -
UaDktn Irmgard, Schmidt, from San Fran- -
CiaCO.
OEPAKTUKKSWEDSisDAT.May 0.
8tmr James Makee, Haglund, for Ka-pa- a.
Stmr Fele, Petersen, for Makaweli.Schr Mary E Foster for Koloa.
VESSELS LEAVING TODAY.Bk li P P-ith-
et, Morrison, for San Fran-cisco, at 9 a m.
VESSELS 124 FOKT. t(Thla list does not Include eoaater.)
KAVAL VESSELS.
DSF8 Philadelphia, Barker, Callao.HUM Takachino, Nomura, Yokohama.H B M S Champion, Rooke, Esquimau.
MKBCHASTMEIf.
Am bk R P Rithet, Morrison, S F.Am Miss stmr Morning Star, Garland.Ship Occidental, Morse, Comax, B C.Am schr Golden Shore, Bernholm, N S W.Bk 8 C Allen, Thompson, San Francisco.Bktne S N Castle, Hubbard. San Fran.Bktne Mary Winkelman, Nissen, San F.Am schr Salvator, Wells. NSW.Am bkt Robt Sudden, Uhlberg. N S W.Am bk Newsboy, Moliestad, N 8 W.Nor bk Drammen. Anderson, N S W.Am schr U N Kimball. Uellingsen, Eureka.Bk C D Brvant. Jacobsen. San Francisco.Schr G W Watson, Olsen, Gray's Harbor.Am bktne Jane L, Stanford, Newcastle.
FOBEION VESSKLfl KXPKUfKl).Veaila. Wbererom ia.
Am schr WS Phelps. ..Gray's Har....DueM Hackfeld (sld Sept 25).. L'ptjot. Mar 25-3-1
Ger bk J C Glade Liverpool. .Apr 1-- 10
OSS Alameda Sydney May 3Bktne Klikitat Port Gamble May 5R M SS Monowai San Fran... May 10HkCD Bryant S F ..May 10Bk Planter S F May 15Be SO vilder ,...SF May 15OSS Austra ia S F May 19Am bk John D Tallant.N'SW May 20CAS Warrimoo S F May 23CAS Arawa N S W....,.Jnne 1O & O S S Gaelic S F June 5Am bk Amy Turner. ..New York.. June 24O & O S S Belgic San Fran... .July 5OSSMar posa 8 F. Juiy 5O & O S 8 Rio Janeiro. .Hongkong.. July 10
PASSENGERS.
ARRIVALS.
From Hawaii and Maui, per stmr iv.inau.May 9 From Volcano: Rev Mr Twomblyand w fe. Baroness V Keyserhigh, Mrs WW Hail, 8 J Anthony and wife; Miss Paua-hiJud- d.
Way ports: Miss Helen Wildtr,E R Hendry, Mrs Saddler and child. MrsR Rycroft aud child, Mrs Ah Sam and 2children. M13 K P Kumalae, T M Harri- -
son, H C Austin, T Yotornato, B Baileyand wife. C 8 Xynnersley, Mrs C F Phelps,Kimo(pake), Dr Kawata, W H Cornwell,C H Dickey, C L Clement, Ah King, and 52on deck.
From San Francisco, per bark Irmgard,May 9 Mr Bradley, wile and 2 children.
IMPORTS.Per stmr Kinau 10.905 bags sugar, 233
bags spuds. 8 bags corn, 31 hogs 141 bdleshides, 130 pkgs sundries, from Hawaii andMaui.
Per stmr James Makee 2484 bag3 sugar,100 bags rice, 8 pkgs sundries, from Kauai.
WHARF AND WAVE.
Diamond Head, May 9, 10 p. m.Weather clear ; wind, light
northeast. Barkentine Klikitat offport.
The barkentine S. G. Wilder wasto leave San Francisco four daysafter the Irmgard.
The barkentine Klikitat was seenoff Molokai last evening. She isfrom Port Gamble loaded withlumber.
The James Makee arrived fromKauai yesterday with 2484 bags ofsugar and departed again in theafternoon after, unloading.
The steamer Likelike is tied upin rotten row and from present in-
dications, she will remain thereuntil the next sugar season.
The Kinau arrived from Hiloand way ports yesterday morning.She brought a heavy cargo of sugarand a full list of passengers.
On the 16th ult., while the W. II.Dimond was on her last voyage toSan Francisco, her jibboom wascarried away in a heavy squall.
The bark S. C. Allen is loadingsugar at the Kinau wharf. Hercaptain expects to get away aboutSaturday with about 1300 tons ofsugar.
The brig Consuelo, from Kahului,and the brig Lurline, from Hilo,arrived at San Francisco on the25th of April. Both vessels wentup in fourteen days.
Washington, April , 2G. TheTreasury Department will issueorders tomorrow making San Diegoa regular revenue station. TheWolcott will be the first vesselstationed there.
Washington, April 26. AdmiralHopkins, of the British West In-dian fleet and the North Americanfleet, has notified the Naval Hydro-graphi- c
Office that he has givenorders to commanders to destroy allderelicts.
The O. & O. S. S. Oceanic re-
cently arrived at San Franciscowith 14,000 pounds of opium in herhold. It is the largest shipmentof the drug ever received in SanFrancisco and the duty on itamounted to $16S,000.
The steamer Oceanic arrived atSan Francisco on April 28th, with
Official List of Members and Loca
tion of Bnreaus.
Executive Council.8. B. Dole, President of the Provisional
Government of the Hawaiian Isl-ands.
F. M. Hatch, Minister of Foreign Af-fairs.
J. A. King, Minister of the Interior.8. M. Damon, Minister of Finance.W. O. Smith, Attorney-Genera- l.
Advisoky Council.
W. C. Wilder. Vice-Preside- nt of the Provisional Government of the HawaiianIslands.
C. Bolte. John Emmeluth,Cecil Brown. E. D. Tenney,John Nott. W. F. Allen,John Ena. Henry Waterhouse,James F. Morgan, A Young,Ed. Suhr D.B.Smith,Jos. P. Mendonca.
Chas. T. Rodsera. Seeretarv Ex. andAdv. Councils.
Supreme Coubt.
Hon. A. F. Judd. Chief Justice.Hon. R. F. Bickerton. First Associate
Justice. ,
Hon. W. F. Frear, Second AssociateJustice.
Henry Smith, Chief Clerk.Geo. Lucas, Deputy Clerk.C. F. Peterson. Second Denntv Clurk.J. Walter Jones, Stenographer.
Circuit Judges.tXXT A. Whitinc)fu.. cj. Cooper. 7 vauu
Second Circuit: (Maui) A.N. Kepoikai.Third and Fourth Circuit: (Hawaii) S.
Li. Austin.Fifth Circuit: (Kauai) J. Hardy.
Offices and Court-roo- m in Court House.King street. Sitting in Honolululhe first Monday in February. May.August and November.
Department op Forkigx 'fpaibs.Officte in Capitol Building, King street.His Excellency F. M. Hatch. Minis
ter of Foreuni Affairs.Geo. C. Potter, Secretary.W. Horace Wright, Lionel Hart, Clerks.
Department op tile Interior.Office in Capitol Building, King
street.His Excellency J. A. King, Minister of
the Interior.Chief Clerk, John A. Hassinger.Assistant Clerks : James H. Boyd, M. K.
Keobokalole, James Aholo, StephenMahaulu, George C. Ross. EdwardS.Boyd.'
Bureau op Agriculture and Forestbt.President : His Excellency the Minister.I : TTT T -
ui luierwr. ym. Vjr. jjwm, AllanHerbert, John. Ena. Joseph Mars-de-n,
Commissioner and Secretary.Chief 8 of Bureaus, Interior Depart-
ment. r
Surveyor-Genera- l, W.D. Alexander.Supt. Public Works, W. E. Row ell .Supt. Water Works, Andrew Brown.Inspector, Electric Lights, John C&ssidy.Registrar of Conveyances, T. G. Thrum.Road Supervisor, Honolulu, W. H.Cum-ming- s.
Chief Engineer Fire Dept., Jas H.Hnnt.Supt. Insane Asylum, Dr. A. Mc Wayne
Department op Finance.Office, Capitol Building, King
street.Minister of Finance, His Excellency 8.
M. Damon.Auditor-Genera- l, H. Laws.Registrar of Accounts, W. G. Ashley.Clerk to Finance Office, E. A. Mcluerny.Collector-Gener- al of Customs, Jas. B.
Cattle.Tax Assessor, Oahu, Jona. Shaw.Deputy Tax Assessor, W. C. Weedon.Postmaster-Genera- l, J. Mort Oat.
Customs Bureau.Office, Custom House, Esplanade, Fort
street.Collector-Genera- l, Jas. B. Castle.Deputy-Collecto- r, F. B. McStocker.Harbormaster, Captain A. Fuller.Port Surveyor, M. N. Sanders.Storekeeper, George C. Stratemeyer.
Department op Attorney-Genera- l.
Office in Capitol Building, Kingstreet.
Attorney-Genera- l. W. O. Smith.Deputy Attorney-Genei- l, G. K. WildeiClerk, J. M. Kea.Marshal, E. G. Hitchcock.Cirk to Marshal, H. M. Dow.Deputy Marshal, Arthur M. Brown.Jailor Oahu Prison, J. A. Low.Prison Physician, Dr. C. B. Cooper.
Board op Immigration.
President, His Excellency J. A. King.Members of the Board of Immigration
Hon. J. B. Atherton, Jas. B. CastleHon. A. S. Cleghorn, James G.Spencer. Mark P. Robinson.
Secretary, Wray Taylor.
Board op Health.Office in grounds of Court House Build-
ing, corner of Miiilani and Queenstreets.
Members Dr. Day, Dr. Miner, Dr.Andrews , J.T. Waterhouse, Jr. , JohnEna, Theo. F. Lansing and Attorney-Gener- al
Smith.President Hon. W. O. Smith.Secretary Chas. Wilcox.Executive Officer C. B. Reynolds. 'Inspector and Manager of Garbage Ser-vic-e
L. L. 1a Pierre.Inspector G. W. C. Jones.Port Physician, Dr. G. P. Andrews.Dispensary Dr. H. W Howar.i.Leper Settlement, Dr. R. K. Oliver.
Board op Education.Court House Building, King street.
President, Hon. W. R. Castle.Secretary, W. Jarnes Smith.Inspector of Schools, A. T. Atkinson.
District Court.Police Station Building, Merchant streetA. G. M. Robertson, Magistrate.James Thompson, Clerk.
H
i
rliii!!
!i11
ii:, S
i
t.1
1fi s! I; j
jjll
.3
n
f
If
1!F i.
iIft I
n
15
!
i i
I
1
i
itII
I
St
)
Steamship Line.
Steamers of the above line, runningin connection with the Canamax PacificRailway Co., between Vancouver, B. C.and Sydney, N. S. W., and calling atVictoria B. C, Honolulu a:dSuva Fiji,
Are Due at HonoluluOn or about the dates below stated, viz:
From Sidney and Suva, for Victoria
and Vancouver, B. ft:
S. S. "ARAWA" June 1S. S. "WARRIMOO" July 1
S. 8. "ARAWA" .August 1
From Victoria and Vancouver, B. ft, for
Suva and Sydney:
8. 8. "WARRIMOO" May 238. S. "ARAWA" June 238. S. "WARRIMOO" July 23
Througtftickets issued from Honoluluto Canada, United States and Europe.
Z2JFor, Freight and Passage and allgeneral information apply to
Theo. H. Davies & Co.,GENERAL AGENTS.
OCEANIC
STEAMSHIP CO
Australian Mail Service.
For San Francisco:The New and Fine Al Steel Steamship
Of th Oceanic 8teamshiD Company willbe due at Honolulu, from Sydney andAuckland, on or about
MAT 31st,And will leave for the above port withMails and Passengers on or about thatdate.
For Sydney & AucklandThe New and Fine AI Steel Steamship
" "jvtoisrowYiOf the Oceanic Steamship Company willbe due at Honolulu, from San Francisco,on or about
MAY 10th,And will have prompt despatch withMails and Passengers for the above ports.
The undersigned aie now preparedto issue
THROUGH TICKETS TO ALL POINTS
IN THE UNITED STATES.
gGFor further particulars regardingFreight or Passage apply to
Win. Gr. Irwin & Co., Ltd.,GENERAL AGENT8.
OCEANIC
STEAMSHIP CO
Time Table.LOCAL LIJsTE.
S. S. AUSTRALIAArrive Honolulu Leave Honolulu. from S. F. forS.F.
May 19 May 26June 16 June 23
THROUGH LINE.From San Fran, From Sydney for
for Sydney. San Francisco.Arrive Honolulu. Leave Honolulu.ALAM"DA Jun 7 MAKIPOSA May 31MAKIPOSA Jul 5 MONOWAIJun 23MONOWAI Aug 2 ALAMKDA Jul 26ALAMEDA Aug 30 MAKIPOSA Aug 23MAKIPOSA Sep 27 MONOWAI Sept 20MONOWAI Oct 25 ALAMEDA Oct 18
3314-3-m
CH1S. BRIWSa & C0.f3
Boston Line of Packets.
.A ' Shippers will please takenotice that the
JOHN D. BREWER
Leaves New York on or about JULY1st for this port, if sufficient induce-ment offers.
gjST'FoT further information, applv toChas. Brewer & Co., 27 Kilbj St , Boston,Mass.. or to
C. BREWER & CO. (L'D.),Honolulu, Agents.
Portland Or- - J McCraken, Consulrort lownsiud, Waeh James G SwanConsulSeattle G R Carter. Corin:Tacoma, Washington J T Belrhr
Acting Vice-Cons- ul '
MEXICO, CENTRAL AND feOUTH AMERICA.
U S Of Mexico. Mpxifn-Pn- T V T ruGrees, Con ui. R II Baker, Vice-Cons- ul
Manzanillo Robert James Barney, Co--suL
Guatemala Henrv Tolkp. ConPeru, Lima F S Crosby, Acting ConsulCallao, Peru S Crosby, ConsulChile. Valparaiso, D Thomas, Charge d'"
Affaires and Consul-Gener- alM i te Video, Uruguay Conrad Hughes,
ConsulPhilippine Islands, Uoilo George Shel- -
meraine, ioneuiManila Jasiter M.Wood OonsnlCeba-Geo- rge E A CaJell Consul
GREAT BRITAIN.
London Chaiee d'AfTairpaSecretary of Legation, Man ley Hop-kins, Consul-Genera- l
Liverpool Harold Janion, ConsulBristol Mark Whitwell. ConsulHull W Mcran, ConsulNewcastle on Tvne-- E Biesterfeld.
ConsulFalmouth C R Broad. ConsulDover (and the Cinque Ports) Francis
vv imam l're-cot- t. Coi sulCardiff H Goldberg, C nsultowansea 11 tfovev. Vice ConsulEdinburgh and L,eith E G Buchanan,
ConfulGlasgow Jas Dunn. ConsnlDnu'it-- e J G Zooler. ConsulDublin RJas Murphy, Vice-Cons- ul
Quenstc n Geo B Dawson, Consul. .i...tr.. TtT ii i
BRITISH COLONIES.
Toronto, Ontario JE Thompson, ConsulGeneral: Geo A Shiw. Vice-Con- &ul
Montreal Dickson Anderson. ConsulKingston, Ontario Geo Richardson.
Vice-Cons- ul
Rimoueki, Quebec J N Pouliot Q C.Vice-Cons- ul
St John's. N B Allan O Crookshank.Consul
Yarmouth, N S Ed F Clements. Vice- -Consul
Victoria, B C R P Rithet, ConsulVancouver, B C E M Beattie, ConsulSydney, N 8 W W E Dixon, Acting
ConsulMelbourne,Victoria G N Oakley , Con buBrisbane, Queensland Alex B VVebster
ConsulHobart, Tasmania Captain Hon Audley
Lkot- -, uor.eulLauneeeton- - Geo Collins, Vice-Cens- ul
Newcastle, N 8 W W H Moulton." Consul
A uckland, N Z D B Cruiki-hank- , ConsulDuntdin, N Z Henry Driver, ConsulHongkong, Chita Hon J Johnstone
Keswick, Acting Consul-Gener- al
Shanghai, China Hon J JohnstoneKeswick
FRANCE AND COLONIES.
Paris Alfred Houle, Chfrge d' Affand Consul-Gener- al ; AN HTeysVice-Cons- ul
Marseilles G da Cayla, ConsnlBordeaux Ernest de Boissac, ConsulDijon, H H Veilhomnne, ConsulLibourne Charles Schaesslcr, ConsulTahiti, Papeete A F Bonet, Consul
GERMANY.
Bremen John F Muller, ConsulHamburg Edward F Weber, Consulf rankfoit-on-Main- e Joseph Kopp, Con-
sulDresden Auzustus P Russ ConsulKarlsruhe II Muller, Consul
AUSTRIA.
Vienna Hugo von Schonberger, Consul
SPAIN AND COLONIES.
Barcelona Enrique Minguez, Consul-Gener- al
Cadiz James Shaw, ConsulValencia Julio Solar, ConsulMalaga F T De Navarra, Consul; F
Gimenez y Kavarra, Vice-Cons- ul
Cartegena J Paris, ConsulLas. Palmas, Gran Canaria Louis Fal-con- y
Quevedo Consul; J Bravo deLaguna, Vice-Cons- ul
Santa Cruz A C de la3 Casas, Vice-Cons- ul
Arecife de Lanzarotte E MoralesRodriguez, Vice-Cons- ul
POETUGAL AND COLONIES.
Lisbon A Fereira de Serpa, Consul-Gene- ral
Oporto Narcieo T M Ferro, ConsulMadeira F llodrigues ConsulSt Michaels A de s Moreira, ConsulSt Vincent, Cape de Verde Islands
C Martins, Vice-Cons- ul
Lagos M J Barbosa, Vice-Cons- ul
ITALY.
Rome James Clinton Hooker, ConsulGeneral
Genoa Raphael de Luchi, ConsulPalermo Anielo Tagliavia, Consul
NETHERLANDS.
Amsterdam D H Schmull, Consul-Gener- al
Dordrecht P J Bouwman, Consul
BELGIUM.
Antwerp Victor horge, Consul-Gener- &l
Ghent K Coppieters, ConsulLiegt Jules Blanpain, ContulBruges Emile Van den Brande, Consul
SWEDEN AND NORWAY.
Stockholm C A Engalls, Acting Consul-Genera- l.
Christians L Samson, ConsulLyskil -- II Be-gstro- Vice-Cons- ui
Gothemberg Gustav Kraak, vTio-Cons- ul
JAPAN.Tokio His Excel ency R Walker Irwin,
Minister ResidentHiogo and Osaka C P Hall, Consul
i :
j
i
;: i
I?
3-- t
f.:
. 1
I1
:' . eli
'Iisafst1
fi
offatb
taarde
mforcata rplitwebet
UiiXLcatipro
toesho' -
ed,exf i;ad;It hefro i
wh I
er
FOKEIGN MAIL SERVICE.
Bteanishipa will leave for and arrive fromBaa Francisco, on the following datts.iiilthe close of 1891.
Ab. at. Honolulu Lbavk Romolxtlufm. 8a f 8a5ci8co Fob 8as Frakcisco
ob Vancouver ob VancocvebOn or About On or About
Monowai May 10 G&elic ..May 14
Australia ...May 9 Australia... May 2S
Warrimoo . . .May 25 Maripuea... .My 31
Gaelic June 5 Arawa ..June 1- Alameda June 7 Australia... .June 23Australia . . . . J u ae IS Mouuwai... .Juue 28A. rawa June 23 Witrrimco.,...Jnly 1Mariposa July 5 Rio Janeiro ..July 10
Belgic... July 5 Australia. . . .July 21Australia.... July 14 Alameda.... .July 26
' Warrimoo... July 23 Arawa ...Aug. 1
Monowai Aug. 2 Australia... .Aug. ISAustralia. . . .Aug. 11 China .Aug. 21
Arawa Aug. --J3 Mariposa... .Aug. 23Alameda.... Aug. 3 Warrimoo.....Sept. 1
China Sept. 3 Australia.. . Sept. 15Australia. . . . Sept. 8 Monowai... .Sept. 22
. Warrimoo . . Sept. 23 Arawa ...Oct. 3Mariposa. . . Sept. 27 Peking ...Oct. 9Oceanic.......Oct. 2 Australia... Oct. 10
Australia Oct. 6 Alameda... Oct. 18
Arawa Oct. 23 Warrimoo.. .Nov. 1
Monowai Oct. 23 Australia. .. Nov. 10
Australia N ov. 3 Mariposa... Nov. 15China Nov. 12 Oceanic .Nov. 19Alameda. ...Uov. 22 Arhwa ..Dec. 1
Warrim oo . . . Nov. 23 Australia. .. .Dec. 8Australia Itc. 1 Monowai. . Dec. 13Oceanic Dec. 11 Warrimoo .Dec 30Mariposa.... Pc it) China ,.DtC 31
Arawa Dec. 23Australia Dec. 29
fileteoroloxieal Record.
THJB tJOYIUJOIEST 8UK VST. FTTBLXSBKD
XVZBY XOHDAY.
B1KOM. THCHMo U
What is Being Done at the RaceCourse for the Coming Races.
Mr. W. M. Giffard was recentlyelected to the office of Secretary ofthe Jockey Club, and since he hasassumed the duties of the officethe otherwise slow-movin- g clubhas had new life infused into it.The club has engaged a gang ofimen, who have been busy for some;days getting the track in order fortHe 1.1th of June races, and- - whentheir, task is completed it will rankwith the best in the United States.The . ground has all been plowedup, and grading is now in progress.The turns will be leveled, and, infact, everything will be done tomake the track as perfect as pos-sible.
The horse-owner- s are now urgedto get together and make their en-tries as soon as possible, as thepublic have been led to expectsome good racing on the HawaiianDerby Day.
BELASCO'S MAY BLOSSOM.
A Pretty American Play With aMost Successful Record.
The Dailey stock company willappear at the Opera House tonightin Belasco's comedy-dram- a, MayBlossom. This favorite play had aphenomenal run in New York, andits metropolitan success has beenduplicated all over the UnitedStates. It will be given tcuight inits entirety, and a very entertain-ing performance may be expected.
Two shows will be given on Sat-urday one in the afternoon forladies and children, and the otherin the evening. Harriet BeecherStowe's well-know- n play of UncleTom's Cabin will be the bill atboth performances. The prices forthe matinee will be 25 and 50 cents,and a jammed house is expected.
. .
Moonlight Concert.The Hawaiian Band, under the
leadership of Professor Berger, willgive a public concert this (Thurs-day), evening at 7:30, at ThomasSquare. Following i3 the pro-gramme "':
paet r.1. March "Pizzaro" ..Arbuckle2. Overture ".La Dame Blanche"
Bucalossi3. March u The Volunteers"
.Paterson4. Selection "II Trovatore" Verdi
PART II.5. Lancers "State Ball" (new)...
mmmm jt?JTCJcl
6. Schottiscne "Pride of Arran"(new) Fare
7. Waltz "The Clear Moou"(new) Fahrbach
8 Polka "Fun of the Fair" (new)Aigrette
"Hawaii Ponoi."
New Naval Appointments.The following nominations have
been confirmed by the Senate :
Commodore Joseph S. Skerrett, tobe Rear Admiral ;' Captain JohnN. Millin; to be Commodore; Com-
modore Frank M. Ramsay, to beRear Admiral ; Captain ThomasO. Selfridge, to be Commodore;Commander Philip H. Cooper, tobe a Captain.
Marshal Hitchcock will not re--! turn before the 28th of the month.
e K - B S b S
ts H s mm?' BE ?E66 8 0.00 T7 9 E 8W 2-- 0
68 t 0.(3 77 9 sw 1
72 0.00 70 5-1-C "f-- 8 3--1
69 82 0.00 67 6 KK 364 81 0.00 67 4--8 K-- 266 8C 0.00 73 8-- 10 S-- 3 071 1 0 02 75l 8 E 2-- 0
9B B
Bun. 23 30.14 30 10Mon 0 00.14 W.05JTue l80.10 30.fc2Wed 2j80.103003Tan 3; 80.04 29 96Frl. 4130.05 30 00Bat. 5 30.08 SO 01
Barometer corrected for temperature and ele-Tatlo- n,
but not for latitude.
Tides Son and Moon.
f r CO S2o o a a0B a 0
B Z.--1
a
pjn. a.m. a.m. a.m.4.40 9.40 5.25 6 28! 9 19
Tnes... C 30 5 ro 10.45 0.4;; 5.25 6.28 10.24
Wed ... 7.30 6.20 11.80 1..--0, 5.21 6 28 11.23p.m-1.4-
8.30 7.30 3. 0 5.24 6 29ThUT..
.S0 9 40 15.40 2.20 5.23 6 29 0.15Frl.n.. 11. 0 11. 0 5.30 4.30 5.23 6 3 1. 01 30111 .60 6.30 5.20 5.22 6.30 1.39
First quarter of the moon on the 11th at 7h.
nmf blowi'it In. 23m. 348. p.m. otHSomfflSK which ! the --ame a. I2h. Cm. Cfrt flreeuwlch time. "
mile. '
hi
!ii!