THE HAWAIIAN STAR....simt "OCEANK " Feb. 12, 1894 tmr "CHINA" March 26, 1894 'nir "GAELIC May 14....

6
THE HAWAIIAN STAR. PUBLISHED TERMS EVERY AFTERNOON, FIFTY CENTS A MON1 H IN ADVANCE. EXCEPT SUNDAY VOL. I. HONOLULU, HAWAIIAN ISLANDS: TUESDAY EVENING, SEPTEMBER 5, 1898. SIX PAGES. NO 187. OFFICIAL DIRECTORY. PROVISIONAL GOVERNMENT OF THE HAWAIIAN ISLANDS. BXRt UTtVI ( lOtJW II S B. Dole, President of the Provisional Gov- ernment of the Hawaiian Islands, anil Min- ister of Foreign Affairs. J. A. Kitlgi Minister of the Interior. S. M. Damon, Minister of Finance. W. O. Smith, Attorney-General- . Advisory Council. F. M. Hatch, of the I'rovis-iona- l Govtfn tfltflt ol the Hawaiian Islands. Cecil Brown, E. D. Tenney, John Nolt, C Holte, V. V. McChesitey, W. V. Allen, ames F. Morgan, Henry Wattthoust, K.I. Suhr, A. Young, J. 1". Mendonca, W. C. Wilder. John Emmeluth. C. T. Kodgers, Secretary F:xecutive and Ad visory Councils. Supreme Court. Hon. A. F. Judd, Chief Justice. Hon. R. F. Kickerton, First Associate Justice. Hon. YV. F. Frear, Second Associate Justice. Henry Smith, Chief Clerk. Fred Wundenburg, Deputy Clerk. Ceo. Lucas, Second Deputy Clerk. J. Walter Jones, Stenographer. Circuit Iudoks, First Circuit: H. E. Cooper, V. A. Whiting, Oahu. Second Circuit: A. N. Kepoikai. Third and Fourth Circuits: S. L. Austin. Fifth Circuit: J. Hardy... Offices and Court room in Government Building, King Street. Sitting in Honolulu, First Monday in February, May, August, and November. Dis I RIO COUR1 . P lice Station Building, Merchant Street. A. O. M. Robertson, Magistrate. James Thompson, Clerk. Department of Foreign Affairs. Office in Government Building, King Street. His Excellency Sanford B. Dole, Minister of Foreign Affair.. Geo. C. Potter, Chief Clerk. W. Horace Wright, Ed. Stiles, Clerks. Department ok the Interior. Office in Government Building, King Street. His Excellency J. A. King, Minister of the Interior. Chief Clerk, John A. Hassinger. Assistant Clerks: James II. Boyd, M. K. Keohokalole, James Aholo, Stephen Maha-ulu- , George C. Rosa, Eward S. Boyd. Chiefs 01 Bureaus, Department of Interior, Surveyor-General- , V. D. Alexander. Supt. Public Works, W. K. Rowell Supt. Water Works, Andrew Brown. Inspector, Klectric Eights, John Cissidy. Registrar of Conveyances, T. G. Thrum. Road Supervisor, Honolulu, W. H. Cum-ming- Chief Engineer Fire Dept., J. H. Hunt. Supt. Insane Asylum, Dr. A. McWayne. Office, Government Building, King Street. Bureau of agriculture. President ex officio: His Excellency J. A. King, Minister of the Interior. Members: W. O. Irwin, A. Jaeger, A. Her- bert and John Ena. Commissioner of Agriculture and ex officio Secretary of the Board: Joseph Marsnen. Department ok Finance. Minister of Finance, His Excellency S. M Damon. Auditor-General- , George S. Ross. Registrar of Accounts, Geo. E. Smithies. Clerk of Finance Office, Carl Widemann. Collector Ceneral of Customs, , B. Castle. Tax Assessor, Oahu, Jonathan Shaw. Deputy Assessor, W. C. Weedon. Postmaster-General- , J. M. Oat. Customs Bureau. Office, Custom House, Esplanade, Fort Si Collector-General- , J. B. Castle. Deputy-Collecto- F. B. McStocker. Harbormaster, Captain A. Fuller. Port Surveyor, M.N. Sanders. Storekeeper, Geo. Stratenieyer. Department ok Attorney-general- . Office in Government Building, King Street Attorney-General- , W. O. Smith. Deputy Attorney General, G. K. Wilder. Clerk, J. M. Kea. Marshal, E. G. Hitchcock. Deputy Marshal, Arthur M. Brown. Jailor Oahu Prison, lames Low. Prison Physician, Dr. C. B. Cooper. Board of Immigration. Office, Department Of Interior, Government Building, King Street. President, His Excellency J. A. King. Members of the Board of Immigration: Hon J. IS. Atherton, Jas. B. Castle, Hon A. S. C leghorn, James G . Spencer, Mark P. Robinson. Secretary, Wray Taylor. Board ok HEALTH, Office In grounds ol Government Building, corner ol Mililani and Ouecn Streets. Members: Dr. Day, Dr. Miner, Dr. Andrews, T. P, Lansing, J. T. Watetliouse Jr., John Ena, and Attorney-Genera- l Smith. President, Hon. W. O. Smith. Secretary, Chas. Wilcox. Executive Office!, C, B. Reynolds. Agent Board of Health. J. D. McVeigh. Inspector and Manager of Garbage Service, L. L. La Pierre. Inspector, G. W. C. Jones. Port Physician, Dr. Trousseau. Dispensary, Dr. II. McGrew. .eper Settlement, Dr. R. K. Oliver. Board ok EDUCATION. Office, Government Building, King Street. President, Hon. C. R, Bishop. Secretary, W. James Smith. Inspector of Schools, A. T. Atkinson. Board ok CROWN Land COMMISSIONERS, J A. King, Minister of the Interior, W. O. Smith, Attorney-General- , and C. I'- lauhea. Office in Judiciary Building. jtfusincBB (garb. ALLEN & ROBINSON 46 Ouecn Street. DKALER IN LUMBER AND OTHER KINDS OF BUILDING MATF.KTA1,. Also Steam and Stove Coal. M. S. GR1NBAUM & CO. Usmsv, honolulu, h i. Commission Merchants and Importers of General Merchandise. San Francisco Office, its Front St. F. A. SCHAEFER & CO IMPORTERS AND COMMISSION MERCHANTS, HONOLULU, Hawaiian 1st VNDS, H. W. SCHMIDT & SOXS. IMPORTERS AND COMMISSION MERCHANTS. Fort Street, Honolulu. J. J. WILLIAMS. o t o grxstplier. FORT STREET. P. O. Box 97. Telephone 140. LEWIS & CO. IMPORTERS Naval Supplies : Wholesale and Retail Dealers in Groceries, Provisions, Etc. in Fort Sr., Honolulu, H, I. Lime and Cement. I'Vr Sai.i at J. T. WATERHOUSE'S Queen Street Stores. JAS. F. MORGAN. No. 45 Ouecn Street. r r. Special attention given to the handling of Real Estate, Stocks fc Bonds. HOIl T I.KWKRS. C M. COOKK. F. j. lowkev. LEWERS & COOKE, Lumber, Buildfrs'Hakdware, doors, sash, blinds, paints, oils, glass, wall paper, matting, corrugated iron, lime, cement, etc. H. MAY & CO., Wholesale and Retail GROCERS 98 Fort Street, Both Telephones 22. P, (). Box 470. A. WfcNNKk. N. P, JACi.ltSON. WENNER & CO. Manufacturing Jewelers AND IUPORTRRS of DIAMONDS, KINK JEWELRY, WATCHES, SILVERWARE, Kit . The Handsomf.si Soiivrnir SPOONS made in the Hawaiian Islands, Fort Strut, Honolulu, ATLAS Assurance Company FOUN1JKD 1 HOH. Capital, - $ 6,000.000 Assets, $ 9,000.000 Having heen appointed Agents ol the above Company we are now ready to etlect Insurances at the lowest rales ol premium, H, W, SCHMIDT .v sons. HONOLULU IRON WORKS, Steam Enoimrs Suoar Mills, Boilrrs Coolers. Iron, Hrass, si. LRAfJ Cas IINOs. Machinery of Every Description Mad to Order. Paitieulai attention pai.l to Ships' Ulaeksiniihing. Job work SXACTUtod al SI1011 Notice t)uhttss darba. W. R. CASTLE. ATTORNEY AX T. AW Office, Caitwttgnl Building. W. A. KINNEY. ATTOHM'.V AT I . A V . Office: No. 06 Fort Street. (W.O. Smith's Law Officii. 241 J. M MONSARRAT. TToRNE AT LAW AND NOTARY PUBLIC. Cart Wright Block, Merchant St.. Honolulu. J. ALFRED MAGOON Attorney and Counselor-At-La- OFFICE 42 Merchant Street, Honolulu. H. I, F. M. WAKEFIELD, Attorney A-- Counselor-at-La- w Temporary Office With C. VV. Ashford, Merchant St.. 5; Honolulu, II. 1. ly W. T. MONSARRAT. Veterinary Surgeon & Dentist. Office Infirmary nm! Residence,. King Street Telephones; Bell c6, Muuml 183. Excellent, ftcconamodstions fur patients. Vetcrinaiy operation tihtej no dsngei frm throwing. IsP Am CALLS PftOMPII.Y A wr.RKU, Day of Night Metropolitan Meat Co. 81 KING STREET, Navy Contractors. G. J. WALLER, - Manager. Hawaiian Gazette PACIFIC ELECTRIC BOOK and JOB PRINTING. Commercial and Legal Work Executed with Dispatch. Posteis, Books and Pamphlets, Printed in the Neatest Style, on Fine Paper, and at Moderate Rates. The Largest Paper, and I'artl Stock in Honolulu. BOOK-BINDIN- G In all its Branches. Magazines, Law Hooka, Mlank B.xiks of an) o)escriptpn, Day U .oks and ( 'asli Honks, Map & Photograph Mounting, Albums, Old B .oks Re bound, Ktlge Ciilding, Lettering in Gold, Music Books, Account and Time Books, Journals and Ledgers, Portfolios, Scrap-Book- Letter Copying Hooks. Binding in Morocc , t 'alf, Sheep, Roan Russia, Persian ..nd Cloth. Paper 3BMlln: AT SHORT NOTICE, Workmanship Guaranteed. HAWAIIAN GAZETTE CO. it Merchant t., Honol' lu. M. PHILLIPS & CO., "W7Tn.olesa.le Importers and Jobbers of American and European Dry Goods. Comer Fori arid Que n Street, Honolulu. 87 If tyttinesa Carba. WILDER & CO.,! Established in 1X72. Estate of S. G. WILDER C. WILDER IMPORTER AND DEALERS IN Lumber and Coal BUILDING MATERIALS St' 11 AS Doors, Sash, Blinds BUILDERS' HARDWARE, WALL PAPER, Etc. at Corner of Fort & Queen Streets, HONOLULU, H. I, ( TO T I i E EAGLE HOUSE. NtUANI AVKNUK, OR TO THE AliLIXCTOX HOT,;,, H. f.i. Strke -- RATES. - Tal.le Itoar.l $1 per day. IJo:ir.l " " an. I.'M'tinj; .412 linatil and Lodging $12 per week. SfSpecial monthly prices. I'. E. KROUSE: pRORlRToa. J. E. GOMES. Mam faciurin.. Iewklf.k, and Ii- - POB i f;r of Diamonds, Watches, Silverware and Fine Jewelry, HAWAIIAN - SOUVENIRS. GENERAL REPAIRING. 400, Fort Street, Honolulu. 4$ itf STEAM and GALVANIZED PIPE, EL BOWS, GLOBE VALVES, STEAM COCKS, ami all other fittings for pipe on hand. Honolulu Steam Rice Mill. Frtsh milled Kict: fo! sale in quantitiea t suit. J. A. HOPPER, Prop. Fori Street, Honolulu. CHAS. HUSTACE, Lincoln Block, - - King STREET, llelween Fort and Alakca Streets. DEALKR IN Groceries & Provisions Fresh California Roll Butter and Island Butter always on hand. Fresh Goods received by every Stunn- er from Sun Pfttttcitco. tsr Satisfaction Guarantied. Manuf.11 turrrv and iL.tln- in Ml Kiml f Organic and Chemical Manures, The Onl ) factory (if lhc Kiml in the Country, sad arc Prepared lo Pamisk l eml- - laSSS In Quantities to Suit ParetttBSfS. Complete High Grade Fertilizers MADE TO ORDER. Hutted Btablc Manures, Putt Kiw BosjS Meal. Sulphate and Meriate Potash, Nilrate of Soda, Ground Coral Lime Stone, Ltjisea Island I'hosphate, Land Plaster, Fi'-- (luaim, etc., etc., always in hand. Send s SAMPLE ORDER and try oar goods A. F. COOKE, Maii.mcr wjdx I'roprietur Hawaiian Fertilizing C . Old Kona Coffee I OK BALE AT J. T. WATERHOUSE'S Oueen Street Stores Shipping. pacific Mail S.S. Co. AND Till Occidental and Oriental S.S, Co. fNat oW k". For M0HAMA and mmm Steamer! of the above Companies will call SI Honolulu on their way to the aliove p rts on 01 about the following dates: Stmr "CHINA" Sept. 18, tSoj Slmr "OCEANIC " Oct. 16, 189.1 Stmr "CHINA" Nov. 27. 189,1 Minr "Ot KANIC" Dec. 2j, l8u.i Slmr "CHINA" Feb. 5, 1894 Stmr "OCEANIC" . Match 5. 1894 S'mr "CHINA' April 10. 18114 For SAN FRANCISCO. Steamer' ol thr al ot Companies will call Honolulu on their wa Ironi Hongkong anil Yokohama the above port on ot about the following .lati".: Stmr "OCEANIC1 Sept. 25, iSy.i Stmr 'CHINA" Nov. 6, 1893 Stmr "OCEANIC" Dee. 4, 1891 Stmr "CITY (Jr PEKING" Jan. 2, 1894 simt "OCEANK " Feb. 12, 1894 tmr "CHINA" March 26, 1894 'nir "GAELIC May 14. 1H04 RATES OF PASSAGE ARE AS FOLLOWS: M VOKO It) NUM.-KON- II UiA. Cabin, $1 50 00 $175 OO Cabin, round trip 4 months 225 00 2O2 50 Cabin, round trip 12 months 162 50 European nisiaane Hs 00 !0O OO Xt' Passengers paying full fan- will be 10 per cent, off return fare if returning within twelve months. ear For Freigh.1 and Passage'npuly to H. HACKFELD & Co., 64 if Agents H MAN BROS. Importers of and Wholesale Dealers in DRV GOODS, Boors, SHOES, CLOTHING, NOTIONS am. FANCY GOODS. 58 Queen St., Honolulu. 14 California St., San Francisco, Cal. HUSTACE & CO KOLE All kinds, in any quantity, (rum a bag to a ton. C II A RC OA L, From bag to any quantity, FI RE-WOO- D In 4 lengths, ami tpwfd ot ipltti from l Itag to any quantity. Alsn, WHITE VM BLACK SAN II. tv n. 114 on llolli Teleiihoiie-,- . frj Criterion Saloon AGENTS OK ohnWieland Brew iCfl. E X T It A Pale Loger Beer Per Austi'aiiu. A Fresh Invoice ov Califor- nia Oysters. Oyster Cocktails a Specialty, U H DEE, Pifon'r. BEAVER SALOON. Hon street, - opposite wilder & Co.'. II I, NOI.TK, PKqPHllTOB, , class I.unclie-- . Served hnil uitn rea, CoSOC, Kodi Wsttt, Gingei Ale m .M'ik. tv Smokers Requisites a Specialty. U ou.i from j .m mi ,0 y m. Shipping, V' AMAHIAM. AMCTDAI IA M mum mioNMunn STEAMSHIP LINE TIME TABLE. For Vancouver, B.C., From Sydney & Brisbane, Arrirr Ht'tti lulu S. S. "WAKKIMOO" Aug. t inq S. S. "M tOW ERA" Oct. 2, 1893 S. S. "WAKKIMOO" Nov. I, 1893 S. S. "MIOWF.IvA" Lee. 2. 1893 S. S. "WAKKIMOO" Ian. I, 1894 And Monthly Thereafter. For Sydney & Brisbane From ancouer, B.C. AVfiW Honolulu s. ' WARklMOO " Sept. 21, 1893 S. S. "MIOWEKA" Oct. SI, 1S93 S. S, WAKKIMOO Nov. II, 1893 S. S. "MIOWEKA" Dec. It, 1893 S. S WAKKIMOO" Jan. SI, 1894 Ami Monthlv Thereafter. Passenger and Freight Rates if. v. H. C aic the same M F'r.incisco, Cal. Through Tickets all poinUl in Canada and the United State! pei Canadian Pacific Railway. tir Kor freight 01 Pastage, apple to THFO. H. DA VIES & CO., 04 tf QeMrsJ Agents. J. T. WATERHQUSE Queen Street Stores, FULL LINKS OF FANCY -:- - GOODS of all detcriptinni. Fort Street Store, IN ADDITION TO THE LARGE ASSORTMENT OF Dry1 Fancy Goods HATE JUST RECEIVED, India Linen and Persian Lawns, Embroidery, In 9 yard pieces; Roman and Guipure Embri idery, Oriental, Platte and othe Laces, in white, ream and Mat k ; C'hilli'n I ace, all colore; 45 in. Lace Net, ( ream and black; Striped and Check Dimity, Wide Japanese Crepe, white and coli'd; White, Cream and Black Surah Silk, White and Cream Silk Crepe, Navy and Cream Serge, Suez and Tennis Flannel, The Jennets Miller "Equipoise Waist, Prima Donna and P, 1). Corsets, Ltdii H ack Hose. G. MULLER. Practical Machinist, Gun and Locksmith. Hell Street, Haniou Illnck, "v-- Sture. lg II W. AHANA. MEKCHANT TAILOR, No. S" Merciianl Street, HaOQlalv. Kin. lull! from $14 up. Lloetl and ClepS Mills, 40.50 up. ALL SUIIS CUARANTKKD IO 1 AMI IN THE I VI I.M STYLE Clothki CUSANSP ami Kkpairko, 44 21I I Native Fans and Island Cunos, is ;mai vakikiv ai iiis 'Elite" Ice Croam Parlors Insurance iloticrr,. BISHOP & CO.. BANKERS. Honolulu, Hawaiian Islands, DKAW KXCHANOS ON THE BANK OF CALIFORNIA, SAN FRANCISCO AM 1IIMR AURNYa IN New York, Chicago, Boston, Paris MESSRS. N.M. ROTHCHIID & SONS, LONDON, IR1 ON Til The L'riion Ptatkaial Hank of CJhirago. Tin Casisssrelal BaakitaJ Co, 01 Sydney, Iindon . The Comaietcial It.ink ng C". of Sydney, Syiliay. The Hank of Nm Zealand, Am and its tranches in (Jhristchurch, Dttotellll and Wellington. The Hank of Hrilisn ( uluml'ia, Portland, r. The Ainre- - and Mad, ira t,ckholni, Sweden. The Chartered Hank of India, A' tralia and China. H OOgkoOgi VOKoh ma, Japan. Anrf trr.nact a (ieneial Hanking HuMnes. insrsTj-jj- i IN THE German -- American INSURANCE CO., OP 1STEW YORK. Assets $5,879,208 00 Mel Surplus 2,255,389 00 When Rates are Equal, Get the Bui Security, wii DER A en., Agents. CASTLE S. CO KE MFE AMI II U I Insurance Atrentw AC KM s KOk NEW ENGLAND MUTUAL Life Insurance Co OF HOSTON. Fire Insurance, Alliance Assurance Co. OI LONDON. ETNA INSURANCE CO.. OK HARTFORD, CONN. C. B. RIPLEY. ARCHITECT ! Okkice Si'reckkls Block, K(xim 5, Honolulu, H. I. Plans, Spccilicatiuns, and Superintendence (rjeen (or every description of Building, Old ltuil.l injs successfully remodelled and enlarged. Designs for Interior Decorations. Maps of Mechanical Drawing, Tracing, ind HI ueprinting. aaTDrawing ior luik. Newspap Iliu& ration. THE MUTUAL Life Insurance Go. Of New York. .ssTSlk:,l.ls!i:. si7;,.ni.ir)ii.Hi s. B. RUSK, General Agent, Hawaiian Islaiuis 32 a if A FEW OF OUR SPECIALTIES. COMPLSTI AM1RMENT OK "SUPERIOR" Stoves and Ranges " EUREKA" RANGES, "CLIPPER CABOOSES. LAUNDRY STOVES, FRENCH RANGES SCI in brick. AGATE IRON WARE, mo TIN WARE. 11 ill' M Ill's WROUGHT STEEL. SINKS, Galvanised and White Knaintlcd, RUBBER HOSK, CAL. WW SPRINKLERS. Kneel Metal timls in Tilt, (.'untie, or Gal' van 11,1 Iron on hand or made to order. PstH line ol Sanitary Goods, llatli Tuh, I lories, Walei Closets, Pipe and Vitttngs. , .lie eqaipped fin rk of all kinds in the SI, eel Metal and Plumbing Trade, and can guarantee thorough workmanship and hrt cla maieriak in thce line.. We lohcit jroui pattosjaM, J. Emmeluth & Co. No. o Nauanu ., and 104 Met chant St.

Transcript of THE HAWAIIAN STAR....simt "OCEANK " Feb. 12, 1894 tmr "CHINA" March 26, 1894 'nir "GAELIC May 14....

Page 1: THE HAWAIIAN STAR....simt "OCEANK " Feb. 12, 1894 tmr "CHINA" March 26, 1894 'nir "GAELIC May 14. 1H04 RATES OF PASSAGE ARE AS FOLLOWS: M VOKO It) NUM.-KON-II UiA. Cabin, $1 50 00

THE HAWAIIAN STAR.PUBLISHED TERMS

EVERY AFTERNOON, FIFTY CENTS A MON1 H

IN ADVANCE.EXCEPT SUNDAY

VOL. I. HONOLULU, HAWAIIAN ISLANDS: TUESDAY EVENING, SEPTEMBER 5, 1898. SIX PAGES. NO 187.

OFFICIAL DIRECTORY.

PROVISIONAL GOVERNMENT OF THE

HAWAIIAN ISLANDS.

BXRt UTtVI ( lOtJW II

S B. Dole, President of the Provisional Gov-

ernment of the Hawaiian Islands, anil Min-

ister of Foreign Affairs.

J. A. Kitlgi Minister of the Interior.S. M. Damon, Minister of Finance.

W. O. Smith, Attorney-General- .

Advisory Council.F. M. Hatch, of the I'rovis-iona- l

Govtfntfltflt ol the Hawaiian Islands.

Cecil Brown, E. D. Tenney,

John Nolt, C Holte,V. V. McChesitey, W. V. Allen,

ames F. Morgan, Henry Wattthoust,K.I. Suhr, A. Young,

J. 1". Mendonca, W. C. Wilder.

John Emmeluth.C. T. Kodgers, Secretary F:xecutive and Ad

visory Councils.

Supreme Court.Hon. A. F. Judd, Chief Justice.Hon. R. F. Kickerton, First Associate Justice.Hon. YV. F. Frear, Second Associate Justice.Henry Smith, Chief Clerk.

Fred Wundenburg, Deputy Clerk.

Ceo. Lucas, Second Deputy Clerk.

J. Walter Jones, Stenographer.

Circuit Iudoks,First Circuit: H. E. Cooper, V. A. Whiting,

Oahu.Second Circuit: A. N. Kepoikai.

Third and Fourth Circuits: S. L. Austin.

Fifth Circuit: J. Hardy...Offices and Court room in Government

Building, King Street. Sitting in Honolulu,

First Monday in February, May, August, and

November.Dis I RIO COUR1 .

P lice Station Building, Merchant Street.

A. O. M. Robertson, Magistrate.

James Thompson, Clerk.

Department of Foreign Affairs.Office in Government Building, King Street.

His Excellency Sanford B. Dole, Minister of

Foreign Affair..

Geo. C. Potter, Chief Clerk.

W. Horace Wright, Ed. Stiles, Clerks.

Department ok the Interior.Office in Government Building, King Street.

His Excellency J. A. King, Minister of the

Interior.Chief Clerk, John A. Hassinger.

Assistant Clerks: James II. Boyd, M. K.

Keohokalole, James Aholo, Stephen Maha-ulu- ,

George C. Rosa, Eward S. Boyd.

Chiefs 01 Bureaus, Department ofInterior,

Surveyor-General- , V. D. Alexander.

Supt. Public Works, W. K. Rowell

Supt. Water Works, Andrew Brown.

Inspector, Klectric Eights, John Cissidy.

Registrar of Conveyances, T. G. Thrum.

Road Supervisor, Honolulu, W. H. Cum-ming-

Chief Engineer Fire Dept., J. H. Hunt.Supt. Insane Asylum, Dr. A. McWayne.

Office, Government Building, King Street.

Bureau of agriculture.President ex officio: His Excellency J. A.

King, Minister of the Interior.Members: W. O. Irwin, A. Jaeger, A. Her-

bert and John Ena.

Commissioner of Agriculture and ex officioSecretary of the Board: Joseph Marsnen.

Department ok Finance.Minister of Finance, His Excellency S. M

Damon.Auditor-General- , George S. Ross.

Registrar of Accounts, Geo. E. Smithies.

Clerk of Finance Office, Carl Widemann.

Collector Ceneral of Customs, , B. Castle.

Tax Assessor, Oahu, Jonathan Shaw.

Deputy Assessor, W. C. Weedon.Postmaster-General- , J. M. Oat.

Customs Bureau.Office, Custom House, Esplanade, Fort Si

Collector-General- , J. B. Castle.Deputy-Collecto- F. B. McStocker.

Harbormaster, Captain A. Fuller.

Port Surveyor, M.N. Sanders.Storekeeper, Geo. Stratenieyer.

Department ok Attorney-general- .

Office in Government Building, King StreetAttorney-General- , W. O. Smith.

Deputy Attorney General, G. K. Wilder.

Clerk, J. M. Kea.

Marshal, E. G. Hitchcock.Deputy Marshal, Arthur M. Brown.

Jailor Oahu Prison, lames Low.

Prison Physician, Dr. C. B. Cooper.

Board of Immigration.Office, Department Of Interior, Government

Building, King Street.President, His Excellency J. A. King.

Members of the Board of Immigration: HonJ. IS. Atherton, Jas. B. Castle, Hon A.S. C leghorn, James G . Spencer, Mark P.Robinson.

Secretary, Wray Taylor.

Board ok HEALTH,

Office In grounds ol Government Building,corner ol Mililani and Ouecn Streets.

Members: Dr. Day, Dr. Miner, Dr. Andrews,

T. P, Lansing, J. T. Watetliouse Jr., JohnEna, and Attorney-Genera- l Smith.

President, Hon. W. O. Smith.Secretary, Chas. Wilcox.Executive Office!, C, B. Reynolds.

Agent Board of Health. J. D. McVeigh.

Inspector and Manager of Garbage Service,

L. L. La Pierre.Inspector, G. W. C. Jones.Port Physician, Dr. Trousseau.

Dispensary, Dr. II. McGrew.

.eper Settlement, Dr. R. K. Oliver.

Board ok EDUCATION.

Office, Government Building, King Street.

President, Hon. C. R, Bishop.

Secretary, W. James Smith.

Inspector of Schools, A. T. Atkinson.

Board ok CROWN Land COMMISSIONERS,

J A. King, Minister of the Interior, W. O.

Smith, Attorney-General- , and C. I'- lauhea.

Office in Judiciary Building.

jtfusincBB (garb.

ALLEN & ROBINSON46 Ouecn Street.

DKALER IN LUMBER AND OTHER

KINDS OF BUILDING MATF.KTA1,.

Also Steam and Stove Coal.

M. S. GR1NBAUM & CO.Usmsv,

honolulu, h i.

Commission Merchants and Importersof General Merchandise.

San Francisco Office, its Front St.

F. A. SCHAEFER & CO

IMPORTERS AND COMMISSIONMERCHANTS,

HONOLULU, Hawaiian 1st VNDS,

H. W. SCHMIDT & SOXS.

IMPORTERS AND COMMISSION

MERCHANTS.

Fort Street, Honolulu.

J. J. WILLIAMS.

o togrxstplier.FORT STREET.

P. O. Box 97. Telephone 140.

LEWIS & CO.IMPORTERS

Naval Supplies : Wholesale and RetailDealers in Groceries, Provisions, Etc.

in Fort Sr., Honolulu, H, I.

Lime and Cement.I'Vr Sai.i at

J. T. WATERHOUSE'SQueen Street Stores.

JAS. F. MORGAN.No. 45 Ouecn Street.

r r.

Special attention given to thehandling of

Real Estate, Stocks fc Bonds.

HOIl T I.KWKRS. C M. COOKK. F. j. lowkev.

LEWERS & COOKE,

Lumber, Buildfrs'Hakdware,

doors, sash, blinds,paints, oils, glass,

wall paper, matting,corrugated iron,

lime, cement, etc.

H. MAY & CO.,

Wholesale and Retail

GROCERS98 Fort Street,

Both Telephones 22. P, (). Box 470.

A. WfcNNKk. N. P, JACi.ltSON.

WENNER & CO.

Manufacturing JewelersAND IUPORTRRS of

DIAMONDS, KINK JEWELRY,

WATCHES, SILVERWARE, Kit .

The Handsomf.si Soiivrnir SPOONS madein the Hawaiian Islands,

Fort Strut, Honolulu,

ATLASAssurance Company

FOUN1JKD 1 HOH.

Capital, - $ 6,000.000

Assets, $ 9,000.000

Having heen appointed Agents ol theabove Company we are now ready to etlectInsurances at the lowest rales ol premium,

H, W, SCHMIDT .v sons.

HONOLULU IRON WORKS,

Steam Enoimrs Suoar Mills, Boilrrs

Coolers. Iron, Hrass, si. LRAfJ

Cas IINOs.

Machinery of Every Description Mad to

Order. Paitieulai attention pai.l to Ships'

Ulaeksiniihing. Job work SXACTUtod al SI1011

Notice

t)uhttss darba.

W. R. CASTLE.

ATTORNEY AX T. AWOffice, Caitwttgnl Building.

W. A. KINNEY.

ATTOHM'.V AT I . A V .

Office: No. 06 Fort Street.

(W.O. Smith's Law Officii. 241

J. M MONSARRAT.

TToRNE AT LAW AND NOTARYPUBLIC.

Cart Wright Block, Merchant St.. Honolulu.

J. ALFRED MAGOON

Attorney and Counselor-At-La-

OFFICE 42 Merchant Street,

Honolulu. H. I,

F. M. WAKEFIELD,Attorney A-- Counselor-at-La- w

Temporary OfficeWith C. VV. Ashford, Merchant St..

5; Honolulu, II. 1. ly

W. T. MONSARRAT.

Veterinary Surgeon & Dentist.Office Infirmary nm! Residence,.

King Street

Telephones; Bell c6, Muuml 183.

Excellent, ftcconamodstions fur patients.Vetcrinaiy operation tihtej no dsngei frmthrowing.

IsP Am CALLS PftOMPII.Y A wr.RKU,

Day of Night

Metropolitan Meat Co.

81 KING STREET,

Navy Contractors.

G. J. WALLER, - Manager.

Hawaiian Gazette

PACIFIC

ELECTRIC

BOOK and JOBPRINTING.

Commercial and Legal Work Executedwith Dispatch.

Posteis, Books and Pamphlets,

Printed in the Neatest Style, on Fine

Paper, and at ModerateRates.

The Largest Paper, and I'artl Stock in

Honolulu.

BOOK-BINDIN- G

In all its Branches.

Magazines, Law Hooka,

Mlank B.xiks of an) o)escriptpn,

Day U .oks and ( 'asli Honks,

Map & Photograph Mounting,Albums, Old B .oks Re bound,

Ktlge Ciilding, Lettering in Gold,

Music Books,

Account and Time Books,

Journals and Ledgers,

Portfolios, Scrap-Book-

Letter Copying Hooks.

Binding in Morocc , t 'alf, Sheep, Roan

Russia, Persian ..nd Cloth.

Paper 3BMlln:AT SHORT NOTICE,

WorkmanshipGuaranteed.

HAWAIIAN GAZETTE CO.

it Merchant t., Honol' lu.

M. PHILLIPS & CO.,"W7Tn.olesa.le

Importers and Jobbers of American and

European Dry Goods.

Comer Fori arid Que n Street, Honolulu.87 If

tyttinesa Carba.

WILDER & CO.,!Established in 1X72.

Estate of S. G. WILDER C. WILDER

IMPORTER AND DEALERS IN

Lumber and Coal

BUILDING MATERIALS

St' 11 AS

Doors, Sash, Blinds

BUILDERS' HARDWARE,

WALL PAPER, Etc.

at

Corner of Fort & Queen Streets,

HONOLULU, H. I,

( TO T I i E

EAGLE HOUSE.NtUANI AVKNUK, OR TO THE

AliLIXCTOX HOT,;,,H. f.i. Strke

-- RATES. -

Tal.le Itoar.l $1 per day.IJo:ir.l " "an. I.'M'tinj; .412linatil and Lodging $12 per week.

SfSpecial monthly prices.

I'. E. KROUSE: pRORlRToa.

J. E. GOMES.Mam faciurin.. Iewklf.k, and Ii- -

POB i f;r of

Diamonds, Watches, Silverware and

Fine Jewelry,

HAWAIIAN - SOUVENIRS.GENERAL REPAIRING.

400, Fort Street, Honolulu. 4$ itf

STEAM and GALVANIZED PIPE, ELBOWS, GLOBE VALVES,STEAM COCKS, ami all other fittingsfor pipe on hand.

Honolulu Steam Rice Mill.

Frtsh milled Kict: fo! sale in quantitiea t suit.

J. A. HOPPER, Prop.Fori Street, Honolulu.

CHAS. HUSTACE,Lincoln Block, - - King STREET,

llelween Fort and Alakca Streets.

DEALKR IN

Groceries & Provisions

Fresh California Roll Butter and IslandButter always on hand.

Fresh Goods received by every Stunn-er from Sun Pfttttcitco.

tsr Satisfaction Guarantied.

Manuf.11 turrrv and iL.tln- in Ml Kiml f

Organic and ChemicalManures,

The Onl ) factory (if lhc Kiml in theCountry, sad arc Prepared lo Pamisk l eml- -

laSSS In Quantities to Suit ParetttBSfS.

Complete High Grade FertilizersMADE TO ORDER.

Hutted Btablc Manures,Putt Kiw BosjS Meal.

Sulphate and Meriate Potash,Nilrate of Soda,

Ground Coral Lime Stone,Ltjisea Island I'hosphate, Land Plaster, Fi'--

(luaim, etc., etc., always in hand.Send s SAMPLE ORDER and try oar goods

A. F. COOKE,Maii.mcr wjdx I'roprietur Hawaiian Fertilizing C .

Old Kona CoffeeI OK BALE AT

J. T. WATERHOUSE'SOueen Street Stores

Shipping.

pacific Mail S.S. Co.

AND Till

Occidental and Oriental S.S, Co.

fNatoW k".

For M0HAMA and mmmSteamer! of the above Companies will call

SI Honolulu on their way to the aliove p rtson 01 about the following dates:

Stmr "CHINA" Sept. 18, tSojSlmr "OCEANIC " Oct. 16, 189.1

Stmr "CHINA" Nov. 27. 189,1

Minr "Ot KANIC" Dec. 2j, l8u.iSlmr "CHINA" Feb. 5, 1894

Stmr "OCEANIC" . Match 5. 1894

S'mr "CHINA' April 10. 18114

For SAN FRANCISCO.

Steamer' ol thr al ot Companies will callHonolulu on their wa Ironi Hongkong anil

Yokohama the above port on ot about thefollowing .lati".:

Stmr "OCEANIC1 Sept. 25, iSy.iStmr 'CHINA" Nov. 6, 1893

Stmr "OCEANIC" Dee. 4, 1891

Stmr "CITY (Jr PEKING"Jan. 2, 1894

simt "OCEANK " Feb. 12, 1894

tmr "CHINA" March 26, 1894

'nir "GAELIC May 14. 1H04

RATES OF PASSAGE ARE AS FOLLOWS:

M VOKO It) NUM.-KON-

II UiA.

Cabin, $1 50 00 $175 OO

Cabin, round trip 4months 225 00 2O2 50

Cabin, round trip 12

months 162 50European nisiaane Hs 00 !0O OO

Xt' Passengers paying full fan- will be10 per cent, off return fare if returning

within twelve months.

ear For Freigh.1 and Passage'npuly to

H. HACKFELD & Co.,64 if Agents

H MAN BROS.Importers of and Wholesale Dealers in

DRV GOODS, Boors, SHOES,

CLOTHING, NOTIONS am.

FANCY GOODS.

58 Queen St., Honolulu.

14 California St., San Francisco, Cal.

HUSTACE & CO

KOLEAll kinds, in any quantity, (rum a

bag to a ton.

C II A R C O A L,From bag to any quantity,

FI RE-WOO- D

In 4 lengths, ami tpwfd ot ipltti from

l Itag to any quantity. Alsn,

WHITE VM BLACK SAN II.

tv n. 114 on llolli Teleiihoiie-,- . frj

Criterion SaloonAGENTS OK

ohnWieland BrewiCfl.E X T It A

Pale Loger BeerPer Austi'aiiu.

A Fresh Invoice ov Califor-nia Oysters.

Oyster Cocktails a Specialty,

U H DEE, Pifon'r.

BEAVER SALOON.

Hon street, - opposite wilder & Co.'.II I, NOI.TK, PKqPHllTOB,

,class I.unclie-- . Servedhnil uitn rea, CoSOC,Kodi Wsttt, Gingei Ale m .M'ik.

tv Smokers Requisites a Specialty. Uou.i from j .m mi ,0 y m.

Shipping,

V' AMAHIAM. AMCTDAI I A M

mum mioNMunn

STEAMSHIP LINE

TIME TABLE.

For Vancouver, B.C.,

From Sydney & Brisbane,Arrirr Ht'tti lulu

S. S. "WAKKIMOO" Aug. t inqS. S. "M tOW ERA" Oct. 2, 1893S. S. "WAKKIMOO" Nov. I, 1893S. S. "MIOWF.IvA" Lee. 2. 1893S. S. "WAKKIMOO" Ian. I, 1894

And Monthly Thereafter.

For Sydney & BrisbaneFrom ancouer, B.C.

AVfiW Honolulu

s. ' WARklMOO " Sept. 21, 1893S. S. "MIOWEKA" Oct. SI, 1S93S. S, WAKKIMOO Nov. II, 1893S. S. "MIOWEKA" Dec. It, 1893S. S WAKKIMOO" Jan. SI, 1894

Ami Monthlv Thereafter.

Passenger and Freight Rates

if. v. H. C aic the same M

F'r.incisco, Cal.

Through Ticketsall poinUl in Canada and the United State!

pei Canadian Pacific Railway.

tir Kor freight 01 Pastage, apple to

THFO. H. DAVIES & CO.,04 tf QeMrsJ Agents.

J. T. WATERHQUSE

Queen Street Stores,FULL LINKS OF

FANCY -:- - GOODSof all detcriptinni.

Fort Street Store,

IN ADDITION TO THE LARGE

ASSORTMENT OF

Dry1 Fancy GoodsHATE JUST RECEIVED,

India Linen and Persian Lawns,Embroidery, In 9 yard pieces;Roman and Guipure Embri idery,Oriental, Platte and othe Laces, in

white, ream and Mat k ;

C'hilli'n I ace, all colore;

45 in. Lace Net, ( ream and black;Striped and Check Dimity,Wide Japanese Crepe, white and coli'd;White, Cream and Black Surah Silk,White and Cream Silk Crepe,Navy and Cream Serge,Suez and Tennis Flannel,The Jennets Miller "Equipoise Waist,Prima Donna and P, 1). Corsets,Ltdii H ack Hose.

G. MULLER.Practical Machinist, Gun

and Locksmith.Hell Street, Haniou Illnck, "v-- Sture.

lg II

W. AHANA.MEKCHANT TAILOR,

No. S" Merciianl Street, HaOQlalv.

Kin. lull! from $14 up. Lloetl and ClepSMills, 40.50 up.

ALL SUIIS CUARANTKKD IO1 AMI IN THE I VI I.M

STYLE

Clothki CUSANSP ami Kkpairko,44 21I

I

Native Fans and IslandCunos,

is ;mai vakikiv ai iiis

'Elite" Ice Croam Parlors

Insurance iloticrr,.

BISHOP & CO..BANKERS.

Honolulu, Hawaiian Islands,

DKAW KXCHANOS ONTHE BANK OF CALIFORNIA, SAN FRANCISCO

AM 1IIMR AURNYa INNew York, Chicago, Boston, Paris

MESSRS. N.M. ROTHCHIID & SONS, LONDON,

IR1 ON TilThe L'riion Ptatkaial Hank of CJhirago.Tin Casisssrelal BaakitaJ Co, 01 Sydney,

Iindon .

The Comaietcial It.ink ng C". of Sydney,Syiliay. The Hank of Nm Zealand, Am

and its tranches in (Jhristchurch,Dttotellll and Wellington.

The Hank of Hrilisn ( uluml'ia, Portland, r.The Ainre- - and Mad, ira

t,ckholni, Sweden.The Chartered Hank of India, A' tralia and

China.H OOgkoOgi VOKoh ma, Japan. Anrf trr.nact

a (ieneial Hanking HuMnes.

insrsTj-jj- i

IN THE

German --AmericanINSURANCE CO.,

OP 1STEW YORK.Assets $5,879,208 00Mel Surplus 2,255,389 00

When Rates are Equal, Get theBui Security,

wii DER A en.,Agents.

CASTLE S. CO KE

MFE AMI II U I

Insurance Atrentw

AC KM s KOk

NEW ENGLAND MUTUAL

Life Insurance CoOF HOSTON.

Fire Insurance,

Alliance Assurance Co.OI LONDON.

ETNA INSURANCE CO..

OK HARTFORD, CONN.

C. B. RIPLEY.

ARCHITECT !

Okkice Si'reckkls Block, K(xim 5,Honolulu, H. I.

Plans, Spccilicatiuns, and Superintendence(rjeen (or every description of Building,

Old ltuil.l injs successfully remodelled andenlarged.

Designs for Interior Decorations.Maps of Mechanical Drawing, Tracing,

ind HI ueprinting.aaTDrawing ior luik. Newspap Iliu&

ration.

THE MUTUAL

Life Insurance Go.

Of New York.

.ssTSlk:,l.ls!i:. si7;,.ni.ir)ii.Hi

s. B. RUSK,General Agent, Hawaiian Islaiuis

32 a if

A FEW OF OUR SPECIALTIES.

COMPLSTI AM1RMENT OK

"SUPERIOR"

Stoves and Ranges" EUREKA" RANGES,

"CLIPPER CABOOSES.LAUNDRY STOVES,

FRENCH RANGESSCI in brick.

AGATE IRON WARE,mo TIN WARE.

11 ill' M Ill's WROUGHT STEEL.SINKS, Galvanised and WhiteKnaintlcd,

RUBBER HOSK,CAL. WW SPRINKLERS.

Kneel Metal timls in Tilt, (.'untie, or Gal'van 11,1 Iron on hand or made to order.

PstH line ol Sanitary Goods, llatli Tuh,I lories, Walei Closets, Pipe and Vitttngs.

, .lie eqaipped fin rk of all kinds inthe SI, eel Metal and Plumbing Trade, and canguarantee thorough workmanship and hrtcla maieriak in thce line..

We lohcit jroui pattosjaM,

J. Emmeluth & Co.No. o Nauanu ., and 104 Met chant St.

Page 2: THE HAWAIIAN STAR....simt "OCEANK " Feb. 12, 1894 tmr "CHINA" March 26, 1894 'nir "GAELIC May 14. 1H04 RATES OF PASSAGE ARE AS FOLLOWS: M VOKO It) NUM.-KON-II UiA. Cabin, $1 50 00

The Hawaiian Star.PUBl ISHBD EVERY AFTERNOON

EXCEPT SUNDAYBY THE HAWAIIAN STAR NEWSPAPER

COMPANY, Ltd.in

Walter 0, Smith, Managing Editor.Cmas. W, Pay, Btnlnem Manager

SUBSCRIPTION RATESl'et Year in Advance, $ti.OO

Ket Month in Advance, .30I'oreiign, per Year in Advance,

ADVERTISING RATES.

Kates for transient ami reeular advertising ofmav lie obtained at 'he publication "It'

U.'ll Telaithane Numbel 217. Mutual .6

TUESDAY, SEPTEMBE m.n

SfcCRET LEGISLATIVE SESSIONS

We can conceive Dcctaiofli where

dip) matic and military matters might

require the members of the C. ivein-men- t

to meet behind dosed dorrs, but

for the average run of legislative work

the executive session is an anomaly.

American bodies rarely

exclude the public from their deli'nra- -

ti.ms s to ( niuress the lower, or

popular branch, with which our Advis

ory Council measurably correspondslooks askance at secret meeting-- ; and

in the case f the Senate, only treatiesand in rare instances removals of office

holders are held to justify the enfofCC

nient ot" lodge room rules.

In general, the secret session is

nrotifie in chicane and humbuB Men

say and d things in them which they

would not think of saying or doing il

the eyes of the public were upon them

Much legislation, for want of populai

Comment and criticism, is sent int.

the world like Richard, "hall made

ud'': and many policies are tilherbeaten or approved which might have

had a different fate if the people, whose

servants the legislators are, had en) iyed

the chance to be heard upon them be

fore final action had been taken.

Sound average legislation needs lit

star chamb.r councils Sincere and

patriotic debaters seek no onceahnenof their views and principles.

OATHS OF FORM ONLY

A Bulletin writer is anxious to nanthe Royalist i flice holders kept in be-

cause they have taken the oath of allegi

ance to the Provisional GovernmentThis plea sounds very well but what

does it amount to? Oaths of allegiance

are unif irmly made to be brokenThousands of high minded men wh

left the Union for the Confederate

service at the beginning of the lafe

civil war, had previously sworn to sup

port the Federal authority. In France,

at the overturn of the third Napoleon,

tens of thousands of oaths were brt ken.

Not long ago the republican leaders ol

Brazil were the sworn subjects of iht

man they dethroned And In Hawaii

it is to be presumed that seveial gent'e-men- ,

high in Provisional Councils 01

in Government employ, have at some

time or other taken oaths of allegiance

to the Royal Government,

Il has become an unwritten law thatthe right to revolt against constitutedauthority, or to change the existing

forms of public administration by forceis not abridged by having taken a

pledge of fealty to them.

To judge the politics of an office-

holder, find out what he says, who

with and what his reasons arc

for not allying himself with the Annex

ation movement. That will tell his

story better than a hundred oaths ol

an allegiance which he is anxious tofind an opportunity to break.

Il is known 10 the President andMinistry thai, whatevei different e olopinion there may be between the An-

nexationists and themselves upon tinmailer of removals, there is no weaken-

ing ol the support which the party hasall along given them. We nave, here

and then, some angry talkers ; bulwhen it conies to the ptrpetualion ol

the Government until its great objectsshall have been attained, the A .nex.lion Club is practically of one mind.

Royalists have no occasion for think-

ing God and taking courage' at wha.

they diem the disintegrali .11 of thi

ruling party. There is no such dis

integration and there will be none.

The motto of the hour is "In essentialsunity, in nonessentials liberty, and in

all things loyally.''

Jul ..(count of M.ss Pope's inter-vie-

with the ex (ueen reached ihi

Star from two Kawaiahao sources, bul

not from the Principal herself i'he

latter wishes it understood that her call

upon Liliuokalaoi was of a private busi

ness nature and that the facts about

it, though given to SOmC of the patronsof the seminary, were n i intended f. t

the press. Miss Pope would like lo

amend the statements in the interview

in various ways bul does not feel thai

she can, in jusiuc to hciself ami the

ex Queen, permit ihis journal lo gjve

her own rep irl ul the now famous call,

What happened ihere, she says, j, not

a matter of public concern.

lllklil or four djys ago the public

ia ml r i.ed by the Advertiser thai

HAWAIIAN TUESDAY, BKPTEMBBB

remOTBM to deemed "inexpedient ITTW extreme difficulty 01 fWUCing thtttand "inouixmutte." Now comes the

same Btpcf to say in an approvingto

way that "the policy of rc-

vals, s id h is .it pit sent being car-

ncd out) was decided upon some lime I

sun e. VVntti it will say tomorrow noliwt Imerwl In the list mating sub

soolhsayci an divine. It is ixing

the comp iM rapidly.

The bow is copied from the Hoiton Advertiser than which there is m

ablet n il mote conservative exponentAmerican principles and interests

published in the United StatesUnl Ict in.

The ab At" tilers to the usual false:il-- ..In' it I lawail in matters. A- - W

the B isl m Advertiser it isan old timedough-face- " sopporter of slavery in the

United Slates and whatever Inn ICAM

it once had was shrivelled forty years

o in the (Ire of Wendell I'hilups andWin. I.lovd damsons contempt andindignation. Naturally it is against

fried "in in Hawaii. Hot what ol that ?

HI Radical is a moth which II i.

into the fire and is consumed, while

the Conservative is a horse whi

wont undue troin Ins ll.iing staple

mil is also burnt d tip The good I

ilitical leader is iteithei s Radical nor

a Conservative.

DO FORESTS INCREASE RAINFALL?

I'he recent decrease of the rainfall

in a district ol one of the other islandl

nd the remedy a iDlled thereto, liivi--

local interest to this tdiiorial Ol a New

York paiier, which the Siak is asked

to republishAccepting the conclusion thai, u

genera1, deserted sudill i f ram, snow dew, it rt and changes of Watea be detcruii. ed how nint h .1 this

increase is available for beneficial pinposes. I'ait ol It Is intercepted l I

foliage and is returned to the atmos-- 1

uinre by evaporation without having I

reachid tiie ground. The proportionjo retained varies with the naturethe foliage, the density of the fort st and I

the season of the year. The retentloiby evergeen trees is iess than by deCld

ous. It is estimated that perhaps 30 I

percent ol the precipitation is thusintercepted and relumed to the alino-- I

phere. Of course this interceptionDd evaporation go on where

lace ol the earth is covered by grass I

nd other growing crops. it I

.sr-- ..... . .. . .1... t . .1is stimcienuy greaiir 1. ine ioresi in. o.

in tne lields lo do away with tne excessof precipitation on wooded tracts ovirhat on cleared aieas is an unsettled

cpjesnon. Ine leiention ol snow Dy

tillage amounts to less than that ol

rain, lor most of the snow caught b)die leaves is shaken to the ground bywind.

Of the 70 per cent, of rainfall which,it is est m j ted, reacnes tne ground inforests, a part is quickly returnedto the atmosphere by evaporation, buthere the loss is considerably less thanin the open held. Under cirtain con- -

dltions li is not moic than 13 per cent.of what it would be on soil; buthe conditions are so various it is

ililhcult to arrive at an average. Again,out of this 70 per cent, of precipitationwnicb reaches ground in wooded

re .s niusl be deducted the loss by

transportation, the process by whichthe plapt gels rid of the surplus watera ter having drawn it bom the intide--r to extract from il nutrimentwhich is present in only a v ry highlyattenuated solution. Various in-

enious methods have been resortedto lor determining tne amount ol

in list urc used in this way; bul, becausef the many factors bavins to do with

t, the amount for the various kinds ofvi gelation can be indicated only with a

Aide margin for variations. Here is

one of the methods :

'The water transpired comes mostly, il notnlirely, from Ihe soil. On evaporating it

leaves behind il the mat ten held in solution.of whieh is iunriianie and il is thai

which constitute! ihe ash ol the plant. Assnm-

ng that ihe absorption Of I lie plant notensibly in ihe average from a largelumbal of individuals, then a knowledge "fhe annual addition ol inorganic material, it c,Itbi to Ihe forest, and the amount ot mineralmatter Ueld in solution by the ground water,will enable us to the amount "1 watiiwhich has been evaporated.

It has been estimated that coniferousrees transpire only about one tenth ;.s

much, on the average, as deciduoustrees. thus, 111 one etU'nale tiniraiispiraiiuii of ash tree during tinpeilnd ol vegetation, it put at Irom 50010 600 pounds of water per poundIry weight of leaves, and of the spructfrom 50 lo 70 pounds. Hut, sine,transpiration is part of the process olbuilding up the forest, the gotrid of in that way cannot be consideredis lost for beneficial uses.

While, as it n..w, nobody cansay, as a result of scientific investiga-tion, whether foiesls increase ihe fill otrain, snow or dew to an ppreciabltextent, there is no room for thaiwooded areas are valuable conservatorsof moisture. In ihis ihey niakthe How of streams more even,and they preserve the constancy olsprings. In wooded areas there is 1

hiss by interception and evaporation 111

the foliage and by transpiration andthere is a considerable i4aln i" th

protection Iron evaporation from tinsurface of the ground. It is not probable that this enservution i f the wjteisupply comes a.iy where near the markdrawn by those who hold that thepreservatti n of woodland insures ana mnd ace ol water supply ; but thebenefit! resulting from il are sufficientlo be 'ii.sidered among the other ex-

cellent reasons for looking to thepreservation of foresls. The effortstoward arriving at a scientific deter-

mination of this question are intt rett-ing because of the many and var.oiis

that have to be dealt with atalui'-s- t every slage of ihe invesligatioi

THE STAR, 5,

u to known innntities, ot even t

rough tillfflitei, has mule it imp bleI resent any array of liiniris ns a

result of the costly and painstakingwork ; but a wider km wledge ol whathas been done would lead to a greater

ject of lore-dry- .

II the results of the sclent in invesligations arc unsatisfactorily vague,there is no uncertainty in the observe-ttOf-

as to the apparent relation olforest and rainfall, without attemptingto assign scientific reasons for thisipparent relation. Thus, the heaviestknown rainfall occurs in the dense and

lciisive forest ol the middle end lowiiItrahmaputra, in India. In the southof Java are large and dense fofestS! inthe n..rth are few wooded tracts. Tinannual rainfall at Tiilaliap, on thi - nth

1st, is iSj.j inches; at these nationn the north coast it is ;S . inchei

I he question! arc raised whetlm inthese instances the l.rtsts were notfostered by the rain I .nil Wh ther the

bsence 01 forests is not a result of thefiilure of rain. Hut here is an instancethat apparently does not admit ol suchquestions. I here Is in central Iinlilarge territory in which special attentionhas been given for sevei.il years to theprotection ami encouragement f fmes'growth so that, from being almost treeess. it has become covered with a tluis

growth of trees. Over this territory thaverage increase ot rainl.nl in nunyears was 13 per cent., tccoroiog t

measurements that are ilest ribed U

accurate.own Country furnishes scvera

examples which are mentioned as'coming from good authorities and

well substantiated. About the year

?75 the Savannah River at August;was "a clear, rapid stream, lull ot ix...... ... .(client lish. and subiecl to no suddenor marked changes of height.The forests were dtstn yed in th

c mrse ot ears, ahd now "the slreamhas become turbid, the fish have near

level are the rule." We have well

known instances of the cutting offIt .rests in tne northern pans ol NewYork State beins followed by a failureof the canal feeders. Of the graduadiminution of the flow of the Schuylkill Kiver in dry seasons, a commissionof engineers said in 1875: re

Intarkablc decrease, not accompaniedby any gnat cha ge in the rainfall, n

prnlinlv in the total annual dist harglot the riv. r, is no doubt largely due to

die destruction of the foresthe drainage area, whereby tin

forests increase slightly thi lly the lower waters, andI. and mai' Slden marked the

the

Whether

very

barethat

the

soil

portion

is

computl

the

water

stands

doubt

way

well

factors

Our

"This

rvative action ot the woodland....has been lost, and the r.iintall is pi i

mitted to descend rapidly to the bednd pass off in a succession of freshets

Similiar stories ire told of the failurein constancy of streams b:g and little

y a New Hampshire r.jtcstry c ommission, by an Ohio rst .te forestryBureau, and by a considerable numbeof unofficial observers from Maine t

California. Most Of these examplehowever, are in veiilu atn n ol the 1111

disputed value of forests as conservI tors or water supply, and i not beI in the question whether forests increaseI the rainfall. Inmost instances whereobservers tell of dwindling streaithey speak also it freshets sweepln

Iilir. ugh the beds ot tht se sir. ams, siI that perhaps the annual outrun is nearlyI if not quite, as great as il was when thI forests were there, and the volumeI the streams w s more neariy constant

One of the conclusions set forth 11

the bulletin Irom which this summaryis gathered is expressed 111 these words

I "As a regulator of water conditionsI the forest of the mountains is the im

p riant factor: and since this influenceI makes Use f lelt far distant from th

location of the forest, the claim folI attention of Government activity ant

tor statesmanlike pouiy wilh reierenceto this factor of national welfare, mavbe Considered as well founded. Everycivi ized Gov rnment must in time ownor control the forest cover of themountains in id. to set ore desirablewater conditions. "

PERSONAL.

A. Irvine of Wainianalo, is registered.11 the Arlington.

Miss Patch, the n teaheiof music, is expected home on thiAustralia.

11. N an Giestn and M ss BerthaMeyer left for Molokai yesterday 01

the Mokolii.A. C. McCarthy, principal ol the

Kaunakakai School on Molokai, rturned on the Mokolii yesterday.

Miss Gran, James Jaeger, HemJaeger, Mis.- - Van Ange en and F,

Heokenins were passengers to S i

Francisco by the bark S. ('. Allenyesterday.

STEAM ami GALVANIZED PIPE, EXHows, ULOPE VALVESSTKAM COCKS, and all oilier liltingfor pipe on hand.

Honolulu Steam Rice Mill.

rush niillt'H RtOI KM IftM InqUMlUtiM l(1

J. A. HOPPER, PropFori Street, Honolulu.

CHAS. HU STAGE,Lincoln BLOCK, - Kino Si km

BetWStS Fori and Alalea Streets.

DEAI.1.K IN

Groceries & Provisions

Fresh California Roll Butter and IslandButter always on hand.

Fresh Goods received In ; y Steamer from Sun irtiiu tsco.

iv Satisfaction Uu aiantiux

BY AUTHORITY.

UUt.H OUNN has this day been appoint,

til arstatwi of the Board "' Firs CbErErkv

sinners fur the City of n diilti, vice I AS.

11. ItOYH.

J. A. KINO,

Mlnirter "f 'he Interior

nteriot Oilier, Sept. 5th. 1S03. 137-

SALE OF TFNANCY AT WILL OF THESTORE ON KING STKEET AND AD-

JOINING THE CHINI 138 THEATRE

On Saturday, SffMmbei 10, iSn.t, ai .12

lock noun, nl the from entrance of the Kxcc- -

ulne llmlihnc will he lOltl SI nolle Aucllonthe Tenancy ai Will of the Premises occupied

as a Slur, nn King Slrtei on the Waikiki IMS

of and adjoining the Chinese Theatre, Hono-

lulu, Oaks,

Term: Tenancy from moult, lo month

until such time as the Ministi of die Interior

may wish to terminate thi name by giving 30lays notice.

Upset price $10. oo pei month payablemonthly in advance.

(Signed) J. A. KINO,Minister "t the Interior.

Interioi OCcc, August 31, 1893. 1343'

IRRIGATION NOTICE.

Otting lo the drought antl scar, ily of water,the irrigation h.urs are hereby suspendeduntil furlliei nt.tit e.

All parsons disregarding the shove notice

ire liable 10 have their priviltgcs cut offwilhoul further notiee.

ANDREW BROWN,Superintendent Honolulu Water Works.

Honolulu. II. I., Aug 30. Stir. ilVtf

WATER NOTICE.

Owing l" die thought antl scarcity of water.the residents above ludd Street are requested

collect whal wnlei they may for

household y irposi 8 o'clock A.M.

VNURBW BROWN,Supl. Honolulu Watei Works.

10- - Il

NOTICE.I10111 ami sflei tlate all hills against ihi

board of Health must he matle in duplicates,CHA.-s- . WILCOX,

Sec' ltoanl of Health.Office Board of Health, Honolulu, H. I.

August 31. 1893. 133-3-

SALU OF LEASK OF GOVERNMENTLAND ADJOINING POHAKU H A KU.

HAMAKUA. HAWAII.

Oo Thursday, September 28, 193. at 12

o'clock noon, ai the front entrance of dieExecutive Building, will he sold nl PublicAuction the Lease of a piece of GovernmentLand adjoining Pohakuhakn, llaniakua, Ha-

waii, containing nn area of 80 acres, more orless.

Terms. Lease for lo years.Upset price $50 per annum payable semi-

annually in advance.

J. A. KING,Minister of the Interior.

Interior office-- , Aug. 29, 1X93. 132--

The Palace Ice Cream Parlors

Hoi el Street, IloMii.ni.c,

Ice Cream, Sherbets,Ice Cream Soda

A Choice Assortnit-n- t of

French & Plain Mixed Candies

Coffee, Tea or Chocolat. with Sandwiches,served at all hours.

651)- Mrs. ATWOOD, Proprietress.

0 I', W i 1 It m A LUILN LOCall in antl examine the

NEW BUTTONHOLE MACHINE

Ami our ru'W itock of

Fine Singer Sewing Machines.

B. BERGENSEN,General Acent.

Bethel Street, Honolulu, Damon Block,

Repairing Done.

Hawaiian Wine Co.FRANK BROWN, Mamaobk,

28 and Merchant street. Honolulu, H. I.

7 iy

CHAS. F PETERSON

Typewriter, Cowreyanoer and

Notary Public.Oliiee- ovel Bishop's li.ink.

M. H. LOHEIDE,Sign & Ornamental Painter

BELL TELEPHONE 157.

EST All Orders Promptly Attended toin if

Hard Times Mean Close PricesTo House Keepers.

If yon are In need of any New or Second-

hand CRM 1'Kl-.- KUOS, STOVES,SEWING MACHINES, Ktc., pail at the

I X LFurniture & Commission House,

Corner Niui.-in- Bud King street.18 If

BEAVER SALOON.

Fort Street, - opposite Wilder & Co.'aHi J. NOI.TK, I'KOPRIKTOR.

Pirtt-ela- UuttchM Served with Tea, Coifee,Soda ater, ijuier Ale or M'lL.

ur Smokers' Requisites a Specialty, tkiOpu (lorn ) LI till la p ru

Actum) Hbfirrtittmtttte.

Sim .a .aM, -- I . W- -

A Big Week!That's what it is at

King Bros.' Art Empori-um, a bier week for thehouse, and a bigger weekfor buyers of everythingin their line. This weekthey have an especiallyfine display of pictures,artists' supplies, mirrors,photograph and a u t o --

graph albums, wall brack-

ets and easels, plush fancygoods and novelties, ihelatest styles of mouldingsfor framing and cornices,a full line of window polecornices, etc. Now is thetime to have portraits en-

larged in crayon or Indiaink by first class artistsat lowest rates.

King Bros.HOI EL STREET

H.I Hi

Aim at the DrakeAnd you .ire bound lo till some ol

This i, precisely the same ui'li

Wampole'sTastelessPreparation

OF

Cod Liver Oil.

It aims to cure Consumption,Hits the Mark, too, and it

most effectually breaks up Colds,Coughs, Hoarseness and allThroat and Lung troubles thatcause this disease:.

It is natural logic to concludethat it" Wampole's Preparationof Cod Liver Oil has powerto prevent Consumption, it sure-ly is able to cure these lesseremergencies.

This vigor-makin- g, fat pro-

ducing preparation is Absolute-ly Tasteless, in so far as CodLiver Oil is concerned. All

of Wild Cherry and Anise.But the purest Norwegian

Cod Liver Oil is there all thesame. It is a great blood en-rich-

Mest of all it is a natu-ral food that in its stomachiceffects, actually assists its ownassimilation.

In Pulmonary or Bronchialtroubles it is unequalled. Noone doubts the value of CodLiver Oil, but not every one isable to lake it.

WAMPOLE'S PREPARATION

removes the nauseous objectionand actually makes Cod Livt rOil palatable.

KEPT IN STOCK AND SOLI) BV

HOLLISTER & Co.

Druggists.109 Fort Stkkki, HONOLULU.

The Central Market.Always have 00 hantl choice Beef, Mutton,

Veal ami Poultry. We make BailMgei .1

specially. (Jive us a trial ami be convinced.

We have ihe best. Our Corned Ileef is 0

th.- vtty bast.

WESTBROOK St GARBS,Proprietor.

lioih Telephone 104. f

Club Stables Co.S. V. GRAHAM, Manahi'k.

Livery, Feed and Sale Stables,

Four SiRKEi, Betwken HotelANU Bbrktania.

itOTH TELEPHONES No. 477

CaT Connected with Hack StandCorner King and Bethel Sts.

o ri r.i.r.rnimr.s, to. 113

(general 3t5Uettimcntfl.

H. E. MclNTYRE & BRO.,IMPORTERS AM'

Groceries, Provisions and FeedBAST CORNER PORT AND KING STREETS.

New Ooodl received by every Packet from the Eastern States antl Europe,frail California Produce by every steamer. All orders faithfully allentletl to, antlOoodl delivered to any pari of I tic city free of charge.

Island Ortlers solicited. Smisfaciion cuaranleetl.Post Office Kox No. 14s Telephone No. 92.

EQUITABLELife Assurance Society

Offers Insurance on all

Ordinary Lift 1'l.in,Endowment Plan,Semi Tontine Plan,Free Tontine Plan,Indemnity Bond Plan (Coupon liontl

at maturity, if desired),Endowment Bond Plan (5 guaranteed)

Il will cost you nothing to call at the office of tht- - Undersigned, andmake further inquiries. 'Should ynu conclude I" insure, it will he money '

your pocket.

Bruce & A. J. Cartwright,Managers for the Hawaiian folandsEQUITABLE Life Assurance Society of U.S.

now for ami

IN

the

Cih afand

Term

.

ION

in slock of

I ()

S and --'7 M i KEEP ON HAND

A Superior An&tirtmenr of Goods Blank Books, all Books, in

Music fi r any

On Alakea and Richards near

I'rimiii attention to all orders.

nar Mutual SS- -

Is openetl business,

OAK BED

mmense

S.104

ol tie

Popular Plans, viz.:

Tontine Instalment Plan (Nkw,

nint Risks,Partnership Insurance,Children'sAnnuities,

Insurance, etc., etc,

PLANING MILL.

Proprietor.ATvTl) I.I.Queen Street, Honolulu,

ICS

tJt Bell 498.

Fort and Sts.hat the Iiik-s- i assortme.nl

ROOM

The Hawaiian News Co.idSTAT NEKS,

News and Music Dealers,ERCHAN STREET,

kinds; Memorandum grea. variety

PIANOS, GUITARS, MANDOLINS,

Sheet Subscriptions Received Periodical Published,

AGENTS FOR

Klinkner's Red Stamp and Yost Type Writer.

ENTERPRISE

PET&R HIGH,OJTiqil

MOULDINGS,Doors, Sash, Blinds, Screens, Frames, Etc.

TURNED AND SAWED WORK.JW

TET,KI'l

New Furniture Store,ROBINSON BLOCK.

Hotel Street, between

ANTIQUE

Nuuanu

CHIFFONIERS, SIDEBOARDS,EXTENSION TABLES, Etc.

ALSO .1 line is.suiMii. nl nl

Reed and Rattan Furniture.

UPHOLSTERY.Spring, Hair, Vt:ol, Moss anil Straw MattiasMS Live l.et-s- ami Slk Fu

for Pinowt. Special attention called iu our latest style ol wikk MATTKKSSKS,ihe beat and ever brought til th country. Pine LoaoM ami Sola

Ucds, at S.m Francisco prices i mplete assorinr.1.1 01 BabyCarriages, Cribs, Cradles, ami High Chairs.

Cornice Poles in Wood or Brass Trimmings, .jstjWe niakr 1 specially of Laying Matlinc, ami Interioi dccoraling.

Furniture ami Mattresses Repaired Pint-Cla- Workmen,Cabinet Making in all iis liranches.

A trial Ki.lieited. Lowest Prices Prevail.

91 tf BELL) 5

ORDWAY & PORTER,TKLEPHOXES.

CHILDREN AND INFANTS'

Hats and Bonnets.N.

Fort Street

SILK

LACE Infants Muslinau oiilMNt is in great variety at jj cents

ATTMACTtVt),Life

Kndownients,

etc,

MI

H.I.

SETS,

Rubber

Fine

by

is;

Robins.. n Block, Hotel Street.MUTUAL 645.

Variety at

SACHS,. . Honolulu.

BONNETS fimu 50 cents and upwards.and uuwards

CKILifN V&VIUXIL tilf" - . U-tr- taM- MULLCH1LDKENS' HATS, POKES and BONNETSCHILDRENS' LACE HATS and LKGHOUN FLATS.

BONNETS,

DEALER

ts-- a. LAitiiK A.MSOBTMBMT OF tm

CHILDREN S SUk and Ca.hin.r, COATS --UNWRAPS If.tl Ct,mpl,t, ,,

Page 3: THE HAWAIIAN STAR....simt "OCEANK " Feb. 12, 1894 tmr "CHINA" March 26, 1894 'nir "GAELIC May 14. 1H04 RATES OF PASSAGE ARE AS FOLLOWS: M VOKO It) NUM.-KON-II UiA. Cabin, $1 50 00

HOW TO BE BALDHEADED.

If You Long For 1 his Sign of Culture,You Can Get It

A medical authority laims thai bald-

ness is a product ami sign of ulture.

If haldni-s- s is a sign of culture, some-

thing devoutly to he wished, we shall

perform a public service in showing

how this condition can be quickly

reached."Wc lose in the course of time,"

said Voltaire, "our teeth, our hair andour ideas." That may be true as far

as the teeth and ideas are concerned,but we cannot always depend on losing

our hair.Persons who long for proofs of cul-

ture must resort at once to the methodsof art. The first good rule is to keepthe head warm. In summer, if youwish tO become bald, do not wear a

straw hat. On the contrary let yourheadgear be a felt or cloth hat, a derbyor a stovepipe- In winter always weara fur cap. While in the house, at alltimes of the year, do not fail to wear afez or an oil cap.

Women whose light hats do not wearoff the hair rapidly enough may accom-plish that end by using heavy switchesof false hair, which will work even morerapidly than a fur cap, as the hair willfall out by the hundreds when the rollis heavy enough. The beloved nightcap, so dear to our grandmothers, is tobe highly recommended also. The hel-

met of the officer and policeman is alsoa splendid invention. What is the effectof these head coverings ? They makethe head perspire.

Moisture is the deadly enemy to hair.On the temples and the back of thehead near the neck, usually untouchedby hats and caps, it is seldom that onesees baldness. A bald ring often marksthe position of the hat or cap. Oaryoung dandies who curry their headsevery morning with two brushes and in

the course of a day comb their hairwhenever they see a mirror are on theright path to baldness. That is alsotrue of women who allow their hair tobe combed by unpracticed servants.

SMOKELESS COAL.

A Large Deposit of a Peculiar FuelDiscovered in Arkansas.

John li. Clements, of the ChristyFire Clay Company, has secured anoption on 6ooo acres of coal land in

the Ouchita River district in Arkansas,

which may go far toward solving thesmoke question. It can be burned on

the fljor in a parlor without giving off

any smoke. Mr. Clements has been

after the property for some time, andhas had the coal tested at the Christyworks, the Crystal Plate Class Works,the Beileville Gas Works and otherplaces. A shipment of it is to bereceived at the St. Louis Sanitaryworks, to be tested there.

The coal is found in a large deposit,the vein being forty two inches wideIt contains 20 per cent, of oil, whichhas been found to be very valuable in

making paint. A bar of iron paintedwith it has been placed in a fire andsubmitted to an intense heat withoutdisturbing the paint. It is also claimedthat it is much better forgas than Pittsburg coal, which is used here entirelyThe Jonly question is said to be theexpense in placing the coal on tnmarket here. As far as can now beseen it can be mined and placed on thebarae at so cents a ton, and can belanded here at $3.5 at a good profitIf this proves to be true, it is said MrClements has something better than agold mine, as the deposit is in inexhaustible supp'y. if. Louis Ptxpcr.

STRANGELY REUNITED.

Advertised for a Wife and FoundOne He Had Lost Twenty one

Years Ago.

the

After a separation lasting twenty-on- e

years, John H. Morrison and his wife

have been reunited. In 1865 'SquireMorrison wedded Miss Fry, in York

county, and five years later came here

to reside. He remained here for twoyears, and, meeting business reverses,went West, leavintr his wife and fourdaughters here, and nothing was heardof him until last March, when an advertisement for a wife appeared in aHarrisburg paper signed John H.Morrison. It was seen by one of bisdaughters. She answered it. Morrison received 617 answers to his adver-

tisement, but reijlied only to the onewritten bv his daughter. In the correspondence that followed their relationshii) was disclosed, and when hi

learned his wife was still living he madearrangements to take htr to his Westernhome. A letter received yesterdaystates that they recognized each otheron sight at the railway station in Oklahoma. Lanmstir (Pa.) Press.

Receptacle For Veils.

A pretty veil holder is made of

board about 1 2 by 8 inches in size

neatlv covered with a piece of india

silk r brocade. On one side of th

board underneath the silk place a few

layers of cotton batting, with sachetnowder scattered over it. On this sameside outside the silk sew two bindswhite or colored elastic to match thecovering, attaching them to the silk at

the ends only and letting ihem runparallel across the length of the boardinches anart. Under these the vei

when folded are easily slipped and Ice)

in place.

Frilled Curtains,

Frilled curtains have now come gen

erally in v gue and give a graceful t

feet, being a considerable advance on

the straight line finish employed some

years ago. A soft lace about six inches

deep on the reverse or window side ot

these frills imparts a

what fuller effect.soft and some

THH HAWAIIAN STAR, 5. SIX

Ckiuv.t I stiller I i cm cnt.

H. S. TREGLOAN &

Merchant Tailors !

OFFER TO THE (1KNERAI, PUBLIC THEIR LARGE

AND COMPLETE STOCK OF

oreign Woolens for Spring & Summer

AT 20 PER CENT DISCOUNT FOR CASH,

Busiuess Suits Reduced to Twenty-tw- o Dollars nnd 50 Cents

Business Pants Reduced to Six Dollars and 50 Cents.

Corner Fort & Hotel Sts.

TAHITILemonade Works Co.,

23 Nuuanu, Honolulu, H. I.

MANUFACTURERS OK

High Class Beverages

.emonade, Soda Water,

Ginger Ale, Hop Ale,

Sarsaparilla,

Plain Soda

TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 18JW. PAGES.

SON,

Sarsaparilla and

Iron Water,

Seltzer Water,

Etc., Etc., Etc.

A Trial Order Solicited

BENSON, SMITH & CO.,AGENTS.

The Hawaiian News Co.Ld

STATIONERS,News and Music Dealers,

25 and 27 MERCHANT STREET, KEEP ON HAND

A Superior Assortment of Goods Blank Books, all kinds; Memorandum Books, in grea variety

1'IANOS, GUITAKS, MANDOLINS,

Sheet Music Subscriptions Received for any Periodical Published.

AGENTS FOR

Klinkner's Red Rubber Stamp and Yost Type Writer.

ENTERPRISE PLANING MILL.

PETER HIGH,OKKICK AND Ml 1. 1.,

On Alakea and Richards near Queen Street,

ty Prompt attention to all orders.

iH.t3T Matual 55.

Proprietor.

Honolulu, H.I.

MOULDINGS,Doors, Sash, Blinds, Screens, Frames, htc.

TURNED AND SAWED WORK.

TELEI'HONf p Bel) 448

(Gnirv.il Atlttrrtltrmentt.

...THE....

PRESSPublishing

Company:LIMITED

109BETHEL STREET: OPPQSITE

POST OFFICE. TELEPHONE :

"BELL" "MUTUAL" 365.

PRINTERS

fa'f;rv description of ion,BOOK AND COMMERCIAIPRINTING, PAPER - RULINGAND BOOK. -- BINDING.

Lowest CASH Prices!

California Feed Co.

T. J- Kim; am J. N. WklQH r,

Have just received the Larg-

est Stock of H AY and GRAINever imported by any firm in

Honolulu, by any one vessel.This stock was personally se-

lected by our Manager T. J.King during his recent trip tothe coast, anil is first class in

every particular. We guaran-tee satisfaction in quality andprice.

Give us a Trial.

KING & WRIGHT.Telephones 121. Prompt Delivery

lH II

A FEW OF OUR SPECIALTIES.

Complete Assortment or

"SUPERIOR"

Stoves and Ranges" EUREKA" RANGES,

" CLIPPER " CABOOSKS,LAUNDRY STOVES,

FRENCH RANGESset in brick.

AGATE IRON WARE,and TIN WARE,

COLUMBUS' WROUGHT STEELSINKS, Galvanized and WhiteEnameled,

RUBBER HOSE,CAL. LAWN SPRINKLERS.

She! Metal Goodt in Tin, Copper or lialvanizeil Iron tin hand or made lu urtkr.

Kull line of Sanitary (loods, Haih Tubs,LavfttorieCt Watei CloMftt, Pipe and Fittings

We arc equipped fr wurk f all kinds inI he Sheet Metal ami Plumbing Trade, and cmguarantee thorough workmanship and mis'.

Man materials In Lhasa lines.We "licit yum patronage.

J. Emmcluth & Co.No. 6 Nuuanu si., and 104 Merchant it.

Native Fans and IslandCurios,

IN CikPAl VARIETY A llll.

lElito" Ice Cream Payors

7.

C

&0

0 8o Iu t

w3

in 3

u0a

Gcncv.il JVobcrii.cmcnt&.

H ARDWARE, Builders and General,

always up to the limes in quality, styles and prices.

Plantations Supplies,a full assortment suit the v.inous demands.

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

CULTIVATORS' CANE KNIVES.

Agricultural Implements,l jcs, Shovels, Mattocks, etc,, etc.

Carpenters', Blacksmiths'and Machinists' Tools,

Screw Plates, Taps and Dies, Twist Drills,Paints and Oils, Brushes, Glass,

Asbestos Hair Felt and Felt Mixture.Blakes' Steam Pumps,

Weston's Centrifugals.

SEWING MACHINESiWilcox & Gibbs, and Remington.

Lubricating Oils, X?e,m"puiGeneral Merchandise,

it is not possible to list everything we have; if there is anythingyou want, come and ask for it, you will he politely treated

No trouble to sin w goods.

HENRY DAVIS & Co.52 Fort Street, Honolulu, H I.

GROCERS AND PROVISION DEALERS !

Purveyors to the United States Navy and l'ro isioneis of War Vessels

FAMILY GROCERIES. TABLE LUXURIES. ICE HOUSE DELICACIES.

Coffee Roasters and Tea Dealers.

Island Produce a SpecialtyFRESH BUTTER and BOGS.

We are Agents and First Handlers of Maui Potatoes,

AND SELL AT LOWEST MARKET RATES.

P. O. Box 505. Both Telephones Number 130.

For the Volcano !

Natures Grandest Wonder.

The Popular and Scenic liouteis BY THE

Wilder's Steamship Company's

Ai STEAMER KINAU,Fitted with Electric Light, Electric Hells, Courteoui ami Attentive Service

VIA HILO:

The Kill Leaves Honolulu Every 10 Day,

TUESDAYS and FRIDAYS,Arriving at Hilo Thursday and Sunday Mornings

From Hilo to the Volcano 30 Miles,

Passengers are Conveyed in Carriages,TWENTY-T- W MILHS,

Over a Splendid Macadamized Roap, running most f theway through ;i Dense Tiopical Forest a ride alone worth thetrip. The balance of the road on horseback.

ABSENT FROM HONOLULU 7 DAYS!

--rr TIC IEC 33 T S, lIncluding All Expenses,

For the Round Trip, : : Fifty Dollars.For Further Information, Calx at the Office,

Comer Fort and Queen Streets.

(General bucrtiGcmcnts.

We are Still Importing

Goods.Among other things the

bark" G. V Wilcox" broughtus the following:

Hubbuck's Genuine, No.I and No. .'I W hite Lead, in 26,50 or 100 lb. iron kegS,

Hubbuck's White ZincRed Lead, pale boiled and raw--

Oil. Stockholm and Coal Tar.in barrels or drums. CastileSoap, Shot. HI; to Nb. 10,lunched Horse Shoes, SalSoda, galv'd Anchors, BrushDoor Mats, flexible steel andiron Wire Rope, Seine TwineHarris' Harness Liquid, Daj& Martin Blacking, galvanizedBuckets and I ubs, Chain, blk.and galv'd to Sfa; galv'rlSheet Iron, No. 16 to 26:finned Wire, Copper Wire,No. 10 to 20, black and galv'dFence Wire, Not. 4, 9 and c.Blue Mottled Soap, Anvils,70 to 200 lbs.; Blacksmith'sVises, all sizes; a large assmt.of Bar Iron, kegs Dry Vene-tian Red, Yellow Ochre, ParisYellow. Burnt Umbre. I 'It.Blue, Paris Green, MetallcPaint, etc.

Also, received ex Australia,2G00 asst'd Elect. Lamps,Hose, Butcher Knives, Carv-er. Carriage (doss Paint, Sulphur Bellows, Scissors, Shoe,Paint and Varnish Brushes;Buckles, Picture Cord, Furni-ture Nails, Tape Measures,Jennings Bits, Yale Padlocks,Oilers, galv'd Swivels. WhiteShellac, Gold Leaf, LeatherWashers, and at last our tineassmt. of Wostenholm PocketKnives and Razors has gothere.

We were almost out of thosefine swing Razor Strops, buthave a new lot this steamer.We have a fnll line of Elec-trical Goods, and can wirehouses for Electric Lights cmshort notice. Now is the time;to leave your order for wiring,as in a few months the currentfor lights can be furnished andthen everyone will want lightsat once, and those whose hous-es are wired will of course getlights first.

E. 0. HALL & SON.Limited.

Cor. Fort & Kino Sts.

Criterion SaloonAGENTS VOR

ohn WiBland Brewing Co

E X T R A.

Pale Lager BearPer Australia.

A Fresh Invoice ok Califor-nia Oysters,

Oyster Cocktails a Specialty.L H DEE, l'rop'r.

BEAVER SALOON.Fort Street. - opposite Wilder & Co.'i

H. J. NOI.TE, 1'Roi'kiKioK.First clas Lunches Served with Tel. UcJbt,

Smla Water. Giiiei Ale or M'lk.t--t Smokers' Requisites a Specialty.

Open from i a.m. till 10 p.m.

W. AHANA.MERCHANT TAILOR,

No. 50 Merchant Slieet, Honolulu.

Fine mill from $14 up. I. men and L'ltpcsuits, 96.jo up.

ALL suns GUARANTEED TOI IT AND IN THE LATEST

STYLE

Clothe Cleaned nn Repaired.44 (

THE MUTUAL

Life Insurance Go.

Of New York.

ASSETS Dm, 81, IMI2. $175,681156.01

s. B. ROSK,General Agent, Htwauan island

M PHILLIPS & CO.,

Importers and Jobbers of American and

European Or) Goods.

Cornel Port nii tjue.-i- i Street, Honolulu.1 7 r

Page 4: THE HAWAIIAN STAR....simt "OCEANK " Feb. 12, 1894 tmr "CHINA" March 26, 1894 'nir "GAELIC May 14. 1H04 RATES OF PASSAGE ARE AS FOLLOWS: M VOKO It) NUM.-KON-II UiA. Cabin, $1 50 00

PULLING A TIGERS TOOTH

Vrofessor Fritz MlOH gently wiped

the blood from I pair Of g istitter's

pliers yesterday afttrnuon, says the

Chicago Tilths."It is harder to pull a ligef'l tooth

than an Alderman's leg," he rematked,

under the Impression that b( was

(juoting from the proverbs Ol S. toitiol).

'I'hc professor was in a profuse pcrspira

tion. His shirt sleeves were rolled up.

A few yards away in her cage at the

HagMtMCh menagerie Kitty WM penl

ing and swearing. Her whole li or

eight feet of brown and black stripci

quivered with rage. Kitty ; ue 01

the larnest tigresses in he mammoth

menagerie, and she had just submittedmost unwil to an operation thatcost her a tooth

For three weeks past Kilty has beenthe victim of a remorseless toothache

a regular double-act- li n

anguish that lied knots in her tail andkept her awake nights. Kitty's howlskept the whole menagerie awake. Sheused to tramp up and down her cage

and Knock her head against the wall tosee if that would produce any goodresults. The entire population was I

despair.Life was not worth living at the

Hagenbach hostelry. There werepontes, high bred animals with valetsto put their manes In paper and sand-

paper their backs into gl lislness, whohad not had as much sleep in a weekas a Brighton Park policeman securesin one hour of duty. S imething hadto be done about it. 1'oultici s weretried, and Kitty swallowed a half dozenthe first night. That gave her indi-

gestion, and she was ranri demonstra-tive than ever. They tried opiates.Professor Mauss determined Upon a

radical reform yesterday.Kitty, after a night long din, was

resting peacefully. To her entered theprofessor. Likewise the professor'stwo assistants and a rope. Kittymerely blinked and smacked her lipsat the possibility of masticating anotherpoultice. A moment and a stalwart1 80 pound man was sitting on her headand each of her four paws were graspedin a noose.

"We can hold Forepaughs at thismenagerie business any time,'' said theProfessor.

Kitty struggled and howled andfrothed at the mouth, but it was ail invain. There was a dexterous twirl olthe Professor's pliers, a sharp twingein her lower law. and peace had beenwon for the wild beast show.

How to Prolong Life.

A scientific writer says that anatom-

ical experiment and invesigation show

that the chief characteristc of old age

are deposits of earthy matter of a

gelatinous and fibrinous character in

the human system. Carbonate and

phospate of lime mixed with other salts

of a calcareous nature have been found

to furnish the greater part ol theseearthy deposits. As observation shows,

man begins in a gelatinous condition.

He ends in an osseous or bony one,

soft in infancy, hard in old age. By

gradual change in the long space of

years the ossification comes on, but

after passing middle life a more markeddevelopment of the ossific charactertakes place. Of course these earthydeposits which affect all the physicalorgans naturally interfere with theirfunctions. Partial ossitieation ol tne

heart produces the imperfect circulationof the blood which artects tne agedWhen the arteries are clogged with cal

careous matter, there is interferencewith the circulation, upon which nutrition depends. Without nutrition tin reis nn iwiwir of the bodv. Hence in his

"The Physiology of Common LiC

G. H. Lewes states that "il the repairwere always identical with the wastelife would only then be terminated byaccident, never by old age.'' BothBichat and Baillie considered that thegreater number of people past sixtysuffer more or less from arterial ossihcation, which brings about obstructionsin the proper and healthy circulation of

the blood.

Akka Pigmies.

Dr. Stuhlmann has brought h roe

two Akka pigmies. He rescued them

from the man-eatin- tribes of the Man-jem-

'These little fellows undoubtedly

belong to tne most interesting pigmy

tribe in Central Airica. The bead is

unusually large and sits on a il nder,

thin neck. The upper body is long,

the shoulders strikingly broad, with1 ng, thin arms dangling from them.

All the joints are large and clumsy

except the hands, which bettay greatrefinement of contour and delicacy.

Not much is known of their language.

'The two pigmies are aged seventeenand fifteen years old, respectively ; botare females. For their tour aroundthe world tiny have been dressed in

childish fashion, with short frocks.Their behavior before an audience is

extremely childish. They either hidetheir face- - behind their hands, turntheir backs on the spectators or laughand giggle immoderately. All theirmotions are apish.

At present the (ierman anthtopiare attempting to decide whether

the reduced size ol their bodies is dueto physical dt generation or whetherCCOmmodtting themselves to the terri

torial conditions of their native landhas brought about a gradual recon-

struction of their f rms.

Only a Trifling Difference.

'The American constitution makesfew distinctions on the ground of sexin conferring privileges upon lil.z. ns.For instance, to men it guarantees thenghl to bear anus and to women bareshoulder-.- . Ntv York He mid.

1

(Senctrtl JUHJcrttecmenU.

a Big week HAWAIIANThill's what it is at

King Bros.' Art Empori-um, a li week ior thehouse, ana a bigger weeklor buyers of everythingin their line. This weekthey have an especiallyfine display of pictures,artists' supplies, mirrors,photograph and autog-

raph albums, wall brack-

ets and easels, plush fancygoods and novelties, thelatest st) les of mouldingsfor framing and cornices,a full line of window polecornices, etc. Now is thetime to have portraits en-

larged in crayon or indtaink by first class artistsat lowest rates.

King Bros.HOTEL STREET

1 it.

Aim at the DrakeAmi ynu are bound to hit sonic of the

ducks. This is precisely the same with

Wampole'sTastelessPreparation

OF

Cod Liver Oil.

It aims to cure Consumption,Hits the Mark, too. and itmost effectuallybreaks up Colds,Coughs. Hoarseness and all

I hroat and Lung troubles thatcause this disease.

It is natural logic to concludethat if Wampole's PreparationOF Con LlVER On. has powerto prevent Consumption, it sure-

ly is able to cure these lesseremergencies.

This vigor-makin- g, fat pro-

ducing preparation is Absolute-ly Tasteless, in so far as CodLiver Oil is concerned. Allyou notice is a delightful flavorof Wild Cherry and Anise.

Hut the purest NorwegianCoil Liver Oil is there all thesame. It is a great blood en- -

richer. Best of all it is a natural food that in its stomachiceffects, actually assists its ownassimilation.

In Pulmonary or Bronchialtroubles it is unequalled. Noone doubts the value of CodLiver Oil, but not every one is

.11. .1auie to taKe it.

WAMPOLE'S PREPARATION

removes the nauseous objectionand actually makes Cod LiverOil palatable.

KEPT IN STOCK AND SOLD BY

HOLLISTER & Co.

Druggists.log pour Sikeet, Honolulu.

The Central Market.Always have on hand choice Beef, Million,

Vtal and Poultry. Wc make Sausages u

specialty. Give us a trial and be convinced.

We have the Ileal. Our Corned lleef is o

the very liest.

WKSTBKOOK ft GAKES,Proprietors.

Both Telephones 104. otitf

Club Stables Co.s. f, graham, Manager,

Livery, Feed and Sale Stables.

Fori struct, Bktwum HotilAN ll HhRKTANlA.

BOTH TELEPHONES No. 477-

ey Connected with Hack StandCorner King and Bethel Sts.

BOTH TELEPHONES, No. 113

THE HAWAIIAN STAR, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 8, U08. SIX PAGES

(general Hbtttrtiecmmti

The Star now has the larg

est of any

paper,

daily.

In

and is

its new form, the paper

will print

THE

STAR.

circulation evening

gaining

is much reading

matter as any other Hawaiian

journal, and will report the

news of its entire oafish with

freshness and accuracy.

Editorially the Star is an

outspoken and consistent ad

vocate of annexation to the

United States.

The paper will be delivered

at any hoese in Honolulu for

50 cents per month.

THE

HAWAIIAN

STAR.

of

Ordinary LifeEndowment 1'

Semi TontineFree Tontine

Offers Insurance on all the Popular Plans, viz.:

Plan,Ian,Plan,Plan,

Indemnity Bond Plan (Coupon

general JtonertttenttttM.

EQUITABLELife Assurance Society the United States

,ndat niaturity( desired ,

Endowment Bond Plan (5 guaranteed)

1 will costmake lurtlier inquiries.

vim nothina call at the

Tontine Plan (Ni-.w- CHtAfand R Ad ),

oint Life Risks,Partnership( hildren's Endowments,

'Term etc., etc, etc.

of the undersigned, andsie-ilk- you lime insure, 11 nuiinj

your pocket.

Bruce A. J. Cartwright,Managers for the Islands EQUITABLE Life Assurance Society of U

JOHN NOTT.

Wrought Steel Ranges, Chilled IronCooking Stoves.

HOUSEKEEPING GOODS:AGATE WARE (White, Gray and Nickle-plated- ), PUMPS, WATER AND

SOIL PIPES, WATER AND URINALS,HOSE AND LAWN SPRINKLERS, BATH TUBS AND STEEL

0. GUTTERS AND LEADERS, SHEET IRON,ZINC AND LEAD, LEAD PIPE AND PIPE FITTINGS.

Plumbing, Tin, Copper and SheetIron Work.

DIMOND BLOCK: 95-9- 7 STREET.

New Furniture Store,ROBINSON BLOCK.

Hotel Street, between Fort and NuuanuIs nw opetuil business, an. has in stock the finest assortment f

ANTIQUE OAK BED ROOM SETS,CHIFFONIERS, SIDEBOARDS,

EXTENSION TABLES, Etc.ALSO a fine assortment of

Reed and Rattan Furniture.

UPHOLSTERY.Fine Spring) IJftlr, Wool, Moss and Straw MaUr&Met Live ueese Peathera and S Ik K

Pillows, Special attention called to our latest style i mkk aia i i K&aaj&s,the best and cheapest ever brought to tliis country. Fine Lounge and Sola

Bodij San Francisco prices. Complete assortment o BabyCarriageSi Cribs, Cradles, and High Chairs.

make a

Cornice Poles in Wood Brass Trimming?.specialty Laying Matting ami Interior decorating. .

91 if BELL,

to

A n ivi

out to win ue

S.

S,

fr

tor

nt

orof

furniture and Mattresses Repaired by Eirst Class Workmen,Cabinet Making in all its (tranche

A. trial is solicited. Lowest Prevail.

525.

ORDWAY PORTER,TELEPHONES.

Genuine Clearance Sale!All in our Large

Down to theBrewer

Instalment

Annuities,Insurance,

office

Hawaiian

CLOSETS RUBBER

COP-

PER,

KING

Sts.

Prices&

Goods

Block.

Insurance,

Robinson Block, Hotel Sireel.MUTUAL

and Varied Stock MarktoLowest Prices.

EGAN & GUNN.514 Fort Street.

Call and see the bargains we are offering.78 it

CHILDREN AND INFANTS'

Hats and Boonets.Iiiniit'iist' Variety At

N. S. SACHS,

645.

104 Fort Street - - Honolulu.CH1LDRENS CAMBRIC HATS, all cobra. 60 cents and upwards; d MULL

HATS, 111 delicate shade, from $17, pwards.CH1LDKENS' SILK HATS, POKES aud BONNETS.CHILDRENS LACE HATS and LEGHORN FLATSINFANTS' LACE UONNhlS. Infanta Muslu: BONNETS from 5.1 cents and upwards.SUN BONNETS in great variety at as cents and upwards.

M A I. A KOI''. AHHOU'l'MKST OK MCHILDREN'S WHITE PRESSES, ueatly made at to, 75 centa ami upwards.CHILDREN'S Sua and Caaliuisre COATS and WRAPS Infanta Complete out6i.

So if

ftentntl ucvticicmcnl

M. W. MeCHESNEY k SONS,

AGENTS

Honolulu Soap Works Co

Laundry Soap

42, 56 and 6 5 bars to case

One Hundred Pounds,

HIGHEST

PRICE

PAID

TALLOW!

K. W. MeCHESNEY & SONS,

Wholesale Grocers,

Honolulu, H. I.

FOR

A FULL LINE

G ROC E R I ESAlways rn Hand,

FRESH GOODSlVr Every Steamer and Sail.

S 3? E O I --A. Il, T I E S 1

Cheese, Lard, Hams, Butter,Codfish, Milk, Onions,

Crackers, Potatoes, Salmon,

Macaroni, Com Meal,

Pickled Skipjack, Alvicore,

Herrings,

Flour, Grain and lieans.

Saddle Leather, Harness Leather

And All Kiniis of

Leather and Nails for Shoemakers.

Hawaiian Wine Co! RANK BROWN, Manager,

28 and 30 Merchant Street, Honolulu, H.70 iy

CHAS. F. PETERSON.

Typewriter, Conveyancer and

Notary Public.Otlice over Bishop's Hank,

LOHEIDE,Sign & Ornamental Painter

CA

M. H.

BELL TELEPHONE ,57.

Ml Orders Promptly Attended totii if

Hard Times Mean Close PricesTo House Keepers.

If you are in need of any Nciv or Second-hand IURNITURK, RUGS, STOVES,SKWINtMACIIINKS, Etc., call at the

I X LFurniture & Commission House,

Corner Nuuanu and King streets.18 If

tikttefdl Jlblicvticicmcnlti.

IT IS EASY

TO BRAGbut decidedly of more value tohave Your Work speak foritself.

We base our claim upon theactual Results obtained in thepast, in the correction of allvisual defects, no matter howcomplicated.

We grind lenses speciallyneeded for complicated cases,insuring an absolute fit.

Is this of any value to you,or do you prefer buying yourGlasses at haphazard, notknowing if they help or injnre.your eyes.

Would you give your eyesight for all you possess? Notif you know it. Then givethem proper care while yruhave them; and when you feelthey need attention, alwaysconsult

H. F. WICHMANSCIENTIFIC OPTICIAN,

517 Fort Street.

The Palace Ice Cream Parlors,Hotel Street, Honolulu.

Ice Cream, Sherbets.

65

Ice Cream SodaA Choice Assortment

French & Plain Mixed Candies

nfTee, Tea or Chocolate with Sandwiches,served at all hours.

ly

of

Mrs. ATWOOD, Proprietress.

SEWING MACHINESCall in and examine the

NEW BUTTONHOLE MACHINE

And our new stock of

ine Singer Sewing Machines.B. BERGENSEN,

General Agent.Bethel Street, Honolulu, Damon block.

Repairing Done- -

THOS. G. THRUM'S

UP TOWF

SMoBery Bool Store

I 06 Fort Street.Slill keeps on liaml a varied slock ol Office,

mmercial and rumonable Stationery, con- -

m pan of Engrowlng and Legal papersand Wrapper!, Klal and folded Cap, broad andnarrow Hill. Statement. Inurnal and Ledgerpapers Linen and other letter and note papersin fold or tablet form, with or without en-

velopes; Island View Letter paper and ViewNote fapeteries; Correspondence, Menu, Balland Visiting Curds, etc., etc., replenishing thesame from time to lime and adolnfl noveltiesas they appear.

Books Besides a full line of BlankBooks, in the various sizes and bindings TimeBooks, Log Books, Agents' and Notaries'Records, Receipts, Nole and other form books,Memo, and Bass Books, the variety ol Miscel-laneous Works, Teachers' and other Bibles,Children's books, Linen and other Toy Books,etc., etc., invites attention.Special Import Orders for

Books, Music, etc.,made up Monthly.

News The News Department htl careful attention for prompt forwardance ol allperiodicals. Supscriptions entered at any timeand periodicals not regularly received will beordered a de.sired.

All Subscriptions Payablein Advance.

A large stock of Seaside and other librariesonhand, and new Novels received by every mailArti.sts' Drawing Materials, and a full supplyof Wfntor & Newton's oil colors, brushes,canvas, stretchers, etc., kept on hand or pro-cured on short notice.

Albums in their several kinds, WorkBoxes and Baskets, Toilet and Manicure sets,Vases, Card Receivers, Leather Goods, Parlorgames and Toys in variety, Dolls and Dollsundries.

Ease Balls, Bats, Masksand Gloves

Kor all aspiring enthusiasts in the profession;all grades.

Binding The Book Binding and PaperRuling Department still fills all orders entrust-ed to it in the manufacture of special workrebinding, plain and intricate ruling, mapmounting, paper cutting and Mocking, etc.Music hound with care.

Printing-Printi- ng orders of all kinds,executed in lust class manner.

In all the above lines in which T. U. T. hasbeen for over twenty year identified in thiscity, heinvitcs correspondence, and guaranteesprompt and careful attention to all orders

him.

In making up an order, see that it includes asubscription for yourself and foi one or morerelatives or friends abroad to "The Friend'the oldest paper published in the Pacific, RevS. E. Bishop, Editor; published monthly, at$2 pel annum, devoted to the religious andeducational Interests of these Islands, as alsoa recorderof political and other current eventsSample copies mailed to any address. Alimited number of advertisements inserted atrersonalile rales.

The Hawaiian Annual now init. Nineteenth amiyear, acknowledged notonly IS the DM) authority on all informationpertaining to the Islands that residents shouldknow and strangers invariably ask, hut theonly reference book of Hawaiian statistics,and annual recorder of current and reminis-cent events. There are homes probably InIhis land in which il is unknown, except byname, and Ihere are numerous friends abroadto whom this publication would afford untolds.itislaction fo the fund of reliable informationit imparts in its one hundred and fifty or morepages, With nothing of the "Guide Book" gushabout it. Price per. copy to any address inthese island,, 75 cents; or mailed to anyaddress 111 the Postal Union foi 85 cents each

Page 5: THE HAWAIIAN STAR....simt "OCEANK " Feb. 12, 1894 tmr "CHINA" March 26, 1894 'nir "GAELIC May 14. 1H04 RATES OF PASSAGE ARE AS FOLLOWS: M VOKO It) NUM.-KON-II UiA. Cabin, $1 50 00

HALF A CENTURY A(H).

RECOLLECTIONS CF AN OLD

WHALER.

Honolulu as it Appeared Fifty Years

Ago Its Grass Church and

Other Buildings

Kvetyone who has lived in Honoluluany length nf time must know

E. W. Norton, who formerly had a

cooperage business here and now keeps

a store on Kurt street, but everyone

does not know that it is nearly fifty years

since he first came to Honolulu. In

July, 1843, Mr. Norton sailed from

New Bedford, Miissachussets, in theWhaler Phiebus, occupying the position

of cooper, one of Ce nsidtrable import-

ance on board a whaling ship. Thevessel put into Hilo in the following

spring, staying there some five or six

weeks. At tint time HIM was

not much of a place, although

Mr. Norton recollects there were

three or four ship chandlers' stores,

one being owned by a man named

Pitman and another by George Moore.It rained nearly all the time the Phcebus

was off Hilo. The vessel then sailed

for Honolulu and stayed here aboutthree weeks. The (oil wing descriptionof the appearance of Honolulu at that

time, the spring of 1844, is taken from

Mr. Norton's lecollections as given toa Star representative this morning

but the time being so long since, the

dates may not be exact in every in

stance.At the time of Mr. Norton's first

visit there were no regular wharves orthe Honolulu water front. The water

at high tide came up to the foot of

Fort street which at that time extendedno further than where Queen streetnow is. The whalers then anchoredtwo or three miles out, all communica-tion with the shore being had by theirown boats which landed at the font ofNuuanu street at a landing built on thespot now occupied by the otifice ofthe Inter Island Steamship Company,Honolulu was the last port of call forwhalers before proceeding to the northand it was here that the main watersupply for the cruise was taken onboard. The empty water casks werebrought from the various ships inwhaleboats, rolled up to the springwhich used to bubble forth ata spot a little behind thebuilding now occupied by M. S.

Grinbaurn & Co., filled by hand androlled back again to the boats. Thenwere no water works or pipes in Honolulu in those days, and it was not tillseveral years aftei that that verynecessary fluid was even peddledaround from carts.

The principal building in the city in

1844, with the exception of the Fori,was the one now occupied by J. A.

Magoon and otheis for office purposesIt was then used as a Custom House,and if Mr. Norton's memory strves himcorrectly, C. H Bishop was the Col-

lector at that tune. There were veryfew lumber buildings, and none ofbrick. The Fort, which stood on theblock extending from Levey's corner toHopper's planing mill, was built ofstone and adobe ana was tne most im-

posing building in the town. Its lowerend formed a sort of sea-wa- ll againstwhich the surf was continually washing.On the top of this wall several cannonwere mounted, which give the buildingits name. It was used in those daysas a prison, police Court, and for otherpurposes. The streets above Queenwere laid out, what there were of them,on present lines but the houses wirenearly all of grass, many large build-

ings being constructed of that material.Mr. Norton remembers the old Kaumakapili church as being the largestof these grass structures. It was

about 100 feet lone by 30 or

40 wide, and would hold sevenor eight hundred people. Of the few

wooden buildings in existence the shipchandlery store of Pearce & Brewer onNuuanu street, the Liberty Hall on

. Maunakea and the Bungalow on Palacesquare were about the largest. I herewere numerous saloons in those dayswhich did a fl mrishing trade with thecrews of the whale ships, and Mr.

Norton remembers one called " HieBlonde," kept by J. Booth, which DC

cupied the corner where the I. X. Lstore now stands ; another one on thsite of Horn's candy store, kept by

Jack llurtlett, and afterwards by a mannamed Bowen. There was anotherone on Nuuanu street, kept by onePearson, which ran through to RoseCottage lane, besides others. Theonly hotel in the city was called the"White Swan ' and was situated onKing street, near Nuuanu, andwas carried on by Bill Gill ; theold Commercial H.tel on kingstreet and Rose lane was builtsoon afterwards. Below Queen street

in those days was a sandy beachover which Mr. Norton has rowedmany a time in u whale boat.

After a stay of about three weeks thePhiebus sailed for the north, the cruisebeine a Lonfl one, and it was not 11

1847 that her oil bairel-- . were filled and

she sailed f r home. The vessel putinto San Francisc lor water just afterthe discovery of gold, and Mr. Nortonwith others, went ashore at the piesentsite of the town of Sausalito, wherefresh water and beef were procured.

The vessel arrived off Sausalito on

Sunday afternoon and sailed the nextMonday, 10 Mr. Norton had no time tovisit the village of Yerba Buuia, or

what is now Sin Francisco. The

Phiebus arrived in New Bedford in

January, 1848, having been away four

years and a half.In 1851 Mr. Nort' n sailed again on

the same vessel, but this was a very

successful trip, the vessel being outonly eighteen months. A stoppage forwater and stores was mud.-i- Ibnioiulu

th going and coining from the north.Mr. Norton ( ontiniied in the whalingtrade, as cooper and as officer, until

854, when he arrived in Honolnlu onthe Champion, and has remained everinCe. I lie riots of Ifse? took plai t:

during one ot his visits here, and hewas here again in the springof 1831 when the smallpox Wttepid mil

and the natives were dying ff likebeep. he riots of 1852 arose from

the atrtst ef a seaman lioin one of thewhalers who was imprisoned in theFort and died there, so it Wl believedby the sailors, from a blow with a stickadministered by his jiiier. At the timetin re were about a hundred wli.iVrs 111

port and the crews of most of themcame ash. re with the intention ofstorming the Fort and lynching the

racial. I hey were deterred from doing so by the cit'.ens, who with theassistance of the e fticers of the vessels,manned the Foil and successfully de-

fended it. The rioters then ..n KmI

several saloons and stores and it waswith great difficulty they were induced10 return to their respective ships.Martial law was declared in the meantime.

At the lime f Mr. Norton's earlyvisits the inter island trade was mostlyperformed by a fleet of small schoonersowned by Captain Hobron. He. remembers a schooner named the Mariaand one named the Moi Wahine asbeing in the island trade, the latterbt ing under the command of a CaptainC'hadwick. The firm of ship chandlerswith whom the captain of the oldPhcebus did business was Magee &Anthon.

YESTERDAY S RACING

Fred Mac. Wins the Final He?t of thePostponed Event.

The final heat of the sixih race,which was postponed on Saturday on

account of the darkness, was finished

yesterday afternoon, being wen by

Mac, in 2:42. Aupur.i had the bestof the start but bioke badly and couldnot recover. A hall mile running racebells', en Ballantine's Queen L andM cfarlane'a Little One lor $100 a side.the horses to be ridden by their owners,was then arranged. The race Was wonby the firmer in 54 sees. tace between the horses Senator Stanfi rel,

Lord Br ck, Duke Spencer and Amor- -

ino, one mile dash, is being talked of.

CIRCUIT COURT MATTERS.

Judge Whiting Decides a Divorce CaseProbate Matters.

A decision in the divorce case ofJoseph Aea vs. Kahae Aea was handeddown by Judge Whiting this morning.The case was heard by him on Saltirday, and by today's decision the husband is granted a divorce on the groundof adultery.

Judge Cooper was engaged thismorning in passing on the accountsof the executors of the estate of J. N.Robinson, deceased The petition forthe probate of the will of Daniel Han-ley- ,

deceased, also came up.

Trees fcr Punchbowl.

Commissioner Marsden has a planon hand by which he hopes soon tocover the whole slopes of Punchbowlwith algaroba trees. He h,.s contractedfor a number of sacks of beans and wil

be glad to receive donations of more.It is the Commissioner's purpose toask the Government t lit him havethe use of a number ol the prisonersfor a week or two during the winteiseason for the purpose of planting theentire slope of the hill with the se beansand in a few years it will be COVi redwith a heavy growth of trees. Onegood result the Commissioner h..s inview in creating this forest is the lowering of the temperature of this city. Itis claimed that a aoi d forest on theslope of Punchbowl hill would reducethe temperature ot Honolulu from liveto seven degrees.

Rainfall for August.

Owing to the failure of a number ofhis correspondents to forward theirrain cards for last month, ProfeesO!Lyons is unable to make out his usual

statement of the rainfall in these Isl-

ands. From data now in the office,

however, it is learned that the rainfallat Luakaha was 8.50 inches ; at Ewa,zero; at Molckai, windward side, J. 50;at Punahou, 1.60; Kahuku,Lihue, c.04 ; Kilauea plantation, Kauai,3.08. Rep its from all over the islandof Kauai show the weather to havebeen vtry dry there during last month,although light showers were cpiitefrequent. At Kahultii there j- - norain at all.

Denison McLaren.

QcOTM P Denitdll, general super-

intendent of the Oahu Railway was

last evening united in marriage to Miss

Anne McLaren at the residence Of C.

H. Kluegel at Punahou. The cere-

mony was pci formed by Rev. I i

Beckwith. Alter the ceremony thenewly married couple and their fiiendsrepaired to their future home on Kingstrett where an elegant repast wasserved

A Shooting Match.

A shooting match between a teamfrom the Sharpslioote rs and one fr m

the Military has been arranged for next

Saturday week at the grounds of theHawaiian Rifle Association. 'Thecompeting teams will number ten meneac h, thai of the military comprisinglive men from Company A, and the

Lame numb r from Company L. Tnehi ting will be at the joo-yai- range

'and will be for a purse of $200 or less.

THE HAWAIIAN STAR, TCJK8DAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1893. STX PAGES.

ON SHORE TO DRILL.

YANKEE TARS MANEUVER ON

THE DOCK

Sailors and Marines From the AdamsShow What They Can Do As

Infantry

At about 10 o'clock this morningthree boats and a steam launch fromihe "Adarns" landed two companies ofsailors and one1 company of marines atthe Pacific Mail dock where, for overan hour the men were put through a

lively infantry drill.

The battalion was in charge of FirstLieutenant Morton. Lieutenant KanedfffCtrd the maneuvers of th . com-

pany of marines, and Ensigns M.irvelland Mo de c nvn.cnded the two com-

panies of sailois. Ensign Vogelgesangwas ling Adj itant.

The melt were lirorgSt ashore forthe drill on account f better facilities

ffi red for extended tactics, as theAdams aff rds but little room. Themen behaved well, going through tinelrill with the prec ision of ch ck workand showing themselves to be fully upin their regulations. The officers expressed themselves as being satisfiedwith the morning's work.

LETTER FROM A NATIVE.

He Believes in the Removal Principleand Tells Why.

Kditor Star: It is a fact, and itcannot be denied, that secret organizations ait usurping our political appoint-ments to a certain exient in bringing a

pressure upon the heads of the Gov-ernment and bureaus by those whowere never conspicuous since the present Government was established. It isaggravating, and it will be disastrousanel a dangerous precedent if not rem-edied. There are only a few questionsto be asked and inquired into throughregular channels.

First How were his affiliations priorto the hour of the present establishe dGovernment ?

Second Has he signed the annexa-tion re II ?

Third Will he support the presentGovernment by force of arms in case

f an emergency?Fourth -- Is he capable of fulfilling

the said position?Fifth Will he become a citizen or

make Hawaii the land f his adoption?Jnor to his appointment alfidaviishould be swe in to ot at least half a

dozen names before the chairman orjny member of the Executive Committee of the Annexation Club, frommembers thereof, and placed on recordin the above club. There is no doubt,in my opinion, that it the selection iseft entirely to the Executive anel heads

of Bureaus the proper course wouldhave been pursued. As we all knowthat there are two distinct parlies in thefield, viz., R yalist and Annexationist,and, therefore, a person must be a

rank member of either of the two aboveparties.

It is a well known Let amongst themembers f the Annex. .lion Club thaise veral appointments have been madein the ast, ai d will be m..de in thefuture, of men tint have been our f esand enemies, nd that they held commissi, .ns t e Xi cute violc nee and dejih

Kn those thai were instrumental Inestablishing a go. d government, if

martial law had he-e- proclaimed undeit- e monarchy, and none but few wouldhave lived to tell the tile.

Hundreds eif these individuals aresmacking their lips and g ggling in theirshirt sleeves to see Imw timid anddocile we are, and only watching an

pp' rtunity to throw up their hats andsay "nurrah" fur restoration of the ex- -

Que-c- and the Royal st oidard unfurlingin the breeze.

Gkokge Makkham.

THE NAME CHICAGO

Chicago ought to change its name.The French can nt ither speak nor spe ll

the word by whvh the place is kn wn.

Hardly any Englishman can pronounceit rightly A German needs years oftraining (or its utterance. An llalianraises laughter in the Plaisance whenhe ejaculates it. Our Jewish n

from Kussia wrestle with it fora h ng lime, though its first syllable isof Hebraic sound. The colored pei pieof the far South smile whe n thi y try toget it off. Even a member of the tribeof Indians from whose language thewold was stolen, says it has been corrupted out ol reason, The world alhuge is wholly unable to master thename of the boastful Western settlement. There are stories from oldIreland about the attempts of thenatives of that country to speak orspell the title of the naval (hip Chicago,which put in at the port ol Queenstown last month. Some of ihem pron mice the first iyllable A'tv, which isin accord With tin Italian usage, softenthe next consonant e, sharpen thevowel a, and then stnke out into theopen pasiuie. A correspondent of theI una says that, in spelling the name,the Irishme n of Dublin town often"got a frightful twist" on it.

I he wird, ..s a stands, or as it isUttered by the people who live underus shadow, is a nuisance to the wholeworld.

And here we make a suggestion foithe benefit of Chicago, (hat the lastsyllable the woid would nuke a

good enough name hr the plac'True, in calling it Go, the originalsense of the tine old Ii dun nounCheecaqua, w h h uu ans "strong

nli n, would be bjgtj but that is asmall c nsieh ration. Ai ybody cansay Go. even en infant, or a Cannibal,or a M.dwuy periun, or a truckman.

The adoption of thai plain yet expreasive verb as e of the Westernplace would save mankind a lot oftrouble, and relieve man) pe ople frompain in the mouth New )'ork Sun.

THE ANNhXATlON CLUB.

What the New York 'Sun' Says of ItsMembership

Apropos of the statement made byMr. Nordhoff that the organic lionpresenting him with lh memorial repre-sented the entire population, and thatthe support oi the Provisional Govern-ment was created in Honolulu alone,and that ai the othei islands the popu-lation was practical manimous insupp rt of the Queens Government,an analysis of the membership of theAnnexation Club, mad up cm the 18thof June last, shows that there wer.

1,075 native Hawaiian members of thecliih, as agcinst 1,065 American mem-bers ; that there were n the island olHawaii 1.519 members, on the threesmaller islands of Maui, Mnlokai and Lana', 705 number,and on the island of Kauai531 members, making a total membci- -

hip of 5432 Since that d.cte tlVliitaj membership has increased to over6000, m st of the increase beingamong native Hav.eiians. mai v ofwhom had been deterred from i inn gI he Clllb owing to constant reiteration

f the Royalists that Mr Blount would,within a fe w days restore the One eand upon such re st ration any one whohad favored the Pr visional Govern-ment or annexation would be made t

suffe r therefor. As this continuallyreiterated threat docs not materialize-- ,

the natives are losing faith in it andrapidly joining the Annexation Club.

1 he following is a full statement oftl-- membership of the AnnexationClub

MM,iVMnMI

modHawaii l.anai. Oahu Kauai. Jotai

American .... 192 8 726 64 1065iwaiian. . . .431 cSi 407 a io-- c

Portuguese... 785 ;s t 929 lit 21hoierman 19 li 197 84 W

British. . . c4 27 166 4 251Norwegian. 9 4 49 7 SoOther nit nil 7 2(1 201 ; jai

A fact which has not been heretofore known, perhaps, is the fac t thatMr. Nordhoff s son is in tne einplc v

f Mr. SpreckcF in San Francisco.Sun editorial.

The Nuuanu Street Grade.

The grading stakes recently set alongNuuanu street have not been placed in

accordance with a new survey as statedin the morning paper. The surveywas made and the grades of the differ-ent streets fixed years ago, and thepresent street work is all being doneaccording to the original survey.

Accidentally Shot

J. F. Truachler, the German shoemaker who occupies a shop oppositethe Club Stables, accidentally she t

himse lf in tne calf of the leg this after-noo- n

about 3 o'clock, while handlinga revolver. He was taken to the hos-

pital where the wound was attended to.

NEWS IN A NUTSHELL.

A bdnch of keys lost. See advertise m nt.

W. C. Peacock advertises a Ci ttageat W..ikiki for lent.

The dredger is at w ik in the slip atthe foe t c f Nuuanu street.

There is said tu be a herd of .'ocoJapane se deer on Molokai.

C. B. Rip ey, the well known architect, has a new "ad." in this issue.

The subscription bail at the Hotelwill come c ff ne;xt Mi nd y ev. ning.

The sual band concert Was gn n ithe Executive bunding this morning

'The hmg needed sidewalk improvenentl on Nuuanu street are now under

way.

Tne Honotucu football team wil.practice this afternoon at the Muklkigrounds.

A friend y shooting match amon ;

the members of the Rifle Associationis being arranged for mxt Saturday.

The Board of Health will muet :,t

3 v. sf. and will probablytake action on Dr. Trousseau's resign!)tion.

Tommy Kiouse deserves a good dealof credit for the way in which he islixing up the grounds ol the ArlingtonHotel.

A mongoose was captured 011 theRoyal school grounds, and a monsterblue centipede in the bouae ol T. G.Thrum Monday.

D ivid Dayton has filed his finalaccount and petiti n for discharge a

administrate r of the estate of Clias W

Hart, deceased.The fourth pip ! read bef re ihe

Historical Society, rec.-ntl- isse.tii ii

pamphlet lorm, d es not give then.imof Ihe author, by an oversight. Th.paper was wiilten by A. 'f. Alkin on,Inapt ctor General ol schools.

'The question is asked when the

property owners on the plains wi brequired to keep their sidewalks inorder, and whether they are supposedto keep them tree fr m weeds.

Th friends of Dr. C. B Wood atepushing him forward as a fa person t

till the place of Port Physician, madevacant by the resignation of Dr. Troussc an, who il understood to insistth.itthe same shall be usidered final.

Miss Hde wh as announced t

succeed Miss Dale as Music teacher Id

Oahu College, has decideel not toaccept the p. sili n. Miss Hyde w

siBO to have acted as organist at ihe

Central (Jnion Cuuich. As Dr. Andeison has s acceptably filled the latte rp sition the past fi W Sundays it Is se.j,gesied by a good many members of tinCongregation that he be engaged pelmaneiuly.

K LOTS A M AND JETSAM.

SCHOONLR ALICE COOKE IN

PORT

The Waimanalo Sighted Sailing of

the James Makee Post-

poned

'The four-maeta- d schooner AliceCooke, Captain Penhallow, arrived in

port this morning after a thirty! x daysvoyage from Pugel Sound, 'The un-

usually long tiAle consumed in makingthe run Wal due to ontinued calmand light winds The schooner's cargoCc lis. ted uf 900,000 feet f pine lum-

ber consigned to I. ewers - C 11 ike, be-- s

des a Iblge number of poles for theelectric company. Bef.re docking a

fl g pole 125 feet in length was fl tedashore. 'The pole is for Mr. Irwii

and, it is understood, is to be erected at

Waikki.A part of the c ergo of the C. R

Peishc p which siled st 9 a. m. to day.Consisted of tWO Angora goats and a

New Zealand sheep. 'They were thepr perty of Mr. J mes Holt, wno isukii g them to his ranch on Waianae,for breeding purposes.

Tiie steamer Waimanalo was sightedby the schooner Mary E. F sler ai6:30 h st, Sunday while off Waianae,and at 2 P. st she was seentwenty 1n1.es off Diamond Head, beat-ing 111 under st .

The steamer Waialeale sailid thismorning for Lahaina and Hamakusports There were no cabin passengersand few on deck

The dredger has dropped down tothe end of Brewer's wharf where thelarge ledge of rock is now being cutaway.

The diving gear lately borrowed olthe governn ent by the "Boston" wasreturned by a boats crew this morning.

The steam schooner Pele will undergo a complete overhauling before mak-

ing another trip.The ateamer w. g. Hall will go on

the marine railway for repairs duringweek.

The sailing of Ihe James Makee hasbeen postponed till at 4 )'. i.

The bark Alden Besse will sail foiS in Francisco two weeks from today.

'The steamer Mikahala is due thisafternoon from Maui and Hawaii.

TUESDAY, SKPTK.M liKK v

UlUlilMi ) I. V. U jtliernasy. Wind fresh, N. K.

ARRIVALS.

TotanAV, Scptembei 5.Am cn Alice Cooke, Penhallow, from Pugel

Sullied.Stmr Mikahala. C'hane-y- , from Mneii anil

Hawaii.

DEPARTURES.Tuesday, Septembe r 5.

Sum C K Bishop, LeCIaire, for Waianae,WaiaUia anel i'unaluci.

Sour Kaala, (iahan, leer Kilaitcsa anel Ilanale-i- .

Stmr twalanl, freeman, for kauai.Stenr ( laceeline, Uavic-s- fur Maui.

Kawaitaai lr Kcilau.Se.hr Millie Morris fur KootaO.Schf Mary E Foster lur Koolast.

PASSENGERS.

IlKI'AR Tl'RES.Fot Maui, ncr stmr Cleuielinc, Sept 5 Mis- -

H Cornwall, Miss K ('oraweil, W H Coin-wel-

A CeicUiurn, S N Hundley, C F Hor-ner, Mrs Horner, 0 B Mitchell, Sister Reva-la- ,

A Tihi, Mrs Ward. J M Homer. A Homer.

PROJECTED DEPARTURES.Am b'.e Alden Besse, Kreis, for San Francisco,

Wedossd y, Sepi ao.

VESSELS IN PORT.NAV AI. VESSELS.

U S S Boston, Day, San Francisco.U S S Adams, .eisun, San Francisco

MERCHANTMEN.an, lebi Ifiliu, Hitchfietd, Jaluil, SSI.

Am Uk Albert, Gr.ftiihs, San Francisco.Am hark AleJcn Hesse, Tree-re- San Fran.Am bk Discovery, McNeil, san Fran.Am schr Alice Cuoke, PtnbaUoW, Fuyel S'el

FOREIGN VESSELS EXPECTED.Am lk Detroit, lj.'parlure Hay DueAm bgi I I) Sprocket, S 1 (Kah) Due-

Am bgl Airline, San T (Hilo) DueAm bkt S (i Wilder, San DueAm hack Harvester, S F UUIol DueAm hi. trmaard, Laysan fslanei DiliJap Stmr AikokJ Mam. Yokohama, DuAm lk Amelia. lJciget Suund Due-A-

Tkt W 11 Dimorjd, Paget sound.. TuAm hk I'eylnn, San Francisco Sept itAm bkl Planter, San Francisco Sepi 1,Am se lir lowers, puget Sound. Sept 15

U S S Philadelphia, San Fran Sept 2.

lir sh e'oejf M riooeth, Newcastle OctAm hkt Wre stler, Newcastle Oct 5tier hk I ( Finger, lire., en Oct 15Ger h'. Paul Iienbarg, Liverpool. .Nov ijAm hk M.inha Davit, Boston Dae;tier hk Nautilus, Liverpool Dec IS

j ICIAJ ijiWtl$CIl. ClllS

LOST.ONI hi 0L R ON THE WAIKIKI

Koad. Findei will it ieareicei i.y leavingnt this office.

IJg.31

LOST.a bunch of Keys -- iki ii kbia

on Kurt Sitctt. A witlhli rewiisl will he

ivtt tbi liil'- at thi oltircIJl t

FOR SALE.A COTTAQE AT WAIKIKI IN QOOO

Order. Apply tuW. C. Pli ACOCK it CO.

J7jJii

Native Fans and IslandCurios,

IN ciK! AI VAK1E1Y Al THS

"Elite" Ice Cream Parlors

FOREIGN MAIL SERVICESicamsliips will leave for and arrive from

San Francisco on the following elates, till (heclose ol 1 Xqj

From Honolulu to kov sun M I SCO

San I k n. is,-.,- 10 Honolulu.AasttaUa cpi ? Australia Sept 6Mariposa Senj 2 e. Inna ... .SCfH InOceanic Sept 81 w srrimoo) an)sp 21Miowera (Van) Oct 2 Alameda . Sept ate

Australia Oct 14 Australia Oct 7Monowai Oct 19 Oceanic. . Oct 17Warrinee u n N Maripe sa . Oct 26China Nov 6 Miowcral Van) Oct 21Australia ..No 11 Auslraha Nov 4Alameda ..... Nov 6 Monowai Nov 23M lowers an) Dee: 2 WarrirnoofVnlNovsiOceanic Dec 4 C hina 2

Australia I er ) Australia ...... Dee (t .11 eetosn I.... a Ataesed tec 14

W.immoo t Van) Jan I Miowera(Van)Dtc 21t iiy Peking ... an 2 Oceanic 1 26Australia . Jan 6 Australia .... Dec 30Monowai Ian I l W.urimoe'l Van) lanWIleeanic. . F h 12 Maiinosa Jan is

Australia Fch J Australia Jan 27lam-d- a Feh 8 China Feb 6soalia . Mar 1 Monowai Feb 15

Mariposa M c s An tralia Feb 24e'hioa Mar 26 ( leeanic March 6

11strahe .. Mar li Alameda. .March 15Monowai Apr ? Australia . . Match 24

. .... .h Mariposa March 12.Maine ela .. ...May J Aiistra ia .A r 21Liaelic .May ij Monowai May 10Aus rati ...May 16 China Aptil I"Mnripoi Maj ,. Australia . Mat 19Australia ... Inne 2 A11 June 7Mo owal . lutie 2S Austr.il S June 16

usiralia I uly 21 Mar'p sa J uly 5ttameda .Juiy 26 Auatrali J uly 14Australia ,.Allg OS Monowai Aug 2

Maripe .e Acs 23 Australia teg i I

kastralia . Sept 15 A lam ela ... A ag 30M. o u ,1 S, pi 20 Austrai.i Sept 8

Mariposa. . Se pt 27Australia. 1 ct 6Mnrviu a; OcJ as

METEOROLOGICAL RECORD.By the- - QvirUI IM1WU1 Survey. Publi'hecl every Monday.

K 11.r..sp . ,

? 3 ? P s,--3 ' ' '

3UII 97 ;dO" id e.1 II 85 57 384 'J.ut 65 t NK 384 u.OO 57 5 NK 484 O.Ol C3 4 NK 5

84 coo 6a B N K 483 OOT 63 3 HE 4S3 o.ol So -3 ESS 4

Mon P Aa M n, fwt1 un 39 10. 30.07 taWed 30 30. 14 ;o 08 73

Sit 31 16jo. 30.09 74Ere I 30. 16 30 74Sac 3 30. a 30.04 71

TIDES, SUN AND MOONBv C. J. Lyons.

I I r r Sf

t 3 S''" la

am. am.Mon 4 7.15 5.44 6.13Tuen .5 4V 8. o 5.44 6. !.

Wed 6 t40 a. o 7 0 8.30 5.456.11 y

ptn am.I hiu 7 7.40 1,40 u.15 7 50 5 456.10 3.14Pri e ,to J. Ij 9.25 8.50 5.45 6. o 4.17s1 9 3 30 J 0 45 9- o 6- -

MSun 10 4.15 io. 35 lo.n 5.46 6- 7

New niinci on the ijlh, nt 8. ,i3'ii i.m.TlftM Whistle blow- - at ih. atn. LAI KM, .C Mo

lulu limt., whii h I, ihr v.tnii' u. . him. .s. c.f t irewii h itnic

RAILWAY 4 m m.'S

TI1VCE TABLE.

Rrciln cuiet Aiie-- .)iuie t. 1H0J3,'J'le'A NS

IO KVVA MM LB. U. A. D.

A.M. P.M. I'M. I.M.Leave Honolulu ....8:45 l:45 4:a5 5 :

Leave Pearl C ty 910 2:30 5:10 5:56Arrive- - ES Mill 11:57 2 S7 5:3 0:22

TO HONOLULU.C. B. B. A.

A.M. A.M. P.M. I.M.Leave Ewa Mill 6:21 10:43 3:43 5:42Leave Pearl Cl y 6:55 11:15 4;,S uc

rrivc Honolulu 7:30 11.55 4:55 6:45A Raturtiay'ii only. C Sunday's ese pled.

- lilv. sWr,v' excepted.

ilciM JlibcriiBtmcntB.

For Yokohama" AIKOKUMARU,"

A I I.E JAPANESE STEAMER

Due hePI tirst week of next month, directlyfrom Japan, will lit-- despatched for t Ire aboveport on or about

13th September, 1893,irwteati ol t'ul.tra, a- - fnrmeily u

I'nr fr.inht md pa.-aj;- lease ipply to

K. OGURA & CO.130 te' a. gents

'li'lllli III 1 1'flllII 1! I II It II I

iii 11 ii hi v vwn4(12 ani:;404 FortSt.

IUST RECEIVEDTlIK rAVOM K

Gurney Refrigeratorsand Ice Chests,

CHOPPING 1KAVS, BKiiuMs,

w.?sii BOARUSi

M0U8I AND KT TRAI'S.11 li.KVs PLANES,

CAKI'EN 1 KKS TOOLS

wiKt CLOTH and NCTTIea'O, ETC

139 6 if

FOR SALE.

S

i FINE NAPHTHA LAUNCHir particular 0MuftC nf

JAMES i;. ATLK.I2f) im olicct'r (scncral of CiiNtrinrs.

L. H. DEE,JOHKF.K OF

HOTEL STREET,Between Fort and Bethel Streets

Typewriting, Engrossing, Draughting.

1 1. M. M IS'J1,Is prepared to and erfSltS any business in theabove named linn. Uffice with Mr. F.. A.lones; entrance Mcichant Street. 59 tf

DR. BRODIEHas Resumed Practice

AT

iTo. --i Bereta.11.iae St.OFFICE IIOl'RS: 8 tog A.M., I to ) r.M.,

and 7 to 8 r.M.ctItoth Tele hone No. 336. lii tf

New Goods!

IF you want a good pair of GLOVESfor driving or walking, I can eil em to

I ... Or il y u wanl to 5ee ome NfeWNhCK WhAR In the laiesc nn,lshcepes, call around and feast your eyes.

I have also got a new stock of COLLARSand CUFFS, and above all do net forgetihit I am niakine' SHIRTS Tfl OBni-- o

in all Styles, anei 'hat... I am...the sole stem pQI.1... r. t" tenr sr. vj. jaeger January L nuerwrar. I nutphysician reconenien.ls it for the health.

M. GOLDBERG.

116 3. im

C. R. COLLINS,Practical Harness Maker

Wlrllor and CarriageTrimmer.

Repairs in the above branches, a specialty.Sir Charges Moderate.

Personal attention Liven to all work.42 King St., Neal to Murray's carriage shop

THOS. G. THRUM'S

UP TOWSlatKinm

i if

I 06 Fort Street.Still keeps on hand a varied stock ol Oft'ice.Commercial and Kashic nable Stationciy, con-discing 111 pari 01 engrossing ana Legal papersand wrappers, Flat and (oleleel Cap, broad andnarr .w Bill, Statement, Journal and Ledgerpnpers; Linen anel other letter and note papersen fold or tablet form, with or without

pes; Is'and View Letter paper and ViewNote PapetCfJeSI Correspondence--, Menu, Ballend Visiting C rds, etc, tic, replenishing theacne freim ume to time anel adding novelncs

they appear.

BookS besides a full line of BlankHooks, 111 the various sires and bindings TimeHooks, Lo(j Books, Agcnls' and Notaries'e.ecords, Receipts, Note and other form books,

emo, and Puss Books, ihe variety ol Miscel-laneous Works, Teachers' and other Bibles,

Children's books. Line n and other Toy Books,etc., etc., invites atlenl on.

Special Import Orders forBooks, Music, etc.,

made up Monthly.New 8 lh News Department has cars

ul attention for prou.pt forwardance ol allperiodicals. Supscriptions entered at any timeeeeo periodical-- , hoc regularly received wilt tierdereei aj desired.

All Subscriptions PayableIn Advance.

A large stock of Seaside and otasu librtriatpahand, and new Novels receive d by every mailAit. is' Drawing Materials, and a full supplyof WinMir eV Newton's oil colors, brushes,canvas, stretchers, etc., kepi ..n hand or pro-cured cm short notice.

Albums in theii several kinds. Worklioxes and Baskets, Toilet and Manicure sets.Vases, Card Receivers, Laaihei Gooda. Parlorgaiiec. anel To)s in variety, Dolls an.l D..II

uneirres.

Base Bads, Bats, Masksand Gloves

For all aspiring eiith'.isiasis in the '-- --

all grades.

Binding The Book B ineiiiii aiul I'aoerKubng Departhienl still lilis all oreleis ei.irusr- -

ed tu it in the 111. aaractars of special weirk,rebinding, plain and intricate ruing, m.ipliounting, paiier cuiui,g anel blockine'. etc.Music bound with care.

Printing Printing orders eif all kinds,xecuted 111 hist class manner.

In all ihe aliove lines in which T. I.. T. hasleen for ovei twenty years idealitied in this

cuy, he invites com stpondl lire, and guaranteespioiiept and caieicei .mention o, all orders en- -

irusie.lio him.

In making up an order, aas lhai it includesaubacriptioa lor roarself and for one or nuredative. 01 fi lends abroad to "TlIK Peiastn1

the oldest lianer liubllshed in ihe I'ai eli.- - llvE. Biahop, Editor i Mbiisiwd aumthlv.

$2 pel iinilUlll, devolid t (,e religious' r. nilsducaUonal interest, ol these island., a, also

leecriieiol poliiie.il and oihei current events.sample copies mailed 10 any address. Alimited number ol advertisements iueited atpersonahie iaies.

Thfl Hawniinn Annual. ...... Im...- - - - - rm 1 v. M I -ns Klivetaenth year, and ackaKnrSsdged notonly as the best aalaority on all infuruiaiionpcrlainiog tO the islands that residents should

."' seidiegei. mvariauiy asK, but theonly lefeience beiok ol Hawaiian staiistica,. nd annual recorder of current ami reminis-cent events. Theie are homes probably inthis land in which il is unknown, except byname, and there are linen. reus friends abroadto whom this public. ai n would sfurd untold.alisiaction foi the fund oi reliable iiifoiniatlon11 imp. Us in Us one bundled and lilly or morepeg s. wih nothing of ihc "i.uide Uoeik" gushabout il, I rice per copy lo any SitlllSSs in11.se 75 cents; 01 mailcu 10 anyaddles iu ihe Postal Lmeo Li Sj cents each,

Page 6: THE HAWAIIAN STAR....simt "OCEANK " Feb. 12, 1894 tmr "CHINA" March 26, 1894 'nir "GAELIC May 14. 1H04 RATES OF PASSAGE ARE AS FOLLOWS: M VOKO It) NUM.-KON-II UiA. Cabin, $1 50 00

INDIAN SOLDIERS NO SUCCESS.

They Might Make Good Soldiers UnderSome Other System, However.

The experiment Initiated bjrwStc-retar- y

PfOCtOf of assisting in the civi

izing o( the tndit.nl bythcit enlistmentin the army has had a two years trial

and has failed. At it Inception u was

hoped that the movement would rw eive

the sanction and support of CongMSt)

but the hope has not beet) fulfilled.

The policy has not been abandoned by

the department, notwithstanding theabsence of Congressional encouragement, but is slowly dying of inetteni m,

owing to the fact that the Indiana whotook advantage of the opportunity ofentering the army are leaving it at theexpiration of their terr,, f enlistment,and there are H new enlistment!Many oft'... I I nl took advantage ofthe law permitting them to purchasetheir discharge.

There were ab ut secn hundredIndians in the army, and this numberhas been reduced by the disbandmenlOf two Indian troops, one at PotlWalla Walla and the other at ForiReno, which had dwindled to less thantwenty men each. There arc aboutfourteen Indian companies, averagingfifty men each, still in the service, andthey may be so reduced b naturalcauses as to require further consolidation.

An offii er of high tank says thesecompanies will certainly nol be musteredout, and that the department will dnothing to discourage blither enlist-

ment. It was settled, however, thatthe experiment as at present conductedis a failure, and that the only possiblesolution of the Indian soldier problemis their organization into an auxiliarybranch of the army, modelled after thesystem employed by the British am y

in the matter of the native tro ps ot

India. It is clear, he said, that theIndian soldier, so far as military dici-plin-

is concerned, will have to beplaced on a different plane from thewhite soldier. Washington Star.

New Palace in Russia

1'lans are being made for the con-

struction of a new palace tor the Ctar,large enough to contain the imperial

family and the whole court suite, at

Betitskaya Pushta, in the province of

Grodno. The site chosen is in the

midst of the great forest of Pushta, en-

abling the Emperor to enjoy the great-est retirement combined with thepleasures of the chase. The cost oi

the palace will be about j$, 000.006.'The Emperor already posses a cons derable portion of the year away from St.Petersburg, and the Cabinet conceivedthe idea of a new palace in the forestsof Grodno in order to have their handsfree for even another month or two.The expense of building the palace is

borne by the Finance Department,which is represented as having so muchmoney that it does nol know what todo with it. 'The Emperor is conse-

quently delighted on both sides firstly,at the brilliant state of the treasury,and secondly, at the present ot a newpalace. The stroke IS a clever one,and if it succeeds to the end, will

fortify the alreadv strung position of thefust semblance of a Cabinet Russia hasseen for some time a Cabinet whoseformation and growth must be watchedwith much interest by political students.

A Delicate Perfume

If yon want the scent of the roses to

hang round your letter paper, save your

rose leaves. It is not necessary to

prepare them. When the rose plant or

bouquet has lost its beauty, collect the

petals and toss them into the table

drawer or wherever the writing paperis kept. Red roses are the mostfragrant, but there is a sweet breath in

every variety, and it is worth saving'The woman of exquisite taste is dis-

criminating. She does not consider it

good form to use a scented envelope.POt that reason the stationery supp'y isdivided, and only the paper goes intothe bed ol crushed lavender and roseleaves.

About the styles in letter paperDifferent sizes and tints of color comeand go, but the preference for diesmallest note in ivory white maintains.A few years ago it bothered the postalclerks to handle the little letters. Nowthey rather like them because they arelighter.

A State Soda Fountain

It may sound like a Munchausenyarn, but it is an actual fact that in thesquint-eye- little burg of Sodaville, in

I.inn county, in block 8 of the town plat,

there is a soda spring, and that tl last

legislature, in its infinite wisdom, pro-

vided that, "inasmuch as there is a

great and growing demand on the part

of the public for the-- waters of saidspring," the Stale would spend $500to improve it. 'This, at last, the fondrealization of the long felt want whichhas been loafing ;r,und the countrylike the ghost of boyhood's happy d. ys

in quest of a watermelon patch wherehaply lingered no vicious dog. It is a

grand and imposing sight to see thelegislative fancy rising hm the sordidcontemplation of a cold and unrespon-sive hog law and hovering on halcyonwings over the soft murmur of anidyllic Slate soda fountain. AstoriaBudget,

Salad Dressing;

Heat up tlie yolk of an egg and adda teaspuonful of freshly made mustard,then olive oil. "with cautious handthat crud'-e- s what it soil.-.- " about tw

UbleipoonfuU, then a tablespuonful ofivinegar -- tarragon is best with eipulcaution, stirring all the time. A glassof Chablis, Saultriu- - or still hock is a

UIL.11VMI. All, UIJ..V. .

uite can be substituted lor

(rci;...ii Jtbtocrttarnuittt.

''iiTfflWi

A Big Week!That's what it is at

King Bros.' An Empori-um, a Win week for thehouse, and a bigger Week

tor buyers of everythingin their line. This weekthey have an especiallyfine display of pictures,artists' supplies, mirrors,

. . 1 1 . . ..pnotograpn ami .1 u 1 u --

graph albums, wall brack-

ets and easels, plush fancygoods and novelties, thelatest styles of mouldingsfor framing and cornices,a full line of window polecornices, etc. Now is thetime to have portraits en-

larged in crayon or indiaink by first class artistsat lowest rates.

Zing Bros.HOT h i STREET

i.v u.

Aim at the DrakeAnd you arc bound to hit some of the

ducks. This is precisely the Mine with

Wampole'sTastelessPreparation

OF

Cod Liver Oil.

It aims to cure Consumption,Hits the Mark, too. and it

most effectuallybreaks up Colds,Coughs. Hoarseness and all

Throat and Lung troubles thatcause this disease.

It is natural logic to concludethat if Wampole's Preparationof Con Liver Oil has powerto prevent Consumption, it sure-ly is able to cure these lesseremergencies.

This vigor-makin- g, fat pro-

ducing preparation is Absolute-ly Tasteless, in so far as CodLiver Oil is concerned. Allyou notice is a delightful flavorof Wild Cherry and Anise.

Hut the purest NorwegianCoil Liver Oil is there all thesame. It is a great blood en-rich-

Best of all it is a natural food that in its stomachiceffects, actually assists its ownassimilation.

In Pulmonary or Bronchialtroubles it is unequalled. Noone doubts the value of CodLiver Oil. but not everv one isable to take it.

WAMPOLE'S PREPARATION

removes the nauseous objectionand actually makes Cod LiverOil palatable.

KEPT IX STOCK AND SOLI) BY

HOLLISTER & Co.

Druggists.109 Pom STREET, HONOLULU.

The Central Market.Always have on hand choice Beef, Mutlon,

Veal and Poultry. We make Sausages a

specialty, (live us a trial ami be convinced.

Wt have the hest. Our Corned lieef is o

the very best.

WESTBROOK (iAKES,Proprietors.

Both Telephones 104. 98-t- f

Club Stables Co.s. k. GRAHAM, Manager,

; Livery, Feed and Sale Stables.

Fori Stkket, BkTWUCM HoikiAND HkKKTANIA.

BOTH TELEPHONES Xo. 477.

great addition. Many ladies avoid vin- - g& Connected with Hack Standgtr, pelievina it to M DM for toe Corner King and BetM

it I BOTH TELEPHONES,

fM HAWAIIAN star, Ti'KsnAt, ski-tkmbK- 5, t t Vmm.

No. I

(GcncT.tl JDbtrtivcmcnti

THE

HAWAIIAN

STAR.

The Star now has the ug

est circulation of any evening

paper, and is gaining ground

daily.

In its new form, the paper

will print as much reading

matter as any other Hawaiian

journal, and will report the

news of its entire parish with

freshness and accuracy.

Kditoriallv the Stak is an

outspoken and consistent ad-

vocate of annexation to the

United States.

The paper wiill leltveret

at any hoese in Honolulu for

50 cents per month.

THE

HAWAIIAN

STAR.

3Utottttcwtcttt.

EQUITABLELife Assurance Society ol the United

Offers Insurance on all the Popular Plans, viz

Ordinary Life Plan,Endowment Plan,Semi Tontine Plan.Free Tontine Plan,Indemnity Bond Plan (O upon Bond

at maturity, desired))Endowment Bond Plan (5 guaranteed)

It willmake furtheryour pocket.

Managers for tin

cost youInquiries.

ncwl

if

ui

Tontine Instalment Plan (Nkw, Chf.aiand Attractive),

LifePartnershipt hildren's Endowments,Annuities,Term etc., etc. etc,

nothing to call at the office of the undersigned, andShould you conclude to insure, it will be

Bruce & A. J. Cartwright,Haw dian Islands EQUITABLK Life Assurance society 01 u s.

JOHN NOTT.

Wrought Steel Ranges, Chilled IronCooking Stoves.

HOUSEKEEPING GOODS:AGATE WARE (White, Gray and Nickle-plated- ), PUMPS, WATER ANT)

son. pipes, Water closets and urinals, rubbkrHOSK AND LAWN SPRINKLERS, BATH TUMS AND STEELSINKs. O. S. GUTTERS AND LEADERS, SHEET IRON, COP-

PER. ZINC AND LEAD, LEAD PIPE AND PIPE FITTINGS.

Plumbing, Tin, Copper and SheetIron Work.

DIMOND BLOCK: 95-9- 7 KING STREET.

New Furniture Store,ROBINSON BLOCK.

Hotel Street, between Fort Nuuanu Sts.Is now opened for business, and lias in stock the finest assortment of

ANTIQUE OAK BED ROOM SETS,CHIFFONIERS, SIDEBOARDS,

EXTENSION TABLES, Etc.ALSO a fine assortment of

Reed and Rattan Furniture.

UPHOLSTERY.Fine spring, Hair, Wool, Mow and Straw M amasses; Live Geese Feathers and S lk F.

lor Pillows. Special attention called 10 our latest style of WIRE MATTRP.SSES.the beat and cheapest ever brought to this country. Fine Lounge and Sola

Beds, at San Francisco prices. Complete assorlni.ni .f BabyCarriages, Cribs, Cradles, anil High I 'hairs.

Is" Cornice in Wood or Trimmings, jgjWe make a specially ol Laying Mailing and Interior decorating.

Furniture and Mattresses Repaired by First-Clas- s Workmen,Cabinet Making in all its Branches,

A trial is ss lieited. Lowest Prices Prevail,

il BELL, 55.

in ourto

pint Risks,

money

Poles Brass

ORDWAY & PORTER,Robl

TELlil'HUNFS.in Hotel Street.

645.

Genuine Clearance Sale!All Goods Large

Down theBrewer Block.

Insurance,

Insurance,

and

Block,MUTUAL

and Varied Stock MarktoLowest Prices.

EGAN & GUNN.5i4 Fort Street.

Call and see the bargains we are offering.78 tf

CHILDREN AND INFANTS'

Hats and Bonnets.Immense Variety at

N. S. SACHS,104 Fort Street - - Honolulu.

CH1LDRKNS CAMBRIC HATS, all col in, 60 cents nd upward; MULLHATS, in delicate ihadea, from $1 7; pwards.

CHILDREN'S' SILK HATS, POKES and BONNETS.CH1LDRENS LACE HATS and LEGHOKN FLATSINFANTS I. ACE BONNETS. Infanta Muslin BONNETS from 50 cents ami upwardsSUN BONNETS In great variety at as cents and upwards.

fc A AHSDHTMKXT OKCHILDRL N g WHITE PRESSES, neatly made at io, jt cents and upwardaCHILDREN S Silk aud Caahmer COATS and WRAPS Infants Complete eutft,

MM

(TuMttnil HibCtUfcntCltta

M, t MeCHESNEY k SONS,

AGENTS

Honolulu Soap Works Co

Laundry Soap

42, 56 and 63 bars to case

Hundred Pounds.

HIGHEST

PRICE

PAID

TALLOW!

K. W. MeCHESNEY k SONS,

Wholesale Grocers,

Honolulu, H. I.

A FULL LINE

GROCERIESAlways 011 H.irul.

FOR

FRESH GOODSPer Kvery Steamer and Sail.

S 3? E O I A. LTIES1Cheese, Lard, Hams, Batter,

Codfish, Milk, Onions,

Crackers, Potatoes, Salmon,

Macaroni, Corn Meal,

Pickled Skipjack, AJvicore,

Herrings,Flour, drain and Beans.

And All Kinhs of

Leather and Nails for Shoe-

makers.

Hawaiian Wine Co.FRANK BROWN, Manager,

2K and 30 Merchant Street, Honolulu, H, I,

70 iy

CHAS. F. PETERSON.

Typewriter, Conveyancer and

Notary Public.Office nver Bilhop'l Hank.

M. H. LOHEIDE,Sign & Ornamental Painter

BELL TELEPHONE 157.

C3T All Orders Promptly Attended to62 tf

Hard Times Mean Close PricesTo House Keepers.

If you are in need of any New or Second-hand FURNITURE, rugs, stoves,SKU INi; MAI HIXES, Etc., call at the

I X LFurniture & Commission House,

Oornei Nuuanu and Kim; streets18 tf

61 net iii (tDbcrtiacmciUii

IT IS KASV

TO BRAGbut decidedly of more value tohave Your Work speak foritself.

We base our claim upon theactual Results obtained in thepast, in the correction of allvisual defects, no matter howcomplicated.

VVe grind lenses speciallyneeded for complicated cases,insuring an absolute fit.

Is this of any value to you,or do you prefer buying yourGlasses at haphazard, notknowing if they help or injnrevour eyes.

Would you give your eyesight for all you possess ? Notif you know it. Then givethem proper care while VCUhave them; and when you feelthey need attention, alwaysconsult

H. F. WICHMANSCIENTIFIC OPTICIAN,

.")17 Fort Street.

The Palace Ice Cream Parlors,

Ice

norm. S

Cream,Kni, Honolulu.

Sherbets,Ice Cream Soda

A Choice Assortment of

French & Plain Mixed Candies

05 ly

or Chocolate with Sandwiches,served at all hours.

Mrs. ATWOOD, Proprietress.

SEW1JNG MACHINESCall in anrl examine the

NEW BUTTONHOLE MACHINE

And our new stuek of

Fine Singer Sewing Machines.

B. BERGENSEN,GSNBRAL Ae.rf.Ni.

Bethel Street, Honolulu, Damon Mock.

Repairiiig Done.

THOS. G. THRUM'S

UP TOWFTIVT1 All A tllT - I I A AIT VI A I1A

v oiureI 06 Fort Street.

Still keeps on hand u varied stock ot Office,Commercial and Fashionable Stationery, con-sisting in part of Engrossing and Legal papersand wrapp rs, Flat and folded Cap, broad andnarrow Hill, Statement, Journal and Ledgerpapers; Linen and other letter and note papersIn fold or tablet form, with or without en-velopes; Island View Letter paper and ViewNote Papeterlesj Correspondence, Menu, Halland Visiting Curds, etc., etc., replenishing thesame from lime to time and adding noveltiesas they appear.

Books- - Besides a full line of BlankBooks, in the various sizes ami liindings TimeBooks, L01; Hooks, Agents' and Notaries'Records, Receipts, Note and other form books,Memo, and Pass Hooks, the variety ol Miscel-laneous Works, Teachers' and other Bibles,Children's iiooks. Linen and other Toy Hooks,elc, etc., invites attention.Special Import Orders for

Books, Music, etc.,made up Monthly.

News The News Department baa carefill .mention for prompt forwardance ol allperiodicals. Supscriptloni entered at any limeand periodical! nol regularly received will beordered as dealred.

All Subscriptions Payablein Advance.

A large siockoi Seaside and other libraries onhand, and new Novels received by every mailArlisis' Drawing Materials, and a full supplyof Winsor & Newton's oil colors, brushes,canvas, stretchers, etc., kept on hand or pro-cured on short notice.

Albums in their several kinds, WorkBoxes ami Baskets, Toilet and Manicure sets,Vases, Card Receivers, Leather Goods, Parlorgames and Toys in variety, Dolls and Dollsundries.

Base Balls, Bats, Masksand Gloves

For all aspiring enthusiasts in the profession;all grades'.

Binding The Book Binding anil PaperRuling Department still (ills all orders entrust-ed to it in the manufacture of special work,rebindlng, plain and intricate ruling, mapmounting, paper cutting anil blocking, etc.Music bound with care.

Printing -- 1'rinling orders of all kinds,executed 111 In si class manner.

In all the above lines in which T. G. T. hasbeen for over twenty years identified in thiscity, he invites correspondence, and guaranteesprompt and careful attention to all orders

him.

In making up an order, scelhal it includes asubscription for yourself and for one or morerelatives or friends abroad to "The Friend'the oldest paper published in ihe Pacific, Rev.S. K. Bishop, Editor; published monthly, at$2 per annum, devotee to the religious andeducational interests of these islands, as alsoa recorder of political and other current events.Sample copies mailed to any address, Alitnltad number of advertisements inserted alrersonablc rates.

The Hawaiian Annual now inits Nineteenth year, and acknowledged notonly as the best authority on all informationpertaining to the islands that residents shouldknow and strangers invariably a k, but theonly reference book of Hawaiian statistics,and annual recorder of current and reminis-cent events. There are homes probably inthis land in which il is unknown, except byname, and there aie nnmerous friends abroadto whom this publication would afford unloldsatisfaction for the fund of reliable informationit imparts in ils one hundred and fifty or morepages, with nothing of the "Guide Book" gushabout it. Price per copy to any addrsss inthese islands, 75 cents; or mailed to anyaddress in the Postal Union for 85 cents eacb