the paciric x

4
r1 1 r r 4 Q MflTiitAiintfr 3 MMnaiii si jui THE PACiriC FROM AUSTRALIA. , ' Ar Vi V Co B P Atikd errlvtJ at Ihia Commercial Urbertiscr X . ftg, 4yt mni 16 Lour from IS PUBLISHED V. " id fn 0 i.-- a L. k - Wm Hvery Saturday Morning, X BY J. H.JLACK. fit, mt.1 lalxml Su ber i pi iona. AG.OO n rear. Vl.OD far Sim Monlhi. I.inr, t I'orriH Subscription. 7.-r- t to IO a lr. 1 1 I. I V Mr-- e tyj a k it The u.-- r ;.:i'.n jir.r- - I r ppr, r.rxrardw! (n any part of Aojtu--1 i, 7 .y p.-- r h;rh in-i-- l In lliwi ai pvr nil;. All np"r f"f Far cin port be charirl the pits- - ilmn.li at tri- - pot kO'-o, wh h varies from 4 to H rnt rn inv pT. Er rurmrTHt Patabi. Aiwat-- it Adtji.-i- . ry Comrn tnica:ion from all parts of th" Pacific will alway, x very acceptaM C7 fvrvn rsi ling in any part of the Vn'.XrA Jutn. can remit the amount of do for thi, pspr in American po-t- -f stamp. PLAIN AND FANCY BOOK AND JOB PRINTING XT BILL-HE&-3. VI?ITINO, BUSINESS AND ADDRESS CAHD.i imiH in the hihest style of the art. (Wlil t-- r lh P. C. Auvrtiser.) Oh Pledge Me Not With Wine ! Oh ! pledge uj not with wine. !ur love t I shrink from it ruddy glow ; And whit and cold a deathly f-- ar Drips tr.to my heart like snow. Oh ! pl"lg me nol with wine, dar love Through it mUl of rxiy tm i rount the beats of a broken heart ; I r a desolate home. Oh ! pllg me not with wine, dear love I shiver with lr dread Eii"h drop 19 me ia a tear of blood Th-i- t aorrowful eye have h.l. Oh pledge me not ! though the wine is bright A th crystal light that flow Thr,ugh the jdsK' cloudy g ' t fire, Or the morniog's vein of roae. Put down the cop! it ia brim'J with blood C'rwhed throbbing from heart like mine ! For hope, f. ,r peace, lit dear love aake. Oh p:Mge use not witTl wine '. VARIETY. A Kifs. Olifcr Wendell Holmes definition of a kids : The twenty-Bevent- h letter of the al- phabet the love-labi- al which it takx-- a two to Iak fluinlj." Hash. " A favorite dish in our restaurants," aj a Montana is beef-hasb- ." The New Yorlc Commercial AJmti.r purposes it must FiGCRisa Up. Chicago and St. Louis are fig- uring up their population by the "Smith method," on the basis of ono Smith to every 540 persons in the United States. None cf our spellers have yet ewnced such pro- found ignorance of orthorgraphy as the Yorkshire-ma- n, who, in addressing Sir Humphrey Davy, rendered it thus Zurumvrijdavy. Who Knows. Never tell the boys that it is waste of time to play marbles. Who knows what advantage that accuracy of aim and steadi- ness of nerve may be when they get older and play billiards ? When a woman is care-lade- n and heavy-hearte- d nothing shakes the megrims out of her quicker than for a couple of ladies to stop in front of the house long enough for her to examine the trim- mings on their bonnets. The liaohester (Minn.) Post gives the following as a eign painted on a fence in that neighborhood : Kaeh pade for littel kalves nut mourn to daze old." That fellow never fv.lcd away hi time loafing around spelling schools. Corrected Himself. A Frenchman, incensed at a writer who is not particularly brilliant, spoke of him ti-- an ass, and then corrected himself : No; I nm wrong. He. is a mole, who has ears equally long and produces nothing." Probably. A meeting of the bald-heade- d men of Winncsmucea. was held at the Court-hous- e in that place, on" the evening of the 18th inst., at which, the Silver Star says, there was probably the grandest exhibition of miniature alkali flats ever eep ; - - - Ah, iSam, so you've been in trouble, have you?" Yes, Jim, yes." Well, well, cheer tries and shows our up man ; adversity us, up beet qualities." 4t Ah, but adversity did'nt try me, it was an old wagabond of a judge, and he showed up my worst qualities." Not CVmfortable. If married men will attend the Bpelhng matches, they had better leave iheir wives at borne. It isn't comfortable to walk home with her and have the dear creature muttering at every Btep, " I'm ashamed of your ignorance," and "if you can't spell 'agitate, 111 teach you when I get yoa home." No ; it's disheartening. It is remarkble how Borne writers can adorn the most common-plac- e subject with the flowers of poesy, and make joy for ever. We read in a contemporary tbata highly-esteeme- d citizen of Franklin, who has dwelt npon this eublunary sphere fur the term of seventy years, and in that time had the mingled grief and pleasure to lay three wives where the flowers of spring could grow ovt r them and the dews of summer sparkle like a robe of diamonds about them, recently took to himself a fourth partner of his joys and sorrows in the perse of a charming widow who has depUited two ventures in a place of prepetual security and gazed on the blushing roses of .'seventy Bummers." Walt Whitman on tub Scandal. The Brook- lyn Anlus says that Walt Whitman is devoting bis leisure momenta to the composition of a poem on the scandal. A few lines will Berve to show that the terrors of his genius are unabated : Cornucopoela ol peatiferous peccadilloes ! Plague, peatilence, alaughter, lamlne, ; araoo, murder, teinpeat, lightning, ahipwreck. North " Paoflc bead wa Orange. ; county batter Wbal are these to thai, or this to thoae ? Warming the Pole icing the equator ; Bitting ad, aolitary ; leaping, crawling ; jiving all around the world, and on the rocka of Terra del Fuego. Parthcnope horriday ! PerUcopic woe ! riaccotaab, of social slime immense ; Dimming the argent plenUune ; Muh. aluah, gush ; Sherman, avaunt ! O Elizabeth ! O Henry 1" The Motiier Tongue. An English clergyman and a Lowland Scotsman visited one of the beet schools in Aberdeen. They were strangers, but the master received them civilly, and inquired : Wvuld you prefer thafl should epecr these boys, or that you should speer them yourselves?" The English clergyman, having ascertained that desired the master to to ereer meant to question, proceed. He did so with great success, and the boys answered satisfactorily numerous interroga- tions as to the exodus of the Israelites from Egypt. The clergyman then said he would be glad in his turn to epecr the boys, and at once begun. " How did die ?" There was a dead silence. In this dilemma the Lowland gentleman interposed. I think sir, that the boys are not accustomed to vour Eoglish accent ; let me try what I can make of them.J And he inquired in hia broad Scotch, .t nktrmnah Airain there was a dead silence : upon which the master said, I tbiak eentlemen, you can't speer these boys ; I II L i,nw tX it." And he proceeded : 1 rnrm-if- i at lua inner end? lne "lill Wll IU iuunw-- - ovs answered : "He was drooned ; and a 'f-- n little fellow added : " Ony lassie could nae n that." ate now of daily occurrence IVsEoklvn families. For instance, the other - r.ihlfi of a well-know- n resident lerrepont street, the following colloquy took f4. Fnmilin fin a stern voice, to a pretty "ehter aged 20) "Julia, who was that young r Julia (with deliberation) " A friend." Father " How late did he stay?" Julia " I don't remember." Father " What is his name? Julia " I can't recollect." Father " Where does he live?" ni.Trlw " Ha's moved." Father (reprovingly) " Don't answer me in that evasive mauuci. j . - younger sister who had been reading the trial (turning to a rich old bachelor uncle) " I object ; the question is leading. tv.. it r Sneict nnon an answer, ves or no. j tht mipitinn in another iorm. as .i l,.Minn r.f the Iinfl ? ' Julia (absently) "My memory fails me in matters ifetails, although, (with a pause) there - i . uota kiAn onrnMhinff nF f Vif Iririd." jmgru naio lA-i-- u Dvuv.u.b At this point the breakfast ended. VOL. XX-N- O. 4. gusintss Carts. TH0S. G. THRUM, ON GOLn.SILVF.R. UK ASS. ENORAVKR c. CUTTER IX 1'LANTATIOX. STENCIL Name IMates. V'l ly WING CH0NG TAI & CO., OXOLULU BAKERV. CORNER OF II H1 King and JH'inai'j sirftii. ij . KOTB. FISCHER & ROTH, V1ERCIIAXT TAILORS. 38 FORT ST., i.vl itol llouolala, II. I. iy DILLINGHAH Sr. CO., AXn DEALERS IX IIARO-WAR- F., IMPORTERS - Cutlery, Dry Goods, Paints and Oils, and General Mtrrchanilise. o.i,7 No. 95 King 6tre, Honolula. j EDWARD T. 0'HALLORAN, TTRXEV AND SOLICITOR. IS A to lend fr.m 2CK to $10,000 on Mortice of r,.nirt. at lowest rates of Interest. XT Agents In London, and in all parts of Australia. OFVICK on Fort Street, (opposite Mr. Ira R.char.Ison s Ptorf ) Honolulu. v.iotn HYMAN BROTHERS, rM PORTERS, WHOLES ALE AND RETAIL DEALtKS IN Dry Goods, Clothintr, Hta furnlhiDK Goods, Ladies' and Genu' Boots and 5i-- s Vankee Notions, sre, &c. Capu Snow's Building. U Merchant St. Honolulu. 9S7 ly WILDER & CO., rrrrwiRS TO UUWSfcia t CO. Corner Fort and Queen Stt. Dealers in Lumber. Paints, Oil, Nails, Salt, and Building S. B. DOLE, - . AT liWi rr r. j ATTORXEV corner of I'ort nd Merch'int Streets C(3 uoouiuiu. j THE0. H. DAVIES, (Late Janlon, Gre;n & Co.) rM PORTER A l J turi.Mjs3iii3 OH a XT n ircti rn Lloyds' and the Liverpool Underwriters, Northern Assurance company, ana criiiun "'-'i- s" Company. 831 Fire Proof Buildings, Kaahumanu ana tfueen o. u DR. 0. S. CUMMINGS, OMCEOPATIIIST, OS FORT STREET, II IloDolalu, II. I. "- - S. MAGN1N, . - - - . - .... . . D X' ANU l r- - a i.r. iv s. V IMPORTER Hats and Caps, Furnishing Goods, c. HIGHEST PRICE PAID FOR I UL.U Arili HlUt. : 933 Fort Street, Honolulu, II. I. 1j F. A. SCHAEFEll & CO., 'M PORTERS MER" Honolulu, Hawaiian Islands. ly C. S. BARTOW, CCTIOXEER. SALESROOM ON QUEEN L 975 btreet, one door from K.aahumann. ly J. PORTER GREEN, . ...nr k r a 1 T A &Vr AM rtl V ATTORNEY door to Vr. H. Stacgei.wald, Merchant St. 978 CECIL BROWN, . . . c. r r ill . . mT SUt;uu.ui.ii"n i " " ' ATTORNEY takinf? Acknowl. dgtaents of Instrument.. for the HUnd of Oahii. . No. 8 Kaahumanu street, nooumiu, -- J E. STREHZ, APOTHECARY AXU DRUGGIST. Corner Fort and Hotel Streets. SATURDAY EVENING. 976 ly Keeps open every M. McINERNY, MPORTER AND DEALER CIjOTlI- iciet CuTlTry' d "derTpTion of Gent's Superior Fn1nrshln Gos Benkert'.Fine Calf Dress Boots, "ay? J? nand x, Strbkts. 973 ly N. K. UOBSB or iwi aTw. PEIRCE & CO., Successors to C. L. Richards & Co.) NHIP CHANDLERS AND G EX ERA L COM- - MISSION MERCHANT. Honolulu, nawaun Islands. . (972 ly) E. P. ADAMS, UCTIOXEER AN D COMMISSION MER-- k CHANT. Street. Honolulu. H. I. 9lly Arnua Jtr AnTTTTflK. WHOLESALE AND RETAIL Irseutrl'. Merchandise. Fire-pro-of etoreNuu.- - nu Streets. NO. 49 HOTEL ST. CONFECTIONER. Honolulu. 9,0 TH0S. G. THRUM, TATIOXER. NEWS DEALER AND s BOOK BlNUtlt, aerciauiruM 958 ly s. b. ratEL. FRIEL & LAINE, ROGERS AND PROVISION DEALERS, G Family Grocery'&nd Feed Store, 58 Fort Street, Honolulu. a J W. G. IRWIN & Co., CylUrf&HlIS AGENTS. Honolula, H. I. W J. MONTGOMERY, a TTORNEY AT LAW AND SOLICITOR Q"'C X- - 8 o'pMirkhodes' building. JOHN TH0S. WATERHOUSE, "sr M PORTER AN D DEALER IN GENERAL Honolulu. iy Street, 953 Queen C. BREWER & CO., COMMISSION AXSIIIPPINU MER- - n.i, (953 1vi" Hawaiian Islands. E. HOFFMANN, H. D., PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. CORNER f Merchant and Kaahumanu Sts , near the Post-offic- 953 ly ALLEN & CHILLINGWORTH, KAWAinAE, HAWAII, CONTINUE THE GENERAL WILL and SHIPPING BUSINESS at the where they are prepared to furnish the justly cele-iuuici-v., r,r.-.- . i .mv. mvnr reoruits as are brated nawainae ruuura) : at the shortest notice and on the Sort reasooMelerms. (953 ly) FIREWOOD ON HAND. ALEX. J. ARTWRIGHT, MERCHANT AND COMMISSION SHIPPING AGENT, 949 lT Honolulu, Hawaiian Islands CHULAN & CO., PORTERS OF AXD DEALERS IX iu CHINA GOODS Of all descriptions, and in all kinds of Dry Goods. Also, con lastly on hand, a superior quality of Hawaiian Rice. 957 Nuaanu Street, Honolulu. ly LEWERS & DICKSON, BALERS IN LUMBER AXD BUILDING D 949 Materials, mnciirti. .j H. HACKFELD & Co. ENERAL COMMISSION AGENTS. G 953 ly iiv.iul.uiv. M. PHILLIPS & Co., AXD WHOLESALE IMPORTER'S Shoes, Hats, Men's Fnrnbhin? and Fancy Goods. (961 ly) No 11 Kaahumanu St Honolulu. 1 1 1 l 111 ' S .1S1 I 1 , HONOLULU. V. usintss Carts. F. T. LENEHAN & CO., COMMISSION AGENTS. IMPORTERS: in General M'rrhandise. 9S9 Queen St., next to the Office of J. I. Doett, Esq. ly D. N. FLITNER, HISOLD BUSINESS IX THE C10XTIXUES building. Kaahumanu Street, Chronometers rated by observations of the sun and stars, with a transit instrument accurately adjusted to the meridian of Honolulu. Particularattention ziven to fine watch repairing. Sextant and quadrant glasses silvered and adjusted. Charts and nautical instruments constantly on &V3 hand and for tale. if DR. F. B. HUTCHINSON, PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. I Office at Mr. Strehx's Drug Store, corner cf Fort and Hotel Streets. XT" Residence corner of Nuuanu and Kokni Streets. ! 3mJ Office hours 9 to 11 A. M. ALFRED s7 HARTWELL, A TTORNEY AND COUNSELLOR AT LAW 993 ly Office over Hoffmann's Drug Store. BISHOP & CO., BANKERS, HAWAIIAN ISLANDS. HONOLULU. OF EXCHANGE ON The Bank of California San Francisco Messrs. Lees & Waller New York Tremont National Bank - .Boston Oriental Bank Corporation ..London Oriental Bank Corporation, payable in Sydney, Melbourne and Auckland. Agents for the Manhattan Life Insurance Company of New Vork. Receive Deposits, Discount First-clas- s Business Paper, attend to Collecting, &c. &c. 93- - ly IRA RICHARDSON, AND HEALER IX BOOTS. IMPORTER Clothing, Furnishing Goods, Perfumery, kc. Honolulu, H. I. Corner of Fort and MerchantjUjajOlyl ED. HOFFSCHLAEGER & CO, . rioUMIfiVlltV M ER. A '' ' " ' f MPORTEKS "rIV . 981 ly Corner of Fort and Merchant Streets. E. G. HITCHCOCK, TTORNEY AT LAW, HILO, HAWAII. ' 977 ly collected. Bills promptly CASTLE & COOKE, DEALERS IN GEX- - ' M PORTERS AND ERAL MERCHANDISE, SHIPPING AND COMMISSION MERCHANTS. 977 No. 80 King Street, Honolulu, H. I. ly B0LLES & CO., . .... roilIICin ... HIP CHAMlu"1"1 a' v s VKRCTIANTS. Importers and Dealers in General Merchandise, Queen Street iinnnii,ln. Hawa an Islands. Maunalua and Kakaako Salt Kaunakakai. Agents lor the 977 Works. M. S. GRINBAUM & CO., WHOLESALE DEAL-I'7- rs iFtonabTeCloThing, Ha.s. Caps, Boots and S hoe. aid every variety of Gentlemen's Superior Furnishing Goods Store formerly occupied by W. A. Aldrich, Makee's 9S5 Block. Queen Street. S E. 0. HALL & SON, rMPnRTFRS AND DEALERS IX HARD- - 9C4 Corner Fort and King Sts. ly . BROWN & CO., M PORTERS AXD DEALERS IN ALES. WINES AND SPIRITS, AT V? HOLM LB .Merchant Street, 1962 lyl IJonoKH JNO. 8. SMITHIK8. A 3. CLRGHORH A. S. CLEGH0RN & Co., WHOLESALE AN D TM PORTERS AXD JrETAIL DEALERS IN Ceneral Merchandise, Corner Queen and Kaahumanu Stf.., and Hotel sts. 958 ly Nuuanu St.. and Corner Fort RICHARD F. BICKERT0N, ctdppt IinN'OLULU. ITi IfERCIIAXT J. W. Austin's former Office, over Henry M. Whitney's BookStore AcCount. and Bill Collected, Copying, Custom House Business Drafting, Book Keeping, executed. 3m 970 and General Commissions carefully fL E. McINTYRE & BROTHER, R.OCERY, FEED STORE AND BAitf.tii, G cornet oi aims ' Honolulu. II. I. 958 ly WM. WEIGHT, Ship and Generfl Blacksmith, Shop on the Judd Wharf, next to the Old Custom House. All work in my line will be executed with dispatch and gUJynAUorders from the. other islands will be carefully at- tended to. Horse-Shoein- g and Carriage Repairing! 979 OO Stroot, oo M . T. DONNELL, IMPORTER AXD MaSTFaCTCRRR OP ALL KINDS OF FURNITURE ! r Suitable to this market. Vg XT Old Furniture repaired and Mattrasses of all de Xi scriptions made to order. Before buying elsewhere call at 8 G and 8 8 K lag t reel 958 ly P. D ALTON, Saddle and Harness JIaIer, KiyG STREET, HOXOLULU. Harness, Saddle & Shoe Leath- er, Constantly on Hand. Orders from the other Islands promptly attended to. 919 ly E. C. ADDEHLEY, Saddle and Harness Maker, - rX CORNER rXJfJL, Fort and Hotel Streets, Honolula. 2SJ2i 3 . . a J: ..-- I, T.l.n.1 XT Carriages rrimmea wild ueaiuess auu uisou. Orders attended to promptly 95 y C. E. WILLIAMS, Manufacturer, Importer and Dealer in 3T TJ XX PJ IT TJ 3F3L 3E3 I f? OF EVERY DESCRIPTION. fcSI Furniture Ware Room on Fort street ; Workshop at M the old stand, Hotel street, near Fort. B Orders from the other islands promptly attended to. 953 ly HONOLULU IRON WORKS CO. STEAM ENGINES, SUGAR Mills, Boiler3, Coolers, Imn, Brass and Lead Castings. Machinery of Every Description made TO ORDER. Particular Attention paid to iShip's Blacksmithing. XT Job Work executed cn the shoftest notice. 949 ly J. M. OAT & Co., Sailmakers. OLD CUSTOM HOUSE, FIRE-PRO- OF BUILDING. 13 uo tne narr, ooici juuaiiu ctrcci, iwuu 1U1U, II. i. Sails made in the Best Style and Fitted with Galvanized Clues and Thimbles. King of all tleaeriptions made and repaired. Thankful for pat patronage, we are prepared to execute all orders in our line, with dispatch and in a satisfactory manner. 9T9 ly HAWAIIAN ISLANDS, P. J. BROWN, GENERAL BLACKSMITH, King Street, near Bethel. Bo&olulJ. PARTICULAR ATTENTION PAID TO Horse-Shoein- g & Carriage Work 99S CABINET MAKER'S SHOP! THE UNDERSIGNED beiis to notify his friends and the public generally, that he has taken Sliop oxx Port tY OO t . one door below the late Government liuUdiugs. where he will be found hereafter, prepared to carry on the CABINET MAKER'S BUSINESS, in all its branches nnd on the most reasonable terms. SECOND HAND FURNITURE BOUGHT AND SOLD, and Repairing Done Neatly and Expeditiously. Tltmte erlvo litm a Call. 987 DANIEL McCORRISTON McCOLCAN & JOHNSON, 1 Merchant Tallwra, Kaahumanu St., H. I., opposite Godfrey Rhodes. 9!7 ly TNT tioo SHIP & GENERAL BUCKSftllTHING CARRIAGE AND WAGON WORK. 1SD Iloi-so-Slioeli- is ! Will be Carefully Attended t at Bed Uoek I'riees ! All Uiuda of BlackauiilhisiK. either from Ship or Shore, will be promptly executed, and on the most reasonable terms. XT PLC ASB OIV8 HTM A CAL-- - XX 973 J- - T- - CHAYTER, Blacksmith. DAVID KEALOHA, House, Ship and Sign Painting! HOTEL STREET. 1VIXC OPENED A SHOP ON THE H .k....iFi i. nrennml to do all manner of work in his line of business. Charges reasonable, and all work done with neatness and dispatch. ly O SEQKLKESC. 8. KISTLEK. C. SECELKEN & CO., Tin, Copper, Zinc and Sheet Iron Workers, Xanana Street, bet. Merehaat and queen, HAVE COXSTANTL1 -- " 11ANU Stoves, Lead Pipe, Galv. Iron Pipe, Plain and Hose Bibbs, Stop Cocks, India Rubber Hose beBt in uA o& nri o r.t writH CoanVir.r and Pine com ICUKLlia j.u au. w ' " ' -- - o " .... ii... - to.na .tnoir nf Tinre of evervdescrio tion. Jobbing and Repairing done to order promptly and war- ranted. Particular attention given to Ship Work. Thankful to the citisens of Honolula, and the Islands gen- erally, for their liberal patronage in the past, we hope by stiict attention to business to merit the same for the future. !D- - Orders from the other Islands will be carefully attended to. 86 ly FISCHER & WICKE, CABINET MAKERS. HOTEL STREET, next door to Strehz's Drug Store. Furniture made and Repaired at Rea-nnab- le Rates. Billiard Tables Repaired and Altered. VTanus moved, ic. 13- - Orders from the other Islands will be promptly to. Vii y C. WEST, Wagon and Carriage Builder, 74 and 76 King St., Honolulu. (974 ly) IMand orders promptly executed. THOMAS LACK, (aCCCRSSOR TO JOHN SKILL.) NO. 40 fe ORT Sa REET, S ' will attend to all orders In the V LOCK. CI X& GENERAL REPAIR L1XE ne win give special attention to cleaning, repairing and reg- ulating Sewing Machines, and all other kinds or Light Machinery and Metal Work of every description, Blnrkaniithintf, 4c ALSO, ON HAND AND FOR SALE CHEAP, A Variety of Sewing Machines, Guns, Pistols, Shot, Ammnnition, MACHINE OIL, NEEDLES, &c, Vc. Sewing Machine Tuckers, Binders, and all other extra and duplicate parts of Machines supplied cn short notice XT Best Machine Twist. jCS COLl AGKNT is this kisgdom for The Celebrated Florence Sewing Machines. 949 ly C K a be g it O S, H O t " k! - H w s 5 a O I - i ' Li -- 2 CI s o li ci r M S I WATCH WORK! No. 6 3 FORT STREET. B.C. KIBBY ATcontinues to Repair Watches and Jewelry in the best manner and at reasonable rates; will M E X D SEWING M ACIIINESI and alt small articles in Gold. Silver or Steel, old Metal Spoons and Forks with Silver in the best possible manner. Satisfaction given in all cases. LADIES, LADIES ! You cannot afTord to boy a new Sewing Machine until you have tried the EASY RUNNING DOMESTIC, no noise, no weariness across the back, call at the sign of the Big Vatch, opposite C. E. Williams' Furniture Store on Fort Street, and examine it, bring along your work nd try it. 948 3m K. C. KIBBY. Agent for the Haw'n Is. J. NOTT & CO., Braziers, riMN, COPPER, ZINC AND SHEET IRON J. WORKERS, Are prepared to do any and all tinds of work in their line. COPPER WORK ef all descriptions made to Order. WATER PIPES, GALVANIZED AND LEAD, Laid on or repaired. GUTTERS AND SPOUTS, and all kinds of Tin Work on Buildings done on Short Sotice. IN STOCK A FULL ASSORTMENT of MATERIALS in the above line, which they OFFER AT LOWEST PRICES together with a fine assortment of Cooking -- Stoves, Ship's Cabin Stoves, &c. &c, &c. REPAIRING PROMPTLY ATTENDED TO 8MA0, FAVORS THANKFULLY RECEIVED AT 964 NO. ft KAAHUMANU STREET. JULY 24, 1S75. nsannrf Cart . NORTH BRITISH AND MERCANTILE INSURANCE CO., tF LONDON AND EDINUTRfill. ESTABUSQCS, 109. CAPITA L. ' .OOO.OOO Arrnranlalrd and I is veal erf Fwad. K.83S.118 rymE I'XDERSICXKl) HAVE BEEN AP-- U. PuINTKD AUK.NTSIor the Samlwich Islands, and are authorised to Insure against Fire upon favorable terms. Risks taken in any part of the Islands on Wooden Buildings, and Merchandise stored therein. Dwelling House and Furni- ture, Timber, Coals. Sh;ps in harbor with or without cargoes or under repair. 9 ly ) KD. HJFFSCHLAKGKR A CO. Boston Board of Underwriters ! AGENTS for the Hawailaa lalaada, C. BREWKRJtCO. Philadelphia Board of Underwriters ! AGENTS for the Hawaiian lalanda, C. BRKWKK A CO. VOTICE.-.MASTE- R8 OF VESSELS VIS- - 1 IT1NG this port in a disabled condition and insured in any ol the Boston and Philadelphia Offices must have their rejorts and accounts duly certified to by us. 931 ly C. BREWER & CO. F. A. SCHAEFER, A GENT Bremen Beard of L'nrfer writer. xAgenl DrrMleu Beard of Underwriters, A Kent Vienna Board ef Underwriters. Claims against Insurance Companies within the jurisdiction of the above Boards of Underwriters, will have t b certified to by the Agent to make them valid. 972 ly THE BRITISH AND FOREIGN MARINE INSURANCE COMP'Y. (LIMITKD,) ACCEPTS RISKS AT THE LOWEST clauses in the Policies of this Company are specially advantageous. THKO. U. DAVItS, Agent. THE NORTHERN ASSURANCE COMFY Issues Fire and Life Policies o N THE MOST LIBERAL TERMS. - ALL Claims tor Losses settled with promptitude. VW1 ly TIIKO. H. DAVIES, Agent. BOSTON BOARD OF UNDERWRITERS. rjMIE UNDERSIGNED, AGENTS OF THE MY Boston Board of Cndervriters, notify Masters of Vessels and others that all bills for Repairs on Vessels, and all bills for General Average purposes, must be approved by the Agent of the Boston Underwriters, who must also be represented on all surveys, or such bills will not be allowed. 903 ly C. BREWER & CO., Agents. CALIFORNIA INSURANCE COMPANY. TMIE UNDERSIGNED, AGENTS OF THE Company, have been authorised to insure risk on Cargo, Freight and Treasure, from Honolulu to all port of the world, and rice versa. 903 ly II. HACKFKLD A Co. TRANSATLANTIC FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY, ol HnmburK. Capital, One Million Prussian Thalers. UNDERSIGNED HAVING BEEN TM1E Agents of the above Company are now ready to Issue Polities against Risks of Fire, on Buildings, Merchandise and Fnrnilnre on terms equal to those of other respectable companies. Losses paid for and adjusted here. For particular apply to 958 tf U. HACKFELD A CO., Agent. IIA.MHUIIOII-HREME- N FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY. rTMIIE UNDERSIGNED, HAVING BEE V M. Appointed Agents of the tbove Company, are prepared to insure risks against Fire on Stone and Brick Building and on Merchandise stored therein, on most favorable term. For particulars apply at the office of 957 ly F. A. SCHAEFER CO. THE NEW ENGLAND MUTUAL LIFE INS. CO. OF BOSTON, MASS. Thirty-en- e Year Standing! Policies Issued on the most favorable Terms. The Greatest Risk taken on a Life, $20,000. Surplun distributed among the members annuil'y. Assets, 812,330,000 I CASTLE Si COOKE, AGENTS 957 . FOR THE HAW'N ISLASDS. Jy UNION INSURANCE COMP'Y OF.SAX FRANCISCO. 2VE AnUNTE. INCORPORATED, 1885. CASTLE & COOKE, Agents 957 ly FOR THE HAWAIIAN ISLANDS. HAWAIIAN SOAP WOAKS (J It EY Sc CO., Manufacturers and Dealers IN ALL KINDS OF SOAPS ! Leleo, King Street, Honolulu. Beef, Mutton and Goat Tallow Wanted ! Order Left at Ira Richardson's Beet and Shoe Store will meet with prompt 9S5 Attendance. ly JEFFREY & CO.'S EDINBURGH ALE IN PINTS AND QUARTS. VORWECIAX ALE IN QUARTS AND PINTS. German Ale, Key brand, in quarts and pints. Holland Gin, stone jugs in baskets, Strong Rum, in barrels ; Alcohol in Tim and demijohns. Clarets of different qualities. LIEBFRAUENMILCH, RHINE WHINE, SELTZER WATER in Stone Jogs. FOR SALE BY 971 H. HACKFELD i CO. Hemp Cordage! poiR STRAND RUSSIA CORDAGE, ALL C1U. For Sale by BOLLEa b CO. Russia Bolt Rope ! ASSORTMENT OF SIZES. For Sale by B0LLE3 It CO. Cruslied Sugar, X HALF BARRELS. For sale by BOLLEH s CO. T- - uiunte rafr, V i,iyy,'-t- s to tne payment iiijiiinmiiLsii.a IT TaiJfg.TiTJ. WHOLE NO. 1000. J. MOANAULI Off. r For Ps-- - ,. r Beef, M alien. Veal. Salman , Fish. at the FISH MARKET STALLS, No. 1. 1, 20, 21. l the Lowest Market Katea. Pleai give tnf a call. ly SOLE AND SADDLE LEATHER, Tanned Goat and Sheep Skim, ON II A NI AND FOR SALE, CONSTANTLY WAIMKA TA N.N E It V C NOT LEY, By (Mly) A. 6. CLF.UHORN A CO , Afrots. FAMILY MARKET, E. II. BOYD, Proprietor. Hotel Street. Choicest Meat from finest herd,. Poultry, Fish, Vcgetablr ., furnished to order. ds4 ly KAUP.IKVEA PLANTATION SL(JAU NOW COMING IN, AND FOR SALE IN LOTS TO SUIT PURCHASERS, BY AFONG A ACHrCK. Honolulu, June 1st, 1ST. ? ly IIONOMIIiH SOAP WOKKS ! Xj o X o o . J. RAWLINS MANUFACTURER yy ALL KINDS OF SOAPS! and Buyer of Beef, Mutton and Ooat Tallow, and all 074) kinds of 8osp Greaae. (ly A. S. CLECHORN & CO. A GENTS FOR THE WAIMFA TANNERY, 87itly Hawaii. MAKEE PLANTATION. ITLUPALAKIJA, MAUI. CROP OF 1873-.- St f.AK Si MOLASSES, For Sale by C. llKKWi.ll 4r Co , Agent. ii.i:i:ir him,, i.aiiaiaa. CAMPBELL Si TURTON, I,reprleiers. of superior quality, now coming ia and for sale In quantitit to suit by 94 ly II. HACKFELD A CO. WAILUKU PLANTATION! VVAILUKU. MA II. CROP OF 1813 V for Sale by C. liKEWKR k Co., 658 3m . Agents. IV A I ii A I" I J Vis AA TAT I OA' ! II. Cernwell, Proprietor. AND MOLASSES FROM THIS SUGAR for sale in lots to suit purchasers. Apply to 968 ly GEO. C. McLEAN, Agent. METROPOLITAN MARKET, Ci. WALLER, KIXQ STREET, HONOLULU. 9S7 ly WASHINGTON MEAT MARKET! F. W. D UNN E. WD3 PROPRIETOR. NCCANU STREET. 0(8 ly HONOLULU STEAM BAKERY! R. LOVE & BROTHERS, Proprietors, NUUANU 8TR3KT. PILOT, MEDIUM AND NAVY BREAD, on band and made to order. Also, Mater, So.Z4 and Butter Clicker, JENNY LIND CAKF.rf. Ac. SHIP BREAD REBAKED on the chortest notice. FAMILY BREAD, made of the Best Flour, baked daily and always on hand. X. B. BROWN BREAD OF THE REST QUALITY 9S7 ly Columbia River Spring Salmon! R ECEIVED PER J. A. FALKINBUKG, and warranted a splendid article. yr sale by 970 3m CASTLE A COOKK. Properties For Sale or Lease THE CELEBRATED SUGAR LAND OF HAKALAU.in the District of II ilo, Hawaii. ALSO The Land, House, Pasture and Premise of AUAUKEAE, Kona, Hawaii, containing about 700 acre. For particular apply to 997 W L. 0REEN. SHIP CHANDLERY! SHIP GROCERIES. WHALE BOATS, BOAT STOCK, FLOUR AND BREAD, COTTON DUCK, HEMP AND MANILA CORDAGE 2 Ar.t Sir., . A.C. AT LOWEST RATES BY A. W. PEIRCE & CO. AgoiitH for Brand's Bomb Lances, Perry Davij' Painkiller, Puuloa Salt Works. THE HAWAIIAN HOTEL! s - . ' - .mkfe . Zjri- - )wssr1"! PROPRIETOR WILL SPARE NO THE pain to make tins BliEG-AICr- T UOT33IJ First-Clas- s in Every Particular ! R00HS AX BE IIID BY TI1E MCIIT 0B WEEK ! with or without toarI. HALL AND LARGE ROOMS TO LET FOR 990 PUBLIC MEETINGS. OR 8QCIETIE3. ly BEEF AND PORK ! ESS PORK. 31 PRIME PORK, OREGON r.F.F.F, HAWAIIAN BEEF. 981 2rn For l by A. W. PEIRCK k CO. etc., etc in r irr 1 1 n i Lloe (1 I'm N. it I. n. (4 tori,. W iulf I" uo.n .. lhird 1 vlvsn..... lUK l'"im holC.4usia.... a a id t u 10 im u 0 T ( 10 ow It W) II OM 4 1K1 111 I IW I 0 VI 1 w I 11 w ii iw a no 4 oo I IW II W It II IW l M CM 14 00 UO Ou i 44 UU t OO II do N IM It OO-T- I MIMNIWH SJ" A Jrrniwrs rl.tn In t tmrm X'mw4 ea pay lev tSe.r card y ewkif OiwOmU w l feats P.wta Kmf aaxwata tay etsa t pay m4 thmtl eard, wtil b, insvrtrd a f lt, fw ie Urn pai4 Nr. IT BoaSoes CarJs, sbea ratrsia r.-- a ta, ar aiwed sMrwant trvm rals, ahlra ars Aw Maasl'al aJrvrtkMment aksa pad rarr4 auartwly. jfortign .JitrtistiatiiU. I. C. BILL. J. C. MERRILL & Co,, Commission Merchants nd Auctioneers 204 nl 20G ClifomU 8irrt, K xv 11 1 ranolNOo. ALSO. AOKSTS Of tll San Francisco and Honolulu Packots. Particular attention ivwi ts Iks aa4 jjrrks of mm,. ,haDatw..hip.' watMM,i.pHHf woakatlM. tsUi VTl ftwUbl arvlvln at Sas rraael...y ov t th. raotw.sston. tr Kchn on Ilooolu'a boW ol aoW-X- sraacaa Mew. A. W. Pvirs A Co Moastol. II. Ilackfold A Co C. Brewer A Co Bi.hop A Co ' Dr. R. W. Wool..: u lliin 1. u. alien. ... ......... ......- - . Wm. Coirr, Doiaio tf trtttv, San Franciico. 'Rrr Mscvssv, rortUnd, O. C0RBITT & MACLEAY, Importers, Yholcgale (Jrocers aud CoiiimifcHloii .lIcrclinntK, Shippers and Dealers of Oregon Produc MAX FRANCIICO I Ofllee 1011 Callforala Hi reel. PORTLAND, OREOOXI 13 mm 15 Froal,a4 IO A. 19 First i. SlfMNrtl 1 W. C. Ralston, Esq., Bank of California.... .tan Fraocloos .. Pas rrascisoo Cha. deRo, Kq. lreiaent o. r. Co. Mer. Cross t'o ....lsa FrsiK'lcs Meswr. Ladd A Tllton, liaoksr...... ..... .'ortlaod, Orvfon Hank t f British Columbia .. rrtiand, Ort'" M . L. Ooldtmlih A Co .I'nrtlasd, Orvfso tf'..kii, r.nin a !. ......... .... ....... I'ortlajOn-irs- Mrairi. lllibDD A Co.. Banksrs...... .... ...Iloouiuls Ceaslcaasealsor Islaaa Preaa roSollrlteo. IBIUIA mil!, CORNER OF MISSI0X I BO0XT STSm KAX IBAXCISfO, CiL. fHIE INDIA RICE MILL H AVINU VL? M' derrone Material ImproveBirot, I oow In pen onaoi- - tlon for the HILLIXG AMI IIHESS1XG OF HW AND UNCLEAN ED RlCai ! In the Best Poislbl Manner. Th pilot for IIULLINU ao4 DREBFINO PA DDT ba boon Ilea area 0 Per Cel OcaxAwvlKajLSXAoaataw of PADDY AND HULLED niCEl Mill 1 teeth Prompt ntul Careful Attention. WM M. ORKENWOOD, Oereral Commission Merchant and Proprietor of India Rhw Mill. KM 3 Cm A. P. EVERETT, Fcrwnrdingtt Commission Merchant 4 OA FR0.fr STREET, CORNER CLAY, MAN FRANCIKCO. Particular attention paid to CorilnmnU f Island Pvndoeo Mi ly . WILLIAMS, BLANCHARD & CO., Shipping & Commission Merchants No. 218 Callforala Hired, mh28 M SAM f RAWCISCO. THE GRAND PACIFIC HOTEL! CHICAGO. The Largest and Host Complete Hotel in the World! rMIE LESSEES (WELL KNOWX AM THE I l.r,r..Lr,r. of Lha feHEKM AN HULUF. bsfor It d traction in th memorablo Oonfiairratl'Mi of Dctotr Slk and 9th, 1871,) take pkasur In announcing ths completion of thl new eolerprlse, wnien i now opra nuavr in.ir prnwiwi mun ment for the sceommodatlon of vnesl. D aaurj ......u .v..r. ..n, . . CP . . , LKBcKEfi FOR TWENTf TEARS. Chico, Jane 1st, 1873. Jolt THi: RIDGE HOUSE ! KEALAKEKUA MA VJIA WAIL THE HAWAIIAN ISLANDS ARK noted th world over for thlr uorivakd aalubricy of fa elimtta. Certain localities la the grouo ar, rec. (all favfred In thl war. Tb District of Kona, on tu leeward aide of Hawaii, bat long bw, famsd as Pao of resort for Invalid with broDchltal. or lone d . WliblU pur and mild atmospbers, with lu sbaolalo rreodom fros torm or bigo wind, with It porous oil which, witk all lu rich vegetation, retain no dampoes and yield no malaria, and with an unvarying temperaturo that of tto Amerinao or (Uratbern European Jun.-A- LL THE YEAR ROLND, tat climate of Kona It on of th Uallikit and ot lusriou on the globe. Ths ander!g-ned,a- t hi boo at Kaawaloo.a hooss an. iualrd in ths district for i, cleatOloss. ooodoos, and tborougbne of furnishing, ia prepared lo glv boarder excellent room no ail obtainable comfort In lh way of diet, THERE ARE FRKBII WATER EATlii on the preoils, and One a bathing wlihln a hort dlstone. The tmer Kilauea and th schooner l lUm and Prince, rus rrularly between Uonoluls sod th Kaawalos Isoding. lhe undersigned eaiploy 00 agenU nor rsnoer. Ills boa speaks for luelf opoa insictlon. ',' TO'i Kaawaloa, Kalakkua bay. Kona, Voe. IS. 17- - 7 3L7"OIX SAX 7?r.- - flUIE t'NDF.RMIGNED OFFER FOR SJALS5 1 cn th OF MOUlKAI, to bo 4llvrl oa tlx Beach at Kaunakakai, ONE STEAM BOILING OUT APPARATUS in PERrrcr order, Consisting of Boiler, two vt an on Steam Pump, A. Tb above apparatus was maoufactarjd la 187S at to liooolala Iroo Work. AUO-- At Walklkl, Ilod of Oabu, ONE COMPLETE Stoam Apparatus for Manufac- turing of Pol ! for further articular apply to CIIAS. h. IiI"lluP,or JNO. O. IxiMIMft, ol Administrator of tstaU of Kamehamcba V. IflEDIGAIi WOADKRI flHIS GREAT REMEOV HAM DONK 1 mor to cur the oumeru a:hr aud pain of th human race than any other combination of rrtnedit. IT IS SAFE, ECRE AM RELIABLE P0R KkrutNMlUns, Nearalgla, lleaaaebr. Cello, Cramp, Lak, Weaasls, Mealsls, Ii raises, Ve. Tskeu with the WONDER PILLS It parlflet th Mood, r late the liver and secretion, and general givr tor lo lb yitem. a c. Mclean, 0T2 ly General Agent for th Hawaiian Island. A FIIVE CIIAIVCE FOR IN VESTINO A HMALLUM of money, or of tecurlng 0XE OF THE MOST ELIGIBLE DWKLLISC LOTS In th City of Honolulu, I now offered by th L'sdsrilgoea. 11 Is desirous to dlspo of that fib and healthily UosUd flsc of Land adjoining th Government Oardn,and fronting bchsol and Fort Streets at th bead of tb latter. Any on withing lo pure has abosld apply sooo, a tt Lot will be old at a low figure. (Ui J. b. LtMUM. FIREWOOD ! FIREWOOD 1 1 EAST MA I' I. FOR SULK BV . IJMIOM ' BuLLRH h CO. riT'jmTrjj"'

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Page 1: THE PACiriC X

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QMflTiitAiintfr 3 MMnaiii si jui

THE PACiriC FROM AUSTRALIA., ' Ar Vi V Co B P Atikd errlvtJ at Ihia

Commercial Urbertiscr X . ftg, 4yt mni 16 Lour from

IS PUBLISHED V. " id fn 0 i.-- aL. k - Wm

Hvery Saturday Morning, XBY J. H.JLACK.

fit, mt.1 lalxml Su ber i pi iona. AG.OO n rear.Vl.OD far Sim Monlhi. I.inr, t

I'orriH Subscription. 7.-r- t to IO a lr. 1 1 I. I V Mr-- e tyj a k itThe u.-- r ;.:i'.n jir.r- - I r ppr, r.rxrardw! (n any part of

Aojtu--1 i, 7 .y p.-- r h;rh in-i-- l In lliwi aipvr nil;. All np"r f"f Far cin port be charirlthe pits-- ilmn.li at tri-- pot kO'-o, wh h varies from 4to H rnt rn inv pT.

Er rurmrTHt Patabi. Aiwat-- it Adtji.-i-.ry Comrn tnica:ion from all parts of th" Pacific will

alway, x very acceptaMC7 fvrvn rsi ling in any part of the Vn'.XrA Jutn. can

remit the amount of do for thi, pspr inAmerican po-t- -f stamp.

PLAIN AND FANCY

BOOK AND JOB PRINTINGXT BILL-HE&-3. VI?ITINO, BUSINESS AND ADDRESS

CAHD.i imiH in the hihest style of the art.

(Wlil t-- r lh P. C. Auvrtiser.)

Oh Pledge Me Not With Wine !

Oh ! pledge uj not with wine. !ur love t

I shrink from it ruddy glow ;

And whit and cold a deathly f-- ar

Drips tr.to my heart like snow.

Oh ! pl"lg me nol with wine, dar loveThrough it mUl of rxiy tm

i rount the beats of a broken heart ;

I r a desolate home.

Oh ! pllg me not with wine, dear loveI shiver with lr dread

Eii"h drop 19 me ia a tear of bloodTh-i- t aorrowful eye have h.l.

Oh pledge me not ! though the wine is brightA th crystal light that flow

Thr,ugh the jdsK' cloudy g ' t fire,

Or the morniog's vein of roae.

Put down the cop! it ia brim'J with blood

C'rwhed throbbing from heart like mine !

For hope, f. ,r peace, lit dear love aake.Oh p:Mge use not witTl wine '.

VARIETY.A Kifs. Olifcr Wendell Holmes definition of

a kids : The twenty-Bevent- h letter of the al-

phabet the love-labi- al which it takx--a two toIak fluinlj."

Hash. " A favorite dish in our restaurants,"aj a Montana is beef-hasb- ." The New

Yorlc Commercial AJmti.r purposes it must

FiGCRisa Up. Chicago and St. Louis are fig-

uring up their population by the "Smithmethod," on the basis of ono Smith to every 540persons in the United States.

None cf our spellers have yet ewnced such pro-found ignorance of orthorgraphy as the Yorkshire-ma- n,

who, in addressing Sir Humphrey Davy,rendered it thus Zurumvrijdavy.

Who Knows. Never tell the boys that it iswaste of time to play marbles. Who knowswhat advantage that accuracy of aim and steadi-

ness of nerve may be when they get older andplay billiards ?

When a woman is care-lade- n and heavy-hearte- d

nothing shakes the megrims out of her quickerthan for a couple of ladies to stop in front of thehouse long enough for her to examine the trim-

mings on their bonnets.

The liaohester (Minn.) Post gives the followingas a eign painted on a fence in that neighborhood :

Kaeh pade for littel kalves nut mourn to dazeold." That fellow never fv.lcd away hi timeloafing around spelling schools.

Corrected Himself. A Frenchman, incensedat a writer who is not particularly brilliant, spokeof him ti-- an ass, and then corrected himself :

No; I nm wrong. He. is a mole, who has earsequally long and produces nothing."

Probably. A meeting of the bald-heade- d men

of Winncsmucea. was held at the Court-hous- e in thatplace, on" the evening of the 18th inst., at which,the Silver Star says, there was probably thegrandest exhibition of miniature alkali flats evereep ; - - -

Ah, iSam, so you've been in trouble, haveyou?" Yes, Jim, yes." Well, well, cheer

tries and shows ourup man ; adversity us, upbeet qualities." 4t Ah, but adversity did'nt tryme, it was an old wagabond of a judge, and heshowed up my worst qualities."

Not CVmfortable. If married men will attendthe Bpelhng matches, they had better leave iheirwives at borne. It isn't comfortable to walk home

with her and have the dear creature muttering atevery Btep, " I'm ashamed of your ignorance,"and "if you can't spell 'agitate, 111 teach youwhen I get yoa home." No ; it's disheartening.

It is remarkble how Borne writers can adornthe most common-plac- e subject with the flowers

of poesy, and make joy for ever. We read ina contemporary tbata highly-esteeme- d citizen ofFranklin, who has dwelt npon this eublunarysphere fur the term of seventy years, and in thattime had the mingled grief and pleasure to laythree wives where the flowers of spring couldgrow ovt r them and the dews of summer sparklelike a robe of diamonds about them, recentlytook to himself a fourth partner of his joys andsorrows in the perse of a charming widow who

has depUited two ventures in a placeof prepetual security and gazed on the blushingroses of .'seventy Bummers."

Walt Whitman on tub Scandal. The Brook-

lyn Anlus says that Walt Whitman is devotingbis leisure momenta to the composition of a poemon the scandal. A few lines will Berve to show

that the terrors of his genius are unabated :

Cornucopoela ol peatiferous peccadilloes !

Plague, peatilence, alaughter, lamlne,; araoo, murder, teinpeat,

lightning, ahipwreck. North" Paoflc bead wa Orange.; county batter

Wbal are these to thai, or this to thoae ?

Warming the Pole icing the equator ;Bitting ad, aolitary ; leaping, crawling ;

jiving all around the world, andon the rocka of Terra del Fuego.

Parthcnope horriday ! PerUcopic woe !

riaccotaab, of social slime immense ;Dimming the argent plenUune ;

Muh. aluah, gush ; Sherman, avaunt !

O Elizabeth ! O Henry 1"

The Motiier Tongue. An English clergymanand a Lowland Scotsman visited one of the beetschools in Aberdeen. They were strangers, butthe master received them civilly, and inquired :

Wvuld you prefer thafl should epecr theseboys, or that you should speer them yourselves?"The English clergyman, having ascertained that

desired the master toto ereer meant to question,proceed. He did so with great success, and theboys answered satisfactorily numerous interroga-

tions as to the exodus of the Israelites from Egypt.The clergyman then said he would be glad in his

turn to epecr the boys, and at once begun. " How

did die ?" There was a dead silence. Inthis dilemma the Lowland gentleman interposed.

I think sir, that the boys are not accustomed tovour Eoglish accent ; let me try what I can make

of them.J And he inquired in hia broad Scotch,.t nktrmnah Airain there was a

dead silence : upon which the master said, Itbiak eentlemen, you can't speer these boys ; I II

L i,nw tX it." And he proceeded :

1 rnrm-if- i at lua inner end? lne"lill Wll IU iuunw---ovs answered : "He was drooned ; and a'f--n little fellow added : " Ony lassie could nae

n that."ate now of daily occurrence

IVsEoklvn families. For instance, the other- r.ihlfi of a well-know- n resident

lerrepont street, the following colloquy took

f4. Fnmilin fin a stern voice, to a pretty"ehter aged 20) "Julia, who was that young

r Julia (with deliberation) " A friend."Father " How late did he stay?"Julia " I don't remember."Father " What is his name?Julia " I can't recollect."Father " Where does he live?"

ni.Trlw " Ha's moved."Father (reprovingly) " Don't answer me in

that evasive mauuci. j. -

younger sister who had been reading the

trial (turning to a rich old bachelor uncle) " Iobject ; the question is leading.

tv.. it r Sneict nnon an answer, ves or no.j tht mipitinn in another iorm. as

.i l,.Minn r.f the Iinfl ? 'Julia (absently) "My memory fails me in

matters ifetails, although, (with a pause) there- i . uota kiAn onrnMhinff nF f Vif Iririd."jmgru naio lA-i-- u Dvuv.u.bAt this point the breakfast ended.

VOL. XX-N- O. 4.

gusintss Carts.

TH0S. G. THRUM,ON GOLn.SILVF.R. UK ASS.ENORAVKR c.

CUTTER IX 1'LANTATIOX.STENCIL Name IMates. V'l ly

WING CH0NG TAI & CO.,OXOLULU BAKERV. CORNER OFII H1 King and JH'inai'j sirftii. ij

. KOTB.

FISCHER & ROTH,V1ERCIIAXT TAILORS. 38 FORT ST.,i.vl itol llouolala, II. I. iy

DILLINGHAH Sr. CO.,AXn DEALERS IX IIARO-WAR- F.,

IMPORTERS -

Cutlery, Dry Goods, Paints and Oils, and GeneralMtrrchanilise.

o.i,7 No. 95 King 6tre, Honolula. jEDWARD T. 0'HALLORAN,

TTRXEV AND SOLICITOR. IS Ato lend fr.m 2CK to $10,000 on Mortice of

r,.nirt. at lowest rates of Interest. XT Agents In London,

and in all parts of Australia.OFVICK on Fort Street, (opposite Mr. Ira R.char.Ison s

Ptorf ) Honolulu. v.iotn

HYMAN BROTHERS,rM PORTERS, WHOLES ALE AND RETAIL

DEALtKS IN

Dry Goods, Clothintr, Hta furnlhiDK Goods, Ladies' andGenu' Boots and 5i-- s Vankee Notions, sre, &c.

Capu Snow's Building. U Merchant St. Honolulu. 9S7 ly

WILDER & CO.,rrrrwiRS TO UUWSfcia t CO.

Corner Fort and Queen Stt.Dealers in Lumber. Paints, Oil, Nails, Salt, and Building

S. B. DOLE, -

.AT liWi r r r. jATTORXEV corner of I'ort nd Merch'int StreetsC(3 uoouiuiu. j

THE0. H. DAVIES,(Late Janlon, Gre;n & Co.)

rM PORTER A lJ turi.Mjs3iii3OH a XT n ircti rn

Lloyds' and the Liverpool Underwriters, Northern Assurancecompany, ana criiiun "'-'i- s"

Company.831 Fire Proof Buildings, Kaahumanu ana tfueen o. u

DR. 0. S. CUMMINGS,OMCEOPATIIIST, OS FORT STREET,II IloDolalu, II. I. "- -

S. MAGN1N,. - - - . - .... . . D X'ANU l r-- a i.r. iv s. VIMPORTER Hats and Caps, Furnishing Goods, c.

HIGHEST PRICE PAID FOR I UL.U Arili HlUt. :933 Fort Street, Honolulu, II. I. 1j

F. A. SCHAEFEll & CO.,

'M PORTERS MER"Honolulu, Hawaiian Islands. ly

C. S. BARTOW,CCTIOXEER. SALESROOM ON QUEEN

L 975 btreet, one door from K.aahumann. ly

J. PORTER GREEN,. ...nr k r a 1 T A &Vr

AM rtl VATTORNEY door to Vr. H. Stacgei.wald, Merchant St.

978

CECIL BROWN,. . . c. r r ill . . mTSUt;uu.ui.ii"n i " " 'ATTORNEY takinf? Acknowl. dgtaents of Instrument..

for the HUnd of Oahii. .No. 8 Kaahumanu street, nooumiu, -- J

E. STREHZ,APOTHECARY AXU DRUGGIST.

Corner Fort and Hotel Streets.SATURDAY EVENING. 976 lyKeeps open every

M. McINERNY,MPORTER AND DEALER CIjOTlI-

iciet CuTlTry' d "derTpTion of Gent's SuperiorFn1nrshln Gos Benkert'.Fine Calf Dress Boots,

"ay? J? nand x, Strbkts. 973 lyN. K. UOBSB or iwi

aTw. PEIRCE & CO.,Successors to C. L. Richards & Co.)

NHIP CHANDLERS AND G EX ERA L COM- -MISSION MERCHANT. Honolulu, nawaun Islands.

. (972 ly)

E. P. ADAMS,UCTIOXEER AN D COMMISSION MER-- k

CHANT.Street. Honolulu. H. I. 9lly

Arnua Jtr AnTTTTflK.WHOLESALE AND RETAILIrseutrl'. Merchandise. Fire-pro-of etoreNuu.- -

nu Streets.

NO. 49 HOTEL ST.CONFECTIONER. Honolulu. 9,0

TH0S. G. THRUM,TATIOXER. NEWS DEALER ANDs BOOK BlNUtlt, aerciauiruM

958 ly

s. b. ratEL.FRIEL & LAINE,

ROGERS AND PROVISION DEALERS,G Family Grocery'&nd Feed Store,

58 Fort Street, Honolulu. a J

W. G. IRWIN & Co.,

CylUrf&HlIS AGENTS.Honolula, H. I. W

J. MONTGOMERY,a TTORNEY AT LAW AND SOLICITOR

Q"'C X- - 8 o'pMirkhodes' building.

JOHN TH0S. WATERHOUSE,"sr M PORTER AN D DEALER IN GENERAL

Honolulu. iyStreet,953 Queen

C. BREWER & CO.,

COMMISSION AXSIIIPPINU MER--

n.i, (953 1vi" Hawaiian Islands.

E. HOFFMANN, H. D.,PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. CORNERf Merchant and Kaahumanu Sts , near the Post-offic-

953 ly

ALLEN & CHILLINGWORTH,KAWAinAE, HAWAII,

CONTINUE THE GENERALWILL and SHIPPING BUSINESS at thewhere they are prepared to furnish the justly cele-iuuici-v.,

r,r.-.- . i .mv. mvnr reoruits as arebrated nawainae ruuura) :

at the shortest notice and on theSort reasooMelerms. (953 ly) FIREWOOD ON HAND.

ALEX. J. ARTWRIGHT,MERCHANT AND

COMMISSION SHIPPING AGENT,949 lTHonolulu, Hawaiian Islands

CHULAN & CO.,PORTERS OF AXD DEALERS IXiu CHINA GOODS

Of all descriptions, and in all kinds of Dry Goods. Also, con

lastly on hand, a superior quality of Hawaiian Rice.

957 Nuaanu Street, Honolulu. ly

LEWERS & DICKSON,BALERS IN LUMBER AXD BUILDINGD 949 Materials, mnciirti. .j

H. HACKFELD & Co.ENERAL COMMISSION AGENTS.G 953 ly iiv.iul.uiv.

M. PHILLIPS & Co.,AXD WHOLESALEIMPORTER'S Shoes, Hats, Men's Fnrnbhin? and

Fancy Goods. (961 ly) No 11 Kaahumanu St Honolulu.

1 1 1 l 111 ' S .1S1 I 1 ,

HONOLULU.V. usintss Carts.

F. T. LENEHAN & CO.,COMMISSION AGENTS.IMPORTERS: in General M'rrhandise.

9S9 Queen St., next to the Office of J. I. Doett, Esq. ly

D. N. FLITNER,HISOLD BUSINESS IX THEC10XTIXUES building. Kaahumanu Street,

Chronometers rated by observations of the sun and stars,with a transit instrument accurately adjusted to the

meridian of Honolulu. Particularattention ziven tofine watch repairing. Sextant and quadrant

glasses silvered and adjusted. Charts andnautical instruments constantly on

&V3 hand and for tale. if

DR. F. B. HUTCHINSON,PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON.I Office at Mr. Strehx's Drug Store, corner cf Fort and

Hotel Streets. XT" Residence corner of Nuuanu and KokniStreets. ! 3mJ Office hours 9 to 11 A. M.

ALFRED s7 HARTWELL,A TTORNEY AND COUNSELLOR AT

LAW993 ly Office over Hoffmann's Drug Store.

BISHOP & CO., BANKERS,HAWAIIAN ISLANDS.HONOLULU. OF EXCHANGE ON

The Bank of California San FranciscoMessrs. Lees & Waller New YorkTremont National Bank - .BostonOriental Bank Corporation ..LondonOriental Bank Corporation, payable in Sydney, Melbourne

and Auckland.Agents for the Manhattan Life Insurance Company of New

Vork.Receive Deposits, Discount First-clas- s Business Paper,

attend to Collecting, &c. &c. 93-- ly

IRA RICHARDSON,AND HEALER IX BOOTS.

IMPORTER Clothing, Furnishing Goods,Perfumery, kc.

Honolulu, H. I.Corner of Fort and MerchantjUjajOlyl

ED. HOFFSCHLAEGER & CO,. rioUMIfiVlltV M ER.A '' ' " 'f MPORTEKS "rIV

. 981 lyCorner of Fort and Merchant Streets.

E. G. HITCHCOCK,

TTORNEY AT LAW,HILO, HAWAII.

' 977 lycollected.Bills promptly

CASTLE & COOKE,DEALERS IN GEX- -' M PORTERS AND

ERAL MERCHANDISE,

SHIPPING AND COMMISSION MERCHANTS.

977 No. 80 King Street, Honolulu, H. I. ly

B0LLES & CO.,. .... roilIICin...HIP CHAMlu"1"1 a' vs VKRCTIANTS.

Importers and Dealers in General Merchandise, Queen Streetiinnnii,ln. Hawa an Islands.

Maunalua and Kakaako SaltKaunakakai.Agents lor the977 Works.

M. S. GRINBAUM & CO.,WHOLESALE DEAL-I'7- rs

iFtonabTeCloThing, Ha.s. Caps, Boots and S hoe.

aid every variety of Gentlemen's Superior Furnishing Goods

Store formerly occupied by W. A. Aldrich, Makee's9S5 Block. Queen Street. S

E. 0. HALL & SON,rMPnRTFRS AND DEALERS IX HARD- -

9C4 Corner Fort and King Sts. ly .

BROWN & CO.,M PORTERS AXD DEALERS IN ALES.

WINES AND SPIRITS, AT V? HOLM LB

.Merchant Street, 1962 lyl IJonoKHJNO. 8. SMITHIK8.

A 3. CLRGHORH

A. S. CLEGH0RN & Co.,WHOLESALE AN DTM PORTERS AXD

JrETAIL DEALERS IN

Ceneral Merchandise,Corner Queen and Kaahumanu Stf..,

and Hotel sts.958 ly Nuuanu St.. and Corner Fort

RICHARD F. BICKERT0N,ctdppt IinN'OLULU.

ITiIfERCIIAXTJ. W. Austin's former Office, over Henry M. Whitney's

BookStoreAcCount. and Bill Collected,

Copying, Custom House BusinessDrafting, Book Keeping,

executed. 3m970 and General Commissions carefully

fL E. McINTYRE & BROTHER,R.OCERY, FEED STORE AND BAitf.tii,G cornet oi aims 'Honolulu. II. I.958 ly

WM. WEIGHT,Ship and Generfl Blacksmith,

Shop on the Judd Wharf, next to the Old Custom

House.All work in my line will be executed with dispatch and

gUJynAUorders from the. other islands will be carefully at-

tended to.

Horse-Shoein- g and Carriage Repairing!979

OO Stroot, ooM . T. DONNELL,

IMPORTER AXD MaSTFaCTCRRR OP

ALL KINDS OF FURNITURE !

r Suitable to this market.

Vg XT Old Furniture repaired and Mattrasses of all deXi scriptions made to order.Before buying elsewhere call at 8 G and 8 8 K lag t reel

958 ly

P. DALTON,Saddle and Harness JIaIer,

KiyG STREET, HOXOLULU.

Harness, Saddle & Shoe Leath-er, Constantly on Hand.

Orders from the other Islands promptly attended to. 919 ly

E. C. ADDEHLEY,Saddle and Harness Maker,

- rX CORNER rXJfJL,Fort and Hotel Streets, Honolula. 2SJ2i

3 . . a J: ..-- I, T.l.n.1XT Carriages rrimmea wild ueaiuess auu uisou.

Orders attended to promptly 95 y

C. E. WILLIAMS,Manufacturer, Importer and Dealer in

3T TJ XX PJ IT TJ 3F3L 3E3 I

f? OF EVERY DESCRIPTION.fcSI Furniture Ware Room on Fort street ; Workshop atM the old stand, Hotel street, near Fort.

B Orders from the other islands promptly attended to.953 ly

HONOLULU IRON WORKS CO.STEAM ENGINES, SUGARMills, Boiler3, Coolers, Imn, Brass and Lead

Castings.

Machinery of Every Description madeTO ORDER.

Particular Attention paid to iShip's Blacksmithing.

XT Job Work executed cn the shoftest notice. 949 ly

J. M. OAT & Co., Sailmakers.OLD CUSTOM HOUSE, FIRE-PRO- OF BUILDING.

13 uo tne narr, ooici juuaiiu ctrcci, iwuu1U1U, II. i.

Sails made in the Best Style and Fittedwith Galvanized Clues and Thimbles.

King of all tleaeriptions made and repaired.Thankful for pat patronage, we are prepared to execute all

orders in our line, with dispatch and in a satisfactory manner.9T9 ly

HAWAIIAN ISLANDS,

P. J. BROWN,GENERAL BLACKSMITH,

King Street, near Bethel. Bo&olulJ.

PARTICULAR ATTENTION PAID TO

Horse-Shoein- g & Carriage Work99S

CABINET MAKER'S SHOP!THE UNDERSIGNED

beiis to notify his friends and thepublic generally, that he has taken

Sliop oxx Port tY O O t .one door below the late Government liuUdiugs. where he will

be found hereafter, prepared to carry on the

CABINET MAKER'S BUSINESS,in all its branches nnd on the most reasonable terms.

SECOND HAND FURNITURE BOUGHT AND SOLD,

and

Repairing Done Neatly and Expeditiously.Tltmte erlvo litm a Call.

987 DANIEL McCORRISTON

McCOLCAN & JOHNSON,1 Merchant Tallwra,Kaahumanu St., H. I., opposite Godfrey Rhodes.

9!7 ly

TNT tiooSHIP & GENERAL BUCKSftllTHING

CARRIAGE AND WAGON WORK.1SD

Iloi-so-Slioeli- is !

Will be Carefully Attended t at Bed Uoek I'riees !

All Uiuda of BlackauiilhisiK. either fromShip or Shore,

will be promptly executed, and on the most reasonable terms.

XT PLC ASB OIV8 HTM A CAL-- - XX

973 J- - T- - CHAYTER, Blacksmith.

DAVID KEALOHA,House, Ship and Sign Painting!

HOTEL STREET.

1VIXC OPENED A SHOP ON THEH .k....iFi i. nrennml to do all manner of work inhis line of business. Charges reasonable, and all work donewith neatness and dispatch. ly

O SEQKLKESC. 8. KISTLEK.

C. SECELKEN & CO.,Tin, Copper, Zinc and Sheet Iron Workers,

Xanana Street, bet. Merehaat and queen,HAVE COXSTANTL1 --

" 11ANUStoves, Lead Pipe, Galv. Iron Pipe, Plain and HoseBibbs, Stop Cocks, India Rubber Hose beBt in

uA o& nri o r.t writH CoanVir.r and Pine comICUKLlia j.u au. w ' " ' -- - o ".... ii... - to.na .tnoir nf Tinre of evervdescrio

tion. Jobbing and Repairing done to order promptly and war-

ranted. Particular attention given to Ship Work.Thankful to the citisens of Honolula, and the Islands gen-

erally, for their liberal patronage in the past, we hope by stiictattention to business to merit the same for the future.

!D- - Orders from the other Islands will be carefully attendedto. 86 ly

FISCHER & WICKE,CABINET MAKERS. HOTEL STREET,

next door to Strehz's Drug Store.

Furniture made and Repaired at Rea-nnab- le Rates.Billiard Tables Repaired and Altered. VTanus moved, ic.13-- Orders from the other Islands will be promptly

to. Vii y

C. WEST,Wagon and Carriage Builder, 74 and 76 King St.,

Honolulu. (974 ly) IMand orders promptly executed.

THOMAS LACK,(aCCCRSSOR TO JOHN SKILL.)

NO. 40 fe ORT Sa REET, S' will attend to all orders In the V

LOCK. CI X & GENERAL REPAIR L1XE

ne win give special attention to cleaning, repairing and reg-

ulating Sewing Machines, and all other kinds or Light Machineryand Metal Work of every description, Blnrkaniithintf, 4c

ALSO, ON HAND AND FOR SALE CHEAP,

A Variety of Sewing Machines,Guns, Pistols, Shot, Ammnnition,

MACHINE OIL, NEEDLES, &c, Vc.Sewing Machine Tuckers, Binders, and all other extra and

duplicate parts of Machines supplied cn short noticeXT Best Machine Twist. jCS

COLl AGKNT is this kisgdom forThe Celebrated Florence Sewing Machines.

949 ly

C K a be g

it O S, H Ot " k! - Hw s

5 a O I - i '

Li -- 2 CI

s o li ci rM S I

WATCH WORK!

No. 6 3 FORT STREET. B.C. KIBBYATcontinues to Repair Watches and Jewelry in the bestmanner and at reasonable rates; will

M E X D SEWING M ACIIINESIand alt small articles in Gold. Silver or Steel, old Metal Spoonsand Forks with Silver in the best possible manner.Satisfaction given in all cases.

LADIES, LADIES !You cannot afTord to boy a new Sewing Machine until youhave tried the EASY RUNNING DOMESTIC, no noise, noweariness across the back, call at the sign of the Big Vatch,opposite C. E. Williams' Furniture Store on Fort Street, andexamine it, bring along your work nd try it.

948 3m K. C. KIBBY. Agent for the Haw'n Is.

J. NOTT & CO.,Braziers,

riMN, COPPER, ZINC AND SHEET IRONJ. WORKERS,

Are prepared to do any and all tinds of work in their line.

COPPER WORKef all descriptions made to Order.

WATER PIPES, GALVANIZED AND LEAD,Laid on or repaired.

GUTTERS AND SPOUTS, and all kinds of Tin

Work on Buildings done on Short Sotice.

IN STOCKA FULL ASSORTMENT of MATERIALSin the above line, which they OFFER AT LOWEST PRICEStogether with a fine assortment of

Cooking --Stoves,Ship's Cabin Stoves,

&c. &c, &c.REPAIRING PROMPTLY ATTENDED TO

8MA0, FAVORS THANKFULLY RECEIVED AT

964 NO. ft KAAHUMANU STREET.

JULY 24, 1S75.

nsannrf Cart .

NORTH BRITISH AND MERCANTILEINSURANCE CO.,

tF LONDON AND EDINUTRfill.ESTABUSQCS, 109.

CAPITA L. ' .OOO.OOOArrnranlalrd and I is veal erf Fwad. K.83S.118rymE I'XDERSICXKl) HAVE BEEN AP-- U.

PuINTKD AUK.NTSIor the Samlwich Islands, and areauthorised to Insure against Fire upon favorable terms.

Risks taken in any part of the Islands on Wooden Buildings,and Merchandise stored therein. Dwelling House and Furni-ture, Timber, Coals. Sh;ps in harbor with or without cargoes orunder repair. 9 ly ) KD. HJFFSCHLAKGKR A CO.

Boston Board of Underwriters !

AGENTS for the Hawailaa lalaada,C. BREWKRJtCO.

Philadelphia Board of Underwriters !

AGENTS for the Hawaiian lalanda,C. BRKWKK A CO.

VOTICE.-.MASTE- R8 OF VESSELS VIS--1 IT1NG this port in a disabled condition and insured inany ol the Boston and Philadelphia Offices must have theirrejorts and accounts duly certified to by us.

931 ly C. BREWER & CO.

F. A. SCHAEFER,A GENT Bremen Beard of L'nrfer writer.xAgenl DrrMleu Beard of Underwriters,

A Kent Vienna Board ef Underwriters.Claims against Insurance Companies within the jurisdiction

of the above Boards of Underwriters, will have t b certifiedto by the Agent to make them valid. 972 ly

THE BRITISH AND FOREIGNMARINE INSURANCE COMP'Y.

(LIMITKD,)ACCEPTS RISKS AT THE LOWEST

clauses in the Policies of this Company arespecially advantageous. THKO. U. DAVItS,

Agent.THE NORTHERN ASSURANCE COMFY

Issues Fire and Life Policies

oN THE MOST LIBERAL TERMS. - ALLClaims tor Losses settled with promptitude.

VW1 ly TIIKO. H. DAVIES, Agent.

BOSTON BOARD OF UNDERWRITERS.rjMIE UNDERSIGNED, AGENTS OF THE

MY Boston Board of Cndervriters, notify Masters of Vesselsand others that all bills for Repairs on Vessels, and all billsfor General Average purposes, must be approved by the Agentof the Boston Underwriters, who must also be represented onall surveys, or such bills will not be allowed.

903 ly C. BREWER & CO., Agents.

CALIFORNIA INSURANCE COMPANY.

TMIE UNDERSIGNED, AGENTS OF THECompany, have been authorised to insure risk on

Cargo, Freight and Treasure,from Honolulu to all port of the world, and rice versa.

903 ly II. HACKFKLD A Co.

TRANSATLANTICFIRE INSURANCE COMPANY,

ol HnmburK.Capital, One Million Prussian Thalers.

UNDERSIGNED HAVING BEENTM1E Agents of the above Company are now ready toIssue Polities against Risks of Fire, on Buildings,

Merchandise and Fnrnilnreon terms equal to those of other respectable companies.

Losses paid for and adjusted here.For particular apply to

958 tf U. HACKFELD A CO., Agent.

IIA.MHUIIOII-HREME- N

FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY.rTMIIE UNDERSIGNED, HAVING BEE V

M. Appointed Agents of the tbove Company, are preparedto insure risks against Fire on Stone and Brick Buildingand on Merchandise stored therein, on most favorable term.

For particulars apply at the office of957 ly F. A. SCHAEFER CO.

THENEW ENGLAND MUTUAL LIFE INS. CO.

OF BOSTON, MASS.

Thirty-en- e Year Standing!

Policies Issued on the most favorable Terms.

The Greatest Risk taken on a Life, $20,000.

Surplun distributed among the membersannuil'y.

Assets, 812,330,000 I

CASTLE Si COOKE, AGENTS957 . FOR THE HAW'N ISLASDS. Jy

UNION INSURANCE COMP'YOF.SAX FRANCISCO.

2VE AnUNTE. INCORPORATED, 1885.

CASTLE & COOKE, Agents957 ly FOR THE HAWAIIAN ISLANDS.

HAWAIIAN SOAP WOAKS

(J It E Y Sc CO.,Manufacturers and Dealers

IN ALL KINDS OF SOAPS !

Leleo, King Street, Honolulu.Beef, Mutton and Goat Tallow Wanted !

Order Left at Ira Richardson's Beet andShoe Store will meet with prompt

9S5 Attendance. ly

JEFFREY & CO.'S

EDINBURGH ALEIN PINTS AND QUARTS.

VORWECIAX ALE IN QUARTS ANDPINTS.German Ale, Key brand, in quarts and pints.Holland Gin, stone jugs in baskets,

Strong Rum, in barrels ; Alcohol in Timand demijohns.

Clarets of different qualities.

LIEBFRAUENMILCH,

RHINE WHINE,SELTZER WATER

in Stone Jogs.FOR SALE BY

971 H. HACKFELD i CO.

Hemp Cordage!poiR STRAND RUSSIA CORDAGE, ALL

C1U.For Sale by BOLLEa b CO.

Russia Bolt Rope !

ASSORTMENT OF SIZES.For Sale by B0LLE3 It CO.

Cruslied Sugar,X HALF BARRELS.

For sale by BOLLEH s CO.

T- - uiunte rafr,V i,iyy,'-t- s to tne paymentiiijiiinmiiLsii.a IT TaiJfg.TiTJ.

WHOLE NO. 1000.

J. MOANAULIOff. r For Ps--- ,. r

Beef, M alien. Veal. Salman , Fish.at the FISH MARKET STALLS, No. 1. 1, 20, 21. l theLowest Market Katea. Pleai give tnf a call. ly

SOLE AND SADDLE LEATHER,Tanned Goat and Sheep Skim,

ON II A NI AND FOR SALE,CONSTANTLYWAIMKA TA N.N E It V C NOT LEY,

By (Mly) A. 6. CLF.UHORN A CO , Afrots.

FAMILY MARKET,E. II. BOYD, Proprietor. Hotel Street.

Choicest Meat from finest herd,. Poultry, Fish, Vcgetablr., furnished to order. ds4 ly

KAUP.IKVEA PLANTATION SL(JAU

NOW COMING IN,AND FOR SALE IN LOTS TO SUIT

PURCHASERS, BYAFONG A ACHrCK.

Honolulu, June 1st, 1ST. ? ly

IIONOMIIiH SOAP WOKKS !

Xj o X o o .J. RAWLINS MANUFACTURERyy

ALL KINDS OF SOAPS!and Buyer of Beef, Mutton and Ooat Tallow, and all

074) kinds of 8osp Greaae. (ly

A. S. CLECHORN & CO.A GENTS FOR THE

WAIMFA TANNERY,87itly Hawaii.

MAKEE PLANTATION.ITLUPALAKIJA, MAUI.

CROP OF 1873-.- St f.AK Si MOLASSES,For Sale by C. llKKWi.ll 4r Co , Agent.

ii.i:i:ir him,, i.aiiaiaa.CAMPBELL Si TURTON, I,reprleiers.

of superior quality, now coming ia andfor sale In quantitit to suit by

94 ly II. HACKFELD A CO.

WAILUKU PLANTATION!VVAILUKU. MA II. CROP OF 1813V for Sale by C. liKEWKR k Co.,658 3m . Agents.

IVA I ii A I" I J Vis A A TAT I OA' !

II. Cernwell, Proprietor.AND MOLASSES FROM THISSUGAR for sale in lots to suit purchasers. Apply to

968 ly GEO. C. McLEAN, Agent.

METROPOLITAN MARKET,Ci. WALLER,

KIXQ STREET, HONOLULU. 9S7 ly

WASHINGTON MEAT MARKET!

F. W. D U N N E. WD3PROPRIETOR.

NCCANU STREET. 0(8 ly

HONOLULU STEAM BAKERY!R. LOVE & BROTHERS, Proprietors,

NUUANU 8TR3KT.

PILOT, MEDIUM AND NAVY BREAD,on band and made to order.

Also, Mater, So.Z4 and Butter Clicker,JENNY LIND CAKF.rf. Ac.

SHIP BREAD REBAKED on the chortest notice.FAMILY BREAD, made of the Best Flour, baked daily and

always on hand.X. B. BROWN BREAD OF THE REST QUALITY

9S7 ly

Columbia River Spring Salmon!

RECEIVED PER J. A. FALKINBUKG,and warranted a splendid article. yr sale by

970 3m CASTLE A COOKK.

Properties For Sale or LeaseTHE CELEBRATED SUGAR LAND OF

HAKALAU.in the District of II ilo, Hawaii.ALSO

The Land, House, Pasture and Premise of AUAUKEAE,Kona, Hawaii, containing about 700 acre.

For particular apply to997 W L. 0REEN.

SHIP CHANDLERY!SHIP GROCERIES.

WHALE BOATS,

BOAT STOCK,

FLOUR AND BREAD,

COTTON DUCK,

HEMP AND MANILA CORDAGE 2

Ar.t Sir., . A.C.

AT LOWEST RATES BY

A. W. PEIRCE & CO.

AgoiitH forBrand's Bomb Lances,

Perry Davij' Painkiller,Puuloa Salt Works.

THE HAWAIIAN HOTEL!s - . ' -

.mkfe .Zjri- - )wssr1"!

PROPRIETOR WILL SPARE NOTHE pain to make tins

BliEG-AICr- T UOT33IJFirst-Clas- s in Every Particular !

R00HS AX BE IIID BY TI1E MCIIT 0B WEEK !

with or without toarI.

HALL AND LARGE ROOMS TO LET FOR990 PUBLIC MEETINGS. OR 8QCIETIE3. ly

BEEF AND PORK !

ESS PORK.31 PRIME PORK,OREGON r.F.F.F,

HAWAIIAN BEEF.

981 2rn For l by A. W. PEIRCK k CO.

etc., etc in r irr 1 1 n

i Lloe (1 I'm N.it I. n. (4 tori,.W iulf I " uo.n ..lhird 1 vlvsn.....lUK l'"im

holC.4usia....

a a id t u 10 im u0 T ( 10 ow It W) II OM

4 1K1 111 I IW I 0 VI1 w I 11 w ii iw a no 4 ooI IW II W It II IW l M CM

14 00 UO Ou i 44 UU t OO

II do N IM It OO-T- I MIMNIWHSJ" A Jrrniwrs rl.tn In t tmrm X'mw4 ea

pay lev tSe.r card y ewkif OiwOmU w l featsP.wta Kmf aaxwata tay etsa t pay m4 thmtl

eard, wtil b, insvrtrd a f lt, fw ie Urn pai4 Nr.

IT BoaSoes CarJs, sbea ratrsia r.-- a ta, araiwed sMrwant trvm rals, ahlra ars Aw Maasl'alaJrvrtkMment aksa pad rarr4 auartwly.

jfortign .JitrtistiatiiU.

I. C. BILL.

J. C. MERRILL & Co,,

Commission Merchants nd Auctioneers204 nl 20G ClifomU 8irrt,

K xv 11 1 ranolNOo.ALSO. AOKSTS Of tll

San Francisco and Honolulu Packots.Particular attention ivwi ts Iks aa4 jjrrks of mm,.

,haDatw..hip.' watMM,i.pHHf woakatlM. tsUiVTl ftwUbl arvlvln at Sas rraael...y ov t th.

raotw.sston.tr Kchn on Ilooolu'a boW ol aoW-X-

sraacaaMew. A. W. Pvirs A Co Moastol.

II. Ilackfold A CoC. Brewer A CoBi.hop A Co '

Dr. R. W. Wool..: ulliin 1. u. alien. ... ......... ......- - .

Wm. Coirr, Doiaio tf trtttv,San Franciico. 'Rrr Mscvssv,

rortUnd, O.

C0RBITT & MACLEAY,

Importers, Yholcgale (Jrocers audCoiiimifcHloii .lIcrclinntK,

Shippers and Dealers of Oregon Produc

MAX FRANCIICO I

Ofllee 1011 Callforala Hi reel.PORTLAND, OREOOXI

13 mm 15 Froal,a4 IO A. 19 First i.SlfMNrtl 1

W. C. Ralston, Esq., Bank of California.... .tan Fraocloos.. Pas rrascisooCha. deRo, Kq. lreiaent o. r. Co.

Mer. Cross t'o ....lsa FrsiK'lcsMeswr. Ladd A Tllton, liaoksr...... ..... .'ortlaod, OrvfonHank t f British Columbia .. rrtiand, Ort'"M . L. Ooldtmlih A Co .I'nrtlasd, Orvfsotf'..kii, r.nin a !. ......... .... ....... I'ortlajOn-irs-Mrairi. lllibDD A Co.. Banksrs...... .... ...IloouiulsCeaslcaasealsor Islaaa Preaa roSollrlteo.

IBIUIA mil!,CORNER OF

MISSI0X I BO0XT STSm KAX IBAXCISfO, CiL.

fHIE INDIA RICE MILL H AVINU VL?M' derrone Material ImproveBirot, I oow In pen onaoi- -

tlon for the

HILLIXG AMI IIHESS1XG OF HWAND

UNCLEAN ED RlCai !

In the Best Poislbl Manner. Th pilot for IIULLINU ao4DREBFINO PA DDT ba boon Ilea area 0 Per Cel

OcaxAwvlKajLSXAoaataw ofPADDY AND HULLED niCEl

Mill 1 teeth Prompt ntul Careful Attention.

WM M. ORKENWOOD,

Oereral Commission Merchant and Proprietor of India RhwMill. KM 3 Cm

A. P. EVERETT,Fcrwnrdingtt Commission Merchant

4 OA FR0.fr STREET, CORNER CLAY,

MAN FRANCIKCO.Particular attention paid to CorilnmnU f Island Pvndoeo

Mi ly .

WILLIAMS, BLANCHARD & CO.,

Shipping & Commission MerchantsNo. 218 Callforala Hired,

mh28 M SAM f RAWCISCO.

THE GRAND PACIFIC HOTEL!CHICAGO.

The Largest and Host Complete Hotel inthe World!

rMIE LESSEES (WELL KNOWX AM THEI l.r,r..Lr,r. of Lha feHEKM AN HULUF. bsfor It dtraction in th memorablo Oonfiairratl'Mi of Dctotr Slk and

9th, 1871,) take pkasur In announcing ths completion of thlnew eolerprlse, wnien i now opra nuavr in.ir prnwiwi mun

ment for the sceommodatlon of vnesl.D aaurj ......u.v..r. ..n,. . CP. . ,LKBcKEfi FOR TWENTf TEARS.

Chico, Jane 1st, 1873. Jolt

THi: RIDGE HOUSE !

KEALAKEKUA MA VJIA WAIL

THE HAWAIIAN ISLANDS ARKnoted th world over for thlr uorivakd aalubricy offa elimtta. Certain localities la the grouo ar, rec.(all favfred In thl war. Tb District of Kona, on

tu leeward aide of Hawaii, bat long bw, famsd as Pao ofresort for Invalid with broDchltal. or lone d . WliblUpur and mild atmospbers, with lu sbaolalo rreodom frostorm or bigo wind, with It porous oil which, witk all lu

rich vegetation, retain no dampoes and yield no malaria, andwith an unvarying temperaturo that of tto Amerinao or(Uratbern European Jun.-A- LL THE YEAR ROLND, tatclimate of Kona It on of th Uallikit and ot lusriou onthe globe.

Ths ander!g-ned,a- t hi boo at Kaawaloo.a hooss an.iualrd in ths district for i, cleatOloss. ooodoos,and tborougbne of furnishing, ia prepared lo glv boarderexcellent room no ail obtainable comfort In lh way of diet,

THERE ARE FRKBII WATER EATliion the preoils, and One a bathing wlihln a hort dlstone.The tmer Kilauea and th schooner l lUm and Prince, rusrrularly between Uonoluls sod th Kaawalos Isoding.

lhe undersigned eaiploy 00 agenU nor rsnoer. Ills boaspeaks for luelf opoa insictlon. ',' TO'i

Kaawaloa, Kalakkua bay. Kona, Voe. IS. 17- - 7

3L7"OIX SAX 7?r.- -

flUIE t'NDF.RMIGNED OFFER FOR SJALS51 cn th OF MOUlKAI, to bo 4llvrl oa tlx

Beach at Kaunakakai,

ONE STEAM BOILING OUT APPARATUS

in PERrrcr order,Consisting of Boiler, two vt an on Steam Pump, A. Tbabove apparatus was maoufactarjd la 187S at to liooolalaIroo Work.

AUO-- At Walklkl, Ilod of Oabu, ONE COMPLETE

Stoam Apparatus for Manufac-turing of Pol !

for further articular apply toCIIAS. h. IiI"lluP,orJNO. O. IxiMIMft,

ol Administrator of tstaU of Kamehamcba V.

IflEDIGAIi WOADKRIflHIS GREAT REMEOV HAM DONK1 mor to cur the oumeru a:hr aud pain of th

human race than any other combination of rrtnedit.IT IS SAFE, ECRE AM

RELIABLE P0R

KkrutNMlUns, Nearalgla, lleaaaebr. Cello,Cramp, Lak, Weaasls,

Mealsls, Ii raises, Ve.Tskeu with the WONDER PILLS It parlflet th Mood, rlate the liver and secretion, and general givr tor lo lbyitem. a c. Mclean,

0T2 ly General Agent for th Hawaiian Island.

A FIIVE CIIAIVCEFOR IN VESTINO A HMALLUM

of money, or of tecurlng

0XE OF THE MOST ELIGIBLE DWKLLISC LOTS

In th City of Honolulu, I now offered by th L'sdsrilgoea. 11

Is desirous to dlspo of that fib and healthily UosUd flscof Land adjoining th Government Oardn,and fronting bchsoland Fort Streets at th bead of tb latter.

Any on withing lo pure has abosld apply sooo, a tt Lotwill be old at a low figure. (Ui J. b. LtMUM.

FIREWOOD ! FIREWOOD 1 1

EAST MA I' I. FOR SULK BV .IJMIOM' BuLLRH h CO.

riT'jmTrjj"'

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JULY 23. 1875.ooly arrtral frona-fnic- pf" since cur last, ws the

A. 8. N. Co .to. Mikado, to C. Brewer A: Co.,t arrived this iorriin;, one day ahf ad if tiir.e, from Aav

Sue MiJ lu-- ni rrow loiq r n Frar.rijro, takurty passeofers hence.

- uriurcs XiAT e been: The LiUma, t,r lb ru-- ua ul -

inUs, with supplies, anj the r. .5. H. To-csro- f r .n Francisco, lasing a mail, both on the 17th. r

The steamship Slicengnr. from Han rnrrin ..n ...7 on.WKloMuUy next." 'I The bark Clara Bell i. supposed to be 19 .lay. out from antj Francisco, ani therefore fully uue. It is over a mouth since. w had any coanmmctiorj from ll.at port.

Tha reUit ial at auction by Mr. E. V. Adams, hell durir.j-Tuesda-

and Wedssdjy rf Ibis wetk, was well attended, andreoUd apparruiiy lo the satislactioo of boih seller and bny-r- T

$13,000 worth of fods having been dirpoae--I UIn the matter of Exchange between the Inland and Sao

Franc:co, a wP.l be of intert to the general public to learnthat the Bank h&a this wrk redaed the rate, from one and ahalf to one per cent.

PORT OF HOWOI.TJI.TJ. H. I.ARRIVAL.

Jaly 1H Hchr IUttie, Elmo, from Koloa and Waiinea.1( Hchr Active. Paaabiwa, from Kohala, Hawaii.H,:r Slary Ellen, Nana, from Ililo, Hawaii.IS S.'hr Ltika, Kaai. from Moloaa, Kauai.Yil' br vrT'ci J(n BuiJ, fm Kalanpapa, M'.htai.13 hr Jaanlia, fudoit. from Kalanpara

9 K simile, Bolle, from Koloa NVaimea1 Pchr Paaahi. llopo, from Ililo, Hawaii3 Tairy Uueen, Kaaina, from llaoaiei, Kauai.2. Crane. from Lahaina, Mam21 H.-h-r Ka Moi. Reynold., from Kahutul, Maui.22 hr I'ueokaJii. Clark, from Han. Maui.23 Bnt atmr Mikado, F Moore, 20 !aya and 19 hoursfrom Hydoey.2--1 Stmr KLaaea, Maxchant.from Hawaii and Maui

DEPARTURES.Jaly 17 Haw schr Uilama, English, for Cuauo laland.

17 V A 8 Taacarora, Lrbeo, for gaa Francuco.1 8mr Kilauea, Maxrhaut.for Maui and Hawaii.19 fchr Mary Ellen, Mana, for Maalaea.19 St-h-r Mile Morria, Lin a, for Kaanakakai, Molokai.19 Mchr Manuokawai, Kalaoao, for .awi!iwi!i, Kauai19 ftchr Juanita. Hudoit, for Lanai.Jfi Sthr Hit tie, .Nika, for Koloa and Waimea, Kauai.20 Hcbr Active, Puaahiwa, for Kohala, Hawaii.20 rtcnr W arwick, John Bull, for Kalaapapa, Molokai.21 rfchr Lukjs. Kaal, for Kaunakakai.21 Hchr Paaahi. Uopa, for llilo, Hawaii.21 Srhr Kamaile, Uollm, for Koloa and Waimea.21 Pchr Fairy Uuaeo, Peni, for Uanak-t-, Kauai.22 Schr rtetiie Merrill. Cane, for Lahaina, Maui.

Projected Hcpnrlurra.Fob KaHiiLt'i Bchr Ka Moi, .ail. this 9 a. m.Fob liana Hcbr Fueokahi, aaila at 5 r M.Fob NawiLlwiLi SUar Kilauea, Bail on Thursday next.

VESSELS IX PORT.XlfiL.

V 8 fiaf .hip PeoaacoU, Rear Admiral J J Almy.MCBCH4!IT.1fE!.

Am aehx C M Wart!, repairing.flaw bk Maltie Macleay, Walter, repairin;.Am ahip EiurraUl, Bairuaoa.Brit atmr Uikajo, F Moore, loading.

MEMORANDA.BcroiT or tbamuip Mikado, F Moobe, Commamdeb.

Left the moorinf a la Jchnatoa'a Bay, Sydney at 1.15 p m onSaturday, Jaly 3d, clearing the heads at 2 p ta. Fre.'u breezeAnd jually weather prevailed throaghotit the run acres toAuckland, wbicb accomplished in 4 day and 15 hours,arrtring at that port at 9 a m on Thursday, July 8th. LeftAuekiand frx Uouololu at 4 p m the toilowiug dayi at 9.30 p inThe Ursat Barrier was abeam, distance one mile. Had mod-erate breeze and fine clear weather. At 4 p m of the 12thpassed Ea laUnd, distance three miles. At 9 a m of tLe 11thpassed the island of Tutulla, and at midnight SE trades com-menced and continued until the leili, when Etrong ME tradesset In, which hare prevailed the remainder of the passage.At 10.30 p m of Saturday, July 17th, crossed the eaualor inlong 164 W. Arrived in Honolulu at 8 a m on Friday, July23d. after a fair passage of 20 days and IS hours from Sydney,includingitoppsxe at Auckland of 31 hoars.

I.-- PORTS.

Fbm Pvbset Sl Avcklard Per Mikado, July 23d: 8 csliquors, 1 oil rafl, 6 pkgs mdse to W L Macgregor; 1 cse plantsto J II Wodehoose-- , 1 hud wine to U Rhodes; 1 cse mdse, 1 domachines, 1 parcel and 1 keg sugar to Cleguom A Co; 1 boxseeds, 1 cse spirits to Lenehan Jt Co; 1 cse plants to Mrs vonStempsky; IS pkgs spirits to Order.

EXPORTS.Fob tit aso Islands Per UUama, July 17tb:- -

Beef, bbl... 49 Potatoes, bass 20Rread, cs....... OVPaiai, lbs 9,000Molasses, bbl... ...... 20. Wheelbarrows, dr. 2Manila Rope, coil..... If

Value Domestic . ..$740 80; Foreign iOS4&7

IMSSKNGEKS.Fob Ovaxo Islasdm Per I'ilama, July 17th Capt Rick-ma- n.

Fob V upward Pobtb Per Kilauea, July 19th II II RKeelikolaai. T W Everett, R W Meyer. W 11 Cornwell, wifeand child, Mrs John Nott and son. II Kuitaelani, Father Puxot,Father Clement, Miss Fannie Ppeucer, Mrs Aaieo, II A Wide-man- n,

O E Richardson. Miss E Morehead, Father Uamicn, IrOliver, Mrs iemson, C Cockctt. and 85 deck.

Fbom Kant-LO-i Per Ka Mot, July 21st Mix. Parker, MisMar Green. Mrs Torbert and family, II R Hitchcock, E Cilobrea, aeveral ethers, and 50 deck.

1 o Labaitia Per Nettie Merrill. July 21st Mis Shel--Joo, Mrs Kapetia, MUa Liuie Shaw, Mr 8y Ira, wife and family.. Fbom Svdkbt Per Mikado, July 23d Win Laird Margre-fo- a-

arsi servant, Dr Berggren, 1 other, and 117 in transitu lorIsb Francisco.

Fob 8Jt FBAcisca Per Mikado, July 24th Mr Shillaberand wife. Miss Bunce, Miss Cooke, L McCully and wife, J MMocsarrat, Mr Sinclair and wife, D Foster, MUs Nellie Fuller,ii' C Parke. MUs Parke, Miss King, A Edwards. Miss Ilumis-ta- a

E l m.l2tu T Barker and wife, Capt C W fielett, A H

rnillt.Fbom o PotTs--f- er KiUuea, July 23d-BU- hop

WUUa, Miss Kenway. Miss Parke ana srryant. Miss Carter anderrant, Mr Mannwai and wife, rj.ters Voting id Louason,

C Brewter, Mrs McCaudless, Miss Ler;rs, J F Nobles, A I f-

lea, Mr Koki and b1) deck.

BIRTH.Id this city, July 19th, to the wife of Mr. II. C. Sheldon, a

daughter.

DIED.guuov At Ililo. July 19th, James L. Sisso, o Frovi-den- e,

R.1-- , in the 38th year of his agc

A Sotrtrx of Revival. A private letter fromLouisiana fnjs that a new era of agricultural pros-perity seems about to dawn on State. The cropsof corn, cotton, cane and rice are all said to beplendiJ. Old planters say that they have never

seen uch crop at this ea?on. Even the vegeta-- .bles and fruits are unusually abundant. Thereare no locusU, except tLe carpet-baggin- g tramps,and even tbey do not upem able to exhaust thevitality of the soil.

Intelligence received from Cbin-Kian- g statesthat some native soldiers in that place insulted the.United States Consul and bis wite. Two of them"1

were arrested and taken to the British Consulate,when the soldiers endeavored to rescue them. TheKuropeans hastily sausUred and prepared to de-

fend the Consulate, bnt the Chinese authoritiessucceeded la quieting the mob. The British andAmeiican Consuls ia Shanghai have left for Chin-Kian- g.

The United States .man-of-w- ar Pnlos andthe British war ship Thalia will follow.

Remarkable Discoveries. A telegram fiomNashville, Tenn., to the Louisville Courier Journal,dated May 12lb, contains the following : 4i Dr.William Clark, paleontoiogist of the Smithsonianfn?itnie toe Tennessee, in digging mounds nearFranklfs reeterday, made a remarkable discoveryor chalk bei. once glazed red, two copper bob-

bins with benipfQ or flaxen thread around them,and the represenul'wa ol an idol indented oncopper plate metal, much corroded. He says thesemust have been the work cf Aztecs, or at least ofcivilized people. All were found sixteen feetbelow the top of the mounds."

Dities ox Imtokts. The receipts of uUtios onforeign imoorts at San Francisco for May anil forthe Erst five months of the fiscal year have been asfollows: .

Mav. Fie Months.186d $55,500 $3.051,SOO1967 &T4.30O 3,015,6o01838 672.600 3,3Sd,600Igj 595.000 3,065.700lto" 6211,100 3.1W.200

6o9.0(K) 2.831.400ihl 703,900 3,423.1001873!.. 693,500 3,051.400m4::.:.:rrr..n.i.: 534.500 2.973,2001971 723,300 3,183,000

The collections last month show large withdrawalfrom ship and bonded warehouse for consumption,indicating an active demand for foreign dutiablegoods, despite the quiet appearance of tho marketduring the interval.

A Washington special says a high official whobaa returned from a visit to the Texas border re-

ports a very deplorable condition of things. Hesays the outside public has no idea of the real stateof afTairs this side of the Rio Grande. A widestretch of country 13 inhabited by Mexicans. Theypreponderate to a great extent over the Americans,and thereby have control of all civil offices. Forthis reason, it Is impossible to secure the convictionof Mexican thieves who cross the border and plun-

der the Americans. Upon the part of Governmentofficials there is grave apprehensions of serious dif-

ficulty with Mexico. Her Government is powerlessto prevent the outrages. Cortinas rales in defianceof the Mexican Government, and is closely leaguedwith, Mexicans on this side in their Echemes forplunder. The promised move to supersede Cortinais not believed to have beei made in good faith.Nearly all the inhabitants upon the border dependon thieving for support. The Texans are nowfally aroused, aty? war to extermination Is not

v.u

THE PACIFICCflmmcrcialSlbbrrtistr.

SA TURD A V. JULY 21.Wr. ler.n-- that LTiHha II. Allen, jr., fq. of

ew York city, has been appointed His Hawaiianesty"s Consul General f r the United States

of America.

Si'F-aki.v-g of tl.e eas-- c of Judl vs. Luce, anent

the cutting down of a tree on the street, the Ga-zf- tu

rajs r,f the verdict, that if allowed toptand, it will establish a precedent.'," We beg todiffer. Who ever lizard of a judge or a counsel-

lor, in the progress of a case, remark " In thecase of Doe vs. Roe, the verdict of the jury wasthus and so, wuich ia an authority applicable inthe present instance." Or, " It has be.?n repeat-edly decided by juries that the moon is made ofgreen cheese ; eryo, it mut be ruled in the cacenow befjre us that the eaid cheese was manufac-tured from fckimd milk."

The mivs brought by the Mikado to the effectthat the Australian iuail contract Las beenawarded in London to a " combination,'" of whichthe Pacific Mail Company is the head, is anearnest of the final establishment of the service ona satisfactory basis. The Xew South Wales andNew Zealand Legislatures have yet to assent tothe contract before it becomes operative, butthere can be Bcarcely a doubt of their doing so,for the ability of the contractors is beyond ques-tion. Five new firt-cla$- n ships are to be em-

ployed, of nearly 3,000 tons each, two to besupplied by the British owners and three by thePacific Mail Company. Honolulu and Fiji arestipulated in the contract as ports of call.

Tue practice lias long prevailed in the Courtsof this Kingdom, of pxor persons when chargedwith offenses obtaining the aid of counsel byorder of the Court, free of charge. The statutesays that the Court may assign counsel in enchcases, " who shall use every lawful exertion inbis (the accused's) behalf, without fee or reward,upon pain of contempt of Court." This mode ofproceeding probably reduces considerably thevalue of criminal practice to the legal profession,for a large proportion of parties accused in Courtare poor ; and if they have friends able to retaincounsel, the effort to do eo i3 not usually made,from the expectation that counsel will be obtainedwithout expense. In point of fairness, however,one can hardly see why the prosecuting officersand counsel should be paid, and counsel requiredby law to defend, go unpaid.

Tue storv of Prince Henry of Portugal, andthe sketch of the life of the poet Canioens, pub-

lished in a series of articles in this paper, arenow issued in pamphlet form. The author, Mr.W. M. Gibson, we learn intends to continue thepublication of other subjects in connection withthe above, so as to embrace a general account ofPortuguese and Spanish discovery and conquest,especially in the Pacific. The present pamphletis a highly interesting and valuable contributionto the literary production and character of theislands. Both the Princo and the poet arc newthemes to American readers ; yet they ought tofind a place iu an American tempIe of fame, theone as the herald and forerunner, r.nd the otheras a foremost celebrator of American discovery inheroic verse. Mr. Gibson's treatment of thesubject is characterized by a warmth of style andan evident admiration of his heroee, that irresist-ibly attracts and holdrf the attention of the reader.The pamphlet is for sale at the book-store- s.

! The commission of the District Judge of Wailuku, Maui, expired early last month, and forreasons best known to the Governor of thatisland, and which were presumably well-founde- d,

Mr. II. W. Daniels, who had filled the post for anumber of years past was not renominated, andthe appointment has been conferred on the lion.H. Kuihclam. It may be well to 6tate here,

tbaftlie administration " meaning therebythe Ministry has nothing to do with the appoint-

ment of District Justices. They arc nominatedand commissioned by the Governors on the ap-

proval of the Justices of the Supreme Court.Mr. Kuihelani is a native gentleman of matureage, of intelligence and probity of character,

though but litt'.e versed in law ; and is a memberof the House of Nobles. This latter fact is com-

mented on by the Gazette of this week as areason why his appointment as a District Justiceis to be regTetted ; and our cotemporary goes bo

far as to say that it is in violation of the Consti-

tution. We have ever been strongly opposed tothe principle and the practice of allowing judgesof any grade to sit as law-make- rs ; but we fail tofintl in the Constitution anything that prevents aDistrict Justice from being a member of the Leg-

islative Assembly, and for the 6imple reason

that be is not a "judge of a court of record."Even the Circuit Judge of Oahu, (when therewas such an ofSce) was declared by the SupremeCourt not to be within the meaning of the 20thArticle of the Constitution.

f During thTpast eiz or ciglit months, we haverepeatedly directed public attention to tho dan-

gerous fact of the marked increase of the use ofintoxicating Eubstances among the people, partic-

ularly on Hawaii and Maui." ,What we have saidfrom time to time has been fearfully emphasizedby the repeated murders which have occurred on

the former island. Every one has Eeen and feltthe necessity of some active measures of repres-

sion and reform, for without a change for thobetter it was plain that the tide of intemperance,combined with other ills and evils, would soon

sweeps the race to extinction. And though manydeplored this, no one of position or influenceundertook to load in the work of reform. Butwhen royalty steps forth from the retirement and" the divinity that doth licdgc a King " and be-

comes an earnest, outspoken advocate cf thetemperance reform, it shows that the ucccssity ofthat reform is strikiDgly urgent, and that theLead of the nation deeply leels his responsibilityin the premises. Among the many noblo actswhich have characterized His Majesty since jisaccession, there has been none that could raisehim higher in the estimation of all right thinkingpeople or that should more surely secure for himthe love and confidence of-- his subjects, than thatof last Sunday afternoon. Who will not most

heartily wish our King God-spee- d in his noblework, ar d in every honorable way, by word andexample, support and encourage the progress cftho national reform thus ausp-iciousl- begun ?

At 4 o'clock r. m. the Household Troops, theBand, and the volunteer Company known as

" The Prince "s Own," were drawn up in a hollow

fquarc in Iolani, in front of the site of the oldPalace building, with the fountain throwing itsspray to the breeze in the centre. Among thosepresent on this interesting occasion were AdciirdAlaiy and wvcral of the members of his staff;Pay Director Doran, U. S. Navy; SurgeonBrown, of the Prnsacola; Col. W. F. Allen,Chief of the King's staff; and Major E. II. Boyd,the King's Chamberlain. After the Baud hadperformed several pieces of sacred music, and aneloquent prayer had been offered by one of thenative guests, His Majesty stepped into the squareand addressed the troops and the assembled house

hold servants in a speech of which t! c followingis a translation, and which we ned hardly saywill be read with interest and earnest approvalby ev ry true friend of tlc Hawaiian people." SOLDIIRS, AND ATTENDANT Of IoLANI PaLACK:

' I have called you together on this good daywith a vk'v to commencing a good work. Tber Jare not a few in our land who devote this day todrinking and revelry. You soldiers, are by yourposition and occupation the guardians of theThrone and the government, and at the sametime a part of my own household ; arid I havetherefore deemed it proper here, in our ownhome, to inaugurate a work of reform, the exam-ple of which may haply extend beyond thesewalls.

" It is my desire that we should here for our-selves into a Reform League, the chief object andaim of which shall be to abandon and discouragethe use of strong drink.

I " The use of intoxicating drink9 is one of thegreat causes of misery to our cation. There ia agreat prevalence of intemperance, and consequent

j sickness among our people, drink inflaming thei blood, disordering the system, and producing dis

ease and death." The reports come to us of .'. '" evils from

every direction of disturbances and violence andmurder, resulting from the ise of intoxicatingdrinks. One day, it is a woman who has fallena victim, and lost her life as a result of the useof drink, and the next a man is killed throughthe same cause. It is time that a 6trong effortwas made to check the evil.

" In other countries, the labors of temperancereformers have for many years been directed tothe suppression of intemperance, and often withexcellent results. You have perhaps heard quiterecently of the Joings of the women in someparts of America, in their crusade against theliquor traffic. The church, and the varioussecret societies discourage intemperance; muchgood is done by Temperance Societies ; our lawsare strict ; but the evil still continues and grows.Therefore let us, here within these Palace walls,combine and agree together to give our exampleand our influence against this great evil, the useof strong drink.

' Let me eay to you, that I feel that a heavyresponsibility a labor devolves upon me to findthe means of eradicating this great evil from ournation ; and I want you to feel that it is uponyours Jyes as well. If you meet with ridicule,regard it uot ; you will be engaged in a noblecause, an earnest endeavor to free yourselvesand your country from a terrible curse ; a worthyeffort for mental and physical reform.

' I invite you, therefore, to join in an associa-tion for the suppression of the use of strongdrink. If you take hold of the work with atrue determination, you will succeed, and fromyour email beginning there may be great results.You know that the appetite for etrong drink docsnot come at once, but by gradual approaches,until the man becomes enslaved. Thus also, itmay be with this work of national reform, herebegun like a grain of mustard-see- d, but whichwe may have tlie happiness of seeing spread allover the land."

It is satisfactory to know that a majority ofthe soldiers have voluntarily signed a pledge oftotal abstinence, for tortus varying from eixmonths to ten years. Let us hope that themovement thus inaugurated by His Majesty inhis own household will spread all over the islandsand amongst all classce, from government officialsand employees who use tho imported article,down to the common people, who manufactureand drink tea-ro- ot and banana beer and sour

I jfotat

fTb example and influence of the King on thet eide is unquestionably a great gain, and we

are duly thankful for it : but the evil of drun-

kenness will not be cured thereby the snake willbe scotched, not killed bo long as men in gov-

ernment positions arc intemperate and the police

fail to do their duty As long as the lawsremain a dead letter apd a by-wor- d, whereby thenatives can buy cheap gin in Honolulu or manu-

facture okolchao and fermented liquors in theouter districts without interference by the police,so long the work of destruction will go on. Shallit be stopped?

THE FUTURE OF CHINA.

We were very much' interested recently, in

conversation with an intelligent Chinese merchantof this c;ty? in which the topic was his own

country, its resources and its future. He con-

firmed the impression that ia gaining ground inEurope and America, that the political system

which has eo long paralyzed the industrial forces

and cramped the resources of China is destined

60on cither to break up or to undergo importantmodifications. The exclusiveness of the CelestialEmpire, it is now apparent, has for some timepast been yielding to that modern world whichnow hedges it in on all sides, and the time is soon

at hand when its gigantic dormant powers willbe quickened into modern life. It is well knownthat the difficulty of opening China to foreigncommercial intercourse has been solely due to

the weak jealousy of the government and theignorance and corruption of the governmentofficers. The Chinese nation is really among themost industrious, and most disposed to generaland active commercial intercourse In the world.Should the obstacles be removed, we may expect

to see a revolution in the China trade.It is a fact not generally known, that in China

coal and iron " ia their combination the sinewsof industry and the master-ke-y of trade ' lie in

abundance ready at hand. Science and practicalexperience are to be had from Europe and Amer-

ica, while labor, of unparalleled excellence andcheapness, and simply unlimited in quantity, isready. And this will prove a more profitableopportunity for the Chinese at home, instead ofspreading in profusion over Americaand Australia. China, it has been estimated,includes within its limits about a fourth of thehuman race, mure honiogeueous, more industri-ous, and perhaps hardly less enterprising, wherethe opportunity oeeure, than the inhabitants ofany of the more modern nations which have

hitherto outstripped her in the path of wealthand civilisation.

The coal-fiej- ds of China arc not only very ex-

tensive, but the quality of the coal is excellent.

A few years ago an English Admiral on hisreturn to England carried some specimens, whichwere pronounced by analysists to be fully equal,if not superior to the best steam oal of Cardiff.

Thjs was brought from a place within forty miles

of Pekin. At the present moment, but few ofthe many coal mines of China are worked, andnone on scientific principles. There are no 6tcamCDgines, pumps or tramways. Though iron minesare numerous, and though iron has been Iu usefrom time immemorial, its manufacture is carriedon from the first to the last of its processes, in

the mosf rimitive manner.It is est easy (says a recent number of the

Iondun Times) to forecast exactly the ultimateresult of introducing the vast industrial forces ofChina into the general current of commercial

enterprise and cornpetitiou ; but if such a portent-

ous change should in proiess of time be made,the value of labor throughout the world must asnecessarily fall as the value of silver fell with thediscovery of the rcines of Peru.

TYPHOIDFEVEE- -

In the British MrJicat Journal for December3d, 1S70, was ac article by Dr. Wiiks, of Ah-fo- r

J, Kent, EcUnd, on the treatment of typhoidfever by the u&c of sulphurous acid, which if the J

statement be true, (3nd then no reason tosuspect falsehood in such a matter) should receive j

all the publicity possible, s:nce this fever is so I

frequent and, under most modes of treatmeat, sodeadly a visitor in many communities. Speakingof sulphurous acid, Dr. Wilks says :

' This summer we have used the acid in morethan a hundred aad seventy cases with signal results;of them alL only one died, and he was a babitaaldrunkard and woftld not take his medicine."

After quoting from his note book 6oae mostunpromising cases that recovered under its ue, i

he goes on to speak of l.i method of using it.He says :

"The acid should le given in do?es cf from twoand a half to twenty minim, according to ag, re-

peated every four hours, and continued for a wek.ten days, or even more, until the patieut complains !

of tasting, smelling, or feeling like sulphur; or in the I

case of infants, until they actually emit an odour ofthe gas from their tkin and Ireatb.

' I have never pressed its ue beyond this, under I

the belief that the system must by tifti time be !

saperaturated; nor have I ever seen reasea to regret )

stopping at that point. j

" When I have seen the cate early, before the j

diarrhoea has become severe, I have given simply the j

sulphurous acid, Savored with syrup of orarjge peel, j

in water. ,

"When the diarrhoea was troublesome I haveadded sulphuric acid and laudanum, according tothe age of the patients.

' Thus my usual formulae for adults have been thefollowing :

"Recipe Sulphurous acid, two drachms; syruporange peel, three drachms; water, six ounces; or

"Recipe Sulphurous acid, two drachms; dilutesulphuric acid, two drachms; tincture of opium,twenty drops; syrup of orange peel, three drachms;water, six ounces.

" For infants : Recipe Sulphurous acid, fifteendrops; syrup of orange peel, three drachms; water,one ounce; or

"Recipe Sulphurous acid, fifteen drops; dilutesulphuric acid, fifteen drops; tincture twodrops; syrup of orange peel, four drachms; water,one ounce.

A sixth part of either of these mixtures is to betaken every four hours.

' In one case only, can I recollect diurrhuea settingin duriDg the sulphurous acid treatment, and with-out having previously existed; but the patient hadold standing renal disease, from which she still suf-fers, though she has almost forgotten fever.

Lest I should be misunderstood, I will state dis-tinctly what I claim for the sulphurous acid intyphoid fever; that it arrests the further develop-ment of the fever poison, and, by continuing thisarrest long enough, exterminates the fever Briefly,it is an antidote.

"In some of my earlier cases, I left off the acidafter a few days use, because the patients seemedbelter. In almost all such cases, there was relapse,which again immediately arrested upon the resump-tion of the acid.

" I believe that, when we et the cases soonenough, we may stamp out the disease then andthere. For instauce, in one thirty-si-x hours I wassent for to see four children belonging to two differ--.

ent families visiting in the town."I had no doubt as to what their symptoms de-

noted, and at once gave the acid. On my visits nextmorniug, I was met in each house with smiling facesand the assurance that I had been mistaken in mydiagnosis, for the little patients were much better,Of these children, three remained under my care,took the acid for a week, and made complete recov-eries without relapse. Tho fourth seemed to ail solittle that the parents would not heed my advice, butcarried her home after two days of treatment.Shortly afterwards, I learned that, three days afterreaching borne, she had beeu attacked by typhoidfever, and hardly escaped with life. I make nodoubt that, had the other three also discontinued theacid as soon as they seemed well, they too would havehad a return of all their symptoms, and have sufferedthe ordinnry course of typhoid fever. Very possiblyI have failed to convince you of the advantages ofusing this drug; but let me again remind you of theplain fact that, of one hundred and seventy-thre- e

cases of this fever occurring in our practice duringthe pail fourteen months, two only diedx and thosetwo did not take the acid; for the one it was not pre-

scribed; the other was a drunkard, and would takenothing. Of the one hundred and seventy-on- e whotook sulphurous acid, not one lost his life; and therewere but few who wtre not convalescent within fifteen

days of commencing the treatment.Surely such results will induce you to try the

medicine for yourselves when opportunity offers."It might be added that, the mortality from

typhoid iu the best conducted English hospitals,has heretofore been not less than from twelve tofifteen per cent. The treatment has generallyconsisted, mainly, of careful feeding and nursing,combined with gentle stimulation, merely to sus-

tain the patient through the course of the disease,which terminates spontaneously if the patientcan fca made to live over the thirtieth day.

Let it be remembered by the reader that thequotations above are from one of the most re-

spectable medical journals extant, anil not theirresponsible utterance of the average newspaper ;

that the writer is an English physician of reputa-tion ; and, his treatsient based upon the modernfungoid theory of disease, which is now revolu-

tionizing both surgery and therapeutics. .R-emembering this, tLe fatality cf the disease, andthe inability of the average doctor to cope withit, the stricken, or their friends for. them, may beinduced to try what, under the circumstances,can be no bold or baseless experiment.

Timber in Foreign Countries.

Land and Water says : " During the springof 1874 the British Government addressed a cir-

cular to the representatives of Great Britain iuthe principal timber-producin- g countries ofEurope, in the United States and Brazil, in Cubaand Honduras, asking for information as to theproduction and consumption of timber; informa-tion desired more particularly by tho Commis-

sioners of our Woods and Forests. Fifteen questions were asked. These related to the sorts oftrees grown in each country, the uses made ofeach kind, the ownership of forest lands, theeauss of increase or decrease in the acreage offorests, the quantity of wood cut annually, andthe amounts exported and consumed at home.Inquiries also were made as to the ascertained in-

fluence of forests on local climate, rain-fal- l, floods,etc.. and, particularly in Switzerland, whetherany steps have been Liken to replant the sides ofthe mountains, so as to stay the action of rain iu

denuding the soil. Various reports' on all theforegoing topics have cow been received, and maybe procured in the form of a Parliamentary BlueBook, from which wc may here cull a few briefextracts, commending the work itself to the care-

ful attention cf all who take an interest in forestpreservation, a subject full of importance, notonly because timber is indispensable to humanexistence, but because e may proint to Palestine,to Spain, and probably to many regions in NorthAfrica, to show how fie gradual destruction of

forests will chapge the eharactcx of a country and

its inhabitants for ever. In Bohemia, d aring the

past ten years, a species of wona, which seems to

act like an epidemic, has been causing great de-

vastation in the forests. The entire side c$ arange of hills may be seen sometimes laid bare of

rhIri"',yit'faiiii'ii It"i'i""f1t1

timbei by tl.e inroad uf this worm disc.iJo. liediminution cf forests in oris of Austria, andmore opccidliy in Hungary, ha hcvn fallowedby b.u.cful cvnwquencvs, such a. lor.p drouthsand tremendous wind, which fill tie air with

cloud of du;--t in i considerably irjerea?pulmonary dis-cv- in tewn. which luve Kvoiuetotally unri.eltcred. , Pret-bur- and Viennaare now jrf.-ctl- intolvr.ible during three partsof the year from this cauK--. At Rio do Janeiro,thuLder storms, formerly . f daily occurrence, are ,

now rare ; and the cauV is wrrwe-- J to be the j

destruction ct tnc I wrueh surrounded me ,

town, as new rads hive been male. Hence, in I

13o2, veil ow fever viitcd the ruee, ar. I has neverleft it since, through tree nre bein r;jly punt- -

kr'1 i rrfv c? swt r In IIee nn l Caden grenterrudecce has been disthtycd. f itir-filt- h of the

fomcr Duchy and ore-thi- r l of the latter arewooded, and the law requ ren th t every thirtyyears land wi uh has once eluug-- U the culti-

vation of trees rour--t return tr itn original employment. In .Sweden the timber resources are im- -

mense ; Iaphvnd ha.-- never !een suneved, hut i

reck,ned, with the Northern Provinto cnuinsome 30,COO,000 acres vf furest. l'n fortunatelythe unerasing and enoiuiou demand for wood,especially for charc-al- . hour building, and luci--

ler matches, N telling raj idly on the productivepower of the forests ; this fact is of world-wid- e

imrbulinr f. .i- - I f i 4 Iifirillw ft mn r i t i m A rnn n --try, except China and Jaj-an- , to which Swedishwood in some form does not find its wav. Atlast, in 1874, a law was passed forbidding thefelling of any trees less than seven inches indiameter, at sixteen feet from the ground. This j

statute applies only to the Bothoiau forests. If j

extended to all Sweden, as it probably will be, it j

may creatly affect the mining interests of Great j

ISritain, lor it will cut on ttie supply 01 email 11 in- -

bcr known as r s.' In Switzerland thereis now a Sylvan Society, and great pins are fe-- jing taken to induce pieople to replant cleared and j

denuded mountain slojes, so a.- - to prevent thedamage Which floods, landslips, and avalaucln j

have of late vears so frequently- - inflicted. Swit- -

zerland also has an industry that of wood carv- - ;

ing which she has made peculiarly her own,although it was not introduced into the BerneseOberland before 1815. This wood carving an-

nually uses up an enormous quantity of wood ofall sorts. In Cuba there are abundant forests.which must have increased tuncc 18G8, when theniHurrection broke out. hr tliere lias been vervlittle cutting of late years ; but, as wc might ex- - i

uect where the Spaniards arc concerned, no morecare is taken, no less recklessness is shown by thefarmers w ho cut wood for their use in Cuba thanin any other timber-cla- d part of the globe."

. NOTICE!R.JOIIN RITSOX HOLDS MY I'OWKIt j

absence from the Kinglom. Mr. CI1AKLKS M. ClOKK willact as Salesman. K. P. ADAMS.

Honolulu, July 21d. 1S75. 1000 2m

NOTICE.TOrHJK IS IIKKKltl GIVES .THAT

Xl during my abseuce from this Kiug'tom Mr. All MIXU I

is authorized to transact my bmines.1000 lm C III7 NO FA A. j

I

NOTICE TO POSTMASTERS.ATTKNTIOX IS SPECIALLY CALLEDj to the New Tariff of Postage in the L'nited States, troin

July I, 187 5. whereby prepayment of I'. Si.

rustlike- - lo auutlry rsunlrirs oulaiHf f theI'uilfd Suite i uiiicle COMI't I.M1KV. SeU. S. Mail. June, 18Ta.

Letters not properly prepaid cannot be forward"!.THK I'OSTMASXKrt GK.NKKAL.

Honolulu. Juty 10th, 1875. i!300.3!.

FTJKNISHED HOUSE TO. LET.MV DWELLI.Nfi IIOt'SK AT XV I- -klkt Tnntiir r.tr V. - lltMOV Dillinffhsm& Co.'s, whom I havu constituted my Attorney in

fart during my absence from Uie Kingtlom-Jul-

23.!, 1875. lOOO Ot) L. Mi CL'LLV.

EXECUTOR'S NOTICE.PEKSOXS HAVING ANY PROPERTYALL to or owing delts to the Estate of the late

;apt JOHN M EEK, are hereby Tequirel teiirer or pay thesame to J. M. CONEV,

909 .It Executo- - Estate of Capt. John Meek.

TO LET.A PLEASANT COTTACJE WITH TWOrooms, in. a beulthy location, about 1- - minutes walkfrom the Post Office, to let. Inquire of Dillingham &

Co., or Castle ir Cooke. !f!M 1m

FOR RENT, SALE OR LEASE !

f! COTTAGE AXD PREMISES ATLj!ji present occupiei! by Col. 11. Premlergast, 11 an.l 13iiUL Kukni Pine. Knouire of

y.iH WALTER R. FEAL.

NOTICE.AND AFTER THIS DA V THE U.V.FRO.M wishes that all letters and communications for

him may be addressed as follows :

CIICN AFOXQ,Of Afosg a AciltrrK.

Honolulu, July 12th, 1875. 099 41

SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN WANTED j

FOR WHICH FAIR PRICES WILL HEt

1 Copy of January 13, 1872; 2 copies each of Nov. 14, tland 23, and Dec. o and 12, 1574, to All setts, by I

999 THOf O. TIIRUM.l"

NOTICE!WHEREAS. I the uii(leriuel tliJ.onthe

1S75. appoint His Koval Highness thePUINCK W. P. LELEIOUOKU to be my Agent for the careand management of all my property, both real and ersonal,within Uiis Kingdom, notice t;er.if is hereby given to allwhom it may concern. K. KKKLIKOLANI.

Honolulu, July 10th, 1S75. n

WATER RATES. .THE WATER RATES FROM THEfirst day of July, 1S75, to the first day of January,m 1&76, (invariably payable in advance.) being now due,all persons having water privileges are requested to

call at my ofUce, foot of NuuaDU Street, and pay up their waterrates.

HENRY PRENDEROAST,999 lm Superintendent Water Works.

OAHU COLLECE !

milE TRUSTEES TAKE PLEASURE IXm. announcing that Mr. A. l'KATT, A. M., reoently of the

Golden Gate Academy. Oakland, and an in hi rue tor of muchexperience and excellent repute will be in charge of this insti-tution the coming year.

Hi will be assisted by accomplished teachers ia th.e variousdepartments.

Mr. V. W. Damon, A. B., w;U coMtiuuc to Instruct In theclassics.

Miss Vanuio Merriit, recently a teacher in the San RafaelInstitute, and Miss M. F. Eckley, fur two years a teacher inthe Benicia Female Seminary, will instruct in drawing, music,and other studies.

Mrs. Pratt will act as matron.Patrons of the school may expect a year of superior advao

tagi---

The next term will oj-- on WEDNESDAY, the 8th ofSeptember.

999 2m DY THE COMM ITTEE.

FOR SALE !

C1H IN A FIRE-WOO- D. JUST RECEIVEDEX 15RIO HA ARD.

CUT & SPLIT, READY FOR THE STOVE !

993 AT LOW RATES. S. C. ALLEN.

IOLANI COLLECE.A BOARDING & DAY SCHOOL FOR BOYS

I'nder the Snpcrvi.ion ol Ihe Iiihastol Hoaoluln.

A JSSlDUOt-- ATTENTION' PAID TO THEA moral training and henlth of the s.h'jW.MASTtR MR. A. CLARK, certificated 1 y the Science .ml

Art Iepartment of II. B. M. C'cunc I ou KJucatiou to ch

Iirawing, Physical OeotTaphy, and Pl.yii.ilrry.

Thr nft Term will ( iimeiit ttn iulx 3th !

Day Scholars, $1.00 per Week.991 3t

SPERM OIL

IN QUANTITIES TO SUIT. FROM I Gall-on to a barrel. For ?ale by

977 CHA5. LONO.

CHINESE TILES !

4 FEW THOUSAND OF GOOD U.UAL- -ITi, lux 1 wili fe gnu ctap, tiy

BOLLES 4 CO.

OREGON HAMS, New and Fresh.I'-JE- J. A. FALKINBUKG. FOR SALE

By HOLLhs A CO.

OREGON PILOT BREAD !

CASES SMALL CAKES.1ff For Saie by BOLLIX 4 CO.

Oregon Dried Apples.RECEIVED. AXD FOR SALE BVJUST VOI.lT.a CO.

OTI('K.-T- bf VbatMMllr 11m HM j

fiuN nrrli fw iel on TmxliM. r.rfci s:-- J p.aiufUj ('

st i.r-- r . tl.f srw;iv1 rT c4 hr K'"' W rr. j

lloji.'uiu. Jti'j Kill. 17J.

MiTI rn. Tfcr lsrlr llaor llall C'lisbmrrl tr rti Tu-Jy- . 1 liut.;. nn4 Paturxlayt st4 k.. r u tMi ll.r fx ui ! SI t rrr . !l Cu;r-- lli

II, nn uta June h. 1:V ! tf

I'I I jX IIOTTsSII JOl IOOL.' FOR GIRLs OM.V.

, TKiNCirAU- - Mtu. owns.'lMlls lH oo I, WILL RK-OPK-.V u

tpr t lrrm i,j mt w (.ru r- -r f n.V'i'for r h int bnt iff. i:C0r r ; v pu-- n racuh cc . .. 10 00 ,

u.c st th most -

r 1 1 r. jm m ..w-.- v mm mm w m r w1 f. r fH!lr. W. 11 WRIGHT anl I J.

bKOW N. an to th firm rw snj :rl of WKIOHT CO..w !ir d:oll t mat ail rnrwot.

Mr. P. J. Brown . sath .r-l tn i s4) cf UrUtf Irm

llrtntnl-i- . July ilh, 1".4

BUSINESS NOTICE,f- - l I

ut f. nt wrim c.. h ptrot t nwnnw t trm litI Vf IX I ' "1 lirv 'V , ss irir-- sB sstsssv I

iTii Mrrt' ..r--....- .. .

RfiVoRK.llonolula. July sib, 1ST. w r.i

rv r i'iTnMr.RSMi'ni'RiTiM) thatilvL j

WITHIN TWO WEEKS!I ftl IOE. j

n U I iu Imms uuiil Viraiifrss sb, mi iiiit h--

10 it, weight up w 400 s. Is sir fci--

K HYCHOKTn,.noiu!u. Jutj 2. ists. w7-- u rrojwinuc.

1 1 I 77 Tm 1 A PTODV INUUANU lUt M AIM U Y I !

jt (he rauic,Uist hivm- - compi-- i um tK. iu..tiM ,nJ f ,u, orkiD8 ord"'

HE IS PREPARED TO FURNISH ICE!in Qaanuurs to Puit, Ieiirprv4 loTovo,

2 1-- 2 CENTS PER POUND,or to Contrsct lor Large Qusotitirs fr Stininf, or fwr r)ntJ l'srtiM.

the hoars or a ana s o'clock, sud iwtw 3mi ao Clock every silrrnoon. lo in mning s supply will oe kejit

t the FAMILY MARKET for transient customers.Wr.lers kit at Thrum's Newt Drjxa aU tha family Market

will be attended to.HJ It. R VCR OPT.

POSTPONEMENT SALE OF REAL ESTATE

VOTIt'K IS IIKREHV fJ 1 V KN T 1 1 A T T II K1 raie of Land belonging to the Kstata of w.n. KAAC- -.. ."..l. ...u--n .1 .t .iithe ioih iy & Juoa, lost., at 12 o'cim-- mmi, is iotpondujf uiucr m 111c vuuil biiui ciluvhi , lliv 1 1 II limy (i, jn- -gust next, st the mm tiros and place.

JOHN KOII t'MAl'N A,Wibl) AdminlsUator of Kol. of W. 11 . Kaauwai,

SInTsTRATOR'S SALEOF

REAL ESTATE!IX PURSUANCE OF A .V ORDER MADE

the 2"tb lay of May, A. D. 176, by the Uou. Chas. C.Harris, First Associate Jistk of the foprrme Court, of theHawaiian Islands, licensing me, JOHN KOII I'NAl'N A, Ad- -ministrator of the Estate of K m. II. Kaanwal, tats of Mono,lulu, dcvraed, to soli at Public Auction, certain lands belong.ing to said Estate; I the underlgncd will sella! Public Auction

ON SATURDAY. 7th DAY OF AUGUST,AT 12 O'CLOCK NOON,

At Mosstnau's Store, lo the Iowa of Wailuku, Maul, all theRight, Title and Interest of the said Wm. II. Kaauwai, de-ceased, in and to the

III OF LAND KNOWN AS PAPOHAKU !

situated at Wailuku, Maui, to win

Four parcels of land lit, 2 chains an I 4 fathoms square; 2d,1 acre and 1 squsre chain) 3d, 1) acre; 4th, 14 acres, chainsand 100 fathoms square.

And likewise, lo and o certala lands situate In llalaula, atWailuku, Maui, afcreld, to wit: 16 lots, as follow;

1st lot containing 31 square rods.2d lot r.9:M lot ' 24 "4th lot ' 1 acre, li square rods.5th lot " 1 rood, 31 square rd-- .6th lot 6 square rods.Tth lot " 1 rood.8th lot " 3 acres, 1 rood 1 38 roils.9i h lot " :i roods, 08 rods.

10th lot " 3 acres, 3 roods, 2 rod11th lot roods, 8 rods.12th lot - 1 rood 31 rods.IStblot " !49Tods.14th lot ' 3 roods, 32 rods.15th lot ' 3 acres, 1 rood, 19 rods.And alto a .rti.n of land situate at Paiki, Maui, ll 1st lot

conuinlng 6 20-1- acres, and the 3J lot, li I 24 acres.Also all the Right, Title and Interest of tun deceased in and

t J all the pieces and parct Is of land described in Royal Patentlcii)g the lots of land conveyed to the deceased and Ueo.

K. Kaauwai, his brother, by the heirs of Naleipulelio, by a er.tain deed of record I o Liber 41. pages 4&3 and 454. Th Antlot of which contains 1 0 acres, situate in llalaula, iuWailuku, aforesaid; the second lot, 8 24 1'JO acres, in Puako,Wailuku, aforesaid; and the third, 23-1- of an acre, situate atthe tame place; and the fourth, of an acre.

And likewise, all the Right, Title and Interest aqoirod bythe deoeased from A. Pepe and Kaumi, hit wife, lo and to theland described in Land Comminslon Award No. 615, containing35-10- 0 of an acre, in the town r( Wailuku, aforesaid.

And also, nil ib Land Kitnnle nt Maala-M- ,

Kula. I a H I, described in Land Commission Award No.2U!3, and containing a acres in favor of . Kaauwai.

And likewise a Tract of Land llnalrd n t Vsloksa, Kuln, Maul, described In Land ('ommiisionAward 23b3 containing acres.

The faitbcr description of the lands may be seen ou appliestion at the Clerk's OlSce of the Hupretue Court UNTIL 8 AT,L'KDAY, the 12th of June, 1875, and afterwards at MR.MO.sSM AN'S STORE, at Wailuku, and at the UOYKKNOM'SOFFICE, Lahaina, Maul.

Sale subject to the approval of the Ccui t, at the CourtHouse, Honolulu.

JOHN KOII t'NACNA.Administrator of the Estate of Wis. II. Ksausai, deceased.

993 fit

PORTLAND CEMENT,BEST QUALITV.

CHINESE MATTING,EXTRA UI'ALITV,

WTOR SALE AT67-4- t F. A. ECPAEPER CO.'.

M 7,M U

I I o

Hd W

P3C3

u H no o ie. u

o Of e3 a oo Imi C

0 a :t

i9.

1IIIK! IfllfK! lllf.Ki!

FROM THIS t

WELL KNOWN PUUNUI DAIRY'j

fpp THE UNDERSIGN ED II A VI NOLz2S purefcssed tha well known herd of All i' ..JI ICOWH frm Mr. J. I'.lcbardson. sod aithsring leased tbe LsnJs knovrn as tT.e

PUUNUI MILK RANCH !

He is rreiaril lo furnish to customers

PIKi: YRVSH Mll.k, l qr.TIHKS TO SWT!AT -

SIZK1 Cents por QUiXnT,FULL MKA.L'KK OL" ARA VTKKD,

(ai I)elhfrt4 In thr .Mralc Mitr I

Zf To large custrtsers, S'itL as If. 41 atu! K Uursit keep.er. Ships of War, Ac, be will make rpecial Cootrsrts. stLOW i'itlCEs.

Orders to Jshn. who has charge of the Milk Vsu, r.rleft at the Intemali'msl Hotel, will I promiKly attended to.

AKONO. Proprietor.6m 14

OREGON LIME.SAX JUAX KILX-JU- ST RECEIVED prr

and in perfe!t cr-le- gor sa hy901 BOH.K8 ACQ

CALIFORNIA LIME!TBECEIVED PER MI'RRA V. IX PERII FKCT ORDER.

'r Sale at jtreatly reduced price, hyROLI.K4 4 CO.

CALIFORNIA OAT-HA- Y !

I1CCEIVED PER D. C. :MURRAY. ANDA. a Superior Qusli'y. Fr Hale hy

ju20 BOLLF9 A CO.

Chain Cables & Iron Stock Anchors.FROM IfiO LB 4. TO'I.OOO LBS.SI7E from a S ineV, (A , meh.

For ale r. HOI V A CO.

I'tucecus to me raynient - vismw faKr, elc, ttc. v . a o ia x. it u H A XK T -s t w nr--. ,i.r

NOTICE.1111. Jl I. II 1 IIOTIMJ l A I'T IIOK IZRI)

V ft fn-t- xh ts I-- wft inr firm rri-.- .

r A.KHAMn CO.

!!. lulo. Ja r 1

DISSOLUTION OF PARTNERSHIP.mjoTIC'K. tii: riKM orxr.l.l',s Hl

l. It s ly ln 4 ly Mwlusi tusi4. AM

nartir lo ih t tnm ! f'M r- -

HifU J Mi A W PM LU Ad4 sil LiMi bni rM rrr-iil- st tnc lo l 'f ltM-t- i

aA. W. fMU .J I.. KINU

HucK'tulu, Jkii I"k.

NOTICE!raviiK rMii.HMi;r.i( ii:uto sTirrJl ln tr il-- l tK M.r Ihsi h' U r l r I K 1st- -

ttr-t,nf Nik rw st thr nl.l 'siJ, t "f HfrrH, is his ssnr. Bf

A. W.PMLLIlocoin'a. Jj JT 1. 1:. 4

NOTICE.rtiV. CIT4I OF Til HA Mill K

jLiJtv M ATT I K MACI.KSV iil fv h fmwny mn'riftl bf ti rr r rft.rf sf MiJ" rm-- l l.ii in this

w.1 I. II. WALTKK.

NOTICE.ffllK l'MIKMIii:H IIAVK. S T II K

irt IV 4 All, IMS, rl4 tnf ' rrIMrH.Suivlrr IS n .. snil M)kelJ II lRt'N A CO , ( hr nfmxi 4 rrfjir, on IU

('perlsisj n md i;sls ltlsirIn nil it I'lstn h. siMl.solM-t- t stisrr t4 Ik kswts

j. it karNP,ii .m m

II Junr I. m

TO LET OR LEASE !

TIIOKK !IRAlll.K l'HI'.MIl l 043 Alskr Mrrf. tmrmrtlf hjr A. f. miC.ViOt, f"t rsntrulsr spl'ly

:i . t. i.r:MON.

NOTICE.I'lIK I'lHIH' A II K IIKKKIIt OT.

SiM thst JosEI'll I't C'll AlK V hum t nllwvtf issell soy lsthrr Bistrlsl tsis.1 Ins KALAI'AO TANW t K X , oor to knrar snjr sipsttHitar fMi imsnl e lltsssm

j.l iMwrrrHonolulu. Msn-- IT, lTV

EXECUTOR S NOTICE.rHE imk.kmum:d havino iikkn1 Mtiflniml ly it e t'nuri a Fieewtiw of the .! atA MONK W. MAMI kl.. ., rqeats allpersons indebtr-,- In said Ft(e in make imatediate pa y wei4 ,and all who have claims against the si4 atials mw lbsame with vouchers to the I -- leirel, daring Ui term vf ssnuiiths from dste, i r thry will ba tts-ev- barrt. Aa4 allpersons tav'ng any .rHrty la their fwMwewua, whateverdescription, In the Kstateof A M'ON K W. MANI HlHare lierehy not i let I to deliver the sawie Is lb t'adsrttf nifurtbwilb, or otherwise to render an aerownt llirrenl.

J. II. 1'I.At'H., rsorwtnrHonolulu, April 9th, 1M7 w

DISSOLUTION OFmilK IIKRKTO.

M i esisling under the firm nm of HI.At K A Al l lis hereby diasolvrd by aiutusl ronsenl. Mr. J. II. BLACKwill ;ay all llatiilitie of the 1st siinerliii, and all nwsmis.iodvbu--d are requete in nmke Imnillaie .a mrni ta kmonly. t. II. MLACK,

June 1st. 174. J AMP- - At' LI.

fMIK INDMKHIONKD, PROP It I RTOfCM aud Publisher ol lbs I si'iim- - ('oHMsaiisL Anvssvixsa.

will cmtliu lbs Imainess i4 Print Inj a ltd I'ublislilng la allIt branches at the old stand, Nn. 18 Merrbsnl 'eeet.

June 6th, 1S7.V i. II. ULAI K.

GREAT BARGAINSIX

T H3 "W 33AND- -

SOLID METAL WORK.

IX OKDEK TO f "LOME OUT THK lil'M-Nli- Ml

ECKART VILL SELL AT C08T !

HR THK NFVT THRKK MONTH,

THE FINEKIOfK OK NOLI l

ttOLD AMD Kl LV KN JKWKt.HIANtk. .....

T MLR WAKE I

ALSO-WATC- HES. Mi MirCANW, PHKLL WORK.

AND OTIIKH FANCY A HI ICLKC.

Call Soon and Secure Oreat Barg-ain-i

pon OA.UIZAT THE FORT KTKEET DtllKK.

MI 3u

SOMETHING

WORTH HAVING !!A Till Stt OP IIEAI TV. IT IN RAlD.'l

J. jny ftwever, and If fitness is the ewwxiiUd Ids fbeauty, ns we maintain ir is, the MtWlNfl MAC1I1MKwllh one of the

PATENT WATER WIELATTACHMENTS !

Is one nf tho most leiitifiil thinrs In lbs worU) notlilnfin Ibe whole ranr of modern inrentlow bring 14 ler adaptlo relieve human drudgery nr fitter for I h purposes Intended.

The UittlrralKBirtl ar. Spr-lw- l Agrsnafwr

THE "DOMESTIC"WHICH IH TUE

BEST SEWING MACHINE III USE!AO POINTS OF SUPERIORITY t

Far Particulars s- - Circulars.

WE An I'RKrAHCb TO rCRNIMI Till;

PATENT ATTACHMENT I

lo any of the m si hi net sow In , which will rnolSteia perfeptly without the least exert loa on th part of the operator. ThewsWheel, art mails hers at th. II II A WW FOU X DK V arsuperior to tbos InporUd, sod sold fur less money,

ci v of: am) .or win bi: (onmmkimIt Is a well known fact that the ill health of tbousaadsU

wnnen and vtrl., can M traned tn th .sertioa req.tre. Mrun 11 pww-r- . worn m in w I mw rvsufficient.

DILLINCillAM ic CO.

DRIED APPLE8 !

ri II O X EN DRIED ll'l' l,K,mmt t. 11 lm Vnr le t,y A. W. rriKCc Co.

ENGLISH "PORTLAND CEUSHr,"ECEIVED FROM TH E II A II K K A MOL.

!..l r.l.lhy hOI.LF.i k CJiBEST ENGLISH PORTLAND CZX'?hi

DIRECT FROM EUR' "RECEIVED atid wsrrsrf 1 freh and fiTlCU.r'rrie at ir.e ii mm, ry lore)

ftOLLU

'McEVVAN S PORTER ! 4.v..

fUNT ARRIVED. IX STONE Jl'Ofc. 0vpints. (77) for rale hy UAM. LONtt.

FOUNTAIN SALOON & RESTAURANT ,

J. W. CKOWKLL. I'KOI'KIKTUR.

No. Hi Fort rtreet, orpo.ii. II. L ('has tUaUrry. ilocrapb

Lunch and lee Cream Rood fQT idiei,OREGON PIL0TrBREAj

1 OO CASKH sWKM.. hy HOl.LFS k CO.

avrfnceT'N DUCK t

IjVVSi&r .AXUFACTORI , A K A- -r,

for sale low byItOLr.F. A CO.

20.C 00 CHINA DRIQKS.EX3Jr SI7.E. WILL LAV AROUT (Kik iv r ",l,"rr" ,,r,i i pet bark

W .L ' ' 'Boi.i.rji k co.

.

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i. V

I'

1

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1

1

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I

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Ci'

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Page 3: THE PACiriC X

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ir

BY C . S. BARTO WJ- TIIISJAY !

KAIU: CIIAXC'K!

OX CARTS AJ AUCTION.

OH SATURDAY, - - - - JULY 24th,

At 12 nvirli Nn.In front of salesroom,

On account of Closing Business,WIJI br Sslt :

TWO NEW OX-CART- S.

C. P. BARTOW, AunV

!

ON THURSDAY, JULY 29th,AT i'l O'CI-OC- A. M.,

AT SAI-KKO- WILL RK .OI.D,

A SELECTION OF DRY GOODS I

LOT OF FURNITURE!

fUOKE HOOKS, MAPS W (HARTS,

KT--. KTC. ETC.

C. ?. BARTOW. Au-t'- r.

TRUSTEE'S SALE OF'

EEAL ESTATEIm lb Mailer ike Eataie mt I he Late.

:pl. Jba Merit, drrewafd.

TTo be Sold sit Auction' At th ?altrooai of C. 8. Bartow, in Honolulu, on

SATURDAY, the 28th DAY of AUGUST,

AT 12 O'CLOCK, NOON,

A I.I. Til AT TRACT OF I.AM), SITUATE

I Til E DISTRICT OP P.WA.Omha, mni known at the

KALAUAO RANCH,rontaunta an area of l ,300 AC'R Est. by a reeent aarveyfty C. J. i.ON!. and Ijrina-- within aboot seven miles of theCity of Mannlala, and dirwtlj on the roat from Honolulu toWalalu. The aaid land U subject to a lease lor a term ofthree yar nnexpirl. Title by Royal Patent.

for fnrther particular apply to J. II. CONEY. Trustee andf!xvntnr of the aaid estates or to J. MONTGOMERY, Solicitor,No. Kaahnnann trt, llonolaln.

C. g. BARTOW. A act'r.

(CIWPBFLL ft. TfRTO, LAIUIXA.)

WHITE SUGAR (WASHED)...JirKegi at 8 Cents a Pound.

FOR SALE AT

II. IIACKFEI.U Si, (O.'S.,lm Agents.

"Wheat Meal, Craham Flour,tCorn Meal, Cracked Corn,Ground Rice, Cracked barley,

flROCND TO ORDER, byA. SCNTER.

Orders V-- with Dillingham Co., or E. O. Hall 8on Will

be attended to. 996 tf

WANTED!THe LADIES of tUe HAWAIIAN ISLANDS

TO KNOW--THAT THE UXDERSIONRD HAS

JUST RECEIVED!PER "LEGAL .TENDER."

An Elegant Urine of

LADIES k IWUIIIEW SHOE WARE

OF A I.I. KINDS.i

i

Which for njriority of irorkmonship '

The Children's ArareARE SOMKTHIX. ELEG.IXT.

ISE GOODS YIM. HE SOLI1 AT j

GREATLY REDUCED PRICES

AIO-JC- ST TO HAND

LADIES' WHITE KID SLIPPERS.

Lsidie you arc respectfully invited to ex-

amine thexe good and judpe foryot'rfielrc.

Krery pair plainly m.itke.l.

M. MrlSERXY,? Honolulu, July 1, 1873. 99MJ

lIVEW SAFIOHi, 1875!

Just Arrived per Mattie Macleay.

Pilot Bread,

Extra Superfine Flour,

Lime, Pork, Hams.

Canned Salmon and

Beet &c, &c, &c.rott ? ALE BY

W 2a, II. IIACKFEI.O A. tO.

LIME, MORE LIME !

ALirORMA AND OREGO.V. .1 Arrr- - iDnr quanta. In tne Del rarar, nr"'"" I"

etw aaXnral.. And Ve wU not he rSDERfOLD FOR j

THK 8ME rAUTV. CU eat9 BOLLE? A CO.

BY E. P. ADAMS.THIS DAY.

REAL ESTATEON SATURDAY. - - - - JULY 24th!

A r li O i.:I K MWN,

Will b o.frM at Fut.Iir Anrti'iu, that ccrlain !ulii?

j Piece or Parcel of Property 1

SITl ATKD tOB.NER HOTEL 4. ALikEl ST..

Upp.ilf Ihr T brut re,

WITH ALL THE BUILDINGSAM"

IMPROVEMENTS THEREON !

EXCEPTINU THK CORN PR T.MtK. T:KM. AT KAl.K.

Tli irr.rtjr ran be rxanum.1 on ,ln a:in to Mr. iH'.O.WE ATHF.RBir, or lo

E. f. A l. M?, Anrirnr.Honolulu, July 12th IS 7 5.

OREGON SUGAR CURED HAMS!KVTKA HUAMTY.

1A KKI 111 JOHNSON SI'A i.ii.;,ani warraol- - l superior. Just rec-if- l per Kalkiulmrfr,and for sale hy

'J9 ROLLED 4 Co.

to wool. ;i:ovi:ks.THE IM)KllM(;Nf.l) coxtim kto buy W1 at if'"'"! prir.s. Wools roniinfr tomarket lhit Spriny particularly to make

t.

IN IOO I.K. KEGS.

IIOR HA I.E BVC S tf II. II ACKFELD & CO

KITS SALMON BELLIES.18T5.- - SPRING. Jl'STI1ACKKI) Faikinburg. For ile by

9t4 B0LI.K8 & CO.

DICKSON, 61 FORT ST.,AS THE LARGEST AND II EST ASSORT- -II MKNT OF

Kou Calabashes, Kapas, Mats,Native Drenaea, phell Mwklncea, Ac, to be found In Ho.

nolulu, and fr aale at LOW J'RICKS I

PIOTUR K FRAMES !

In Great Number and Variety.

PIIOTOOUAPIIM-- A Large Ftock of Hawai-

ian Views and PortraiUAlwajfH ob llauw. Momtfd oa (ards r rnmoantfd,

992 FOR MAILING. qr

BOSTON MANILA COEDAOE,I 1- -2 to G Incbfi,

17 ROM THE XEW BEDFORD FACTORY,made by Uonton himself or Home other mm.

991 2ia For Sale by A. W. PEIUCK k CO.

CONSTANTtV ON HANOIA GENERAL ASSORTM'T OF

SHIP (KAJDLERi k SHIP STORES.

Fr Sale by UOLLES St CO.

PER ' FALKINBURCDIRECT from PORTLAND,

OREGON'. BnrrrU

Columbia River Spring Salmon !

PACKED by WARREN' & CO., 1873. anda 8UPKKIOR quality. For alo by

994' BOLLES A C0

EIEW GOODS !

Iffcw Goods !

New GS-ocd- s !

JUST RECEIVED

FROM CHINA DIRECT,

Per Brig HAZARD,

VW OPENING AND FOR SALE BVl THE UNDERSIGNED.

JEWELRY IN SETS, of Cnpst quality, gold

ami poarl, coral tiger claws, Ac, Ac.

SILK DRESSES of ditTfront j:iiteriis. ami

PINA Stripetl dan.e.

LADIES' SLirrERS of fancy stylea.

Crape Shawls, Grass Clotb, Silk Neck Ties.

Tortoiseshell, Feather and Silk Fans.

Sandal Wood. Ivory. Tortoiseshell, and Lac-

quered Ware of all description!.

Flowered Vases of all sizes and devices.

Silver Ware. Very fine,

White Matting of very Gnest quality.

White Contract Matting No?. 1 and 2.

Assorted Colored Matting Nos. 1 and 2.

Caaiphor Wood Trunk in Nests e.t quality,

Camphor Wood Trunks in Nests No. 1.

Camphor Wood Trunks in Nests No. 2,

Manila Rope best quality an A cf all izes.

BASKETS OF VERY FINE I5REAKFAST TEA !

Preserved Ginger and Chow Chow.

SUGAR MATS, SINGLE AND DOUBLE.

TEAS, all of the new season I

Souchong in Chests, lb4 packages,

flyson, in 21b. boxes,

Oolong of very superior quality.

PRESERVED GINGER AND CHOW CHOW,

Cigars ! Cigars ! Cigars !

Genuine Manilas and Imitations.

FIRE CRACKERS k I IKKWORRS. all

ALSO

FULL LIWES OF STAPLE GOODS TOO NUMER-

OUS TO MENTION.

AFONC & ACHUCK, -

IS MnnanH Sirrri. ,

pipping.

FOK SAX FKAXCISCO.The A. S. N. Co.'s Splendid Steamship

; j : '

TJH X DES. JL 33 O ,VOOUK, Ut-- r

WILL SAIL FOR SAN FRANCISCO.This Day, July 21th.

A!l Frirht it!tr.tJ fnr phiptntnt rr mr .ih-r lPun Fraoe;r or i;l b rf'.t- - i in tf.-- 5tentnrWrthou Free1 f Siiiragr.

The Ar'Ki ; I p,v a WanEi.o-j;-Reir- t I t ail Irchn- -I bt!t will not b T"i'-r:h- i U r ! by fire.

XT Fcr Freight ar-- P"ae-"- . cr ar.y farhi-- r

659 Arp'y 11 C. EREWFR k CO., Afn:. j;

For PorflniMl. Orcson.THK HAWAIIAN BARK

MATTIE MACLEAY,T. II. WAI.IEK, M--

Will have Quick Dispatch for Above Port.Fur Fivipht r Pa2s spi'1

Mlm II IlAi"KFKLt it CO., Ag-i.t- s.

for svdi:v, X. JS. w.The A. S. N. Co.s Fine Steamship

MACG-REGOI- . !CAI'T.4I KRAI.VGF.K.

WILL SAIL FOR SYDNEY. N. S. W.,

On or about July 28th.All Frright iotendol for Shipment per Sleainf-r- s riihrr in

Fan FraucUco cr the Colonies will le received in the SteamerWirehoose Free cf Siornge.

The Affentu will give a Wrehue-R(-ceip- t for ail Merchan-dise, but will not he teponsihle for los by fire.

XT For Freight nd Paste, to Sydney, New Zealand andMelbourne, apply to

TIME-TABL- E OF THE

STEAMER KILAUEA,"MARCH A.vr, : : : : MASTKR.

Jaly 32 Monday.... 5 p m.. . . . Kona.lu Monday. ...6 p m... . .Hilo : Kaunakakai both ways29 Thursday ..6 p m. . . . . Nawiliwili.

Aug. 2 Ionday....5 p m.., ..Circuit of Hawaii." 9 Mondy....5 p m. . . . Kona." IS Monlay ....5 p m... . . Hilo k Kaunitkakai both wava' 25 Wednesday .5 p m... ..Circuit of Kauai.

30 Monday. .. .6 p m... . .Circuit of Hawaii.8ept. f Monday.... 5 p m... ..Kona.

" It Monday... .5 p m... . . Hilo & Kaunakakai both" i Thursday... 6 p m... ..Nawiliwili. lh" 27 Monday. ...5 p m.... ..Circuit of Hawaii.

tt When there are no cattle to land at Maaluea Bay, felt

effort will be made to reich Honolulu Saturday P. M.XT On down Trip! the Steamer will not leave Kaalualu until

9 A. M. or later; Makena until 8 A. M. or later; and MaalaeaBay until 8 A. M. or Liter, without due notice of any chanjrebeing given.

Rates of Passage will beTo or fiom Kaunakakai, Molokai $500

" " l.ahaina, Maul........... , 600" Maalaea, Maui . 7 00

' " Makemi, Maui 8 00' " Mahukona, Hawaii.; 10 00" " Kawaihae, " 10 00.i Kailua, ' 10 00" " Kaawaloa, ' 10 00" " Hilo, " ..; 12 60

" Kau Coast . " 13 00Circuit of Hawaii, Hound Trip 22 00To or from any P rt on Kauai 8 00Circuit of Kauai, Round Trip 12 00Deck Passaice for natives only 2 00

No Credit for Passage Money !

TICKETS AT THE OFF1CK ONLY.

No berth will be considered as taken until paid for. Notresponsible for hairrge unmarked or any Freight or Parcelsunless receipted for.

FREIGHT MOXEV DIE OX DEMAXK!ICT An effort will be made to have the Bteamer reach Bono

lulu on the evening of the same day she leaves Maui.SAMUEL G. WILDER, Apent.

Office with Wilder & Co., corner of Fort and yueen Streets.9yt)

tOMXIA A VAPOR DEL C010RAD0

L.A COM PA XI A TIEXORA COM-unicaci-

con loa Tuertosde Mejico y Arizona.

Paba Mazatlan, La Paz, Guaymas, Magdalena Bay, Cabo deSan Lucas, y

EX, KIO COLOEADOTocando a La Paz de Ida y Vuelta. Linea Regular Para Los

Puertos (te Mejico, Saldran cada 20 dias llevando carga apn-cio- s reducidos.

AGEXCIAS:Mazatlan Mexico Fort Yuma ArizonaI a pal Mexico, Khrenberg ArizonaGuaymas Mexicoi Mohave Arizona

El pasage se ha reducido mucho, y hay la mayor comodidadahordo para pasageres.

Para infonnarse, tocando flete y pasage, ocurrase aEDUARDO NORTON,

977 6m 610 Calle de Front, San FrHncisco.

BOSTON & HONOLULU PACKET LINE !

C. BREWER CO., AGEXTS.Favorable arrangements can always be made for

3 Htoraee and Shipment of Oil, Bone, Wool, Hidesami other Merchandise to Ner Bedford, Boston, New York andother Eastern Ports. XT Cash Advances made

95j Jy v. t5Kfc tit s J- -

REGULARDISPATCH LINE FOR SAN FRANCISCO.

C. BREWER Ai CO.. AGEXTS.Merchandise received STORAGE FREE andliberal cash advances made on shipments by this

line. (954 lyj nntor n. . v w.

REGULAR PACKET FOR L HI A IN A.

ill THE SCHR. NETTIE MERRILL,K. l. CRANE, Master.

Will Rao Begnlarly between Thi Port and Lahalna,LEAVING

nonolaln Saturdays and Lahalna even Wednesdays.

958 3m II. HACKFELD & Co., Agents.

IX Sl. XT X r A. C? ZL JH 1 I

FOR KOLOA .AND WAIMEA.THE SCHOONEE

KA3IAILE!BOLLES, MASTER,

Will hive Regular PispaU-- for the above named Ports, on

and after the 5th of November next, until further notice.Freight and Passengers taken at the Lowest Rates.932 BOLLES & CO., Agents.

PRIME C. R. SALMONAND

BELLI ES. IX BBLS., HALFSALMONKits.

PILOT B RE A I). FLOCK,II A MS nud OREGOX LIME.

iU 2m Fir Sale at U. 1IACKFELD A CO6

NEW ENGLANDTunnel & Smelting Comp'y

IN TUE

Mineral King Mining District,Tfclme (ocnt; Stat of California.

Shares of Stock For Sale in above eompany

XT SEE PROSPECXCS. JO.

902 3m C. S. BARTOW, Agent.

INVOICE OF AMERICAN CLOCKS !

IOR SALKiitSAX FRAXCIsrO PRICES.ar 91 3m II. HACKFKLU k CO.

INVOICE OF SILK FOULARDSRECEIVED VIA PAXAMA.JCST 2m II. II ACKFELD & CO.

00LDEN GATE EX. FAMILY FLOUR !

TlthFR'S EXTRA FAMILY FLOUR,Received per Marrav, and for sale ry

BOLLES li CO.

Manila Cordage !

ITIROM THE BOSTON' FACTORY ALLa1 sizks.

For Sale hv BOLLES CO.

. ICE CHESTS.IV EAT. COM PACT AXD SERVICE. RLE.

Frireonly f 12; enquire at .1 S. H" RX E V'!, NnuanuStreet, t"!"W Kinj nr of

990 R. RYCROFT.

I)

tax

THE PACIFICCflmmf rcial SUbfrtisrr.

P or thk Moos rot thi Moam or ."t iv,liTi-HosO- Llll Mn Tim.

Ja'T .'- -.r Morn 4 W.7 ra9 Fir.t vloart-r- r i 8 9 r

Full Mo 2 M i2i UalUurid 1 "

tutor time iTTieJu'y I Sun r:- - 5 Zi i ; fu kU 41 ru

H ?an r;e 5 2 7 ; on vt. A 41 7 m13 fun r;e SSoa; --arta 6m

Sun rit 5 .'H w; Kunwt... 9: rSun rvi 5 ."6 fns( 3 r

SI eon rie a "7 am; SunfH. 55 rlCrr.lirL !uth- -

sotr of th f wrrK.The Bant will nrt pNj t Emma Square tha f--J

lerooon, but will be ia attervlftnce at the wharf onj llhe Jeparture of the stearrer for California.i

Ieill Yesterday afwrnoon the marires and seamen of the Penineola, accompanied by the band,drilled on the E?plnade, and made a fine appear-anc- e.

Fi.beign JrEOiw. We are reqaestel to say thatforeign jurors fjr the late terra may receive theirfees by calling at the Supreme Court room, betweenthe hours of 9 and 12 this morning.

fiix V9. C PirM. It is sai l that ince the opiumlicenses expired on the 21st ult. large quantities cfgin are sold to the Chinese. A case cf "out of thefrying-pa- n into the fire."

A Jocrnalut os FcBLOccn. We had the pleas-

ure yesterday of receiving a visit from Mr. W. G.Jerrems, for some years connected with the staff ofthe " Town and Country," of Sydney, on his way toEngland via the overland route

Masonic. The regular monthly communicationof Lodge Le Progres de l'Oceanie, A. F. & A. M.,will take place on Monday evening next, at the LodgeRooms on King street. Visiting brethren are invitedto attend.

Receptions on Shipboard. Admiral Alroy's fort-

nightly reception on board the Pennacola was nu-

merously attended on Thursday afternoon. TheirMajesties the King and Queen and as many as ahundred other guests, ladies and gentlemen, made afriendly call on the gallant Admiral and officers.

Target Practice. Last Wednesday a party ofaeamen belonging to the LT. S. S. Pensacola were onthe reef to seaward of the port for several hours,engaged in rifle practice. Standing on the Esplanadeone could hear the shots strike the target. The dis-

tance fired we should judge was 300 yards.

r Mas Ovebboard. On the last trip of the Kamoi,when in the Molokai channel one of the crew felloverboard. A boat was lowered and picked him up,but not until the schooner had left him half a mileastern. But he was a Hawaiian, and swum like afish.

A Bali. Next Week. T.e learn that on Fridayevening next, being the eveoftheS2d anniversarycf the restoration of the Hawaiian flag, a ball will begiven at the Hotel Pavilion in aid of the funds ofQueen Emma Lodge, No. 2, of the Order of GoodTemplars. The Order has confessedly done a goodwork in this community, and we doubt not ourcitizens will show their appreciation of that fact byliberally patronizing it on this occasion.

The Pkihk ok thk I'exsacola. The gun, purexcellence, of'ilu 1'eiintculu isr eleven-inc- h pivot,itf tvfirkCit i 1 ini'i fiiiniu mil a. i r i i f 1 r i iu aaiv ii rt xa f. ravawwuw7Vsflj'a.'iiia UVt Ollll VMuiim livi J VI1V VII M

board U oi course quii.-p- i oud. I Whil." their Maj- -

eslied were on a visit to tin Admiral last Thursday .

the Quern was admiring the great gun, and re-

marking that shu had beard it said that sailors fre-

quently culled their guns by p't names. a?kcd ifthis one hud a name? "Yes. your Majesty," re-plied the gallant Admiral. wa have named this.KapioI.am. .

At thk Focxpky. Whenever I If is a plentyof employment for mechanics, it indicates an improvement in the times for everybody else.

" We'are therefore pleased to chronicle the fact that theworkmen are busy at the Honolulu Iron Works.Among the contracts in hand, we note a VacuumPan for Mr. A. II. Spencer, East Maui, to be 5 feetdiameter by 6 feet in height, with air pumps andsteam engines ; arid a new sugar mill for Messrs.Campbell & Turton, the rollers of which are to be48 inches long by 26 inches in diameter, with he avyconnecting gearing, and to cost about $7000.

Orange Consumption in California. Says theS. F. Chronicle California consnmes 10,000,000oranges per annum, or about eighteen apiece toeach man, woman and child in the State. Thereare of course some who far exceed that figure, andmany who never taste an orange from the 1st ofJanuary to the 31st of December ; but eighteen isthe average. Of the 10,000.000 of oranges con-

sumed over fifty per cent now come from LosAngeles and the other southern counties of theState : and the supply from that source is conlantly increasingShort Sivfs One day last week, in removi

an old store-hou- se attached to the former place ofbusiness of Mr. G. C. McLean on Nuuanu streetunder the floor was unearthed a case of cigars," short sixes," that had been forgotton there forover sixteen years. in former years, that style otcigar was extensively smoked here, being broughtout in large qualities for trade by whalers. Wewere favored with a bunch of the find," whichwere in excellent order and well seasoned. Thebrand reads, Extra No. 1 Havana Sixes, manufactured by Dow and Wilder, iTo. 3 Chatham RowBoston."

Work for Shipwbiohts. We are pleased to learnthat Messrs. Campbell and Turton of Lahaioa havecontracted with the Messrs. Foster of this city forthe construction of a new schooner of about 150tons, to take the place of the Aetti$ .Merrill on theLahaina route. On the return of the rettie fromher present trip she will be hove out in order toobtain the lines of her model, upon which, for anisland coaster, it is believed that no improvementcan be made.J It is understood that m the comple-

tion of the new vessel, (which it is calculated willbe on or before the first of Januiry next) the J"etliewill be turned over to the Messrs. Foster. Ilavingbeen well and faithfully built in the first place, shehas many years remaining of service.

Samshoo, or Samshy. The meaning of this worior either of them in Chinese, i9 " thrice distilled,' j

and it describes (according to S. Wells Williams) astrong spirituous liquor distilled from the yeaetyt

. ,1! - L l l M 3 I I Siliquor m wuicu uoiieu rice 11:19 uetu leriueuieu un-

der pressure many days. We are told that a gooddeal of Samshoo is consumel by the lower order ofChinese on these islands, and that it is retailed inmany of the petty shops in this city. The Custom-

house records how that large quantities are importedfrom China in earthen jars, and it paj9 a duty asspirits of 3 a gallon. Scarce a coaster leaves this !

port for the other islands but takes one or more ofthese jars for the Chinese traders. Our governmentrequires a license of SI ,000 per annum for retailingAmerican wbkky, British biindy pr German gin,but Chinese Samshy shies along under an ordinarymerchandise license.

Treasury Order Relatlss ro Goous for Hoxo-lcl-c.

The Secretary of the Treasury directs thattits ports of Tort Huron and Detroit, Mich , andDuluth, Minn, shall be and the same are designatedas ports at which combined entries for the transpor-tation and exportation may te made of goods arriv-ing at these places and destined for the SandwichIslands via San Francisco, under the conditions speci-

fied in chapter 4 of the Customs regulations of 1872,wita 'his modification, however, that in cennectionvi'h such entries such examination and appraise-ment of all package? of gpod3 so shipped shall behad as will insure accurate identification of theircontents and afford a proper basis for fixing thepenalties of transportation and export bonds. Theseprecautions are deem necessary on account of theimpracticability of transporting such goods fromeither of the above ports of departure to San Fran-cisco in sealed cars without removing the seals orbreaking bnlk. S. F. Commercial Herald.

tiiA.ccu. tu tne

Ma. Ei rroH : It wi with very gret aatisfacikothat I read in the Gazette cf thia tne-rnie- of thetttaod takca ly His Mjesty va SanJay Uat. theHutject itl tie ue cf intoxicating leverages. It U

rotn sach Liz'i R'arce that a rtf. rta cf tLU kin Jithoul-- ccme. ic crxlcr to reach the Fcp'e f theU'aoJs

There is Do JvuLt Lut the icueoc cf thvM highin kuthoriry Cabinet Mitiiter, Governors, JuJgrs,high t Sicitii c f foreign ns'ioni. ic., if thrownupon lh..' right i Je. w u'. i be cuocful ia banishingthe destructive drinking customs new to prevalent,from decent society, anJ ia rescuing the foreign awell aj native p pa'.atioa from the yawning gulf cfdrunkeiice3 that alkvi up so many, anJ threaten to depopulate the islands.

For cc I most heAriCy wish IIU Msjesty uooes:n tii recent movement to no bit people goou; ana itrust that his Minister!, Governor. Judges, TrivyCouncillors, and all friends cf the nation, will givehim tLeiv cuu&tenance and support. X. V. Z.

Ms. Editor : The attitude assumed by nis Maj-

esty the King ia his address to the Household Troc palist Sunday, as an advocate of temperance, mustsend a thrill of emotion to every heart that lovesHawaii nd the Hawaiian? It signifies a revival ofhope, when hope had well-nig- h expired. If, follow-

ing Ills Majesty's example, every government off-

icial, from the highest down through all the gradesto policemen, will become temperance men ind.td aswell as in word, the nation may be redeemed.

But will they do it? Will Cabinet Ministersabandon their cups will they give up buying andselling liquor? Will Governors ceae to encourageby their example the habit cf getting intoxicated,and will tbey cause the removal of distrirt judgeswho are notorious drunkards? Just as long as thesources of the fountain are mud ly, the stream willremain unclean. It is because men who fill highpositions in the government are not temperance men,that this tide of drunkenness is flooding the land.Oar laws are ample, but oar minor official will outexecute them for the reason that they know, and thepeople know, that the higher officials hate those laws,sneer at them, and are well pleased to have them dis-

regarded and treated with contempt.If His Majesty would make the temperas? rf-;-u

a practical success, let him, in military parlance," put none but sober men on guard." Let the ralebe, no man shall hold office under the governmentwho is ever known to become intoxicated, or whoopenly frequents places where liquor is sold, or whohimself trafficks in intoxicating drinks. Such a rule,strictly followed, would quickly cleanse this Augeanstable. Hawaiian.

Heroism on the Scaffold.Frank Smith was a negro murderer cf Texas, and

he was justly led to the gallows a short time ago inMontague county. As always happens at Southernexecutions, an immense crowd was present when thenegro was led upon the platform. He made a ferventprayer and after it addressed the people. He confessed his crime, and exhorted his hearers so fervently to avoid his errors that all were moved totears. The Sheriff put the noose around his neck,but the rough crowd, moved by the murderer's elo-

quence, surged around and upon the gallows, de-

manding his release. The Sheriff made an ineffectualeffort to clear the platform. The men were armed.and he was in their power. All at once the marderer, who was a Hercules in strength and stature,shouted, " Stand back. ! This is no time for a row,

l am guilty. iet the taw take us course, l am aman, and I can die like a man!" The rescuersshrank bock appalled The Sheriff, with a heavyheart, completed his preparations, the trap was

teprung and the brave malefactor fell and died with- -put a struggle. Is there another instance in historywhere a man, having life and liberty before him,

irew them away to vindicate the majesty of a lawwhich he himself had violated?

Hovel JReading.Professor Swing thus closed bis lecture in Brook-

lyn, on " The Place of the Novel in Literatureand the remark is unavoidable that it is in beauti-ful contrast with the sensational thinness of DeWittTalmage on the same and other subjects :

The question, who should read novels? is per-fectly absurd. There are in all the arts the highand the low. The wit of Rabelais is low, ofCervantes lolty. The paintings of the old Dutchschool were bumble, being most of their scenes ingrog shops ; but in the Dusseldorf school they arelofty, being for the most part great scenes from theworld of nature. The poetry of Swinburne is lowfor the most part ; that of Bryant lofty. Thesetwo colors, white and black, run through all theart3 everywhere ; and it is for us to choose. Whoshould read the novel? Everybody should readthe novel where woman decorates the great truthsof life ; but where the novel is (he pimple historyof love, nobody. And especially should thoseread novels who the most don't want to. Theythe most need them ; and there ought to be a lawrequiring a certain chips of people to read onenovel a year, persons who, through some narrow-ness of law, or of medicine, or of merchandise, orwhat is more probable, of theology, have been re-

duced to the condition of pools of water in Auguststationary, sickly, scum-covere- and just about

to go dry. Nor are we to love only the novel ofthe day when history has become so deep, bobroad, so grand, not being the history of wars anymore, but of thought, of science, of art. In sucha day. to love only the novel, and to read only thenovel, is to offer an insult alike to God and toman ; but even Tyndall ought to turn away fromhis perpetual analyses'of drops of water, everlast-ing weighing of dust, and' oyer the pages of JohnHalifax pass from a world of matter to a world ofspirit. So you must all live, with all the beautifulthings and the powerful things of God's worldfalling right into your open hearts, feeding thogreat flame of life. As miners jool; up a longShaft and sw a little pivce of sky which thev callheaven, so there are men who look through a longpunched alder, very long, and very slim, and theysee through the other end of it a spot and call it aworld. No, it must be the effort of jour lives, myyoung friends, to get right away from this impri-

sonment. To be too near, any one thing that isfanaticism. It is tfie eclipse of God's great heav-

ens in favor of your tallow candl.'.

The Prince of Wales.

The London letter to the New York Time baa thefollowing :

It is now finally decided that the Piiuce of Walesis to go to India. It is understood that thia conclu-

sion has not been arrived at without much dubt andhesitation, and that, even after the announcement ofthe intended journey h&J git into the papers, thewhole question was reconsidered in consequence of

the warnings and remonstrances which were receivedby the Government from competent advisers. Those:who know India best condemn the project as rash andfoolhardy. It will be impossible for the Prince totravel incognita. There will be endless embarrass-ments as to presents, precedence, and all other com-

plications of Oriental etiquette. Then there are allthe personal risks which the Prince will have to en-

counter, not only from the climate, but from nativefanaticism. The expenses of the journey will alsobe extremely heavy, and can hardly fail to give riseto some very untoward discussions in Parliament.The Prince has already allowed it to be proclaimedthat his income is Insufficient to cover his reglar ex-

penses, and that he would be every year in debt to alarge amount were it not that he draws upon his ac-

cumulated capital, a process which cast Gf course,before long come to an end. Under these circum-

stances it i obviously out of the question that heshould bear himself the large additional outlay whichwill be incurred by this trip ; and it will thereforehave to be defrayed out cf the public funds. It is

said that the difficulty is to be solved by making theIndian Government pay the bill ; but this could notprevent discussion in the Roua of Cocsccna, a$ the

..., iHie rapcr,payment (i.TV

; itera woul J t influJvxl in the Indian Ba lg-- t ; ai d,

is ny exit, totbingcoulJ te more shall y than Lrthe heir to the thrvoe U great an 1 wealthy country

! to speege in this way f.r the eij-t- - if bli !y.An attetspt U Ning made ty n.ae cf the lucre ejeo-rhant- ic

cf the Lcti i. n pjeri to s'tcw thtt the Princewill be dultig a gret public eervice in goicg to India ; j

nJ it tu n b n tupg rrd that this i tit only J

oceans of rrcvveriiig the prestiee which is auppoaed i

to have Ln ht Lv the recrnt burc.mz aoout me'

Gaikwar's cae The UV.r tf thi k rt tf writing' acaroe'.y require to be exped.i It is id'.e to surooae that the aiiht .f the Prioce

who is certainly not very itEp nK 1"- - '"S 'J'i will, at the nttne-st-. t more than n amuveojent U

th native. As to its havicg the slightest eject inpolitic! matter, the i lea is simply chilJuh. How

ever, he Is to go, and it is to be Loped that the fatiwill be prcpitious. He will leave England In Octoberby the overland route, and will be o-e- t in Easternwaters by the .Vurcmn, Almiral Randolph's flaghip, and escorted to India. It is announced thathe visit is, in every euc, to be arrange! in a

manner befitting his Rrjal Highness." Mr. W. IIEassel. the well-kno- cf rrepor.dent cf the Tiw.rrwill accompany the expedition an bitcriograp her.

Swallow-Tail- s and White Neck-Tie- i.

The .VdiVJn does it up in this style : "The savagemakes no change of toilet for the evening. liedresses for war and religious ceremonies, l ut he goes

to a social reuniwu or fet in such clothe as he

happens to have on when the invitation finds himThe plain man i f ci iliied life, under similar circumstances, puts on a clean shirt and his best suit o

clothes. This suit, among the Luropean peasantryIs aft to be tianply of the aaue cut and material aa

the working suit, or, as it would be called in Brook

lyn, the garb of toil; among Americana it U a blacksuit, like that of a clergymai, aud includes a silkcravat, generally black, but permissably colered

The whole matter is, however, cue cf pure conventioo. Now it La been found of late years a matterof convenience, especially to hard-worki- ng men andmen of moderate means, wh are exposed to theconstant social demands of the great cities of thewcrld, to Lave a costume in which one can appearon any festive occasion, great or small, which all,gentle or simple, are alike expected to wear, whichis neither rich nor gaudy, and in which every manmay feel sure that be Is properly dressed, and thedress fixed on for this purpose throughout the civiliied world is the plain eui: of black, with thaswallow-taile- d coat, commonly called evening dresa.Nothing can be simpler or less pretentious, or moredemocratic. Nobody can add anything to it or takeanything away from it. Many attempts to modifyit have been made during the last thirty years byleader of fashion, and tbey have failed, becaue itmeets one of the great wants cf human nature.Nevertheless, it makes its way with difficulty. It ia

only within the last fifteen yema that it has obtained afirm footing in American cities. People look on itwith suspicion, as a sign of sowe inward and spiritual haughtiness, and regarded the nock coat, with itsfull skirts as the only garment in which a serious--mmded man, with a proper sense of his origin anddestiny, and correct feelings about popular government, could make his appearance in a lady's parlor.Why no one could tell, for there waa a time, notvery far back when the sack coat was in itself aninnovation. Of late that is, within perhaps tenyears the swallow-tail- s of the world have exchangedthe black or colored for a white cravat, and justifythemselves by saying that it not only looks cleanerof necessity than a ailk one, and that you cannotlook too clean or fresh about your throat when youpresent yourself at a lady's house on a festive occa-

sion. Nevertheless, the plain, blunt men are neversatisfied. They do not as yet feel aure as to itsmeaning. They think it indicates either over-thoug- ht,

fulness about trifles, or else a leaning, slight thoughit be, toward despotism and free trade. They willnow Lll or nearly all, wear evening dress with ablack cravat, but even those of them who will con-

sent to put on a white cravat do so with a certainahamefocedness and sense of backsliding and oftreachery to some good cause, though they do notexactly know which."

The Situation in Europe.The aspect of Europe is thiiM referred to in nol-em- n

language in nn article in the brilliant Spectatorof London.

" The social disturbance in Kusniu, a disturbancemarked we are told, by an inclination to threatenthe rich and to commit violent crime, U on Hi" in-

crease ; the finances are believed to be In gravedisorder ; Die army, in spile of desperate efforts, isnot fully reorganised ; the Asiatic provinces arehoneycombed with discontent and infested by acorruption with which the Czar, however willing,is unable to contend. In Germany so recentlyelevated to the top of the world all clauses, exceptberbaps the great military officers, nre ill nt ease.Tkn atateainen fear that too much rests upon Bis-

marck's single life. All chtssos but the Jankersare oppressed by the iron rigidity s'.:), w hich mili-

tary service is demanded. A thinly-veile- d relig-ious war is raging in half of tho provinces of theEmpire. Thirteen millions one-thi- of the pc- -

ple are mortified by attacks upon their creed,sanctioned with exultation by another two-third-

while those two-third- s are disquieted by thethoughts of a possible retribution, in fear of whichthey every day demand stronger and strongermeasures of prevention. In Denniatk a semi-politica- l,

semi-soci- war is raging between the proprie-tors and the peasantry, in which neither Fide willgive way. In Scandinavia, the upper classes, whowatch the situation of their country with alarm,dreading Germany as much as they ever dreadedRussia, eem unable, even with the Government attheir back, to reorganise the army tbey consideressential to their frcedouv n Austria the ' doubt-ful experiment ' of dual government U about to berevised : there i universal suffering under a financial crisis, and there i a growing perception thatthe very afety of the Stale is menaced by pecun-iary corruption. In Turkey baukruptcy U rapidlycoming on, tte conflict between the Empire and thevassal princes grows daily sharper, and the Government seerns to vacillate between an impulse to-

wards despairing concessions, such as dismirifclr.gGrand Visiers on demand from abroad, and releas-ing Mussulman fanaticism for that sanguinarystruggle in which, true to the law of its being, It 1

should one day expire. In Fiance the whole ener-gies of a great people uie taxed to bear, withoutglory, new military burdens, t pay fxr the ex-

penses of a lost war. mid t eetablieh a system ofgovernment which hatl admit of incesnunt chacgoand yi t be penmuent. Tie; conviction '.bat an- -

Other dreadful war must come weig,H upon allminds, and is not accompanied by lh; iinml con-viction that it will be successful. Europe for Bgeahas had no parallel for the cor.litiu of Spaiu. hmseen no people in a tondi!ini which seerutd tothemselves and otbe-is- . o newly to justify despair, j

In Belgium the religious Mi if-- divide the townsfrcm the country, the Flemings fr m the Belgians,the parties from each other, till, if Belgium wereSpain, and tbeiefore isolated from Europe, it mightbe the scene of a ruling religions war. TheCnited Kingdom, it U true, is ttjinquil, extepiIreland, and Italy except in the r,ld k'.sgdom of thtwo Sicilies, within which aociil order does notexist; but the two exceptions in each case are suf-ficient to cause perpetual anxieties, not diminished i.in either by a sens of inadequate military strength,which yt cannot apparently be incre-e- d . Out-

side Germany the nati r.i Certainly look to no one,but wait on clrcuniMancfs, li-t- with the expecta-tion at ouoe of lassitude and fear rr the somethingwhich does not happen, but seerns always at hand. beIt may be war, i'. may be u religion revival.'

As by tbp new Senate bill of France, the Districtof Bcllort elects one of the Senators in addition toits choice of an the inliah't.vm I'ithereof hav waited on M. Thiers tu invite Lim torepresent their, in the French 3r

e.ecting Lnn to both ihe Assembly and Senate, i

so that he can take bis choice. Senator n"y botaken from, present or former peput Jes.

etc., etc. mw.au A X. it M U A U T H T ft

FROM AUSTRALIA.Tl e A. S. N CN 8 8 AMaca arrlJ at Ubia

i"rt yeiterday norif,tJ4ayi and JC btsura fitxA

rWJnry via Auckland -- a day lu a4aic t-- f tim.W are in icbtej to Purer C.rba T.ss rfdates.

Tb rooat ituporta&t item of iattlligenea bf thisarrival U the aaacurtceturtt that tk coulra.4 orcarrying the Dritiaa aaJ Aaaerioao mail tetoSn Fraoois-- o an J lit Cv!ti bad been arardel In

Lon Jb Mo a fonltaatUa, eobitii g i f ti t FarinaMall Compaey and tvo Sctttuh lorx,wt.era. Theparticulars will I frond elaewUer in to-da- plr.

We notice Hawaiian augara, " I jthts," 4'l atAuckland at fXt2&. .

A joint arraiigenseot baa been mala Isrlwfsra New

Sooth Wales atut New ZealaaJ for tba eowtraetlcBof a telegraph '.aUa to eDt the latter oloty k

tha malntani cf Auslrtlia.By thia arrival wt Lata leleg rap to froe

Europ to Jaly lat , rlcvta days later than cur lastadvices via Baa FraacUoo. Aafolkwat

Jane 27. Th detail ef tha Intin.'ationa ratifcs!l y the ovet flowing t f the (Jarocn are brartreudi or.

To batiJred and f.lleen eHrpws have ts fneol,and destruction of property baa teen imiotna.

Twenty thousand people have been render! dealitote.

Manhal MacMahon baa gone to Toulouse to (TrJ .auccour.

June I'l Tha Emperor Francis Joaeph of A na-tr-ia,

and the Eoiperar Alcitn ler of Basaia mi-- t inIk.hernia.

The disastrous inundations ia France extended toneveral departments ia tha Kath. Tha NationalAssembly voted two million francs for the rlif oftha suflrrvra.

The German Court f Appeal baa convict! CountArni n on the charge cf unlawfully removing Ptatndocuments, and he baa been arntenvl to ninemonths Imprisonment.

July 1. The Cape Cabinet objected t on aldertha aufgestiona in the dispatch of tha Earl of Car-narvon relative to tha federation of tha eotoniea andform atatea of South Africa, on tha grouod flat theauggestioti are premature. Tht votes upon thaquestion were aix to four.

The Americana won tha rifla match against theIrish by thirty-rig- ht point.

contract Awarded for the Australian Line.mm

The fallowing from tha Auckland N. TL) IhrmUof July 8, give tha particulars of all that ia atpresent to be aaid about tha contraat for carryingtha maila between 3ao Franclaoo and tha Colon It ofAustralia. The omUaion of Honolulu aa a way pottin tha following account, ia an evident mistake, aa

the Sydney papern of the 21 distinctly mentionHonolulu :

By cable tneaiage wa hava been adtlaed of thacompletion of a contract with tha Paciflo M. 8. ft.Company, and John Elder, of Ulaigow, and Mr.Macgregor, of Leith, "jointly and aeverally," forthe conveyance of the English and Amerloaa nailbetween Han Francisco and New Zealand and NewSouth Walea. The cablegram briefly reel Ira Iba termsof the contract to be aa follow : " Term, tightyears; each colony p"y'n4T half; speed, II kno'a;ubaidy, X83.H50. Tha erviea begina in November

next, from Sydney and Port Chaluier. and ooatinneaouca every four weeka. Boat for rWn Franclaoo aailfrom Port Chalmers, and the boat from Ban Fran-Cisc- o

through to Sydney, connecting at Fiji. Theboat from Sydney to Fiji meet tha boat from BanFrancUoo, and csrriea Iba maila o tba New Zealandporta; thia boat then being tha next through boatfrom Port Chalmers to an Franoisoo, returningthenca to Sydney, and ao on. Elder aupplles two newahipa, and tha American company three new iblp,all upward of 2,800 tona, and of Iron. Tba 0 n tractforwarded by tha out-goi- mall require confirma-tion of the present aeaaion of Parliament." Beforethe contract ia agreed to by tha New Zealand Parlia.ment considerable diacuaeion will probably ensue.There ara three claaara of otject'ona raland to thaaervica and its term. Firat, tbera ara tboaa whouncompromisingly object to tha mail lioata runningdown the coast, and interfering with tha Inter-pr- o.

vincial trade of locally-owne- d boat, thu incurringtha expense of paying tha mail boat not only to in-

terfere with their paaaenger trade, but to undertakethe distribution of tha maila, a aervica which couldbe more efficiently and much mora cheaply perform,ed by an lnter-provlnci- sl atram Una coopanj, Sec-

ondly, there ara tboaa who abject to tha rotita ehoaeo.That at present taken by the A. H. N. Company la bythem deemed to be not only cheaper bat the leaetcumbersome and the most couducn to Iba conveu.ience and comfort of passenger. Failing that, theywould prefer to bava tha boat run Uou iba princi-ple of the "forked M aervica ohrrv by tha Wtbbline. Thirdly, there ara those wbo.poeaeaa a strongprejudice against American mail oomraotora, eipri- -ence leading them to fear that eome trouble will aurato arise, aud that if it doea ihera ia little obanoa ofpecuniary red rcm. By tho who raise thia objectionit waa hoped that to either an Eni'.sti or a colonialcompany would tha aervica bavg Ireo given Wamight add, as a " lastly," that there ara a few whothink that all our want would be met bv a out unction with Victoria and tha Hun mail aervina. TbiaUtter clasa, however, ia not very large nor demonatrative. It i now general! conceded that the toutvia San Franclaoo ia our natural highway for mailaand assengers, and tha desire ia anil aa atrong aaever, notwithstanding all our trouble with con.tractor and their boat, that a permanent and tffi- -c)nt line ahall be established. What tba Pydneyfeople think of tba matter wa have not yet heard,

t however, probable tha lowest tender, aa aentin. will be agreed upon. Then may possibly arisetbia difficulty ; that iba New Booth Wales Parlia.ment my be willing to agree to ooa thing, and thattha New Zealand Parliament may wish to arriva at adifferent conclusion. . Should auch a contrtttminoccur, much inconvenience wou'd eniua, and a conelderable amouut of time woulj be lost In aettllagtba dicuculty. Aa, bowevcr.the ew South WaleaParliament fa now in aeesion, and will hava diecuaaedand decided, probably, upon their course of actionbefore our Legislative body meet, It will dooMleaabe the desire of the New Zealand Parliament tostretch a point, in order that an amicable ondcr- -atanding may be arrived at and nniforni termsagreed upon. The great eturubling-bloc- k In the diecusaion will be the acceptance of an Amerloan eon-tra- ct;

but, should aatiafactory Information be received from Mr. Tbomaa Boaaefl of th bonm fidt$ ofthe contractor, tbia prejudice will no doubt be overcome. Uor American friend can scarcely Llama asfor the existence of auch a prejudice! that It does soIs entirely due to the conduct of their own bnalneasrepresentative. Aa we have before ol servad, Aoitr.lean atearu.hlp owhere have a right to look apoa thiaroute aa peculiarly their own; and if we oan only beassured that tbey will undertake the work In a fairaplrlt and with an bonett ioteotion to earrv out thecontract offered them, none will be more gratiaHtban ouraelvea to Join in a commercial rtlationshln

itb them. We ahall only be til el. aa eachcondition, to aee a little more of the "atara anlftrlpca" In our wa'er.

Wnr.itK tut. Gold Govs Durlnir tk month ofMay, NeW York Imported the value ef 11.315,000in Silk goods. The amount la lea tban for theprevious montli and also les tban for the correa-pondin- g

month last year, but above the averaarafor the currwnt fiscal year. The total for the elevenmonths ending June 1st compare as follow:J72 itfl 177.000 174 f 71.447.600

7,Vo.OoO 176..... UAItJHMTho to.intry paya from t2l,0(W,0)0 to t30.000.000annually for plain and fancy Filks. from 15 fo 20per cent, of which la spent for Bibbona. Theamount thrown on the maiket last month wa fullyequal tu the amount imported. The depression inbusiness ut the East cannot La very opp restive,when 1.300,000 ispnlln 30 days for 811k goods.

Tin. Ni.w Twkntt-- i 1AT Coiv. Sainplea of thenew 20-ren- t coin were received in 1M1 city Fridayfrom the Carson Ml.it. The officer of that Dintwere anxious to make the first coin of this descrip-tion on th" Pacific Coast, and, accordingly, La4everything in readiness upon the arrival ot thedies from Washington. The first coins were struckoff tlio 1st of June. The new cola has beretolorebeen minutely disci ided. lit of course a littlesmaller than the quarter dollar, and Las the worda"twenty ceoU" la place of the words -- qnar.do!.; otWwIss there ia Lut Utile CifXiTene I theger.erai appearance of the two coin. Home carewill be necessary ia receiving change not to takethem for more than their face vaJw. The newcoin ha a clean look, and waa probably madefrom Consolidated Virginia bullion. Bulletin.

Tim ro4dpt of tha Fue Canal for 1673 reachedeat ly 85 OoO.OOO. while its running expense were

leas than one-fourt- h el that sum, and lu stock waathen placed npou the book of the London (Stockhxebange. The dividened declared and paidthat year waa three and tbree-quaiter- a per cent.The receipt the past year were wore than 1 1,000,-00- 0;

but enlargementa and Improvement nre tomade in the canal, which will abaotb thia

amount thi year, which are. of course, extraordi-nary expense. The construction of thia canalcost afSsiOO.000: aud if auch a water-pat- h baaproved a financial success aa to captivate the

huh mind, there ran be no fear of success notattending the much shorter canal proposed on thePanama Isthmus that divides North and KonthAmerica: and ir la nnlte nrobable tironosala forconstructing U will eome from Lonoor beforeJong.

R5--

Page 4: THE PACiriC X

H. HACKFELD & CO.Oflcr For Sale

the .following goods

JUST ARRIVED-- i'ER-

HAWAIIAN BARK KA MOIWHICH SAILED

OX THE 2d OF NOVEMBER LAST.

JJEKH PINK PRIXTS, LARGE PATTERNS.

Assortment Fancy Prints, new styles.White Ground Prints,Black and Wbite Prints, French Muslins.Hear Blue Denims, plain and striped,El;ie and White Striped Ticking.Brown Cottons, assorted qualities,Blue Cottons, White Cottons,Horrockses White Long Cloth, A and B, 36

inch and 32 Inch wide,Ilickorj Stripes,Linen Sheeting, 72, 82, 90 and 100 Inches wide,Cotton Sheeting, 63, 72, 80 and 90 inches wide,Victoria Lawns, pieces, aaoi'd qualities,Indigo Blue Flannel, Black Silk Alpacas,Black Cobourgs, Cne and medium,Scotch Waterproof Tweeds, all colors.Mosquito Netting,Silk Corah Handkerchiefs,Turkey Red and Yellow Cotton Handkerchiefs,Ladies' Cotton Handkerchiefs,Assorted Cotton Stockings and Socks,Linen Thread, Assorted,Black and Colored Silk Neckties, new styles,Monkey Jack. assorted qualities.Ileary Woolen Blankets, Scarlet, Orange, Blae

and Green,Fancy.Flannel Shirts, Linen Shirts, Cotton do.Merino Finish Undershirts, Cotton Undershirts,Assorted Burlaps, French Calfskins,English Saddles.

Genuine au de Cologne.Macassar Hair Oil, Lubing Extracts,Fine India Rubber Dressing Combs,

Fine Woolen Shawls and Traveling Plaids,

Fine and Common Pen and Pocket Knives,Fine Steel Scissors, Common Scissors,Tinned Spurs on Cards, Iron Teakettles,GjtlTanized Pails, 10 and 12 inch,Galvanized Washing Tabs,ivrforated Metal for Centrifugal Machines,Charcoal Box Irons,Bright Fencing Wire, No. 4, 5 and 6,Full Asstm't of Best Refined English Bar Iron,Swedish Iron,XTintz's' Yellow Metal Sheathing, and Comp'

j sitlon Nails, Block Tin,Galvanized Iron Pipe, Hoop Iron.Porous Water Monkeys,Pressed Tumblers.Cat Porter Glasses.

Hubbuck's Patent White Zinc Paint,Hubbuck's Patent White Lead Paint,Hdbbnck's Pale Boiled Linseed Oil,Black Paint, Paris Green, Red Lead.

J:matic Soda, Best Lagos Palm Oil.

A LARGE ASSORTMENT OF

GERMAN. ENGLISH & FRENCH

Liebig'a Extract of Meat.

Stearii:e Candles, 4, 5 and 6 to a pound,Ultramarine Blue,Castor Oil, in tins and glax,Epsom Salts in bulk and boxes.

Nests of Trunks, Birch Broom,Wrapping Paper, Market Baskets,Demijohns, Cork?,Assortment of Blank Books,Press Copy Books, Shipping Receipt Books.

Assorted Sizes Horse Rope, Hemp Packing,Spnnyarn, Flag Line, Log Line,Marline and Housing,Swedish Safety Matches,J)evoe's Kerosene Oil, in patent cans,

Ueidsieck & Coa Champagne, in qts. and pts.Ouin&rt Pere & Fits' Champagne, do. do.Sparkling Hock, in qts. and pts.Genuine Hollands Gin, in jugs and baskets,Genuine Hollands Gin, In glass, green boxes,Boutelleau & Co. 'a Brandy, in glass, one to

four diamondBoutelleau & Co.'a Brandy in casksGerman Ale and Lager Bier in qts. and pts.JeSrey'd Edinburgh Ale and Stout qts. and pts.Assorted Clarets very fine to commonLiebfaaenmilch Lanbenheimer Rhine WinesSmall Assortment of Hungarian WinesBitters, Alcohol in 1 gal. demijohns 96 per cent

German and Havana Cigars.

Fire Clay, Coal Tar, Stockholm TarStockholm Pitch '

Empty Petroleum Barrels for Tallow containersOak Boat for Coasters,

Etc. Etc. Etc. Etc. Etc.Etc. Etc. Etc. Etc.

Etc. Etc. Etc.Etc. Etc.

The above epecifled Goods, together with a wellAssorted Slock now on hand ex recent arrivals,are offered for sale in quantities to suit the trade.

Orders from the other Islands filled atlowest market rates. 963

MUTUALLIFE INSURANCE GO.,

OF- -

THE OLDEST,

LARGEST

, AND BEST

Life Insurance Company

IN THE UNITED STATES.

SAML G. WILDER,972 tf Agent Cmr the Hawaiian Island.

CANNED GOODS,rROM CUTTING & CO.'S CELEBRATED FACTORY,

MOCK TURTLE SOUP, CASESC14SES Beet, Cases Boiled Bfff, Cases Roast Motion,Cue Boated Mutton, Cues Roast Vel, Cases Turkey, Cases

CaseSoQP. c, c.Chicken. & cq

1 GENERAL ASSORTMENT OF

Preserred Meals, Froits, Vegetables.IOR SALE BYF BOLLE3 CO.

Sperm and Polar OilW7RRT SCPKRIOR QUALITT. FOR PALE

W I N Quant tt ies to P ait by EOILES & CO.

Cooperai. a. n. cm ti.

J. H. BRUNS & CO.,BK.fi LEAVKTO NOTIFY THE PL'UI.Ilthey h.tre purchaa-r- the entire st' in trade ofthe lat Jinn L. Lewi, n. lht they will cootiaae to carryon the Hutineu of

Coopering and Gauging,At the Old Stau-- cn KINO STREET, near the Brtbel, until

farther notice. And also,ON QCEEX STREET. NEAR FORT,

Where lhy ic'i'd be fourul Prepared U Hitcnie allOrdr in their line.

Casks, Kerosene Oil ContainersFOR TALLOW. Etc., Etc., ALWAYS ON FIAND.

Honotala, Jane 12. IST5. 994 Ij

FOR SALE !

PILOT BREAD !CHEAP.

Damaged BreadsGood for Chicken Feed, &c.

KAKAAK0 SALT, per Bag or Ton,

FIREWOOD,Of I be Beat 0,ualily, Cut up If Required,

Cu.x1o Stouos.JAS. I. DOWSETT,

970 3m Corner Qaeea & Fort Sts.

HIDES, KKIIV.TALLOW.THE U.DERIGED CONTINUE

I to Py the highest market price for Dry- Hides, Uoat Skins and Qoat Tallow.

657 3m C. BREWER & CO.

CARRIAGE JttATERIAL !

gPOKES, 1 TO 3 1.2 INCHES, HICKORYRIMS Ash and Ilickorjr, 1 to 2 inches;HUBS All sizes,FELLOES For Ox Carts, assorted sizes, Oak and AshSHAFTS Wagon and Carriage, finished and rough;POLES Wagon and Carriage, finished and rough;

tthiffletree, Singletrees,

Cross Bars, Yokes, Seat Rails,

Seat Spindles,

Wagon and Baggy Bows !

ALSO

A I way Keep en Hand and made la Order,Ox Cart Wheels and Carts,

Which I am prepared to HELL CHEAP.

A Li 8 O , ON HAND,A Large Lot of Ash Lumbar !

Having purchased the entire stock of carriage material from Dillingham Co., I am prepared to fill City and Country Orderspromptly and at Reasonable Trices.

DIFFERENT STYLES OF

ELEGANT CARRIAGESof my own manufacture, constantly on hand, and

for sale.

G. WEST,971 ;'m 74 and 70 King Street, Honolulu.

OsOOOEASTERN SUGAR

SHOOKS !

FOR SALE LOW BY

9T1 "in C. BREWER & CO.

2jh HJ 3SS 15 LE5 23.

AND- -

BIIILDM MATERIALS!

OF ALL KINDS, AT

BED ROCK PRICES I I

WALL PAPERAND

In Largo Assortment.

iva a i.,

paikts,OILS,

TlIRPEATIXi;, VAISKISII !

DOOKS,

SASH,

iiixgks,BUTTS, Arc.

Finest Quality Puuloa Salt.

GOODS DELIVERED IN TOWN

F'llTSn OF' CIIAHGE,

and at any Port in the Kingdom as per

agreement.

WILDER &, CO.974 Corner of Fort and Queen Sts.

Blocks and Oars!FI LL ASSORTMENT.

For Hale hy BOLLES tt CO

THE PACIFICCommercial Ubcvtisf r.

SATURDAY. JULY 21. -

Dr. Livingstone's Journals.From a recent London Review we make the

following extracts :

Jnhe Manjeuma country, we met with a newm&iaiaa!. the Maiuba sh, which ' has breasts

,witlj milk, and utters a cry!' Livingstone alsokilled an elephant with three tasks, all of goodsize. Here, too, he fell in with the eoko, which19 believed to be an entirely new species of chim-panzee, and are supposed by the natives to betheir deceased kinsmen revived. The engravedportrait of a young eoko, repreecnta him with aface dreadfully like that of eome of the ruffiansin certain of John Leech's caricatures ; althoughthe expression of the chimpanzee is scarcely sorepuleive as that of some of the faces in " ACourt for King Cholera." We borrow from asecond volume of the " Journals" the followingdescription of the soko :

44 Four gorillas or sokos were killed yesterday :

an extensive grass-burnin- g forced them out ofther usual haunt, and coming on the plain theywere speared. They often go erect, but place thehands on the head, as if to steady the body.When seen thus, the eoko Is an ungainly beast.The most sentimental young lady would not callhim a 'dear,' but a bandy-legge- d, pot bellied,low-looki- ng vagabond, without a particle of thegentleman in him. Other animals, especially theantelopes, are graceful, and it is pleasant to seethem, either at rest or in motion ; the nativesalso are well made, lithe and comely to behold ;but the soko, if large, would do well to stand fora picture of the devil.

" He takes away my appetite by his disgustingbeastiality of appearance. His light-yello- w laceshows on his ugly whiskers and faint apologyfor a beard ; the forehead villanously low, withhigh ears, is well in the background of the greatdog-mou- th ; the teeth are slightly human, butthe canines 6how the beast by their large develop-ment. The hands, or rather the fingers, are likethose of the natives. The flesh of the feet isyellow, and the eagerness with which the Many-uem- a

devour it leaves the impression that eatingsokos was the first Btage by which they arrived atbeing cannibals ; ihey say the flc6h is delicious.The soko is represented by some to be extremelyknowing, successfully etalking men and womenwhile at their work, kidnapping children, andrunning up trees with them he seems to beamused by the sight of the young native in bisarms, but comes down when tempted by a bunchof bananas, and as he lifts that, drops the child.

. . . . Numbers of them come down inthe forest, within a hundred yards of our camp,and would be unknown but for giving tongue likefox-houn- ds this is their nearest approach tospeech. A man hoeing was stalked by a soko,and seized ; he roared out, but the soko gigledand grinned, and left him as if he had done it inplay. A child caught up by a soko is oftenabuBed by being pinched and scratched, and letfall. . . . Sokos collect together, and makea drumming noise, some say with hollow trees,then burst forth into loud yells, which are wellimitated by the natives' embryotic music. If aman has no spear the soko goes away satisfied,but if wounded, he seizes the wrist, lops off thefingers, and spits them out, slaps the cheeks olhis victim, ana bites without breaking the skin,lie draws out a spear (but never uses it) , andtakes some leaves and stuffs them into his woundto staunch the blood; he does not wish an en-counter with an armed man. lie sees women dohim no barm, and never molests them ; a manwithout a spear is nearly safe from him. Theybeat hollow trees as drums with hands, and thenscream as music to it ; when men bear them theygo to the sokos ; but sokos never go to men withhostility. Manyuema say, Soko is a man andnothing bad in him.'

(' They live in communities of about ten, eachhaving his own female. An intruder from another camp is beaten oS with their fists and loudyells. If one tries to seize the female of another,he is caught on the ground, and all unite in box-

ing and biting the offender. A male often car-

ries a child, especially if they are passing fromone patch of forest to another over a grassy space;he then gives it to the mother."

The inclination which the sokos display to-

wards instrumental music is common, however,to many varieties of the monkey tribe. There isone, the black chimpanzee, Troglodytes niger,which uses drumsticks, employing their handsand feet with equal dexterity in wielding them.Tame monkeys can be easily taught the use of thecastanets ; and it is a curious circumstance, asM. Houzeau has pointed out in the work whichwe recently reviewed, that in all parts of theworld the drum is the first musical instrumentconstructed by the savage, it being, like that ofthe chimpanzee, nothing more, in its primitiveform, than a hollow cylinder of wood ; while thecry of the lowest races of man in the AndamanIslands, for example, is indistinguishable fromthat of the chimpanzee.

Livingstone was a born traveller, fitted for itno Je68 by his iron constitution than by the ver-

satility of his resources, his various knowledge,his equanimity of mind, and his power of adapt-ing himself to novel circumstances. The pros-pect of entering into unknown regions, evenalthough it involved the confronting of perils ofno ordinary magnitude, exhilarated his spiritsand braced his energies. When he was setting"Out on the arduous journeys recorded in thesevolumes we find him writing :

44 The mere animal pleasure of travelingin a wild unexplored country is very great.When on lands a couple of thousand feet eleva-tion, brisk cxerciso imparts elasticity to the mus-cles, fresh and healthy blood circulates throughthe brain, the mind works well, tho eye is clear,the step is firm, and a day's exertion alwaysmakes the evening's repose thoroughly enjoyable.

44 We have usually the stimulus of remotechances of danger either from beasts or men.Our sympathies are drawn out towards our hum-ble hardy companions by a community of inter-est- s,

and, it may be, .of perils, which make uall friends. Nothing but the most pitiablepuerility would lead any manly heart to maketheir inferiority a theme for self-exaltati- ; how-

ever, that is often done, as with the vague ideathat we can, by magnifying their deficiencies,demonstrate our immaculate perfections.

44 The effect of travel on a man whose heart isin the right place is that the mind is made moreself-relia-nt ; it becomes more confident of its ownresources there is greater presence of mind.The body is soon well-kn- it ; the muscles of thelimbs grow as hard as a beard, and sctm to haveno fat ; the countenance is bronzed, and there isno dyspepsia. Africa is a most wonderful coun-try for appetite, and it is only when ono gloatsover marrow bones or elephants' feet that in- -

digestion IS jhjmsiuic. iu uuuuv umiu ion 10involved, and fatigue of which travelers in themore temperate climes can form but a faint con-

ception ; but the sweat of one's brow is nolonger a curse when one works for God ; it provesa' tonic to the system, and is actually a blessing.No one can truly appreciate the charm of reposeunless he has undergone severe exertion.

The Chinese as Colonists.The following letter appears (from Mr. Monck- -

ton Synnot) in a late issue of the Melbourne Argus,and will probably be read with interest :

As well hang a dog as give him a bad name.It seems rather hard on the Chinese that a sectionof the Tress 6hould persistently hold them up topublic execration, ana couaemn tncni as a bodyfor secret practices of which it is very doubtfulif they are guilty. An article charging themwith all manner of evil, lately published in oneof the weekly papers, has gone the round of thecolony. It is read by thousands, believed bymany, aud, remaining uncontradicted, becomes atext for reference for future attacke.

The chief objections to the Chinese as colonistsis, that they are simply sojourners for a time ;that they come with a fixed intention to return totheir own country as soon as they have got enoughto establish themselves comfortably at home. Thesame objection might have been urged againstthe early English settlors, who came here with aprecisely similar object, but a long residence hasproved the impossibility of carrying out the in-tention, except in a very few cases. The Chinaman certainly has greater inducements to returnto his native land than the English colonist, whois rarely so great a man in the old country ashere, while with 44 John " the case would be exactly the reverse. He might well remember hislife in Australia with a shudder, as a man awak-ing from a hideous dream, or as Marasquin, afterhia escape, might have thought 01 Ins life amnng

the monkeys. On Saturday la?t.a weekly paper,with little or no town, but an extensive countrycirculation, gives a very bad leading article ontLc Chinese as colonists, especially 60 because itis calculated to convey emncous impression?,and is evidently vritten by some one little ac-

quainted with tie subject. The writer of thearticle in question says : " The worst featureabout them probably is their peculiar notions ofmorality." What their notions of morality maybe are best known to themselves, very probablyquite different from thoe notions on the samesubject preached, if not always practised, by mencalliEg themselves Christians. But of thoetaught by their great philosopher tod priest,Confucius, it is said ia the 44 Encyclopaedia Bri-tannic-

44 His morality is in many respects sup-erior to that of Greece and Rome, and yield tocone upon earth except to that of Divine revela-tion." Again, the article goes on to say:44 But at the same moment that a Chinaman ispractically without moral feeling or religious ob-

ligation, he has a civilisation of his own, and hasbeen well educated. He is not the man to com-

mit crime in a country where the police are tole-

rable efficient. Besides, he has been well trainedia habits of industrv, and, though entirely un-

scrupulous, he finds it more convenient and com-

fortable to work for his living Itis certain that the evil is frightfully increased bythe systematic agency for decoy and corruptionwhich is employed by the Chinese ....Children of tender years having been seduced byprocuresses, taken to dens of infamy, druggedwith opium, and delivered over to their heathenemployers." On this subject the writer in theweekly papr is profoundly ignorant, and hazardscharges that cacuot be substantiated, and in factdo not exist. Now, hear the evidence of theMelbourne detective police about this same mat-ter : 44 Of the class who keep housrs for the

of introducing young girls to Chinamen,furposefound that such monsters are happily al-most unknown, but the girls who have beenfound in brothels, Chinese os European, have in-

variably found their way to these places them-selves, guided by their depraved moral nature,and requiring no snare to entice them." Thereply from the city police was to the effect thatthe trade of the procuress for the Chinese wasnearly, if not quite, extinct. For this we maythank an efficient police supervision over a peoplewho, though utterly unscrupulous, have beenearly trained to habits of industry. Presumingthe police to be as well informed, or better, thanthe writer in the weekly, he has been too eagerto fix on the Chinese the odium of a systematic

of a most dreadful crime, which theSractice police would certainly shew they are notguilty of to the extent for which they receivegeneral credit. Another charge he makes againstthe Chinese as colonists is rather a sweeping one,namely: 44 Among the many thousands whohave come among us, not one can be mentionedwho has conferred a benefit on a person or on thecountry." This charge is simply childish, andcontradicts itself. It is known to every one thatthe Chineee fill all offices common in our commu-nity, from the import merchant to the ordinarylabourer. In living among us they are gainingsome knowledge of our language, laws, ciid doni-mcst- ic

habits, i"C, and possibly may be of mate-rial assistance to the missionary in future laboursin China. If this is not beneficial both to indi-viduals and the community, I should like toknow what ia. With regard to the Chinese ascolonists, I find that multitudes of them have set-tled in Japan, the Philippine islands, Java,Sumatra, Timor, and Borneo, where they wereare now living in habits of peaceful industiy;and why not in Australia? They are not an ig-

norant people; they have among themselves al-

ready an amount of mercantile shipping exceedingin tonnage that of any other nation. Their fore-ign commerce in 1S54 was estimated at twenty-fiv- e

millions sterling, and, though they havehitherto persistently resisted innovation, 7et, ac-

cording to the Argus, both the electric telegraphand a railroad are in operation, or shortly willbe. They have antiquated usages and heaps ofprejudices to be swept away, but the end of thewedge is already inserted in the log ; to drive ithome will be profitable alike to us and to them.The author from whose little book upon China 1have taken some of the above facts was the lateeditor of the North China Mail, Samuel Mossrman. He winds up the preface to his book withthese words : 44 Altogether, there is a greatfuture in 6tore for British relations with Chinaand the Chinese, which the rising generation maysec developed to an extent unknown to their fore-

fathers."

Preventive Medicine.BY PROF. R. C. KEDZIE, M. D.

Abstract of an address to the Graduating class,Medical Department of Michigan University, AnnArbor, March 24, 1875.

Preventive medicine is now pressing its claimswith an emphasis never before heard. The racedemands of the profession not only to repair theravages of disease, but to save them from itspower. Follow the phalanx of human life as itmarches on, and see how fast its ranks are de--.pleted by deserters, till we arrive at three-scor- e

years, only to find a body-guar- d left. Admitthat there arc fixed climatic conditions unfavora-ble to long life ; that accident and unavoidableconditions destroy a certain per cent.; pass overall the victims whom human foresight and pru-dence could not save, and what a tearful Loststill remains, cut off in their vigor and prime bypreventable causes. See consumption like thehovering wings of the angel of death overshad-owing the race ; cholera and yellow fever sweep-ing over the land and sowing the earth thickwith graves ; intemperance sending body andsoul to the demon's hell ; typhus and typhoidgathering the sheaves of the harvest of death ;consider these and a score beside, and tell me ifthere is no work to be done in the fields of pre-ventive medicine. 44 Lift up your eyes and lookon tho fields, for they are white already to har-vest." The old superstitions which connectedunusual sickness with tho wrath of offendedDeity have faded in the light of. science. Theblack death, cholera, typhus, scurvy, etc., are astruly the penalties of violate, sanitary laws as isdeath by submersion in water. I f

As science sheds more fully its light upon thesedark and perplexing questions we 6ee more andmore clearly that sickness and pain are the fruitsof our own misdoings. The 44 mysterious pro-vidences" about which we have heard so muchare resolving themselves into 44 defective drain-age," 44 sewage contamination," "unwholesomefood," 44 poisoned walls," 44 no ventilation," etc.

The school rooms, the lecture halls, the courtrooms, the temples of religion, the halls of legis-lation, the hospitals, the prisons, and even bursecret rs are full of subtle poison.

Go into our cities and villages and see thefestering graveyards pouring their literally dead-ly contents into every well in the vicinity ; thecesspools pouring rectified death through all thesubsoil; an epidemic of dysentery or typhoidfever sweeps over the afflicted community, andmen bow themselves before 44 the mysterious pro-vidence," and roll up their eyes as though theywere objects worthy of deepest pity. Awaywith the impiety which would flout our filth inthe face of Deity, and say that these afflictionscome from his hand. The voice of God thundersas of old, 44 wash you, and be ye clean," if youexpect his favor--ele- an in your person, andhomes, the food you eat, the water you drink andthe air vou breathe ; clean in thought and inlife.

Tyrannical Fashion.Probably no characteristic of the female mind

is better developed than the dociiity with whichwomen accept the fashions of the day. Be theybeautiful or hideous, becoming or unbecoming,comfortable or torturing, they are the fashions"and must be worn. Take for example the hair.This, 44 the crowning glory " of a woman, can beworn as 6he pleases, and what work many makeof it ! Now a coffure called the 44 Grecian knt"is coming into favor. Of it a recent womanwriter says : Aboat one woman out of twenty-fiv-e

has a head and features of the Ehape necessaryto make this style becoming ; given a broad, half-hig-h

white foreheal. rather straight nose, wellrounded face and throat, and the careless knot ofhair low in the nape of the neck, with a purewhite part in the centre of the head, from whichthe hair ripples naturally over the temples andears, is beautiful, making the wearer a Greekgoddess at once, or, what is better nowadays, acharming American woman. But take the re-

maining twenty-fou- r women, who have all kindsof foreheads and features, and are 6tately withtheir hair massed ouj.the very top of their heads,or braided and bandpd smoothly neither high norlow, or bewitchingljf coquettish and girlisft witha Chatelaine braid or a curl or two, finger puffsabove the forehead and little rings filling over it;

i

i put the severe Grevk knot low down on the;i heads, draw the hair i ver the pretty piDk car,

narrow the temples and checks ny aim t obeeur-- ,ing them, and what is the result"? Tho statelywoman looks prim anl belittled, the bright,coquettish one is ten years oiler, and in many

, cases startling defects of features vr odd expres-sions never before noticed by those wlo knewthem bet, and t) li m they were onee pretty,are developed hy the change.

! Leprosy in Canada.In the Arcailiaa villas of Tracadi, near the

mouth of the Minmicht ::v.r. t!;ere have bfnleper? for the I;it ripLtv t r uiu-t- y year. A fco-- !

pital for Iheir ben-i- t i . ivd hy tL localgorernmerit. Tfa leprnsy i ien xhry iiffer i

; e'iepaniijsi frocori;;". o ch1U'1 tria i- - tendencyi to make th limb" swell i lpbantir propor-- I

tion. Tbi dWe.j' is unJert mI to tave babrought there by a Frmcb vrrl. which, cn itreturn voyage from Saiyraa. touched at the Inlandof Mitylene, and took ia a quantity of clothing and

! some other stor-- . and on her way to DaubarU' Inland, a French military port stif was wreckedi near the mouth of Miramichi. The people ia the! neighborhood played ihe part of wrecker, and! helped themselves to the clothes cast ashore, which

were supposed to be Minted with leprosy, the con- -

sequence of which was that ;lje disease soon brokeout aiuonff ttem. Another .account U that the

i vessrl brougtt two lepers from St. Maloes, andthat every leper known in Tracadie descendedfrom oue or the other or tnese men.

The opint n there is that the disease is Dvt contagious. but simply hMditary. The people haveno dread of it. and persons vllgaged about thelepers for years never contract it. Not only dothe lepers marry niiio:i themselves, but such isthe feeling anion the poor French in Tracadiethat there is no repugnance in many cases amongperfectly healthy people to taking lepers for husbands and wives. 1 lie taint generally nianiteatsitself in every alternate generation. Ia this waythe disease has become permanently seated ia thelocality, while the general poverty and not verycleanly habits of the French population tend toexcite and intensify it.

It first shows itself ia the form of small whitespots on the breast, then the face assumes a puffyappearance, and there is much pain, languor anddrowsiness. The fingers become crooked, theneck swells, the limbs show all the 'symptoms ofdropsy, the nails fall off. and at last the throat andlungs are attacked, and the sufferer dies, a meremass of loathsome disease. Its duration variesfrom five to twenty-fiv- e years, according to thestrength of the constitution.

Leprosy is not nearly so rare a disease as is gen-erally supposed. It is on the increase in many ofthe British dependencies, iu some parts of Indione persou in ever? hundred is a leper, and insome part of the West Indies, as well us in theSandwich Islands, it is also very prevalent Toronto olofje.

Referring to the expressed opinions and claimsof the Indians recently in asbington. the ChicagoTribune says : The noble red man of the forest hashitherto been charged with divers and sundrytraits of character not redounding to his creditAmong them are his proclivities for leaving whitemen bald-heade- d and torturing prisoners ; fordrinking Gre-wat- er in unlimited quantities ; for themost abstract and unqualified laziness, for a s;blime disregard of his plighted faith ; filth and dirtof every description ; and, in fine, tor generalcussedness. In addition to these deplorable evidences of a lack of Christian civilization and ofthose social graces and amenities which make lifeso delightful, the red man of the forest has nowdeveloped a new feature which has hitherto beensupposed to be the monopoly of the pale face,namely, cheek. He has not only developed cheek,but cheek of the most extraordinary descriptio- n-large, voluminous, approaching the sublime.

AND RESIDENTS OPCITIZENS Friends and Slrane-- r item-rall- arecordially invited to attend Public Worship. t FORT ST.CIIL'KCn, where services are hold every Sahbath at 11 o'clock,A. M-- , and 7 1- -2 P. M. Seat are provided for all who may bepleased to attend. There Is a Wednesday evening PrayerMeeting at 7 2 o'clock, In the Lecture room, to whii-- h all arewelcome. ap4 ly

FOR SAIjEBY THE UNDERSIGNED!

I V

s aj'i J P'r - - -- !

EX

eutsclilaiici,rrnoNS best smith's coal.Tons l!est Glasgow Splint Steam Coal,

Uar Iron, in Assorted files,

LIME JUICE CORDIALS !

in 1 doz. cs. of the Celebrated Manufacture of JohnGillon & Co., Glasgow,

ALSO, A. FKW OFSmith & Wellstood's Celebrated

STOVES & RANGES!Highly Recommended by those who have tried them, still

on hand and will be disposed of at Low Rates to Suit the Times.

ALSO, THE

FOLLOWING MACHINERY !

ONE SUGAR. MILU COMPLETE;THREE WESTON'S CENTRIFUGAL

MACHINES!

FIVESTEAM CL.A RIFIERS, 400and oOO GALLONS.

DRY GOODS!--OF-

Varlous 33osoriptious I

PER BARK D. C. MURRAY.

LIftUORS!Cases Ileidseick'a Champagne,Case Assorted Brands Champagne,Cases Hennesey's 1, 2 and 3 Star Brandy,Cases Assorted Brands Brandy, Cases Best Claret,Cases Best Scotch Whiskey, Cases Best Holland Gin,Baskets Best Holland Gin, stone jug;Cases Best Old Tom Gin. Cases Assorted Clarets,

BEST AMERICAN WUISKIES!Occidental, Hermitage and O. F. C.

DE3IIJOIIXH ALCOIIOICases Best Pale Sherry, Cases Best Old Port,Quarter Casks Hennesey's Pale Brandy,Quarter Casks Pale tshcrry,Quarter Casks Irish Whiskey,Quarter Casks Jamaica Rum,

McEWAN'S INDIA PALE ALE,Pints and Quarts.

Blood, Wolfe & Co. s India Pale A'.e, pints and quarts;Bass tt Co.'s India Pale Ale, p'mti and quarts;Orange Bitters,

ALSO

J I ST RECEIVED PER "Kl MOI!"

711 9 EV A N 'SXXXSTO V T. 1NSTO N E J CG3,i?J. PINTS AND QUARTS.

Port Wlat , in 3 dor. ts; Slitrr) Hluf, In 1 doz. c.OF SrPERIOR QUALITY.

"961 F. T. LEN'EII AN V CO.

J. S. CURNEY,COF(TIO., TOBACCO AM) BILLIARD SALOO

No. 19 Nuuana Street, 4 doors below King.

Dtthr in Shells. Corals and General Cariositiesof the Pacific.

Pcelt Cisdies, Cigars, Toiacco, Lemoxade & Soda Watk972 ALWAYS OS HAND.

UNION SALOON.E. S. CUNHA PROPRIETOR.

MERCHANT STREET, HONOLULU.'

Choice Ales, Wines, Liqnors, Cigars, &c.95 ly

GLASS ! GLASS ! GLASS ! !A FINE ASSORTMENT OF riCTLKL' AM WINImiW ULAS. Jl?T KKCEIVLP.

isi frvtu 8tI0 to uOilO.

W X X XC , W X X 13 W I X. 13 !FOR Fr-NCI- :;st oi!.KI S. i !

SAUCE PANS. FKV PANS, IKON 11ll, Dl Ull oVKYs,

;alvan!.i:i ikon mis ami 1st iklts,A FINE ASSORTMENT- - OF SHELF HARDWARE !

POCKET AND TABLE CUTLERY, SCISSORS. SHEARS AND RAZORS,

Silttr Pl;itl Table Knife), Forko and Sfooti. CtutJrcnV .Vt Kniw. Irk r.J St-- , irj ra.ToMe Castor. UrcakaH Caotorn, Tin Scf, Ac.

BIRD CACES,FISH HOOKA. FISH I.INKN, coll LI N KS, r.lK TWINE. AI.F fckl

LAMPS, C1IANI)ELIKR.S. OIL, MATCH IX

Xjantorns O X1 TToront Styloa !

A FULL LINE OF SHELF PAINTS, IN OIL AND DHY !!ESTZIC. WHITE LEAH, P A I NT Ol L. Tl R PK N Tl NK. VAUMMIK- -.

EOPE, 1-- 4 to 1 1-- 2 inches.All tlie above (iood, together with a Thousand aud more tWful Article, wc Oflrr tr .Sale un

Ke&ftonable Terrug, with

Liberal DiHCoun t io i- - O ft w I, J

9S3

STEAMERS, D. G. HURRAY AND SYREN

J

REIVER &FOR

CASTLE ilDIU COOHH.JTJOWMCR'S AND DHVOE'S KEROSENE Oil.,

UVAM'S 8.CAKI) FRICTION

AMOSKEAG & PEARL RIVER DENIMS !

BARRELS EXTRA O.CALITV DAIRY SALT, IO AND 20 Lll. II A UK,OX ROW S. I .. f 3.4 AND 8 IISCIIM, VARMMIRII.

GOLDEN SUPERFINE AND OREGON EXTRA FLOUR J

Kiver Halmon X1iiii1ni, I3X.rXfc.A. I4-- 4 Fine White China Matting, arrival. Knglitih HreakfuHt am! Janii Tn, I 3 . lb vieOat, Corn and Wheat Meal, Cracked Wheat and lijet Flour, Cruihcd Sugar, '

Fresh Canned FruiU from California.Hubbuck's Best Pale Rolled I,ineed Oil, alo, IUw. Ilubbuck'a White Lead nd Zinc PiillvA good assortment of Paint in Oil, 1 and 2 lb. cam. '

ALSO, A GENERAL ASSORTMENT Of"

SHELF HARDWARE, DRY GOODS, GROCERIES ! !

Tin and Wooden Ware, Paris, Eagle No. 2 and 20, and Sleel 'low. Jlr,Spades, Shorelg, Etc. htc. Etc. Etc. Elc. 1'ic. Etc. Etc. Eic.

ZT Tho above Goods will bo Sold on most Liboral f t

LUMBER,JUBIBER !

LEVERS AND DICKSON

AT THEIR OLD STAND

Fort, King and Merchant Sts,

HAVE ON HAND AND FOR SALE.

NOR'Boards, Flanks and Battens.

Nor' West Tongued and Grooved Boards,

Nor' West Surfaced Flaned Boards

Bough and Flaned Boards.

Redwood Battens and Clapboards,

Redwood Tongued and Grooved Boards,

VHITE CEDARAND

REDWOODSHINGLES !

DOORS, WISBOff S AM MUDS !

Nails, Locks, Butts and Screws,

OIL, WHITE LEAP, ZINC FAINT,

Turpentine, Chrome Green,

Faris Green, Chrome Yellow,

Red Lead, Black Faint. Varnishes,

Burnt and Raw Umber,

Venitian Red, Yellow Ochre, &c, &c.

METALLIC PAINTFOR PLANTATION tB.

WHITE ASH BOARDS & PLANKS,FOR WHEELWRIGHT A.D PLA STATION VtK

WHITE EASTERN FINEBOARDS AND PLANKS.

WALL PAPER !

AND

All OTHER Bl'IlDIM MATERIALS !

LEWERS & DICKSON.m Sra

CHAS. T. CULICK,

NOTARY rUT3I,TG,AND

AGFAT TO TAKE AClLWLELGF.Mi:TS FOR

Xj on.If InWU.r (ifUee. Honolulu

!

FULL ASSORTMENT OF FILES

DILLINGHAM & CO.

G. B GO.OFFER SALE THE FOLLOWING

MATCIIK.

GATE,

Columbia infresh

Torms.

WEIL SELECTED CASED ! iFOR Till.

FALL, 112 fiaj o TV

JUST RECEIVEDBV Tiir

American Clipper Ship SyrenIPTIOIVT T"t sT sPi T" tvt , .

Sales to Arrive will bo made jX If Y GOODHa

AMs.,?!5AO OKNIMS,stylet. AMKHK'AN

Pearl Hirer Ieoims. Marx b Lrnisut, Mu Ir

GROCERIES.Pur Cider Vinrr, Qr. bblt Clear Pork,

lepier Kauoe, Kinturord's Cora BlLrrh,Bs?t Black Pepper, Klttt Mo. 1 Mackerel,

Tomato Ketchup, Yarmouth Corn,

GKNLI.NK PARKKR II O V K ftOltpMIUrn Peas, Fait Water Soap,

Piston's Family p, 60 lb. t.PROVISIONS AND NAVAL STORES.

Barrels Mrs Vtk,Carks N- - K'dford Pilot Bra.,

I'.airrli Kcitithern Pitch,Harrrls fcouihcrn Pitch,

barrels No. 1 Roal.

COAL,2S Tods bUam Coal, Casks Cct-r1ai- 4 Cl.

SHIP CJHAJVMjKKY.t

Tiro 20-f-et Centre tvrl Whale floatsNew peford Oil KliW-ks- ,

New )irort Cordage, u nclNew Bedford H dale Line,

Copper Paint, I i s;al. wfitfnKamar Varnish,

Haven buckLawrence Cotton Vuck, No. 2 to 9.

A Choice Lot of Ash Oars, 10 to 22 Feet

IIARDWARICharcoal Iron, Ilsjr Cotters, Mm. I, f, S,

II unl's Axe Hatchets, Htr.lnf,215 Krfta C'sal Kails, AmIsI. M ' Nlara

Cenlrirnral l.lulnjr,Bart Keflneil American Iron, a'torted smet

Bwerlisb Iros), Norway

WOOI)Ei WARE,Paits, 2 tiefrirrau,rat Chtirs, - bO (lot. Ax rTandleo,

Zinc Hash Boards, 10 dot. Mirrh Broowftermor Ox lkvt, li, t Inch.

100 CASES CARD MATCHES !

A reecteil Amortmrn; of Ash Plank.White 1, 11. IJ, I lrvht.

Ilia k Walnal, I, t, a lr. net,Cedar Soal Boards,

H hit Oak Plank.

Yellow Metal. Composition Nails t

Leather Bltint:, Paper Bf, Ohlliiren't Perambulators,2 American Pii Spring Carryalls.

Cur I'd Hair, Rubber Parkins',Lamp Black, 11 gaality Babbitt Metal.

Cniimtlo Ksoclu,Eastern Pine Keg and Bbl, Shookt !

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