watchmaker - evols at university of hawaii at manoa: home

8
r'A ft I a m II b - 1 fl n r r t i Established July 2, 1850. VOL. XXI.. -- NO. 3949. HONOIiUL.U. EAWAIIAK 1 ANDS, PRIDAr, STARCH S22, 1895. PRICE: 5 CENTS. Business Carus. Business (Carfcs. FORM IS BETTER THAU SOUND. ception and memory should be form. Ideas of extensiou are Blmpier and more attractive than those of number. The child recognizes hundreds of things by their shapes, before he be- gins to count. He can easily learn the few geometric forms, which, singly neither may exclusively occupy the Meld. .The misuse or abuse of memory does not justify its neglect. Au exact memory is a priceless blessing. Said an ancient Greek philosopher, "On earth there Is nothing great but man; in man there is nothing great but mind." It would not be true to ex- tend this saying and affirm that in mind there is nothing great but mem- ory, for all our faculties are God like and wonderful, but memory is one of the most marvellous powers of the human mind, and marvellous most of all In its susceptibility to culture. Too often its traluing has been inci- dental and without any careful study of its laws of growth and devel pment Astonishing feats of memory are sometimes performed by artificial and unnatural methods, which give no discipline or development to this fao ulty, and which ch, have no general application or utility. . The dexterity thus acquired, like the feats of the ac- robat, serves admirably for show. This boasted system of mnemonics is a species of cram. It discards the spacial and intellectual relations which nature and philosophy suggest, aud substitutes arbitrary and artifi- cial combinations. While these may aid in memorizing certain name, dates, or details, the same time and thought, if applied to the true, philo sophical association of Id-a- , would secure better results both in acquisi- tion and discipline. This machine method is unworthy the teacher whose primary aim in every exercise Is to - j iPY '.Myf ill-'- ' 0ijh Mj flh IL, JENNIE L. HILDEBBAND, H. D. Ilomeopatbio Physician. HOTEL STREET, Opposite Y. M. C. A. gXyOSlce hours: 9 to 12 a. m. and 2 to 4 y. m. Mutual Telephone No. G10. 393--3 m C. J. WHITNEY, Tuaoher ot 2loovition tml Dru- - matio Art, Arlington Hotel. 3884-- y 8. T. ALEXANDER. II. P. BALDWIN. ALEXANDER Jfc BALDWIN, Commission Merchants No. 3 California st., Pan Francisco. XvCT"Is!and orders promptly filled. 3597-6- m A. PERRY, ATTORNEY AT LAW And Notary rabllc. Ofl'.ce: Over Bishop's Dank. 3692-- 1 v VTILLIA1I C. PARKE, ATTORNEY - AT - LAW Agom to tk Aeknowl.dgn.ou Orrica Ho. 13 Xaahumanu Btrset. Hsna- - luln, H.i. GONSALVES & CO, Wholesale Groceia and Wine Merchant. 225 Queen Street, Honolulu, H. I. H. MAY & CO., Wholesale and Retail Grocers OS FORT STRKET. Telephones 22. P. O. Box 470. 3450-- y HAWAIIAN HARDWARE CO., HARDWARE, Cutlery and Glassware 307 Port Street. 3575-l- y BEAVER SALOON, FORT 8TREET, OPPOSITK WXLDKa A co.'s IX. J. NOLTE, Proprietor. First-cla- ss Lunches served with Tea, Cof fee, Soda Water, Ginger Ale or Milk. "OPEM FROM 3 A. t. TILL 10 P. M. Smokers' Fecnieites a specialty. WM. F. THRUM, S XJ K V EY O I t . Room No. 11, Spreckela' Blook. 3S53-6- m LEWIS & CO., Wholesale and Retail Grocers 111 FORT STREET, Telephone S40. P. O. Box U? CONSOLIDATED Soda Water' Works Company, Limited Isplinade, Ccrcer Alien and Fort Sts. HOLLISTER & CO., 3710 1553-- 1 v Aeentfl. U. W. McCHESNEY & SONS WHOLESALE GROCERS AND DEALERS 12?- - Leather and Shoe Findings nONOLULU. AGENTS Honolulu foap Work! Co., Honolulu Tannery. H. HACKFELD A CO- - General Commission Agents Cor. FoTt anHJQueen ts., Honoluln Imperial Flour 13 u sin css Carta. DR. R. I. MOORE DEISTTIST, Oflw: Ariicxtoa CotUg. Bc:el Sire XCC"0fEce hours : 9 a. n. to 12 M. and 1 r. v. to 4 p. v. 3S60-- 1 m M. E. Grossman, D.D.S. 73 KilSTTIST, i3 flu STRUT. wyQrriPi Hooa!' 9a.m.to4. m. The New Watchmaker Will clean your Watch for 75c. Put in the best Mainspring mm 40C. - Balance or Pallet Staffs 1.25 Jewel holes, Pivots, etc. 50c. Clocks cleaned - 50c. iCT"Does his work well and GUA- - RANTEES it for ONE YEAK. HIM. W. J. STODDART, Foit Rreet. above Hotel street, next to McDonald's Blacksmith Shop. 3933-- y New Goods A FINE ASSORTMENT. And for Decorating Purposes ; MaTTOra OP ALL ICCTDB, Masela Ciqabs. WING W0 CHAN & CO. rfo. a& Nttuaau Btrt. 15 1 -- q F. W. MAKINNEY, TYPEWRITER, Cenvevancer and Searcher of Records riKE, LIFE AMD Accident Insurance. All kinds of Typewriting done, promptly, cheaply and accurately. ALSO GENERAL. COLLECTOR. X" OFFICE : 313 FORT STREET 3348-- t WM, L. PETERSON, Notary :- - Public, -- : Typewriter . AND COLLECTOR. Office: Over Golden Rule Bazaar. 3S18-- y DR. J. UCHIDA, Physician and Surgeon. No. 5, KUKUI LANE. Officb Hours: 8 to 12 a. m. and 8 p. m. Mutual Tel. 532. HONOLULU IRON W0RES CO., Stoam Engines, Boiler. 8nzar IXllIa, Coolers Krmn and Lad Catlnsrs. And machinery of every description made to order. Particular attention paid to ships' blacksmithinsc. Job work ezcuted on the shortest notic. LEWERS & COOKE, Successors to Lewers & Dickeon. Importers and Dealers in Lumber And all Kinds of Building Materials. NO. 88 PORT STRKKT, HONOLULU T.O. Box 3SC. Mutual Tel. 544. NiN-Y- D COMPANY, LIMITED, Commission IMorcliarits UIPOKTERS AND DEALERS LX Japanese -:- - Provisions AND GLN'ERAL 1IEECHANDISZ, 411 KINO STREET, LTonolulu, Hawaiian Islands. C?"Kew Goods by every steamer. 3S7S-l- y TEE HAWAIIAN SAFE DEPOSIT A2'D INVESTMENT COMPANY, HOHOLCXC, II. I. Hare Safe Deposit Eoxeaof various sizes to rent by the month or year. Stocks and Bonds Bought and Sold AQSSITS FOB San Insurance Office of London. AGXXTS FOK Great Northern Railway. Tickets Bold to All Anoints. AGZXTfl FOB The Hawaiian Land and Improre- -' ntent Company (Limited). Borneo! the finest Coffee and Frnit Land on the Inlands for sale upon very favorable terms. S878-- tf 8. BREWER k CO., LMTED Queen Street, Honolulu, II I. AGENTS FOR Hawaiian Agricultural Co., Onomea gnjear Co., Honomu bugar Co., Wailnkn Sugar Co., "Waihee Sugar Co., Makee Sugar Co., Ualeakala Ranch Co., Kapa-pa- fa Kanch. Planters' Line San Francisco Packets CThaa. Brewer & Co.'a Line of Boston Packets. Agents Boston Board of Underwriters. Agents Philadelphia Board of Under- writers. LIST OF OFFICERS: P. C. Jones President Geo. II. Robertson Manager E. F. Bishop Tres. and 8ecy. Col. W. F. Allks Auditor O. M. Cookb j H. Watebhou8k... ..; Directors A. W Carter....) The Hawaiian liwestmenl Co. REAL ESTATE -- AND- FOR SALE. Desirable Property in all parts of the City. Four Houses on Punchbowl street at bargain. ' A 4-a- cre Lot at Makiki. Lots 4 and 5, Block 25, Pearl City. . A2acro Lot at Kalihi. "Residence at KaliM with barn, pig pens and chicken coop, 120x10 ; suitable tor a Chicken Kanch. 13 and 15 Kaahumana Street Telephone 639. Near Postoffire. Castle & Cooke L'd. LIFE AND FIRE INSURANCE AGENTS AGENTS NEW ENGLAND MUTUAL Life Insurance Company OF BOSTON. tna Fire Insurance .Company OF HARTFORD. HONOLULU CARRIAGE MANUFACTORY! W.W. WRIGHT, Proprietor. Carriage -- : Builder AD REPAIEEE. "All orders from the other islands In the Carriage Building Trimming and Painting Line, will meet with promp Attention. CGTP. O. BOX 321. . HOS. 123 AND 130 FORT STREET 3S8i-- y Massage. lP.3. PRAY WOULD ANNOUNCE 2JA. that she will attand a limited nam b9i ol patients. Aidreea at II. M. Wbitnay's, King st. ; Bell Telephone 75. 3225-- tf Dr. Northrop Tells How to "Culti- vate a Retentive Mind. KKI'ICI K CY T r" S IH r mm nr. . Valuable lilutu ly Vmlneut Educ. tor Memory 6treusthened by the Will Pride of Wisdom the Proof of Folly Knowledge by Aaaoeiation. There was a large crowd present at the Y. M. C. A. hall last night to hear -- Dr. B. G. Northrop lecture on "Memorj and How to Train It." Promptly at 7 :30 President F. A. Ho?xner of the Honolulu Teachers' Association, undtr whose auspices the lecture was given, delivered a few introductory remarks touching the occasion before introducing the lecturer. Before taking up the subject of hi3 discourse Dr. Noithrop made reference to thie, his first visit to Honolulu, spoke of the people whom ho had met since his arrival, and praised the beauties of the country. The learned lecturer spoke some- thing over an hour and a quarter, and the following is a complete report of the subject : The general outcry of- - the pres3 aprainat cramming has not been with- out reason. The surfeit following a plethoric indigestible diet illustrates a common mei tal dvspepsla. With exacting examinations at hand, there is a strong temptation to smattering. Where the mind is treated as a mere receptacle, the quantity rather than the quality of attainments is the meter of Droeres. It is a cardinal rriJiciplft " . that the . discipline . . i of the mind is more imporiaui. iubu j u furniture. Knowledge, though essen tial to education, does not constitute It. Facts, however valuable, are toue learned, not xtrtmanij for tneir . own sake, but as instruments or culture. The school studies are each and all more thoroughly mastered when they are pursued, not as ends', but as means of mental discipline. As all truth is harmonv. so the purest processes or acquiring truth accord with the laws of mental irrowth. The best way to develop each faculty is identical with tne oeit meinnas Ol caiuiuu-an- u rc tHininir knowledge. If right babits of study are formed, and if the child thus PHina a consciousness or power auu a tieliuht in doina In achievement, knowledee will come in tiue lime as a matter of court" o It is the teachers' dutv. not so much to impart knowl edge as to show his pupils how to get it, inspiring them wit" love oi siuoy and of masteruur difficulties. This joy of conscious progress quickens the memory ana an me oiuer lacuuies. Ttie culture of the mind 19 to be meas ured, not nrimarily by what it con tains, but bv what it can do. Effi ciency the powt-- r of using the facul- ties and resources of the mind, is tbft teat of nrocrefrs. The teacher's succes is to be mensured, not by what be tells his nuial, but by wtiar, throuch hid instruction an 1 impulse thpv are enabled to tell him. buch method?, if less troductive.of imme diate and showy results, secure a bet ter trammer of the mind and ueart. The process of cram retains little genuine knowledge. while the true method renders it acquisitions ever at command. Worst of all, cram has a moral taint, fostering ostenta tion and conceit. Superficial attain ments are always chaotic. Promising the substance, thev cive only the shell and semblance of knowledge. There may be a rapid repetition of lessons and text books, with no real grasp of the subject. But it is doing violent to the soul to its Innate love of truth, .and growth by the uu- - ttiment of truth, to feed it thus with the mere buks of knowledge rather than wilh knowledge itself. Buch eramraitiL' Is ouite as likely to make dudHs Mutuant as fluent. Those who learn everything and know nothing are pt to confound flippancy wilh smart uet-s- . anil to be more wordy than wise. Crm is multiplviug Shake speare's "knave very voluble," but better methods would train our youth as Isaac Taylor ld, "to put flippant scorn to the blush." Any method which inflates pupils with an over estimate ot their attainments is harm ful. A prominent ltsou of true teaching is the greatness of our igno rance and the littleness of our kuowl- - ledte. The modety of the true scholar is pioverbial, while "the pride of wis-do- m is the proof of folly; or, as another has happily said, "the greater the circle of "our knowledge, the greater the horizon of ignorance that bounds it." The proper revolt against parroting has bail to the oppo-it- e extreme ami put memory in the background. In th- - nrrinuiure attempt to bring the reflrctive faculties! to the front, xorae have banished text books and subti-tut- e l object lesr-oi.s- , talks and leo-tuie- s. lu a wisecour-en- f study, there i is a place for each of thee, thougu or combined, are the patterns of ail visible objects. The experience or all kindergartens, and of the best primary schools in this country a- - d in Europe, shows that learning the geometric forms by making them is one of their earliest and pleasantest occupations. Such experience amply, proves that this exercise favors clear perception and conception and exact memory of visible objects. The circumstantial memory should be early exercised In discriminating them au exercise which rightly presented fascinates the yo'ingest pupils. Next In order comes number. After this has been duly taught with 06- - jects, the lessons in the ground rules and tables are arllla of memory. These let-son- s should be so thoroughly learned that all ordinary combina- tions in addition, subtraction, multi- plication and division should be as rapid as intuitions. They should In- volve no conscious effort and occupy no perceptible interval of time, any more than does the combination ot letters which make a name.-- . The in- stant the eye sees them, the wo id Is recognized. If the circumstantial memory were proptrly drilled at the outset, the figures in a column would be added as quickly. This, with some NORTHROP. aid from "contractions," fs the secret of the llghtuing calculator. Such acceleration in arithmetical processes is really simple, and both practical aud valuable for all ordinary pupils. But the broadest field for the cir- cumstantial memory 19 language. Our faculties are specially fitted for the tasks naturally Incumbent lneacli succes-slv- period of life. To learn to talk is one of the earliest efforts and necessities of the child. Nature so befriends him that his progress, even without a book or teacher, is marvel ous, rnougn at z years or age ne ' can epeak but a tew words, at 6 years be has a better command or ma ver- nacular in conversation than a stu dent of Latin ordinarily acquires after ten years of study of that language. The children of American families re siding iu Europe learn French or Ger man more readily tnan tneir pa- rents. The children of recent Immi grants in this country learn our language sooner tnan tne adults whom they accompany Many such facts have come under my observation, which show how early in the order of nature the linguistic faculty is devel- oped. This law of memory Is full of prac iical suggestions to the teacher. It shows that language, especially in the form of reading, spelling and talking, should be made the most prominent exercise of young children. The abil- ity to recognize words at sight, and thus read without conscious effort, gives to the juveuile mind the encour- agement and impetus which it. most need3. The question whether the child is to be fond of books or averse to them depends 'much on the previ- ous question, whether he is a pro- ficient in reading. The early mastery of one's native tongue invites and facilitates other attainments, while poverty of language is a constant hin- drance aud discouragement. In pro- portion as you enrich the child's vocabulary, you promote his interest aud progress In all future studies. Tact and didactic skill are, needed in nothing more than in the first steps in teaching, reading and spelling. In- stead of the old monotonous and me- chanical drill, each should be m de, aud by our best teachers are now made, au intellectual exercise pur- sued from the outset, not primarily to learn the literal elemeuts of words, but for the higher aim of cultivating perceptlou aud memory, acquiring the power to bring before the mind's eye the form of each word as a whole, just as one would rarefully observe a hout-- e or horse iu ordt-- r to draw the same from memory. It is an important art iu memory to learn to see so accurate- ly that we can recall the exct image ot the object, and form concepiions as clear ami vivid as were the original perceptions. This process, if early DR . 15 G. develop power and facilitate epontane ous self-exerti- on. He who aspires to implant germinating principles will measure his success, not so much by what he tells his pupils as ny wnat they are stimulated to lo, and be, aud describe, instead or simpiy renears- - Ing the results he has reached, he shows his pupils the road by which he reached them, aud Incites each to work his own way. The inetuod which substitutes training for routine is not suggested by any system or mnemonics. These objections do not apply to historii-a- l or any other charts which are based on the proper laws of association. A great memory for facts and dates is by no means a proof- - of intellectual power. There are many illustrations of the old motfo, "Great memory wilh little common sense." By 'the pro- cess of cram, one may have the multi- tudinous facts of history and science on his tongue's end and become a walking encyclopedia, and yet be only a learned driveller. Take himoffiiis beaten path and he is as helpless as a locomotive off the track. But such abnormal and one-side- d development does not warrant the conclusion that a great memory is with sound judgment. On the other band, such a memory is one of the conditions of the highest intelligence and power. As a rule, the men or greatest anility nave ex- celled in grasp of memory. This view might easily be confirmed by facts which show that a strong memory has characterized the most eminent men iu the world s history. Hr William Hamilton cites many historic illustra- tions of this principle. It is not, how ever, claimed that intelligence and memory hold a necesary proportion to each other, Memory changes with, years and at- tainments. This cardinal principle of didaetics is "most suggestive to the teacher. In early life the memory Is circumstantial, and therefore easily t? rasps and holds items and details, Jike words and their form. The re flecti ve laculties are yet comparatively Ititent, but the perceptive powers and circumstantial memory are ocufe. Children can therefore learn spelling, ami language In general, better than adults. It is aftmiliar saying, that those who neulect spelling iu their childhood, seldom master it- - tu a'ter life. Tht-- n the memory becomes phi Iosophical able to grap comprehen sive truths and principles, groups aud classes, genera and species. But years before the child can understand abstruse associations and perceive re- lation in their deepest 'significance, be can most prontaMy store uptnose details and perceptions which furnish materinl for the play of the reflective faculties. f Among these earliest appeals to per Is the only blended flour ever offered on thete Islands. It is a new '"Patent 1'rocePt-- " o hleiidinp: toetlir the Best Known varieties of wh?t for 6trrjgtli and color,, thereby producing a flour that will give tlu- - bt-h- t poesibie baking results for the l.ouPekeepr jC7"Afk your proter for a tiial sack it will cost jou no iiu re. A. L. Mi RbIS & CO., S537-C- ui Who:tsale Agents. 5 (

Upload: others

Post on 25-Jan-2022

2 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Watchmaker - eVols at University of Hawaii at Manoa: Home

r'Aft I

a mII b - 1 fl n r

r ti Established July 2, 1850.

VOL. XXI.. --NO. 3949. HONOIiUL.U. EAWAIIAK 1 ANDS, PRIDAr, STARCH S22, 1895. PRICE: 5 CENTS.

Business Carus.Business (Carfcs. FORM IS BETTER THAU SOUND.ception and memory should be form.Ideas of extensiou are Blmpier andmore attractive than those of number.The child recognizes hundreds ofthings by their shapes, before he be-gins to count. He can easily learn thefew geometric forms, which, singly

neither may exclusively occupy theMeld. .The misuse or abuse of memorydoes not justify its neglect. Au exactmemory is a priceless blessing. Saidan ancient Greek philosopher, "Onearth there Is nothing great but man;in man there is nothing great butmind." It would not be true to ex-tend this saying and affirm that inmind there is nothing great but mem-ory, for all our faculties are God likeand wonderful, but memory is one ofthe most marvellous powers of thehuman mind, and marvellous most ofall In its susceptibility to culture.Too often its traluing has been inci-dental and without any careful studyof its laws of growth and devel pment

Astonishing feats of memory aresometimes performed by artificial andunnatural methods, which give nodiscipline or development to this faoulty, and which ch, have no generalapplication or utility. . The dexteritythus acquired, like the feats of the ac-robat, serves admirably for show.This boasted system of mnemonics isa species of cram. It discards thespacial and intellectual relationswhich nature and philosophy suggest,aud substitutes arbitrary and artifi-cial combinations. While these mayaid in memorizing certain name,dates, or details, the same time andthought, if applied to the true, philosophical association of Id-a- , wouldsecure better results both in acquisi-tion and discipline. This machinemethod is unworthy the teacher whoseprimary aim in every exercise Is to

- j

iPY '.Myf ill-'- '

0ijh Mj flh

IL,

JENNIE L. HILDEBBAND, H. D.

Ilomeopatbio Physician.HOTEL STREET,

Opposite Y. M. C. A.gXyOSlce hours: 9 to 12 a. m. and 2

to 4 y. m. Mutual Telephone No. G10.393--3 m

C. J. WHITNEY,

Tuaoher ot 2loovition tml Dru--matio Art,

Arlington Hotel. 3884--y

8. T. ALEXANDER. II. P. BALDWIN.

ALEXANDER Jfc BALDWIN,

Commission MerchantsNo. 3 California st., Pan Francisco.

XvCT"Is!and orders promptly filled.3597-6- m

A. PERRY,ATTORNEY AT LAW

And Notary rabllc.Ofl'.ce: Over Bishop's Dank.

3692--1 v

VTILLIA1I C. PARKE,

ATTORNEY - AT - LAW

Agom to tk Aeknowl.dgn.ouOrrica Ho. 13 Xaahumanu Btrset. Hsna- -

luln, H.i.GONSALVES & CO,

Wholesale Groceia and WineMerchant.

225 Queen Street, Honolulu, H. I.

H. MAY & CO.,

Wholesale and Retail Grocers

OS FORT STRKET.Telephones 22. P. O. Box 470.

3450--y

HAWAIIAN HARDWARE CO.,

HARDWARE,Cutlery and Glassware

307 Port Street.3575-l-y

BEAVER SALOON,FORT 8TREET, OPPOSITK WXLDKa A co.'s

IX. J. NOLTE, Proprietor.First-cla- ss Lunches served with Tea, Cof

fee, Soda Water, Ginger Ale or Milk."OPEM FROM 3 A. t. TILL 10 P. M.

Smokers' Fecnieites a specialty.

WM. F. THRUM,

S XJ K V E Y O I t .

Room No. 11, Spreckela' Blook.3S53-6- m

LEWIS & CO.,

Wholesale and Retail Grocers

111 FORT STREET,

Telephone S40. P. O. Box U?

CONSOLIDATEDSoda Water' Works Company, Limited

Isplinade, Ccrcer Alien and Fort Sts.

HOLLISTER & CO.,3710 1553-- 1 v Aeentfl.

U. W. McCHESNEY & SONS

WHOLESALE GROCERSAND DEALERS 12?--

Leather and Shoe FindingsnONOLULU.

AGENTS Honolulu foap Work! Co.,Honolulu Tannery.

H. HACKFELD A CO- -

General Commission Agents

Cor. FoTt anHJQueen ts., Honoluln

ImperialFlour

13 u sin css Carta.

DR. R. I. MOORE

DEISTTIST,

Oflw: Ariicxtoa CotUg. Bc:el Sire

XCC"0fEce hours : 9 a. n. to 12 M.

and 1 r. v. to 4 p. v. 3S60-- 1 m

M. E. Grossman, D.D.S.

73 KilSTTIST,

i3 flu STRUT.

wyQrriPi Hooa!' 9a.m.to4. m.

The New Watchmaker

Will clean your Watch for 75c.Put in the best Mainspring mm

40C.-

Balance or Pallet Staffs 1.25Jewel holes, Pivots, etc. 50c.Clocks cleaned - 50c.

iCT"Does his work well and GUA- -RANTEES it for ONE YEAK.HIM.

W. J. STODDART,Foit Rreet. above Hotel street, next

to McDonald's Blacksmith Shop.3933-- y

New GoodsA FINE ASSORTMENT.

And for Decorating Purposes ;

MaTTOra OP ALL ICCTDB,

Masela Ciqabs.

WING W0 CHAN & CO.rfo. a& Nttuaau Btrt.15 1 --q

F. W. MAKINNEY,TYPEWRITER,

Cenvevancer and Searcher of Records

riKE, LIFE AMD

Accident Insurance.All kinds of Typewriting done, promptly,

cheaply and accurately.ALSO

GENERAL. COLLECTOR.X" OFFICE : 313 FORT STREET 3348-- t

WM, L. PETERSON,

Notary :- - Public, -- : Typewriter

. AND COLLECTOR.

Office: Over Golden Rule Bazaar.3S18--y

DR. J. UCHIDA,Physician and Surgeon.

No. 5, KUKUI LANE.

Officb Hours: 8 to 12 a. m. and8 p. m.

Mutual Tel. 532.

HONOLULU IRON W0RES CO.,

Stoam Engines,Boiler. 8nzar IXllIa, Coolers Krmn

and Lad Catlnsrs.And machinery of every description madeto order. Particular attention paid toships' blacksmithinsc. Job work ezcutedon the shortest notic.

LEWERS & COOKE,Successors to Lewers & Dickeon.

Importers and Dealers in LumberAnd all Kinds of Building Materials.

NO. 88 PORT STRKKT, HONOLULU

T.O. Box 3SC. Mutual Tel. 544.

NiN-Y- D COMPANY, LIMITED,

Commission IMorcliaritsUIPOKTERS AND DEALERS LX

Japanese -:- - ProvisionsAND GLN'ERAL 1IEECHANDISZ,

411 KINO STREET,LTonolulu, Hawaiian Islands.

C?"Kew Goods by every steamer.3S7S-l-y

TEE HAWAIIAN SAFE DEPOSIT

A2'D

INVESTMENT COMPANY,

HOHOLCXC, II. I.

Hare Safe Deposit Eoxeaof various sizesto rent by the month or year.

Stocks and Bonds Bought and Sold

AQSSITS FOB

San Insurance Office of London.AGXXTS FOK

Great Northern Railway. TicketsBold to All Anoints.

AGZXTfl FOBThe Hawaiian Land and Improre- -'

ntent Company (Limited).Borneo! the finest Coffee and Frnit

Land on the Inlands for sale upon veryfavorable terms. S878-- tf

8. BREWER k CO., LMTED

Queen Street, Honolulu, II I.

AGENTS FORHawaiian Agricultural Co., Onomea

gnjear Co., Honomu bugar Co., WailnknSugar Co., "Waihee Sugar Co., MakeeSugar Co., Ualeakala Ranch Co., Kapa-pa- fa

Kanch.Planters' Line San Francisco Packets

CThaa. Brewer & Co.'a Line of BostonPackets.

Agents Boston Board of Underwriters.Agents Philadelphia Board of Under-

writers.LIST OF OFFICERS:

P. C. Jones PresidentGeo. II. Robertson ManagerE. F. Bishop Tres. and 8ecy.Col. W. F. Allks AuditorO. M. Cookb jH. Watebhou8k... ..; DirectorsA. W Carter....)

The Hawaiian liwestmenl Co.

REAL ESTATE-- AND-

FOR SALE.

Desirable Property in all parts of theCity.

Four Houses on Punchbowl street atbargain. '

A 4-a- cre Lot at Makiki.

Lots 4 and 5, Block 25, PearlCity. .

A2acro Lot at Kalihi."Residence at KaliM with barn, pig

pens and chicken coop, 120x10 ; suitabletor a Chicken Kanch.

13 and 15 Kaahumana Street

Telephone 639. Near Postoffire.

Castle & Cooke L'd.LIFE AND FIRE

INSURANCE AGENTS

AGENTSNEW ENGLAND MUTUAL

Life Insurance CompanyOF BOSTON.

tna Fire Insurance .Company

OF HARTFORD.

HONOLULUCARRIAGE MANUFACTORY!

W.W. WRIGHT, Proprietor.

Carriage -- : BuilderAD REPAIEEE.

"All orders from the other islandsIn the Carriage Building Trimming andPainting Line, will meet with prompAttention.

CGTP. O. BOX 321. .

HOS. 123 AND 130 FORT STREET3S8i-- y

Massage.lP.3. PRAY WOULD ANNOUNCE

2JA. that she will attand a limited namb9i ol patients. Aidreea at II. M.Wbitnay's, King st. ; Bell Telephone 75.

3225--tf

Dr. Northrop Tells How to "Culti-

vate a Retentive Mind.

KKI'ICI K CY T r" S IH r mm nr. .

Valuable lilutu ly Vmlneut Educ.tor Memory 6treusthened by theWill Pride of Wisdom the Proofof Folly Knowledge by Aaaoeiation.

There was a large crowd presentat the Y. M. C. A. hall last nightto hear -- Dr. B. G. Northrop lectureon "Memorj and How to Train It."

Promptly at 7 :30 President F. A.Ho?xner of the Honolulu Teachers'Association, undtr whose auspicesthe lecture was given, delivered afew introductory remarks touchingthe occasion before introducing thelecturer.

Before taking up the subject ofhi3 discourse Dr. Noithrop madereference to thie, his first visit toHonolulu, spoke of the peoplewhom ho had met since his arrival,and praised the beauties of thecountry.

The learned lecturer spoke some-thing over an hour and a quarter,and the following is a completereport of the subject :

The general outcry of- - the pres3aprainat cramming has not been with-out reason. The surfeit following aplethoric indigestible diet illustratesa common mei tal dvspepsla. Withexacting examinations at hand, thereis a strong temptation to smattering.Where the mind is treated as a merereceptacle, the quantity rather thanthe quality of attainments is themeter of Droeres. It is a cardinalrriJiciplft

" . that the. discipline. . i

of themind is more imporiaui. iubu j ufurniture. Knowledge, though essential to education, does not constituteIt. Facts, however valuable, are touelearned, not xtrtmanij for tneir .

ownsake, but as instruments or culture.The school studies are each and allmore thoroughly mastered when theyare pursued, not as ends', but as meansof mental discipline. As all truth isharmonv. so the purest processes oracquiring truth accord with the lawsof mental irrowth. The best way todevelop each faculty is identical withtne oeit meinnas Ol caiuiuu-an-u rctHininir knowledge. If right babits ofstudy are formed, and if the child thusPHina a consciousness or power auu atieliuht in doina In achievement,knowledee will come in tiue lime asa matter of court" o It is the teachers'dutv. not so much to impart knowledge as to show his pupils how to getit, inspiring them wit" love oi siuoyand of masteruur difficulties. Thisjoy of conscious progress quickens thememory ana an me oiuer lacuuies.Ttie culture of the mind 19 to be measured, not nrimarily by what it contains, but bv what it can do. Efficiency the powt-- r of using the facul-ties and resources of the mind, istbft teat of nrocrefrs. The teacher'ssucces is to be mensured, not by whatbe tells his nuial, but by wtiar,throuch hid instruction an 1 impulsethpv are enabled to tell him. buchmethod?, if less troductive.of immediate and showy results, secure a better trammer of the mind and ueart.The process of cram retains littlegenuine knowledge. while thetrue method renders it acquisitionsever at command. Worst of all, cramhas a moral taint, fostering ostentation and conceit. Superficial attainments are always chaotic. Promisingthe substance, thev cive only theshell and semblance of knowledge.There may be a rapid repetition oflessons and text books, with no realgrasp of the subject. But it is doingviolent to the soul to its Innatelove of truth, .and growth by the uu--ttiment of truth, to feed it thus withthe mere buks of knowledge ratherthan wilh knowledge itself. BucheramraitiL' Is ouite as likely to makedudHs Mutuant as fluent. Those wholearn everything and know nothingare pt to confound flippancy wilhsmart uet-s- . anil to be more wordy thanwise. Crm is multiplviug Shakespeare's "knave very voluble," butbetter methods would train our youthas Isaac Taylor ld, "to put flippantscorn to the blush." Any methodwhich inflates pupils with an overestimate ot their attainments is harmful. A prominent ltsou of trueteaching is the greatness of our ignorance and the littleness of our kuowl- -

ledte. The modety of the truescholar is pioverbial, while "the prideof wis-do- m is the proof of folly; or, asanother has happily said, "the greaterthe circle of "our knowledge, thegreater the horizon of ignorance thatbounds it."

The proper revolt against parrotinghas bail to the oppo-it- e extreme amiput memory in the background. Inth- - nrrinuiure attempt to bring thereflrctive faculties! to the front, xoraehave banished text books and subti-tut- e

l object lesr-oi.s- , talks and leo-tuie- s.

lu a wisecour-en- f study, therei is a place for each of thee, thougu

or combined, are the patterns of ailvisible objects. The experience or allkindergartens, and of the best primaryschools in this country a- - d in Europe,shows that learning the geometricforms by making them is one of theirearliest and pleasantest occupations.Such experience amply, proves thatthis exercise favors clear perceptionand conception and exact memory ofvisible objects. The circumstantialmemory should be early exercised Indiscriminating them au exercisewhich rightly presented fascinates theyo'ingest pupils.

Next In order comes number. Afterthis has been duly taught with 06--jects, the lessons in the ground rulesand tables are arllla of memory.These let-son- s should be so thoroughlylearned that all ordinary combina-tions in addition, subtraction, multi-plication and division should be asrapid as intuitions. They should In-volve no conscious effort and occupyno perceptible interval of time, anymore than does the combination otletters which make a name.-- . The in-stant the eye sees them, the wo id Isrecognized. If the circumstantialmemory were proptrly drilled at theoutset, the figures in a column wouldbe added as quickly. This, with some

NORTHROP.

aid from "contractions," fs the secretof the llghtuing calculator. Suchacceleration in arithmetical processesis really simple, and both practicalaud valuable for all ordinary pupils.

But the broadest field for the cir-cumstantial memory 19 language.Our faculties are specially fitted forthe tasks naturally Incumbent lneaclisucces-slv- period of life. To learn totalk is one of the earliest efforts andnecessities of the child. Nature sobefriends him that his progress, evenwithout a book or teacher, is marvelous, rnougn at z years or age ne 'can epeak but a tew words, at 6 yearsbe has a better command or ma ver-nacular in conversation than a student of Latin ordinarily acquires afterten years of study of that language.The children of American families residing iu Europe learn French or German more readily tnan tneir pa-rents. The children of recent Immigrants in this country learn ourlanguage sooner tnan tne adults whomthey accompany Many such factshave come under my observation,which show how early in the order ofnature the linguistic faculty is devel-oped.

This law of memory Is full of praciical suggestions to the teacher. Itshows that language, especially in theform of reading, spelling and talking,should be made the most prominentexercise of young children. The abil-ity to recognize words at sight, andthus read without conscious effort,gives to the juveuile mind the encour-agement and impetus which it. mostneed3. The question whether thechild is to be fond of books or averseto them depends 'much on the previ-ous question, whether he is a pro-ficient in reading. The early masteryof one's native tongue invites andfacilitates other attainments, whilepoverty of language is a constant hin-drance aud discouragement. In pro-portion as you enrich the child'svocabulary, you promote his interestaud progress In all future studies.Tact and didactic skill are, needed innothing more than in the first steps inteaching, reading and spelling. In-stead of the old monotonous and me-chanical drill, each should be m de,aud by our best teachers are nowmade, au intellectual exercise pur-sued from the outset, not primarily tolearn the literal elemeuts of words,but for the higher aim of cultivatingperceptlou aud memory, acquiring thepower to bring before the mind's eyethe form of each word as a whole, justas one would rarefully observe a hout--e

or horse iu ordt-- r to draw the samefrom memory. It is an important artiu memory to learn to see so accurate-ly that we can recall the exct imageot the object, and form concepiions asclear ami vivid as were the originalperceptions. This process, if early

DR . 15 G.

develop power and facilitate epontaneous self-exerti- on. He who aspires toimplant germinating principles willmeasure his success, not so much bywhat he tells his pupils as ny wnatthey are stimulated to lo, and be, auddescribe, instead or simpiy renears- -Ing the results he has reached, heshows his pupils the road by whichhe reached them, aud Incites each towork his own way. The inetuodwhich substitutes training for routineis not suggested by any system ormnemonics. These objections do notapply to historii-a- l or any other chartswhich are based on the proper laws ofassociation.

A great memory for facts and datesis by no means a proof- - of intellectualpower. There are many illustrationsof the old motfo, "Great memory wilhlittle common sense." By 'the pro-cess of cram, one may have the multi-tudinous facts of history and scienceon his tongue's end and become awalking encyclopedia, and yet be onlya learned driveller. Take himoffiiisbeaten path and he is as helpless as alocomotive off the track.

But such abnormal and one-side- d

development does not warrant theconclusion that a great memory is

with sound judgment. Onthe other band, such a memory isone of the conditions of the highestintelligence and power. As a rule,the men or greatest anility nave ex-celled in grasp of memory. This viewmight easily be confirmed by factswhich show that a strong memory hascharacterized the most eminent meniu the world s history. Hr WilliamHamilton cites many historic illustra-tions of this principle. It is not, however, claimed that intelligence andmemory hold a necesary proportionto each other,

Memory changes with, years and at-

tainments. This cardinal principle ofdidaetics is "most suggestive to theteacher. In early life the memory Iscircumstantial, and therefore easilyt? rasps and holds items and details,Jike words and their form. The reflecti ve laculties are yet comparativelyItitent, but the perceptive powers andcircumstantial memory are ocufe.Children can therefore learn spelling,ami language In general, better thanadults. It is aftmiliar saying, thatthose who neulect spelling iu theirchildhood, seldom master it- - tu a'terlife. Tht-- n the memory becomes phiIosophical able to grap comprehensive truths and principles, groups audclasses, genera and species. Butyears before the child can understandabstruse associations and perceive re-

lation in their deepest 'significance,be can most prontaMy store uptnosedetails and perceptions which furnishmaterinl for the play of the reflectivefaculties. f

Among these earliest appeals to per

Is the only blended flour everoffered on thete Islands. It is a new'"Patent 1'rocePt-- " o hleiidinp: toetlirthe Best Known varieties of wh?t for6trrjgtli and color,, thereby producinga flour that will give tlu-- bt-h- t poesibiebaking results for the l.ouPekeepr

jC7"Afk your proter for a tiial sackit will cost jou no iiu re.

A. L. Mi RbIS & CO.,S537-C- ui Who:tsale Agents.5

(

Page 2: Watchmaker - eVols at University of Hawaii at Manoa: Home

ru

THE PACIFIC COMMERCIAL ADVERTISER: HONOLULU, MAKCII 22, 195.o- -

Mutual Life. Insurance Company BYAUTHQRiH;Tenders for Beef Cattle.

Ornca cf the Board of 111,1Honolulu, March 19,

ie

OFRICHARD A,

NEWMcCURDY,

Company's Statement for .the

ASSETS - - - $204,638,783.96

Income.Received for Prondums $36,123,163 8iReceived Irorn all other Sources

Disbursements.94

" for KndWts Divid'dstc ft 59,4K-- j 14 $21 0S9,257 OS

For all other Account" 9 789 P34 13 $30,S7S,891 26

Assets .

Unift d i.itrs D.nd and other Securities '....$53 '970 691 67First lien LoaT3 en B inds and Mortpagp - 71:339 415 9!Loan 8 on stocks and Bonds ll,36i l'H) 00Kel Estate- - 21 691 731 39Cash iu Banks and Tmst Companies - 9 6 5,193 91Acciued Interest, Deferred Premiums, etc .6 6 5 5 07

$.U4 63 i 783 s6rieeerve f;r Pcliciee and other L'b'litieSjCo.'s Standard, Anj. 4 percent. 18 109,4e6 14

JSnrplas ?2-,5-9,- 3j7 82

Inenraucrt and Annuities assumed andInsurance and Annuities in force December 31, lc94.

1 have carefully examined the foregoing Statement and find the same to becorrect. CH KLK8 A. PUKLLs.ll. Auditor.

From the Surplus a dividend will Le apportioned as usual.

lteport of the Fxminin Gommittee.Office or The Mothal Life Insurance Company or New York, Feb. 7, 1895.

t a m-eti- p of the ho.ird of Trustees t tu:j Company, held on the 26th dy ofDecemb r fas , the unde-gne- d were ppoiut-- d a C mmitre-- to examine the annualstateuii nt for th ye r ending December 31, 1894, nd to er fy ttie same by comparisonwith the assets of the Com pin v.

The Ciunmittee have carefully .performed the duty assigned to thrm, and herebycert fy that the staten ent is in all particulars correct, "aud thiit the assets specifiedtherein are in possession of i he Company. 'li making ihi- - cenificate ihe Committee bear testimony t the high cbaracte" ofthe investments of the i omp ny and exp ess their aproval of tbe pys'eni. order, andaccuracy with which the accouats and vouchers have beeu kept, and the business ingeneral transacted. . tigne ,

H. C Von Post, J. Hobart Hcrrick, Charles R. IlenOerson.Tlieo. A. Havemcyer, Charles E. Miller, Kobert bewell.

So ircl ofSamuel P. lalcock. Oliver Harriraan,Chart, s E Miller, George 8 Ce,Henry H . I?oers, Walter It. G llette,Charles It Henderson, Jno. V Auchinclos,George F Ba' er. George Bliss,He ruann C Von Post, Dudl. y Ulcott,Adrian l.-eli-n, Jr., Alt-x- . H. Itic ,SStuvvesiint Kish, GeorKe S. BowJoin,

1 1 T . u i :LU . 1 . UIJL.V11, AugUbtus U

KOBERT A. GRANNISS,WALTER It. GILLETTE. General Manneer.

I8A AC F. LLOYD. 2d Vicc-Pre-ide:- .t.

WILLIAM J. EAtSTON.e.tr tirv.KREDERIC CROMWELL Tieasuter.

YORK,President.

Year Ending December 31st, 1804

II 897.7PG 12 $43,02Q,8f9 94

renewed ..$73rt,2P0 677 97.. 855,207,7; S 42

Triixteo. t

Robert Sewell. Robert A. Grannis3,Henry W. bnvtb. S. V R. t'ruger,

it h A. v'cCurdv, Robert Olvphant,H. Waltf r Webb, James C. llo den.' he . .Voif T t, te-.g- e Hven,R VV. PecHvm, William Habcock,Frd Cnm tll, J. Hobar; Herrick,Lewis lay Juhen I . Uavies,

Jnilliard, Thco. A Havemever.Vice-Preside- nt.

HKNKY E. DUN'CAK, Jr., Cor, 8ec.LERr KLAMROTU. Asst. Sec.

J M ES Tl M VSOS, 2d Treasurer.EDW vltD P. HOLDh.N, Assistant Cashier.LL D.. K.I A . Actuary.

WM.W. RICHARDS, Comptrol'erH 8. BROWN, Asst. Comptroller.

KOSK,Islands.

' '

'(jz

Fort Street.

YOU MUSTnAVE TOMAKE GOODCROPS.

o--

COMPANY kei s always and constant )FEUTIUZEKS a.id offers them lor sale

JOHN A. FONDA, Assistant treasurer.WILLIAM P. SAND Cashier

EviOKY ilcCLINTOCK.JOHN TATLOCK, Jr., estant Actuary.CIIARLEd A. PRE LLElt. Audi or.

ticeNan effective means of trainingchiMreii committ. memorv. There.

..-t- iv mor than American pupilsIu the premature attempt to train thereason, we eiunc " iur,w,Mj.knack of facile memorizing must beoriiirtMi parlv. or never : and onceacquired, it facilitates all later acquisitions. American youth learn solittle by heart that this knack is sel-

dom gained. German children earlymemorize so much that afterwardsthey memorize easily. In our Kin-dergarten schools children learnstories, songs and mottoes, as a playmore than a task, and thus developthe verbal memory, which is of greatvalue iu after life. This Germanmethod is gaining the sanction of ourbest teachers, aud tho memorizing ofchoice selections is beginning to berecognized as an important schoolwort. Such memory gems may be-come lasting and priceless treasures,expanding the mind and vitalizingthe heart.

10. The memory may be strength-ened by observing the laws of asso-ciation, such as resemblance and diffeience, caue and effect, proximity Intime and place. My limits forbid thediscussion of this brauch of the sub-ject.

During the progress of the lecturethe learned doctor recounted nu-

merous anecdotes, the recital ofwhich caused considerable merri-ment. The large and fashionableaudience was treated to an innova-tion through a request by the lec-

turer to repeat certain sentences.This was complied with cheerfullyand created not a little amusement.Every one who listened to the lec-

ture agreed that it was "splendid."

NEW EDITIONOF THE

Toifris's1 Guide Through Hawaii,

2500 Copies.

To Be . Issued April 15th.

A second edition of this verypopular band book descriptive ofHawaiian Scenes and Scenery is nowrunning through the press, aod willbe published on cr about April 15.It has ben carefully revised, andportions of it rewritten, bringing itdwn to the pvereut date, making itan indispeobihle hand book.

Besides a full description of eachof the island?, it contains most val-uable information for tourists relat-ive to bteamer travel, rates of passage,hotelf, . weather records, healthresorts, the Government, exports andimports, a brief account . of therevolution of 1895, interesting factsfor ioquiriDg tourists, notes on coffee,sugar, &c, &e , and all informationsought by tourists regarding theseislands. A full index accompaniesit.

The book will be beautifully illus-trated with maps and so ma twenty- -.five full page pictures.

Can be obtained from the News-dealers in HoDolnlu.

Price 75 ct& , per copy.11. M. WHITNEY,Editor and Publisher.

P. O. Box 159 Telephone 75.397 1G39 lm

YOU CAN OWNins

Miracle Workirg Graphophone !

To meet the lonv expressed deu-an- d

for a ei ir pie, iijiht, inexpensive, c.j.t-pa- ct

'taking Ma h'ne for l.xhibition orHome itDtertrtiiunent

Load, ctaraMd bnhiarit in results;either ith horn cr multiple tube.

PEERLESS I PERFECT!Fo simple you can learn to ue it in

five minurr8 . nothing toet oul of order.ltiJ Machines c-- n be B-- en in op ta-tio- u

at llart'3. Hotel ttreet, or addressC. STOtXKL',

3940-2- w Honolulu.

at u? I) nnnni 1? 'CIHONEY

la what we wan, but in crder to ob-tain it, we must give

VAZ.UB FOR VALUEand invite the a:erition of the VEO-PL- K

(tourists especially; to mke athrircuch examination of cur tockand prices, in Sterling SilverwareSouvenir Hpoon Plated Waie,Watches and Diirnonda, NativeJewelry, manufactured in unique desins nd to order

Jacobsou & Pfeiffer.FOKT STKKKT,

Wenner i Co.'d Old Stand .

'3R5S-t- f

(juardiau's Notice.i

IJ1VINH TIMS DAY BEEN Ar--pointed guardian of James Love, a

spendthrift, notice is hereby given that 1

wdl not bo responsible for ai y bii's con-tr- a

td by him or by any person in hisb-h- aK, unless authorizetl by me inwriting. (Sig ) J. ALhKKl MAtiOoN,

Da td uonolula. Febmary 14, lb95.

iJas. W. Uergstrom,r!ANO, PIPK AM) liJED ORGAN I

MJL. I uner. and Kpuiffr.' ... Orders "efi &iinru n'6 Bookstore, will receive pioapt i

attention.

Is little -e than a perfectly educatedwill." Not that ttie will is the onlyfaculty to e trained, hut that itsright rullure includes that of all otherfaculties, but especially of the atten-tion and memory. The Germanmaxim that the normal man is two-thir- ds

will and only one-thir- d intel-lect, illustrates the present teudencyof philosophic thought. No power ismore euceptiahle of dcipliue. Noneneed? more to be energized. Yet oureducational processes to seldom aimto train the will. Mauy things arelone and more are permitted whichImpair its vitality. When other lawsof memory fail, sheer determinationmay firmly rivit facts in mind. Thisvery effjrt luvigorates the will andgives a grateful consciousness of itssupremacy, and illustrates the mottoverisimilar if hyperbolic, "There is nodifficulty to him who wills."

4 Coexistent emotion quicsensmemory. As metals weld best atwhite beat, so the facts or truths arebest remembered which awakenwarmest luterest. The crimlual outrial for his. life remembers every wit

m mi t fness ana every worn. iue ieuuer atact, ekill and resources are evincedbv the interest he awakens and theenthusiasm be Imparts. Youth needinspiration even more than mere instruction, or rather such instructionas will enkindle-zea- l in their worK.Such a cheerful impulse lubricates allthe movements of the mlnu, anaespecially of the memory. Joy andL 'pequicKen this Jacuny, as gimiruand itisi-ouraeeme- mmiress Its lite.The happiest effort are never the pro--

duct of . unimpassionea intellect.Emotion is the celestial fire of poetryand eloquence. But our educatiouaiprocesses often ad-lres- a the intellectouiv. and ignore the sensibilities, inwhich are found the best dynamicsof the mind. Witt. out these forces,the iutedect illustrates a system ofstatics, or rather reiernbles a factory,with no propelling power Its cantsand jennies aud looms all still at thegrave, while the engine is cold butkindle a fire in the furnace beneath,and Ut, a thousand spindles and shut-tles resound with the choral din of in-dustry, ho, kindle a glow iu the seu-sioiiit- ies,

and all the springs of mem-ory are at once in motion.

5. Curiosity, or what Is kindred,love of kuowlede, is an importantfactor Iu training the memory.Though too often iorraaut, It may be-come one of the vital forces in eouca-tlo- n.

It is especially fitted to developattention ami memory. It preparesthe soil and fertilizes tho seeds oftruth. At first a restless iustiuct, itmatures, unier fit culture, into an in-satiable desire aud sometimes becomesa ruling passion. Curiosity should beto the mind what appetite is to thebody, creatiug a hungering fr know-ledge, which is the mind' food. Iu-ste- ad

of surfeit, the fullest suppliescreate a craving for more. Ive ofdi-cove- ry was a strong passion withNewton as love of conquest withNapoleon. Under its inspiration fetudyis a pleasure; without a ta.--k.

G. Classification is one of the leading laws of memory. This principleis disregarded when facts and detailsare learned without order or system.The-min- d thus crammed is like afurniture shop, where are chairs,tables, bureaus and whatnots In confusion. The value of ciaxsiflcatiou is

ustrated by the remark of an imlnent mineralogist in one of our leadingCoIIetfe. who claimed no naturalsuperiority of memory, "Ou mycouch at night I can recall the story,the room, the alcove, the shelf, audthe place on the shelf, of each of thethousands of minerals in our largecabinet." Napoleon, when ques-tioned as to the eciet of his gtasp ofmemory, replied, "Have separatedrawers and. place each class of 'actsin its own drawer." Quaint ThomasFuller says: "Mar-b- a thy notionsinto a haudsome method. One willcarry twice more weight trussed andpack d up iu hunilet!, than when itlies flapping aud hangiug about idsshoulders. Tilings orderly fardled uu-d- er

Iheads are most ortabIe."

One'e progre iu real knowledgedepends not o much on the numberot isolnted facts tie learns, howeverinteresting each may be, as on the ex-tent aud value of their perceived rela-tion;. While the chibl mu-- t legitiwith detail, hi interest both in ob-servation aud reflection grown in pro-portion a be learns that all trutii isrelated. . Many fact or principlesproperly associated are more easilyre.nembered thin a.y one of them, ifentirely lolated. Our new. acquire-ments day by day should be" appr el-

ated mainly accoidiug to the new re-latio- ns

they discloseThe study of nature fosters the

habit of clarification. The child earlylearus that everything i organic orinorganic, and U comprised in thethree fo'd division of animal, veget-able and mineral. . Cuvier's fourfolddivision of . the animal kingdomgreatly helps his memory in naturalhistory. The fact that everything iuthe vegetable kingdom is an iueddegrower or au ouuMe grower facilitateshis first observations in botany. TheFame principle Is now happily appliedin the topical method iu geographyand other studies.

7. Drawing aud map drawing frommemory are now o generally taught,aud with uch manifest gain in train- -inf lhi. fac.lillv. fUK tn rnoiro hut ufsingle word of commendation.

8. Both home aud school readingserve as admirable drills of memorywhere pupils are expeced to giveorally, or iu writing, abstracts oftheir reading. The expectation ofgiving an epitome of the book one isreading will increase hi interest iuhis author, dicipliue hi memory, de-velop his coruniuid of language audfoster a tate for good reading, foronly choice books will be selectedwhen they are to be epitomized bffurothe school or the family. The youthwho has a good book awys at handforod I moment; is forming a habit orinestimable valu- -. This culture ofexpression includes and promotes thatof all other faculties. IVrceptlou,conception, memory mid imagination,the trte and the seimibilities shouldbe trained by aud for expression, forwithout it tuete powers would droopand-- tlecay. 1 he soul, like a lake,grows etugnaut without an outlet.Thought itelf falters where languagefail. . Felicity of expression fivoMel - ar thinking as much as exact logichi-lp- i laugUMge. I

9. The memory should Le early cul-tivated by couitutttiiji: choice elec- -ions of in-- e and uo-tr- v. Tho i;eiu

tnu sratln-re-d will abitlt as taniinu :

of taste and treasures tit thought. IuGermany aud Hwitxtrland this prac- -

developed lu reading and ptellitig,mv thru le r i fared rt-aJil- in reference to ativ objects cf andmemory, and thm the child guius apriceless power which enters into altthe higher nitrations of the mind itinatural cience and hUtry, in portry,the flue arts, and indeed in all uec nation.

To make it a disciplinary study,enelliitir, and indeed every study,should he learned by methods thataccord with the laws of memory andof mental development. Everythingremembered Is retained by some lawof aHKOciation. Ouh cannot alwayscame tbn precise link in the unseenchttin which rivti each item, huthowever it miy elude your gaze, it isonly by some association that faets arefixed iu mind. Now what principleof association should be employed inteaching spelling? Is it the ovular orauricular, or, In pltin Saxon, the eye-lin- k

or ear link? We remember formbetter than sound. Mo amateur inmuiccan in silence recall the variedharmonies of a complex luue as vivid-ly as the artist .remembers the stillmore numerous details of a landscapeor a picture. Yet, until receutly, theauricular associations were mainlyemployed In teaching spelling- - Whenthis stU'ly began, each pupil whis-pered the letter names in the severalwords, making a subdued bedlam, lessconfusing but based ou the sam phil-osophy of memory as that of the Chines hciiooIs, where each body studiesaloud, and he does best who shoutsIoiJiet.

Not only should reading and spell-ing be so taught as to train the mem-ory, hut language in all Its higherranges should be made tubervieut tothe Htiue end. Tills Is oneapplicaf ionof th comprehensive motto of IVreGerard, of Switzerland, "The mothertongue, the great educator." As thevehicle and vesture of thought, language is the grandest product of the

iman mind at once the means animeasure, of its growth, the greatestinstrument of human Investigationand progress. It is the index alike ofindividual and national character.To awaken greater interest in thisgrand culture study, American teach-ers should consider well the tdperiorcharacter of our language and itswealth of expreion. The boy whorealizes how rich a heritage is the.Eiirli?b tongue feels new ze.t in its 3

study. The English language and theEnglish race are to play the mostprominent part iu thecivilizafion nodChritdiitdzatiou of the tiaiious. Thespread of this language and the in-crease of this race in numbers, wealthand influence is one of the marvels ofthe age and nnparalled in history.VJe cannot well exaggerate the disci-plinary value of the right study of ourown language. The. culture of anynation is told by its tongue. The lan-guages of ravages are meager and ng.

To them every new gen-uine word represents an advance incivilization. The enlargement ofone' vocabulary means the enlarge-ment of Ids vange of thought and theacquisitions of new materials ofknowledge.

Aehie from iheee general principles,certain rules apply to the culture ofmemory, and first in the order of time,if not iu importance, Is (raining thesenses. Observation is the basis of i

memory, tiiearanu accurate inrcep- - ithmN are the condition of vivid Hintexact conceptions. Th senses are thepioneers of all knowledge. They opt--n

the roval avenues - to the juvenilemind. Nature la the prime educator.Objects and events the familiarthings surrounding the child, theseare the firt instruments for trainingthe memory, as. well aa the other fac-ulties. To the child all things arenew and attractive He loves naturewith enthusiasm. Her protean formsare cons anlly revealing new beautiesto his wondering paze. He is inclosest ymathy with the externaland material. While his reflectivefaculties are dormant, hi perceptivepowers are acute. . Lie can reasonlittle, hut he t an observe and remem-ber well B"H)ks are yet dry or mean-ingtei- s,

hut the minutiae and raagtdftoeiice of nature nil him with d light.It has teij well said, ''bonks nrothe art of man, but r.ature isthe art of OckI." The direction, seeand then tell, observe and then de-bcrib- e.

Utfgent3 the true metlnni togain facility and felicity of illustra-tion and expression, and develop bothmemory and imagination. Strictlyspeaking, things come before names,and idea before word- -, but practicallythey ho'uld be conjoined, for languageis the racket which holds the ideas.The more fieely these are given out,the more firmly they are bold in. Thechild should be treated as an active aswell a a receptive being, who needsto speak as well as to h-a- r. Re pres-Alo- n

as well us zpre?sion has oftenbeen the result, if not the aim inschool. A dngle fact or truth whichthe child is tdimulated to discover anddescribe is worth a thousand jvhichhe passively receives. Every observa-tion aud description thus made facili-tates others ant imprints the factsdescribed upon the memory.

Fixing the attention is an impor-tant aid in memorizing. The founda-tion of all education, but especially ofmemory, lies In. the command of at-tention. Says Helvetia-- , ' Genius Isnothing hut a continued attention ; "or, as BufTou avs, only a protractedpatience Culver put the samethought in fuller form: "It is theftalltme of. a souud intellect, when

which truly constitutesgenius" The vividness of our recol-lections depends largely Uou the iu-t- e

utne of atteutiou. Such power ofconcentration I characteristic of menof great memories. Pupils should bestimulated to gin this attainment,and to"realize that whatever dissipatestheir atteutiou cheats them out ofpower and progress. Success is as-sured to him. who applies the motto ofHorace, "totos in Wis,' and is'whollyahorhed in hi eulject. This powerof concentrating the thoughts on anysubject at will, and excluding irrele-vant ideas is by no mean an easyattainment, but Ha difficulty Is exeeeded by its importance. Thoughmen liiHVr in natural aptitudes andcapacities, each may bo cultivated.Attention in not, as is often claimed,a mere gift, but a power whicti utedto be developed by patient labor, tillit become a habit. Such n habit canbe forujed only t y ptrrsiateut effortand exercise. i

3. The memory may be lrenc:theued by power of will. ThH is thereiral faculty which largely deter I

mines one's history, and whicti in-- !

ceea dillereutlates men. CkMt-ridg- e I

eald, A perfectly educated character i

EDWARD LYMAN SHKT, General fcolicitor.MEDICAL DIRECTORS.

G DSTAVUS S. WINSTON, M.D. KLI AS J. M A USH; M . DGRANVILLE M. WHITE, Sf.D.

Sealed tenders will ba received at thisoffice until WEDNESDvY, April 3d1S95, for sapplyin the l eper Settlementat Molokai with (1) jrood beef cattle, toweigh not less than 350 pounds net Wheadressed.ard (2) fat beef cattle.tobedeliT-ere- d

at the Leper S,dtleTient at an ave-rage of ninety heads per month, for six-months- ,

ending September 39, 185,The tender for fat beef cattle must be

for the pri e per pound dressed, and thatfor good beef cattle, per head.

Hides and tallow to be the property ofthe Board.

Bids should be marked "Tender forBeef Cattle, Leper Settlement." TheBoard does not bind itself to accept thelowest or any bid.

WILLIAM O. SMITH.Pre ident of the Board of Health.

. 947 1638-4- t

Vacation Notice.The Public Schools will close on FRI

DAY, Apiil I2th, for the Eter Taction and re-ope- n Si ON HAY, April 22.

By order of the Board of Education.

J OUS F. SCOTT,3918-- Gt 1638-- lt Fecretary.

Water Notice.Holders of water privileges, or those

paying water rates, are hereby notifiedthat the hours for irrigation purposes arefroni 7 to 8 oclock a. m. and 5 to 6o'clock P.M.

ANDREW BROWN,frupetintendent of Water Woiks.

Approved J. A Kino,Minister of the Interior.

Honolulu, March 12, 1895.S942-t- f

Chronometer

and

Miisig.

Requiring ekill ul handling, is workwhich we are especially fitted to do.

The attention o' fea Capfains and &U

owners of line Chronometers which theyvalue, is called to oar excellent facili-

ties for patting their instruments inP. RFECT b II APE.

The long experience of our HeadWatch-make- r with the best concerns on

the Coast in just th:s kind cf woik, enables ns to guarantee absolute

SATISFACTION

IN fcVKUY

CASK.

. We spoke casually in our last ' Ad" ofcomplicated work. Yoa'd ought to seethe array of Chronographs and Eepeat-er- s

repaired during the last few weeks.

Surprising where they all came from.

People appreciate this kind of work athome, and it won't be long before we do

every complicated watch in the country.

H. F.WrCHMAN

Fort Street.

Practical GunmakerdirWill do any kind of repairing to Fire-

arms, aho Br.wningand Blueing andrestocking qnal to Factory work. atis-factio- n

guaranteed. Union street, wituC. Stirling. Painter. S90S-- T

Firewood for Sale.AND SPLIT ALGEROBA

Firewood in quantities to tun, at $12per c rd, delivered to any part ot tneci'y limits, free of charge. Apply at yardof California Feed wan-hous- e, next to 0.K. 4 L. Co. depot. Telephone 195.

JACK KEE,3932-S- m Proprietor.

t3T" For particulars apply toS. B.

General Atrent Hawaiian

2 V.

You had hotter get oil the eartli if you don't vvearMoIwBK-Shok- .

Sf-A-LL PRIZE WINNERS.

ny's

Mclnerny,

mxm !

TI li-on

h'A'vVA MN F.KRTILI21NGLand il the tl i known CHrMlCAL

the iowe. 3.'a''k;r ats.I bey uiunoa:ture conjp.'efe il.gh Grade Fertilizers to any special forrama an

giarre the uih'v-:- r. and all that ther firms doPLter-- wonl.i do to wrie the undersigned before ordering anywhere ew.

;j A iJo'.lar favd a dollar made.

yv. F. GOOKE,HrorriHtor and Maaacer Hawaiian Fertilising fJompanr.

Join the Columbia Bicycle (Iub.

Page 3: Watchmaker - eVols at University of Hawaii at Manoa: Home

15'THE PACIFIC COMMERCIAL, ADVEIiTISEK: HONOLULU, MARCH 22. 1895.

BOSSY BURNS' SWEETHEART.PROFESSOR LEONARD'S POWER. GRAND NO M OF w 'J.Tliw Feoplo of Scotland Soon to llr-- t t afetatoe f Highland Mary.

Whru IJ.'i!;bv I:ur::.s, coiland' crc.it- -

Clearance Sale!: c--;t pout, ivi:iKl thos-.- o touching Hues,', Hut still wit!. in rt-.- onj I'.w a. Iw'IilanJ ilary,i ho litt.'o lr. ;u: il that his fame and thi faruo of hi.t laclilt sweetheart would

COMMENCING

TFn'V&? between Ja--)

nanand Chinais still on, although activework in the field has been sus-pended until spring.

Through my agents, I madearrangements before war wasdeclared for an immense stockof goods to be shipped as I re-quired, consequently I can af-

ford to sell at the same lowfigure.

Ex Bentala I received a con

Marcli 1st

Will Print a Perplexing Picture Illus-

trating His Mystic Powers.

It would bo difficult to discovercomUnatinn ofa more perplexing

myBteriou3 eynibola than that con-

tained in en illustration of bis oc-

cult power3 whicn Professor J. G.

Leonard has prepared for publica-

tion in Saturday's Advertiser.The rare mental gifts of th

Professor have been already do-ecrib- ed

in this paper. Those who

have continued an investigation of

his wonderful endowment are only

the more puzzled tho further theypursue their inquiry. The illus-

tration and accompanying eketch

to be published tomorrow is aboutthe best-explanatio- n that can be

given of the Professor's powers,and this is suid in the face of the

AMI CONT1NV1SCI TORmmfeu ij

still live in Sco-tland's bosom uo.ntury after hi- -

voice was hube-- d

in death. Stillless 1)0 dreamedthat near Hin-- 1

a n (1 Mary'.-horr.- o

100 yearLenco a i-- f

his admirers70nld rear astat-ti- n

of hi.s .deadgwecthuart. Tin:work "will Lodene, however,end IX W. Kto-ven?o- n.

It. tj. A.,the f amouHScotch scnlptcr,b&s already de-

signed the grace-fn- l

gtatuo ofMary CainpL-l- l

mmN in V. :',' t i ,'iV-- 30 DAYS !3k

1m 1.1 I i

I Am Overstocked.

signment of good9 comprisingall the latest and freshest de-signs in Dress Goods, Scarfs,Morning fiowns for ladies andgents, JSilk Kimonos, SmokingJackets, Silk Pajamas, Japa-nese and China Ware, Screens,Portieres, Lamo Shades, etc.

. The latest thing in LacquerWare, is the Cherog Lacquermade up in handsome designswhich cannot help to pleasethe most fastidious.

ISsPRemember, I have theleading store for first-cla- ss

Japanese Goods.

THE MONUMKNT.ErWythins, including shelves

and counter are loaded withsroode.

on tho rocks notthat will bo unveiledBAIUIIS VKRSUS LOBSTERS.

t.h. !Y r r tlioujflif Maiutna, are babies green before they're boiled, the

Brooklyn Life.far from thn farmhouse of Anchiuore,whero Highland Mary was born. Thedate of tho ceremony haH been set lorJnlv 21. 1SUG. the centennial anniver

I Must Have Roomsary of tho fjreat poet's death. INTho etatuo will necessarily be some-what of & fanciful character, but thcojtumoat least will bo historically cor

and have marked prices down

to inangnrate a Great Pale.rect. Sculptor Stevenson has raado thofcubject a careful btudy, ttiid the details OFof tho costmuo have Leeu taken iromthe wcrks of David Allen, aa artist

DAI NIPPON,HOTEL STREET, ARINGTON BLOCK.

MRS. J. P. P. COLLACO,Proprietress.

Special Salewell known fur his illustration of Scotch MILLINERY -:- - GOODS !

fact that it only mystifies and be-wildr- e.

But this, as has beenalready noted, is the uaual out-

come of tests of the Profeesor'n ex-

traordinary mind powers.Tho illustration suggests, how-

ever, the sources of occultism. Itis an amalgam of Oriental symbolsand devices strange, weird, oddfigures and designs that were theliterature of a craft, before thoPharaohs were heard of, and longbefore the pyramids were raieed topuzzlo succeeding generations ofTvise men. The symbols of Pro-

fessor Leonard's illustration willnever be read perhaps. They areas inscrutable today as they werein tho far-awa- y past when theyformed tho signs and language oftho magicians who contended withMoses.

Tho results of Professor Leon-

ard's work in tho determination ofphysical troubles is a new featurewhich has increased the mysteries,surrounding his unnamed powerof discerning tho past, present andfuture.

THE WHALER GAYHEAD.

Captain Shorey Telh of His Con-nectio- n

With Consul Mills.

Mr. Editor: The article pub-

lished in the Advertiser, alone,this morning, relative to the at

0

:- - IMPOKTJ3JD-

Pattern Hats and Bonnets !

of some article each day, whichwill be dif played in the window

each day prior to the day of eale.

This will bo a grand lime for

for tho people of Honolulu tosecure bargains.

gSTAMOSKEAO GINGHAMS 14

YARDS FOR $1.WILL BK KXHiniTED ON

lifo at tho tiui3 when "the golden hour.on angel wii-cs- " flow o'er Burns andhis "dcatio." The statuo will 6taud ina very conspicuous position in front. of.tho ruins of the ancient strongholdknown as Dunoon cattle and will boplainly visible from tho Firth cf Clyde.

Burns wa. a iv.an of many loves, andtbero would l-- r. great many morostatues in Scotland it each of tho poet'ssweethearts was immortalized by thesculptor's chisol, but Burn3' lovo forHighland Mary, tho heroine of hi3 pomof that n:ir::o r.ud of tho touching liui-- s

"To Marj' I Heaven," was undoubted-ly ono of the purest and most pathetic

iu bis ill regulated and com-

paratively short lifo.

IN MZMOrtY CF A CHIEF.

Iron Nation V.'a a Onot Fighter Affln!tlio Sioux'. Indian Unemle.

TJjo cravtt of tho i;reat Sioux chief.Iron 2Cation, will boon be marked bya handsome marblo mouutnent. This

--.nusual tribute is to bo paid tho memo-ry of tho dead warrior by his people,who aro raising funds for tho purposeby popular subscription. Iron Na-

tion's gravo is in a cemetery on Medi-

cine creek near Chamberlain, S. D., andnear by stands a church that was con-

structed through his efforts For yearsn.-F-t throughout tho woht tho popular

SATURDAY, MONDAY AND TUESDAY,

MARCH 23d, 25th AND 26th AT

N. S. SACHS',Don't Forget the Date

MARCH ist.

The above is our epeclal brand ofSAFETY MATCH.

Firet-clae- s in quality.Controlled by ourpelven only nd at

prices to suit the times.

Honolulu520 Fort Streettempted scuttling of the whaleship of FashioD, CASTLE & COOKE L'D.

3SS0-.-tf

CrXadies are co-dU- invited to attend. Temp eGayhead (of which vessel 1 ammaster) was a surprise to me, for,

WOVEN WIREalthough I had a knowledge of thefacts, I did not suppose that theubiquitous reporter had obtained

M. G. SILVA, Prop.

MERCHANTS' EXCLMiF,

Corner of Kir.g and Nuuaau Streets.any knowledge thereof. My deal

idea of the red man among whito pcoplohas been expressed by the saying thattho cnlv rrool Indian was a dead In

RubberStampsMadeltoOrder;at theGazetteOffice. 5

ECrviuit received by tho Australia, afresh invoice ofdian, bnthis Etatemeut could not with

justico bo applied to Iron Nation. IjO

was a rood Indian, who always corn- - Enterprise Beer and Oysterssoled peace with the white, and whowas instrumental in preventing trouble HITDDEUST WORDS.on more than ouo occasion.

FOR COCKTAIL".ggTglephone 805. 3S07-- tf

The Hawaiian Gazette Comcastmannfftrtnrft robber stamps.

Iron liation's reputation ar a fight-

ing man rests upon his campaign againsttho Pawnee-- , tho Pcncas, tho Ora alias.md th j Cros Vcntrer, tho enemies oftho Sioux. His father was chief of allthe Sious as tho timo tho tribe split upinto two faction?, tin Upper aad Lower

Tueir NiME is Millions.An alma cf old in me you'il find;

A friend indeed was I,In 6torm and wreck a help bo kind

Of hearts to bd I try.

Woven Wir Mattresses which will not rust; Iron Bda which fold; SpiralSprings for upholsterer' use ; all made rht hero in Honolulu by

J. S. BAILEY,The Woven Wire Man, Hotel Street,

ings with the representative Amer-

ican Consul here, Mr. Mills, havebeen of so unpleasant a nature(with regard to the former incendi-

arism) that I wished the vessel tohave no further notoriety, espec-ially as I found that the diminu-tive under American representa-tive had no wish to forward the in-

terests of my owners or myself.The report published is correct,and, although the parties 'sus-pected of this heinous act of at-

tempted scuttling are judged to bethe same parties charged by mewith incendiarism, having form-erly U3ed his authority of placeand power to prevent trial of thatcharge, I am nolens volens to againtake thcr three objectionable menon board'as part of my crew. Willyou permit me to eay that, as aship master, one who has visitedhere for over a. decade of years, Icannot regard Mr. Mills as favor-able to the interests of Americancitizens, but that lam much in-

debted to manv of vovsr local offi

v

.1

9 flk k 1 T a J ...

The; above MOLINE WHEEL WALKING PLOWS yedow carry in stock and can fill orders for same promptly.They have heen thoroughly tried and the fact, that we navesold SEVENTEEN on the island of Hawaii alone during thepabt two months shows that the planters know a good thingwhen they see it. , rk

,

ON

CH!L0.FESSHOES

ADDCHILI' lKOS NATION.

We still sell tne wen-Know- n xiau creaKer, i, 11, i u16 inch, which is also made by the M0L1NE PLOW COM-

PANY. One of our latest customer says this:'Send me a 16 inch 'HallV Breaker, I have tried other

makes lately and find they do not do the work that yours will.Ernies, owinj; to tho fact that a chieffnilpd to obscrvo tho minnction con BEAUTY

ANDcerning covotin a neighbor's wife.

cials, especially the police officials,for proper assistance and gentle-manly treatment..

Wm. T. SnoREY,Master Whaleship Gayhead.

Honolulu, Mar 21, 1895.mm

FOR LEPER BAND FUND.

Officers of Philadelphia Arrangingfor Illustrated Lecture.

The first proposition to give tan-

gible form to the subscription tothe fund to purchase band instru-ments for the lepers on Molokaicomes from the officio of the

WEARs.We nave an sizes 01 nows irom w au mwoa,

hill and furrow Plows. -

We have the most complete assortment of Tools 01 allkinds for clearing sugar or coffee lands.

Our stock of SHIP CHANDLERY and ROPE has beenh olmnQf. nnvthiner needed.

This chief loved anotner chief s wire,there wero an elopement and a sensationin exclusive Indian society, and as thewifo stealer refused to surrender hidinamorata a civil war resulted betweenthe followers of tho wronged husbandand tho despoiler of his lodge. Iron Na-

tion's father and Iron Nation himselfcast their lot with tho Lower Ernies and

'WAUKEUAN" BARBED WIRE is far ahead of any othertYiol'o- - f rrr if onrl Tjmt will Y& snmrispd TVl th the results. Ifmm.iy i you prefer galvanized or black plain Fence Wire we have a

American man-of-w- ar Philadelphia.heavy siock. ,Captain Cochrane proposes to give

a lecture illustrated by the stereop If you want 3. perfect wire strercner sena 10

E; O. Hall & Son.ticon, the proceeds from which willpo to start the fund. fiWKTTHE TOE WHERE THE WE Ar COPIES..

The captain, during his travelsabout the world, has taken numer-nn- n

nhotosrraDbs. which have been NEW IN CHILDREN'S SHOES shabby gentility

their faction came iut ahead in tho in-

ternecine war.In I80O the Lower Bruleswero raided

by the Gros Ventres, who killed twoBrule women while the warriors wereaway a hunting expedition. Ono oftho women killed was Iron Nation's sif-

ter. Ho at once called a war party to-

gether nnd ftiirtcd on tho trail of thmurderer. Afur a tho enemyfor : iu:;y l:y - Ii-j-u Nation at lastsighted n party cf ilicm. Ho was so en-rap- 'd

that di.l :;ot even pause tonxui:i his .:- I on a runfor tha CiK-j- 'j, : by fourSioux r:ri'. r-- , v.-h-

-i v.r-.- i r.ionnted. Inthe rave :' livriihs Nution cnt- -

stripp d ci:o r.f tho rvjv.iAc d . r r.iTicrsand In t urh ; i rondiiim lit thofinish that ho kiih-- half a dozen of theGrew Ventres ic v;us inado a chief.

prepared for the stereopticon. nts

have been made for the t n-- an wciu inlpratpfl hv wrpona of correct bahits. It ia fil- -

FOi; SALR KYco nneration of C.J. Hedemann,andCantain Cochrane has sent to theCoast for nlates. .Two lectures

wavn paey to e well dreef--- d at the i res nt coi dition of prices at d jroods.

I imiort di ec from Japan ard i uy for cah and conheqr.-nil- y get low fignes.31y preso stock of Silk and Ccton Unrerweir, Towels Ha's and Cape are the

Uteet iniporiation and are equal wihe demand of the most fastidioui.I aifo handle Piovifionp. Mattings 'toilet Soaps, etc. Smph-- of all kinds of

Japanese Goods wlJch T can impoit on phort notice. !

Take home a sample package of my S. T. Tea. I guarantee it to bemtrBt-cla- ta

in every artlular.

will be given, one for tho benefit ofthe Kawaiahao church.

THE MANUFACTURERS' SHOE COMPANY'S

Big Store Shoe.

Join the Columbia Bicycle ClubTAKEMURA

405 KING STKEET,ralriotisin rtoqaJrca I'atlencc.

To render tho Chineso national hymntakes half a day.

Advertiser 75 cent3 a month.Aft Hawaiian Gazctta Oflo.

Page 4: Watchmaker - eVols at University of Hawaii at Manoa: Home

1' 4

i

lilE PACIFIC COM M KKC1AL AX) V KRTISJSK; HONOLULU, IAItCII 22, 1895.

The Pacific Commercial Advertiser Jimiy 5opie5Htlfticn Dcl3.

Jnm V. Morgan.

with previous" figure., it ii trel! to ;

take into consideration the in- - i

crearel uviciitv with which new.- -Exceptlud Every Morning,

Sunday, by ih J2ortjrairee,ti(,e of Intention c - -zrch 0. 2C ). Vto Fmrlwsc and of Sale.

papers are coming to grasp thefocriminal event.. Crime in the far-of- f

corner? of the world is beingferreted out and ppread before theworld as never before. Telegraph

When a man puts his wits GOINCt to waikikiMaU'AIIAN (JAZ2TTK COMPANY

l N. 31 K Merchant tret. f ivTOTics is jii:i:i:uy aiv.:x' l t hat hv Tiriue of a power of tale contained' in a crrtain rjori2e dated 'he 0".th. day oflinen are permeating every nooi

and corner of the country, and telc- - . November. A. I). 1n-- 7. made by V. w. KAIil A- -'

K l of llonomlu. leland of Oahu, to AI.XAiirierT7ALLAC3 R. FARECfGTON, EDITOR. ra r.Ti nnirn nr a wi IT ait fin nil niCLll :

' CoiDbeif"now deceased), recorded in the Office

35

,

1faw ..... 1 - Hf,,;i.,Mr t,f ConveTince in Llbur 1US

together and invents machin-

ery that saves money to thefarmer, the manufacturer orthe planter he is called the foeto labor. The fact that hegives to the world the meansof producing staples at a less

MARCH 22, 1S95FRIDAY,tO eeild OUt tho horrors Of a lynch- - : toUo.nn&367tyiTSrelCmfb9ll. Elizabeth

: Uycroft, her Lu-b-i- id Itobert Kycroft hereininC DartV. while a hundred and j.,iuiD and conei.tln- -. Alexander J.CaraptwII.

I Mart P. Iii.inon Guardian of J. L. I. Jiobin- -

one religious revivals in the eame j 'eon. m. a. Hobinson ami a. o. uobin-o- n.

children, of Sophia Louice Kobln-o- n nee Camp- -

d;Strict WOUld fcu Unnoticed. Again, ' be!l. W. 11. O. irampbeil and JtJin T. Campb-.- lh..nf ftld Alexander Campbell intend to fore- -

at a three-minut- e clip, wTith your horsenosing another fellow's hind wheel, meansall the dust on the road for yourself. If thetop of your bngy is thrown back, as itshould bo, you need a Duster to protect thecloth lining.

We are making Dusters for Buggy Topsnow.

AND PEARLADMIRAL BEARDSLEEHARBOR. 1 a 1L clocecald mortals- - for a b each of the condifinririp tne nasi year, mo touiai

Editorial ignorance of Hawaiian cost, and consequently be-

comes a benefactor of thepolitics and geography has placedmore than one American writer in masses indirectly is not re

0 M ,

condition of tho country has beenfeuch a3 to invite criminal action.With thousands of men looking forbread, murder, suicide and robberyare bound to increaee. It is well

to know what havoc bin and ini-

quity are working; and it i3 al.o a

tions in eald mortgage coniauieu, io vu: iaenonpavment of b.tu the priuclpal and iutcreetnben due. "..,, .

Notice is at.-oner- iiven that all and sing-ular tbe laud-- . tcnei. euU and heredittmenta in.aid mortira.e contained and diicribed will besold at pnblic auction at th- - auction rooro ofJames F. Morgan on Queen tr-e- t in naid Hono-lulu on MONDAY theth d iv of mahcu. a.o.1.9S, at Vi o'clock noon of :id dy.

The property in said mortg-s-o ia thuaTiz.:

All the oue un3iidod third and intercutof the raid 1. W. Kabnakai in all that certainpiece or parcel of land ituate at I'uuepa. Kvuala, I(-l..- of Hawaii, coniiing no area of 19

a ludicrous position and subjectedcognized. That he has takenthis country to not a little misrep

resentation. That a certain amount work from an individual orcertain classes of wage work-ers is sufficient cause for the

of this is not duo to malico of forethought is evidenced by the follow matter of satisfaction to know that

I acr and ,M niuare lainoms hu DeiLe tneTHE HAWAIIAN OAMIAGE M'FG. CO.

InO. to queen street.IS premises dCribd in hoyal ratent No. Tio7,

! L. V. Award No. K8i-iu- d to Hooia .nolonlna,Orleans T.mca- -iDff from the New tbo opposing moral forces aresteadily, advancing. condemnation that is landedaici nharu huvin' been conveyed to the raUl Uof theDemocrat, a leading paper

on his head.VOICE 0? THE PRESS. The man who invented the

. Kxhuakni ly KeamolniU l derl clntt-- MjySrd, and rtcude i iu Liber 10; folio- - 5 ar.d6.

MAlKUPETCAMPREr.L,KI.IX4lti.Ttl' KYCitOrT,KOHKItr HYCliuKT,

l.KX N'1K: J.CAMrCELL,MAHlv 1. nur.IN.StJN,

Curdiun ol J. L I INibineou. M. A.

sugar land implements thatThe revelations made in the dia- -

i. i . .. . e f t : : we sell did that which acts toriea ol tho ex aueen oi ixuwauleave no doubt of the responsibility

kob'n-o;- i anM A. C llobiusou.W. II. C CAMH1KI.L,.lOIIN T. CAMI'I ELL.

llcir of AlcxHUder Caujpbeii.ceased. Morttrasree.of Cleveland and Gre.ham. for the

turbed political condition of the i Termt'a'h. Dcedarl eipense of purcbaer SUFFERERS ASTHMAlatter half of l"' ""en..-.,cu..u- .jp'y '.inlands during the

a certain degree as an offsetto any tariff legislation in theUnited States.

A whole colony of planta-tion laborers could not do inone day what an Avery Stub

1893.. In these records" whichQueen Lil never intended that any

South:We publish In our telegraphic col-

umns a rumor wlilch cuues via Vietoria that Admiral BeardNlee has takenpos-essl- ou of Pearl Harbor ami de-cla- rel

a piotectorate over the Ha-waiian Inlands. Kven in these days,when E gland I parceling out Afiicaand Asia between herself and otherpower, this rumor is incredibly flist,because Pearl Harbor has been cededto the Uuited Btalea for a coaling sta-tion, and secondly, because it 1-- sowell known to Englaud that theUnited States reparda her Interest inHawaii a predominant. If the unex-pe- c

ed ha- - happened, and if the Brit-ish flag has actually been raided overHawaii, the act of h Admiral willbe disowned by the Biltish Cabinetas eoon as It is fQcially informed ofit. Any otbr course would provokethe people of the United States to adangerous extremity.

Had the above appeared in theNew Yoik Herald we should imme

Attorney for Hlr of AIortctet.Honolulu, February 2fih,lS95. lti-L'-

SOTICJ of saieAKE KEQUKSTED TO PKRUBB THK PAMPHLET

ON THK

one ebould see, Gre.ham is ehownto be a warm partisan of Kanakaroyalty, for he actually held a con-

ference with Macfarlaue, who wentto Washington as an emi..ary ofthe deposed queen. When these Lease of Premises Himalya Asthma fiemedydiaries are published, as they willbe some day, we hall have materials for a full-lengt- h portrait of initliI Nilh (timer of Iving ami

Streets, llouoltilu. THK NEWLY DISCOVERED

ble Digger operated by oneman can perform. It saveslabor and consequently coin.In distributing fertilizers everyplantation manager knowsthat it cannot be done by handwithout loss of material. Bythe use of the Avery FertilizerDistributor the material isspread so evenly that there smm

he greatest blunderer who everoccupied the chair of Secretary of

diately infer that James Gordon SPECIFIC for ASTHMA.Bennett had just returned from Hi:, un ier'inn-- i, e.'v AliA-die'iie-

A''tnca ol lin KftHteot Uh sar Li.luito,Europe, and in the usual over--

State. S. F. Call.The clemency which is being

exercised by the Hawaiian Govern-ment toward the revolutionists whoso recently endeavored to

the corrupt monarchy is not at

i a uM fc'l at iu'liu au-tio- at. turning of his editorial force had EJ&' The Pamphlet doesn't cost anything the cure onlyj the auction ro-- i-- f .taujes I4. itorjau on

i Queen atret, i i Honolulu. l.Uiiil ofput the elevator boy in the editor'sOabu on S.iTifKPAY NKXT, the 231

--iA -

I.b

ii -

f

i!

ifi ;

!

3 I

ji? ri( i

ii

no loss whatever, and onechair. It will be a good many mi purnri. incr to ino.e wno .now t iiar .iaii.ii, . o- - ut i i uurn iivj.i t'lcj ... . man with one of these machinestho men' who. eomnoae the Hawaii- - 8,ul ceitam leas- - yt premissyears before the good Yankee Adan administrative .force, however can do as much work asmiral, Beardslee, raises a Britishastonishing it may be to the thought nine without it.flag over Pearl Harbor. It appears

that the Admiral has been to Pearl

Two Dollars.CF"Call on or address the

H0LLISTER DRUG COMPANY

hmitli Kfrcet., in eaU l.o--o!ui- fiv-- n byAnions J. Loi-- s to J.' J Brit i, itafedJune 4, 1891 Tb Iee8. i fo twenty-fiv- eyear- - fiotu abov date I lie rental is $2.per montli, payab'e ruotitlily in fldvaiicn

less and rabid opponents of appliedrepublican principles in the Sand-wich Islands. Blatant demagogues

The results that follow theuse of these implements apHarbor once during his stay here.

He with a party of officers went to The premised iive? a 'rontaue of Go feetand salaried advocates of "renewed Jon King street ami idOl f-- et on eirsith ply as well to the StubbleFord's island pheasant shooting, dishonesty at Honolulu have done sireet. The BuiUiinu. on the prerm-- e

are in gxd order arnl Terms Shovers and Disc Cultivators.remained over night, had a good their utmost to spread abroad lm--cash in U. 8. Gold Co n. Deed t pur--wnat 13tim flnrl r turner! miir--h TreahrA PSSlons aerogaiory lO The following testimonials S3 POUT STREET. HONOLULU.cfipr,'. Fxpenm;.

glXJFor inrti.or partica'aie,is knoan iu Hawaii as the mis apply toby the twenty-fou- r hour3 outing.

A

Vs

f H

regarding the implementssionary element, and have, to someAnd tho Hawaiian flag still holds extent, in benighted communities.

made converts of a few whoseshould be a sufficient guaran-tee of their usefulness.

James b. Morons, or toK W. 3IcGHFNi-V- ,

Assignee of the Eetat. of C. L IHio,a- - Bankrupt. 3946-5- t

Holomua Publishing Company's

minds are childishly receptive andsway over Pearl Harbor. If anAmerican editor doesn't know hisoorn Admiral it is perhaps severeto condemn him for. what he does

unreasoning, but is ditacult to unUuTCBiKsoN Plantation Compan y. 2 a- -derstand how these - haters of prob

albuu, Hawaii. !ity and good government will con-tinue to criticise President Do'o March 1st, 1S95.not know about Hawaii. K. R. IIkndry. Fso . Hawaiian Hard

ware Ctapa'-y- .

DearSir: in answer to yo r le'terCRIME. ON THE INCREASE.and his associates. With the livesof the most active rebels in hihands, President Dole has beenhumane in the extreme, and has

iunuuinv: about t e Avery Stubble D- i- Your CouPLANT

IFOK .--It !

Lnudlord'M SIc of Go'irl

ght.ersand Fertilizer Dihtributor, I wou d

done iust what his friends in theUnited Stated supposed he.woulddo. It may fairly be questioned i

.. .1 1...: : 1 ,1 1, t trniavii fttr Utiit.wiieiuer revoiuuuiusid wouiu i;ivbeen so well treated under the circumstances by any other power as 'OTIC ISN I HHIEP.Y -- !VKN

hliHi'l. mx.11 F I DAY, ihthat Ithe rebels have been by the "mis

8iy tfjat the fact that wo hav just re-ceived the .rcond Muhble Idpger KpeaRSfor itne'f. We have da: over lour htm-dr- ef

hcres of rattoon Ftoof. aud consideit will b a yreat b'iefit

Tno Fertilizer Ditjtr.but ?r ia a goodthing an t ha eff ctel a material pavingof Ubor in the application of Fertilizerand applies it better than can be doneby hand.

These machines are very firti pie andwell const- - tlcte.i and we have bad notrouble with the working of them ardwe consider them one of the most ust-fu- llabor . avii g machines that can be u.edon a plantation.

Yours Truly,G C. Hkwitt,

. Manager H S. P. Co.

29th da-- o Mar, h. ls)", at J2 o Jocknton, nt 'he Thomas' Blocic on King

sionary children" who now controlthe affairs of the Islands fromHonolulu Washington Star. .ireet in u .iioumi, in W rr-tni- -e noA

is troublesome to you, annoys

your friends, and will ulti-

mately lead jou to an early

g.ave if not checked in time.

Sufferers with coughs and

colds will find

Ofonpi-- by thn M.j1 gmiu l'ab iihine(Jompatty, ct-l- l lh 1'Jaut of Ujh HolomUa

In the office of the ChicagoTribune eits a veteran editor whoseonly duty is to go through thepapers day by day and from themcompilo a record of the criminalevents of the Uuited States. Hisbooks for the year just passedmake excellent material for tbepessimist who each 3'ear sets theworld one step nearer the verge, ofmoral and intellectual ruin. Ac-

cording to the statement publishedrecently, the year 1894 is the dark-est on record, Iynchicgs aloneshowing a falling off from previousyears. There were 190 personskilled by lynchers during 1894, 134of the victims being negroes and 54whites. Tbe highest record oftfcese terriblo outrages was in 1892when the number reached 235. As

rublishin lompjny, including nilpiea-e- a, type, tafe-,pa- i er, liruproof safe,and all and .insular the .0 8, chattelsFire, Life and Marine Insurance

New York Lire loioraoee Company,

ani ellects U tne paid Ii roLnua Publir-h-in- g

Company, ihe sums avini he.nheretofore distrained bv me for rent.

K. B. THOMAS,By his Agent S C. All-n- .

Dated Honolulu, Dccerabt-- r 4:h, 1S94

Assets $l5o,45J,48.73.London anil Lancnahlr Insaranc Coru- -pnj.

As.efs $2,641,029. U. S Branch.Jas. F. Morgan, ENOHartford Tlr Iinraori Company, COUGH

REMEDYAsmu $7,.7S,082.3943 1637-r- d AUCTIONEER.I'alatlna Iniaranee Company,

Assets 2 255,974 U. 8. Dranch.Thame and Mrr Marina Inanranra

Prize Exhibition of Land Shells,

Oxomka .crAK Compact,Papaicou, Hawaii, Febrnary i'o, 1895 )Mr John A. cott, Wainaka. Hawaii.

Dear ir : -- The Onomea -- Ujjar Com-pany has now in.use three' of the '.tabbleDiggers.

1 think these machines are indispen-sable for the proper cuhiration ofratroons.

We have never had an implement thatwould so thorougbly loosen the eartharound the stools, and put the soil in-- Uch condition tnat the air, moisture andfertilizer woti'd so readily find access tothe fine roots of the cane and the roilaround them.

1 am glnd to testify to th merits ofthes tools The -- ngar Land Difc Cul-tivators arrived too late fur mu h u?e inthe cuitiva'io i of the lat younv plant

Company.AsetB.$6,124 C57.

J. M. DOWSETT,General Agent for the Hawaiian leland

394S lm

A NYI have

KESIDhNTr.01

Wilt) MAYland .hell-- .

Tfie laid American Hovelan 1 ratuions, but I elieve thev will

an excellent medicine.

"I want another bottle of

Eno's Cough Kemedy, said acustomer. I find it gives me

the most relief when I hare acough."

It has cured others; it will

curejou. Why not try a bottle?

Children take it readily.

prove to b very n-ef- ul and Ubor savingimplements in districts where cane isra:srd without irrigation.

Yours Trnlv,Wk V. G odalk.uaomea Kuar Company.

Wh have secured thoeeivieea of haw,the lightning (fJo.dire Arit."whowill opin in our window FRIDAYMOKN1NG. March 22 J. B east i.is andBracelets of h latest esiirns mmla rr

wincn iney wcuui ro wtiPn to put onpublic exhibition Pre invited fo corres-pond ith Prof V. T. Br gh rn, Cnratorof the B. P. Bihhop ilr.seuin. It is pro-poe- ed

to offer pi ires for the best uo; lec-tions. The co ledioii- - will be displayedin the central tables of the Mn.run An-nex Every poss.ble facility will bft d

for naming and arranging tt)e.hells. Tbe Musenzn will be opeu to tliepublic on Fii!as and Saiurdavs, andthe collections will be on exhibition forthree weeks, beginning May 10.

39Q IBtl-l- m '

J B. C.

Bohemian Beer !

might be expected the SouthernStates show by far the largestnumber, the total beiDg 166 against24 in tbe North.

For suicides, the figures run asfollows:' For 1889, 2224; 1S90,2640; 1891, 3331; 1S92, 3860;1893, 4460; 1894, 4912. Thecauses are : despondency, nearlyone half ; insane, 457 ; liquor, 218 ;ill-healt- h, 270; domestic infelicity,241; disappointed love, 232; busi-ness looses, "122; unknown, the re-

mainder, 1310. The amount ofmoney stolen by embezzlers, de-

faulters, etc., is the highest in. thehistory of the country, reaching$25,234,112, the highest previousrecord being twenty-tw- o "mil-lions in 1884. The increasein tbe number of murdersis somewhat startling, reaching forthe year 9800, which is fifty percent, higher than the year previou..The total destruction of life in the.United States durirg 1S94 wo.14,712.

This is certainly a gruesome dis-

play of figures, but, in comparing

HAKiLir, IfAwxn. Febrnarv I6.1P95.

order hil yoa. wait-- A Breast Pin madeto order in threw minutes See ihi. no-vo t and uo uot fort onr no- - line ofgoods.

M. G STTA'A,S913-l- w Temi.le of Fashion.

Assignee's Notice.

Ma h. K. Hekdrv, PreMdent nl Mana-ger Hawa in Hardware Compauv,Honolulu, Oahn.

Wo us; tfe Averv !tnble Dier.Fer-tihze- rDistributor and Can Cultivator.

I hey save I tbor and do the work claimedfor them. The Mu b!e Digger t connid- -r a particularly good implement'

Yours Truly,tKO. 1 os,

Manayer llakalau P.'anUtion Company.

PROM TH K THE HOBEON DEUG CO.UK U N D fc" R I N K I , THE a.S- -1 tinto in bankrooU-- v cf the Efltatp

cf W H Sudth, jiive n ti. e that he has SELL IT.iirnricin Brewing Ctmpauy, Fl. Lcnis

C7 For sa!e by

n. w. schmidt & soxsmetiinttie Circuit Court, First Ci.cnit,r.'awaiian Jsla-.d-- , hit accounts as 6uchAHnee, and has asked lor a Fettlemmtof tbe samo and a cii hrgr, and thatl ea inr on the nam as tieen set forlUEttDA Y, Aprh 9, 1-- 95, at 10 o'clockA v ALFHEn W. CAKTER.Asigr,e cf tbe Etate cf W. II Smith.

Bankrupt. . 8947-t- d

S43- - lw The .lawdiiac Hsrdsaw Co. Ltd.Oppalta Kfw.cJr-a- a Kloc,The Daily Advertiser 75 cento a

month. OUT KOKT

Page 5: Watchmaker - eVols at University of Hawaii at Manoa: Home

THIS PACIFIC COSnrEIJCIAL ADVERTISER: HONOLULU, MARCH 23, 1895.

Ladies Column. mm istott,IMPORTER AND DEALER IX

FEVER OF GA3IBLING.

KATE JORDAN'S l"PrlESS!ON3 CF THEMONTE CARLO CASINO.

l vlf-- s . dill

l:un jii:o moire antique, saCJo talis at necxand on tho boulfant sleeves and finishedat throat and waist with knots of soft yel-low lace and violets.

All Attention Iteat Upon the Game.Among the strollers these world known

people attract all tho att tion. Amongtho players no thought enters but thegame. Huspeneo hangs liko o mist in thostifling, dusty air.

In the Casino at Monte Carlo there is noflirtation. Young girls of raio beauty,quietly gowned, stray from their friendsand make their Independent way aroundthe rooms unmarked. No wicked French-man follows them; no Llaso, monocledBritisher marks them for his own. Whereshowers of gold chango hands with everyheart beat and ' the latest importationfrom the demimondo of Paris struts pastin blazing triumph, tho young girl ofmodest mien, no matter how pretty, isleft serenely to her own devices.

And how does it feci to play at MonteCarlo? To tho ungated visitor who ven-tures 20 franc3 as a new experience Itseems very much liko a Joke and has thenovelty, the suspense of one's first swim-ming lesson.

A 5 franc piece Is dallied In the finger.What to place it on? Tho system is easilylearned. Placing money on tho line be- -

Bj VggQrveTrt&l will provWheir grir. T!TlL iv

i r WRINKLED BEAUTIES SHOULDUse Iola Montez Cremk. Skin. Food and Tissue Builder. Doesnot cover, but heals a&d cures blemishes of the skin. Makes thetissues firm and builds up the worn-o- ut muscle fibers, and makesthem olump. Lowest in price and best in value. 75 cents lakqb pot.

Mbs. Harrison's Face Blbach. Cares most aggravated casesof Freckles, Blackheads, Flesh Worms, Sunburn, Ballownesa, and

Moih Patches. Quick in action and permanent in effects. Fsick $1.Mbs. IIakbison's Face Powder. Pure adhesive and positively invisible.

Three shades -- wlme, flesh, biunette. "Will not clog the pores, stays on all day.Price 50 cents.

Mbs. Harrison's Hair Vigor. Stops Falling Hair in one or two applications.Prevents Gray Hair and causes rich and luxuriant growth of Hair to grow on baldheads. Cases of ears standing ep cially invited to a trial. Price $1.

Mrs. Harrison's-Hai- r Bestorer. Only four to ten days required to restorehair to its natural color Is n t a dye or bleach. No sediment cr stickiness. Coloris permanen' when onco jour hair is restored to its natEral shade. Hair becomesglossy and clean. Price $1.

Mrs. Harrison's Frizz. For keeping tho hair in coils a week at a time; notsticky; don't lave a wtiite deposit on the hair. .Price 50 cents.

SIRS, NETTIE HARRISON, America's Beauty Doctor.26 Geary Ptreet. San FrsncUcn, Cal

gCT For pale by HOLLIhTER DRPG COMPANY, 523 Fort Street. Honolulu.XDCn Any lady call at Hellister Dmg Company will be given a Lady's Journal

containing a Beauty Lecture wiitten hy Mrs. Nettie Harrison.

Give the Baby

FOR AND

INFANTSitolNVALIDS.

BENSON, SMITH & CO.,Role AsaniM for tYif Itlntid.A.

H. E. McINTYRE & BRO.,EAST CORNER FORT AMD KING STREETS

IMrORTIchs A.SU rKALKJlS" in

Groceries, Provisions and Eeed.

fluttering: Like .oilo About tb I'lame.A Hell of l'nhoIin4 WItu a ll)cH Sct-tin- g

Ha fi iliomit Toilet and FaniouH

Women LoitorlDff Over the Green Cloth.4

SjH.ei:il Corrcspon'luuce. J

IToTELUn I'ai:is, Monto Carlo, Feb. is.In tho mcrr.ln after your coffee arri

rolls and little corkscrews of unsaltod Li.tter you qo Into tho sunlight and lift yourface to tliecarcssiEf breath of Cowers fromthe gardens along the way and from all ofnature's sweets hidden on thoso hip.watchful, purple hiJIa rising lite citadelabovo this principality that has no dupli-cate In the whole world. Oranges nndroses mix on tho villa walls till you feelIn a hazo nnd ask If this bo rea ly o day InFebruary. Monte Carlo Is a bower of flow-em- ,

n veritable paradise, or bo It seemsuntil you come out cn tho plaz.i thatleads to tho Casino.

16 Is crowded, it Is filled with murmur-ing voices, and a fever Boraeliow commanlcates itself to you. Tho doors of the beautiful gambling hr.ue aro still closed, furit lacks CO minutes of 11, tho openirv;hour. You know you aro surrounded 1 y

tho serious gamblers who sock Monte Carloas other of well ordered fouI go Into abusiness venture-- . Nowhero among th!ar'rowd is then? any lazy lordiing in M;archof excitement. lie will f.troll In lutt r.wli'jn tho room.? nrefull. .Nowhcrols thereuny c uriosity r like myself. A tr rr ii.lo earnestness, nervousness, speculation,-- peak from every eye.

TJio Game Tlrglna.In n twinkling, after tho doors ,;::

;vcry scat at tho dozen and mor upr!.!ymounted green talile.s Is taken, and stand!ng circles are soon formed. Tho croupier:-- ,

four at each table take their plat.-- ,and tho play begins. The rouletto wheelbuzz, tho ball of fate leaps In its circle, a!lover tlo numbered fpaccs tho gold and eilvcr are staked, and every eyo is fastenedon tho diziiy whirring wheel.

"What num'.jcr will l!io ball fall into?""What color wjll tho number bo ou?"

TJieso aro the thought.-- in every mind. 1

go from t.iblo to table. One Englishmanloses $700 in half an hour and doesn'twink an cjclrh. An old grnndam, un-

doubtedly French, who from the wicked-ly lined faco seems winding up a bad 1 f

to a consistent clos, wins L'O franc picestothotunoof $300 nnd rakes them withrlcvf nails Into an antiquated purso.

Uy and by the 'swells" stroll In. And.this is whero you sen tho 6 wells at tbitea son from every quarter of t.'ie gUA- -.

In tho moving tableau, whero tho .ir

talncd sunlight mixes with green li'. ifrom tho tables, thcro arc imperial, H n u

und royal high ncssts galore, rich A merim ?

and oven potential dignitaries from Asialilands. They play. Ho do their wives ai dlisters. .So do the jeweled and routedwomen of the 4,half world," who -- makeMonto Carlo a rallying ground. So doe?(he young English girl, who comes inwith her florid papa, and who lau-rl- :

musically when sho wins, and stamps hriby no means tiny foot when sho doc?:j'ttk does the young French girl of tho middie class, who .follows In the wake of epertly grandmother. Everybody plays.

A queer placo this Monte Carlo a plan,of moving contrasts, a little hell of unholicess in a jewcllike setting that seems

by heaven.Come from this first "table i hero the

play lags a little and stroll down the rooi.i.'hm-lit- i man there, wearing a moooch.fhoeo face is high bred and fatigued, who

leans over tho shoulder of a pretty V.ur.lish woman amusedly watching her in-genuous play where have you scon himbefore? That Is England's foremost com-poser, ir Arthur Sullivan. Who knowjwhat new aria to delight millions may notbe born of this rhythmic clinking of gMas the croupiers rako in tho logics n:ulfling out the gains?

The' i:rapre4 of Austria.A woman sweeps past, one of a party vl

four, llcr cjch are proud, her Up hoftlrscornful. .It la evident sho takes but npassing Interest in tho scene. "Horn tocommand" speaks from her every ccsypoAO, but when she smilc3 her faco lightsInto sympathetic sweetness. Wo need notxnako any surmises as to her identity ti;whisper has gono around It is tho c ::jprrss of Austria.

How clo?o sho is to that young, dainty,exquisitely gowned woman, tho center c fa group of men! Is e an empress too?Hbs looks it. Perfectly groomed, her paleface untouched by cosmctique, her bearingmodest, reflnvd, her gown and hat of rich,slmplo ruby velvet, sho seems born to athrone, nnd yct the measureless distant obetween tho status of tho two women, fortbo latter Is tho well known "Nellie" whohelped an American capitalist to get ridof Forno of his millions whllo in Paris lastfall! Thcro oro many liko her here; but,unllko her, most of them wear their his-tories on their faces. Chief among thocelebrities, resplendent, wealthy nnd look-ing ten years younger than when shedanced at tho Eden Musee in New York,Is la belle Otero. She is gambling heavily,playing a big game, and, it is said, carriento her hotel at least from 5,000 francs toEO.000 In winnings every night. Her

A1 1

Si

THE CASIXab.auty is more sparkling and vivaciousthan it used to be; ber eyes. Instead of be-

ing languid, are now. of feverish bright-ness, and instead of her pale, camellia skinsho has bought herself somewhere n pinkand white complexion.

Without doubt sho is tho most talked ofwoman in Monte Carlo. - It would take npage to describe the dozen toilets I havoeen upon her. Her Eumptuousnesa Is

fairly dazzling. Perhaps 1 may describeone gown and the cloak Into which shesinks when the last table is deserted: APaquin 6klrt of the softest, thickest blacksatin, a high necked bodice of butter col-

ored satin, with draping of real ClunyJaco, and long lines of sparkling bullionarranged serpentwlso on the botom. The

.sleeves are enormous' puffs to the elbow,tho rest of tho nrm covered by white suedegloves, from whoso wrinkles jeweled brace-lets wink with every gesture. From thewaist to tho high, crushed collar are a linoof sapphires, like great 6tuds, each as largoas a half dollar, and surrounded with acircle of diamonds. Tho passionate Span-ish face Is shaded by a black "picture"hat of uniquely monstrous size laden withsoft falling plumes. The long cloak is ofblack Tel vet covered with butterflies Iniridescent fcanules. lined throughout with

LOOK BEFOBE YOU LEAP.When you go out shopping, consider;think of tho money in your pocket,

and take account of the many storeswhoso various attractions are laidbefore you.

There is X, with temptations inthe form of a pretty show; there is

Y, whose wiles aro innumerable; andZ, who" says, he is the man for yourmoney.

PLEASE PAUSE !

And remember your pocket is con-

cerned.STOP AND THINK !

Would it not bo well to po whero

for forty years HONEST GOODS

and HONEST PRICES go hand inhand.

Beauty and durability, instead of

mere show and display, is the virtue

of good3 handled by us.To sell at a Email Profit in every

Department is tho fundamental law

of cur house; to carry tho best and

newest good3 tho markets, of theworld afford is our constant aim.

Among the many new things

found on our counters this week, wo

wish to call your especial attentionto what is generally known as

TABLE FELT,TABLE FELT,

TABLE FELT,though it is continually used forfancy work. We have an extra fine

Jineof thi3 cloth in all colors.EIDERDOWN,

EIDERDOWN,EIDERDOWN.

To look at it is to buy it, soft as

velvet, j'ust the thiug for Capes orChildren's Jacketa. We havo it inblue, pink, and cream. You will

want it in all these colors after onco

looking at it.

B. BALERS & OU.

SOOTETTE !

t4The best Corset in theworld for the money.

tComo and

look at the m,

take them: iiome,try" tiij23i ox!

And return them if theydon't suit you.

These Corsets are made instyle to fit arid suit every-body and their purses.

They are in forty-seve- n dif-

ferent styles and range inprice from $1 to $5 per pair.

Ask to see the Extra Long-Wai- st

Sonnktte for $2.25.They can't bo beaten.

If you can't get Corsets longenough, remember you can getthe "Sonnette" with mxhooks.

Should you want a CorsetWlch REAL WHALE getthe "SONNETTE."

Anyway come in arid seethem.

J. J. EGAN.Sole Agent for Hawaiian

Islands.3Sl9-t- f

H 1ST ACE A Cb..

WOOD AND COALAlso White and Black Sand which we

rlll cell at tho very lowest market rates.

7Bjix Txl&tbohi No. 414,

CCMcTTJAt TaurHOJCJi No. 414.S49S-l-y

New and Frefh Goovls received by every packet from California, Eastern States,and Euroi ean Markets.

1 Standard crades of canned Vegetables, Fruits and Fish.-- Goods delivered to any part of the city. Satisiacticn guaranteed.Island trade solicited.

P. O BOX 145.

SteeI and Iron Karnes

.NTOTKS AND KIXTUKE9,

House Keeping GoodsAND

LCitelien Utensils,AGATE WARE, RUBBER HOSE

VUMPS, ETC., ETC.,

Plumbing, Tin, CopperAND

Sheet Iron Work.

D1M0N1) BLOCKKIN KTREKP.

' G. WEST,Cofflmission -:- - Merchant

IHPORTKR ANI UEALKS IN

Carriage 3IaterialsOI Every Peseriptiou li cut-i-

OAK, ASH, HICKORYAND

WHITE WOOD LUMBER,Spokep, all sizes; Savern Wheels,Wood Hub Wheels, Sawed Fflloee'.Bent Rims from 1 to '2 inches,Dump Cart Simfts, Wagoa Poles,Double-tree- s, Wngle-frefB,- "

Wagon and Cart Hubs, all eizea ;

AND A t L'LL AKSOKTKENT OF

Trimmers MaterialsCarriage TTardware, Norway Iron,and Steel Tires.

llavine a long experience in theCarriage Business, 1 am prepared to sup-ply Carriage Builders, Plantations, etc.,with first class materials, personallyselected, at the very lowest cash prices

CA11 Island orders will receiveprompt attention.

MASONIC BLOCK,Corner AUkes and Hotel Street.

zyTelephono No. 350. 3378-t- f

Japanese.Goods.

ilk Ire tl,otton DreM Oood.

--.fut'c silk Sblrt,Orut'i Cotton Shirts,Geiit'a Fancy Crep Slilrtn.Straw anrl Ftlt llats,finbrellas and Faraaola,Taney ScreeDa, IToalery,

IIamlherbJef and Neektles,

For loth ladies aud gentlemen.

Watch our advertiteroenl for newgocnls arriving by every e'eanier.

HOTEL fcTRr' KT.

Next to Peck's Cominij-s:or- i lujiis312f--tf

NrsUi's Milk Food for Infants has, during 25years, grown in favor with both doctor andmothers throughout the world, and is now un-questionably not only the best substitute formothers' milV, but the food which agrees withthe largest percentage of infants. It givesstrength and stamina to resist the weakeningeffects of hot weather, and has saved the lives ofthousands of infants. To any mother sendingher address, and mentioning this paper, we willsend samples and description of Pestle's Food.Thoa Leemlng 8c Co., Sola Agts. S M array St., N. T.

The Agenoy forKESTLE'S MILK FOOD

IS WITH TJIS

Hollister Dro. Company, Limited

523 Fort Street, Honolulu, H. 1.

Eoyal Insurance Co.,OF LIVERPOOL.

" THE LiAKG KST IN THE WOKLD."

Aets January i at, 1892, - 1 42,432,1 74.00

SCENE IN TI1K Ai:i)F.X.

tween two numbers gives yon a ofwinning 16 times your stake on clth-T- :

placing it between four iium! r, elgb-- t

times your stako on any one of thorn; Utween six iiuihImts, ivo times your rfa!..risking it nil on one mnnhrr, tin.your stake; putting it all ? zoro. '.;times your stake. Betting cn color, ror black, yen double j:i:r str.ko ir y: t

win. Betting on place, Ud-i- r.r ;l-18- ,

you also double it.How It Feci tr Win.

And how does it feci to win at .MontrCarlo? To tho ti Dsn ted visiter, sho of

mind, the sensation gees to 1 1 j .

head liko wine. What! Il;uyuur ioirane.brought you that Uttlo heap of gold h.causo you were fortunate enough to plac-- t

it on. 4? You gasp, tho croupier rakes iiin for you, you seize ir, you put 0 francson next time and again you win. A senseof power steals over you, tho fascinationof gambling seizes ycu. Why not le bravtand conquer for:un;? You do. You winagain and again. Your netted purso 13

full of bright, louis d'or. AJi! If you onlywould stop in time. If you would onlyturn before your luck turns! But this Isjust where-gamblin- is a delusion and asnare. Few are they who do not attempttoo much and loiter too long by tho greentable, whero the cry of the croupier comeslike a lullaby:

'Mcswloiirs, faltcs vos jeux, &'ll vousplait!"

And iiow.dw s l to Io.im at McutCarlo? Thcro are n nsatlon3 that cannotbo described! . Kate Jordan.

AN IMPORTANT WORK.

The. Oariu; Men Who Cialdo Ship IntoPort.

Special Corrrrondc-uco- . J

BOSTON, Feb. 25. Tho ecvero stormsthat. have recently swept across the seashavo drawn especial attention to a mosthardy class of men tbo pilots. It can un-doubtedly be stated with perfect truth thatnowhere else iu tho world i3 there a morodaring, more successful set of pilots thanthoso who guido tho ships of the worldInto the ports ulong tho eastern coast ofNorth America.

Though not ail born in America, thesemen uro all Americans in tho best senboof tho term. They are necessarily sailorsof exceptional ability, they aro sober Ir.their habits, and they lovo this country,whether it bo theirs by birth or adoption.A largo proportion of them nro natives ofMaine, that stato of rockbound cou?twhich has furnl?-lc-d so many stanch ship.and so many skilled mariners to navlga:Mthem.

It is not an easy thing to win tho rightto servo as an Atlantic coast pilot. '1 he-youn-

man who wishes to pass his life attbo business cf guiding ships safely intothis port or tho port cf New York mniiterve a long novitiate. At New York ho

must first bo an npprcntlco for two years,lifter which, if he shows especial ability,he may bo promoted to the post of bont-keepe- r.

After ho has been a boatkecperfor flvo years continuously ho may taketbo pilot's examination, nnd if he passthat ho may then net as pilot on shipswhich draw no moro than 18 feet of water

this is, if thcro 13 a vacancy, but nototherwise. After ho has 6howu his com la-tency by tho successful piloting of vcsikjIsof lighter draft for one year he may re-

ceive a full license. Sometimes tho wouldbe pilot has to wait years before ho can ro-cel- vo

his ccrtliicate, for only one pilot canenter the service from tho same boat Infive years, nnd no one can leavo one boatfor another without special permissionfrom tbo commissioners.

If thcro is a prettier sight in tho worldthan .that presented by tho fleet of pilot-boa- ts

off tho poits of Boston and NewYork, tho writer has yet to behold It. Tholittle vessola are sclooner rigged, withhulls of graceful, taper build, and theirwblto Balis contrast exquisitely againsttho dark green of tbo waves, ibecn fromthe deck of an incoming 6tcamcr, they ap-pear to its passengers like the harbingersof tbo approaching end of tho voyage, andne they riso on the crests of the billows thered of their bottoms often shows distinct-ly, presenting a note of lively color thatseems to perfect the picture.

Tho dangers to which thepllotboat menare exposed are manifold, ono of the mostnotable being that of being run down atnight or when becalmed and in a fog. Instormy weather the pilot takes his lifo inhis bauds whenever he boards a ship, andwhen tho winds and the waves are hjghthere are almost the dangers of the lcoshore. But, though many pilots loso lifeby accident, moro perhaps are carried oilby pneumonia, for notwithstanding theirhardiness this dread disease carries offnumbers of them. Within tbrvo weeks ofJanuary this year there wcro eight deathsfrom this cause among tho little band ofpilots whoso bcvidquarters nro "at NewYork. F. B. Lewis.

Tbo Hawaiian Gazette Compajtt.nnFfiotnrn nKQf atomna lf all

descriptions.

A Perfect Nutrimentfor growing Children.Convalescents,

consumptives,Dyspeptics,

and tho Aced, andin Acate Illnenii andall Wastins Diseaaes.

THE

Best Foodfor Hand-fe- d Infants.

OUR BOOK for the instructionof mothers, "The Card and Feed-in- of

Infants,"wUl be mailedreto any address, upon roquesL

DOLIBER-GOODAL- E COmBOSTON, MASS., U. 8. A.

TELEPHONE NO. 92.

WALKER,Agrent for Hawaiian Tslfinds.

G BELL 403.

Cents per Month

tZTFirc risa,s on all Einaa of inumble property tafeon at Ourrenl ratesby

J. S.3140-l- m

ENTEEPEISE PLANING MILLPETER HIGH & CO - - - Propristors.

OFFICE A?r MIIJLi:Alakea and Eicharda near Queen Street, Honolulu, XX. 1

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

TURNED AND SAWED WORK.o

7"FTompt attention to all orders.

TELEPHON Kfi :MUTT7AL IK.

EVERYBODY KNOWSGeo. W. Lincoln

Is Burned Out, but Still Prepared toSuperintend or Build Anything froma One-roome- d House to a NewCity Hall.

All Orders Left With John Nott, KingStreet, Will be promptly Attended to.

Daily Advertiser, 75

Page 6: Watchmaker - eVols at University of Hawaii at Manoa: Home

.1

rp tt v PACrFIC COMMERCIAL. AD V fc-- it i ic-is- : nuiNULUhU, 3IAKCU 22. 1S95.

CORNER ISTTJTJW.N'TJ

CASTLE & COOKE YOKOHAMABAZAAR,

-- AN'D-THEEE'S

ONLYIlOTKIi STREETS.

TO CAMP AT THURSTON COVE,

Sharpshooters' Company Will Huntand Fish for a Week.

der the new management of thehotel. The new chef, Mr. Meyer,caters favorably to public taste andthe social features are enjoyed bymany outside the regular RUtsts.The Quintette club will furnishmuic during the dinner and fordancing in the lanai and parlorsduring the evening.

LIMITED,

ONE IMPOETERS,No Military ConTeotlonallty will be Al-

lowed Shipload of KdlMes.etc. Required.

IMPORTERS AND DE LERvS IN

Japanese Silk and Cotton Dress Goods !

Kiraonoa, Fcarfs, Shawls, Bamboo Parlor Screens, from $2 up and Portieres, Fans,Lacquer, Porcelain and China Ware, Gents' Furnishings, consisting of Silk, Cottonand Crape hirts, bilk and Cotton Hosp, Neckwear, etc., etc.

S7-V-Ve are the cheap st and best house in Honolulu for Japanese Gooda.Call and we will convince you with prices.

o

A Diet of Blood. torThe regular meeting of the Sharp The use of blood a3 a curative profit made by US, OS we buy BUILDERS HARDWARE

agent is said to be on the increase direcfc frQm the mater, where- -shooters' Company, held in theDrill Shed last night, wa3 an in-

teresting one. After soma routineMURATA & CO., Proprietors.

--AND-

busineea had been disposed of, tho JUST RECEIVEDby we save YOU the middle-man's profit. If you have beentold otherwise, call and beconvinced.

Our special announcementto you is that by the Gaelic

GrEJN ERAL

in ran?, anu, ceriainiy, i a""that persons still resort to the abat-toir- e

every morning to partake ofthis nauseous form of so-calle- d

cure. Although French doctors donot often prescribe these forms oftreatment, "blood-baths- " are notinfrequently used, and certain pa-

tent medicines are sold under thename of "poudre de sang," andother titles.

Merchandisewe have received a fine assort-ment of Dress Goods, Gents'Furnishing?, Neckwear andJapanese Jewelry consisting of

1'lantaticm Kipilie. HEN RT CLAY AID

BOCK & COMPANYSteel rlow.

question of tho company's proposedouting was taken up. It was de-

cided that the company would gointo camp for a week at Ilanauma

better known as Thurston Covebeyond Koko Head, whero all thorequisites aro to bo found for theenjoyment of outdoor life. Thatplace is well known as a fishingresort, having been used as suchby a number of Honolulu people.Besides, quantities of small gameare found in the locality.

The party will leave on May 4th,and return on the 12th, going bysteamer to the place selected.Thirty-fiv- e members have alreadysignified their intention of goingout. Plenty of funds are availablefor the purchase of the varied col

Work withmade expressly for Islandextra Part?.

OANE KNIVES.

Scarf Pins in new and uniquedesigns for both ladies andgents.

Straw Hats,

. Straw Hats,

Straw Hats.

Agricnltoral Implements ! Claoioe Havana CigarsCAKPKNTEKS', KLACKSSIITJIH

Ifr. Jiorman 1). TaxingOtsdaTra, N. Y. AND

A BARGAIN,

lection to be taken along, ana thecompany expect to thoroughly en-

joy this their first camp out.The following committees were

appointed in connection with theouting:

Transportation: C. J. Camp-bell, A. W. Keech and James L.McLean. ,

Finance: F. S. Dodge, M. N.Sanders and Fred Leslie.

MACHINISTS' TOOLSHelpless as an infantAfter Pneumonia Weighed 80 lbs A Rollister & Co.BAHGAIN,

A 35AH GAIN. Painters Supplies,

Blake's Steam Pumps,

Weston's Centrifugals,

Hood's Ccrsapsrllla tftatio Him Feel33 Young &3 a Coy.

MC. I. Ilootl & Co., Lowell, Mas. :

" Gentlemen I wish to express rcy grate foltbanks for Hood's Sarsaparillx I am on myeventa Lottie and It Las truly been a blessing

to myself and wile. I bad a severe attack ofpneumonia last December, and It- - was thought

Commissary : L. L. La Pierre.Targets: O. E. Wall.Music: Joseph Marsden. j. fio;p:p &. go.E. FUKUYA,There will be no military conven-

tionality during camp, with possi I should die, but I gradually pulled through.iany strength,and had

and then did not seem to gainhad to le helped like an lulant. fallenbly the exception of placing pickets Hotel Street.Robinson Block, Wilcox & Gibbs' Sewing Machines FUBMTURE JUST EECEIVED Iaway from 115 to BO lbs. 1 read about Hood'son day and night service, to pre SarsapariUa, and 1 decided to take it.

vent any of the members getting 3653-- y

more than their share of the spoils,edibles and refreshment?. LUBRICATING OILS,

'. I Soon Gained In Strengtho that I could sit op, and then baring a serer

pain In the small of tnj back, sent for a TusSanor&ln-KUIIn- g Plaster, which soon cored me of

Hood Curesthat trouble. Today I feel as well as erer lamy life, and as young as a boy; although I amIn my 61st year. I cannot express the gratitude

EtcEtc., Etc., EtcVILLAGE IMPROVEMENT. Etc.,

A COMPLETE STOCK OX

BEDROOM SUITSSLT LOW PRICES;

Wicker "Ware,Kugsand Portiers of all sizes,

Shaving Stands,Card Tables.

'ti t 'tt&Tr I- -'

for Jiooa'snarsapanlia." ouhjlsof my heartD. Yorco, Otsdawa, Otsego Co., New York. CASTLE & COOKK L'dHood'a PUIS cure Constipation by restor.leg the poxistalUc acUonof the alimentary canal

HOBKON DIOJG COMPANY,SG6 . Wholesale Agents.

Hardware d General MerchandisePROFESSOR AND EOCKERS

PHOTOS.WAR

"

Dr. Northrop Will Lecture on ThatSubject Next Week.

At the urgent request of Presi-dent Dole and others interested inthe public improvements ofHawaii, Dr. 13. G. Northrop hasconsented to deliver a lecture on"Village Improvements." Histreatise will deal with sanitary im- -

provcmeot3 and methods of beau-tifying the streets, public parks andprivate residences of the city. Thislecture will be given next Thurs-day evening in the Y. M. C. A.hall.

Dr. Northrop will sail for JapanApril 2d'on the China. The doctorholds a high place in the minds ofthe Japanese, and will deliver nu-merous lectures during his stay intheir country. It was through bisinstrumentality that Japan, in1873, saved many thousands ofdollars by the return of a portion ofthe indemnity payment required

anno, riJ. G.

In Oak or Cherry,and other gdo(3atoo numerous to mention.

Bepairing of all kinds prompt-ly attended to. Furniture packedfor the other islands. Specialcare given to Piano moving.

74 KING STBKET.

PAPA'S PAWS n, Tin-- .SJi' i r-- v SiNew lot of Crepe and

renownedworld.The Plain Tissue Paper.Prchycologit who Is making a

Latest designs in Pictour of the world is registeredat tile Hawaiian Hotel, where

Are too Large forme -:- -

But the' fit papa the nicest of any that

ture Mouldings.he will remain for a few. daysbefore sailing for the Orient. Lots of other Goods, VUI.CAN SAFETY MATCHES The beet in the market odorless.

new and novel, just W A It -:- - PHOTOGRAPHSFramed at $1.25 each and Upwardp.received.

Kubbtr Garden. Hose;

he ha had made in

HONOLULU.If you don't know where the place is,

aek tbe policeman on the corner to

chow you

by the United btates.Dr. Northrop is highly pleased

with Honolulu and its people, andif time permits will write a seriesof descriptive articles for theSpringfield (Mass.) Republican.

The doctor, though 77 years oldand travels unattended, is vigorousin mind and body, and enjoys per-fect health.

'VICTIM OF PNEUMONIA.

Timothy Sullivan, the Well-know- n

Hackxnan, Fasse3 Away.In the death of Timothy Sulli-

van, which occurred yesterday

IVieclianics Tools, a specialty;Ready IVlixcd Faints; Xaints in Oil;

Dry Paints; "Varnishes; Faint Oils;

l.ucol axicl Linseed.,KING Paint Brushes. BUsting Powder. Giant Powder, Caps ami Fuse,UEADQUARTEKS FOR

BROS CAKBOLINEUM AVENAEIUS !

morning from pneumOula, tiie com- - J

HOTEL STRFET.3857-l-y

413-For- t StreetWhile ordering a Buit, you can also be

fitted out in all classes and grades of

mm foiishg!

(EEGISTEBKD.)

Wood Preserving Oil.Endorsed by the Press, ScientietB and leading Architects throughout the World.

Preserves all wood above or underground, in fresh or salt water. Treyentadampness in walls and renders brickwork waterproof. Destroja vermim, insecta.house fungus, disinfects premises.

This remarkable man whosecareer has bee& ouc of unqaaliGed success wherever hehas apperr.d, is gifted bynature with a power that ap-

proaches the miraculous. Heis acknowledged by the Pres3auH Public to be tho marvelof the Nineteenth Centuryand his wonderful powers excite the astonishment andadmiraticn of tho most fckep-tica- l.

Through his develop-ment of occult sight and histhorough knowledge of themany occult sciences peculiarto tho men of the Orient, he isenabled to render most valu-able advice and assistance toall.

The Professor respectfullyannounces to the Public ofHonolulu that he will, for afew cays only, give privatesittings to any who may desireto visit and consult with himat his cottago adjoining theHawaiian Hotel. Entranceon Richard street, oppositeCentral Union Church.

AH persons in-- Honolulushould avail themselves ofthis opportunity. Consulta-tions aro strictly confidentialaLd private, and no chargesaro mado for sittings unlessentirely satisfactory- - to thyconsulting party. Office hoursIrom 10 a. m , to 8 p. m.

3047-- 31

CARRIAGE WHIPS a new invoice.Agents for the celebrated VACUUM OIL.

O

Pacific Hardware Company, Limited,

j. i': f

i

J ;- ? S

' ' T;

- I

ifi

; ti, v

53

Fort Street. - . - Honolulu.

Don! Forget, the Humber

4:13, 413. THE MTJTXJA.L

xnunity lost a valuable member.He was gentle, kind and affection-ate, and his lo3 will be felt bythose who knew him. Mr. Sulli-van had been ill but a few daysand hi3 sudden death was' morethan a surprise. The deceased was42 years of age and leaves a wifeand three small children ; also abrother, J. J. Sullivan, proprietorof the Pantheon stables. Hisfuneral took place at 4 o'clock yes-terday afternoon, from the CatholicCathedral, and . wa attended bya large number of friends and ac-

quaintances. Tho pall bearerswere J. V. McDonald, W. V.Wright, L. H. Dee, H. Evans,Henry Smith, J. E. Echardt, J.Carden, P. M. Lucas.

Mr. Sullivan was possessed ofconsiderable property, sufficient toplace the family he leaves behindhim in comparatively easy circum-stances.

French Dinner and Danciu.The regular Saturday French

dinner will be given at the Ha-

waiian Hotel tomorrow evening.These weekly events have beengiven an increased popularity un- -

DRESSED TO 'KILL !

He is, no doubt. The result shows it.The damsel prefers the better dressedman S icb result is a matter of coursevf hen the suit is made in our well knownfaultless style Poor tailoring spoils ihebest cloth. With us both material andtailoring are above criticism. And we arenow making Suits, Overcoats and Pantsat a big reduction.

g?tieQ our Pants for f5.

LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY OF NEW YORKJohnston & Storey. VreeldenuRICHARD A. McCURDY

Assets December 31stf 1894 2 2Q4,638.783.9BMORE in; toe landN. F. BURGESS oMED EI ROS & CO.,

Hotel street, opposite King P.ros.

Wanted To Purchase.A Good Record, the Best Guarantee tor tne uiure.s Buiiu prepared" to Tepair Garden

Hoe, hprinkhre, Water Tape, Saw Fil-ing and all kinds of Tools sharpened in-cluil- inc

Carving Knives and h'ctsore;Lawn Mowers a epecialty ; also lettingGlacs, in fact all kintis of jobbing Workcalled for and returned. King np 159Mutual Telephone any, time before 2o'clock a.m. 3S34-6- m

S?"FOR PARTICULARS, APPLY TO

S. B. ROSE,FILE OF TIIE HOLOMUA,(English) for the year 1894. ApplyA Hawaiian Islands.forG-ener- Aprentat Ady&bixsek office. S916 il

Page 7: Watchmaker - eVols at University of Hawaii at Manoa: Home

THIS PACIFIC 'COMMERCIAL, ADVERTISER: IIONOLUM. MARCH 22, 1S15.

If !ou Want !LOCAL BREVITIES. Land and Housesstruction of the building permitsmuch back door Sundaytoo quiet,

. . . . . i iC. & C.

FLOUR,

SPECIAL BUSINESS

jCT The Popular Tally Tlo Uathas ju3t been received in black andwhite at N. S. Sachs, 520 Fort (street.

B&Farnisbed Booms for rentby the day, wetk, or mouth at theSailors' Home.

Mrs. R. I. Green.

Situation of any kind,Help of any kind,Notary Public s services,Deeds, Mortgages or Leases

drawn up ;

If You Have !

House for Sale or Bent,Booms to Let,

CALL OK

c. r. CHASE,Safe Deposit Building,

403 FORT STREET.CTelepbone 184. 3931-- y

A NEW EmmReal Estate, Collection,

Insurance, Commissions.

I am now prepared to do all kinds ofbusiness which may be entrusted to me,and I shall be pleased to act as an Agentfor anyone deflirjn a representative inHonolulu. All communications andbusiness will be confidential and will receive ray prompt and careful attention.

Henry VYaterhouse,3923-- tf QUEENT STREET OFFICE.

Fireman's Fund Insurance Comp'y

The Thlrtr-econ- l Annual statementDecember 31, 1804, shows

ASSETS $3,240,861.CTAltlLITIK?.

Capital Paid-u- p in Cash $ 1,000,000 00Setfcurp:us - 84,2o7 81

KSEUVE.(Cal. Standard) Fire $ 1,168 693 04Marino 501 38

cojiimkative' ciNDiriox.Jan. Assets Ke-Tn- s. Net1st Keserve Snrrlus

1SS0 $ 741,437 244. 01 $151,17218S5 120 893 407 90S 2G,33 '18H0 2,4-11.71- 797 10 484 4 '&

1895 .1.240,801 1,222,299 846,267

JOHN H. PATY,S939 Agent.

pop Information. Concerning

THE MUTUALInvestment -:- - Union

CALL OK OR ADDRESS

JOHN M. CHASK,Offick : 40ti Fovt St. General A Vent.

(Telephone 184.) 3937

E. VANDOORN & CO.,DEALERS IN

Havana, Jhnila aai Doa:st!c Cigirs

We also carry a full lino of Tobaccos,Pi"ie3, etc., etc.

ICE COLO DRIN2S k SPECIALTY.

tfjST'Hien in on vur way to tbe .cityfront ami tret a eo! J drink and1 a gOvideigar.

No. 208 Fort St., Esplanade3877--v

JAPANESE STORE.

B. KISHIS1UBA - - fropnetor.

FANCY GOODS I

Provision Merchant.'NEW GOODS EVERY STEAMER

T. O. Box 277. Telephone 317.

Foster Block, Nuuanu Street3921 --y

NEW GROCERY STORE322 'UUANU STREET,

Between Hotel and King Street- -

American and English Groceries.

I Fresh Canned California Fruits,Provisions of all Kinds.

HNew Goods received by eversteamer from the Coast and Europe-ftatipfa-tio- n

cuaranteed. Parchases d- -! livered to all parts of the city.

TELEPHONE 1004

GEO. McINTYHKWING WO TAI & CO..

HAVE KKCEIVKD BARS LlA

!A LARGK INVOICEor

itATTAN CHAIRS !

AND

JL OUNGE8.

trade. A lengtny pennon nas oeenpresented to the Minister of theInterior by the ladies of .Honoluluagainst grauting the renewal of thelicense.

Work Road a on Hawaii.Thirty-si- x prisoners, mostly the

youngest of those convicted of com-

plicity in the !ate insurrection, willbe sent to Hawaii by the Kinautoday. They will be distributedfor work on the Puna and Hilo-Hamak- ua

roads. Aldricb, C. Cole-

man, Johnstone, Eldridge, Over-hah- er

and F. J. McDonald will bein charge of the prisoners on thetrip and likely remain as lunaaover them.

Board of Immigration Meet.The Board of Immigration met

yesterday. It was decided to allowtbe seventy Japanese who came on

the Independent looking for em-plowme- nt,

to land, provided theywould contract for service. Theyajjretd to do so and have been re-

leased. Collector Castle referredthe matter to the loamigrationBoard for settlement with theabove result.

Vote That the WarIa over, and it is the duty of evry citiiento mpport tin-- exi-ti- n form of govern-ment. Although things mav n t movewith ih ordidlty that would insure aneverlasting pe-c- e, still hey mav b al-

lowed to Mibs'-d- Into that e

without animosity, tnat would alloweither party to work cut thair be?tiut rests

All things considered it may be for theb.st, buttime, tre onlv ar.iirator in tucricae-- , must alona decide that. J. H.STKWAKT is a plumber and will doynnr work in a nhp and at figures thatwill wive Eaiisfacuon.

349-t- f 15 H ETHEL STREET.

Assignee's Notice.

'I -- HE UN n K It - IG Vtf d. assign feI in Daiikrup'cv of th Estate oi J. K

Zablan, uives mice to all pt-rjo- n whohave proved tlieir c!aim agiii st aidBankrupt that he ha filed his ncoountsus pucIi As-iyn- ee in the Circuit C urt forthe Firs; Cm-uit- , and will apjly tor adischarge cs such Apai:ne on TUES-DAY, March 2ith, li95, at It a v.

C BIKE,Assignee of J. K. Zb!aa.

S94-- 4t

J. T.Xiuid,IS lietbel street, PRACTICAL GUN andLO KsMITH; Repairing of all des-cription, Electiif!' Comgatel and Ar-

chitecture Iron Vork;0 nam-nt- al I'onjUt-- a Hnd V-n- c-B ; Hrowniny, Blueing andKestocking Guns and bicycle Kepairioga ppcaltv 39 9 v

Wanted.V

1f7' ANTED, A PAttTNFtt WITHcapital for an imprrti-- g lloue

Ooimdcntia !y addrtas "Hawaiian Im-rjj- rii

Companv," rrn AoVKKTiSkE.I 3949-1- -

rv Found.

l R TINT 1 1 OF KYS ON WA1KI- -

ki road Ci'l and identity at I'or- -tnau htn, corner lletelama ai.dPunvhbowi streets 3919-l- t

Notiee.

LL CLA1VS AGUXfvT TUK S. S.A Indprrnilnt must be i resented inrrinlipiifH at the office of th undersignedTOD Y. HlOAY ihe JLM intt., other-wi- e

thev will not be aUowe.l.THEO. If. IAVIK8& CO , L'O.

Kmployment AVantedYOUNG MAN, WELL VERSEDA in lu-ine- matfera Iepires lirfht

employmen' anywtura in th KonaDi irict Willing to work cheap in orderto yet ben-fi'- . i climate. Audreys SO ." care rh'ift office. 3943 tf

Flute Lessons

f IVhN TO A LI.M1TKD NUMHLv3 of pupils. AddrM Fort ."treetHonse. Telephone Ko. 65.

L. BARSOTII.

Notice.fU. IINRY WATERHOCaiC ISJjX au'hrized under power of attorney

to attend to all mat'r of babinees forme in the Hawaiian

w i Li. I AM WAThR HOUSE.Ilonolulu, March 2. 1S95.

39S-- 2t

Wanted.A. LIGHT HAN'T CART

:n repair. Aiplv topantheon stablesttfbU K

.A nnouncement.MIfcS CAIHIL, FORMERLY OF

n. ha retu ned from theFas' with a eniplt Iin of th LatentNovelijp atrii affl and a f.dl 8ort-mi- it

of i!ill;nry. which sho will bp:eas't to a in a fw dava. 3946-t- f

Auvertipeb 75 cent a tuouth.

FOR SALE !

1Those Premises Situated at Pauoa

near the Pauoa Bridge, containing anarea of about

1 ACRES.With all th BTJIITJINGS

THEREON.All are in rood condition, with a well

fixed pond adjoining; there are lota ofshade trees on the premises; it is one ofthe best locations in town and formerlyknown as the Opfergelt premises.

Price is reasonable.f"Title perfect.

EX3Fot further particnlars, apply toLao Cnoxa, at Wing vVo Tai & Co.,or to

W1LL.IAA1 U. AUtll.Corner Bethel and Kins streets.

Ilonolulu, February 15th, 1S95.3920-- tf

Building Lots

AT WATKIKf ON CAlt LINEand on PA LAMA ROAD nearFertilizer riant. These Lots are

v-r- y chpap and will be sold on easyterms DePirble AUK k inau l nearthe city and other properties for Bale.

BRUCE WARING & CO.,503 Fort Street, naar King.

3946-t-f

Store and CellarTO LET,

No. 23 Nuuanu "street, premises formerlyoccupied by Tahiti Lemonade Worts..

. 2T"Appy to

Benson, Smith & Co.3735-t- f

To Let.Ttt IT KTEftAXT UEST- -

tftlii dence at the heal of Victoria' - 1 4 1

.rri. A.-n- a

r HtcL auu i Jill ! u ncuufSouth Punchbow Hill and known as"Diana Lodge," partly famished andlately occupied by E. Wbltpr. The pre-njiF- es

can insrec ed daily. A morer sidence and finer location

for health cannot be fonnd in thecity. The home ia new and has all theconveniences necessary, iiutside build-ing consists of Servants' Quarters Car-riage House, Two Mali Stables, andFeed Room. Bath Room, Tool Room andChicken H.use, etc, etc.

XApplv toMAN O THE PREMISES.

3036 tf

CEITEK10N SALOONFort. Near Iiotel

cii as. j. McCarthy, - Manager.

Popular Brands of Straight Gorf

ALWAYS ON HAND.

Trv the Great Appetizer THE BkOWSUCO( KTAU., a epecilty with t;ireport.

Dr.P-'- i OF THI

FAMOUS WISLAND LAOKU BEE?.

GOO Ki M.411 uunu Street,

IMPORTEK AND DEALER IN

Eoropeaa and Chinese Dry and

FANCY GOODS.By the latest vessel, received a fall

and complete lin of Idi- - b Ttimmedand Untrimmed Ha's, Gent' Furni-hin- g

and Cloth con-istin- g of the latest pat-terns and designs..

Ca l on mefor your doe clothes, etc.QJJT Best Black and iireen Chinese

Teas m quantities to suit.n35--v G)Q KTM. Proprietor.

Commercial Saloon.Corner Nnuanu and Beretania Stieets.

T. KEVEN, - ranaxer.

COOL FKESH BEERON DRAUGHT AND THE STANDARD BRAND3

OF BOTTLED BEER.

Fine Whiskies, Brandies, WinesAND FRENCH LIQUORS.

Table Claret a specialty.BjSmhe only sporting Honee in

town. 3s31-- y

H. G. BIART,Formerly "with Wenner A Co.

Jeweler -- : and :- - Watchmaker,

.515. FORT STREET,Hawaiian Jewelry

and Diamond SettingA SPECIALTY.

SOUVENIR SPOONS at very loprices.

33" Don't forjret the mirnVr Bt5Forr s'ret. 3A63-- y

EMPJliE SAI.OOX,Corner uantiu anl Hotel Streets.

Fine Wliskiea, Brandies, tcut, Alee,Clarets, etc. for table and family use.McBrayer Sonr Mash Whiskey aFpecialty.

3'I4Vt K. N. KEQP, Manager.

A bunch of key3 baa been found.

M. BraFcb, of Hyman & Co. is in-

disposed.A partner with capital i-- s wanted

for an importing bouse.C. Bo&ee, assignee of J. K. Zab-la- n,

ba3 a notice in tbia issue.

Special officer A. Hammer raideds. Chinese gambling joint last nigbtand captured nine Celestiale.

The Christian Endeavor Eocialwhich was to have taken place to-

night, baa been postponed.'"Hidden Words" ia the subject

of Woven Wire Bailey's new ad-

vertisement ia another column.

Professor Sbaw, the lightning"gold wire" artist, can be seen atwork at the Temple of Fashionthis morning.

Marshal and Mrs. Hitchcockwill leave by the Xinau today forHilo. The Marshall will be absentabout a month.

All rlnim.q nrainftthe steamshipIndependent must be presented intriplicate today to Theo. II. Davieafc Co., Ltd., agents.

Easter opening of millinerygoods and imported pattern hataand bonnets at Sachs tomorrow,Monday and Tuesday.

Attorney-Genera- l Smith andMarshal Hitchcock spent yesterdayaboard the Philadelphia as guestsof Admiral Beardslee.

J, T. Lund, at one time employedat the Heel a Iron Work?, NewYork, baa opened a general repairphop at 15 Bethel street.

D. B. Smith, of the Manufac-turers' Shoe Company, ia able toattend to business, after a rathersevere illness of several days.

C. II. PfeitfVr, of Jacobsen &PfeiffVr, has not been able to at-

tend to business for several days" hrough an Attack of rheumatism.

- Messrs. L. M. Johnson and M. H.Drummond, the new proprietors ofthe Eagle House, will take posses-sion of that popular hostelry today.

J. T. Stewart, late of the SanitaryBoard of Engineers of Los Angeles,Cal., has gone into the plumbingbusiness, and U located on Bethelstreet.

The many friends of W. C.Wilder, Jr., Captain of CompanyD, are pushing his claim for theposition of Colonel of the FirstRegiment.

One undivided third share andinterest in a valuable parcel ofland on Hawaii will be sold by J.F. Morgan, at his auction roomsnext Monday at noon.

ProfeEEor Stoecklo received by a

the Australia the latest "mcKie-in-th- e

Blot" machine. It records yourweight, tells your fortune and playsa tune. It is on exhibition at theElite ice-crea- m parlors.

The excellent likeness of Dr. B.G. Northrop, whtch adorns thefront pape of this morning's edition,was made especially for ih Adver-tiser, yesterday, by J. J. Williams,the popular photographer.

There will be a crirket matchSaturday afternoon at 2:30 on thebaseball grounds between the" Ho-

nolulu boys and a team from theNvmphe. No admission fee will becharged and a good match and bigcrowd are anticipated.

Funeral services over the lateMrs Charles K. Maguiro will beheld at the residence of Smue1Parker on King street at 10 o'clockthis morning. The remains willbe Eent to Mana today by theKinau and be interred in theParker family vault at that. place.

Three Japanese were brought toto the Police Station last night byF. A! Cook, who lives near thecorner of Berctania and Nuuanuetreets. Cook,- - with others, at-

tempted to put a noisy native outof the yard and were attacked bythe Japanese. A bottle was thrown,inflicting an ugly wound on Cook'scheek. Dr. Cooper was called anddressed the wound.

Baseball Season.The captains of the three baseball

clubs compoair g tbis year's leaguewill hold a meeting eome eveningnext week to determine tbe dateon which tbe first game will beplajed. It is likely April 13th willbe eelrcted, and tbe competingclnbs be the Stars and Athletics.

Robert Simmons and AlbertoTJehrene', amateur base-bal- l playersfrom Puget Sound, are expected bythe Miowera next Sunday. Theywill play pitcher and catcher forthe Stars during this year's Feries.

Bay Horse Saloon Licnse.Marshal Hitchcock has refused

to endorse the application for arenewal of the licenpe to the BayHorse Saloon. This is owing prin-cipally to tbe fact that the con- -

Apront Ginghams, twelveyarde for 1 ; Dress Ginghams ten aDdeight yards for f 1 ; Ladies' R. & R.Sailors, black and white, for 50 centsat N. S. Sachs', 520 Fort street.

tSTTZie Singer has'agaln arrived,and if you wish to see him call at 113

Bethel Street. We wish to callspecial attention to our exhibit ofembroidery rvork.

B. Beroesen.

grjnayvalian Boat Uonae,

Foot of Richards street,Have Hue pleasure boats of all des-

criptions for rent by the hour or day.Balls & SnAW.

7" W7:en you wish to discontinuehousekeeping let Hawklus & Henrybid on your furniture iu its entirety.It will avoid Inconvenience of sellingIn pieces or sale. King and Alakeastreets.

Hawkins & Henry make estimates on all classes of painting, wallpaperlDgand upholstering. All workguaranteed. Kiug and Alakea streets.

fFfJWew &nJ second-han- d furniture, all kindj of stcond-han- d books,jewelry and diamonds bought andsold. Contracts for painting.

Hawkins & Henry.

jfiT Beach Grove, Waikiki, nearBishop's Switch Bathing and PicnicResort. Reserves for families, ladiesand children. Terms reasouable.

Chas. F. Warren, Manager.

ST" ratronlxe Ilauiwal Baths,Walklkl. Tramcars pass tbe door.

W. S. Bartlett, Proprietor.

j For Bat gains In New andRecond-han- J Furniture, Lawn Mow-

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

27"" Bedroom Sets, Wardrobes,Tco Boxes, Stoves, Hanging Lamps,Rugs, Bureaus, Chiffoniers, Steamerand Veranda Chairs, Bed Lounges,8ofas, Baby Cribs, Clothes Baskets,Sewing Machines, Whatnots, MeatSafes, Trunks, etc., aold at the loweetCash Prices at tho I. X. L., corner of

Nuuanu and King streets.

jOST If von n-n- at to stll outyour Ftirnittjrs in it entirety, callat the I. X. L.

tG. 11. Harrison, Practical Pianoaud Organ Maker and Tuner, can fur-

nish bet factory references. Ordersleft at Hawaiian News Co. will receiveprompt attention. All work qruarau-tee- d

to bf th same as don In faetory.

Edison's Kinetoscope

10c. YOU CAN SEK THEFOB marvel of pcience.TO HAY" Three Little Danc-D- g

Girl ."T'SubjoctB chaneed dailv at Hart

A ;ompanv'a. IIotl street. Exhibitionhonr; 9a.m to 9 p m. 3907-- tf

Cottage to 1--et

WlMARCH 31 st,AFTER Bedaoms. arlor. Dining

Ko-r- a, Bath, Kitchen and Pantnr Rentmoderate Applv to 1j. ADLFB,

394i-2- w No. 13 Nuuanu street.

Ship-Owner- s, Attention !

MOT FAVORABLE TERMSTHK now orf-rn- d for ir snranc onIep VVatpr WpseN by tbe Fihem'sFtsd Inhcbance Company or Fbax-Cisc- o.

For particular, applr toJOHN U. PATY,

S6"0 tf gent.

To Let.

A VKRY CONVENIENT"fj J new Cottar, with all modern

iJ-- improvements, on Kinva str-et- ,

one b'ock from i he car It :e. Servant'sKootn. Harn antl tab1o on prem'603.For pgrticnlrs, applv to

N. s. SACHS,30i:Vtf 520 Fort "Tet.

G. E. SMITHIES,- -

Accountant, Collector andCopyist. .

Omen: WPb C. V. ChaM, lta'e Depo-sit Bnildinfr. Telephone IS.

The collection of Government "Bills aspecialty. 3931 6m

Has gained the con

fidence of all con

sumers.

Prices below any

other No. i Stand

ard Flour in market.

WE' GUARANTEE

EVERY SACK.

Tlieo. H.

Davies

& Co.,

SOLE AGENTS.3S33-t- f

FOR RENT !

City Houses,Large and small, a? d in con-venient locations.

Seaside Houses, '

Furnished or unfurnished.Pearl Harbor Houses,

At special rate, furnished orunfurnished.

A HotelOn Nuuann Avecua with everyconvenience.

Waikiki Beach LotsOn long lease, iu desirablelocality.

jSinformt?on ga;ily fnrnished andhouses opened for mpHct on at any time.

Henry Waterhouse,3929 tf QUEEN STRKET.

A NEW LOTOF

PEARL OILHAS BEEN KECEIVED BY

Castle 4 Cooke, Lilted.SGovernment tests show that there

is no better quality of Oil in tbis maiket.firWe guarantee it in every respect.

XT"PEARI. OIL DELIVERED TOA.VxPA RT OF THE CITT at $1.80 percase C. O. D.

Castle &Cooke, L'd.3922--tf ,

CKKTBAL MARKET!NTJUANTJ 8TRKET.

First-clas- s Market in every respect;eides carrying a full line of Meats,

we make a specialty of

Hrealtfaat Sausagei,Head Cheese,

Pressed Corn. J)t.WESTBR00K 6 GABES,

343 7- -q Propbxstob.

Ileail This !

YOU WANT A MOTIVE POWER,IForder a Rkqak Vapob or PacixioGas Euqixs ; they are the best, safestand simplest in the world.

JOS. TINKER,Bole Ag?nt.

gLTSend for rAtalognes. Honolulu,uTtr S6S8-- U

Page 8: Watchmaker - eVols at University of Hawaii at Manoa: Home

PACIFIC COMMERCIAL. ADVERTISER: nONOEULU, MAKCII JL,TUE" .

SHIPPING INTELLIGENCE.H3(T BiiXWiV i iiiv 5

r: ii- - .iv'ROM JlU'J iFTSH J UN 3 X. leJVa

. t i Li

TO CWA MILL

B B A Da.m. r.. r.u. r.x.

-- v Houoinm... H'Ab 1:45 4:35 6:10mth Pearl Oitr..w:30 2:30 6:10 56nP.wa Mill... 9:57 2:57 ?:3fl 6:22

TO aOSOLCLC

C B B A

A.M. A.M. T.M. F.M.

iwa Miii..6:21 10:43 3:43 6:42

tve--oavc

Pearl City..6:55 11:15 4:15 0:10.rrivo Jionoluln..7:::0 11:55 i:

A Sat'irr on,7B Daily.O 8anaav excepted.D Saturdays excepted.

The Pacific Commercial AMiser

Iua5.- - Kvry Morning, ExceptSunday, by th

Hawauan Gazette CompanyAt No. 318 Merchant Street.

eUBSCBIPTION KATES: .

Thb Daily Pacific Coxxkrcta.l Apvkb--TT8ER (8 FAQES)

Lr month : ' ? S?tr 3 months if paid In advance. . -o WfVr year in advance '. 3 00Per year, postpaid to United States

of America, Canada, or Mexico.. 11 WJ

Per 1 year, postpaid other Foreign 14 00

fjAWAHAX Gazette, Scmi-Wkke- xv (8paoks Tuesdays and Fridays)

Per year 104 numbers 3 00

Per year. Foreign Countries v 00

Payable Inyarlably In ArtTance.Advertisements unaccompanied by

specific instructions inserted till crderedout.

Advertisements discontinued beforeexpiration of sprcified period will becharged as if condoned for full term.

Liberal allowance on yearly and halfyearly contracts.

Where cuts are inserted they must beALL METAL not mounted on wood-other- wise

we assume no, risk of their pre-

servation. 'GEO. H. PABIS,

Business Manaeer.

FRIDAY, MARCH 22. 1895

THE ADVERTISER CALENDAIt,

March, 1895.

So. M. Tu. W. Tb. Fr. 3a. HOOM F HARES.j

i 3 First Qu'rMarch 4.

3 4 S c 7 8 9 rail Moon

10 TT 12 77 77 ISJlarch iO.

Lul Qu'rU March .17 18 17 30 21 23 23

New Moon24 25 2B 27 J 28 29 20 ! March 28.

31 !

rniiKiosi hail SKKrint.

Bteaiiisnips will leave lor uo ftrrvIrciiraa Krancisco, Vancouver and Sydney nthe followins dates, till tr.e 1oj oi lt5.AB. AT E.050LTJLTJ i.kavx hoboltjluFx. 8as Fbaitcibco Fob Sab Fbabcicu

ob Vancotjvib ob VakcotjvehOn or Abvwt (ht or About

Miowera....ilar. 24 I'eiu March 9China April 2 . Varr!jnoo....Apr. 1Australia. . .Apr. AlfUDtrda Apr. 4Aratva Apr. 11 Australia. ...Apr. 13VrtrrinioJ. ..Apr. 24 Gaelic. . . . .April 28

Coptic April 30 Miowera.. ..Mav 'IAustralia. . . May 3 Mariposa. ..May 2

. Lin!"ia Mny 0 Australia . .May 85io-e- r

. May 2i China .May 20Australia.. ..May 27 Arawa May SO

City I'ekiri..June 1 Warrimoo. ...June 1

'.Janjwsa. . .. .June G Australia. .. June 3A;i?traJm... June 21 C ptic ...June 17Warrimoo.. June21 Australia... .June24A.rawa July 4 Alameda June27Australia.. ..July 15 Miowera July 2Miowera July 24 City Peking-Ju- ly 17Coptis July 10 Australia.... Juiy 20Alameda Ang. 1 Mariposa July 25Australia... Aug.- - 9 Warrimoo.. ..Aug. 1

City Peking.. Aug. 10 Belgic Aug. 9Warrituoo.. Aug. 24 Australia... Aug. 14J J ariposa. . ..Aug. 29 Arawa. .....Aug. 22.n3trali.' .Sept. 2 Miowera Aug. 31

Coptic ..Sept. 19 liio Janeiro. .Sept. 6Miowera. ..Sept. 24 A ustraila . . . Sept. 7Arawa.... ..Sept. 2J Alameda. . . .Sept. 19

. nstralin. ..Sept. 30 Warrimoo.. ..ct.2.Australia'. ...Oct. 21 Australia Oct. 2Warrimoo ...Oct. 24 China Oct. G

Alnrueda. . ...Oct. 21 Mariposa. Oct. 17China ... ...Oct. 29 M'owera Nov. 1

Australia. .Not. 15 Coptic Nov. 6Miowera ..Nov. 24 Warrimoo Dec. 2Coptic Nov. 23 City Peking.. Dec. 6Warrimoo... Dec. 21 1 8JKJ.Citv Peking..Dpc. 23 Miowera Jan. 1

Meteorological Reronl.

SV TBI 807IRNMIir 6CBYET. r CUIUS HEBKVttT liONDiT.

KARON. THEKMi) aaB o

a m c

she was being towed into port bythe tug Eleu, a heavy wind causedher to ba blown on the reef about125 yards outside of the lighthouse.The James Makee was sent to assistthe Elou, and in a time thevessel was clT and on her way tothe Oceanic wharf. She will loadsugar for lew York in the nearfuture.

The Oakes was built in Philadel-phia in 1833, is 2G4 feet long, draws23 G feet of water, and has a ton-pan- e

of 2000. Her port of registeria New York.

Change of Pursers.William White has succeeded

William Ros3 as clerk in the Inter-Islan- d

wharf office. Mr. White'sfriends are pleased at his promo-tion. He is affable, obliging andand competent. Mr. Ross, whosehealth ia not good, and desires achange, will assume the duties ofpurser on the Mikahala, relievingMr. Alleray, who is transferred tothe Hall. Purser Kelly will returnto the Iwalani.

Telegraphic Clocks.The revenue of the Western

Union Telegraph Company for fur-nishing the time of day to thiscountry amounted last year to about$1,500,000. The company has atelegraph desk in the Naval Ob-servatory in Washington. Fourminutes before noon the wires ofthe system all over the UnitedStates are cleared of business, andthe instant the sun passes the 75thmeridian electricity carries' thenews to every city. American Ex

The contract to connect Astoria,Oregon, with the Northern Pacificrailroad at Portland has beensigned and the road is expected tobe in running order by October,189G. Thi3 means that there willbe another large port on the Pacificcoast. Without direct railroadconnections Astoria can never beany more than it is now as a ship-ping point. But with railroad con-nection its possibilities as a tradecenter depend wholly upon theenergy and enterprise of its mer-chants. Ex.

An eccentricity of the receutstorm was witnessed in the loosen-ing from her moorings of a vesselat Savannah, blowing her severaltime3 across the river and backagain, the vessel coming into col-

lision with, and damaging more orless, seven other large vessels,barely missing contact with a num-ber of others, and finally floatingaway to five miles below the cityand there going aground Ex.

The Hawaiian Gazette is issuedon Tuesdays and Fridays.

PORTS OF OAHU.

t John Calway, Captain.

X7 Quick dispatch for Waianae,Waialua and Waimanalo. Orders atTelephone 92. 3929-3- m

Election of Officers.

TUE ANNUAL MEETINGATof the stockholders of the Inter-Isla- nd

tein Navigation Company, (L'd.)held thi3 day, the following Officer andDirectors were elected for the ar:

W B Godfrey.. I'refi-ien- t

J Ena Vice-Preside- nt

W H McLean.. .. . .SecretaryJ L McLean. . . . . . . TreasurerT W liobron... Auditor

PtKECTCRS.

V B Godfrey, J Era,G N Wilcox, W O 8mith,F A Scbaefer, A S Wiicox,

E Snhr..W. II. McLEAN,

FecrWary Inter-LOan-d Steam NavigationCompany, Limited.

Honolulu, H.I. March 10, 1895.3947-l- w

ATTENTION J

T WOULD liESrFCTFULLY LN-- 1

form roy friends and the public thatI am etid in the Tinsmith and Plumbingbusiness That I am now offering forcash regular size 2x6 feet, Zii c Linedbath Tubs, with Plug, Chain and smallpiece of pipe ready for connection foronly $10 each. Also Stone Pipe at bed-

rock prices : 6 in.. 45c. a length ; f) in.,40c a length; 5 in., 35c a length.

jCT-- All kinds of Jobbing promptlyat'endfd to.

jX7"Ring up Telephone 844 and yourorders will receive prompt attention atlowest prices. JAS NOTT, Jr.

PIONEERSteam Candy Factory and Bakery

F. HORN,Practical Confectioner and Baiter,

NO. 71 HOTEL STREET.37V-t- f

Notice.O. E. COAKDMAN ISMil. to collect a.l accounts

for William Bros.Ki. A. WILLIAMS,

SS9I-- ilanagr.

Bepublic of Hawaii.

Official List of Hembsrs and Lccatica of Bureaus.

KXKCUnVE COUNCIL.

Sanford B. Dole, President.Francis M. Hatch, Minister of 1 creicr.

Affairs.James A. Kin?, Minister of Interior.Samnel M. Damon, Minister of Financn.William O. Emith, Attorney-Genera- l.

ADriSOBY COCTffCIL.

C. Bolte, John Emmeluth,Edward D.Tenney, James F. Morgan,Wm. F. Allen, Alex. YoanjffJo. P. Mendonca, John Nott,D. B. Smith. John Ena,F. A, lloamer, Geo. P. Castle,C. B. Wood, Jas. A, Kennedy,

William F. Allen,Charles T. Rodger, Chairman .

Secretary.

6CTBXMX CODBT.

Hon. A. F. Jadd, Chief Jaatice.lion. B. F. Bickerton, First Associato

Justice.Hen. W. F. Frear, Second Associate

Justice.Henry Smith, Chief Clerk.Geo. Lncas, Deputy Clerk.G. F. Peterson, Second Deputy ClerJ. Walter Jones, Stenographer.

ClECCTT JUTXIXB.

FirstCircuit: ; A; Oaha.Second Circuit: (Maui) J. W. Kalua.Third and Fourth Circuit: (Hawaii) 8.

L. Anstin.Fifth Circuit: (Kauai) J. Hardy.

OSces and Court-roo- m in Court House,King street. Sitting in HonoluluThe first Monday in February, May,August and November.

Defabtxcxt or Foksigx tpaxrs.

OfHce in Capitol Building, King street.F. M. Hatch, Minister of Foreign

Affairs.Geo. O. Potter, Secretary.J. W. Girvin, Secretay Chinese BureauA. St. M. Mackintosh.'

DiPABTYKST OP THE IkTXBIOB.

Office in Capitol Building, Kingstreet.

J. A. King, Minister of the Interior.Chief Clerk, John A. Hassinger.Assistant Clerks : James H. Boyd, M. K.

Keohokalole, Stephen Mahaulu,George C. Roes, Edward 8. Boyd.

BVZBA.V of Agriculture and Foexstkt.President : the Minister of Interior. Wm.

G. Irwin, Allan Herbert, JohnEna. Joseph Marsden, Commiesloner aud Secretary.

Chiefs op Bureaus, Iotebiob Dspabt- -IC23T.

Survey or-Gen- eral , W. D. Alexander .Supt. Public Works, W. E. Kowell .

Supt. Water Works, Andrew Brown.Inspector, Electric Lights, John Caseich ;Registrar of Conveyances, T. G. Throii'.Road Supervisor, Honolulu, W. H.Cum-ming- s.

Chief Engineer Fire Dept., Jas. H.Hunt.Supt. Insane Asylum, F. I. Cutter.

Dz?A3TH5iT OV YlHAKCX.

OSce. Capitol Building, FCIdk

street.Minister of Finance, 8. M. Damon.Auditor-Genera- l, H. Laws.Registrar of Accounts, W. G. Ashley.Clerk to Finance OfHce, E. R. btaciable.Collector-Gener- al of Customs, Jas. B.

Castle.Tax Assessor, Oahu, Jona. Shaw.Deputy Tax Assessor, W. O. Weedon.Po8tmaster-Gnera- l, J. Mort Oat.

Customs Bcrxac.OfSre, xJuRtoni tlou?3. - Egplauade, For.

strtuCoIIector-Geuera- l, Jas. B. Cattle.Deputy-Collecto- r, F. B. McStocker.Harbormaster, Captain A. Fuller. .

Poit Surveyor, M. N. Sanders. "

Storekeeper, George C. Straterncyer.DSPAETMEMT OF ATTOr.ISEY-GE?JER- A i.

Office la Capitol Building, Kinstreet.

Attorney-Genera- l, W. O. Smith.Deputy Attorney-Geneii- l, A. G. M.

Robertson.Clerk, J. M. Kea.Marshal, E. G. Hitchcock.

' Clerk to Marshal, II. M. Dow.Deputy a Marshal, Arthur M. Brown.Jailor Oanu Prison, J. A. Low.Prison Physician, Dr. N. B. Emerson.

Board ov Ikmwbattos.President,J. A. King.Members of the Board of Immigration.

J. B. Atherton, Joseph Marsden, J.A. Kennedy James G. Spencer,J. Carden.-Secetary- ,

Wray Taylor.Board 07 Health.

Office In gronuds of Court House Build-ing, corner of Mililani and Queenstreets.

Members Dr. Day, Dr. Wood, N. B.Emerson, J.T.Watorhcure, Jr., JohcEna, Theo. F. Lansing 8nd Attorney- -

General Smith.President Hon. W. O. Smith.-Secretar- y

Ch as. Wilcox.Executive Officer O. B. Reynolds..Inspector and Manager of Garbage S- .-

vice L. L. La Pierre.Inspector G. W. C. Jones.Port Physician, Dr. F. R Day.Dispensary, Dr. U. W. Howard.Leper Settlement, Dr. R. K. Oliver.

Board of Education."Court House Buildinjr, King street.

President, W. R. Castle.Secretary, F. J. Scott.Inspector of Schools, A. T. Atkinson.

District court.Police Station Buildiug, Merchant jir-e- :

A. Peny, Maristrf.Jama 'i'hotnrpon. Olerk

Board of Fire CojfX'issiosa.

Andrew Erown, .'President; Geo. W

Smith. .-- . '

James H. Hnnt, Chief P'ngineer

Vh.iM,l.S 1- - I'OKT.MKN OK WAR.

T K F S iliiXat-Uliia- - Cotton, S F.II iJ M S Nyujphe.Uuiitiu:ford,&au Diego.

MEKlCANTMES.(This Hit Sob not Include coatert.)

tkbr Norma, Swensou. Claxton, C C.Dark Sumatra, Derrv, UUo.tch King Cvrus, Christiansen. ewcastle.Ship H FGIad,Herck?en. Liverpool.Am schr Golden SLore.Henderson. Ne c leUK Kobert Sudden, Jiiriholin Newcastle.Uk Newsboy. Mollestad. Newcastle.lik C D Bryant, Jacobsen, San irancisco.Ship Charmer. Holmes, San J? rancisco.Sch Transit. Jorgensen. San Francisco.Bk Alden Besse. I'otter, I'ort Blakely.Cier stmr Independent, Anrenkiel. Kobe.Schr W F Jewett. Johnson. Puget bound.Bk Matilda. Swenson, Fort Gamble.Sh Hawaiian Isles, Kutsel. Newcastle.Bk Martha Davis, Soule, San Francisco.Sh T F Oakfis, Ileed, San Francisco.

rOBEION VJC83EI.S KXPSOTBO.Vessels. Where from. Pue.

Sch Maid of Orleans. S F. .'. DueBark Harry Morse.. Newcastle DaeScbr'Edward May. ..Boston May 16

BktneS G Wilder... San Francisco. Mar 25Schr Aloha San Francisco :Mar 23

ASBZTAXS.Thursday. March 21.

Stmr Pele. McAllister, from Kauai.ShipTFOakes. Reed, from San Fran-

cisco.Ci Martha Davis, Soule, from an Fran-

cisco.

UEPAKTCltt f.Thubsday, March 21.

Stmr James Makee. Peterson, for KapaaJJktne Amelia, Ward, for Honoipo.

VV..SSSL4 2.EAVINO flliAV.Stmr Kinau, Clarke, for Mnui and Ha-

waii at 2 p in.

I3IFOKTS.Per stmr Pele 1352 bag sugar ro C & R

A. 919 to.M & s. A, and 1600 to M & KQ

DIED.MAGUIRE In Honolulu, -- on March 19.

1895. Mary Kihhlaninui. beloved wife ofCharles K. Maguire of Kohala, Hawaii,aed 24 years.2C7" A funeral service will be held this

Friday morning, at 10 o'clock, at theresidence of Samuel Parker on King street.Friends and acquaintances arc respectfullyinvited to attend.SULLIVAN In this city, March 21.-189- 5.

of pneumonia. T Sullivan, a native ofIreland, aged 42 years.

WHARF .AND WAVE.

Diamond Head, Mar. 21. 10p.m.Weather, cloudy ; wind, fresh

Northeast.The ship Hawaiian Isles ia re-

ceiving a much-neede- d coat ofpaint.

The Kinau will sail today at 2p.m. for her usual ports on Mauiand Hawaii. .

The Pele ai rived late Wednes-day night with a cargo cf eugarfrom Kauai.

The Philadelphia men weregiven Admiral's inspection and boatdrill yesterday.

Tho W. F. Jewett, now at Dil-lingham's wharf, has nearly fin-

ished discharging her deck-loa-d oflumber.

The interior work of tho newHealani boat house is rapidly pro-gressing. The outside paintingwill soon be completed.

The James Makee sailed yester-day for Kapaa with a large cargoof general merchandise and a num-ber of Japanese laborers.

The Pele discharged 2171 bagsof pusar aboard tho King (Jyrus,and 1600 aboard the Charmer, yes-terd- a

Both of these vessels arein naval row.

The larger part of 230 bale3 ofwool from the Humuula Station,Hawaii, was shipped on the H. F.Glade yesterday. Tho remainderwill be put aboard tcday.

The bark Martha Davis, Soulemaster, arrived yesterday morning17 da3's and a half from San Fran-cisco. Following is her report :

Struck light winds on leaving port,which continued for 10 days; didnot mak very good progress ; inlatitude 29 12deg. longitude 131 25deg. struck fresh trades and fineweather which continued to port.The Martha Davis was in Molokaichannel during Wednesday night.She brings a large cargo of generalmerchandise.

Departure of the Gay head.The whaleship Gayhead sailed

for the coast of Japan yesterdayafternoon. The three sailorsWilliam Breslin, William Gehr- -

mann and Walter Ekernkcelerwho were arrested on suspicion ofhaving pet fire to the vessel, werehandcuffed and taken aboard atneon by three police officers andCaptain Shore. The men madesome resistance, but were soonquitted by the officers. WalterEkerenkoe'er is supposed to be atough character, and wus shippedon the whaler by his father beforeher departure from San Franciscoto avoid arrt-s- t for a crime com-mitted there. All three men arevery much disliked by the remain-der of the crew.

Arrival of the T. I7. Oakcx.The ship T. F. Oakes, Rcd,

master, arrived yesterday afternoon,17 davs from San Francisco. While

;e Bssx iss

Of Interest to Managers of Plan-tation- s.

A Mode I Plant is not complete withoutElectric Powr, thus dispensing withsmall Engine.

Wbv not c3nerae your power fromone CENTRAL Station? One generatorcan furnish iniwer to your Pum ps, Centri-fugals, Elevators, Plows, Railways andHoiste ; also furnish liht and power fora radius of from 15 to 20 miles.

Electric Power being used faves thelabor of hauling coal in your field, alsowater, and does away with " hibg pricedengineers, and only nave ore engine tolook a'ter in your mill.

Wher water power is available, itcosts nothing to generate Electric Power.

The Hawaiian Electric Compant isnow ready to furnish Ptantsand Generators of all "descriptions atshort notice, and also has ou hand alarge stock of Wire, Chaudeliers, and allElectrical Goods.

All orders will he given prompt atten-tion, and estimates furnished for Light-ing and Power Plants; also attention isgiven to House and Marine Wiring.

THEO. HOfFMANN,3940-t-f Manager.

National Cane Shredder

(PATENTED UNDER TH1! LAW rTHE HAWAIIAN ISLANDS )

Mr. John A. Scott, Managerof the H1I0 Sugar Companygives the following wonderfulrecord of the working of theNATIONAL CANE SHRED-DER, which was erected bytheir works at the commencement of the crop just har-vested:

"During the past week thdHilo Sugar Company's mill ex-

ceeded any of its formerrecords by closing the 125hours grinding with an outputof 300f tons. This is fully 10per cent, more .than the bestwork of former years.

"The thiee roller mill being26 in. by 54 in. and the tworoller mill 30 in. by 60 in. Thefirst mill doing this amount ofwork in an efficient mannerand with great ease, comparedwith work on whole canerowing to thorough preparationof the cane by the NationalCane Shredder, recently erec-ted by the Company. Andby its use the extrac-tion has been increased from3 per cent, to 5 per cent, on allkinds of cane, and in somecases 80 per cent, has beenreached; the average being 75to 78 per cent.j according toquality.

"I continue to find themegass from shredded canebetter fuel than from wholecane.

"The shredder has beenworking day and night forseven months and has givenme entire satisfaction, havingshredded during that timeabout seventy thousand tonsof cane, and a large part of itbeing hard ratoons,

"The shredder and enginerequire very little care orattention."

EasTTlans and specificationsof these shredders may be seenat the office of

Wm. G. Irwin 4 Co. HSOLE AGENTS FOR THE

HAWAIIAN ISLANDS.5D4-3- m

National Iron WortsQUEEN STREET,

Between AUfcea and Ricbjird 6tieels.

rpHE UNDERSIGNED ARE-PRE-J-

pared to n ate all kinds of Iron,Brass, Bronze, 7 inc. Tin and 1 ead Cat-i- n

s also a general rej air shop for SteamEnirines, Kice MiJls, Corn Mills, WaterWhee-B- , Wind Mills, etc.; Machines for

the Cleaning of Toffee, Castor Oil3,Beans, Hamie, Steal, I ineapple Leavesand other Fibrous Plants and PaperStock: also Machines for VxtractingPtan-- h from th NSanioc, Arow oot.etc.

DAll ordeTS promptly at'ended to.

White, Hitman & Co.3832--y

Steamship JLine.j.

Steamers of tbe above line, runningin connection vrith tLe Canadian PacificRailway Co., between Vancouver, B. C.and Sydney, N. S. W., and calling atVictoria B. C. llonolnln . andSuva Fiji,

Are Due at HonoluluOn or about the date3below stated, viz:

From Sydney and Sara, for Victoria

. and Yaneomer, B. C:

K. 8. WARRIMOO" April 1S. S. "MIOWERA" ... Mayl

From Victoria and Yancouier, B. C, for

Suva and Sydney:

8. S. "WARRIMOO" March 24S. S. "MIOWERA". April 24

Through tickets issued from Honoluluto Canada, United States and Europe.

BGTFot Freight and Passage and allgeneral information apply to

Theo.H.Davies & Co., L'd.GEN.ERAL AGENTS.

OCEANIC

STEAMSHIP CO

Aastrata Mail Service.

For San Francisco:Th New aud Fine Al Steel Steamship

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

APRIL 4th,And will leave for the above port withMails and Passengers on or about thatdate.

For Sydney & AucklandThe New and Fine Al Steel Steamship

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

APEIL llth,And will have prompt despatch withMails and Passengers for the above porta.

The undersigned are now preparedto issue

THROUGH TICKETS TO ALL FOISTS

IN THE UNITED STATES.

2ETFor further particulars regardingFreight or Taseage apply to

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

OCEANIC

STEAMSHIP CO

Pime Table.LOOAL LINE.

S. 3. AUSTRALIAArrive Honolulu Leave Honolulu

from 8. F. torS.F.April 8 April 13May 3 May 8

THROUGH LINE.From San Fran. From Sydney for

for 8ydney. San Francisco.Arrive Honolulu. Leave Honolulu.ARAWA April 11 1 ALAMEDA Apr 4ALAMEDA May 9 I MARIPOSA May 2

331 4--3 m

CHiS. SRS77JS & c

Boston Line of Packet?,.

- Shippers will pleaee takenotice that the

?- '- JOSN D. BREWERLeaves New York on or about MAY15 for this port, if sufficient inducc- -ment oilers.

gjgT For ,r"-fhe-r information, apply toChas. Brewer & Co., 27 Kilby St., Boston,ito., or to

O. BREWER & GO. (L'D.),Honolulu, Amenta.

n.

V

5 13 --r ?3 4 B

1 30.10 mss 77; 09 AT 5E 5-- 27 .00 6:

Tue M.:ii.-.,- w.os! ea; 75 0Wed .i. .00. CU-- .t

110 SKIThu i 30.. 7.ll CA C3

Frl U 30.1 30. I ll 67 ll! V5 NKit. 2!A..19o0.1ll CV,

Brometr corrftctl for teaipertare and ele-vation, bat not for latitude.

Tides. San and Moon.

& 5 S a oorr.

li'SSi S si 5 si Ssi !

I 'p.m a.m 'p.m a.m.1, !

Mu is 11.12 10. 0 'i.y. 1. c; c. 6 co, 1. s1 ft.ia. p j.I i i

ru- - ...v i--. 3 4 la r.s-- i c. 5 11

Vea.... 20, 0. 6 12.5.' 5.1 7.5 6 4 U 11 2.43i I .iu. p.iu. ' I

hir... IV 0.51 131 e i, ?.3i 6. M 6 12 3.'."ria.. 2', l.'J 2. 9 S.tl 7.2S! C. '2 6 4 1

at, 3 2. 3 2 ) 8 4) 8 IX- 6 1 C 12 4.3n . 2n i n a. 12 7 S.ssi 0. 0 r. 12 3. 6

"Nevr moon on the 2Mb, w 11 h. m. p. m.