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iMIIII-II-I I II M- -
KVKKV AFTKHNOUrT m nana t mm jkx;kit sijnoay IN AIIVAM'K.
VOL III. HONOLULU, HAWAIIAN ISLANDS, EVENING, AUGUST 15, 1S94 NO. 122.
The Hawaiian Star.PUBLISHED EVERY AFTERNOON
EXCEPT SUNDAY
BY THE HAWAIIAN STAR NEWSPA-
PER ASSOCIATION, Ltd.
IRiaUlt JOIINMTONK, EDITOR.
MTBSCKimoS RATBW.
Pei Year In Advanco, --
Pet
M.00
Month in Advance. --
toretgn,.7S
pet Yeer In Ailvanee. - 12.00
ADVKHTMIMO BATKH:
KniM lor tmnment nd retrularafivertlii.nRcan I obtalnad at the publication officii.
lUMUIUl prompt tnnertlnn all adTurtlee-rritn- tl
mum be delivered ntthe Biilne' mv txifore 13 ra.
MliTKUKULUUlCAL BKCORU.
iy the BomMMM Hurvey, I'ublUhedKvery Monday.
s a 3o I a
8011.' WO.V "0 83 0.01 5B 3 . 4Moii ...iu:ki.U8 71 M IB O M.fne. I mm sV.S on sr, u 1 HI 3Wil V'Al M.I t 67 U 0.00 7ft 4 INK 4
Thii WW. 11 .Wi 72 m o.oi i r. Nt:Frl . 10:tu.l2 U.W. 11 Kl 0.01 0 4 INK A
Hat o. n i tl II OH 911 4 INK li
........ ...1 fur (amiwrtl nr Rinl
elevation but not for latitude.
Tldea, Snn and Moon.
i I il i !f s
6.38 6.31 3- - 76.80 4 26.80
5 W 6.211
His.
5.3K 8- - 1
5.40 6.27
Day.
p.m. i i. in. i.m, p.m.Mon . i m 41 7.26 lo.BuTues ill S.lltl --' J i 7 4ii 10.4OWed ... lis .1 40 2.65 8.20 11- -
8.6Thur....jl II.Frl 17 4. Ml 6okl-65
M.m.Bat . ..181 5-- 5.26Hun. id ft 6- - 01 ii :if'
Full moon on the le'.h at 2:46 a.m.Time Whlrlle llloivn at lh., 26m., 84s. p.m. of
Honolulu time, which In the aaBM aa 12b , Om..Ob. of Oreenwlch time.
For every louu feet of distance of the ob-
server (from the Custom House) allow onesecond for transmission ol sound, or 6 secondsto a statute mile.
HUH Hi N MAIL SKKVK K.
Steamships will leave for and arrive fromBan Francisco on the following dates, ti theclose of 18V4 :
Arrive at H'b'lulo Leave Honolulu fobFH.OH BAM r CIHUO OAnrAulnuiuM
ob Vancouver Vancouver.Oh or About On or About
Warrlmoo. ..July Australia July 21
. vuu 2 Aiatneda.. .July Ms
.Aug 11 Arawa July a,Arawa ..Aug 2) Australia,.. Aug 18
Alameda. ..Aug 30 ftetglc ....Aug 21
China ...Sept 4 ManiioMi. Aug 23
Austialla.. .. sepi i Warrini-io- Sept :
WHrnmjj. ..beut ai A all i. .Sept 16
Marlica.i.. ..Miut 7 Monowai beit 20
Oceanic... ....Oct 2 Arawa OctAustralia. ....Oct Au.iralia Oct 3
Arawa ...Oct 23 C'llyof Oct 9
Monouai-- . ...Oct i't Alameda Oct 18
Nov 3 Warrlmoo Nov...Nov 13 Australia ..Nov II
Alameda... ...Nov 22 Mariposa...- - ..Nov 15
Warrlmoo. ...Nov 23 1'oru .Nov illDec 1 Arawa . - Dec
Australia lwc i Australia I let- 8
Mariposa Dec 2U Mouowal Dec II
Arawa Dec 28 China Dec 81
Australia Dec 28 1MB,1896. Warrlmoo Janl
Ohtna Jan 22 (ladle Feb U
liccaiiio Feb 10 Peru Alar 20
hina April 2 Gaelic Apr
UAHU RAILWAY & LAND CO.'S
TIME TABLE.jTrom and After Jane 1st, 1SD3
KAIN
TO EWA Mil. I..B. A. D.
A.M. P.M. P.M. P.M.
Leave Honolulu 8:46 1:46 4:36 5:10
Leave Pearl City :8u 2:80 6:10 6:68
Arrive Ewa Mill 9:67 2:57 6:86 6:22
TO HONOLULU.0. B.
A.M. A.M. P.M. P.M.
Leave Ewa Mill 6:21 10:43 3:43 5:42
Leave Pearl City 8:56 11:15 4:16 6:10
Arrive Honolulu 7:80 11:66 4:66 6:45
A Hat urday'e only. C Sunday's excepted.K- - Daily D Saturday b exceptec
HOST. LHWRKS. C M. COOKS. r. J. LOWRBY
LEWERS & COOKE,Lumber, Builders' Hardware,
doors, sash, blinds,paints, oils, glass,
wall paper, matting,corrugated iron,
lime, cement, etc.
BISMARKFEED and LIVERY STABLES,
WAILUKU. MAUI.WILLIAM GOODNESS, Prop.
Carriages to meet every steamer atKahului and Maalaea Bay.
Horses for Haleakala or any partof the island, at reasonable prices.
W. GOODNESS,376tf Proprietor.
REMOVAL
HUSTACE & COhave moved to
Morgan's Auction Room?
for a short time. We are still selling
Departure Bay Coai
CHARCOAL,ALGEROBA and
KINDLING WOODin any quantity.
'Both Telephone!) 414. 3S4tl
I rllO rflrtn DAKfc'B AdvertM.64 and 06 Merchant'. Excliauue, M.D
Friuclaco, Cel., where uouiracU (or adver.aJaTag DM be made fori L u
THE HAWAIIAN STAR.OFFICIAL DIRECTORY.
OF THE REPUBLIC
OF HAWAII.
EXBCUTIVE COUBCIIfc
. M. Dole, President o( the Republic of
Hawaii.F. ,M. Hatch, Minister of Korelun Affairs.J. A. Kin. Minister of the Interior.1. M. Damon, Minister of Finance.W. O. Smith, Attorney-tlenera- l.
AnvitWBY Council
W. C. Wilder. Chairman of the AdUsoryCouncil of the Republic of Hawaii.Oecll Brown, B. 1. Tenney,lohn Nott, C. Bolle,lohn Ena. W. F. Allen,James F. Morgan, Heury Waterhouse,J. A. McCandless, A. Younir.J. P. Mendonca, I. B, Bmlth,
lohn Kmtneluth.C. T. Rodgers, Secretary Executive and Ad-
visory Councils.
Hupbimi Court.Hon. A. F. Judd. Chief Justice.Hon. It. F. Blckerton, First Associate Justice.Hon. W. E. Frear, Becond Associate JuBtice.
Henry Smith, Chief Clerk.ileorge Lucas, First Deputy Clerk.C. F. Peterson, Hecond Deputy Clerk.
J. Walter Jones, Stenographer.
Circuit Judoks.
First Circuit : H. E. Cooper, W. A. Whiting.Oaliu.
Second Circuit : Maui, A, N. Kepoikai.Third and fourth Circuits: Hawaii S.L.Austin.Fifth Circuit: Kauai, J. Hardv.
Offices and Court-roo- In JudiciaryBuilding, King Street. Sitting In Honolulu:First Monday in February, May. August andNovember.
Dbpabtmbnt or Foreign ArrAina.
Office in Executive Butldiiuj, King StreetFrancis M. Hatch, Minister of Foreign Affairsi ifu. C. Potter, Chief Clerk..1. W. Qlrvln, Lionel Hart, Clerks.
Dbpahtment or ins Interior.Office In Executive Building, King HtreetJ. A. King, Minister of the Interior.Jhief Clerk, John A. Hasslnger.Vesiatant Clerks. James H. Boyd, M. K.
Keohokalole, litis Hone, Stephen Mahaulu, George C. Ross, Edward S. Boyd.
hief or Burea-- s, Department orInterior.t
Surve W. D. Alexander.Supt. 1'ubllc Works, W. ti. Howell.Supt. Water Worki, Andrew rinwn.Inspec or Electric Lights, John Cassldy.itegisti'ar of Conveyance, T. 0 Thrum.Deputy Registrar of t.'onvel ances, R. W.
Audi ewaRoad Supervisor, Honolulu, W. H.
Chief Engineer Fire Dept., J. H. Hunt,riupt. Insane Asylum. Dr. tieo. Herbert.
Hnii; u OP Ai, ii ii r ki.
President exihicio, J. A. King, Ministerof the Interior.
Members: W. G. Irwin, A. Jaeger, A. Her-bert and John Ena.
Commissioner of Agriculture and ex officioSecretary of the Board: Joseph Marsden.
Department or Finance.
Minister of Finance, S. M. Damon.Auditor-Genera- l, 11. Laws.Registrar of Accounts, W. (J. Ashley.Collector-Gener- of Customs, J. ti. Castle.Tax Assessor. Oahu, Jonathan Shaw.Deputy Assessor, W. t . Weedon.i'ostmaater-Genera- l, J. M. Oat.
CUSTOMS 111 ul t,Office, Custom House, Esi an !e, Fort St.
Collector-Genera- l, J. B. Caatie.F. B. McStocker.
hu ll. .1 Master, Captain A. Fuller.Port Surveyor, M. N. Sanders.Storekeeper, Geo. C. Stratomeyer.
Department or Attorney-Geniba- u
Office in Executive Building, King St.Attorney-Genera- l, VV. O. Smith.Deputy Attorney-Genera- l, G. K. Wilder.Clerk, J. M. kea.Marshal. E. G. Hitchcock.Clerk to Marshal, H. M. Dow.Deputy Mtvrahal, Arthur M. Brown.Jailor Oahu 1'rlaon, James A. Low.Prison Physician, Dr. C. U. Cooper.
Board or Immigration.
Office, Department of Interior, Judiciar)Building, King Street.
President, J. A. King.Members of the Board of Immigration:
J. B. Athertou, Jas. B. Castle, A. 8.Cleghorn, James G. Spencer, Mark P,Robinson.
Secretary, Wray Taylor.
Board or Health.Office In grouuda of Judiciary Building
corner of Million! and Queen Streeta.Members: Dr. Day, Dr. Wood, Dr. Andrews,
J. T. Waterhouse, Jr., John Kua, TheodoreF. Lansing and Attorney-4ener- Smith.President, Hon. W. O. Smith.Secretary, Chas. Wilcox.
Executive Officer, C.B. Reynolda,Agent Board of Health, J. D. McVeigh.Inspector and Manager of Garbage Service,
L. La Pierre.Inspector, G. W. C. Jones.'Port Physician, Dr. It. P. Myers.Dispensary, Dr. Henry W. Howard.Leper Settlement, Dr. K. K. Oliver.
Board or Education.Offioe, Judiciary RniMiaf, King Street.
President, W. It. Castle.Clerk, J. F. Scull.luapector of Schools, A. T. Atkinson.
Board ob Crown Land Commission ebb.
J. A. King, Minister of the Interior; W. O.Smith, Attorney-Gener- aud '. P. laukea.Offioe In Judiciary Building.
District i m hi
Police Station Building, Merchant Street.A. O. M. Hoberleon, Magistrate.James Thompson. Clerk.
PosTorricg Burjuu.
Postmaster-Genera- J. Mort Oat.Secretary. W. O. Atwater.Sup't Postal Kavlnga Bank, E. H. Wodehouae.Money Order Department, F. B. Oat.General Delivery, L. T. Keuake.
Department, G. L. Desha.Clerks: J.D.Holt, K. A. Dexter, a - Kekn.
mann. F. B. Angus, J. H. Nni. Henry. KalaJohu Hiram. K. Naxita, J. T. Figured.
TNI
ELITE 1GE CREAM PARLORS
Candy Factory.lutDTIMI
hit Bake,I
FINE MOT
IOE OREAM8, COFFEE,
CAKES. CAWOIES TEA, CHOCOLATE
island curios.Our BttHbHshment la the Finest Keaort in the
City. Call anti aae ua. Open till u p. m.
CASTLE & COOKE,LIFE and fire
AORirra kor
NEW ENGLAND MUTUAL
Life Insurance Co.OK BOSTON.
JETNA
FIRE
INSURANCE CO.OF HARTFORD, CONN
Castle & Cooke,
IMPORTERS,HardwareandCommissionMerchants,
General Merchandise,
AgriculturalImplementsandPlantationSupplies.
423tf
This Spaceis
Reservedfor the
EpitaMe Life Assurance Society
of te United States.
BRUCE & A, J, CARTWRIGHT.
Genera Alanagcrs for the Hawaiian
Islands.
Hard Times Mean Close Prices to
Housekeepers.
If you are in need of any New orSecoud-Han- d FURNITURE, RUGS,
STOVBS, SEWING MACHINES, Etc.call at the
IorT jFURNITURE & COMMISSION HOUSF
PACIFIC
COMMERCIAL
ADVERTISER.
76 cents Per Month.
$2 Per Quarter.
SubscriptionsPayableStrictlyInAdvance,
Hawaiian Gazette Co.
CHAS. HUSTACE,Lincoln Block, King Stkkkt,
Between Fort and Alakea HU.DEALER IN
Groceries and Provisions.
Fresh California Roll Butter and IslandButter always on hand.
fresh Goods teceived by every SteamerJrom San rranasco.g 8ATM!1 ACTION OUABAMTUD. jf--J
MISS LIME M. WLVT.
Agtnt to Takt Aitnoiulefements.
Office and Residence corner l'unch-bow- l
Hiid BeTetaAla alreela. 1
CONSOLIDATED
SODA WATER WORKS,OMl'AiSY, LTD.
Ksplimtvl', OOfMf Allen nnd Ftirt streetw.
HOLLISTER Jt CO.. Agents.P. o. Hon sVT, Telephone - i"
LEWIS & CO.IMI'OHTKHS.
Buniilies. Wholesale and RetailDealers in Groceries, Provisions, etc.
Ill Kort BU Honolulu, H. I.tl--ll
M, PHILLIPS & CO.Wholesale linportttnt and Jobbeni nf
AMERICAN & EUROPEAN DRY GOODS.
Corner Kurt and V" Hts., Honolulu.H7tf
J. ALFRED MAG00N.ATTORNEY and GOUNSKLOR-AT-LA-
Offli, 42 Merchant Street,
Honolulu, H. I.
J. M. M0N8ARRAT.ATTORNEY AT LAW AND NOTARY
PUBLIC.Cartwright Block, Merchnnt St., Honolulu.
M. II. L01IEIDE,SIGN and ORNAMENTAL PAINTKR.
BELL TBLWHONI 167.
UF"AU OnierB Promptly Attended to.
H. W. SCHMIDT & SONS.
IMPORTERS AND COMMISSIONMERCHANTS.
Fort Street, Honolulu.
M. S. URINBAUM & CO.United.
HONOLULU, H. I.
Commission Merchants Uld Importersof Gen- rul Merchntnlise.
Hun rmaelaoaOSoa, HI Front St.
C. B. RIPLEY.ARTHUR REYNOLDS.
Architects.Officio -- New Safe posit HulldiiiK
Honolulu 1. I.
Plans, NHM'iflrnt Ions at d Sinifrlntenileiiceurivmi foreM;rj dwcTlptinn of Building,
Old Hui'dit'K BOCOOTtttll remodeli-- HtidenlirKi'd.
u 'hIkiih for Interior i omttonaMapH or lt'i'hrink al 1.' .wiiu. Tmotng nnd
Rhi ir.ntiii((.I' rlrnw niKft for Boo r NoWtpopor 01
ion
Old Kona ColteeFOK SALR AT
J. T. WATERHOUSE'SOhpti Strppt Stnrpe.
HONOLULU
Mutual 314
.;
BISHOP & CO.,Estahlisbcd in 1858.
BANKERS.HOHOMTML Hawaiian Islands.
DRAW EXCHANGE ON
BANK Of CALIFORNIA, FRANCISCO.
AND THKIH IN
New York, Chicago, Boston, Paris,MESSRS. N, M, ROTHILO & SONS, LONDON,
IKANKFORT-ON-THK-MAIN- ,
Tin' ( rOnuMFflW Banking Oo. jf Hyilney,N. S. W.
Hi- Mitnk of New ZealHnd, Auckland, anditH liranclim in OhrtltOtHirCh. DuneiHnnnd VYellinjrt4m.
The Hank of BritWh Oolambi. Vi tnrift. andits hrant'hnN, Van'ouver, Nanaltno, r
B. C . nd 1'ortland, Oregon,be Aores and Madeira
stiK'kholm, Hweden.The Charteml Bank or India, Australia and
'hina.The Iliaigkong and Slum .:lun China; and
V"k(dinina, Hiogo and N'AgaHaki, Jaan.Ami truiiHiu'ta (leneral Bitiikiug BMUMH.
C, BREWER & CO., LTD
Queen St, Honolulu. H.
AOKNTS KOR
HftWaiiail AKricultural Co., OnomeaBngM I 0., Ilonointi Suar Co., Wni-In-
u Stinr Co., Waihee Sugar Co.,Makee Sugar Co., Haleaknla Rar'.'hCo., Kapiln Ranch.
Plnnters' Line San Francisco Packets.Chas. Hrewer & Line of Boston
Packets.Agents Huston Buiinl of Underwriters:Agents Philadelphia Hoard of Under
writers.List or Okkicers :
P. C. Jones PresidentUko. H. Rohkrtsiin MiuiagerE. F. Bishop Trens. and Bocy.Oof- - W. F. Allxn AuditorC. M.H. Watkbhousb.. - DirectorsC. L. Cahtbh )
WILDER & CO.(Established in 1873.)
Estate S, G, WILDER W. C, WILDER,
and Dkalkrs in
and Coal
Building MaterialsIUC8 AS
DOORS, SASH, BLINDS,
Builders' H ard w arc,Paints, Oil GUM.
WALL PAPER, ETC.
Cor. Fort and Queen Streets,
HONOLULU, H. I.
SOAP HOUSE!
M HALL.
Sells the very best quality of Soap$4.50 per hundred lbs., and 17 bars, ofhonest weight, for $1.25. German BlueCastile Soap, manufactured by GransBros, Mannheim, Germany, at 10c per lb.Toilet Soaps, retail at wholesale prices. SoftSoap, in tins of 42IDS., $1.25.
Stearic Wax mining Candles, manu-factured by the Emery Candle works, of Cin-
cinnati, Ohio, 12 candles for 25c.
Kiawe Fire Wood, $10 per cord;same cut in blocks 12 inches long, in anyquantity, from $1.00 up, delivered free ofcharge to any part of the city.
Kiawe Charcoal at 40c a sack.
Richmond, Va., Cedar Wood Poi Pailsfinished with brass hoops, small size 50c,large size 75c.
Empty vinegar and wine barrels, aswater receivers, at $1.00.
Kitchen Salt in sacks of loolbs 50c;Table Salt given away.
Highest price paid for Hides, Skinsand Tallow.
1ST.:wtf Telephone
j ..
THE SAN
AOICNTB
I.,
Co.'s
t'lSlKK
Lumber
at
STRHGE SELF DECEIT.
What MorMil Ul For the HrntlonalMay Nnmrllmi'ft Arroiiiillnh.
A morbid lofi nf tin- m'Tisaf iminlloads vomitf people EDoVB tfped&llj
fOUtlg wihih It, lnrn itnUlgB patlifl. Mnnyxt rmmllrmrv hjUtAH0M an- on of
th) iiu: 1l.1t inaimcr in which tin y haveimposed upon ivhitive and friends, repreMfttlttg tbeimetTH as miNriii fnmibafltltlfl malatly in HODM cast s; in .alicrs asthe of n.jusi ice of peTMKJtllloB.
A case uf the latter kind was that of theCanadian t; Katd to lie pefWUCUml hyHie receipt of Kcurrilous iinonymoiiH lettors. The wholo ppn1ation was roumilinto nmpMthy anil IndiKiiation, and fthfllierv. If was driven finally Into herrac.amid the laiucntat ions of the community,by her malevolent and nmIlNcnvtrah1e
Afterward an examination of herpaper and letters revealed the fart thatshe hernelf bad lnvn the unknown writer.It would seem renmrknblo that one shouldbo one's enemy to such an extent as tocommit suicide by self persecution lu thiamanner. Vet psychologists know thatsuch cases are not Infrequent.
A Meat illustration of t hut Is affordedby the story of a spinster milliner, whonot only wroto herself perwoutlng letters,but actually set flro and destroyed some ofher personal effects In her little shop Inorder to satisfy her morbid crnvlnKfor thesympathy and attention of the oonimuntty In which she lived.
Some years ago Portsmouth was (rentedto a rather more striking example of
when a young woman of good fam-ily cnrriitlout for nyenror two a most ex-traordinary system of deception. She as-
sorted that while traveling she had bsQOUM
acquainted, with n young American ofenormous wealth. They became attachedto each other, corresponded and were en-gaged. Kvory week or so sho received let
is and cablegrams from her imaginarylover, and these she would read to midtalk over with her many friends. Thewedding day was actually set when n cf--
leg foxtl announced the death of her expouted swain. The bride seemed over-whelmed with grief, but her friends
suspicious, and an investigation,quietly carried on, revealed the tact that theletters ami messages orininnted with herself, and no lover had ever existed. Pittsburg Dispatch.
WHAT THE SIGN SAID.
Ami How the Meal Herted lleiuotittt rated ItTuUl the Truth.
Walter Mansfield, the bofcfd of trade attorney, Is n most enthusiastic sportsmanand an expert w ith either rml or gun, buthe will never permit his enthusiasm tostint his st omuch. If at the moment lahad his gun on a Hying quail a dinnerI" 11 should ring, he would drop his gunand go to dinner.
When Mnnsllcld goes out on ono of hitrips, he always locates a place where hecan get u good meal and so times bioopotithat he will reach It at the dinner hourOnce upon a time he went up on the Illy;
Sulphur crock for a day's fishing, and Mhe started out at duyhnak he saw a liltWii- ide shanty, in front of which stood ahorse trough uud a sign, Hot Meals atAll Hours. " The trough did double scrvlee Bl a drinking place for tiied and dusthor. s and a lavatory fur the guests of tinhotel.
''That's just the place," said Walter tohimself. I ll fish up stream and thendown again, BO that I'll reach here a:
' 'n in.Ho carried out Ida programme, went to
the "hotel, " w here hu rublied soft soaparound his DOM and washed it off In thehor&c trough, nnd then seated himself atthe wootlen table. An nld Missourian sursmoking In one corner and never budgedor puid the slightest attention to MansHeld, who was nibbling at a cracker hefound on the table.
"Wall where Is my dinner:" inquiredtho hungry sportsman.
"Thar, " and rancher aimed thestem of his pipe at the table.
' Why, your lgn snys 'Hot Meals at AllHours.' "
' ' Thar sho Is. ( 'rockers an pep pisauce. " San Francisco Post.
A IMgeun With m Memory.It seems really iui)HssihIo to extinguish
tho homing Instinct in a good pigeon. Astory is told of a Kn'nch carrier pigeonwhich was captured by tho licrmau sol-
diers during tho siege, of Paris in 1870.The bird was Udug carried lu a balhsmfrom Paris to some point In the country,whence it was expected to return to Pariswith a message. It was taken to the tierman headquarters aud p rebel ted to thecommander, Prince Frederick Charles,who sent It to his mother la (iermaiiy.Here it was placed In a splendid nsunyaviary and carefully fed and nourished,hut although It was kept here, living Intho lap of royal luxury for four years, theFrench pigeon did not forget its fatherland.
At tho end of that t lino tho aviary wasIt It on h ono day. Tho pigeon Hew out,mounted high lu tho air, Hew alsmt for amoment as if to find the points of thecam pass and started In a straight lino forParis. Ten days afterward It Is at liswings against the entrance to Its uld loftlu tho Itoulevi.rd do Cllchy. Then- it wasrecognized, ai d Its case Is lng brought topublic attvnllou It was honored as a patrtot retnnied from foreign captivity. Itremained at tho Purls .lardln d'AcclimaHon until It died In 1H78. How Hells.
A WuiiisUi Jury'a Verdlvt.A case of women doing jury duty lu re-
corded lu the annals uf old Newbury moreih.iii j o.j ,,u-- up. A certain KUats-t-
Hunt of that towu buvlng In lntmdied under mysterious circumstance and rumorsof foul play lieing circulated It was deemedwise to huvo an Investigation, and a Juryof IH women wus Impaneled, who viewedtho remains and after due deliberation returned the following verdict, doubtless corlOOt with the cxceptiun of tho spelling:
'Wo Judge, according to our lies! lightand coutienls, that tho death of said Klutiboth was not by any vlolens or wmug dunto her by uny parson or thing, but by somesoden sloping of her breath "
The common habit at that time of pi..flouncing or after tho Hrltish fashion usdark for clerk, Darby for Derby no doubtprevented any parson " of the place, allof whom worn pious and excellent gentlemen, from finding a panoaal innuendo Ina decision otherwise rather sturtling.
The t'liH'k oiuimuj.''You huve no idea. " said a luichclor
business man, "how much company aclock In. When I go home to my nsims atulght I am u oaiOJIM Isjanler tho llrstthing that I hour as 1 open t he door, Isthat pleasant tick tock, tk-- took, which Umy only welcome. I huve given that clocka IpOOa f its own ami cun hear it say'. ..in.' In, coini' in, ' when I return at night,and 'goiMl luck, good luck' when I goaway In the morning. Due night I couldHot sleep, but seemed to bo pon.sened of ademon of restlessness, and the atmospherefelt heavy, like load. I didn't find outuntil nearly morning what was tho mattor. Theu 1 discovered that the clock hudstopis'd It was an ciht day dock, and 1
hml forgotu-- to wind it. As MM as 1
could hear Hi. ..oothiuK Uek-tao- k EMIOiloap.1' Detroit Free Press.
Hhould HeJdr Of r It.He You ought to Ij- glad 1 love to klw
girls.She-W- hy?
He You won't have any trouble to kospa svrvaut when we marry Troth
GEMS IN VERSE.
The MHKl "I "I'm M ".(..n.-- 1
know n inml w lie -- t n ei- - nv- mfWith the Ifalngl wlileh in. nit f n hlrv.It - wr lied w ith the tuoiiev m t HlOaill to hsi 6
MfOtflAnd ihf plnures for whleh w- .
The kind word ampOfcl a. i lie pfoailOH blMMAmi taahf a oooetod I n
Are rtaWM ) UlOTa in that land e
The land of "I'rctty Soon."
Thrr nr.' OM )0Wvll (f poatlbll fimotsftOI OBoal In t bl "In t.
And Maat a noble ntnl lofty itiinCovered with mold iithI rast.
And, oh, this plncc, w Idle il IOBM ID nenr.Is fnrtlier awny than tin-
Thoiiifh our pOrtoOM Is fab, et u never ptthere
To the land of "Pretty Soon."
The read thai 'ends to that rntlr l.vidIs fircwn with pitiful wreck.
Ami too anlpB that have walled for Itnlilnfngstrand
Rear ekeletona on heir llpt taIt is tnri li. r M noon thsn it was M duwn.
Ami farther at night lhaa al noon.Oh, let us oaWMO at Unit laiid down thera
The land of "Pretty 9000.-- Ella Wl.eeli-- Wilcox.
My shin.Sly rahln I iWOrt In the onward wwrep
llf the terr Me nnriherii blast.AIm.vc its risit the w dd clouds leap
A rul -- hriek as ihe hurr.v pnnl.The siiow mim-- liins a in m if the pluln;Like l.niuirj wolves they st retch and strain:They race and lump with riutliiia; baOtlI.Ike Health) tread of myriad feetThey pans t he doxir. l"ion the roof
The ley showerx ,w irl and rattle.At timet the nioor,. thoart fur aloof,
Thrmiu'li irlodi and snOMaJn furious battlebllMN w III 10 and wan w ithin the room.
Then will loiids dart acro- - the light.And nil the plain Is lost to rightTlua caljin roekh, and on my palmThe nlfted now falls, eold and calm.
Clod, what a DOWVf is In the iudllay my ear to the cabin side
lo feel the u eight of IhoOl giant liaials.A M'ck, a fly In the blasting title
Of streaming, pitiless Icy sandsA single In art with Its feehle
A intiiise in the linn's throatA sw immer at sea a OabOMB! mnte
In the Htretigth of a teiupe-- i (.l hntl and slif tl- Ilandin iiarland.
The row n Of l alliire.When pOO. have lived your life.
When you IliTt foOgll )oiir last good tight andWilli,
And the dftl work is Dntthed. aixl the snnBttl on the darkening world In all Its strife
Kru the worn hands are tired with all they'vedone,
Kre the mind's strength hepitll todfOOp ant?Wane,
Kre the lirst lorn h of sleep has did led the brain.Kre the heart's springs are slow ami r unnlu
dr- y-
When you boto lived your life.were good to die.
If it may not be so.If you hut light n light you tuny not wintsee the far goal. Nat may not enter In
'Twere bit'- r then in die and not to knowDef eat to die amidst t la- null and din,Sitil striving, v liile the heart beats high ami
fastW'.Wi glorious life, it pin most fall, at last.Ku'-'- end wee best with all your bopi atid all
Vuur spirit la its ..mil,rian. when Mm. full.
Far better to in die.Still on ling up w ard lh rough the mist - o' noire,With all tigs possible and gotlUr tgrOi
Than to touched by ghir and byTo win by pbance feJDe thai may nnt eii'lure,Tliat dies mill leaves you living, w hie ;oe strivfWith wic o il breattl to keep Ita fame aftHOtAmi Tan. with empty Imusl and proud i egrets,
Heineii.brii.ii 0 of a pa.itThe world forgets.
Chamber!1 Jnurnal.
Sun) lew.Her face a polac t hat awaits its king,
I'repareil and set in order w ith tin- goldOf truth, the sparkle nf the Jeweled fbM
Of thought aud thrilled w Ith tutteio! Jfiyfulring.
Rut empty. From her eyes no di oper thingThan loogbtari from bar lips ao words hut
UghMThe Mi k heart Li inks from darkening her
sight.She knows not tenderness nor the mute touch
Of symiiathy. Ber patb boa been loo bright.Nnr dis s she leel liie lack, nnr mourn II ni'.icli.
Rut who watch and love her are most finThe gules hntild open to the tender truadOf wnmanhood, who enters w ith bent head,
Crown'd wilh the blue purple blossoms ofpain.
Anna Knbesou Rrown.
in kind.lie kind to thy father, for when thou wert
youngWho loved thee so fondly aa he?
He caught the drat eooenta that fell from thytongue
And Joined In thy InnoOWl h e.Ite kind to thy father, for now- he ii nld;
His locks intermingle with gny;Ills footsteps an- feehle; once fcarlessand bold,
Thy father is reeling aeay,
Re kind in thy mother, for, lo! on her hrow-Mn-
traces of sorrow be been.Oh, woU mayet thou cherieb and comfort her
now,For loving and kind hath ah.1 boon.
Remember thy mother; for thee he will pray-A-
long a- - H.d giveth her bn athWilh accents of kindness then cheer her lorn
way,KVn In the dark valley of death.
Ru kind to thy brother; his heart will havedearth
If t lie smile of thy joy be w ithdrawn.The goWert of feeling w ill fade at, their birth
If the dew of allYctlon be gone.be kind to thy brother wherever you are
The km of a brother shall beAn ornament purer and richer by far
Than pearls from the depths of the sea.
Re kind to thy sister: not many may knowThe depth uf true slsterl) love.
The wealth o the ocean Ites fathoms belowThe Kffooo thai ijTiritles ehovt.
Th) kindness shall bring to line many sweethours
And blessing thy pathway to crown;A BfeotloU sha'l w eave thi'u a garland of lluwen
More pruelous than wealth or reOOWOu
Hi ill us Hostage."Thou boat my heart," he murmured
low."For years it bus been thine.
Keturn ll if thou'drt have ine gu;hetuiu it now that I may know
What uiay'st be thy design.
"Thine gi tiomt do perplex me so,Th) thoiighu 1 can't dit bag
Thine ejes thy coldness seem to show,Yel when I'd go a sudden glow
Of love dust ia UMNO shine.
"An answer give for weal or woe.If lhou'dr-- m love (b i I. lie,
Ulve liack the heart I did tasUow.'Bhe sighed and aiisWeri.'d, bending low,
"Nay, not wbiht thou hast mine."- til lot t Flower.
Wlm In My WllgfcktOTWho is my neighlsir.' It is he
Who netnU a gift my hands can give,WIiom- human iuier pleads to me
Ills claim lo help, his right to live.
1 cannot flight the gracious lawThat makes a gogf door sorrow rr.
Nor hun a sutTerer'n tear- - that drawMy l.eai t with pit) - eagdo divine.
t lierrlul lltMika.1 turn oft net g uilUOtfuJ baokg to
Uaiks In whiofa my old friends marry well,for I think the scope of a novel U proper!)limited it providing eound, whnleooimaiuuseineiit. The novelist should Butstrive either to preach yr to prove, butinert ly to portray. Stanley L Weyumii
He Uhs Not to Blame.He Yon must iniah 1 am a blamed foollbhe(kiinll I don't unnk egJ bud'
everblani.u Ueiroit Frve Pn sti
ODDS AN0 ENOS.
The rlevll tremble when a bad man be-gins to think nbouf his :(kI mother.
Thorn are two perfectly OOd1 men; onodead and I he ot her unborn. Chinese Jroe-0T-
SThe world 'a pastures every year produce
and t bO world gMMBMO I Ti.flOfi.OOO tons ofbeef nod mutton.
tt lo OOid ibafl Crenl Britain prows ereryyear bushels of turnips, whichare mot!y dJovOOUad by the I'.riti-- h .
Thirty tboltMOdl frogs are brought intothe DtllTato market rach week, and n largearpMrtloa of th m rro raportod to NewYork city.
Vcaooto can load coal at Alaska and de-lii-
it at ,an Francisco cheaper than thentllroadg oafl haul it from the Pennsylva-nia mines to New York.
The iong "Fair Harvard" was writtenninny years gfto in th- - Fay House, which lanow the home of HadciinV college, w bnsetadcata oonetltato "Fn .rer I tat vartL"
When Mrs IVter Coopgf first went tobousekeepiiig.it is said that every articleof lo r furniture was made by her husbandwith bit own bands, including; bedroomand parlor ""eta."
An exchange credits a witty amenity to aperson who had just taken away an um-brella from the pedestrian in front of inm."Permit me. ' he said, "to Muni your um-brella. I found, it in my eye."
The pnn nt of all the varietiea of appleIs a gMtof wild crab. It la kuown that thtafruit was cultivated and improved by theancient Oreokg and Romans, and it is be-lieved t hat even earlier nut ions were. Instru-mental in Its cultivation.
A man's genius is always in the begin-ning of life ns much unknown to himselfaa to ot Iters, and it is only after frequenttrials attended with success that he daresthink himself equal to those undertakingsIn which those who have succeiled hnvofixed the admiration of mankiud lluoje.
"LIGHTS OF THE HAREM."
They Itap Two A nieriran TonrUt Over thelliud Wild Fiikers.
While the two Americans, Mcrfsrs. AllengPtt BOflhtlnhntl, who made a bicycle tourground the world. were in Arrulau. Persia,a present from the Tillage khan was anBOUttOad. In Stepped two 01611 .u.hgahuge tray tilled with melons, apricots, sug-ar, rock candy, tints, pistachios, etc.. nilof which we must of course, turn over tothe khan keeper and hN servants, nnd paydouble their value to the U nrers aa a pres-
ent.This polite metlxsl of extortion was fol
lowed the next morning by one of a botdflTami BlOfg isrefoptory nat ara. Not withstanding the feast of the night I s foro atour i gpoMe, and in addition to furnishingus with iMtlelothes which we really oughtto have boon paid to tloep in, our oily hostnow Irjelated upon thraonr four prices forhis lcnlgiugs. We r fu-'- d to pay him moreth'jui n certain sum and started to vacatetlx proeuhOBO. TheteiiponlgfTimi his graarason oouht hold of our moycloa. Hcmon-strancc- s
proving of nq avail, ami sdngunable to fotei our ptLssngo throng thenarrow doorway with the bicycles I ourbaadoj we dropped t hem ami gre piedwith our iiniapinlsts. A noisy sctitlh andthen i heavy fall ensued, but luckl wcwen- both on the upper side.
This unusual now bn ightout t he inmates of t he vy dnltig alide oon.
In a moment then- was it iliti ofgnronnoa end a fluttar of gam ids,
and then a cia.'.iiing of o'.ir pith he BOHbenOMtfa the blowo of pokers and ami ons.The villagers thus amused OOUM a lastto our res' tie, and at oiiee pna-ed- I topatch up a cumpromise. This, In vie a ofthe .iiniioniiui who werestanding by in nadim . foniMtnud onset,wo Wen1 more than pleased to aoocpt.From Ibis Inglorious combat WO came offwithout serious injury, but with thosegentle poker tiips wen- knocked out for-ever all the sweet delusion of the "Lightof (bo Uorcm. " Century.
THEIR DOG'S QUESTIONABLE COLOR.
t wo i'rt tty f.lrN Try to Agree oimlV. allavtto-lo- oi, but Fail.
"Ke p still. Mamie. logo Is brown andwhite, with n (laik tip on his mse, " saidtile elder .sister to t lie man who gives ea-ulneg a license to live in MInnoapolai
'What's the color of the dog'" Inquiredthe man without removing bis eye Iruiohis pad of blanks.
"Why, to riie, you must DO emy. Ingtiis black and butf. 1 should think youwould know tab oolor of llie dog Chnrih
"gave you."What's the color of the dogr" n sated
the licenser, with a pcn-- pi lolo hardness olvoice.
' Well, Mamie, if yu know all alsuitIn go, p.rhaps you'd Uer toil it. We'llnevi r get a license If you keep interrupt-ing the man. logo Is brown ami whiteand - just bj bandeotno iw he cjiu Is-.-
'He's no mon- blOWU and wh'te than I
urn, but if you want to have him ih m ribed that way. why, of course, he's yourdogYou must Is- color blind. "
' What s the Ooloff of the dogV aald theman, With bis teeth clinched
"Well, put him down btOWn and whitewhen a little dog that's when be wasgiven to me but he's kind of dark now.'"
That's right; tell die truth. No usc)n Is lng s 'litlmeiitui over a dog." said thebhttef as the martyr wrote across tho
"logo, a dog of questionable color. Forparticulars regarding same sv Mamie andticrtie. who an not presMnl fortiiuc"Minneapolis Tribune.
A Itfrdoagc.The prisoner was before the linr of jus-Uo-
(I 'i having bOOfl goaao other bartiai long.
"What were MtJ doing drunk on thesln-et?- gokedJ the judge.
' Was 1 drunk, judge" was the reply lua tone iif surprirsil innocence
The arrest ing oftU-e- S4tys you wen "'I'ndir oath, judge''
"Qgitaliilj "Perhaps boa rint, judge, but 1 was
fuel going along with a birdcage In layhand."
The judge had a jug set the pris-oner.
"Dp. you cull that a birdcage?" he in-
quired. ' Thai's what pm wire carryingalong in your hand. "
The prisoner pieki-- it up carefully, removed the iuapar, look a smell and turnod It upshl.- down It wns us dry .u hewas.
Well, judge," he atisweml slowly, "Uain't ablnhagc now, since thuu ottoggghas had a u hm k at ft
Probably you are sols-- now and seethings differently. M
That am t it, judgiv It was a birdcage whin I hud It last."
"Possibly you rati explain what youmean by a hinhugc. siigestiHl the puiJJad court.
"Kaay enough, judge," smiled the prlsoner, ' it had 4U or .Miswullows In It whentiny got It," and the lucidity of thu ggplauniion and the joUiUU t. ,,f ulmt hudhappened, to it affected the judge mi powcrfull that be dtsmisMil the um-.Det- roit
Frei- Pn-s-
In Sw.slen if youaddh s thepuorest s I
got) on Um it root iVOO WUel Ufl your hat.Th. huom oauri g U Ineiokal n$um it ragpassu lady on stairway To inter an mIiok com or a tmnk 0 ith oue's hut .uIs n gauh .1 a impolite
The Hawaiian Star, f
PUDLISHED hVtKY M rbKNOONSXCKPT SUNDAY
My THK HAWAIIAN STMt NKWSPAASSOCIATION, Ltd.
). rnoR JoaMaroBR, - Mmon,
mnnttnMi sayss.l Vrar In Adviinoo, - ttMlo M.mtli hi Ailvancr, - .tit
I... i, ter Year In Ailvfiw'f. -
iDMMDAY, - AUGUST IS, 1104,
UY authority.BOARD OF EXAMINERS.
Until again announced nn BMIN meet-
ing of the Hoard of Kx tininers Mealedby Act 17 ctf tlM OMWttttttloa will Ih- -
lie i.i in Honolulu. Tha Board will meat
at Khb Plantation store, Wednesday,August Mi nnd :it Kwfl Court HouseThursday, August M.
KDWAftD TOWBK,CARL BUBCHJASt,f. i. oomSi
424-- 4t
IRK.OAriON NOTICK.
Holders of water privileges, or thosepining witter rates, art liereliv notified
that the hours for llllgMlOB DUrpOMS
are from 7 to 8 O'clock a. m. and 1 to (I
o'oloek p. in.A. BUOWN.
Supt, Honolulu Water WorksApproved: J. A. KlNti.
Minister of the Interior,Office Honolulu Water Works.
Honolulu, May 25, 1SII4.357 tf
REGISTRATION NOTICE.
The meetings of the Board of Regis
trillion In Honolulu are discontinueduntil further notice.
The Board will be in session at the Bwa
Plantation store. Honouliuli, from 10
a. in. to 8 p. in., on Wednesday, AugUBI
15th and at the ttwa Court Utilise, fromtt a. in. to 4 p. ill. on Thursday, August16th. '
Hie further meetings in thepreeinets will he duly advertised.
C. T. KODGERS,ANTONIO PERRY,DAVID KELI1PIO.
Hoard of Registration, Island of Oahu.424--
;
WATER NOTICE.
Owing to the drought and scarcity ol
water, the residents above Ju.ld streetare requested to collect what water thei ay require for household purposes heI le S o'clock a. in.
ANDREW BROWN,
Supt. Honolulu Water Works,
tonolulu, H. I. , July 90, 1894.04-- tf
Thk Attorney-Genera- l has de-- i
anded more substantial bonds-- i
en than those furnished in theo e pending against Arthur White,'j his will be another fine opportu-
nity for the Royalist journals to
abuse the Republic and point outthat any bondsmen went under themonarchy.
PATRIOTIC JAPANESE.
The prompt action taken by theJapanese residents to assist theirhome Government in the war withChina shows how strong the love ol
country is in that race. That theJapanese here belong generally to
the poorer classes emphasizes the I
fact they are willing to makematerial sacrifices for a patrioticend where many of the more civil- -
ized races, in the same position, I
would hesitate 11 is learned tintbesides raising a large sum of
money to go directly to the home
Government money is also beingraised on this island for a hospitalfund for field service. It is under-stood this letter movement was
started at the Waialua plantationand will be extended throughoutthe islands. The Japanese at the
plantation mentioned donated from
their earnings . 108 for this purpose,Inquiry shows the movement hasbeen taken up by the Japanesemerchants and that the amountssubscribed from the plantations willbe largely supplemented.
JS NORWAY TO BLAME?
When Captain Stott ran the!Miowera on the reef at thetrance of the Honolulu harbor theAdvertiser was se'erely censuredby the captain's friends for saying, .1, c .1ne was 10 uiamc 111 .spue ui (" -
v. hitewashing given him by thec urt of inquiry, which, by in-I- I
ndo, if not direct charge, al-- t
mpted to throw the blame of the1 lahap upon the Provisional Gov-- 1
ULieut. ITuder the same master1 .0 Miowera has been run ashorea ;aiu almost as soon as she left the
v dock in England. This times went asuore on tne coast 01
Xorway, and ' 'her passengers werelanded on an uninhabitable island.
It is fortunate for Xorway thatCaptain Stott did not have his well-know- n
Honolulu court of inquirywith him, otherwise the blame
might have been put upon thatGovernment for having the coast of
Norway directly in the Miowera'scourse. A similar charge was en-
tered against the Provisional Gov-
ernment for not changing the Ha-
waiian charts to agree with Cap-
tain Stott's navigation
BY AUTHORITY.MCCKlPTfl AM) BXPP.NDITURBs OK llll'. HAWAIIAN TKKASI'KY VOH
THE OH wtvrv f.nmni. JOUR , ISM,
RBi HtPTS,i Ret elptsFran Interior Pctwrtme
" Cofltoms Receipts' Fines. I'enallit s am l' --I. .
" Revenue StampsSan Kraneiseo Dons I 1
Chinese PenspiJIlS" Water ReoelMs
Rlectrtri Light Ren' Market Receipts
" RMfJMn Office Rem n" llilo Water Ri'ivi s
1'oM Diti..,. U.oei,it- - ...." Government Reel's i it hp
Prison ReceiptsBoard of Bdnoalioi Roeipts..
' llegistry of Itraui i" Inheritance Tax" Taxes
Loan Aci Bepterobei Tth, 1899Loan Act January Itth, ISM .
Treasury Not Am I una let, MMI l:i iiu... n Postal 8a villus HankCroivn Land Revenue
EXPENDITURES.Salary of PresidentExpenses of Election ol Delegates ami
tional i onventicn
PERMANENT Sk.TTI EMF.NTS.
Mrs. BlWttS B irnardMrs. Mele KatilianeMrs. Mary R. Stolr. .
JlDHTAKY.Snlary t'liief Justice and Associates
Cterka and Shorthand Reporter" Interpreters and Messengers
Circuit Judges and clerks ...' District Magistrates
" Expenses Supreme and Circuit Courts...Expenses Witnesses Criminal CasesStationary and Incidentals ...
DEPARTMENT I IF KnltF.UIS AFFAIRS.Salary of Minister Clerks and Messengers '
" Envoy Washington . . -
" Secrt tary I.i.ga'ion WashingtonConsul Genera) Ban H ranoleoo
Clerical Aid San FranciscoBandKeeper Powder Magazine .
Expenses Hawaiian Consulate San F rancisco (lastperiod)
Unpaid Bills (last period)
DEPARTMENT (IF FlNANCF.Salaries of Minister, Auditor ( leneral.
Public AccountsSalaries ol' Tax Assessors and CierksIncidentals Finance DepartmentIncidentals Finance Department (hist period)Incidentals Auditors OfficeInterest on Public Debt -
Expense of placing Loan of 1803S ilariee last period not paidSnlarv Postmaster General and Clerks .
Pay of PostmastersPay of Mail CarriersIncidentals Postal HureauIncidental! Postal Bureau (last period)Special Mail CarriageSalaries Bureau of CustomsCustom II, .use Boat Pay RollExpenses Pilot Boats Pay RollExpenses Pilot boats (last period) . ...Incidentals Customs Hu eatiIncidentals Customs Itu cat- (hist period)Incidentals March 31,Incidentals Tax Office (1 st period)Claim of II. O. Treadw ,y
RNEY GENERALS DBPAB1 T.
Salary Attorney Genera I Deputy ...Salary Marshal, Deputy C rl: ami JailorSalary of Bherifts and (
Salary of Deputy SberiSalary of Police Ilawa aul, Kauai.Salary of two Cleri.s R, lag StationSalary Supreme Court 83
lack 1 nipeotor . ." Physicians Recci in. Station
P.iv of .Jailors. ( lirirds i d junas of PrisonersSalary Clerk Translator an I Copyist ...Detective Service -Support of PrisonersIncidentals Civil and Criminal expensesCoroners Impiests
Bmuuo of Public instructionSalaries Inspe, tor General of Schools,
Messengers -Support of English, Hawaiian and
Schools
INTERIOR.
Salaries Clerk, andMessengers
Salaries Bureau SurveyRegistry UlticeImmigration Bureau
" Superintendent Water Works.Assismnts.
Running Expenses Bureau Water Wows(leneral Repairs Water Workss,llliries superintendent Public Works ,
AssistantsRoads and Honolulu Pay Rolls,em TWstohman Steam Dredger' aptain hteani Dredger
(, s liMiJ ,,, GovernmentLandings and Buoys, KauaiLandings and Buoys, HonoluluSteam TugDredging Honolulu HarborRoads and Bridges, Honolulu
DEPARTMENT.
ASHLEY,
Health.Secretary
(ioernuient PhysiciansGeneral Expenses Board Health Pay .
General Expenses Board HealthChildren
Removing Garbage Pav,
Maintenance of Hospitals Pay Roil . . .
Support of HospitalsAct to mitigate Pav Rollsegregation of Lepers Pay Roll
of Le- P-gaTMlon - -
ill i, lent 11. 1I11 4MV innPay of Assistants, InsaneInsane Asylum
Regular pay roll Electric LightLight
Honolulu Department pay roll
Miscellaneous
Registrar -
Pay of Veterinary SurgeonPay of Keeper Diamond HeadI'av ot LlgOl House .ee.iersPay of Oommlaioner A: rioulture
nv ol rroreesor ruieoelPav of Gardener NureeryPay forester Hakikl
of Laborers Makikip,lv ,, NurseiPay R ill lio.ernment I lili ii gPay Roll Thomas and E 111 SquarePav Mausoleum an (i 'oundsl'ay Roll .l.u and K p rAel to Queen'i capital
to Kaplolani Mater t) Homearaditt of Vncifu- . .
Unpaid Mills Interior D 'OH' lit
General B- - Prov al Government.Support ol (lie .Military
'' ';':''' '7""" llakl "1I11 all r orks
Bridge Waialua River" """ a Honolulu,
Purchase Kuleanas Settlement
StRoatl -School Tax
l ieasiiry Note Act, AugustPostal Savings
Treasury Ba'auee. Marcl 31,Receipts to June 30. Kit I
Expenditures Jane 98, 8M..Treasury Balaooe, July I. 189--
Finance lepartment, 2, 18114.
t 99.010 20110,840 Wi
s,at)7 M1.501 HI1,944 M1.057 tMI
1,9 H
15(1 (XI
K',7 5n1,9M imi
I (HI
14.S2M 91989 :u
I,044 458.IKM 24
1,040 Hi
10,157 M
2.5IHI tKl511,11011 (III
onH,7ni 2(1
II, M
m IF
er
to
no
8900,004 or,
91
8896,661 9;
Constitu4,069 17
n.o2 11
75 onfill (HI
(Ml (II)
225 00
4,000 (Ml
1,275 001,881 oo1,878 oo9,806 m9,489 oo
(t(IH 0(1
8 5510,445 3(1
2,170 001,500 oo1,050 00
(Kill fill
104 004.484 50
150 00
307 14133 Hit
10,50(1 Ifi
Register of3,300 009,869 17
187 50891 71
42 9033.110 (SI
I, 120 on1.7584.0110 009,800 5o9,668 50
; 15 07738 27
25 00. . II, 455 51
H (SI
ITS (III
..- - 18 2513(1 III453 (III
22 501,014 64
140 34nii.OHti .
. 1,875 008, ITS oo
598 5o4,160 on
'aim 21,372 85300 00270 oo300 00300 110
4,41(1 0(1
300 002.47 00a.nod 962.231 00
2!) 50411,7711 01
Clerks and8 1,576 00
common23,1143 97
.''luIU !I7
3,7115 003,1 HO 001.440 00l.llstl llll
Clerk and2,513 00
30(1 00720 69
Clerk and1,725 008,328 831,520 00
150 00225 00
Buildings... 751 4031! 50
1,079 8510 00
454 844,593 58
2t),09 fi'i
f 450 004.3(13 351,390 00
29 00114 00705 (10
150 00. . 894 00
3 00225 OO
8,042 0(1
030 50450 00
2,103 005(1 00
l.t.ass m
81,050 00336 50
3,1)30 00150 00120 00225 00505 00450 00250 00255 00225 00222 25135 00524 90255 00
97 00Clrounds.. 311(1 00
2,000 00101
300 00- 5,813 72
02831.997
5,000 008 00
914 788,688 i t
2.018 523,100 17
14,791 SiNLUIES.
975 003(10 00
3,50(1 002.500 00
7. sir. fi'i
Mlt,5il 87
53326,551 97
51tl,0.'i 5027U,.'4 7
1:1
910,665 .',0
W. (1.Registrar Public Accounts.
Minister, Chief Assistants
Bridges,
A(,lilioI1K
Boakii ofSalary ofPay of
of Rollof
Non Leprous Pay RollRoll .
,,,ur,.tO... IW
Asylum
ElectricFire
electoral
Signal Station
ofl'ay
,al.rersGround!
RollItor Executive
Aid
penaee
Otlloh
ail,
Leper
Tax
30,Bank
1H94
July
95
.'2
50,000
120,547
34
184,113
2111,116
1MB .HAWAIIAN STAR, WEDNESDAY AUGUST is. my.
An Olrileel 11 nttion.Tn Might ns falling, .b rlii. it
sis stepped into I lie porch. MareneriMTiibbins was then to greel him, Mlt heteemed not to realhn her presence, it, wasKiMin evident that be was doing it on pursise.
. "Oh. speak 10 met" she cricl."No." he answered resolutely, "I shall
not. From I Ids time forth yon Shall MMns keeping llenee."
"( Mi, hcavt t WI11O have lilonetode-eerv- e
thisf"Imi hi v yon 'ait done he asked
auonifilllj ' VI my 111111.''
'I cannot slleeeit, Vet you inisted meof.
I did, lac ami there Is perfidy on yonrfee- -. '
No.no! v latererelseltnay haveuone,I lane never need t l it or anything eiSSiM 'implex ( 11 is tnj own."
lb langhel bosrseiy, so hoarsely that thepi tnt Inin nn 1,1, lirl t nun a cough drop.
I; is (veil , Out I discovered this oelore' marriage, ' he muttered with Blinebeo
teeth.kDia00Vered What? she vis
ible emotion, lor she was easUy mnvei1,wasM 11 merlta Tat. Inns si. easily moved thatshe had Innu since ceased to trust herselfon roller akates, After a minute's emotion she repeated the question in anotherform :
'What have you discovered?"'That 70S receive lhe attentions of an
other man.""TO false!"
I saw yea driving with lii m last Wednesday night."
Vnll saw me last W eilnrsdaynight V" she faltered. "And this is whyyou refuse to speak to nie?'
"It is."'I can explain all. You are mistaken.""PerhSpa I am," he answered haimlitlly,
"and perhaps I am not.""It. was my aunt you saw.""fio to go to.""I will not," she cried indignantly. "Not
till you have heard me through. You haveblundered upon our family's secret. Myaunt is'
"Well?""A bearded lady."She hung her head and blushed deeply.
Did she blush been use of the painful dis-
closure she bad just made, or because In
was showering apt a runs kisses on the hackof her 1,1,1, Tit-liit-
Fritiiti at ills Handlwerst,"What a complexion!" enthusiastically
remarked ette oi a group standing on astreet comer in a neighboring city recentlyas a well lres-,- i woman spprosehedi
"Ah, there's not hlng to heat that in thistown," lie continued. "I tell you I'mproud of that woman."
"Why sor" asked a stranger srhowaaonenf the parry. "Is the woman a relatlveofyours?"
"Oh, 110."
"Then Why do you rave so over the com-
plexion?""Why, sir," said the first speaker, "I sold
K tu her myself. am the druggist Whomakes it." New Vork Herald.
Uvfi-t-x-
JrSi , .;: v
-- ' ."A
-. R sV'ia
Mrs. Mea I Why what's the matter'PustyRI .'.' Utterly exhausted, mum.
Bad to knee . tn tool Puck.
lie , niiu rcii ttt paanrlptloiiaTlio old u nl leiiiMii in his he.irt did not
obji ct tn lhe youoa man hh nhut l e wan nut of uiat klod of old Hiitlt1-ine- n
who I ke 10 raise nbjcetfnns first nnltl.e.i re.ieb an agreement, aa though botvoracnnferi iuH ftlVOf, nd wlien the youngman callexl on the Important mission bewai ready for liitn.
"St.," lie i'lterrtipted fiercely before tbeyouth bnd two words, "you want meto t you marry ley daughter, do you?"
Tha young man irnt his Moond wind onthe first Jump.
"T didn't ay ao, did I:'" be asked coolly.The old gentleman gasped."But you were going to say so?' ' he in- -
BlMt til."Who told you I wast" Inquired tha ap-
plicant, teeing his advantage."Hut you want ine to let you marry her,
don't yoU?" asked the old gentleman, noftuing."Xo.""Xo" nnd the old gentleman almost fell
off bis chair."That's what I said."The old gentleman thought be bad made
a mistake."Then what in thunder do you wanU" be
exclaimed."I want you to give your consent," re-
plied the youth pleasantly. "I'm going tomarry her liyhtfW, but we thought yourContent wouldn't he a bad thing to have ana starter."
It took the old gentleman a miuutu to re-cover his Kjuilihriuni. When he did, beput out his hand.
"Shake, my hoy," he said. "I've beenlooking for a with Home sand inhis craw, and I guess you'll do." DetroitFree Press.
or OonnaeThe silence of the forest was about them.
There Wire alto ant hills, but theywere toofur away to cut any figure.
She drew her mantle more closely abouther slender form mid shivered.
The best literature goes to show thatthere was nothing unusual or nut re in theproceeding,
He glared fiercely at tbe tuft of moss ona ueigbboflug oak.
"Aha," he hissed, "I shall take my life."She spake not in reply."Do you QOC think," lie demuuded, "that
with your heart cold toward me, I werebetter dead?"
She atghed."Yes, Mr. Diuktnsnoopi-r,- she said, and
her voice was like lhe gen lu purling of thebrook, "if It's warmth y.m're after, I daresay ou nr. right,"
A throstle in the net !. boring thicketemitted a loud and dissonant note.
Presently they might have been Beenbilei t y heme. Detroit Xews-Tril-
une.
An I leoneldevate itai);ir.The man, .Wnfc-ve- be was, who designed
the. doors mi the floor of til.' bmisu of repr MBtatlTl Up at the cap-- w wan h veryire msHert t individual. It need not beli t nedthr all th members of what thepai ea irre1 --ent ly rafof to aa 14The CaveI ' tboWinl " hi'c ia the habit of gettingInt. 1 a oo 'it ion where they need thes; e ll r to mind li ui where they nro at ,
b it even uiu v ry men will necaJonaill ge. np In tbd morning with a
, dark blue metallic taste in theirtin1' ats niitl ii certain uusteadiuesB ofnerrei th it ill C"i,; w ith tutldeQHhockH, Kow iii getting into the housethey are m i Ii more than likely to use lheHide dours IlOQl lb. north and mth corri'lorn, and it is here that thearchitei t busput in his iii.t work, lor on both pairs ofdoore ther are elalMirate ornaments oftwisting Hi'akeH, t h verly t ast. vhich leernl tbe pas- Bby imtliguantly and lifelike.
Poat,
The .11 Child.Little Main Kthel must think you're
lots hatter than any ol her 01 her beaux.Mr. Spooui.way (ratifltsl and blushing!
Why, dfgrfLittle Mai- lii' H. if she leta me atay
in the room when you call, u she don'tu hen tbe others cell. Chiceao IteoonL
A HOPELESS CASE.
After renins aii the striate, ttte BaetanSlsea it l it.
Ills wife hud tnid Mm thai bsnssdejlMbadly, and nfier thinking I; over for n weekI... tYcitled to have Ids hair rut.
lie had Man sitting In I he barber chidrfi the Inst half hour. All those little at- -
tentiOBS for which barbers have bsootnslin ed had Men showered upon him wit h
Ja ish hand and trslSSS tongue. The bar-0-
laid down his . taSoTS,
, deep drawn si;:h of InifTablc relit f ap1 tired o coma up out of tbe Innermost us--
,, tterlng of the sbalr, for the lltth manfarcied the ofdeal was tearing its end.Tl a through ha f closed lids lie saw t ha '
hu iter arm himself with a long lmlrid1,1 i li. Memories of tin- taut were Waftedl.u k to Idm, and shutting ids eyes he
roanetl aloud and shuddered,"Pomatum on your hair, sir?" inquired
the barber in bis otlmsl tones as be jabbedtie long haired implement of torturs downtli." Utile man's back and wiggled II aroundIn a manner particularly exasperating.
"No, sir. I never usethe stuff!" snappedthe vict im, with a took of disgust.
"A share, sir?" suggested the barber Inrn offhand way as he shimmed a greasyhand familiarly over the little man'smonth and proceed ad to pal his face affec-
tionately with a sloppy towel."No, sir. Thank heaven, 1 shave "
eeSie the reply in a voice tremhiiagwith indiulllitinn.
"Shsmpool " .'in tinned the barber, withih jued pefseveraie-e- as lie mullled up theIn ' man's head in a hot towel.
Who! Heaven forbid!" came the halfsmol answer.
"Or sea fonm, sir?" went on the per-
sistent barber aa ha fondled the throbbingbead lietwecn his clammy hands.
No. no! Nothing!" gurgled a faint voice111 reply.
"You'll want a bath, sir?" exslaimed thebarber after a laps,- of a few momenta, in abrisk, businesslike tone, as though he werecommencing all over again,
"No, sir; I won't, I've a bath In my ownhouse," quickly rejoined the little niau,shaking himself defiantly and putting likea donkey engine.
"Shoe shine?" laconically suggested thebarber.
"No, no! I shine my own shoesalways!"fairly shrieked the little man testily as hewiggled to get free
"Before you go, sir," softly whisperedthe barber in a confidential ami persuasivetone aa he combed the little man's hair ina manner thin wasalmosl lender, "I wouldlike to sell you a bottle of my patent, hairrestorative. Your hair, sir, is coming outby the handful."
"I know it is!" shouted the little mangleefully, "and I'm glad of it. I've tieenusing Jinks' Hair Remover for.the pastlive years, and I hope sunn, sir, to have noneed of your services whatever."
"Yes, sir," answered the barber in adreamy, mechanical way as he releasedthe victim from his clutches.-- Puck.
A Trench Hoy Hero.Another name, our Paris correspondent
says, la added to the list of boy heroes of
the French wars by the death of a drummerboy ut the sieeot Mauhcuge 100 years a .0.The overlooked at tin- titoe,were brought to light by modern historiansof the French revolution. Strauh, orStroh,rus it isal-- spi lled, was a drummer at 14
in the French Royal Bwadlah regiment. Itwas on Oct. la, V,'Xl. The army of the con-vention hail undertaken tn raise theslegeolMauhcuge by tin Austrian, nnd Strauh'?regiment, had been sent to occupy the vil-
lage of Dourlera, Regardless of danger, theyotuig drummer lipped through the linesof Austrian skirmishers by hedgi s andditches, and cached the canter of the vil-li. ge, where he pr iceeded to perforin oil hislrum a rattling e ill to tirmn.
The enemy, believing that the French bin.occupied the village, retreated in disorder.Tate enabled the French to gat ni to theBret bouses of tin village By this time theAttatriani had discovered bow thty bad1been played w ith and were in no humor tnforgive tbe ant bo;' of their defeat. Strauhran for his life, but too late, Surroundedin front of l he ohuroh by ungariau grena- -
mete be fell, having himself shotdoun atYernl of his assailants. A peasant bidden In J
a loft bail witnessed the whole scene. Someyean later in the army he met Slrauh'sbrothers, who were aware that the drum--
er hoy had been Killed, but were ignorantm' t he circumstances of hie death until thepeasant told them. In IK?, in opening theground i front of the church of D.airlers,a boy's skeleton wan found among thebodies of seven Hungarian grenadiersTims the peasant's story, which it appearedImpossible to autbentli ate, received a con-I- :
rinal ion. Lomh m Xews.
Corner Doors Tor Street Cam.A u move has been made by the West
Kial Ii:iilroad company of Huston in intro-ducing a new arrangement whereby pas- -
Bcngurs can leave street cars more quicklyand more conveniently. The ease of exit isa factor in the comfort of passengers thatBl n el railWay coin panics have hii berl beenstrangely negligent of. Rapid transit in mostAmerican cities is still in its early st ages,and so long as people could tmvel from onepoint to n net her they have put up as bestthey could with the crush and turmoil andvitiated air of crowded cars.
But the public is becoming somewhatrestive under this burden of discomfort,and, what is still more to I he point , the rail-way companies arc beginning to recognisethat if they are to retain and increase theirbusiness they must make their lines at-- tracl ive.The h ail of tho West Fud company will
probably soon be followed by developmentsin the same direction. Their improvementconsists of a pair of doors placed at the COT
ners of the ends of the cars instead of theningle door usually occupying the center ofthe ends of the cars.
Only one nf the dnors will lie open at atime that on the side of the car farthestfrom lhe adjtiiningtrack but it will readi-ly be seen that by this device escape from acrowded car will be much less a matter oran anxious and annoying struggle than itbut too often is at present. The newlytilled vehicles are well named "acceleratoccars." Pittsburg ilispaieh.
Th (.rami Old Man.A hiily who bus recently cihiih from abroui)
is rt'punsiblu for this true hut HunicwhatIrrevereiM uuec'ilute, which hIhiws the a
In which Mr, GlttdttOQl is held byItin family. Shu WAS OttlUog on Mrs. (ilml-Bton- i
the "(jiuml Old Mmi" hud notmade an appeai-unee- The OQnvOfSAl Iondrifted Hround tu BsDgUen. politics, repeal,umI tbe general opinion uemed to he that
thinH-wei- pretty badly."Ve hhuuld be thankful, however," wxid
tho visitor, "that there h One above whowill wateh over us," meaning a benignProvidence.
"Yes," assent d Mrs. Oludbtone, wbiwuthought were i idently on her cel brute I
husband, "ho his just gone tipst tirs tochange his coll. in aud cuffs:" KaWMflCity Time.
A (ilorlfittM y It lory,Mrn. tie .stjUv I'vu not afeesdol Msa
du Fashion al last.Husband Howl ,
Mrs. lti fMyll At .Mrs. uolast puriy wo uf tbS gUSSlS falnuil, solut my rsospttloa lat night thurriltih wiu, bo xn nl that ulx of th,. liulluuhad to In; earn,-,- out, and Qns hud to huvuii doctor. New Vork Wockly.
A Had Time.Mm. DtmplStOB I (asl an ImUly. I
a my husband if he didn't love im- to-day, and hu wouldn't pay thu h,. in, at-tention to me.
Mm. von Blurnei Perhaps you asksdhlin while hu was at dinner Nrnv VorkHerald.
A Creature uf Habit.Prison Wurden Tall niu w hy you oh- -
icct tu occupying the other oell.Prlboner Oh, do put ms into No. ,fi! I
Have ot so mad to my old cull. 1 nttcjould sleep lu u struugu uud, you know.Uk.
Hqoig CieireG
AO'fl. Ci B, CardOaklandi Cai.
Made Over AnewChronic Headache Cured Weak
Lungs Made Strong and Well.For yfars I had sick headnrlirM every day, and
-- I nUo lu'l rrrj wruk Iubki. since I hartl.orMi taking llooiVi 8art:iiarllla, I harbtlB rn- in I ciirrd of and mylimn aro Btronn and well. Frlendi often lay
How Vcll You'ro Looking.I tell them It ll AM to Ilood's Sarsnparllla. I
:im Bm.i.1 In st ilurn never weighed over100 pound- before, taking Hood's Sarsapft- -
rlila, and at the time I begin taUnglt I hadrun down to 8." BOUadti lint now I weigh
Ill' j. My friends thought 1 wonld be deadI0114 no, bttt I um perfectly well. I amunable to express my thanks for the good
Hood's Garsaparillabas in.-.- MM. C. I). ('Aim, 121B Adeline
Btre it, Oakland, CSilforntt,
Moo-1'- P'llO ev.ro ail l.ivnr Ills, bilious,ncss, Jaunt e, fll i m, Bl k llcadaoha.
Hobron Nowman & CoWIkiIpshIb Aeenfst.
This Spaceis
Reservedfor the
Equitable Life Assurance Society
of tbe United States.
BRUCE & A, J, CARTWR1GHT,
Genera Managers for the Hawaiian
Islands.
Hard Times Mean Close Prices to
Housekeepers,
If yon arc in need of any New orSecond-Han- d FURNITURE, RUGS,
STOVRS. SEWING MACHINES, Etc.call at the
I cjr LFURNITURE COMMISSION HOUSF
Castle & Cooke,IMPORTERS,
HardwareandCommissionMerchants,
General Merchandise!
AgriculturalImplementsandPlantationSupplies.
4 Mir
A BIG
IS WORTH I.
FOLLOWING UPWe liuve un idea that there is
considerable artistic taste lyingdormant in our midst, which onlyrequires bringing out
With this in view we have im-ported some very instructive littleHand Jtooks on AIM sueh ae .
The Ail of Sketching from Nature,
The Art of Landscape Paiotiog in Water Colois,
The Ait of Fl:wer Painting,
Sjstem of Wuter Color Painting,
Marine
and many others on differenttopies. TI.ere is no lietter edu-cator than a close study of na-ture, unil in order to enable thebeginner to start in the rightdi-MOtto- n
ill his efforts to repro-duce what he sees in nature,we suggest a perusal of theselittle treatise. . . .
KING BROS.HOTEC
STREET.
Honolulu, Angus iSd.mr. customer
Dear Sir:In rcjily tn yours o(
30th tilt, wc WOUid say thai wehave all the ikIs you ask for.In most of the cases the pricesyon quote are our regular prices,but on some of the items ourprices are lower than you men-tion, and we shall of course giveyou the benetit of the reducedrates.
Razors and StropsWc are V"u ha c decidedto try our new "set blade" razors,and patent swing strops, as inthe country ever man has to dohis own shavltlg and as shavingbecomes a pleasure with these"tools" wc know you will have alarge demand lor them. In re-
gard to Lawn Sprinklerswe will say that we have sent avery simple one, which cannotwear out or get out of order, theprice you see is low, and the)will do good work.
Pocket Knives -- W e sendwhat you order in this lineand will say that wc have latelyreceived a tine assortment so canlurnish anything in this line from15 cents to 4.00 each. Yes, wehave the Clauss Knives,have sold them lor a year, citherin sets or single bread knives.Our stock of Butcher andHunting Knives is also com-plete.
Soap -- As you did not sayhow many bars you wished to the100 lbs., wc are sending one caseeach 42 -- 50-60 and 70 bars to100 lbs. We carry a heavy stockof this article and, as you willnotice, it is a first grade Laun-dry Soap, and we have put it inat a very low figure.
We regret that you got "nip- -
Sed" on that ' bargain" 111
Wire and note thatin future you will come to usand get a first class article. Wethought when you told us of your"buy" that before it had been uplong you would see you had a"sell."
In closing let us say that wchave a large and varied stockol Hardware, Ship Chandlery.Paints oils, and leather, andwhen rilling your orders willalways charge the lowest prices.
Truly Yours
E. 0. Hall & Son,Limited.
ForSALEOrLEASE
The ResidenceLately occupied by
Mr, A. J. Cartwright,Situated on Corner of Lunalilo and
Keeaumoku Streets, Makiki.
For further particulars apply toBkucb Cartwright
Trustee.344 tf
THE HAWAIIAN
Deposit t MnieiitCOMPAXY.
HAS -MONEYTOLOAN
on good real estate security. AUo twovery desirable HOUSES FOK BALEupon easy terms.
Apply for particularsTHE HAWAIIAN SAFE DEPOSIT
AND INVESTMENT SO.408 Fort Street, Honolulu.
18; tf
REST0R
Ml
CASTLE & COOKE,
IMPOR t ERG OF
HardwareandGeneralMerchandise.
The ROCHESTER LAMPCOMI'ANt were given thehighest award al the WORLD'SFAIR tor ARTISTIC LAMPS,SHADES, BURNERS, etc.
We are offering as a specialtytheir line PARLOR TABLELAMP with COLORED LIN--E-
SHADE. These lamps aresilver plated, o( a beautiful de-
sign and arc sold al a low price.We also carry a complete and
well selected slock of other lampsof various sies, patterns andprices, but call your special at-
tention to this PARLOR LAMP.We have handled CLAUS
KNIVES for over a year andhave always found them to givegood Satisfaction, while in theCUTTLERY LINE we havemany new DESIGNS in CAR-VERS, TABLE CUTTLERYami SPOONS. Anything youdesire can be found at our store,as our stock is a large one. Wenave a good article in SPOONSat $2. 25 per dozen.
Something new in TOWELRACKS. They arc NICKELPLATED, in no way bulky, canbe adjusted to anything, arcneater than wooden ones, costless, look better, are belter, andjust what you want from 15 centsui).
SOAP. SOAP. SOAP.BROWN SOAP. BLUE
MOTTLED SOAP and CAS-TILE SOAP in quantities tosuit.
BlowingYcurOwnHorn
is a waste ol" wind. The publicdon't want it; they won't believeyou. It is not what we, but whatothers say, that tells the Story.
A prominent physician writes:"I have found your drugs of equal
excellent with those supplied by otherHonolulu linns."
Krom a country merchant:"Your Jamaica, dinger in excellent.
It is the bast I have hail here. Youmay expect my future orders,"
These are voluntary testimonials.They speak for themselves; we cangive you many others. We expectto do business right in Honolulufor twenty-fiv- e years. We expectto have most ol the drug business,too, as our increased sales clearlyshow tbflt the public are sensible ofthe presence of a live, cut-rat- e
drug store.
Our later announcements will behair-raiser-
HOBRON, NEWMAN 4 CO,,
Or si gCBCi t as.H91 tf
ATIOHOf good times is what the Sand-wich Islanders want, but theburning question with them to-day is, where can they get thebest carriage work done for theleast money. The
Will Mi'S.is authority for the statement that the bestsatisfaction in the matter of Carriac Re-pairi- ng
can be had at Ko. 70 QUEEN St.
A LADY TIIKOSOI'IUST.
MRS. 11111:1.- - Oft tiik MUtWIKROWLIMI Mil Kl -
Onre All Religion. Taught llnlverHftlllrottirrlioorl lluilillilum Com-tii-
LMHlffVii
Mr Thirds of Chicago, bnl more re-
cently of San Francisco, is in the city'and is the mu st of Mrs. T. H. Foster. 011
Niiuunn avenue. As previously an-- jnoniicod, Mrs. Tliirds is a Theosophist,indeed a lender in that school of moralscience, and visits Honolulu for the ex-
press purpose of delivering a series oilectures upon this subject, a subject!Which i now holding the attention of
the enlightened world.Mrs. Tliirds is a lady of great intelli-
gence. of a broad and liberalmind d to delve to ultimatefor truth, and then to separate the nug-gets of worth from the dross, by exer-cise of slrong reasoning facull ies. Mrs.Thirds, however, has not always been aTheosophist ; but, in her own word",was liorn a skeptic an Atheist, perhaps.
Her father was and Is an agnostic,lieing a believer in the principles anildoctrines as enunciated by ColonelHubert Ingersoll. Therefore, reared inan atmosphere of free th'iiight, with sur-
roundings that encouraged explorationsinto the world and universe of reason,from the simple fact that the child-min- d
was not given theories to feedupon, Mrs. Thirds drifted into a realisticconception of the cosmos, and from ma-
terialism into the broader Held ofTheosophy.
J. ike other people, at that stage ofhuman existence at least, the concrete,the material was accepted; and so theabstract the but ob-
scurity a mysticism so with iiidiasi indistant to be encompassed by the mind
Theosophy, she thinks, puts this coin- -
mon theory to flight and enables theto explore the hidden things of
the spirit, or abstract life.After years of study and teaching
Mrs. Thirds says she is proud to be..:.ll...l ! Pnllnwa r.f M...1,.... It!., .......l, .
Blie does not call the belief a creed butrather a system, and says that it com-
bines philosophy, science and religion,all of which give birth to, nourish andsupport the doctrine.
Speuking to a representative of theStar Tuesday afternoon Mrs. Thirdsstated that the very first principle ofTheosophy was universal brotherhood,freedom of opinion and religious toler-
ance. The belief, tne system was not areligion, but was a reformer of religion.It found good things in all creeds andsought but the truth in all.
Continuing, upon an intimation tothat effect, she said: "Yes, our belief is
often accused of having sprung fromIluildhistu. Some call us Buddhistsand all such things. But we decline toaccept the Impeachment, Theosophy is
independent of creeds."Later, however, she admitted thftPtu
Theosophy was more clost ly allied tothe Buddhist religion, and bore astronger affinity to that creed than anyother. In explanation of this positionshe stated that the religious tolerancefor the Buddhist! had enlisted the sym-pathy of Theosophisis and had broughtabout a degree of fellow-feelin- g whichmight not be encountered in the con-
nection of Theosophy with other creeds,Christianity.
"In the beginning all creeds were thesame," she said. "The fundamentaldoctrines of the sages were Identicalin spirit. Buddha, Zoroaster, Jesus andperhaps Confucius, when . on earth.taugHit the same truths. There shouldbe no difference in them
"Buddha taught universal brother-hood, so did Zoroaster, so did Jesus buttho followers of all have departed moreor less from those teachings. Christtaught more than we have record of. Itis not to lie supposed for a moment thatduring his life as a teacher, a leader, afounder of a religion that he tajight anddid no more than is recorded in theNew Testament. The student of Theos-ophy can read much in the writings of
the apostles, and can see much behindof which there is no account."
She continued by saying that the fol-
lowers of Jesus had gone wide of themark of His teachings. From a sect In--structed in universal brotherhood andreligious tolerance it become one ofintolerance and nerseelllioii. Of themany, lluddhiuui is the only religionwhich holds scrupulously to the teach-ings of the sages.
"Jesus was a sage," she said. "WhenI first studied the bible this was, per-
haps, not a forcible Impression. Hut bythe more ellicient agency of TheosophyI class the founder of the Christianreligion among the greatest of the sages.He has given the public as much us theycould understand ; has Buddha andZoroaster and Confucius.
"Theosophy is a turning from thematerial to the abstract side of things.We look upon and study the abstract,the spiritual, the sentimental. Wehold that the spiritual ll not hidden, notImpenetrable, but that it can be studiedas anything else. Ot course it is diffi-
cult, and fur that reason must bestudied wilii a trained comprehension.
"We are not llati nulists. We donet. say that the soul is a faculty or athing within the body, but that thebody is a house for the soul. Throughthe abstract of human life we persevereafter truth. That is our aim; that is
our element. It is philosophy, scienceand religion combined from which weextract truth.
"Theosophy is a reformer of religion.is the agency by which the teachings
of the sages are to be restored and intro-duced into psychical and practical life.It obstructs nut, but seeks tho factfrom all creeds.
"People have misconceptions of us.They call us spiritualists and Malty allof the ',ius'. But because I do not e
in a big man up in the. sky, apersonal god, am I to be called aspiritualist V
The lady cotiuued to speak of Theo-
sophy lor some time, during whichshe referred in pleasing terms of tiiework being done by Mr. Maiquies and. thers in the local society. A libraryhad bcin started and wink was pro.greasing very satisfactorily. Her visit
In Hawaii n mdfl in tin- - hope of firi-ng; RlrciiKih to the lociil society bv herlecture and irark,
Tuesday night a party of ladies metat the homo of Mrs Foster, on Nutianustreet, anii were nddresBed by Mrs.Thirds upon the subject of Theosophy.
at the hall in the Foster blockbeginning at 7:80 o'clock she willdeliver the first of a series of addressesupon the snine stihjcct.
BIXF.ivkii stoi.kn GOODS,
A i.hmm Unit Hits rroltnl.ly Mm liftingOn fnr Years.
A Chinaman by the naine of ChOflgI, inn, was arrested last night for receiv-ing three buckets of paint and threecases ol glass which hail been stolenfrom Wilder & Company. From evi-
dence in baud is believed that theprisoner bad been encouraging theserobberies fur some years for the profitobtained in buying the stolen goods andselling them to bis patrons.
ConcertThe Hawaiian band, under the leader-
ship of Professor llerger, will givea concert this evening at 7 ::i(T
o'clock, at Thomas square. The follow-ing is the program
PART I.
1. March 'Manhattan Ilcuch" .Suuza2. Overture "JSenteralda'', .Herman."t. Finale "Itelisario" Ilnnizctti4. Selection "Krnani" Verdi
PART tliS. Medle "Ye Olden Times" ..llerger
. Waltz "The Paradise of the Pa-
cific" llerger7. l'olka "Xuiinnu Valley'".. llergerH. Scottische "Pretty Women of
Honolulu" llerger"Hawaii I'onoi."
HERBERT BYGRAVE HERE.
ins 1. in:
Wrecked In l.ove the World Hi NoI Iiiii in- - for lllni, and He tines to
Win- - In CnreH.
Herbert II. Uvgrave, anarrived on the S. G. Wilder from
San Francisco this morning and willspend several duys in the city.
Mr. Bygrave is a small man, con-siderably below the average, and hasjust turned his thirtieth year. He has
bright eye and wears a thin darkmoustache which he finds pleasure incurling at the ends.
On the street this morninghe wore a dark suit the coatquite nobby though rathershort, and a light colored cap.He looked over the city in companywith Mr. S. W. Hergstroin, the organmaker, who was a felluw passenger onthe Wilder.
Mr. Bygrave passes as a tourist, andstated to a Government official thismorning that be was merely down for atrip and would return on the Wilder to
States. This, however, is not theimpression the young man has left be-
hind him in Sati Francisco; anil if all
spiritual; as antoo profound and A nu man a e
reason
including
had
so
Ii
it,
true is Olaa system itsJapan cationface
near future.There is a fine story going the rounds
about young Mr. Bygrave whichexplain liis appearance here. It foundpublication the Sin FranciscoChronicle of August 8d is 'follows:
The bark S (i. Wilder sailedHonolulu on Tuesday last and carriedaway as a passenger Herbert H. By- -
.......... .. .. ... ... .....11 .. ... ..,, ,, ...
111 mis eiiv. iii'iiiiiinu in tiiesto Yokohama to accept ft inthe Japanese navy. Bygrave is a
young fellow is veryhighly connected in the old country.There is a touch of ronence in lifewhich accounts for his b vingneenSan Francisco.
At an early he conceived a pas-- 1
sion for a high-bor- n young lady thecounty of Kssex, his native place. Hislove was returned, but the parentshad loftier hopes for their offspring amithey scorned the young man's preten-lion- s.
It was the old, old story. The;
plished, but these constituted her onlydowry. A wealthy baronet was a suitor
W her hand, and, theM waB wedded a man old enough to
le her father.Young Bygrave ran off to sea, and
his return went into the training shipj
Worcester, from which he afterwardsgraduated. England held morecharms for him and lie shipped theBritish ship Hutteriuere as mate. Hemade two trips in her around the Horn
San Francisco and finally settled here.Disgusted with his home and every-- 1
thing English, he resolved to becomeOB American citizen ami about Aveyears ago he out tiia naturalization
a monthly allowance from home uponwhich he lived very comfortably. A
desire oveicaine hi in to return oncemore the laud of liis birth and gazeupon the girl w ho was still mistress ofhis heart.
In May. 1800, In, in company withThomas O. Lindsay of this city, made atour of Europe, he reachedhis blrtbplaoe he found that the girl heso much loved was dead. died
poor fellow was I
inconsolable at thr c- iand from thatlone he seeined-i- o care little what
MOWN LANDS UKl'ORT.
ROM! r(T 01 IWTIBRWT TO
TIVKS AM)
Whcr suit How t Oct r. HomeWhat Cnn He tm with 11
Valunlile Statistics.
Tbe biennial report of Mr. C. 1'.
laukea, Commissioner of Crown Lands,is to hand y and ll a vuluublr aswell as interesting treatise upon this
subject. Mr. laukea devotesconsiderable space to the Olaa coffeelands Hawaii, and the neighboringterritory in the district of Puna, muchof w hich will be found of gn at value tointending settlers as well as to personsdesiring know more the lands in
that quarter now being opened up. 01
these lands the Commissioner says:SRTTI.KMB.NT.
The opening of the new Volcano roadthrough the Crown land of Olaa, inPuna, Hawaii made accessible to settle-ment a large area of fertile land w hichhad hitherto remained practically un-
known. The desire for land which fol-
lowed, necissitated the adoption of amore liberal system of leasing, so as tomeet the requirements of the class de-
sirous of taking up land. With thisObject in view, the principle of freeselection in limited areas was Intro--
'ducedand the land thrown open rentfree for the first three years, subject tocertain conditions of improvement andcultivation, the tenure being a thirty-yea- r
lease.As a direct result of this system, the
total area now occupied at Olaa foractual settlement and cultivation, ex-
clusive of the Homestead Reservationlor native Hawaiian", is 11.47K acreseijthty-fiv- separate holdings, an averageof ISA acres to each selector.
IIOMKSTKAI) RKSKRVATIOX, OLAA,
III response to the claims of a numberof native Hawaiians, tenants the landof Olaa, a reservation of 1400 acres wasset apart specially for their use. Suita-ble sections were allotted each in thenature of homesteads, a continuous resi-
dence of five years being required, dur-
ing which period no rent WSJ chargea-ble. Forty-seve- n have acquired hold-
ings Occupying a total area of 482 acres.The settlers with their families, number-ing over a hundred persons, are thriftyand in comfortable circumstances. A
church has been erected at the settle-meU- t
and all that is now necessary is asuitable school where their childrenmay receive the advantages of an earlytraining and education. The attentionof the Government is respectfully in-
vited to the needs of the settlers in thisregard.
The appended tables, marked A andP, give the names of all the selectors atOlaa, together with the area held by
each, whilst the accompanying maps,Exhibits and 2, show the sections non-
occupied and actually under lease.
AMI WAIAKOI.KA HOMKSTSADS,
The satisfactory results attained it
tenants have acquired homesteads, thetotal area occupied being IdO 8. TableC, Appended herewith, contains fulldetails.
PITKAPr IIO.MKSTK AOS.
Paring the latter part of 1893 urrange- -
incuts we're concluded with the trusteesof the Parker estate by which a largesection of the crown landof pQUkftpU, inWaimea, Hawaii, under lease to theParkers, was surrendered to tli e Commission and devoted to homestead pur-
poses. This tract, containing 1000 acres,adjoins the village of Waiinea and com-
prises some of the choicest land in theneighborhood. The Government roadto Hainakuu crosses the middle of thereservation an elevatien of about 2"i00
foet.In offering the land for settlement
preference was given native Hawaiians,the intention being to atf-ir- themevery of acquiring suitablesections of land whereon they maybuild and establish permanent homes.As an additional inducement the cost ofsurvey was assumed hy the t.'ointnis-sloner- s.
Fifty-nin- e selectors have se-
cured homesteads occupying a totalarea of KM. 73 acres. Of the presentholders all are native Hawaiians withonly three exceptions. This practicallydisposes of the whole reservation, theremaining area taken up forroadways, etc.
The totalurea of the lands isapproximately 071,403 acres, valued at$8,814,880, and distributed by Islandsas follows:
accounts be Mr. Bygrave on his under this led to app'i-w-a- y
to and lias no idea of turn- - to the lands of Kaimu Waiing his Unvard the Golden Oate Inlkolea, in Puna, Hawaii. All of thethe
may
inand
for
commission
and
hisin
agein
girl's
heart-broke- n,
to
on
aoin
to
look
to
and when
Shebroken-hearte- The
on
Important
on
to of
OLAA
in
of
to
KAIMl
at
opportunity
being
Crown
and
AKKAS. VAI.l'K.K42,2 $ 02,:i00
00,121 lHO.oOO
20,802 23,00017,:i00 17,000M,8M 518,460
L54,aa8 381,000
871,463 18,814,880
ISLANDS.
HawaiiMuniMolokaiLnuftl
loahuKauai
Totals,
TKXt'KK AN I) CONDITIO,
The tenure under which the lands areheld is a lease for thirty years and theconditions substantially as follows:Payment of rent commences at the endof the third year, which varies aooord- -ing to location and quality of land. AtOlaa the maximum rent per annum is$2 and the minimum $1 per acre. AtPuiikapu the rental is lixed at 23 cents
became of him. He returned to San per acre per annum. Maaftf pays allFrancisco with Lindsey and remained taxes and otfier impositions required byhere ever since. law. Within one year from coiuiiience
The prospect of stirring action soiled mcnl of lease he must clear and planthi in in his condition uf mind, and when not less thftllS percent, of tin- allotment,he heard that the Japanese Government during the second year I ja'r cent., andwas offering iirincely salaries for foreign w ithin the third year 6 per cent., w ithcommanders he eagerly Jumped at the c jffee and fruit trees, and during e.
Through his relations he se UnUaBMOi lease properly cull ivuie thecured a commission and set off to join same. In addition to the above thethe little brown men in their tight, land must be further improved by theWhat will become of him may he imag- - erection of buildings and fences to theined. he is a courageous fellow and value of $300. Residence, except at theone w ho is sure to be in the thickest of homes:ead reservations at Puna,the Rattles. He went by way of Hoipi- - Hawaii, is not compulsory, but actuallulu, partly for the sea voyage and s 'tilers are granted a special reductionpartly because he is a greut friend of of rent at the late of theCaptain McNeil of the Wilder, From amount. A pruvi-- i in in the Olaa leasesHonolulu be will proceed to Japan on prohibits tfag cutting or destroying ofthe steamer llelgic, w hich w ill lie the tie. s, brush Ul natural Under growthnext China steamer to touch at the within 250 feet of the volcano road,
' oept for purposes of roadway.
THE HAWAIIAN STAR. WfiDVrSDAV, AUGUST
It is almost impracticable tit theprstent time to m ike distinctions, withany degr. a 'curacy, betwei-- theVarious rjlaSsSS Of land, it" some of llnlarger and more valuable LfNCtS alestill unsurvpyed and practically un-
known, A striking illustiation of thisis the land of Ohta, near Hilo, whichwns generally regarded of very littlevalue for agricultural purposes. Sincethe Opening of the new Volcano roadthis tract has been found to cnittftfal avast region of line coffee land equal IfD01 superior to any 111 that neighbor- -
htWd,
Further on in the report Mr. laukeafurnishes the (lovertiuient with an In- -
1i resting description of Olaa, its loOft
ti. 11, physical features, etc llesays:This land is one of tin ahupUftftS Hot!
reaching the saa. it is situated to theSouth of Waialtea.on the boundary linethst divides the Hllo and Puna dlstt lots,Its nearest point is eleven miles fromtile port of Hilo, where the new volcanor ad enters the land and traversesIhroUgb Its entire length a distance i f11 miles to w ithin a mile and a half oftile vole 1110 of Kilauea. This land isvery valuahle and especially adaptedfor OOffee culture. FtiiIb of all kindsdo well. Nearly all of the availableportion lying on each side of the vol- -cann road for a distance of thirteenmiles has been eagerly sought and takenup by settlers, the total area now occu-pied being in the neighb hood of 18,000acres. This area will he very largelyIncreased in the near future by theOpening Of new roads. This tract is ml
M'Mnipllse between 83,000 and 40,000
acres of good coffee land. The rail fillis heavy, but the drainage is almostperfect and the soil very rich. Theelevation at the lower end of the lam) is(Mill feet and gradually rises to 4000 atthe Volcano House. Total area, 04,800acres.
MOWS IN vl'THIIKLL.
A Chinaman was rubbed of $5 011 thePali road last night.
Charles Blake is now District Judgeat Kawaiahao, Kauai.
The Board ol Examiners and Regis-
tration are a' Ewa
The Government band "ill play atTh'omas square at 7t80 Ibis evening.
Five lighters were arrested last nightfor trying to pummel various persons.
Nine natives were arrested last nightfor bucking the Chinese national game,die fa.
Stronger bondsmen are required bythe Attorney-Gener- al in the ArthurWhile case.
The Healaiii Boat Club will bold itsspecial meeting for the election of officersthis evening.
All of the Government physicians inthe city will meet with the Board olHealth this afternoon.
Gorman D. Oilman was entertainedby the 1. 0. O. F. liusdav evening. Thegentleman has been a member of l.x- -cebior Lodge for lorty years.
Miss Malic Kali ii do I at the home fJoi u Cummins narly this afternoon.Shi was a woman of middle age and hasbeen an inmate of the Cummins homefor several years.
Superintendent Atkinson and Beerstar Scott of the Board of Educationare busy looking over the papers olteachers in the primary grade wl.opassed examinations last week.
Till-- BOABBS LtCATK TOWN.
win Nafcs Olllseas and DsnUwas Alongthe Highway.
The Boards of Examiners and Registration went down to Ew a nlautalionI his morning w here they w ill he engagedin making citizens and denizen., all day.
they will he engaged in thesame husincssat Ewa court house. Fromthat point the Hoards will make a tourof Western Oahu and w ill not again appear in Honolulu until August 87th at
The following program has beenarranged:
Ewa Plantation Store. Wednesday.August 15th, from 10 a. in. to 8 p. 111.
Ewa Court House, Thursday, August10th, from 10 a. 111. to 4 p, ni.
Waianae Court House, Friday, Aug-17t-
from 4 p. m. to 8 p. 111.
Kaneohe Court Huose, Monday, Aug- -
80th, frotn 10 a. m, to 8 p. m.Hauula Court House, Tuesday, Aug
11st 21st, from a. 111. to H p. in.K alnil.il Plantation. Wednesday, Aug-
ust 2'.'d, from 10 a. in. to 8 p. in.Waialua Plantation, Thursday. August
88d, from 111 a. in. to 8 p. 111.
Waialua Court House. Friday, August84th, from 10 a. in. to i p. 111.
NATIONAL IUARBSMKW.
Volmi leers lint llcgiiltirs Turn Out uli iiton ssjaare.
Six companies of National laurdsmOBturned out for regimental drill andparade on Union square Tuesday night.Alsmt 230 nien were in line. The tiov- -
ernmenl band was iii attendance andfurnished march music. A very largecrowd w as present around the square tosee the boys.
Tho maneuvers gone through showedmarked Improvement. The volunteersdrilled exceedingly well aril ihe regularsmoved around like old veterans. Whenthe troops were in line the commandsextended the entire length of the square.
Every one present enjoyed the splcndid showing of the soldiers. From thesquare the march was taken out King toAlapai, up to Baratftnift, in to Port, downto King, back to the square again andto the barracks.
A ; . i i I till l.llll.l..leebea a- Ce. After the Kdltert of
"MJIil.llkl."'I he Jupauese editors of Xijittntil:i. a
newspaper published iii Hcnolulu. w ere.arrested Tin sd ly for libel, Upon a
warrant sworn out hy S. Kasaiiiatsu ofthe ltohan store.
The warra it reads: II. Aoki andII. Mlguno at Honolulu, Oahu, August11th, A. D. 1804, committed the offenseof publishing a libel in the llrst degrteby inal ciously BUttlflg into circulationin a newspaper called Vyio,oW. pub- -
liHhed in the Japanese lai gunge in saidHonolulu, a false, defamalory andhhellouii article euiitled "ltohan No
iMutio."
1894.
PASSED IN THE NIGHT.
sun- - Til a 1 havi: 11 1. TO
Ki l l ItN.
vakaiwa Fate of (he Afon Oefftl,
Senegal and Tnrilenakjolil -- OtherMissing Vessels.
One hundred and twenty sailors havebeen lost with three ships that are nowlisted as uninsurable and nearly 40more are thought to have joined theirc tnrndrn beneath tho waTos.
What ft volume of meaning there la Inthcie words: "Overdue!'' "Missing!"Only the mariner can fully appreciatethe weight of their stgnlflftnoaj,
Where is the Afon Uefnlf Where tretin- Senegal and the Tardensk jold. Onehundred and twenty Englishmen,Scotchmen, Americans and men of allnations were among those wiio mannedt lese Vessels and all have bam oblile- -rated frotn the) records of life.
he sea has no doubt claimed Itsdead in the matter of those three craf Is.
" nrsl tin 111.1011011. the Afon l.fni.sailed from Swansea .11 the ill, of Jan- -
' I. w ith 8148 tons of Dual and,ls '"'is of brick lor San Francisco. Shecarried a crew of thirty eight officers1M' men. Among the latter Wftfeeveral s ins of w ealthy English land-
owners.About one of the apprentice DO) s a
prttty story is told. He was a fait--
aired id who hftd never been to seabefore, but was a natural lover of thegreat deep and an adventurous spiritwithal. His patent was a nobleman,residing near Swansea, who died daringthe absence of the Cefui and bequeathedall of his wealth to his son. The familysolicitor and relatives of the boy havebeen waiting ami watching for his return for nearly two years now to informhim of his Inheritance, but the Oefnlhas never returned nor never will, forIt Is admitted that she went dow n in agale off the English coast, and allnanus Hinting a totiih in the ship.
All that could ever lie saved of theCefai drifted ashore at different datesalong the French and English eoasts. On!January 81, iho2, a life buoy markedwith the ship's name floated to thebeach at Serlly, and on February 14th ofthe same year another part of a y
was picked up at the Lizard. Still later,on March 17th,iore wreckage from themissing craft came ashore at Sussex.
The Gafni was a new ship. She hadonly been completed l.v Stephens A Sunsof Glasgow the year before she was char-tered to load coal lor California. Therewas nothing peculiar about her, nor
considered at all "cranky," tieLloyds surveyor pronouncing her "anexceptionally tine construction."
Th.'re were several theories advancedis to the cause of her loss, but noneseemed more plausible than that ot aBritish captain who declared that shetnust have been dismasted, then sunk hybeing capsized when in that unman-ageable condition. The OsfnPs loss costthe insurance men about $230,000.
Mat) j strange and Interesting stories I
nave 'iiisiercii annul the .Norwegianbark Tordensk jold, that left Port Natalfor Rangoon over leu month.-- ago. 1 hemarine insurance men have refused indicker with her reinsurance, and haveposted her as missing
here is something rather interestingabout this ship's sudden disappearance,Befort she sailed her liisl officer ,e--
eli.reii that he felt it in his bones thatSomething awful was going to happenbefore the vesiel reached her port ofdestination. How true was his fore-- 1
boding can be judged when it is takeninto consideration that than is not the
,. ,"l l'o'le chance of bar ever
coming into port again.Forty-thre- e men constituted the bark's
arew, end they all found death in the!same foaming waters that buried theirmarine home..,
niuing nearer home we nnd that alarge percentage of the 120 lost soulswenl dow n close to the California coast.Thirty-nin- e human beings have sur-- jrendered their lives to the demon of theSsa somewhere between San Diego andTamil. a.
,ti a disabled ship bftOn driven onthe rockl m ar our harbor bar and thir--
lives sacrificed to the billows,fancy the sensation that the eventWO.lId have created.
Still, there is no room to doubt now r
but that the British ship Senegal, fromSan Diego for the Sound i , ballast, hassunk forever, carrying with her twosgftre ot hardy sons of the sea.
I I,,, BjtllAiMl is lino i. ill ovor IIIO .liieaand the insurance speculators havceased lo speculate on her. Her namehas been added to the list of sea mysleriei that arc kept in the Lloydsrecords.
T e eight or more men who sailedn ithlhe ship Blair Allude and Moray-
shire have not been included in thelist of the 120, These unfortunateshave almost been forgotten, ami thewords "lost, no hope," placed oppositetheir names on tile shipping list ofIndia.
The hull of tie Morayshire has beendiscovered sshors on the reef nearWarren Hastings island off the north-east coast of Java, but the IMair Atlmlefoundered in roldoosan ami the log ofher voyage to deal h must only be readal the day ol judgment.
Many nautical persons feel coutidentthat the vessels mentioned comprise thecomplete hsi of "mvatarious di appearinces"for the pas twenty-fo-ur months.hul the wise old salt looks knowingly attlie offing and questions' "What ha"become of the CoUntralve, the Laomeos,Mcx lllack and Sierra .Madrone'"
The Colintraive ami Laoiuene areboth overdue ut San Francisco and in-
terest naturally centers upon llietn.The t'olinlraive is out nearly forty
days too long, with coal from Ni--
castle, and la iug an almost bran newship much anxiety is felt for her Iftfatby her owners. IneUrSDOS men havequoted reinsurance on her al 25 per
ut. anil friends of u crew aie crow.lug seriously worried al her nun arrival.Nearly forty lives han in tne balanceof ner fate.
I he ljoinene is from Calcutta, witha valuable cargo of jute and generaliiurchaiidise. She in now overduemany days, and leinsurance on liet is
u tite, thuni a Ja of dollar' hivechm.'. d hands In the past met Hercrew number- - ovei thirtj men, includIfSJ ollicers.
the Sierra Madaone is overdue fromLiverpool to Rangoon, and has culled forthe a ten t ion of the irs irers.
The Alex Black left Astoria (orQwsjnatowfl mouths ago and is nowquoted us probably Iflak She is a tineiron bark, built in 1891, and carries acargo of lumber and general stuff. Hotcrew ami that of the Sierra Madroneplace nearly sixty men on the roll of un-
certainly.News is anxiously waited for from the
British ihip Cambfian Chieftain, dis-masted near Coqiiimboo. The live" offourteen men pari of her crew wasrescued are despaired of.
line strange thing in connection Withthe missing fleet is that all of the Vessel!were built after 1800 with the exceptionof tho l.aomeiie; that was turned out byW. H. Potter A Son in 1880 from theirLiverpool shipyards.
The Cohntruive was built hy A. Rodgers it Son. at Port Olasgow. The firmmade a particularly good job of the ship
1... 1 .1' S al of her. Theelder Rodgers is said to have remarkedthat he was building a modern shipduring an age of progress, and he in-
tended to make a specially of the work.The Senegal was not as large a ship a.
the Cefni. She w as a d vesselof 1462 tons gross, and w as one of Russell& Co.'s prides. The Cefni registered8066 tons groes, and measured 284 feet i
inches in length, as against the Senegal's2:10 feet 2 Inches,
McMillan Son built the Alex Blftekat Dumbarton yards in 1801, and pro-nounced her a "swift and safe ship "The TordenskJold only measured 782gross tonnage and was built at Alloa in1890.
From the original 120 men who aregiven up as lost, have lieen evolvedscores more who may never put fisit ondry land again, and the mysteries of thesea still remain Unsolved,
hakim: mii i -
The Kaahl arrived this morning fromKapaa and departed at once for a circuitof t hthtli
The S. ;. Wilder, McNeill command-ing, arrived this, morning fourteen daysfrom San Francisco. She is consignedto Schaefer .v. t lo.
The James Makeo arrived this morn-ing from Kapaa. She won-- corrugatediron Smoke-sta- ck , having prepared itbefore the Kaala arrived. The keel of
the Makee was damaged in the recentaccident and she will go on the marinerailway for repairs,
PMMONAL,
Dr. and Mrs. SheltOll are booked toleave on Saturday.
II. F. Wiehiiiau will leave for thecoast Saturday on business.
Prof. W. W. Lovejoy will return tohis home in California by the Australia.
Mr. II. II. Bygrftve arrived this morning from San Francisco on his way toYokohama where be w ill accept a commission in the Japanese army.
How tti.i Judge OSSftSed OverChief Justice A. F. Judd, wife and
family wont over to Kuloa Tuesdaymorning. The Judge and wife crossedtne ran m a wagon, w iiue me oiliermembers of the family rode horseback, Itwas an amusing sight lo see them Stringing along Ui the Pali road ; they hsikedlike a Gypsy caravan,
Hmm Arrivals,The S. S. (iaelic brought to HolUeUH
& Co. a large shipment of Manila eigaisfro!" "f the most celebrated factones ot that place, winch thev are nowoffering for saTe, either In bond or dutypaid, at their store, corner of Fort andMerchant streets. :!07-- tf
.The liest weeklv' newspaper published
in the Republic. is the Haw aiian Stak.
Kiciir vour friends abroad posted. Sendy i ni atopy.
Mr. A. K. Walker, representing thewell known artist, Mi. A. W. Dowe, ofSan Francisco, is in town taking ordersfor enlarged photographs. The samplesme lirst class and the work recommendsitself,
Sorghum and alfalfa seed for sale, byHenry Davis & Company, 503 Fort St;telephones ISO.
"""" " ?
"'t' S(llc.
hit si Piinnhou inn hy 'ion feet. Hulls,-thre-
J eonlHIlis linrlor. illlintni; risitu,bed riMiins, Imtii room hut ami water.etc. saaeis ami carriHsv limine, BIO.
The Kriiillliln are well laid out ill fruit unitrilllllli-ll- t ill Cmr or iiiiruriiiHi h address A. U ! Ills oftlce.
-- ir
Htalani Hunt Club.
An adjourned meeting of the HealaniBoat f 'luh will be held at the Chamberof Commerce Rooms on Wednesdayevening, August 15, 1804, at 7:110 p. m.for the election of officers for the en-
suing year. Per orderO. E. UOARDMAN,
C. L. Chabbr, President.Acting Secretary, 484 8
FOR SAI.F.SMOOTH in large or
CAYENNE H",B"qiianti
PINEAPPLE' "SUCKERS' Suck e rs
Itft grown in Florida and produce thelinest fruit in the world. Correspond
IftlUI GRAPE & FRUIT CO,,
m Orlando, Florida.
BISMARKFEED and LIVERY STABLES,
WAILUKU. MAUI.WILLIAM GOODNESS. Prop.
, a,Carriages to meet every steamer atKalmlctj and Maalaea Hay.
Horses for Ilakakala or' any partle lslaIu1' at reasonable prices,
W. GOODNhSh,37ftl roprietor.
HAWAIIAN . 'J A K
BUSIXI'SS DIRECTORY
or lloxoi.i i.c
a k i laTa,ti HOW ARB HITCIH in Kn
ARTISTS MA I A s
I'M n il' harhwapi: copint M
ATrOKNbY'SAI LAW
t'Et'Il. HltuWN.'I I ..ii'iriiHin
W. C, I'AKKF.Ktuiliiininniiu St.
Wll.I.IAM roMTBtl1.1 Kiuihiiiiwnuu St.
hakheks.J. K. AMWORTH
d:i Klni si.
C A It It IAOK MANUHAtTUKKKSW. W. WRIOHT,
Fort M., oftpuatts Crab fllahlss
dkkssmakkksMlS"t II I1ITCHKLL
Fnit and Ben t,n, la si.MISS ll H tlltKKNU KI.L.
;,14 fort st,
KUWNIIUKS. AND UPHOI.S1 fcKLKS,
OIUlWAY A I'llltTKItHotel Si
j. HOPPa in.4 King St
i w ucdonald, i
Fort si.,.. p t l'antliB.,11 stablea
INSUKANCK F1KK ANU MAKINK
BISHOP . O .
Fireuu-n'- Fund. London ami lilols-
CASTLE & COOKK.Aetna. Alliaaee. Baa Bnglsnd Mutual
JU.WELI-.kS- .
,1. K. DOMESW.I f, ,i t st
PHYSICIANS AND SUHUKON3lilt. MeLKfffl N
Lit Fort st.
KI.STAUKANT'S.
OB AS. UHDExccIm"!-- Banana st.
SALOONS.
MLIU'HANTS8. J. Shan , Proprislor,
PACIFICB. ii. f. w.iii i r... Manager
ROYALO. Hawkins, Manager.
lll.MMEltl'IAI.11. Khansne, Manager
PANTHKi INJim Dedd, Prop.
VbTKKlNARY SURCKONS.
A. it. ROW AT, li v. sInfirmary 888 King St,
WATCHMAKERS.F. .1. KRUQKR,
Fni't St.. corner Merchant
WHOLtSALb LIQUORS.
W. s. LOOM,Lis: M. St.
COTTAGES
For RentAt m a a
Pearl . .
City . . .
PeninsulaAm opportunity to rent li KiraMr
at very rMOIiabla r iIom, It isperfect health resnrt, wiih ti niamricent view, ami only 45 miOQtGt frotnHonolulu.
TIih fnlli ivvinir r. it r ii :i uv '
nue, fiteinK (he trmle u uhU tire offered:Uncle SamH Villa, Steven' Villa.
WatcrhoiiHe Villa, Sweet Home, EHtttOOdVilla and Aloha Villa.
Tney are cmveiiMttly arranged withhath room, etc., and are partly furnishedincluding move, kitchen utensils, crockery ware, etc.
Also UttfUIlsilhcd cottages in ditTerenlI'm at i" tin on the I'etiinsula, vlx.1 DoleVilla. Waterloo Place, oleander Place,and others.
Very ipeclaJ ruteh fur transportationwin ne made tiy llie i(jniroail ompanxto occupants.
Kor terms, particulars, etc., apply to
W. W. DIM0ND,at J. I. Water boose's Hardware andCrockery Store, Queen street.
TELEPHONES
MUTUALBELL 71
ConsolidatedSoda Water Works
Co., Ltd.
REMOVAL
HUSTACE & COluivt' iimvt-- l
Morgan's Auction Room
fur a Ikorfl time Wo aw till Wiling
Departure Bay Coa!
CHARCOAL.ALGBROBA and
KINDLING WOO'.)in any quantity.
"BOIL Telephones 414, iMit
" -MyttU Lodge K. of Pt ii. refniUi conrentlofl of Mystlo
Lodae No. :, K. ot V. this erenine, theRank of Kniuht will lie conferred, towin !i all Knights are cordially invited.
I'l l order of the ( t
J. B KAItliT.188 K U. .1 s
Libra vu .Vol ice., ,Until rurt her notice tin- - Hea.linK
liimiii and lii fetence Iieparttnent of theLibrary Ansociation will he cloeed on ao- -
count of iifeemtarv repairs.The Otrealatiac Department will be
P"8 every dny from 848 o'clock a. m.l" U '
M M. liritBANK,If Librarian.
"The World do move."lad ssj 4asM ike n i i itSERVICE, who hn I
Its meeaeMgers era CbImbiMn iti. ii win riellrsr pack-ge- l
up io Mtsta In wt'ljehil::,m' WeSBgBS quicker Hum h)nil) oilier Mtkod, urn! much
ll ilt l' loo.Don't OG a Clam.
gar) UssiC MS moii) I., Bnrfssftill' nc.x'iiiti'r Wert let'.
' n. JOHNSON, viHi.grMutual T..l..ph,,nv .V.s.l Hell T"leph.iiie V,'i.
To Let.
Commodious cottage adjoining theAfong residence on NmUUM avenue.
Apply tomi;s. o. aJTONO,
808-- tf Wtiikiki.
Xoli ce.
During the absence of Miss Rentier.Miss tl It Qreeawell has taken chargeif tin- Drees rnsking partmenl of J, J,Kgan, 31 Fort St, t i
II (Jim s fur Sale.
The celebrated trotting bores CaptainJack.
1 gray saddle mare also broken toharness.
bay saddle male.heavy dray holso. Apply to
Fd. A. Williams, my and nil Km St.40011
Criterion SaloonJOHN WIIiLAND
EXTRA PALE LAGER BEER
always mi draught.
2 For 25 Cents.Pine Wines and Liipiors, Oy ers
by Kvery Steamer, i lyster Coi
a Specialty.
f.. H. Dhk, - Propieto .
Just Arrivedper bkt'n Irmgard,
JHAY &Cho,ce)GRAIN
CALIFORNIA
FEED
COMPANY(Cor. tueen and Niiuanu ats.l
or ring up telephones No 121.
sTeosnaiift
Help Wantedl!
$25 per day.I mice bad a wheelSome sucker stole itI want it hack Bfsia; will pay
25. iw reward tor information lead-ing to its recovery
Keep your eye open and allevi-ate the sufferings of a felluwcycler
Walking is pretty touh this hotweather. My pet wheel was aNo. B Rambler, copper rims, (1. &J. tires, foot brake, 68 gear, weight
s lbs., all on including tools andbag.
HONOLULU CYCLERY,
107 King street.The Re 111 bier Agency.
4IUlw
Tin tfaniHhii
WAIMAIMALOwill run resell Isrlj hat Bean this pmi
land Waialua, Waianae, Kawailinpai,Mokuleia, ICsftwenni and Kuiki on theIsland o Oahu. For freight, etc., applyto the Captain,
WM. DAVIESUil:k ' t titul Wrecker. Kti-niate-
an I ontraoU 00 all klttdi ofwork.
Inquire at Office of .1. S. Walker, overSpr.s k Hank. tf.
Something New
Every DayIn The Year.
'e have now readyjtctay and novel line of.ouvenirs that are sure toe prize winners.
The issue of
Bt RCHARGEDSTAMPS
will soon he a thing of
the past, the few remaining in col-
lections will Steadily grow in value.To preserve a number in a Usefulway. we conceived the idea ol con-
verting them into articles of jewel-ry, and the first lot of
CUFFBUTTONS
just finished, convinces us that pos-
sibilities in that line are gre.it.They are without a doubt
the prettiest thing we havemade for some time, and arealready selling at a lively rate
anil newt valii ilile sunups; unci tli.it tindementi will he great, goes without say-
ing. The price w ill he so low everytvml something in the lot. Look
in our upper window, when passing.Slid BOSS the pretty display.
H. F. WlCHMAN,
323tf FORT STRBKT,
For Sale! and
and Boiler
For particulars at
DAIRY,or 10 U. '. DILLINGHAM,
4l:ltf
:Kiiitf
J74--
TDTfurn
THE NEW
v. wyrm
ICUICI DV
aMnTlB IX IB503 FCRT STRE T
u prepared t matnifeetui : nytMBfin its line.
Souvenir Spns a Walty.ai on head i ftae mm u ofImport) cl Jiwelrj e l lUgin the latent ilenitjn
P. 11. ltox. ....s M 1.
Perl StreetIsland Obdus Promptly Attended 10.
E. A. JACOBSONH. MAY & CO.
Wholesale and Retail
GROCERSiS Fori reel.
Pacific BrassBoth Telephones O. Foundry
Metropolitan Meat Co.81 KING STREET,
olPrr:uiv. ".'iii'liwini! nimn'of t'he'll'st WhOleSale 4 MA ButcbS
WOODLAWN
HP
AND
Contractors. Prop'r.(1 i. WALLER, Manager. I
ll.HACKFELD & CO.CKNKKAL
Commission Merchants
BOMB POWERApls; Groceries, Provisions Feed.
EngineKnquire
Queen St.
Tel.
HONOLULU. I.
BEAYER SALOON.Fort Street. - Opposite Wilder & Co.
H. NOLTE. Prop'r.Fiflt-ClaJ- Lunches served wii.li fen, CofTe
Wtitei Uicger Ale of Milk.
Requisites Specialty
1CO. LTD
402. 404 FORT STREET.HAVE JUST RECEIVED
Picture MouldingsOf the I.ateU Pattern 1.
Bird Cagesl'or Canaries and Parrots a Large Assortmei
Vacuum OilersFor All Kinds of Feed oil
any density, automatically, by visible drops, rapidlyor slowly as may required. Will teed from onedrop in ten minutes to a steady stream of oil. Oilingby hand wastes enough oil to pay all necessaryoilers in a short time.
v.
,his For theVolcanosnowu . tiuenthorough appre-
ciation of ourlow
PopularCamelline,
ivnow add anotherarticle real
to the list.This
Lubin's Rice Powderat oOc a box, former price No
but double value for your moneyevery
V
Headjuarters for Fine Goods at prices.
H0LLISTER DRUG CO.
MOTCheap and Doubt ill
BUTPure and Reliable
DRUGS, MEDICINES &
OUR SODA WATER LEADS.BENSON, SMITH &
Hwit
I
M6i
n electric j,f INTINC WOFfKJl NKXTI.V l)ONK.
S INERNY BLOLI. , m ,.k nrr,,, , 0f , . H,B,. ni,r nie a
Is t do nil kimta fartiHti" Bo k. Job rii1 Nowa-pftpvv ptini ni nt faif ptiooii
MammothPostersB
Specialty.
Hooks. Pamphlets. I.egnlBsnd Bills, Dodgers, better andHill Heeds, Bnsteess ami visitingf'linifl. TIOKetS, Proirrnins, ete. . .
SI
22. P. B0X470!
H.
J.
he
STEAM am OALVAMIZBD PIPE, F.I,
Honolulu Steam
Navy HOPPER,
jyrSniokers'
Machinery.
merit
time.
HE HAWAIIAN WEDNESDAY AUGUST 15, 1894
MURRAY,Carriage and Wagon
MANUFACTURER.
lLepairinj,Painting,
Trimmiu
Mil id Intnl.
to. 44 Street.li'iilw n. W!.
IM--
Hox
ATLASASSURANCE COMPANY,
Capital, $6,000,000Assets, $9,000,000
Having been tppohlted tils the abovewo Arc etteet inur--
Hit lowest premium,B, W, SCHMIDT
HONOLULU IRON WORKS,
HOWS, ULOHE-VALVE-
STEAM COCKS, and all rittingR Enciinfr, Sugar Mii.ij, Boilers,for on hand. LeapCoolers, Iron, and
Rice Mill
rnttUt Woe .or 1, la tu.tltta. to .alt ,)"''S&C&' toBhlp,J. A.
for
Blacksmith in g. Job executed at
H. BIclNTYRE BRO.,IMPOKTKRS OKALKRS IN
20
East Corner Fort Kim; STREETS.
w received by Vneket the Baiter!) bimI EttfOft('HiifVr'iuH rrofiuiu every rtfsir.er. A orders tull ellttdci
ami tfoods red to any of the free of charge.foiiiutsd. pvsisttl
Prwt. nnicA fo '45
Give the Baby
FCR
inn 11 r lAjV. kill 1 If. P fr
il!U
mm 5
m 9
the--
T. B.
i b 01 10
T. P. (). 41
- -- -
n (to ofUonpsny toady to
rnienisons.
otherBrass
1Mbwork Hhoit
nntle.
AND
C"
and
N, ('cm?s every from StatesFresh i y lnitl
part cityou'ers
Nutriment LiquorsCH.LDRtN.
Convalescents,
J F. MORGAN.Ull liVl'l I'I'MIHN,
THE
Best FoodimAli .m fnViLIL'i. Hand-fe- d Infants.
JlUtna, Telephones,Of therv Freil- -
lnC.triH,"will inulledrtv)ry mlilnss, Tswni.
E
ao&TON, MASS., 8. A.
BENSON, SMITH & CO.,Aurentii tfa.TB in lAlnnclii
As the ladiesw -
a
exNature's Grandest Wonder.
tremely pri-
ces Soap and The and Scenic Routewe; -- is by
of
is the
11.25.ohromoSt
lowest
S.
r'S"
prepaiw'
Papers.
PaHslartlm
MAK,
Kinu
Vnliml
now
Steampipe
Island
Castings.
E.
DO CO
on
bumpiiy S
Al STEAMER KINAU.Fitted with Electric Lights and Bells. Courteous and Attentive Service
VIA HILOThe Kinau Leaves Honolulu Every 10 Days
TUESDAYS AND FRIDAYS,mstreet, arriving ui niiu mursuciy ana ounaay mornings.
CO
From Hilo to the Volcano-j- o Miles
Passen; ;rs are Corveyed i:i Carriages,Sri il MACADAMIZBti Road, ruoning most the
.1J4I1 Dense Tropical loresi--- a ride aloneworth he trip.
ABSEKT FROM HONOLULU 7 DAYS
-- f ICKETSINCLUDING ALL EXPENSES,
PERFUMERY For the Round Trip, Fifty Dollars.For Further Intormation. Cai I. at the Office.
Corner Fort and Queen Streets
EMPIRESaloon.
Corner Hotel and Xuuanii Streets.
CHOICE 1) FAMILY
Wines BrandiesOyster Cocktails a Specialty.
E. N. REQTJA,SWtf Manager.
Hawaiian Wine Co.,Frank Browh( Mor.
98 niii M Mprchant St., Honolulu. H. I
The Republic bttng secured, we annow prepared to well at
Annexation Prices- -TIIK MM OF
Wines,Ales jhi1wholesale. No goods sold at retail,
if
Club Stables Co.S. GRAHAM, MaMMX.
Liver?, Feed and Sale Stables.
Kort Street, Hoteland Iterctaiiia.
Telephone.s No. 477.CONNECTED WITH HACK STAND
Cor. King and Bethel Sts.
ROTH TELEPHONES NO. its.
Commercial Saloon.HARRY KLEMME, Mgr.
Corner Nuunnu and HeretimiuHonolulu.
The Only Spotting House in Town.
O. I3. specialty
LOHENGRIN LAGER BEKR.always on draught,
two glasses for cents.
A Perfect Best of Wines, and Cigars nlways'"' MOfiros GROWING
consumptives,u,. gSRS AS.
Hi 'Demand
I
T
No- - 45 Queen Street,
Auctioneer and Stock Broker.
Special to thehand ing of
FOR
THE
Attention
J. T. WaterhouseQueen Street Stores.
FULL LINKS
Hardware, Crockery, Saddlery
AND
FANCY GOODSof clcwrlptlons.
Fort Street StoreNo. IO.
ADDITION THE LARGE
SORTMENT
DRY AND FANCY ROODS
HAVE JUST RECEIVED
India Linen and Persian Lawns,Embroidery, in vard pieces
und Guipure Kmbroidery,Oriental, and other laces,
cream andLace,
45-i- Lace Net, cream and black.Striped and Check Dimity,Wide Japanese white colr'd,White, Cream and Black Surah Silk,
White and Cream Silk Crepe,
Navy and Cream Serge,Suez and Tennis Flannel.The Jenne8s-Mille- r "Equipoise" waistPrima Donna and Corsets,Ladies' Black LIoBe.
HYMAN BROS.Importers Wholesale DeAlers Id
DRY GOODS, BOOTS, SHOES,
CLOTHING, NOTIONS andFANCY GOODS.
Queen Honolulu.
Hi California Francisco.
FAT TURKEYSFor Sale
All the Tear Round
SUBSCRIBE
HENRY MIS & CO.,
505 FORT STREETTH LABQRAMRI ( HOOK fnr the Instrucllon inHI Lauait; OOUllS 'h 130
'nrr fine)Ini: tf In-
to unm
J.
I - n 1 wtill
of
:
ft i 1 A 1 1 1 1 1 1 t 1 mmN rout
Over a olwa 11 a
m
l
At
F.
Iletween
Both
Streets,
Ssft. a
25
,1
attention given
all
OK
all
IN TO AS
OP
9
Roman
Platte, in
white, black,Chiffon all colors,
Crepe, and
P. D.
of and
D8 Street
St., San Cal.
ORA IT 1 R'.'he
i
,
for the Best
Weekly News
paper ever published in the Hawaiian Islands.
Try it lor three months. It will cost you just a
dollar. American money taken at par.
a dollar you naturally expect to get a
dollars worth. The Weekly Starwill give it to you. One Dollar lor three months
question that now agitates the public
mind to the exclusion of the tariff and
Hawaiian affairs is how to get the worth ol your
money. One dollar invested in three month's sub-
scription of the Weekly Star will be worth hun-dreds thrown away. on other publications.
WEEKLY p
. very well, but the
Weekly Star is satisfied it you will pay once a
quarter, ' advance, of course. A common, ordinary
U. S. or Hawaiian dollar, sometimes called a cart-
wheel and sometimes the 'Almighty," will pay for
three month's subscription to the Weekly Star,
QtfTl K This wonl by itse" looks lone- -
some. So did the "Lone Star"
of Texas, but it got there all the same, and is now
a member ol the brightest constellation old Mother
Earth has ever known. The "Lone Star" of Hawaii
will get there, and don't you forget it. There are
two or three kinds of "Stars" but those we are
looking out for are the "Annexation Star" and the
Wekki.y Star. The former we are bound to have
in time, and the latter costs just One Dollar lor three
months. Take them both. You will have to, sooner
or later.
M5-- tf
ENTERPRISE PLANING MILL,
PETER HICH, A CO, Proprietor.
Office and Mill on Alakea and Richards, near Ouun St., Honolulu
MOULDINGS, DOORS, SASH, BLINDS, SCREENS, FRAMES,TURNED AND SAWED WORK, ETC.
Prompt to Order. TKLKPHOMS8: gftfl
520STR Br. N. S. SACHS,
NEW GOODS-- JUST OPENED
COTTON CRAPES,Eiiiureil and Solid Colors,
Cotton and Linen Duck,For Dresses in White and Cream
Fancy Figured DimitiesAnd Figured Muslins
delivered in time
HONOLULU
A New of
CHALLIESAll Wool nnd Silk in Light and
Dark
An Assortment of
WHITE DRESS GOODSHtrtpPH and Plain's.
New Jet and Silk Passimenterie Trimmings.
KRAJEWSKI'SPATENT
CANE CRUSHERHE HONOLULU WORKS COMPANY,
having- - secured the Exclusive Agency for the Hawaii-an for the Krajewski Sugar Cane
er, arc now prepared to orders for the same, to befor the next crop.
This machine, which has been invented but a lew years, hasbeen adopted by a great number ol cane sugar manufacturers,especially in Cuba, it was first put to trial and itbecame extremely popular. Nearly one-thir- d of the whole sugarcrop made in Cuba is made with the assistance of thesecrushers. These crushers have also proved a great success inother West Indian Islands, and Louisiana, as can be seen by testimonials on hand.
crushers when attached to any cane mill will increaseits capacity by from 50 to 100 per cent; will improve extraction;will regulate feed of the mill. We have three of these machinesin the way. For further particulars enquire at the
HONOLULU IRON WORKS
mm 1.
PI I' i
5
Si:Ji
Wrought Steel Ranges, ChilledIron Cooking StOTres.HOUSEKEEPING GOODS:
Agate V are (White, Grav and Nickel-plate- PumpsWater Sou Pipes, Water Closets and Urinals, Rubber
and Lawn Sprinklers, Bath Tubs w SteelO. S. Gutteis .ind Leaders, Shee1 Iron Copper, Zincand Lean Pipe Pipe Fittings.
Plumbing, Tin, Copper and Sheet IronWork.
DIMOND BLOCK, - 75-4- ,7 KING STREET
eg
m
As
Assortment
Striped,Umuiids.
Immense
IRON
Islands Patent Crushreceive
where where
being
These
CO.
Hose, Sinks,
Lead,
oC?3
sag
02
J. J. EGAN,DRY GOODS & MILLINER
J. J. Egan, 514 Fort street, will com-
mence a Grand Clearance Sale Monday,July 23, for a few weeks only. It willpay you to call and examine prices dur-
ing the sale, as goods will go pricesthat will" suit the public.
Remember this well-selecte- d stockwill be sold cheap, the greatest bargainsever offered to the public of Honolulu.
mtt
ifmii!
and
and
--a
at