124 HONOLULU, Australian · 41-3-m 79 FORT ST., Honolulu. ANDERSON & LUNDY, Dentists. ARTIFICIAL...

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- m JSC : VOL- - X.-- NO. 124 HONOLULU, HAWAIIAN ISLANDS, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 25, 1889. PRICE 5 CENTS. THE DAILY lusiness Ofards. THE OCEAN'S BED. Australian Mail Service or THE THROUGH STEAMERS or THE OCEANIC S. S. COMPANY. GARDNER K. WILDER, -- Atto rne v ' a t-- L aw Office Honolulu Hale, Merchant Street. 77 1264-l- y . (Menial Advertiser g PUBLISHED gorning Except Sundays, . 46 Merchant St. u SUBSCRIITIONB : S. N. CASTLE. , J. B ATHERTON. Q. P. CASTLE. W. A. BO WEN. EDW. D. TEVKEY. CASTLE & COOKE, Shipping and Commission Merchants, -- IMPORTERS AND DEALERS IN- - General Merchandise. -- ALSO, AGENT8 FOR-- Grove Ranch Plantation, B. Halstead's Plantation, A. H. Smith & Co., Koloa, Kauai, G. F. Blake's Steam Pumps. Union Fire and Marine Insurance Co., of San Francisco. Ftna Fire Insurance Co, of Hartford. The New England Mutual Life Insurance Co., of Boston. D. Weston's Patent Centrifugal Machines. The New York and Honolulu Packet Line The Merchants' Line, Honolulu and San Francisco. Dr. Jayne & Sons Celebrated Medicines. Wilcox & Gibbs, Eeiniiigtoii and Wheeler & Wilson SEWING MACHINES. tf FT. ED. Mclntyre & Bro. IMPORTERS AND DEALERS IN Groceries, Provisions and Feed, EAST OORNLR FORT AND KING STREETS. New Goods received by every pacset from the Eastern States and Europe Fresh California Produce by every steamer. All orders faithfully attended to, and Goods delivered to any part of the city free of charge. Islaud orders solicited. Satisfaction guaranteed. Postoflice Box No. 416 Telephone No. 2 Oapl? tn Its Deepest Parts IU Desolation Must Be Extreme. Despite the fanciful pictures which tome writers have drawn of the ocean bed. its desolation, at least in its deepest parts, must be extreme. Beyond the first mile it is a vast desert of slime and ooze, upon which is constantly dripping a rain of dead carcasses from the surface, which carcasses supply the nourishment for the scanty fauna Inhabiting the abyssal region in 6ome places more than five miles from the sunshine, and the microscope re- veals that the slimy matter covering this deepest ocean bed is very similar in composition to the ancient chalk of the cretaceous period, while mixed with it here and there are minute metallic and magnetic bodies which have been proved to be dust from the meteorites. At long intervals a phosphorescent light gleams from the head of some passing fish, which has strayed hither from a higher zone. But it is not until we have mounted a good deal nearer the surface that the scene changes for the better. We now meet with forests of brilliantly-colore- d sponges, while the phosphorescent animals swimming about are much more numerous, and the nearer we get to the littoral zone more and more phosphorescent lights appear, till at length the scene becomes truly ani- mated. When only 1,200 feet separate us from the sunshine we come upon the first seaweed and kelp, (1,200 feet is the deepest limit of plant life in the water); but we must rise still another 1,000 feet and more, and get as near the top as 120 feet before we find any reef-buildi- ng corals. As plants do not live in the deep sea, the deep-se- a animal either prey on one another or get their food from dead organisms and plants which sink down to them. Thus Maury says: "The sea, like the snow-clou- d with its flakes in a calm, is always letting fall upon Its bed showers of microscopic shells." And experiment proves that a tiny shell would take about a week to fall from the surface to the deepest depths. Since sunlight does not penetrate much farther than the littoral zone, there would be beyond this perpetual darkness, except for phosphorescence. Many of the animals inhabiting the continental and abyssal zones have merely rudimentary eyes. But these blind creatures have very long feelers, which help them to grope their way along the bottom. Other deep-se-a animals on the contrary, have enor- mous eyes, and these very likely congregate around such of their num- ber as are phosphorescent, and many perhaps follow the moving lamps about wherever they go. And so bright is this light on many of the fish brought up by the dredge that during the brief space the animals survive it is not difficult to read by it The reason why fishes and mollusks living more than three miles under water are able to bear a pressure of several tons is that they have exceed- ingly loose tissues, which allow the water to flow equally through every interstice, and thus to equalize the weight. When the pressure is re- moved they perish. In the Challenger expedition sent out by the British Government, all the sharks brought up from a depth of a little less than three-quarte- rs of a mile were dead when they reached the surface. Household Words. GEO. W. LINCOLN, THE WELL-KNOW- N BUILDER, IS STILL IN THE FIELD AS A and is now better prepared to do any and all kinds of work appertaining to contracting or any other class of work belonging to his trade, in the same good and workmanlike manner as heretofore ; having curtailed my shop expenses and still retain plenty of room to do any and all kinds of work appertain- ing to the building trade that may be entrusted to my care. 1 am enabled to do the same at very low rates, to suit the extremely dull times, and at the same time bearing in mind that what is worth doing at all is worth doing well. Thanking the I 65 FOR SAN FRANCISCO. The new and fine Al steel steamship ALAMEDA 99 Of tun Oceanic Steamship Company, will be due at Honolulu from Sydney and Auckland on or about Dec. 14, 1889, And wlllieave for the ubve port with mails and passengers on or abou t that date. For freight or passage, having SUPERIOR ACCOMMODATIONS, apply to Wm. G. Irwin & Co., AMJSNTS. For Sydney and Auckland. The new and tine Al steel steamship fc 6 55 MARIPOSA ot the Oceanic steamship company , will be due at Honolulu from San Fraucisco or or about Nov. 23, 1889. and will have prompt di3patcn with mails an assengers for the above ports. For freight or passage, having SUPKRIOR AC-C- M MO D ATIO Ns, apply to Wm. Ot. Irwin & Co., AGENTS J. E. GOMES, (Formerly of Gomes fc Wicbman.) No 135 Fort Street, Manufacturing -:- - Jeweler, Island orders promptly attended to. P. O. Box No. 488, Honolulu. 48-3- m Walker & Bedward, Contractors & Builders Brick, Stone and Wooden Building Estimates Given. Jobbing Promptly Attended to, 76 KING STREET. Bell Telephone No. 2. P. O. Box 423. 211 tf MRS. TH0S. LACK, DEALER IN THE BEST KIND OF Guns, 3?istols5 Ammunition, Etc. A full Assmt. of Baseball, Lawn Tennis & Cricket Goods. SOLE AGENTS FOR THE White & New Home Sewing Machines and New National and Peerless Machines. Also, all kinds of Material for Fancy Work. Embroidery and Stamping Orders rilled at short notice. Having procured a workman, we are now prepared to do all Jobs in the repair line and warrant satisfaction. 41-3- m 79 FORT ST., Honolulu. ANDERSON & LUNDY, Dentists. ARTIFICIAL TEETH from one to an entire set in- serted on gold, silver, allum-inu- m and rubber bases. Crown and bridge work a specialty. To persons wearing rubber plates which are a constant source of irritation to the mouth and throat, we would recommend our Prophylactic Metal Plate. All oper- ations performed in accordance with the latest improvements in dental science. Teeth extracted without pain by the use of Nitrous Oxide Gas. Hotel street, Tregloan premises. 55-l- y HONOLULU MARKET. (Successor to Wm. McCandless.) No. 6 Queen Street, Fian Market, Ho-nolnl- n, H. 1. Choicest Beef, Mutton, Pork, Fish VEGETABLES, ETC., Always Kept on Hand. Family and Shipping orders Carefully Attended to. Live Stock Furnished to Vessels at short notice. Telephones No. 212 Due at Honolulu from San Francisco, on or about. Alameda October 26 Mariposa November 23 Zealandia December 21 Leave Honolulu for San Francisco, on or about. Zealandia November 16 Alameda December 14 Mverlistmtntz, A NEW GUIDE BOOK. The HAWAIIAN GAZETTE COMPANY are now printing a 'Tourists' Me Tlroil the Hawaiian Islais," And are prepared to receive Advertisements for the same. The Edition of this Book will be about 5.000 COPIES, And it will have about 200 octavo pages descriptive of the Scenes and Scenery of the Group. The work is to be illustrated, and will contain from twelve to fifteen full page illustrations of Buildings and Island Scenery. It will also have a beautifully illuminated cover. As the circulation of this work will be world-wid- e, among tourists and travelers, it furnishes one of the best mediums for advertising that has, ever been offered to the business men of these Islands. Advertisements will be inserted at the following rates : Full Page, $25 with ten copies of the Guide, gratis. Half Page, $14 with four copies of the Guide, gratis. Quarter Page, $8 with two copies of the Guide, gratis. Small Business Cards (4 page) $5 with one copy of the Guide, gratis. Every advertiser, on payment of his bill, will be entitled to copies of the Book, as above specified. W For further particulars, address, H. M. WHITNEY, Manager Hawaiian Gazette Co. Honoluln, November, 1889. 1296-2- PROF. G. SAUVLET, Piano, Violin and Singing Lessons. At Residence Cor. Beretaniia and Alakea Sts. or will visit pupils at their residence. 84-l- HARRY'S LUNCH ROOMS HOTEL STREET. Open Day and ISTight BILL OF FARE: Tea, Coffee or Chocolate with Ham and Eggs 25 cents Eggs to order 25 " Porterhouse Steak 25 11 Mutton Chops 25 Pork Chops 25 " Hamburg Steak 25 " Steak and Eggs 35 " Steak and Chops 35 " Fish 25 " Tea, Coffee & Chocolate, with Bread and Butter or Cakes 10 " Mush and Milk 10 " ISTFresh Wild Game to order every Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday. ")Extra dishes cooked to order. Dinner from 11 a. m. to 2 p. m. Dishes cooked to order up to 8:30 p m. 19-t- f FILTER PRESSES. Paauhau Plantation, Hawau, March 9, 1888. ) Rlsdon Iron and Locomotive Works, San Fran cisco. Gentlemen We have used two of your Filter Presses thisseason. They are convenient, easily bandied and are working entirely to our satisfaction. I can recommend no improvement on them. Very respectfully yours. (signed) A. Moobe, Manager Paauhau Plantation. Heeia, Sept. 28, 1889. Mr. John Dter, Agent Risdon Iron Works, Honolulu. Dear Sib: Please ship us one of your 30 Compartment Filter Presses, 240 square feet surface, same as the one supplied us last season, which I am pleased to say has given us entire satisfaction. Yonrs truly, GEO. R. EWART, Manager fleeia Agricultural Co. These Presses are made extra heavy for high pressures, occnples a floor space of 1 1 x 4 ft., and presents a filtering surface of 240 square feet. A limited number iu stock in Honolulu and are sold at very low prices. Risdon Iron Si Loco. Works, San Francisco. For nrt1p.nliirR nnanira of 'OBBlr.sw,,, 234 W. 6. IRWIN St Co., Agents. J. ALFRED MAGOON, Attorney and Counselor at Law and Notary Public. 42 Merchant Street, Honolulu, H.I. 121-l- ni GOO KIM, Merchant Tailor, HAS ON hand; Cashmere, Diagonals, Tweeds and Serges, Etc. A perfect fit guaranteed. NUUANU STREET, HONOLULU. 7G-3- m NTEBPEIS PLANING MILL, A LAKE A, NEAR QUEEN STREET. 174 Telephone 65. SUN FIRE OFFICE, OF LONDON. Established 1710. Insurance effected upon every description of property at current rates of premium. Sum Insured in 1885 327,333,700 Claims arranged by the Local Agents, and paid promptitude and liberality. The jurisdic- tion of the Local Tribunals recognized. G. W. Macfarlane & Co. Agents for Hawaiian Islands. BREWER & COMPANY, .I,imtled. GENERAL MERCANTILE 'AND COMMISSION AGENTS. LIST OF OFFICERS: C. Jones. Jr President and Manager O. Carter Treasurer and Secretary W. F. Allen Auditor DIRECTORS: C. R. fiishop. Hon. H. Waterbouse PIONEER AND BAKEEY F. HORN. Practical Confectioner, Pastry Cook and Baker and Delicious Ice Cream made by Steam. 71 Hotel Street. Clans sprecke'.s Wm. . Irwin. CLAUS SP RECK ELS & CO., BANKERS. HONOLULU HAWAIIAN ISLANDS Draw Kxchange on the principal parts o the world. Will receive deposits on open account, make collections and conduct a general banking and exchange business. Deposits bearing Interest received in their Sav Department subject to published rules and regulations. 17oc8tf 'CALL FOR DIAMOND CREAMERY BUTTER In lib., 21b., 31b, and 71b. Tins. Finest Article for Warm Climates. S. FOSTER & Co. Wholesale Grocers, SOLE AGENTS. . i San Francisco. nd 28 California St., feb21,89 45-l- y L dvebtisek, one year f6 .. 81X OlOUtbS mm J UO per month 50 u.wumn llAXKTTa, one year w foreign (in- - Office ti 00 Lie Invariably in Advance. r HAWAIIAN GAZETTE CO., 46 Mercha t st., 0. Honolulu. H. I. WILLIAM C. PARKE, kttome yat'Law, 13 Kaahamana Street. Hono-J- r lulu, H. L LEWERS & COOKE, - to Lewers & Dickson) L,r(tr huh iif icr iu ijuuiuci ud ill Kinds of Building Materials. I STREET, Honolulu. 15 JOHN T. WATERHOUSE, Importer and Dealer In l 1 T n T - TT A "XT TV TQ f 3 ijueen Street, Honolulu, ltf Total fi. HACKFELD & CO., with i ml Commission Ageuts liu (a.vrt k Queen Sts., Honolulu, ltf BEAVER SALOON, C. rwi-t- , Opponite Wilder A to. H. J. NOLTE, PROPRIETOB. L Lunches Served with Tea, Coffee, sda Water, Ginger Ale or Milk. n From 3 a. m. till 10 p. m. pokers' Requisites a Specialty. ltf RLULU IRON WORKS CO., Steam Engines, Snsjar Mills, Coolers, Brass aul Lead Castings, P. J. litthinery of every description made to Hon. i reticular attention paia to snips' oiacs-Jo- b work executed on the shortest R. ltf Hon. THE ROYAL SALOON, I una mi and Merchant Streets Uuder the Management of E. H. Wolter, s m$? in stock a variety of the best Wines, P, Beers, and ice cold beers on draught at Fprr glass. Jgrt'ail and Wee 1.H ltf WOaSTG- - SAI, Manufacturer of piemen's Underclothing Wollen and Poneee Coats, Rich I Mill . (low r. . r 1 I inoTI v.nv,v, VJCI mail itllU UlUVIt Shirts. 'weet, next door to K. B. Thomas 14-3- m WILLIAM C. ACH1, ami Counsellor at Law. and 1J-- Kstate Broker. all the Courts of the Kingdom. -- 36 Merchant St., Honolulu. -- 0IU J- - C. MARCH ANT, Pjk-lnm- lv p. t. t i . St., Press Pub. Co. Building. 2-- tf Ings iXEW GOODS ! ' Wr Bark Aron from Hongkong. 1 Contract Matting, I -- sorted Colors; Chairs and Lounges ew Patterns and atvloa- - tW!?9 of Silk. - Manila Ctgars, Flower Pots, asstd sices; - an assortment of toSQiifrt TT r WO TAT & rn tuuanu Street. iPf-- ADVERTISER 26 latest news. Kobala Sugar Co., Haiku Sugar Co.. Paia Plantation, Papal kou Sugar Co. public for past favors, remain respectfully yours, GEO. W. LINCOLN. 29 1277-t- f NOTT, and 97 KING STREET. Housekeeping Goas. and Sheet Iron Work HAWAIIAN BUSINESS AGENCY, Corner of Fort and Merchant Streets, Honolulu, Hawaiian Islands. GENEE A.L AGENTS, EXPERT ACCOTJN TAISTTS AND COLLECTORS, REAL ESTATE, FIRE AND LIFE INSURANCE AGENTS, CUSTOIV HOUSE, LOAN AND EXCHANGE BROKERS. o 1 Departments of Business : Books and Accounts accurately kept and properly adjusted. Collections will receive special attention and returns promptly made. Conveyancing a Specialty. Records searched and correct Abstracts of Titles furnisheo Legal Documents and Papers of every description carefully drawn and handsomely engrossed. Copying and Translating in all languages in general use in this Kingdom. Real Estate bought and sold. Taxes paid ana Property safely insured. Houses, Cottages, Rooms, Offices and Land leased and rented, and rents collected. Fire and Life Insuranck effected in first-clas- s Insurauce Companies. Custom House Business transacted with accuracy and dispatch. Loans Negotiated at Favorable Rates. Advertisements and Subscriptions solicited for Publishers. Skilled and Unskilled Labor Furnished. Any Article Purchased or sold on commission. Inter-Islan- d Orders will receive particular attention. A.LL BUSINESS ENTRUSTED TO OUR CARE WILL RECEIVE PROMPT AND FAITHFUL ATTENTION AT MODERATE CHARGES. Having had an extensive business experience for over twenty-fiv- e years in New York City and elsewhere, we feel competent to attend to all business of an intricate and complicated nature, or requiring tact and discretion, and respectfully solicit a trial. HAWAIIAN BUSINESS AGENCY. FOR SOCIETY PEOPLE. A Business-Lik- e Suggestion Evolved By a Thoughtful Toung Man. In this period of financial depres- sion, it is expedient for society to com- bine business with their pleasures, to mingle with their expensive gayeties schemes to assist indirectly in paying for them. There are many ways in which this can be done. For example an invitation to a party might be made to read somewhat after the following pattern: "Mr. and Mrs. Handmedown present their compliments to Mr. Adolphus Smalltalk, and request the pleasure of Mr. Smalltalk's company on Thursday evening. Mr. Handmedown desires to call Mr. Smalltalk's attention to the fact that Handmedown & Bilk have on hand a first-clas- s assortment of gents1 furnishing goods of the latest spring style. "N. B. Our prices are as low as the lowest "P. S. -- Positively no credit." Or Mrs. Swellrig, wife of the distin- guished livery stable proprietor, might thus devise her invitations to an afternoon tea: "Mrs. Swellrig will be happy to see Miss Giddychippy on Friday afternoon at five o'clock. Get your carriage at Swellrig s. He is the boss. " These suggestions will be readily appreciated by some of our four hun-drede- st society families. Chicago America. . f r A Russian navy officer has invents ed a method of searching the sea or coast by night, which does not reveal the position of the ship. A mortar fires a buoyant shell containing a com- pound which ignites on reaching the water and lights up the surrounding area. iA'-0K5SSS5h- JT83B3(LbOR Bell Telephone No. 274. JO PI 1ST DIM0ND BLOCK, 95 Jjljft jIjj Stoves, Ranges and Plumbing. Tin, Copper gj

Transcript of 124 HONOLULU, Australian · 41-3-m 79 FORT ST., Honolulu. ANDERSON & LUNDY, Dentists. ARTIFICIAL...

Page 1: 124 HONOLULU, Australian · 41-3-m 79 FORT ST., Honolulu. ANDERSON & LUNDY, Dentists. ARTIFICIAL TEETH from one to an entire set in-serted on gold, silver, allum-inu-m and rubber

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mJSC :

VOL- -X.--NO. 124 HONOLULU, HAWAIIAN ISLANDS, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 25, 1889. PRICE 5 CENTS.

THE DAILY lusiness Ofards. THE OCEAN'S BED.

Australian Mail Serviceor THE

THROUGH STEAMERSor THE

OCEANIC S. S. COMPANY.

GARDNER K. WILDER,

--Atto rnev 'a t--L awOffice Honolulu Hale, Merchant Street.

77 1264-l-y

. (Menial Advertiser

g PUBLISHED

gorning Except Sundays,

. 46 Merchant St.u

SUBSCRIITIONB :

S. N. CASTLE. , J. B ATHERTON. Q. P. CASTLE.W. A. BO WEN. EDW. D. TEVKEY.

CASTLE & COOKE,Shipping and Commission Merchants,

--IMPORTERS AND DEALERS IN--

General Merchandise.-- ALSO, AGENT8 FOR--

Grove Ranch Plantation,B. Halstead's Plantation,

A. H. Smith & Co., Koloa, Kauai,G. F. Blake's Steam Pumps.

Union Fire and Marine Insurance Co., of San Francisco.Ftna Fire Insurance Co, of Hartford.

The New England Mutual Life Insurance Co., of Boston.D. Weston's Patent Centrifugal Machines.

The New York and Honolulu Packet LineThe Merchants' Line, Honolulu and San Francisco.

Dr. Jayne & Sons Celebrated Medicines.

Wilcox & Gibbs, Eeiniiigtoii and Wheeler & Wilson

SEWING MACHINES.tf

FT. ED. Mclntyre & Bro.IMPORTERS AND DEALERS IN

Groceries, Provisions and Feed,EAST OORNLR FORT AND KING STREETS.

New Goods received by every pacset from the Eastern States and Europe Fresh CaliforniaProduce by every steamer. All orders faithfully attended to, and Goods delivered to any part of thecity free of charge. Islaud orders solicited. Satisfaction guaranteed. Postoflice Box No. 416Telephone No. 2 Oapl?

tn Its Deepest Parts IU Desolation MustBe Extreme.

Despite the fanciful pictures whichtome writers have drawn of the oceanbed. its desolation, at least in its deepestparts, must be extreme. Beyond thefirst mile it is a vast desert of slimeand ooze, upon which is constantlydripping a rain of dead carcasses fromthe surface, which carcasses supplythe nourishment for the scanty faunaInhabiting the abyssal region in6ome places more than five miles fromthe sunshine, and the microscope re-

veals that the slimy matter coveringthis deepest ocean bed is very similarin composition to the ancient chalk ofthe cretaceous period, while mixedwith it here and there are minutemetallic and magnetic bodies whichhave been proved to be dust from themeteorites.

At long intervals a phosphorescentlight gleams from the head of somepassing fish, which has strayed hitherfrom a higher zone. But it is notuntil we have mounted a good dealnearer the surface that the scenechanges for the better. We nowmeet with forests of brilliantly-colore- d

sponges, while the phosphorescentanimals swimming about are muchmore numerous, and the nearer weget to the littoral zone more and morephosphorescent lights appear, till atlength the scene becomes truly ani-mated. When only 1,200 feet separateus from the sunshine we come uponthe first seaweed and kelp, (1,200 feetis the deepest limit of plant life in thewater); but we must rise still another1,000 feet and more, and get as nearthe top as 120 feet before we find anyreef-buildi- ng corals.

As plants do not live in the deep sea,the deep-se- a animal either prey on oneanother or get their food from deadorganisms and plants which sink downto them. Thus Maury says: "Thesea, like the snow-clou- d with its flakesin a calm, is always letting fall uponIts bed showers of microscopic shells."And experiment proves that a tinyshell would take about a week to fallfrom the surface to the deepest depths.Since sunlight does not penetratemuch farther than the littoral zone,there would be beyond this perpetualdarkness, except for phosphorescence.Many of the animals inhabiting thecontinental and abyssal zones havemerely rudimentary eyes. But theseblind creatures have very long feelers,which help them to grope their wayalong the bottom. Other deep-se-a

animals on the contrary, have enor-mous eyes, and these very likelycongregate around such of their num-ber as are phosphorescent, and manyperhaps follow the moving lamps aboutwherever they go. And so bright isthis light on many of the fish broughtup by the dredge that during thebrief space the animals survive it isnot difficult to read by it

The reason why fishes and mollusksliving more than three miles underwater are able to bear a pressure ofseveral tons is that they have exceed-ingly loose tissues, which allow thewater to flow equally through everyinterstice, and thus to equalize theweight. When the pressure is re-

moved they perish. In the Challengerexpedition sent out by the BritishGovernment, all the sharks broughtup from a depth of a little less thanthree-quarte- rs of a mile were deadwhen they reached the surface.Household Words.

GEO. W. LINCOLN,THE WELL-KNOW- N BUILDER, IS STILL IN THE FIELD AS A

and is now better prepared to do any and all kinds of workappertaining to contracting or any other class of work belonging to his trade, inthe same good and workmanlike manner as heretofore ; having curtailed my shopexpenses and still retain plenty of room to do any and all kinds of work appertain-ing to the building trade that may be entrusted to my care. 1 am enabled to dothe same at very low rates, to suit the extremely dull times, and at the same timebearing in mind that what is worth doing at all is worth doing well.

Thanking theI

65

FOR SAN FRANCISCO.

The new and fine Al steel steamship

ALAMEDA 99

Of tun Oceanic Steamship Company, will be dueat Honolulu from Sydney and Auckland

on or about

Dec. 14, 1889,And wlllieave for the ubve port with mails andpassengers on or abou t that date.

For freight or passage, having SUPERIORACCOMMODATIONS, apply to

Wm. G. Irwin & Co.,AMJSNTS.

For Sydney and Auckland.

The new and tine Al steel steamship

fc 6 55MARIPOSAot the Oceanic steamship company , will be

due atHonolulu from San Frauciscoor or about

Nov. 23, 1889.

and will have prompt di3patcn with mails anassengers for the above ports.For freight or passage, having SUPKRIOR AC-C-

M MO D ATIO Ns, apply to

Wm. Ot. Irwin & Co.,AGENTS

J. E. GOMES,(Formerly of Gomes fc Wicbman.)

No 135 Fort Street,

Manufacturing -:- - Jeweler,Island orders promptly attended to. P.

O. Box No. 488, Honolulu. 48-3- m

Walker & Bedward,

Contractors & BuildersBrick, Stone and Wooden Building

Estimates Given.

Jobbing Promptly Attended to,

76 KING STREET.

Bell Telephone No. 2. P. O. Box 423.211 tf

MRS. TH0S. LACK,DEALER IN THE BEST KIND OF

Guns, 3?istols5Ammunition, Etc.

A full Assmt. of

Baseball, Lawn Tennis & Cricket Goods.SOLE AGENTS FOR THE

White & New Home Sewing Machinesand

New National and Peerless Machines.Also, all kinds of Material for Fancy Work.Embroidery and Stamping Orders rilled atshort notice.

Having procured a workman, we arenow prepared to do all Jobs in the repairline and warrant satisfaction.

41-3- m 79 FORT ST., Honolulu.

ANDERSON & LUNDY,

Dentists.ARTIFICIAL TEETH

from one to an entire set in-

serted on gold, silver, allum-inu- m

and rubber bases.Crown and bridge work a specialty. Topersons wearing rubber plates which are aconstant source of irritation to themouth and throat, we would recommendour Prophylactic Metal Plate. All oper-ations performed in accordance with thelatest improvements in dental science.Teeth extracted without pain by the use ofNitrous Oxide Gas.

Hotel street, Tregloan premises.55-l- y

HONOLULU MARKET.

(Successor to Wm. McCandless.)

No. 6 Queen Street, Fian Market, Ho-nolnl- n,

H. 1.

Choicest Beef, Mutton, Pork, Fish

VEGETABLES, ETC.,

Always Kept on Hand.

Family and Shipping orders Carefully

Attended to.

Live Stock Furnished to Vessels at shortnotice.

Telephones No. 212

Due at Honolulu from San Francisco,on or about.

Alameda October 26Mariposa November 23

Zealandia December 21

Leave Honolulu for San Francisco, onor about.

Zealandia November 16

Alameda December 14

Mverlistmtntz,

A NEW GUIDE BOOK.

The HAWAIIAN GAZETTE COMPANYare now printing a

'Tourists' Me Tlroil the

Hawaiian Islais,"And are prepared to receive Advertisements

for the same. The Edition of thisBook will be about

5.000 COPIES,And it will have about 200 octavo pagesdescriptive of the Scenes and Scenery ofthe Group. The work is to be illustrated,and will contain from twelve to fifteen fullpage illustrations of Buildings and IslandScenery. It will also have a beautifullyilluminated cover.

As the circulation of this work will beworld-wid- e, among tourists and travelers,it furnishes one of the best mediums foradvertising that has, ever been offered tothe business men of these Islands.

Advertisements will be inserted at thefollowing rates :

Full Page, $25 with ten copies of the Guide,gratis.

Half Page, $14 with four copies of theGuide, gratis.

Quarter Page, $8 with two copies of theGuide, gratis.

Small Business Cards (4 page) $5 with onecopy of the Guide, gratis.

Every advertiser, on payment of his bill,will be entitled to copies of the Book, asabove specified.

W For further particulars, address,

H. M. WHITNEY,Manager Hawaiian Gazette Co.

Honoluln, November, 1889. 1296-2-

PROF. G. SAUVLET,

Piano, Violin and Singing Lessons.

At Residence Cor. Beretaniia and AlakeaSts. or will visit pupils at their residence.

84-l-

HARRY'S LUNCH ROOMSHOTEL STREET.

Open Day and ISTight

BILL OF FARE:Tea, Coffee or Chocolate with

Ham and Eggs 25 centsEggs to order 25 "Porterhouse Steak 25 11

Mutton Chops 25Pork Chops 25 "Hamburg Steak 25 "Steak and Eggs 35 "Steak and Chops 35 "Fish 25 "Tea, Coffee & Chocolate, with Bread

and Butter or Cakes 10 "Mush and Milk 10 "

ISTFresh Wild Game to order everyTuesday, Thursday and Saturday.")Extra dishes cooked to order.

Dinner from 11 a. m. to 2 p. m.Dishes cooked to order up to 8:30 p m.

19-t- f

FILTER PRESSES.

Paauhau Plantation,Hawau, March 9, 1888. )

Rlsdon Iron and Locomotive Works, San Francisco.

Gentlemen We have used two of yourFilter Presses thisseason. They

are convenient, easily bandied and are workingentirely to our satisfaction. I can recommendno improvement on them.

Very respectfully yours.(signed) A. Moobe,

Manager Paauhau Plantation.

Heeia, Sept. 28, 1889.

Mr. John Dter, Agent Risdon Iron Works,Honolulu.

Dear Sib: Please ship us one of your 30Compartment Filter Presses, 240 square feetsurface, same as the one supplied us last season,which I am pleased to say has given us entiresatisfaction. Yonrs truly,

GEO. R. EWART,Manager fleeia Agricultural Co.

These Presses are made extra heavy forhigh pressures, occnples a floor space of 1 1 x4 ft., and presents a filtering surface of 240square feet. A limited number iu stock inHonolulu and are sold at very low prices.

Risdon Iron Si Loco. Works,San Francisco.

For nrt1p.nliirR nnanira of'OBBlr.sw,,,234 W. 6. IRWIN St Co., Agents.

J. ALFRED MAGOON,Attorney and Counselor at Law and

Notary Public.42 Merchant Street, Honolulu, H.I.

121-l- ni

GOO KIM,Merchant Tailor,

HAS ON hand;

Cashmere, Diagonals, Tweeds andSerges, Etc.

A perfect fit guaranteed.NUUANU STREET, HONOLULU.

7G-3- m

NTEBPEISPLANING MILL,

A LAKE A, NEAR QUEEN STREET.

174 Telephone 65.

SUN FIRE OFFICE,OF LONDON.

Established 1710.Insurance effected upon every description of

property at current rates of premium.

Sum Insured in 1885 327,333,700

Claims arranged by the Local Agents, and paidpromptitude and liberality. The jurisdic-

tion of the Local Tribunals recognized.

G. W. Macfarlane & Co.Agents for Hawaiian Islands.

BREWER & COMPANY,

.I,imtled.

GENERAL MERCANTILE

'AND

COMMISSION AGENTS.

LIST OF OFFICERS:

C. Jones. Jr President and ManagerO. Carter Treasurer and Secretary

W. F. Allen Auditor

DIRECTORS:

C. R. fiishop. Hon. H. Waterbouse

PIONEER

AND

BAKEEYF. HORN.

Practical Confectioner, Pastry Cook and Bakerand Delicious Ice Cream made by Steam.

71 Hotel Street.Clans sprecke'.s Wm. . Irwin.

CLAUS SP RECK ELS & CO.,

BANKERS.HONOLULU HAWAIIAN ISLANDS

Draw Kxchange on the principal parts o the

world.

Will receive deposits on open account, make

collections and conduct a general banking andexchange business.

Deposits bearing Interest received in their SavDepartment subject to published rules and

regulations. 17oc8tf

'CALL FORDIAMOND CREAMERY

BUTTERIn lib., 21b., 31b, and 71b. Tins.

Finest Article forWarm Climates.

S. FOSTER & Co.Wholesale Grocers,

SOLE AGENTS. .i

San Francisco.nd 28 California St.,feb21,89 45-l- y

L dvebtisek, one year f6.. 81X OlOUtbS mm J UO

per month 50

u.wumn llAXKTTa, one year wforeign (in- - Office

ti 00

Lie Invariably in Advance.r

HAWAIIAN GAZETTE CO.,

46 Mercha t st.,

0. Honolulu. H. I.

WILLIAM C. PARKE,

kttome yat'Law,13 Kaahamana Street. Hono-J- r

lulu, H. L

LEWERS & COOKE,

- to Lewers & Dickson)

L,r(tr huh iif icr iu ijuuiuciud ill Kinds of Building Materials.

I STREET, Honolulu. 15

JOHN T. WATERHOUSE,

Importer and Dealer In

l 1 T n T - TT A "XT TV T Q f3 ijueen Street, Honolulu, ltf Total

fi. HACKFELD & CO., withi

ml Commission Ageutsliu

(a.vrt k Queen Sts., Honolulu, ltf

BEAVER SALOON, C.rwi-t- , Opponite Wilder A to.

H. J. NOLTE, PROPRIETOB.

L Lunches Served with Tea, Coffee,sda Water, Ginger Ale or Milk.

n From 3 a. m. till 10 p. m.pokers' Requisites a Specialty. ltf

RLULU IRON WORKS CO.,

Steam Engines,Snsjar Mills, Coolers, Brassaul Lead Castings, P.

J.litthinery of every description made to Hon.i reticular attention paia to snips' oiacs-Jo- b

work executed on the shortestR. ltf

Hon.

THE ROYAL SALOON,

I una mi and Merchant StreetsUuder the Management of

E. H. Wolter, sm$? in stock a variety of the best Wines,P, Beers, and ice cold beers on draught atFprr glass.

Jgrt'ail and Wee 1.H ltf

WOaSTG- - SAI,Manufacturer of

piemen's UnderclothingWollen and Poneee Coats, Rich

I Mill . (low r. . r 1 I inoTIv.nv,v, VJCI mail itllU UlUVItShirts.

'weet, next door to K. B. Thomas14-3- m

WILLIAM C. ACH1,

ami Counsellor at Law. and1J-- Kstate Broker.

all the Courts of the Kingdom.--36 Merchant St., Honolulu.

--0IU

J-- C. MARCH ANT,

Pjk-lnm-lv p. t. t i .

St., Press Pub. Co. Building.2-- tf

Ings

iXEW GOODS !

' Wr Bark Aron from Hongkong.

1 Contract Matting,I --sorted Colors;

Chairs and Loungesew Patterns and atvloa- -

tW!?9 of Silk.- Manila Ctgars,Flower Pots, asstd sices;

- an assortment oftoSQiifrt TT

r WO TAT & rntuuanu Street.

iPf-- ADVERTISER 26latest news.

Kobala Sugar Co.,Haiku Sugar Co..

Paia Plantation,Papal kou Sugar Co.

public for past favors,remain respectfully yours,

GEO. W. LINCOLN.

29 1277-t-f

NOTT,and 97 KING STREET.

Housekeeping Goas.

and Sheet Iron Work

HAWAIIAN BUSINESS AGENCY,Corner of Fort and Merchant Streets, Honolulu,

Hawaiian Islands.

GENEE A.L AGENTS, EXPERTACCOTJN TAISTTS AND

COLLECTORS,REAL ESTATE, FIRE AND LIFE INSURANCE AGENTS, CUSTOIV

HOUSE, LOAN AND EXCHANGE BROKERS.o

1 Departments of Business :

Books and Accounts accurately kept and properly adjusted.Collections will receive special attention and returns promptly made.Conveyancing a Specialty. Records searched and correct Abstracts of Titles furnisheoLegal Documents and Papers of every description carefully drawn and handsomely

engrossed.Copying and Translating in all languages in general use in this Kingdom.Real Estate bought and sold. Taxes paid ana Property safely insured.Houses, Cottages, Rooms, Offices and Land leased and rented, and rents collected.Fire and Life Insuranck effected in first-clas- s Insurauce Companies.Custom House Business transacted with accuracy and dispatch.Loans Negotiated at Favorable Rates.Advertisements and Subscriptions solicited for Publishers.Skilled and Unskilled Labor Furnished.Any Article Purchased or sold on commission.Inter-Islan- d Orders will receive particular attention.

A.LL BUSINESS ENTRUSTED TO OUR CARE WILL RECEIVE PROMPTAND FAITHFUL ATTENTION AT MODERATE CHARGES.

Having had an extensive business experience for over twenty-fiv- e years inNew York City and elsewhere, we feel competent to attend to all business of anintricate and complicated nature, or requiring tact and discretion, and respectfullysolicit a trial. HAWAIIAN BUSINESS AGENCY.

FOR SOCIETY PEOPLE.A Business-Lik- e Suggestion Evolved By a

Thoughtful Toung Man.In this period of financial depres-

sion, it is expedient for society to com-bine business with their pleasures, tomingle with their expensive gayetiesschemes to assist indirectly in payingfor them. There are many ways inwhich this can be done. For examplean invitation to a party might be madeto read somewhat after the followingpattern:

"Mr. and Mrs. Handmedown presenttheir compliments to Mr. AdolphusSmalltalk, and request the pleasure ofMr. Smalltalk's company on Thursdayevening. Mr. Handmedown desires tocall Mr. Smalltalk's attention to thefact that Handmedown & Bilk have onhand a first-clas- s assortment of gents1furnishing goods of the latest springstyle.

"N. B. Our prices are as low as thelowest

"P. S. --Positively no credit."Or Mrs. Swellrig, wife of the distin-

guished livery stable proprietor,might thus devise her invitations toan afternoon tea:

"Mrs. Swellrig will be happy to seeMiss Giddychippy on Friday afternoonat five o'clock. Get your carriage atSwellrig s. He is the boss. "

These suggestions will be readilyappreciated by some of our four hun-drede- st

society families. ChicagoAmerica.

. f rA Russian navy officer has invents

ed a method of searching the sea orcoast by night, which does not revealthe position of the ship. A mortar firesa buoyant shell containing a com-pound which ignites on reaching thewater and lights up the surroundingarea.

iA'-0K5SSS5h- JT83B3(LbOR

Bell Telephone No. 274.

JO PI 1STDIM0ND BLOCK, 95

JjljftjIjj

Stoves, Ranges and

Plumbing. Tin, Coppergj

Page 2: 124 HONOLULU, Australian · 41-3-m 79 FORT ST., Honolulu. ANDERSON & LUNDY, Dentists. ARTIFICIAL TEETH from one to an entire set in-serted on gold, silver, allum-inu-m and rubber

1

DAILY PACIFIC COMMERCIAL ADVERTISER NOVEMBER 2188Ktw SUtocrtiscmmts.GRAND EXCURSION.OUR SAN FRANCISCO LETTER.By 3utl)ority

Per S. r

clusive evidence has been adduceddirectly connecting the defendantswith the crime. ThuB far it is purelycircumstantial and the prospects forconviction are not very good.

Sporting Notes.Stanford's three-yea-r old filly

E. R. Hendry, President and Manager.Godfrey Brown, Secretary & Treasurer.

S. Mariposa, San FranciscoNovember 16, 1889. I U i

OAHU RAILWAY AND LAP CO.'s

TIME TABLE.

To Moanalua, Halawa, and the Lakesof Tearl River.

On Saturday afternoon the grand ex-

cursion which was planned by Mr. Dil HAWAIIAN HARDWARE(From Our San Francisco Correspondent.) COJSunol trotted a mile in 2:10i at the(LIMITED).Bay District in San Francisco on

November 9th, beating the world'sthree-yea-r record by lh seconds.

Sugar Matters.price of refined sugar Fort Street, Honolulu,The has Opp. Spreckels' Bank,

Importers and. Dealers inIt has pleased His Majesty the King to Stanford's Axtell held the formerdropped one cent during the past HONOLULUMIR A InS WILL LEAVErecord of 2:12. Another of the Sen Co. asweek, and raw sugar is now quoted --I over the Oahu Railway & Landfollows :at 4 for 96 test Cuban basis.

appoint His Excellency Hon.LORRIN A. THURSTON

to be His Acting Attorney-General- .

Iolani Palace, Honolulu, Nov. 22, 1839.1208-I-t 124-3- t

Hardware, Crockery, GlasswareChandeliers, Electoliers, Lamps and Lamp Fixtures,

lingham became an accomplished fact.At 1 :15 p. m. a train of three palace andtwo open cars drawn by the engine Kaala,engineer Allan Clark manipulating thethrottle, left tbe town station, con-

ductor J. Coakley having charge of thetrain. A goodly number of ladies andgentlemen and children occupied seatsin the cars, and the balmy breezes fromthe Kalihi and Moanalua valleys re-

freshed the travelers on their journey.Rapid transit was the order of the dayand the engine thundered over thebridges and ran shrieking through thecuts and around the curves which formthe road to Moanalua. At Moanalua a

The question of sugar beet culture ARRIVE HONOLULUDEPOT.

LEAVE HONOLULUDEPOT.is exciting the farmers of Southern

California, and their interest in the

ator's horses, Palo Alto, covered amile in 2:12, making a new Coaststallion record.

Robert Bonner, the owner of MaudS., is negotiating with the owner ofSunol for her purchase. The priceset is said to be about 40,000.

London, Nov. 10. Yesterday theCalifornia Athletic Club was an in-

stitution practically unknown in

9:30 A. M.12:00 m.4:30 P. M.

7:3010 :003:00

M.M.

M.

A.A.P. HOUSE FURNISHING GOODsForeign Office Notice.

Foreign Office )

question has been increased by theannouncement that a large beetsugar factory is to be constructed in99 1880.Honolulu, H. I., Nov.

that the Chino Valley in San Bernardino SUNDAY TRAINS:faints, uus ana varmsnes, jaru kju, uynnaer UU ;

Powder, Shot and Caps, Machine-loade- d Cartridges, ChainWl.in- -

Silver-plate- d Ware, Table and Pocket Cutlery :s pjf;

Plows, Planters' Steel Hoes, and other Agricultural Implements-Handle- s

of all kinds; 1

Official notice having been givenduring tbe temporary absence of

H. LOSE, ESQ.,county. The American Sugar Re 11:30 a. m.short ston was made duriner which the Leave Honolulu 9 a. m.

and 3 p. m.excursionists had opportunity to viewfinery Company is said to be back ofthe scheme, and it is asserted thatActing Consul for Sweden and Norway, -- 10:15 a. in.r.h xt,nsive erounds of Hon. S. M. Returning Leavk Halawa

1 :45 p. m. and 4 p. m.Damon. The iourney was soon conC. BOLTE, ESQ., Plantation Supplies of every description'tinned on to Halawa, near Dr. McGrew'sthey have entered into a contractwith Richard Gird, owner of thewill discharge the functions of that office HONOLULUresidence and there the party left the

England; w its name willbe in every ones mouth, for PeterJackson, the champion of the club,carried its colors to victory at thePelican Club to-nigh- t, defeatingJem Smith, the English champion,so easily that all the spectators werevery much disappointed at seeing sopoor a fight. Smith declined at firstto shake hands with his conqueror,but finally did so. Jackson wins

800 prize money and wins an equal

as Acting Consul, all persons are hereby train to take passage on the small butcomfortable steamer Ewa, Captain Ki- -Valley, by which Mr. Gird transfersrequired to give full faith and credit to all

FIRE DEPARTMENT.the officieal acts of the said C. Bolte, Est. lipi. The steamer was reached by meansto the American Company 2,000acres of the Chino lands at a very of a wharf which had been built for the

accommodation of the passengers. Thesatisfactory price, and leases 2,000JONA. AUSTIN,

Minister of Foreign Affairs.1298-I-t 122-3- t

F.uft left for the commencement of heracres more for a term of years.vovaire at 2 o'clock, engineer Clark salThe decision in the New York

Hart's patent " Duplex " Die Stock for Pipe and Bolt Cutting'Manila and Sisal Rope, Rubber Hose,Wire bound Rubber Hose, Spincter-gri- p ;

Sprinklers and Sprinkler Stands.

AGENTS FOK:Union Metallic Cartridge Co.,

"New Process" Rope,llartman's Steel-wir- e Fence and Steel-wir- e Mats

Neal's Carriage Paints,Win. G . Fisher's Wrought Steel Ranees

Gate City Stone Filters," New Process" Twist

II...4).. n . . .... brills. loi

uting the departing vovagers with blastsSale of Lease of Government Land in

amount in bets for his night's work,besides earning the reputation amongsports here as the hardest hitter andmost scientific boxer in the world.

Hilo, Hawaii. from the sonorous whistle of the Kaalaanswered by the more mellow whistle ofthe Ewa while the Hawaiian quintetteOn THURSDAY, December 26, 1889, at

at 12 o'clock noon, at the front entrance of club, which had been especially engaged

Courts has been given against theSugar Trust.

N. W. C. T. U.

The National Woman's ChristianTemperance Union has gone tosmash. At the national conventionof that organization on November12th, the Iowa delegation walkedout and withdrew from the conven

to add to the pleasures of the trip, voicedAluoiani Male, will be sold at Public Auc DAMAGED AND DELAYED.tion, the Lease of the Government Land of "Alohaoe." For two and a half hours the

excursionists were carried on the steamerfrom point to point, all the beauties ofKuliamano, Hilo, Hawaii, containing anthn but little known shores of the variarea of 317 acres.

Terms Lease for 15 years. ous lochs being pointed out and the interest being added to by the skillfulnilotintr of Captain Kalipi who at timesran so close to the shore that it would Election of Mmhave been an easv matter to havestepped on or off the steamer. The re

Upset Price $1,305 50 per annum, payable semi-annual- ly in advance.

L. A. THURSTON,Minister of the Interior.

Interior Office, Nov. 20, 1889.1298-2- t 121-- 4t

THE ADVERTISER CALENDAR.

turn start was made from ott' Mr. C. A.

FOR 189091.Brown's place at 3:15. A different routewas taken on the homeward passage, the

tion, on account of a difference ofopinion as to the propriety of theunion mixing in politics in its fightagainst King Alcohol.

The Charleston.Captain Geo. C. Remey lately ap-

pointed to the navy yard at Nor-

folk, Virginia, as commander of thenew cruiser, Charleston, is now inthis city. News has been receivedhere that it has been definitely set-

tled at Washington that the cruiserCharleston will make her maidencruise as the flagship of the Pacificsauadron.

Steamer Hawaii of Wilder & Co.'s LineMeets with an Accident.

About 7 o'clock on the morning ofNovember 15th smoke was discoveredcoming up from the hold of the steamerHawaii, laying alongside of Folsom dockNo. 2, and an immediate investigationshowed that the cargo of lime stored inthe vessel's hold had been in somemysterious manner reached by water,which was commencing to boil, creat-ing a gas and heat which might resultin a fire below decks. After taking thenecessary precautions to prevent as faras possible the result, Captain King sig-

naled the tugs Vigilant and Alert, whichwere soon alongside and pumping sev-

eral heavy streams into the vessel'shold, but without any apparent effectother than to increase the boiling of thelime.

When Messrs. John D. and A. B.Spreckels, accompanied by Mr. Hug,arrived on the scene with the tut: Re

steamer finally landing her living freightat the wharf at 4 :45, where the Kaalaand the cars were in waiting. The NOTICENotice is hereby given that the first bi

ennial election (under Chapter 45 Statutehomeward iournev was rapidly made,November, 1889. Laws of 1888) will be heldforty minutes being the time allowed byengineer Clark to his iron horse to aving purchased from J. J. Melehcrs, W. Z. Schiedam

Holland, the sole right to use hiscover the distance in and the train ON MONDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1889,rolled into the depot on time.

(6 95Mr. Dillingham is to be congratulatedupon the success attending the trip, allCommodore Brown, who is under

Ru. Mo. Tu. W. Th. Fr. Sa. j Moon's Phases.1 2 JSovember 7.

Full Moon.3 6 6 7 8 9 i NovemberToT"

17 "IT 12 13 h IT ic tBt Q"art;f;i

17 1 8 19 20 21 22 j 23 New Moon.November 29.

24 25 26 27 28 29 30 First Quarter.

At the Bell Tower, Elephant JLabelpreparatory orders to command thesquadron, was in Washington dur For the purpose of Electing a Chief Enwho had ventured being strong in their

praise of the system which is apparentin the management of the road for the ofgineer and two Assistant iMieineers oiing the past week, and while there For GIN in this Kingdom, which label bears the picture

an elephant, under palm trees, printed in differentcolors, and also the words

the said - ire Department, rolls willcomfort of its patrons. The new counhe consulted the chief naval con be open at G p. m. and close at 9 p. m.try which is opened up to view and thetractor in regard to certain changes

in her cabin accommodations neces scenery in and about the deep lakes ofPearl harbor are well worthy a visit andTHE DAILY HENRY SMITH,

Secretary H. F.111-t- d D.sary to a flagship. The changeswill be made at the Mare Island opportunity will probably be offered in

the near tuture tor the public to enjoy HART'S PATENTNavy Yard, where Commodore another excursion at reduced rates.Pacific Commercial Advertiser. Brown will put his flag upon hersome time during: the month of

"Greatest Gin Distillery of the Netherlands.registered;

J. J, Melchers, W. Z, Schiedam,"

And having been granted a Certificate of Registration forthe term of twenty years, dating from the 1 7th day of Se-ptember, A. D. 1889, under the hand and seal of L. A.Thurston, Minister of the Interior, for the Hawaiian Islands,for the exclusive use of the said label throughout the Ha-

waiian Kingdom, all persons are hereby warned not to ustthe said label, or any imitation thereof, under penalty of law.

Auction Sales. i"DopJanuary.Nicaragua and Panama. ex M

The first sod of the NicaraguaBe just and fear not:

Let all tbe ends thou aim'st at beThy Country's, thy God's, and Truth's.

BY JAS. V. MORGAN.canal was officially turned on

For Pipe and Bolt Threading.October 22d, according to a dispatchreceived on November 10th. The W. C. PEACOCK.

76-3- mMONDAY, NOV. 25, 1889. Frame Bd'iUms at Auctionceremony was performed amid thecheers of thousands of spectatorsand in the presence of Governor u Both Guides and Dies Instantly Adjustable

ireno del Midillo ana stan, representing Nicaragua, the chief engin On Tuesday, Nov. 26th, No Wrench, Thumbscrew or Collets, too

complete in itself, and will do moreand better work than any

other Hand Die.eer and staff of the Nicaragua Canal

At 12 o'clock noon,Company and all the foreign Consulsin this city. The work really began GOEHSTT'S FINE BL.UEDie3 easily sharpened on a GrindJune 3d last, but owing to a slight stone.

The call from Hilo, which we pub-lish to-da-y, for a ministerial state-ment or platform of their principles,is a new thing for this country.This public declaration of politicalprinciples by the ministry is fre-

quently given in other countries, byspeeches, yet it has not been thepractice here. It strikes us, how-ever, as being eminently wise andproper, and for the reason stated by

LIGHT, STRONG, COMPACT, SIMPLEand Very easily operated.

On the International Hotel Premises, cor-ner of Bethel and Hotel streets. I will sellat Public Auction, the

TWO-STOR- Y

Wooden Buildings!Now occupied as a Restaurant.

FLANNEL SUIT!

lief, it was decided to tow the vesselover to Mission flats. The Vigilant andAlert were not long in bringing the Ha-waii out into the stream and to the Mis-sion flats, where she was run into mudand swamped.

As soon as the power of the lime canbe overcome, work will at once be com-menced on removing her cargo of merch-andise, and until then there will be littlechance of estimating the loss.

The steamer Hawaii was formerly theDel Norte, belonging to the Crescent CityTransportation Company. She was soldto the Wilder Steamship. Company sev-eral weeks ago for $38,000, and a fewdays ago completed her repairs, and wasto have sailed for Honolulu this morn-ing, where she was to be placed on theinter-islan- d routes. The freight billedfor the islands was so large that thesteamer Australia,which sailed for Hono-lulu last Saturday, was forced to leave aconsiderable amount behind, and Messrs.Spreckels Brothers decided to send thesurplus down by the steamer Hawaii, sothat it would reach its destination intime for the Christmas trade. Thesteamer was filled to its utmost capacity,principally with valuable Christmasgoods, and their loss will prove a serioussetback to the Hawaiian merchants.

The cargo's principal damage is fromwater, as it is generally believed that theboiling lime will run to the bottom of thehold and there exhaust itself.

The clearance papers of the vesselshow the value of her cargo to be $27,-47- 7.

Of this amount $25,277 was des-tined to Honolulu, and the balance$2,200, to Kahului.

When John D. Spreckels returnedfrom the vessel he stated that the boil-ing lime had been subdued by filling thevessel full of water, causing a total lossto her cargo but assuring her hull frominjury. The vessel has settled deepinto the mud, and can only be set afloatwith much difficulty. Pumping her outand "removing her damaged cargo willconsume the greater portion of the week.

Under the maritime laws John D.Spreckels & Bros, will claim salvage,their tugs having come to her rescue.

When the fire was first discoveredJohn Dunn, a passenger, was sleeping inthe forecastle and was nearly asphyxi-ated before rescued. He was taken toCity Receiving Hospital, but did notfully recover for over an hour.

A Word About the Bolt Die Stock.

the Hilo committee, that under thepresent Constitution, the ministry

I-TE-RMS CASH.

Buildings to be removed within 10 daysNo turning back over the threads after

it is once cut, is a prominent feature of theare responsible to the people. Such

YOUNG HEN'S BLACK FRENCH DIAGONAL SLITS.

BOYS' FINE LIGHT WEIGHT CASSIJIEBE SUITS.

" .Duplex."an address, if made by them, must All mechanics agreeing that the turning

back against the cutting edge injures theJas. IT. HVTorgan,123 3t AUCTIONEER.

dies niucn more than the actual cuttingWhen the " Duplex " dies become dul

serve as an appeal to their constituency, to sustain the Reform Govern by cutting, they can readily be renewed by

suarpemng on a grindstone. Thus wak-ing the life of these dies longer, at least bv

ment, as now established. It wouldthrow the responsibility of main GENTS FINE NECKWEAR, HOSIERY,four fold than any other made, and at thetaining the present Governmentdirectly on to the voters, where itbelongs. We trust that the ministry

AUCTION SALE OF

Coral Blocks and

Building Bocks !

Gent's Black, Brown and G-re-

will respond to this call from Hawaii.

misunderstanding between Nicara-gua and Costa Rica, which has sincebeen amicably arranged, the formalopening was postponed until to-da- y.

Mr. Johu Hewson, an Englishcivil engineer, who recently returnedfrom a visit to Panama, has the fol-lowing to say about the big ditch:

"To abandon it altogether wouldbe a disgrace to the skill of thiscentury, yet it seems impossible toComplete the work on a paying basis.To complete the canal on a levelwith merely a tidal lock the removalof 100,000,000 cubic meters of earthis still necessary."

Mr. Hewson thinks it would takeat least two or two and a half yearsmore to complete it, and that theexpense would be about 2,000,000,000francs.

American Affairs.A blizzard swept over the western

states, New Mexico, and Texas, dur-ing the fore part of November anddid a great deal of damage. Thestorm was accompanied by snowand sleet and several people losttheir lives in Colorado and NewMexico. In the latter section thou-sands of cattle were frozen to deathand in Texas about 100,000 sheep per-ished. The blizzard came withoutwarning and was almost unpreced-ented in severity. It is thoughtthat when the reports are all in itwill be found that the death listamong stockmen and travellers foundfrozen will be large.

A Washington dispatch says: Thesubject that will receive the consider-ation of the Secretary of State andthe Navy, and probably be presentedin their annual reports, is that of es-tablishing a coaling station on thePearl river on the island of Oahu, of

FINE -:- - STIFF -:- - FELT -:-- HAT!The news received by the Mariposa s mail, with dates to the 16th

same time avoiding the common occur-rence of stripping or weakening the threadand rendering the work worthless.

This tool, when set to any desired size,can instantly be released and lifted off andreset to same size without trial, thus in-suring all the threads uniformly alike. Itadjusts to all the variations in iron rough,oversized iron is shaved to standard sizeand threaded at the same time. This can-not be accomplished with any other DieStock. The " Duplex " being the only toolmade allowing one set of dies to accuratelycut two distinct sizes in the adjustmentno wrench, screw driver or any extra toolbeing used and when adjusted is as rigidas a solid die, and will do at least one-thir- d

more work in the same space of time. Wesolicit a comparison with other makes,both as to range of sizes each tool cuts,and prices, as well as price of extra dies.

inst., will be found interesting if notitararvxr nnrTi nd NEimportant. The storm or "blizzard' t3T All tlie above Grootls are j J V V J v-- '

VERY LOW FIGURES

0u Tuesday, Nov. 26th,At 12 o'clock noon,

On tbe International Hotel Premises, cor-ner of Bethel and Hotel streets, I will sellat Public Auction, all the

as it is called, which swept over theWestern States and Rocky Moun-tain territories was one of those des-tructive hurricanes, which have beentoo frequent of late years. The

DESIGNS, ana will be sold at

THE LEADING MILLINERY HOUSE

Corner of Fort and Hotel Streets.SICHAS. J. W0l)Lpping.

average snowfall is reported to have For Sale byBlocks, Building Rocks and

RED BRICKSJNow lying on said premises.

67 1289been over two feet in depth. Thisstorm is what detained the Mari

Clias. Brewer & CosBoston Line of Packets! it

Hawaiian Hardware Co.Opposite Spreckels & Co.'s Bank,

103-- 1 m Fort Street, Honolulu.

TT1 1TBAY VIEWposa, the mail train having been de jn or kdixj 1TERMS CASH.layed by it.The State elections have been The material to be removed within two

days after the sale. m jfcmore than usually erratic this fall IMPORTERS WILLplease take notice that thefine bark Martha Davis willbe laid on the berth in Bos-ton to load for this port dur

- FAT- -Jas. F Morgan,The Republican States of Ohioand Iowa have chosen Democraticgovernors, while the Legislaturesare strongly Republican. It is said

UP-TOW- N

Book and Statiooery Store.

106 FORT STREET.

33-- 3t AUCTIONEER.ing February next, to sail on or about thefirst day of March, 1890. TUKKEYSIvor further particulars apply to

RESORTKing St, opp. Oahu Railway Depot,

Billiards, Bowling Alley

SHOOTING GALLERY, SHUFFLEBOARD AND SPARRING.

Cold tales! Cold Drinks!

that the temperance question has120 1293 C. BREWER & CO.been the disturbing elemeut. WThile

AND

For Kauai Ports.these elections will not change thecomplexion of the present Congress,they indicate what may be the result

SUCKLING PIGSMeeting Notice.v.FORat some future time.

THE STM R.AKAMAI,Capt. Mason, will sailregularly for followingports: Nawiliwili.Koloa,The accident to the steamer DelJ

D andThanksgiving

ChristinasNew

Norte, we cannot call it a fire,though it would have resulted inthat, just as she was ready to leave

Year

Eleele, and Waimea, onKauai. )For Freight or Passage, ap-ply on board, or to

DAVID DAYTON, Agent,115-l- y No. 91 King St., up-stair-s.

A SEMI-ANNUA- L MEETING OF THEBoard of Trustees of the Queen's Hos-

pital will be held on THURSDAY, the 12thof December, 1889, at the rooms of theChamber of Commerce, at 10 o'clock a. m.Amendment to the By-law- s. Per order.

F. A. SCHAEFER,Secretary.

Honolulu, Nov. 11. 1889. 115-t-d

The Best of Coffee, Tea and Chocolate.Finest Brands of

CIGARS AND TOBACCO. BY- -

the Hawaiian groupe, about sevenmiles from Honolulu. The privilegeof establishing a station there, whichis conceded to be a great desidera-tum, was secured to the United Statesby the treaty concluded with Hawaiiby Secretary Bayard, but no appro-priation was made by the last Con-gress to make it effective. Thesite must be purchased and thebar across the mouth of the har-bor blasted out to make the entrancefor ships of war. The appropria-tions to secure these ends will pro-bably be urged upon Congress.

Three of the four breweries lo-cated in Kansas City, Mo., have prac-tically been sold to the English syn-dicate which recently purchased thebreweries of St. Louis. The pricepaid is supposed to be 11,500,000.The formal transfer will occur onJanuary 1st, 1890.

The circulars announcing the es-tablishment of a fast mail servicebetween here and New York, andvice versa, have just been issued, andthe overland flyers started on their

Oysters and Game by every HENRY DAVIS hFOR SALE.

Full and Complete As-sortment ol

1890-- :- DIARIES -:-- W

For Two Dollars and a Half($2.50) we will Sell the

BEST RAZOR IN THE- - COUNTRY!

Never Needs Grinding and isalways ready for use--Buy one andbe Happy !

THOS. GTflRUM,PROPRIETOR.

Pianos For Rent.

California steamer.

NOTICE. 52 Fort Street.

San Francisco, was unfortunate onaccount of the attending loss anddelay. And yet it was fortunatethat it occurred before the vesselwent to sea, where the disastermight have been more serious. Sheis reported to have been insured for$30,000, but that sum will not pro-bably cover the actual loss and at-

tending salvage which may be

ipavetbei. . . ....Li

AT MRS. THOS. LACK'S, 51 EMMAstreet, a varied assortment of Articles

both useful and ornamental which will besold at very low prices. The house will beopen on Saturday, Nov. 23, 1889. 120-- 4t

Parties desiring snou -M.TURING MY ABSENCE FROM THE SNIFFEN,Manager.

E.lll-l- v

as tne numw -orders at once,--Lf KiiiL'doni. J. Alfred MaPdnn will act 113-2- ni

for me under power of attorney.rfretiPound Notice. n (l BM

WM. McCANDLESSDated Honolulu, Nov. 12, 1889,

114-l- m 1297-2- t " :ilJrrlia'

ARE YOU ILL?Ir. Pieree's Blt ittbe only perfect ElectrioBody-Batter- y. It will

enre NervouKsitively Rheumatism,Lame Back, 1m potency,Kidnpj flnmnlunL Dys

:8irt;r. ujn)Wjf3 uVIe Id i ...rS.REMOVAL.THERE WILL BE SOLD ATthe Government Pound, nearthe Oahu Jail, on SATURDAY,Nov. 30th at 12 o'clock noon.

flgg ga Mrd only by tfcs in, to." rD.t ill r n. -1 v.- -A.J.first journeys in both directions on

Sunday, the 17th November. Hi.Decsh""SSSk Cincinnati JBSp

Ohio. JNearly seventeen and a half mil-

lions of people visited the Paris Ex-hibition, an increase of more thaneight millions over the number inthe corresponding period at the Ex-hibition in Paris in 1878.

U!rt bv I'""5"Trad

pepsia, Male and Female Weakness. Thousands curedin America. Forwarded safely toany psrtofthe woria

--Write for Pamphlet No. a. Address M. E.TruaCo., 704 Sacramento St.. San Francisco, Cal.. V.S.A.Pile cured-Pmp- h. No. 3 describes a new In v enUou

ADVERTISER IS THETHE daily paper of the Kingdom

SA1S IN GOOD ORDERMsKffl' month.

iVSEPARTMJENT OF

THE OFFICE OF SANDERS' Ex-press was removed on Wednesday,

Oct. 10th, to the old stand, No. 81 Kingstreet, directly opposite the present stand.

one Mare branded on right hind leg M. Ontbe 7th of Dec. will also be sold, one Sor-rel horse, branded on right hind leg co21.

J. W. P1I,Pound Master.

Honolulu, Nov. 23, 1889. 123-- 2t

The trial of the alleged murderersof Dr. Cronin still drags along inChicago and although the evidenceof the people is about all in, no con

1 v I II Jo.,BENSOK.SiiiTHWhoIesaiian HAWAIIAN NEWS j

109 ICCOMPANY,Ring up Telephone ob. 89-l- ni

Iv t

Page 3: 124 HONOLULU, Australian · 41-3-m 79 FORT ST., Honolulu. ANDERSON & LUNDY, Dentists. ARTIFICIAL TEETH from one to an entire set in-serted on gold, silver, allum-inu-m and rubber

rDAILY PACIFIC COMMERCIAL ADVERTISER, NOVEMBER 25, 1889.

fgONOLULTJ, H.THE CAMERA CLUB.HILO HAPPENINGS. Nero Sttrocrnstmentfl.

JMotes of Interest from Our Own Cor'.i;i;1V.W.s.SATX7KPAY, NOV. 23. respondent. THANKSGIVING DAY.

LOCAL AND GENERAL.

Excellent weather Sunday.

There will be a band concert at Emmasquare this evening. .

situated room awaits anoccupant.

from Maui and! lironzeiv

0 1889 - CHRISTMAS -- 1889.V" ptfjRIBUS U,

lhe extension to the old wharf makesall the room that is now needed, and wehave long required such room. We

." frntn naiuaK.ua. xa- -

Va!n'ie would not have had this done had it notBP

Their First Public Exhibition Exhibitsand Exhibitors.

The members of the Camera club afterenjoying in company with their imme-

diate friends the opportunity to inspectthe amateur photographic work of mem-

bers of the club and which graced thewalls of their comfortable quarters, ex-

tended their kindness to the generalpublic to also view the display of prints.In consequence of an invitation a largenumber of residents visited the rooms on

Diraond, Drew, 15 been for the Reform Legislature, whichH A New Departure!The Mariposa was delaved bv th A New Departure !non- -ISP1' fiVsinCI arrival on timpnf tho TY Ot hj has made necessary appropriations. Wei i -an Howard, from San w U1U1 in.i now want another legislature that will

do as well., Broad and frequent flashes of lighten-m- 8

1,1"m,inated the heavens on the nightof 23d inst.,AKI l KKS. ah the stores are getting in their

United States Legation, )

Honolulu, Nov. 23, 1889. ia XT - f

Prof P. A. Van Tassell and Mr Frankrost, his manager, left by the Mariposafor the Colonies.

Beginning on Saturday, Nov. 23d.o

I beg to state to my patrons and the public in general that my Store will be openfor business

EVERT SATURDAY NIGHT UNTIL 9:30 O'CLOCK

And during the period known as Christmas week we will open

EVERY NIGHT IN THE WEEK.

Si n day. Nov. 23.

II i ward, for the Colonies.PRESIDENT HARRISON HAVING--

1- designated THURSDAY, Nov. 28th, asa day of Thanksgiving, to be observed bythe eitizens of the United States, the un-dersigned takes the liberty to suggest to allhis countrvnien and to nthpM in the Ha

iyjT",,; MeCullough, tor banin i 1 Messrs. Castle & Cooke advertise thatpayment has been stopped on six draftswhich have been lost.

., Htp Davies, for Maui at 5 p m.A r,.r fur Mnlokiii nt

fjlokuiH,.

-- :o:-

waiian Kingdom, who wish to expresstheir approval of a venerated religiouscustom, that they unite in duly observingthe day especially set apart for returningthanks to the Divine Father for the bless-ings He has bestowed on the Americanpeople and those of other nations. I amrequested to say, there will be religiousservices in Honolulu, at the Central UnionChurch and at St. Andrew's Cathedral, onthe 28th, at 11 a. m., and a cordial invita-tion is extended to the public to participatetherein. JOHN L. STEVENS,

123-t- d U. S. Minister Resident.

cummiiw. Neilson, for Koolau

I Ljfor Waimea, Kauai.IK for HanaleL'iKe:iul for Kohala.

.lu for Hawaii.

Mr. J. M. Macdonald, a well knownCalifornia journalist and descriptivewriter, left by the Mariposa for Sydney.

Mr. E. C. Bruns the bookkeejer of theKilanea store at Kilauea, Kauai, is in townon a short visit of business and pleasure.

W. Ebeling of Wainaku, Hilo, Hawaii,advertises himself not responsible fordebts contracted without his writtenorder.

Christmas goods. Holmes & Wilfong,and L. Turner, dieplay a splendid collec-tion to suit all people and everybody'stastes.

The meeting which was to have beenheld at the Court House in Hilo on the16th inst. to make arrangements regard-ing Nobles and Representatives for theIsland of Hawaii, has been postponed,as the prime mover was absent. Thetime for the next meeting is not knownat present, but will very likely be inDecember.

The telephone office at Hilo has beenremoved. Increased rent for groundwas demanded, and opposition madebecause there was a library in the build-ing, which has been and still is an insti-tution of great use to the people.

As the Volcano road is now aboutfinished to the half-wa- y house, a placefor refreshments is needed and a suitableplace to repose. It may be also neces-sary that the Volcano house should beenlarged, as the guests will be muchmore in number when the road is fin-ished than formerly, and it is suggestedthat the owners commence soon to makeincreased accommodations. On theKing's birthday the Volcano road wasfull of private conveyances and no onehad any idea that there were so manyowned in Hilo. Every one seemed jolly

Saturday evening and viewed the ex-

hibits made. The pictures were well-place- d

and the ample light showed thedetails to good advantage. It wouldbe hardly proper to individualizeany of the pictures as regards meritthat belonging more properly tothe judges appointed and who mayfeel disposed at some later day to an-

nounce their awards. What may besaid though is that the exhibition show-

ed plainly that the amateur photogra-phers of Honolulu, as represented bythe Camera Club, are capable of compet-ing successfully, with the professionalsof the art of counterfeit presentiment.

Following is the list of exhibits andnames of exhibitors :

G. E. Boardman Seven silver prints,views in Hilo and Wailuku ; two bromidecontact prints, of Cocoanut island, Hiloharbor.

J. F, Brown Five bromide enlarge-ments ; the "sick doll," landscape views,and "an avenue in Kapiolani Park ;" onetransferrotype.

Dr. F. R. Day One set of six trans-ferrotype- s,

miscellaneous views.Mrs. Dr. F. R. Day One bromide en-

largement, "child and dog."Walter W. Gitfard Three bromide en-

largements; "1'rincess Kaiulani in Jap

TO THE LADIESI beg to state that I have made extensive alterations and improvements on my

lower floor and am prepared to show the most

Elegant Assortment of Boys' and Children's Clothing

Ever before offered for sale in Honolulu.

JOSEF HOFMAN FIFTH AVE. BRITTANIC SUITS FOR CHILDREN

My Stock of

Ladies' Misses' and Children's Shoe Wearis replete with the Latest and Best of Everything.

Purser Smith of the Mariposa, waskind, as usual, in furnishing late news-papers and a full report ot passengersand cargo.

a 1

trom riireigu runs.When from. Due.

,.r .Boston Dec 10, r Bremen Dec 27

Liverpool Dec 30Hongkong, Nov 1

1 Liverpool Dec 25. , Towifsend..Nov 20

Ltle.. San Francisco. Nov 27Francisco. .Nov 28

'ie!i v,n Franci.sco Nov 28.. .l'ugct Sound Dec 15

j a;,,' San Francisco, Viiv ..San Francisco

..San FranciscoLelia EurekaKitmore Puget Soundg,, Puget SoundL Puget Sound

, . San Francisco

rank terrara has been presentedwith two silver medals

.suitably inscribed,

V m

ah a reward tor his bravery in stoppinirunaway norses.

It is reported that the Warspite, of10,000 tons burden, will replace theSwit'tsure as flagship of Her IiritishMajesty's forces in the North Pacific.

TO THE GENTSI would say that I have laid in an immense stock of all the latest novelties in

GENTS' FURNISHINGS.and determined not to take anv one's

take as weii uum, out liicio won uuue 10I lis Majesty has appointeu uon. .Lorn nl are not troubled in that wav that is,"iDre' iint-iioi-

, iu i naruiy ever. This road will. ihurston, the Mi

he acting Attorney- -surpass any

vom:iai, UUI1IILT IIIU inilUMlt Mnnnlnlll wo unmrmaCD 1 -absence of Hon. C. V. Ashford.

rASSENGERS.

AKIIIVALS.

'rancisco per S S Mariposa.B Atherton, Miss Atherton,

wt ...and wife, C Binning, A Mc- -a 1 k 1 WW s--

The Hamburg-Magdebur- g fire insur-ance company, of which Mr. A. Jaegeris the local agent, is the first in the fieldwith the annual calendar of 1890.

r. A .Mciiryuc, nenry castle

Mr. C. L. Furneux, artist, has latelygot some fruit trees of rare varieties, andwill commence at once planting them,and have a small ranch, to see how wellthey will prosper here, and from time totime will introduce other choice fruittrees.

Doctor Sheldon, dentist, left here ashort time since for San Francisco, enroute for New York, with the intention

J B Castle, --Miss a LuUoit, Har-de- n,

Frank S Dodge, Miss Evay Hart well Mrs M il Hardwick,

POWDERAbsolutely Pure.

This powder never varies. A marvel ofpurity, strength and wholesomeness. Moreeconomical thn the ordinary kinds, andcannot be sold in competition with themultitude of low test, short weight, alumor phosphate powders. Sold only in Cans.Royal Baking Powder Co., 100 Wall St..yew York. "

104 ly

MUD !

. ;. il Sawyer and wile, James, Chas Stratton, .1 L

Wall, and 32 steerage, 4 cabin.The Camera Club has received excel-

lent encouragement lately, no less thanseven gentlemen of the city tenderingtheir names for enrollment on the list ofhonorary members.

Lot" studying medicine. On his arrival atrage, for Auckland, and l cabin,liteerage, for Sydney.iltniand Hawaii per stmr Like-- l

.1 Carden, Win Keating, DJ DColville, Arthur Deverell andpes Monkhouse, Father Leonore,i, Brother Bertram, Ant Abrew,

ind 26 deck.Maui and Hawaii per stmr Kinau,

--E Walter, W VV Goodale, W S

Mrs. Cyril Trower, nee Miss MayRichardson, sister of Mrs. George B.Smith and Mr. Arthur Richardson, is intown, from her home in Sydney, on abrief visit to her relatives.

I am offering a magnificent line of Gfout'fl Silk dk str.ppeu Z , sr i weightOver Shirts, Tennis Coats and Belts in endless vareiy, h u . r a -- torts,

Suits and Ties; a handsome due of White Flannel, Blue - ergtand Fancy mixed and Stripped

Flannel Coats and Vests and Suits, all light weight goods,

Suitable for this climate and made specially for me.

GAITERS, BALMORALS and RUSSETT LEATHER SHOES, the --FINESTever offered to the Honolulu public.

,v l OKaba, D Porter, J Wilson,

WOW THAT THE RAINY SEASONis upon us, everybody wants a door

mat that will be an ornament at the frontdoor, and will thoroughly do the work re-quired of it. The

Clukoii, Naone, W E Kowell,B Bailey, Chang Kim, T Hwife, W McDougal H Mac--8

May, C J Falk, A Smithies,!. Dr G Herbert and wife, A

The Sunday trains on the Oahu rail-way are a much needed accommodationand the enterprise of the management inso quickly providing them merits thetangible approval of the public. MotHartmau Stee wire Hid

B,J M Williams, A C Dowsett, R:. A Dunn, T J liayselden and 21 Keyworth, wife, child and ser- -

anese costume; "Freedom," and "AComing Squall." Ten silver prints ; in-

teriors of residences of Hon. A. S. Cleg-hor- n

and W. G. Irwin; "Freedom,""Surprised at Pasture" and views atVVaialua and Makiki.

Joseph A. Gilman One bromide con-tact print, scene at Waiulae; 5 silverirver prints, the little bantam's, native

bathers, and landscape views.John A. Hassinger Two bromide en-

largements, (1) Juniata a Spanish ladyin costume and (2) avenue of cocoanutpalms.

C. Hedemann Three bromide en-

largements, (1) Kipahulu Gulch, (2)Hana harbor, Maui, (3) in the woods onTantalus. 1 silver print (instantaneous)Chinatown after the tire of 1887 ; 6 silverprints; (1) view from Punchbowl road,(2) yacht Nyanza, (i) a kindergarten,(4) informal meeting of the Camera club(flashlight), (5) interior of residence ofH. W. Schmidt, (G) Makiki falls.

Frank Hustace Two bromide enlarge-ments, scenes on the Old Plantation.

Mrs. E. W. Jordan One bromide en-

largement, view from the verandah ofHon. C. R. Bishop.

Dr. J. S. B. Pratt Five silver prints(1) night blowing cereus; (2-- 5) scenesabout Hilo.

A. W. Richardson Three bromide en-

largements, (1) native grass hou?e, (2)Chinese ladies in costume, (o) the"Lover's retreat." Five silver prints, (1)duck ranch (2 to 5) landscape views; 3opals.

W. F. Thrum Six bromide contactprints (1) Music Hall, (2) Governmentbuilding, (3-6-) local views.

Dr. C. B. Wood Two bromide en-largements, (1) IIar?apepetfalls, (2) "thelaughing girl."

The following exhibits although origin-ally printed by the members whosenames are attached were not placed incompetition as assistance had been ren-dered in the final finishing by outsideparties.

"The Three Friends" after Herring'sfamous picture, a bromide enlargementby Mr. Frank Hustace.

Stereoscopic slides of local scenes, en-closed in a stereopticon presented byNapoleon HI. to Queen Etnma, by Mr.C. Hedemann.

Miss Helene Irwin and Master J. Win-ter two bromide enlargements vignettes,by W. M. Giffard.

"Hawaiian Girl" a bromide negativeand enlargement of a typical native char-acter, by A. W. Richardson.

and see xxs or ring up Bell Telephone No. 269 andyour wants will be fully attended to.81 tkvk passengers.

auai ner stmr Mikahala, Nov 24

The Young Woman's Christian Tem-perance Union is a local organizationwhich offers opportunity to members ofthe gentler sex to join in the work of re-ducing the influence of King Alcohol.

is just the thing. It cannot become soakedby rain, as is the case with fiber mats, andit always keeps clean. Being made ofGalvanized Wire

ie and child, Mr Pumoku amiII Spronll, Miss Larson, P P Sole Represntative of the American Waltham Watch Co. in the Hawn. Isl

San I rancisco, finding that there was agood opening in Gautemala for one ofhis profession, went there at once.

Waiakea Plantation will soon have itsthird locomotive (a Baldwin) fromAmerica. The tracks are being put insplendid condition by men of experience.,Everything shows thrift.

We need a line of steamers from hereto San Francisco, to get goods morerapidly. Hope to have the line beforelong. If steamers ran trom this port,they would in a short time carry morebananas tnan are sent from Honolulu.No place on the islands will equal Hilofor big bunches of this fruit.

Glad to know that the iron pipes forthe introduction of the spring water intoHilo will arrive in February next. Purewater is greatly needed here.

The Japanese hospital, it seems, is tobe in the place selected at first, notwith-standing there was opposition to it beingso near town. Quite a large building isnow in course of erection. The frontbuilding is an ornament to the place.

All Hilo welcomes Miss Grace Porterhome again from a delightful long tripto America.

The selection of the Board of Appealon Taxes is a most excellent one. Be-lieve it will be satisfactory to all con-cerned.

Weather delightful ; rains at night alittle now and then. Seldom rains dur-ing the day time.

Judge McCully and wife are here fromWaimea. J. A. M.

Hilo, Nov. 21.

I : , r W olte, ana 4o deck.

They Cannot Kust, M. McINERNY,In Francisoo per W H Dimond,1M Wright and w ife, S H Wass,an. 11 (J Steebins, Mrs Drew and

DEPAKTl'UES.Hand and Svdnev rer 0 S Mari- -

The O. S. S. Mariposa arrived herefrom San Francisco at 11:30 p m. onthe 23d inst., bringing mails and pas-sengers and news dates to the 17th inst.She sailed again for the Colonies at 4 :15p. m. on the 24th inst.

lW-- 4 C Crozier. Miss L Crozier,as do many of the wire mala now in use.They are far superior to and far moredurable than fiber or rubber. Can be hadof iSteel Wire at

BFan Tassell, Frank Frost, J M FORT AND MERCHANT STS.123-2- w

.1 Wright, W H Stevenson.

iSHIl'l'lNti NOTES.The two-stor- y wooden building situated

on the south-we- st corner of King andFort ntreets and formerly occupied bythe Keystone saloon, was sold under thehammer on Saturday last by auctioneerMorgan, to Mr. Oudeikirk for 125. The

H. Dimond is docked at Frew- -

n.

HAWAIIAN HARDWARE CO,

Opposite Spreckels & Co.'s Bank,102-l- m FORT STREET.

laialeale brought from Kauai 111 building is to be removed within ten days.v.

Bum, Capt. Lorenzen, sails nextI ..: p. in.imr, Likelike gbrouht 140 bags su-hitl-

and !5 pkgs. sundries.Mikahala brought 2PJ7 bags su- - New Goods! New Goods!

The through passengers by the Mari-posa for the Colonies availed themselvesof the opportunity given, by the steamerstaying in port yesterday, to visit thePali, Punchbowl, Waikiki and the de-lightful trip to Pearl river by the OahuRailwav.

bags rice, 5 horses, 1 cow, 8 pkgs.

The Paradise of the Pacific, under the

Hawaii to the Front.The following adopted by the Centra.

Committee of Hawaii, with the approv 11

of the members of the political organ-

ization of the Reform Party, speaks foritself. It indicates that the party isthoroughly in earnest and at rk, andonly requires the presentation of .. ii I

issues to proceed to a successful cv

editorship of Mr. Wray Taylor, presentsthis month a large amount of material

ARE NOW BEING OPENED

J. N. S. WILLIAMS,ENGINEER and CONTRACTOR,TS PREPARED TO DESIGN AND1 contract for all classes of Sugar Extrac-tion Machinery, Irrigating Machinery,Evaporating Apparatus, Vacuum Pans,Engines of all kinds and for all purposes,Water Wheels, Water Conduits, both Pipesand Flumes, Steam Boilers of variouskinds, etc., etc.

Diffusion MachineryIn ail its branches a specialty ;

Plantations supplied with Chemical andAnalytical Apparatus of the veay best de-scription to oader.

Close attention paid to all orders andfiatisuietion to the purchaser guaranteed.

P.O. Box 3SO, Fort St., Honolulu.57i287-l- y

1ST OTIC K.

lro tvned.

On Saturday afternoon last at a littlepjst I o'clock a fireman on the steamerW.iiaieule, named Thomas I.c,avitt, felloverboard from the ves sb waslying close to the wbiu shipmate

Tamashtro Maru sailed Saturday forlad China. She took 30 head ofcat-ili- l

lkg. sundries; also 5 steerageogers.

stnir. Kinau brought 400 bags pota-- M

bags corn, 12s green hides, 12ml, 1 horse, 1 mule, 20 pigs, andm, sundries.Imr S 8 China, bnflt in ScotlandpPacific .Mail arrived at Hongkongp;3d, to take her plaoein the line be-r--- M

Francisco and China, and is ex-- M

Bonololn to be registered andp Bawaiian flag.Ptofthe R. M. 8. Mariposa Ieftmat San Francisco at 4 p. m. Sat-- ?

Nov. 16, and anchored in thegrt midnight, where the tug camePjtvitfa tiit-- mails and balance ofPps. Proceeded to sea and dis-PFil- ot

at 2:15 a, in.. 17th, to 19th,

--AT THE- -

useful and interesting to both local andforeign readers, especially to the latter.The public have been generous in theirpatronage to this enterprise and thejournal in response upholds the interestsof Hawaii.

One of the inmates of the Insane Asy-lum while in apparently amicable con-versation with another suddenly seizeda stick of wood and unmercifully club-bed his fellow inmate about the head.The injuries are reported to be veryserious. No blame attaches to thekeepers or officers of the institution forthe occurrence.

lent nd im- -

re 'ue. Thej man had POPULAR MILLINERY HOUSE

named Tag; saw themediately went to ilplace where the unfcdisappeared was maimaining on the sui..

I y his hat re-

but althoughevery effort was made, both by white. Stmnp winits frnni W frtS. VV.

L".;V.' )if.(l ..... ,1...... . . Kioirt rPHK UNDERSIGNED HEBE. Honolulu,104 Fort Street, :

paign :

Whereas, by the system of Govern-ment represented in the present Consti-tution of the Hawaiian Kingdom, theMinistry are directly responsible to thepeople, and must stand or fall uponsome policy of Government to be formu-lated by such Ministry, and

Whereas, in view of the necessity ofpresenting well defined issues to thepeople at the approaching election, somedeclaration of policy ought to be madeby the Ministry upon the present condi-tion of affairs in the Hawaiian, King-dom, therefore,

Resolved, that His Majesty's Cab-inet be requested to state publicly,through the press and in reply to thisresolution, the policy of the Governmentto be pursued in the immediate futureupon the following questions, to wit:

1. With regard to internal improve-ments and the development of the re-

sources of the country.2. With regard to the question of im-

migration and a labor supply for the

. i' ' .1, INUIU C tU HM I ill il If well with frequent rain squalls.gift's i.or stmr M.irinnsa Nov '23 A

M. by gives notice to all persona that we arethe owners of thoe pieces of it,!i hat wereleased to the Kipahuin Sugar Co . viz: It&kole,Alenoho, Piiaola, Papuaa aiid Xakauoni, leav-ing two pieces of land not leaseu to the Planta-tion which is Puolala and the dweliii;

r' Kblers&Co.. Com. "Irouuois.",; Uyman Bros., Hawaiian News

& Co., A McKibbin,Son., .1 A Burkert, Dr D B Kaiihi.at Maulili. adioininc th mnka; sirt'o of

and native divers, no trace of his bodycould be obtained. Police officer Clem-ens who was on duty at the wharf, ob-

tained drags and the bottom of the dockwas searched by those means up to alate hour, but without result. The un-

fortunate man was about 54 years of ageand a native of England. He had beenin the employ of the Inter-Islan- d S. S.Co. for about a year past and was wellliked. Further efforts will be made to-

day to recover the body.

y r - - -till. ........ . . . . II . . 1 . ...due uuiciuiucut iunu io u e tea. arm aowitn N. S. SACHS, Pr prietoBnson, bmith & Co., PG Camar- -

Oliver, J L Torbert. Lewers &

The final performance of the RayBrothers was given on last Saturdayevening at the Music Hall, the piecepresented "Our Guv'ners" giving theactors full scope for their character de-

lineations. The residents of Hawaii andMaui will be afforded an opportunity towitness the performances of the RayBrothers in the near future as they pur-pose paying the other islands a profes-

sional visit.

The regular monthly meeting of the

M aillipa iV. Co., Mrs Barto, Lewis

me mahiii Bie 01 o.aKanoni to tlie sea. we nowhereby commission J. Kake (Japanese) totake charge of those pieces of land that werementioned last, and forbid persons treBpassinc.

J. H. KAMIO,MRS. MARY KUE.

Honolulu, Nov. 18, 1889. 1297-- 3t

mas, Mrs j ; Spencer, HongJ W K Kiwtpp Ti.lit ill' n:.l '

105-3- wWANTED !Baseball.Saturdav baseball irames

feat the U IST.Five Thousand Empty 2-l- b. Fruit or

Vegetable Tins in Good Order for which One

Cent Apiece will be Given.

mi aiuLU auuiviivvThe first game was called

P o'clock and was between the1,1,1 the Roads and Bridges clubs,

fjfce from the start was entirelyPw and enue(j in a decided vie--

JIX () DRAFTS OF H. P. BALDWIN,on Castle & Cooke, drawn in favor of

Miss H.E.Carpenter, for Fifty dollars ($50)each. These drafts were drawn aboutNov. 1,1889, and payment has been stopped.

CASTLE & COOKE.Nov. 23, 1889. 124-l- w

industries of the country.3. With regard to the Chinese ques-

tion.4. With regard to the public debt.5. With regard to future indebtedness

for internal improvements.6. With regard to our political rela-

tions with the United States.7. With regard to any other matter of

policy important for the country uponwhich there has been no public declara-tion ; and be it further,

Resolved, that a copy of this resolu-tion be forwarded to the Minister of theInterior, and another to the Honolulupapers for general publication.

Wm. W. Goodale,C. E. Richakdson,D. H. Hitchcock,

Central Committee of Hawaii.

t-T-T. nmed club the score

io to 7.d game of the afternoon wasl3) o'clock the Valley Boys

CASTLE & COOKE.117-t- fNOTICE.

-- v., i i ill) I iJI llllr i r uwmnii,- -s. the Bunahou Bovs Notice of Election.t.t'HTIlii...- - .1

wav and theirO "'V.II J IITiat... 1,

felt iubilant. But"aiurany,is a ",. "

'fi..,: "Vfeul onsarten game

T WILL NOT BE RESPONSIBLE FORJ-- any debts contracted by my wife W.Louisa Ebeling in my name, without mywritten order, from this day.

W. EBELING.Wainaku, Hilo, Hawaii.

Nov. 18, 1889. 1298 124-- 3t

ie V ailey Boys turnk Uiev.on thn

STEINWAT PIANOS!THE BEST AMERICAN PIANOS IN THE WORLD.

WESTERMAYER'S PIANOS !

THE BEST GERMAN PIANOS EOR THIS CLIMATE.

ED. HOFFSCHLAEGER & CO.,Sole Agents for the Hawaiian Islands for Steinway & Sons, New York ;

and Ed. Westermayer, Berlin. Also,

Fisclier Pianos ! mLd?"JP"For Sale at Moderate Prices by

ED. HOFFSCHLAEGER & CO..12 100-l- y King and Bethel Streets.

The Daily Advertiser and Weekly GazetteARE THE LEADING PAPERS OF THE KINGDOM.

Y. M. C. A. Association was held attheir hall on Thursday evening last,Hon. Henry Waterhouse, the presidentin the chair. After the reading of theminutes of the last meeting by Secre-tary South wick, the various standingcommittees then reported. The treas-urer reported having the sum of $306.07on hand. The meeting then adjourned.

The Hawaiian Chinese News has beenplaced on the desk and as usual containsbright and cheerful thoughts uponari-ou- s

subjects. There are four pages of

illustrations which exhibit the art of thelithographer in a meritorious degree.There is a graphic description of the per-

formance now running at the Chinesetheatre, and much other matter whichshould be read to be appreciated. It isreported that full files of this very in-

teresting paper are to be forwarded to

Bourbon County, Kentucky, by the nextmail.

Public Concert.

The Royal Hawaiian Band will give a

concert this evening, at Emma square,

commencing at 7 SO o'clock. Following

is the programme :

Blanche . .1. Overture-- La Dame Boteldjeu2. (new) Wacner3. Chorul-Tannha-user

4. Reminiscences of Balfe .oairejKuu Lei. Oanona. Lihi Rat.

TWasia-- A Night Alarm (new)..Reeves

Sounds LabitzKy8 Waltz-Lei- nat

Hawaii Ponot.

kJ against them. toose- -l!thir0,,M'nent8 Put two tal- -

notice;.DR. OLIVER,

AT AN ANNUAL MEETING OF THEWaihee Sugar Co., held this day, the

following persons were duly elected for theensuing year:

Col. Z. S. Spalding PresidentMr. E. D. Tenney Vice-Preside- nt

Mr. J. O. Carter. . Secretary & AuditorMr. P. C. Jones Treasurer

J. O. CARTER,Secretary Waihee Sugar Co.

Honolulu, Nov. 11, 189. 112-l- m

JAA1E8 CARTY

bCore- - trom thencern ELWM .very interesting the

to Dr.194. Fort Street, next doorEmerson's.

Utieir i; , ,un,y endeavoring tolin-- i While the valley Boys

"'h innT 1,e 8anie ended atrrs ma draw, darkness

7 to 10 p. m

Bell 475.Office Hours 9 to 12 a. m.

Telephones Mutual 608;124 tf

,Iwl.

innings:O A 1 0101 i fimXjys. ft U 0 2 2 0 3 0 310

BOUGHT OUT MR. W. H.HAVING the Honolulu Carriage Manu-factory, at 128 Fort Street, I am preparedto continue the above business under theold name of Honolulu Carriage Manufac-tory, and being an old experienced carriagebuilder I solicit the patronage of my oldfriends and the public in general, and withmy thorough knowledge of the businessand with experienced workmen and usingonly the best material 1 guarantee generalsatisfaction. Please call and see me beforegoing elsewhere.

(Signed) GIDEON WEST.Honolulu, Oct. 28, 1889. 103-t- f

TO LET.!llul Morris Keohokalole.Can be found next door to the P. C. A.

Office, Merchant Street.

Hacks Nos. 18, 37, 66, 75, 18(AND WAGONETTE 110.

t3B" Bell Telephone 204, Mutual 50O.203-- U

A LARGE FRONT ROOM,3 K n I KEPT ON FILEi .

h 8 Advertisingk i- vfnicely furnished, on Nuuanu Avdi recti v opposite U. S. Legation

124-t- f

IIICisco p. i

rcnant 8 Exchange,1 V. L 111...,. .

No. 26 Merchant Street OFFICE Honolalu, Hawaiian Islands-- Scan hi ' ere contracts tor

mad f. iV.

Page 4: 124 HONOLULU, Australian · 41-3-m 79 FORT ST., Honolulu. ANDERSON & LUNDY, Dentists. ARTIFICIAL TEETH from one to an entire set in-serted on gold, silver, allum-inu-m and rubber

IDaily pacific,, (jummercial advertiser, novbmber 25, issi),

&verimmtns.&&vtxtittmm.iXctu SUtocrttsemcnts.DISEASES OF SWINE.

NEW YORKFruit TreesCEYSTAL SODA WORKSETAHITI LEMONAD CO.,AND

feoine of the Conditions Essential to Pre-vention and Cure.

In preventing diseases it is first neo-essa- ry

to guard against an enfeebledconstitution. Constitutional infirm-ities are transmitted from parent to off-

spring more readily among swine thanalmost any stock. Closeand breeding from immature parentsare mainly to blame for a lack of con-

stitutional vigor in swine. Of the two

. o4JOHN GRACE, Proprietor. inI 0 PlantsSOLE MANUFACTURER OF THE

evils I regard the latter as the greater. Assets : $95,000 ,000.(JNot only is the constitutional vigor ofthe mother unduly taxed by rearingand suckling young while still growingand needing to devote her energies toher own development, but her pigs arerobbed of what is justly their due andas a consequence are weaker than if

10,000 FRUIT TREES AND PLANTS

From our Orchard and Nurseries inAlameda Co. California.

"Facts arA cw.-- vuuoorn thin ft."

D. T. B A ILEV, Manager.MANUFACTURERS OF

Tahiti Lemonade,Lemon, Cream and Plain Soda,

Ginger Ale, Hop Ale, Grenadine, Iiaspherryade, Sarsaparilla,

MINERAL WATERS, ETC., ETC.

AT EVERYAT J

GREAT BLOOD PURIFIER

SABSAPABILLA AND IKON WATER!

GINGER ALE,Sarsaparilla, Lemon, Cream and Plain Soda,

Champagne Cider, Etc, Etc.

born of strong, mature parents. Matestrong, healthy, mature animals and ifproperly treated you may expect strong 1 wic, anu in everr

ACTUAL RESULTS i .'

w inn . ,offspring. A strong constitution maybe enfeebled by improper management. of the New York life ,

'"France rhave been LARGER than .

The kinds and quality of food whichwe give to animals and the methods ofgiving it have much to do with their Y OTHER COMPANYhealth. With many men the unfortu

similar poncie8.ALL AREATED WATERS GUARANTEED PURE.

ORANGE, LEMON, OL'VE, WAL-NUT, ALMOND; 2 years old; $2 each.

APPLE, PEACH, PEAR, APRICOT,FIG, NECTARINE, QUINCE, PRUNE,FILBERT and PECAN; 1 to 2 yearsold; $1.50 to $1.75 each.

ROOTED GRAPE VINES ; 10 varie-ties of Table and Wine Grape ; 20 to 40cents each. Grape and Olive Cuttings.

ROSES ; 10 choice varieties ; 1 yearold ; 30 to 40 cents each.

Ten thousand ASPARAGUS ROOTSat Kalihi ; 2 years old ; strong, can becut the first year after transplanting;$5 per 100.

It is our purpose to recommend nothingbut what we know to be of value and whatwe know from experience will grow in theIslands.

Parties sending in their orders before theend of December will receive their Treesand Plants in January and February, thebest time to plant.

TELEPHONE 291. For particulars apply to

Mutual 330 TELEPHONES Bell 298.C 0. BEBGER,

Gen'l Agent Hawaiian W..

All communications and orders should be addressed to

BENSON, SMITH & CO,ISLAND ORDERS PROMPTLY ATTENDED TO.

Ill 1296-l-y149-t- f ",l8- -

64 1287-l-y AGENTS.W"r ull particulars will be given how

to plant and when, with every $25 order.

Address A. HERBERT,Honolulu ;

Or 302 California St., San Francisco, Cal.114 1297-l- m

BUHA.CH!IfYou Want to Furnish Your House

:GrO TO:

B. F. EHLERS & CO.'s, 99 FORT ST.,

For all kinds of CURTAINS, BEDSPREADS, SHEETINGS, MOSQUITO NETS

And PLUSH RUGS in all sizes, at very low prices, in great variety.

PLUSH GOODS FOR THE COMING HOLIDAYS

The Genuine Article. In Quantities to Suit.THERISDONIron and Locomotive Works,

Corner of Beal and Howard Streets, Every Mill-buildin- g. Wardw h

nate idea prevails that any thing isgood enough for a hog. On this ac-count much unwholesome food is fed.In the hog-growi- ng districts corn is al-

most the exclusive diet from birth tothe time of slaughtering. I am con-vinced that one of the most importantthings to do to prevent disease is tofeed less corn, particularly during thefirst six months of the pig's life. Theopinion that corn alone contains theelements necessary to the growth anddevelopment of swine is an error thatthe average farmer will never abandonuntil taught many costly lessons byexperience when attempting to freighthis corn crop to market through thisuncertain and risky medium of trans-portation.

In feeding, the greatest regularityshould be observed. The digestive ap-paratus of the hog is easily impaired.If not fed at the proper time the ani-mal will gorge itself, the appetite crav-ing more food than the stomach canutilize. Let the food be such as to de-velop bone and muscle and build uphealthy tissue and blood. Never over-feed; never underfeed; maintain regu-larity, and just in that proportion willour hogs be healthy and free from themany fevers' to which they are liable.Impure water has destroyed more hogsthan any one thing. They can be in-

duced to drink filthier water than anyother domestic animal, for the reasonthat they get more of it to drink. Dur-ing dry seasons water in stagnant poolsand even in dry wells becomes infestedwith disease germs. These germs areconveyed to the stomach. In fact, allanimal and vegetable matter found inimpure water is conveyed to the hog'ssystem. No wonder that amidst suchdestroying agencies, death numbers itsvictims. If water is not at all timesaccessible, it should, during the hotseason, be placed often within reach.The conformation of the hog makes itneed more water in hot weather thanother animals. Its body is near theground and composed largely of fat

San Francisco California Public Hull Phnmk n .COLGATE'SW. H. TAYLOR PresidentJUST OPENED.MyK. S. MOORE Superintendent naici m uuwinuic Buooia ie provided with

Builders of Steam Machinery

V1J ' ' I lit.'!

"ParagoifHoselieelsWith 100 feet Hose, which is one of J

SOAPS :- -: AND -:- - PEEFUMESIn all its branches.Steamboat, Steamship, Land Engines & Boilers,

uksi, pnwovuuua against nres.mgn pressure or compound.

PACIFIC HARDWAEE CO., L'd.Fort Street, Honolulu, H. I.

Reduction in Lamp Groods!8TEAM VESSELS of all kinds built complete, .T.. ..,.,... i

1 "I , - . nr r. . - . ail litmrnea on, luuit. uareka Mil Hondownn nuns 01 woou, iron or composite.

ORDINARY ENGINES compounded when advisable. A Full Assortment Just to Hand ex Stmr Australia. seconds.STEAM LAUNCHES, Barges and Steam Tugs con- -

siruciea wnn reierence to tne trace in which 'Insurance Companies have iwmJNew Invoices in Latest Designs Just Received and offered at Specialty Low Prices. : i 3 ' "ttney are to be employed. Speed, tonnage anddraft of water guaranteed. mzeu me great advantages and protectMo- -

SUGAR MILLS and Sugar Making Machinery wuen inis system is always readv for u

by making deductions on rate' of ureiuaue aner me most approved plans. Also, all uuuiu lor meir riSKs.xHmer iron worK connected therewith.WATER PIPE. Of Boiler 01 tet Irnn nf m For further particulars enquire ofDepot for Joy's Vegetable Sarsaparilla.size, made in suitable lengths for connecting

lusemer, or oneeis roned, punched and packedfor shipment, ready to be riveted on the LEWERS & COOKE.ground.

A NEW LINE OF GOODSArtists' Materials, Art Goods,

Paintings, Pictures, Picture Mouldings,All of which were personally selected and are of newest patterns.

AgentsHYDRAULIC RIVETING, Boiler Work and Water. . .Tl - A

Testimonial.njit's maue oy mis establishment, riveted byhydraulic rivetiHg machinery, that quality ofwork bein;; far superior to hand work.

SHIP WORH., Ship and Steam Capstans, SteamWinches, Air and Circulating Pumps, made

E. S. Babcock. Jr., President of the Ho

tel del Coronado that has 85 Reels, mwith 100 feet VA inch Hose, writes the!WYET'HSPICTURE FRAMING in all its branches .a specialty. lowing under date of Sept. 14, 1888: " H

"icr ilie uiuNt approveu plans.SOLE Agents and manufacturers for the Pacific

Coast of the Heine Safety Boiler. take pleasure in certifying that at the

cent fire in connection with the laumirvnlPUMPS Direct Acting Pumps for irrigation or the Hotel some 6 ' Paragon Hose Keels

were in use for several hours under a prewuiaB purposes, omit wit h the celebratedDavy Valve Motion, superior to any otheipump. sure of lOOlbs. and both Heels and ImExtract Malt, EtcRUBBER HOSE !

Having been appointed AGENTS of some of the largest factories in theEast, we are prepared to supply all grades and sizes of Hose upon unusuallyfavorable terms.

stood the strain with perfect ease.1'

Ill 1296-lr-aJOHN DYER Honolulu13m Ro om No. 3. upstairs. Spreckels" Block

Let this point be specially emphasizedgive an abundance of pure water.Suitable protection should be pro-

vided in winter and in summer. Win-ter quarters must afford plenty of sunand pure air. Good bedding must befurnished as often as needed, whichwill depend upon the weather and num-ber of hogs kept together. Use everyprecaution to keep the stock as farfrom disease as possible. At the firstindication of the failure separate thoseaffected and apply treatment H. H.Brownell, in Farm and Home.

The Liverpool and Low--A Large Stock of Goods in all Lines Just Received. LOVE'S BAKERY.

No, 73 Nnnann Street. HOLLISTEE & CO., don and Globe

MRS. ROBT. LOVE, . . - Proprietress. IN8URANCEC0,Electric Light Chandeliers and Fixtures

LATEST PATTERNS, JUST RECEIVED FROM THEMANUFACTURERS DIRECT.

1290 lltfESTABLISHED UN.1Q9 Fort St., Honolulu148 1276 Asaet 40.MO.ojM

Net IncomeClaims Paid J12.56.000

Every Description of Plain and Fancyi

Bread and Crackers,V RES H

Soda CrackersA N D

Saloon Bread

on BuildingB, Machinery, Sugar VBhfiand Furniture, on the mo8tfaYorauw

Bishop & Co.CARE IAGE MANUFACTURING CO, 11HH-6D- 1

J TVS. DODD,

CRITERION SALOON, FORT ST. F00K LOT & CO,m

108 Nuuariu Street,

(Opp. Queen Emma Hall,)Honolulu, Hawaiian Islands,

XXCIVO tJ UOU j-v- v

Per Late Arrivals from Japan amSOLE LOCAL AGENTCarriages. PWm. Rmim Rrafos wmm Etp.

China, a Fine Assmt.oi

Christmas I Hoi) to

J 1 ways Oil Hand.

MILK BBEADA SPECIALTY.

Island Orders Promptly Attended to.172-8- m

JUST RECEIVEDBy the S. S. City of Peking, and Bk.

Velocity, for and Sale by

Mi WO CHAN I CO.

No. 22 NUUANU ST.

Japan Fire Screens, Picture Frames,Bronze Vases, different kinds;Card Cases, ivory, bronze, sandal wood,

etc., etc.Fans, a large assortment ;

Framed Japanese Pictures,Ink Stands, bronze ;Paper Knives, ivory, bronze, etc. ;Bronze Plaques,Canes, all kinds and very choice ;

Dinner and Tea Sets, Hand Painted.Ladies' Bronze Baskets,Japanese Fancy Towels,Jap. Morning Gowns, cotton, silk, etc;Silk, Grasscloth, and Ladies' Fancy

For the Sale ofFOR SALE AT A BARGAIN. ALL KINDS OF

CARRIAGE and. WAGON REPAIRINGSolicited at very low prices.

SILKS in assorted colors;

Chinese Porcelain Dinner and Tea Sets,

JAPANESE CABINETS!

PROGRESS OF VEGETATION.Tracing the Process from the First Inroads

of Fertility.It is curious to trace the first inroad9

of fertility on barrenness, by the nat-ural growth of vegetation, in the shapeof lichens, which seem to be the har-bingers of the vegetable world, andever exercising a restless activity inextending the dominion of vitality.These little plants will often obtain afooting where nothing else could beattached. So small are many, thatthey are invisible to the naked eye;and the decay of these, when theyhave flourished and passed throughtheir transient epochs of existence, isdestined to form the first exuvial layerof vegetable mold; the successivegenerations give successive incrementsto that soil from which msii are to reaptheir harvests, anu cattle to derivetileirlCOu; from which forests are de-

signed to spring, and from whichfuture navies are to be supplied.

But how is this frail dust to main-tain its station on the smooth andpolished rock when vitality has ceasedto exert its influence, and the structurewhich fixed it has decayed? This isthe point which has been too general-ly overlooked, and which is the mostwonderful provision of all. The plant,when dying, digs for itself a grave,sculptures in the solid rock asepulcherin which its dust may rest; for chemis-try informs us that not only do theselichens consist in part of gummy mat-ter, which causes their particles tostick together, but that they likewiseform, when living, a considerable quan-tity of oxalic acid, when by their decay6et free, acts upon the rock, and thusis a hollow formed in which the deadmatter of the lichen is deposited. Fur-thermore, the acid, by combining withthe lime-ston- e or other material of therock, will often produce an importantingredient in the vegetable mold; andnot only this, the moisture thus con-veyed into the cracks and crevices ofof rocks aud stones, when frozen, rendsthem, and by continual degradationadds more and more to the formingsoil. Successive generations of theseplants successively perform theirduties, and at length the barren break-ers, or the pumice plains of a volcano,become converted into fruitful fields.N. Y. Ledger.

04Fame, like lightning, generally strikes

the man who is not expecting it. 'SquireHobbs.

OUR PATENT BRAKES 0rieinated in Honolulu by us have beenreduced 25 per cent, in price. Shell

-:- - JOHN WIELAND'S -:- -

CELEBRATED -:- - BEEESTrays, Screens, Tortoise

dKan.lk.-'.i-fl'01'- "Grlove ano

Just Received a large invoice of

Second Growth of White Oak SpokesHUBS' 'EX2k.mi 'H HICKORY WAGON,

:o:-- 11V4 wudj, ikuus, ETC., ALL AT A GREATLYWT REDUCED RATE.

Large Assortment of Bai Iron.SOLD DURING THE YEAR 1888,

I

I

I f1

Tortoise Shell Tea Tables,

Card Receivers, Paper Gutters,

Salad Forkc and Spoons,

Bronze Inkstands,

SANDAL WOOD FANS,

GLOVE BOXES, CARD CASE?

and HANDKERCHIhrBOXES;

Mosquito UrnsETC., ETC., ETC.

JttanaKercniets,Crepe Shawls,Japanese Sauce,Rattan Chairs, assorted varieties;Chinese Plants,Paving Stones,Chinese Matting, white and colored ;Row Boats, etc., etc. 155-l- y

H. R. Hitchcock. J. McQueen.

Hawaiian Transfer Co.

122,173 B A.RREL8 ! Pioneer Shirt Factory, of Honolulu.No. 104 Fort Street.

10Mm

Full Importations by Every Coast Steamer.2-- tf LEWIS & CO.,

Wholesale and Retail ftWhite shirts, Over Shirts and Night Gowns.

A lit guaranteed by making a 8ample Shirt to every order. Island order, solicited.

EXPRESSING & DKAYING

FAITHFULLY ATTENDED TO.

Mutual Telephone 565. Bell Telephone 160.103-3- m

The Weekly Gazette and Daily P. C. Advertiser

Are the Best Advertising Medium in the Kingdom111 FORT STREET.

i p. O. oX

MT Bell Telephone 4lO. M. MELLIS- - Telephone 240.1M