fl c ''y XXVIILNo. HONOLULU, TUESDAYS JUNE No....tf"Corrcapondencolntended lor publication,...

13
J it "fi ' " " ; ' " ;' ''y fl c VOL. XXVIILNo. 24.1 HONOLULU, TUESDAYS JUNE 13, 1893. No. 1483. Hawaiian I BY -- KLISIIKD HAWAIIAN GAZETTE CO., (Limited,) Evorv Tuesday Morning. il FIVE DOLLARS PER ANNUiM PA TABLE IXADTAXCE. yorplcnSnliscrlbersSU.OiHuAdTaurp WiUi Includes postages prcpufl. H. M. WHITNEY. Business Manager .Arid. EDITOR. Odce, No. 46 Merchant Street RATES OF Mllrl In het)p.ITlL J l'W 3w 1 ra m 13 ra 6m Jy W In 100 lW 200 3U0, 400 600 1000 1 In 200 3uu: 400 500 600 1000 14 00 In 300 5 00 600 800 1000 1400 20 00 3 In 400 600 750 1000 1300 1750 2400 4 in 3 00 50 9 00 120011500 2400 3000 5 in 739 1000U200 i60ooo 30 00 60 00 7 in ' 9 00 120011400 1300:2400 3600 8000 Col.... ,1500 1800!2200 SO 0014000 5000 10000 H Col.... 1750 0015000 40 00150 00 SO 00 12000 1 Col '2000, 23(M,S-0- 50 00)75 00 11000 15000 tf"Corrcapondencolntended lor publication, thellawa-lla- n Gazette, Post Office Box. O. " KB" Correspondence rclatlne to Advertise- ments, subscriptions and Job l'rlntlnp, should be adlrcstedto the "Manascr of the Hawaiian U&zcitc, Post OCIco Dor, O. " CiTBusincss Cards and all quarterly or yearly advertisements arc payable in cdzence or on proentation of the bill. X. B All foreign advertisements ranetbe ac- companied with the pay when ordered in, or no notice will be taken of tlicra. The rates of charges are jiven In the above scale, and remit- tances for European or American advertise rnents, ir 'ifcscrnrtlonts may be made by postal i order. THE Daily Pacific Commercial Advertiser Is published bj the IUwaiux Gazette Co r at its Office in Merchant Street, and by Carriers In the City, at Sis Dollars (33.00) Par Annum. Dally t Forelcn Countries-Posta- ge paid. S10.00 per annum r Address all Comracnlcatlons, HAWAIIAN GAZETTE COMPANY, No. 46 Merchant Street gustos (Sards. PROFESSIONAL. CHARLES .. CARTER, .Sttori.- - ert li". 1350 Xo.S4McrchantStrcet. y A. ROSA, Attorzioy cc-- t Xjn-cTcr- . No. 15 KAinvXAXC Street, 1356 Honolulu, II. I. y WUCLIAM C. PARKE, And Agent to take Acknowledgments. OFFICE: 13 Kaaiiuuaxu Stres, . 1333 Honolulu, II. I. Q W. R. CASTLE, And Notary Public. Attends allthe Courts of 1356 the Kingdom. y J. ALFRED MAGOON. Attorney and Counselor At Law- - i OFFICE-- 42 Merchant Street. Honolulu, U. I. 1343 vac. KAtaiENs.FmuorpcnaiLT.HEavANN tooxe, Honolulu. Uonoluln. Honolulu. E HOFFSCIIX.AEGER St CO. King and Bethel Streets, Honolulu, H. I., Ixporteri and Commiition Merchants, 1356 H. L. HOLSTEIN, .to.or txX Xs-v- -. CqULECnOHS PROJirTLT ATTENDED TO. 1373 KOHALA. HAWAII. ly JOII-- f II. PATV, SOrABY PUBLIC and COMMISSIONER cf DEEDS For the States or California and New York 0tce at the Bank of Bishop & Co.;Honol!u. 1334 J. M. WHITNEY, M. D., D. D. S Dental Rooms on Fort Street, jcein Brewer's, Block, corner Hotel and Fort 1 356 y streets Entrance, Hotel street. WILLIAM 0. SMITH, 66 Fort Street, : : Honolulu. 13M-- y E. G. HITCHCOCK, Attorney and Counsellor at Law. Offlcc at HILO, HAWAII. Bills FoxrTCoCTiD.- - 1372.1y) . WILLIAM C. ACHl, Attorney and Counsellor at Law, and Heal Estate Broker. Attends all the Cocbts or the Eingdo- -. OFFICE: No. 36 Merchant Street, 1372 Honolulu, U. I. ly Mil. W. F. ALLEN, AN OFFICE OYER MESSRS. BISHOP HAS corner of Merchant and K tumann streets, and he will be pleased to attend to any oslness entrusted to him. 1356-6- B. E.' IIcII-- T VISE i RItO. .Grocery, Feed Store and Bakery. Comer King and Fort Streets, 1S56 Honolulu. U. I. y THE WJSTRNAND HAWAIIAN ' Investment Comnanv. (Limited r Honey loaned for lonj o. uort periods, ON APPROVED SECURITY. Apply to W. L. GREEN, Manager. , 1S56 u0ce Bearer Block. Fort St, y Business (Sards. rtftSSCELLANEOUS. BISHOP & COMPANY. ESTASIiIfJEBD XZT 3.3SJ3. BANKER8. , tiONoti hawaius isi.axds DRAW 2XCIUUGE ON THE BMK OF CAUFGRWA. SAS FRflKCISCO HD TIIEIB 10EKI5 IX- - New York, Boston. Parts HESSHS. n 81. ROTHSCHILD SONS, LONDON. ANKFORT-ON-THE-MAIN.- Thc Commercial Eankins Co. of Sydney. Xonco?. The Commercial Bankinp Co. of Sydney. Sydney. The Bank of Ne Zealand, Auckland, la Chrfstchnrch, Danedinand WclMnctoa. The Bank of British Columbia, Portland, Orecon. The Azores and 3Iadeira Islands. Stockholm, Sweden. The Shattered Bank of India, Australia and China. Hongkon?, Yokohama, Japan. Andtransacta 135S General Banking Business y K. O. UA, Vfc SOif. LIMITED. Importers and Dealers in Hardware, Plows, Paints, Oils and General Merchandise, - OFFICERS :- - 5"raW Hall -- .President and Manager E O White Secretaryacd Treasurer Wm F Allen Auditor ThogMayand F Wundcnburjj Directors J858 Corner Fort and King Sts y . crrzzv. c.rt. c:ce E "WE Z H . 3 i Succc3ors to Lcwees Dicesok , slmportori d Dealers in Inrabo'r, And ail kinds of Building Materials, 1356 FortStreoMIonolnln. y E3IPIRE HOUSE, J OLDS, ::::::::: Proprietor Corner Nnuanu Avenue and notel Streets, Choice 1356 Ales. Wines and Liqnors y. E. S. CTJNHA' HotdLX vz"daa.o Uoaloi-- . TJIWON SALOON, In rear or the "Hawaiian Gazette" building 1356 No. 23 Merchant Street. HONOI,TJL,Tr IRON WORKS CO sgSfK Steam EnInes,SnsarMills. Boilers,, ?&&. Coolers, Iron, Bra.sandLead Casting Machinery of Every Description tfS- - Mad to Order. S Particular attention paid to Ships' Blackt smlthlnR. JOBTfOBKexeentedon theabortei- - 1S56 notice. y J. K. KAHOOKANO. Attorney and Counsellor at Law. vAttexds ixj. the Courts or the Kisodom. 1377 15 Kaahnmanu Street. Honolulu. ly J. S. SMITHIES, AND AGENT TO GRANT rARKIAGE LICENSES. Mahnkona, Kohala. Hawaii. 1415-t-f J03IIV T WATEIUIOUSE. IMPORTER AND DEALER IK GENERAL MERCHANDISE. 1356 Queen iitrect. Honolulu y HAWAIIAN WINE CO. FRANK BROWN, Manager. S3 and 30 Merchant Street, - nonolnlu, U. I. 1393-- ly C. E. "WILLIAMS, Importer, Manufacturer, Upholsterer, AND DEALER IN FURNITURE OF EVERT DESCRIPTION, Pianos and Musical Instruments. 13i 105 FORT STREET. ly G. W. MACFARLANE CO., Importers and Commission Merchants, Honolulu, Hawaiian Islands, Mirrlecs, Watson Co.. Scotland Street Iron Works. Glascow. John Fowler Co., CLccds) Limited Steam Flow 13SS ana Locomotive works. Leeds. ly SI. HACKS ;i & CO., General Commission Agents, 1353 Queen StraetJlonolulu.ILI. y F. A. SCnAEFKJt ACO, Importers Cornmlsslon Mrc's. 1333 Honolulu, Hawaiian Islands. y M. S. GRINBAtJM CO. noBTEEs or Gon'l Morcndiso and 135S Moani.Honolln.H.I. y M. S. GRINBATJM & CO., Commission Merchants,: ' No. 215 Front Street. San Francisco, Cal. Post Offlcc Box 2603. 1356 y WILWEtt CO., Corner of Lumber, Taints, Oils, Nails, Salt&Bnllding 1356 Hate rials of every kind- - t IIYMAI JBROS.. Importers of General Merc'aandise, BOM FRANCE, ENGLAND, GERMANY AND THE UNITED STATES. 13T3y No. 58 Queen Street, Honolulu. H. I, HYMAN BR.OTHElS. Commission Merchants. SUB Front Street, San Francisco. Particular attention paid to filling and shipping 1C73 Island orders. y XH5KO. C DAVIES & Co., Importers and Commission Merchants, AKD AGXHT3 IO Lloyd'eand the Liverpool Underwriters, BJiJ?1LFeISn Marine Insurance ;Co., ltJJ And Northern ssaco Cctsptay. 7 Spc'rmi oficxs. MISCELLANEOUS HAWAIIAN anil Title Co. NO. MERCHANT ST. HONOLULU, 1. J. . At. Hatch - -- resident Cecil Brown - W. E. Castle' -- ' - J. F.Brown, Treasurer: Manager . W. V. rear . 9 - 'Auditor This Company is prepared to search records and furnish abstracts of title to all real property in the Kingdom. Parties placing loans on, or contemplat inj; the purchase of real estate will find it to their advantage to consult the company in regard to title. S7A1I orders attended to with prompt- ness. Mutual Telephone 133 8ell Telephone 1D2. P. O. Bo 323. DBS. t U: DENTISTS, Hotel St., gap-CJ- AS ADMINISTERED. Canadian Pacific. The Famous Tourist Route or the World. $5 Second and $10 First Glass. Loss than by Other Linos. To A Points i ih UNITED STATE8 and canada, via. pobtl-n- d, tacoiia, Seattle, Victoria and Yanoouteb. - mountain resorts, r Banff Glacier, Mount Stephen and Fraser Canon. Empress Lice of Steamers from VaocosYer Tiokets to all points in Japan, China, India . and around the world. X3T For Tiokets and General Information THE0. H. DAVIES &'C0., Afionts Canndian Pacific Railway for 1426-l- y Hawaiian Islands. St. Hall. SAN MATEO, CALIFORNIA. A School for boys. Twenty-sixt- h year. Send for Catalofr-- c. Est. Alfred Lea Brewer, D.D., Esctor. N- - 1ES3 ly C. HUSTACE, . (Formerly with D. F. Bolles Co.) Whoiooalo and Rotall Crocor, 111 King Struct, under narmony nail. Family, Plantation, and Ships' .Stores sup- plied at short, notice. New Goods by erery steamer. Ordere :ro the other Islands faith- fully executed. 1356 TELEPHO NE No. 119. 3 H. W. SCHMIDT & SONS, Importers ad Commi-.fo- n Mmk, Honolnla. BUS BAZAAR! HONOLULU. AGENT FOR California Ontical Co's Spectacles and Eyeglasses. t CW Assortments will be sent to other Is- lands for the convenience of those who cannot come to Honolulu. 1455-l-y PIONEER STEAM and Bakery, . . EC O rt T Practical Confectioner, Pastry Cook and Baker 1356 Tl Hotel St.. bet. Nnnar.n,andort y MISS D. LAMB Notary Public Ofllco of 'J. A. Maroon, Merchant street, near the Postoffice. ' ll-ly- . Hawaiian Annual. NO HAND-BOO- K, EXCELS THE HAWAIIAN ALMANAC and ANNUAL for reliable statistical and general information relatlni; to thtte Islands. Price 75 cents; or mailed abroad ai S3 cents each. in ' THOS. tl. THRirM. Publisher. 343-l- y Honolulu.H . .1 as PAU! vrrsr-i- r , . wijiijipLki in, linn, A m. nmimigQmM WHOLE (Jazette. ADVERTISING. honldbcaddrcscdtothe"Edltorof ATTORNEY-AT-LA- W, FortandQ.ueenSteets,Honoluln, ItelMi ANDERSON opj..Dr.J.S.McGicw' Matthew's GOLDI Candy.Manufactory TBEEX'-QUEE- NON-SUIT- S HER OWN CASE. .. e Royalist Cause Collapses. She Surrendered to the 3'rovljloual Government Without Kecourse. ' The. substance o the following document was contained in a Ho- nolulu dispatch to the San Fran- cisco Morning Call several months ago and created much comment in the United States. " The document shows'the CalL's dispatch was sub- stantially correct, although Mr. Neumann openly denied its truth at the time. When Mr. Neumann returned to Honolulu, and severed his profes- sional delations with the n, he made certain disclosures to the government which relieved them from any further secresy regarding the matter and the cabinet deter mined 'to make it public whenever they deemed the circumstances and the welfare of the country de- manded. President Dole lately decided that such a time has arrived and the document is now published in full : To all persons and to the govern- ment of the United States of America and to all governments whatsoever; to all bodies corporate as well &3 bod- ies .politic; arid more especially to the President and to the Secretary of the Department of State of the United States of, America, I, Liliuokalani of tho city of Honolulu, in the Island of Unliu, one 01 tue Hawaiian islands, send greeting: Whereas, on the seventeenth .day of January, a. "d. 1893, at the city ot Honolulu, aforesaid,I did yield to the Provisional Government of the Haw- aiian" lslhnds'my authority as Sover-efgn'o- lt the Hawaiian Islands, under protest; and, WhereAs, by so doing I clnim to be entitled, by international law and in the high forum of conscience and equity, to receive consideration and provision both for myself and family, and for Kalulani who was my legally appointed successor as such Sovereign; and, Whereas, it is my intention and desire by these presents to authorize, secure, accomplish, and Anally to complete and to ratify such arrange- ments as may conduce to the greatest welfare and benefit of nil the people of the Hawaiian Islands, and also of my-se- jf and fanilly, and of the said Kalu- lani, and Whereas, I repose the fullest con- fidence in the nbilltv. inteorritv and fidelity of Paul Neumann, Esquire, of the city of Honolulu aforesaid, coun- sellor at law, and have entrusted him with full power and authority to act for me in the premises; now, there- fore, Know ye that in consideration cf the promise I Liliuokalani aforesaid have made, constituted and appointed, and by these presents do hereby make, constitute and appoint the aforesaid Paul JNeumann, Jsq., my true, lawful and sufficient attorney for me and in my name, place aqd stead; to negotiate, arrange and agree with the united States of America and the. President and the Secretary of the Department of State thereof, and with any other (if any) represent- ative or olllcial thereof having au- thority in the premises for. such olll- cial or other consideration, benefit and advantage, as in tho opinion of my said attorney, shall, may or can be obtained from the United States of America as well for myself and fam- ily as for the said Kalulani in consid- eration of existing conditions and cir- cumstances. And if no official con- sideration for myself or said Kaiulani 8hall,in the opinion of my said attorney be attainable from the United States of America, then and thereupon, and in such case to arrange and agree upon such pecuniary considerations, bene- fits and advantages as can or may be secured for myself and family and for said Kaiulani from the United States of America, and whether the same shall be in the furmof payment at one time or a sum oi money to myself or of distinct sums of money to my- self and said Kaiulani or in payments of stated sums of money annually or of tenor for a fixed terms of years, or for a fixed period or periods of time. And upon ascertaining that such pecuniary conaideration1, benefits, advantages or payments of money from jtud on the part of the said United states can be secured, to agree npon, reLfive and accept the same and in ray ii.nc and behalf to make, execute nnd deliver such agreements, releases and quit- tances of all my claim, demand.-- " and is pretensions whatever Uon the ti rone all of the Hawaiian Island- - nnd upon the Government of the United States of America as well as of the Hawaiian Islands, and-po- n nil persons having had anything to do with, or having been, or being in any way concerned the said Provisional government, shall be requisite to accomplish &j2. and secure such pecuniary considera tious, benefits, advantages and pay- ments, or which shall be required therefor by tho president or the secre- tary of the department of state afore- said, or by any other (If any) repre- sentative or official of the United States authorized to act or agree in the premises. And all that my said attorney shall do or cause to be done in tho premises. I do herebv for mv- - seii ana my successors, executors, administrators and assigns ratify and confirm, and further I do herebv covenant with my said attorney and his executors and administrators and with the President of tho UnitedStates of America, and with any other person or persons representing the said United States of America in the premises, and with each of them and with their respective successors both lointlv and severally, that all and whatsoever my saiu attorney snau in my nenaii agree or uo, or cause to ne none or agreed upon by virtue of these presents. I will andmysuccessors, heirs, executors and' aamimstrators snail ratify and con- firm, and that I will atany time and times thereafter execute, sign, seal, acknowledge and deliver such other and further releases, acquittances, assurances and instrumentsln writing as shall in tho opinion of my said attorney, or in the opinion of tho President of the United States of America, or of any officer or repre- sentative thereof having the matter in charge, be requisite and proper in order to carry out the full intent and meaning of these presents. In witness whereof I hereunto, and also to two other instruments of the same date and tenor, have set my nana ana seal, at tne city of Honolulu aforesaid, this thirty-fir- st day of Janu- ary, in the year of our Lord one thou- sand eight hundred and ninety-thre- e. Signed LiirnoKViANl. Signed, sealed and deliverod in the presence of James W. Eobertson. Hawaiian Islands, HONOLULU, OAHU.Jfab' On this thirty-firs- t dav of January. a. D. 1893, personally appeared before mo Liliuokalani, to me Known to be the person described in and who exe- cuted the within Instrument, and she acknowledged to me that she had exe- cuted the same freely and voluntarily and for the uses and purposes herein set forth. Signed A. F. Judd. Chief Justice Supreme Court of the Hawaiian Islands. Hawaiian Islands. Honolulu, Oahu. J83" I, the undersicned. do herebv certi fy that the above and annexed docu- ment Js a true copy of the original Power of Attorney from Liliuokalani to Paul Neumann, Esq., pages 1 to 12, inclusive, and of the acknowledgment thereto before the Hon. A. F. Judd, Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of the Hawaiian Islands, on the 31st day of -- January, A. D. 1893, this day pro- duced before -- me, tho same having been carefully examined by mo and compared with the said original, and found to agree therewith word for word, and figure for figure. In witness whereof, I have set my hand and seal this 25th day of April, A. D. 1893. Signed Cabmen E. Vida, seal. Notary Public. m New Departure. Designs of the lines of the new British yachts Calluna and Val- kyrie, obtained by some mysterious means for tho "Tew York Herald," indicate marked departures from the conventional model of the trim and sightly cutters that have here- tofore been the chief reliance o liritish yachtsmen in international contests. The Calluna, which is expected to defeat the American yacht Navahoe in English waters, is modeled substantially after our shallow centre-boar- d sIoop9, with the addition of a big fin keel of about fourteen feet draught. The Valkyrie's lines arc almost clumsy in appearance, owing to the heavy and bulky overhang of the vessel. But the Valkyrie is a racing ma- chine, built expressly to cross the Atlantic and contend for the Amer- ica cup ; and speed, not beauty, has been the first and chief thought of her designer. A contest in which this dangerous craft shall be "beaten will be a memorable race, indeed. Philadelphia Record. U. S. Sugar and Rice Statistics. The Superintendent of Census has issued the statistics' of sugar and rice production in the United States, compiled under the super- vision of Special Agent Hyde. The total production of cane sugar in the year ending May 31, 1890, was 302,731,895 pounds, vatued at $12,-829,8- 24 on the plantation. The total production of merchantable cahe molasses was 25,398,954 gal- lons, valued at $8,070,575. The total production of rice was 130,-- UrJ,l3 pounds, valued at $3,951,-11- 9 ; 96.5 per cent, of the sugar and 58.G per cent, of the rice were produced in the State of Louisiana. Very True. The demand for Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy steadily growing from the fact that who give it a trial are pleased with the results and recommend it to their neighbors. We feel sure that the lemedy cannot be recommended too highly. Wagley Smead, Drug- gists, Newton, Iowa: For sale by all medicine dealers. Benson, Smith & Co., Agents for H. I. J A NATIVE FEAST. ROAST PIG AND 0THEK DELICA- CIES GALORE. now the Slasonlr le atertalne-The- lr Guest at Kallhl. The ladies composing the Masonic Temple furnishing committee proved last week that they do not? do things by halves, and the luau which was given at Kalihi yester- day waa no exception to the role. The affair was given more as a compliment to the peoplo who at- tended their series of lunches, and not as a money getting device. But nevertheless it turned out a money maker, as the receipts amounted to $379.75, with additional outstand- ing moneys to be collected. The luau in all other respects was a big success also. Everything was arranged so well and everybody present agreed that a better Ha- waiian feast could not be prepared. The food, as is usual in such en- tertainments, was cooked under- ground by natives, and the tables fairly groaned under the weight of the many dishes. Shortly after noon the guests took their seats at the tables, and for nearly an hour about 350 people were kept busily engaged in feasting. At the second table about 150 more guests were supplied with all their hearts and appetites could wish for. While the luau was in nrocrreaa the Hawaiian band played at in tervals, and a portion of the suc- cess of the day is attributed to Professor Berger and his' hired men. The young ladies who had charge of tho flower booth were very at- tentive to their duties, and their motto seemed tobc "let no one escape." They succeeded admir- ably. They took in $68.50 during the day. After the feasting was through with dancing was in order, and at an intermission an auction sale took place which netted ?GS.50. The principal articles disposed of were an oil painting of Diamond Head and a wooden hatchet. The hatchet was made entirely of na- tive woods and it was donated by Mr. Jay Greene. The whole affair was enjoyable and great credit is due to the exe- cutive committee Mrs. J. A. Has-singe- r, Mrs. J. S. McGrew, Mrs. A. Fuller, Mrs. E. D. Tenney, Mrs. A. Brown, Mrs. M. N. Sanders, Mrs. J. H. Soper, Mrs. Chas. Williams. Mis3 Finkler, Miss D. Noonan.Mrs. T. Sorenson and Mrs. Dr. Wood. The Downfall of a Tyrant. . A while since a telegram an- nounced that the Khan of Khelat, being displeased with certain of bis ministers 'and wives, had had their beadB chopped off. The re- cord of this wretch, who has been drawing an annual salary of 125,000 rupees from the British Govern- ment, proves to be a3 follows : Has lately murdered 65 persons. Killed 4 wives. Burnt one alive. Murdered 3000 people. Therefore ho is declared to be deposed. Calcutta cablegram in the London Chronicle. A Freak of the Missouri River. A South Dakota court is trying a liquor case which involves the question of the State boundary line. The channel of the Missouri river has shifted since the line waa surveyed and the defendant de- clares that his saloon is situated on a strip of ground that is not within the jurisdiction of either State. He i3 between the Scylla qf prohibition in one State and the Charydi3 of high license in the other. The number of gas and electric lamps required to illuminate New York after nightfall is 23,000. The streets lighted arc 523 miles in length; the parks lighted covar sixty-si- x acres, and the piers two miles. The whole cost of keeping the city lighted is $800,000 a year. The city pays on the average 18 n. vnjir for the 2s furnished to each lamppost.

Transcript of fl c ''y XXVIILNo. HONOLULU, TUESDAYS JUNE No....tf"Corrcapondencolntended lor publication,...

Page 1: fl c ''y XXVIILNo. HONOLULU, TUESDAYS JUNE No....tf"Corrcapondencolntended lor publication, thellawa-lla-n Gazette, Post Office Box. O. " KB" Correspondence rclatlne to Advertise-ments,

Jit

"fi

' " " ; ' " ;' ''yfl c

VOL. XXVIILNo. 24.1 HONOLULU, TUESDAYS JUNE 13, 1893. No. 1483.

HawaiianI BY-- KLISIIKD

HAWAIIAN GAZETTE CO., (Limited,)

Evorv Tuesday Morning.

il FIVE DOLLARS PER ANNUiM

PA TABLE IXADTAXCE.

yorplcnSnliscrlbersSU.OiHuAdTaurp

WiUi Includes postages prcpufl.

H. M. WHITNEY. Business Manager

.Arid. EDITOR.Odce, No. 46 Merchant Street

RATES OFMllrl In

het)p.ITlL J l'W 3 w 1 ra m 13 ra 6m Jy

W In 100 lW 200 3U0, 400 600 10001 In 200 3uu: 400 500 600 1000 14 00

In 300 5 00 600 800 1000 1400 20 00

3 In 400 600 750 1000 1300 1750 24004 in 3 00 50 9 00 120011500 2400 30005 in 739 1000U200 i60ooo 30 00 60 007 in ' 9 00 120011400 1300:2400 3600 8000

Col.... ,1500 1800!2200 SO 0014000 5000 10000

H Col.... 1750 0015000 40 00150 00 SO 00 120001 Col '2000, 23(M,S-0- 50 00)75 00 11000 15000

tf"Corrcapondencolntended lor publication,thellawa-lla- n

Gazette, Post Office Box. O. "KB" Correspondence rclatlne to Advertise-

ments, subscriptions and Job l'rlntlnp, shouldbe adlrcstedto the "Manascr of the HawaiianU&zcitc, Post OCIco Dor, O. "

CiTBusincss Cards and all quarterly or yearlyadvertisements arc payable in cdzence or onproentation of the bill.

X. B All foreign advertisements ranetbe ac-

companied with the pay when ordered in, or nonotice will be taken of tlicra. The rates ofcharges are jiven In the above scale, and remit-

tances for European or American advertisernents, ir 'ifcscrnrtlonts may be made by postal

i order.

THEDaily Pacific Commercial Advertiser

Is published bj the IUwaiux Gazette Cor at its Office in Merchant Street, and

by Carriers In the City, at

Sis Dollars (33.00) Par Annum.Dally t Forelcn Countries-Posta- ge paid.

S10.00 per annumr Address all Comracnlcatlons,

HAWAIIAN GAZETTE COMPANY,No. 46 Merchant Street

gustos (Sards.

PROFESSIONAL.

CHARLES .. CARTER,.Sttori.- - ert li".1350 Xo.S4McrchantStrcet. y

A. ROSA,

Attorzioy cc-- t Xjn-cTcr- .

No. 15 KAinvXAXC Street,1356 Honolulu, II. I. y

WUCLIAM C. PARKE,

And Agent to take Acknowledgments.

OFFICE: 13 Kaaiiuuaxu Stres, .

1333 Honolulu, II. I. Q

W. R. CASTLE,

And Notary Public. Attends allthe Courts of1356 the Kingdom. y

J. ALFRED MAGOON.

Attorney and Counselor At Law- -

i OFFICE-- 42 Merchant Street.Honolulu, U. I.

1343

vac. KAtaiENs.FmuorpcnaiLT.HEavANN tooxe,Honolulu. Uonoluln. Honolulu.

E HOFFSCIIX.AEGER St CO.King and Bethel Streets,

Honolulu, H. I.,Ixporteri and Commiition Merchants,

1356

H. L. HOLSTEIN,

.to.or txX Xs-v- -.

CqULECnOHS PROJirTLT ATTENDED TO.

1373 KOHALA. HAWAII. ly

JOII--f II. PATV,SOrABY PUBLIC and COMMISSIONER

cf DEEDS

For the States or California and New York0tce at the Bank of Bishop & Co.;Honol!u.

1334

J. M. WHITNEY, M. D., D. D. S

Dental Rooms on Fort Street,jcein Brewer's, Block, corner Hotel and Fort

1 356 y streets Entrance, Hotel street.

WILLIAM 0. SMITH,

66 Fort Street, : : Honolulu.13M-- y

E. G. HITCHCOCK,Attorney and Counsellor at Law.

Offlcc at HILO, HAWAII.

Bills FoxrTCoCTiD.- -1372.1y) .

WILLIAM C. ACHl,Attorney and Counsellor at Law, and

Heal Estate Broker.Attends all the Cocbts or the Eingdo- -.

OFFICE: No. 36 Merchant Street,1372 Honolulu, U. I. ly

Mil. W. F. ALLEN,

AN OFFICE OYER MESSRS. BISHOPHAS corner of Merchant and K tumannstreets, and he will be pleased to attend to anyoslness entrusted to him. 1356-6-

B. E.' IIcII-- T VISE i RItO..Grocery, Feed Store and Bakery.

Comer King and Fort Streets,1S56 Honolulu. U. I. y

THE WJSTRNAND HAWAIIAN' Investment Comnanv.(Limited

r Honey loaned for lonj o. uort periods,ON APPROVED SECURITY.

Apply to W. L. GREEN, Manager., 1S56 u0ce Bearer Block. Fort St, y

Business (Sards.

rtftSSCELLANEOUS.

BISHOP & COMPANY.ESTASIiIfJEBD XZT 3.3SJ3.

BANKER8. ,

tiONoti hawaius isi.axdsDRAW 2XCIUUGE ON

THE BMK OF CAUFGRWA. SAS FRflKCISCOHD TIIEIB 10EKI5 IX- -

New York, Boston. PartsHESSHS. n 81. ROTHSCHILD SONS, LONDON.

ANKFORT-ON-THE-MAIN.-

Thc Commercial Eankins Co. of Sydney.Xonco?.

The Commercial Bankinp Co. of Sydney.Sydney. The Bank of Ne Zealand, Auckland,

la Chrfstchnrch, DanedinandWclMnctoa.

The Bank of British Columbia, Portland,Orecon.

The Azores and 3Iadeira Islands.Stockholm, Sweden.The Shattered Bank of India, Australia and

China.Hongkon?, Yokohama, Japan. Andtransacta

135S General Banking Business y

K. O. UA, Vfc SOif.LIMITED.

Importers and Dealers in Hardware,Plows, Paints, Oils and General Merchandise,- OFFICERS :- -5"raW Hall --.President and ManagerE O White Secretaryacd TreasurerWm F Allen AuditorThogMayand F Wundcnburjj Directors

J858 Corner Fort and King Sts y

. crrzzv. c.rt. c:ceE "WE Z H . 3 iSuccc3ors to Lcwees Dicesok ,

slmportori d Dealers in Inrabo'r,And ail kinds of Building Materials,

1356 FortStreoMIonolnln. y

E3IPIRE HOUSE,J OLDS, ::::::::: Proprietor

Corner Nnuanu Avenue and notel Streets,Choice

1356Ales. Wines and Liqnors

y.

E. S. CTJNHA'

HotdLX vz"daa.o Uoaloi-- .TJIWON SALOON,

In rear or the "Hawaiian Gazette" building1356 No. 23 Merchant Street.

HONOI,TJL,Tr IRON WORKS COsgSfK Steam EnInes,SnsarMills. Boilers,,?&&. Coolers, Iron, Bra.sandLead CastingMachinery of Every Description

tfS-- Mad to Order. SParticular attention paid to Ships' Blackt

smlthlnR. JOBTfOBKexeentedon theabortei- -

1S56 notice. y

J. K. KAHOOKANO.Attorney and Counsellor at Law.vAttexds ixj. the Courts or the Kisodom.

1377 15 Kaahnmanu Street. Honolulu. ly

J. S. SMITHIES,

AND AGENT TO GRANT rARKIAGE

LICENSES.

Mahnkona, Kohala. Hawaii. 1415-t-f

J03IIV T WATEIUIOUSE.IMPORTER AND DEALER IK GENERAL

MERCHANDISE.1356 Queen iitrect. Honolulu y

HAWAIIAN WINE CO.FRANK BROWN, Manager.

S3 and 30 Merchant Street, - nonolnlu, U. I.1393-- ly

C. E. "WILLIAMS,Importer, Manufacturer, Upholsterer,

AND DEALER IN

FURNITURE OF EVERT DESCRIPTION,

Pianos and Musical Instruments.13i 105 FORT STREET. ly

G. W. MACFARLANE CO.,Importers and Commission Merchants,

Honolulu, Hawaiian Islands,

Mirrlecs, Watson Co.. Scotland Street IronWorks. Glascow.

John Fowler Co., CLccds) Limited Steam Flow13SS ana Locomotive works. Leeds. ly

SI. HACKS ;i & CO.,General Commission Agents,

1353 Queen StraetJlonolulu.ILI. y

F. A. SCnAEFKJt ACO,Importers Cornmlsslon Mrc's.

1333 Honolulu, Hawaiian Islands. y

M. S. GRINBAtJM CO.noBTEEs or

Gon'l Morcndiso and135S Moani.Honolln.H.I. y

M. S. GRINBATJM & CO.,

Commission Merchants,: 'No. 215 Front Street. San Francisco, Cal.

Post Offlcc Box 2603.1356 y

WILWEtt CO.,Corner of

Lumber, Taints, Oils, Nails, Salt&Bnllding1356 Hate rials of every kind- - t

IIYMAI JBROS..Importers of General Merc'aandise,

BOM

FRANCE, ENGLAND, GERMANY AND THEUNITED STATES.

13T3y No. 58 Queen Street, Honolulu. H. I,

HYMAN BR.OTHElS.Commission Merchants.

SUB Front Street, San Francisco.Particular attention paid to filling and shipping

1C73 Island orders. y

XH5KO. C DAVIES & Co.,Importers and Commission Merchants,

AKD AGXHT3 IOLloyd'eand the Liverpool Underwriters,BJiJ?1LFeISn Marine Insurance ;Co.,ltJJ And Northern ssaco Cctsptay. 7

Spc'rmi oficxs.

MISCELLANEOUS

HAWAIIAN

anil Title Co.

NO. MERCHANT ST.

HONOLULU, 1. J.

. At. Hatch - -- residentCecil Brown -

W. E. Castle' -- ' -J. F.Brown, Treasurer: Manager .

W. V. rear . 9 - 'Auditor

This Company is prepared to searchrecords and furnish abstracts of title toall real property in the Kingdom.

Parties placing loans on, or contemplatinj; the purchase of real estate will find itto their advantage to consult the companyin regard to title.

S7A1I orders attended to with prompt-ness.

Mutual Telephone 133 8ell Telephone1D2. P. O. Bo 323.

DBS. t U:DENTISTS,

Hotel St.,

gap-CJ- AS ADMINISTERED.

Canadian Pacific.The Famous Tourist Route or the World.

$5 Second and $10 First Glass.

Loss than by Other Linos.

To A Points i ih UNITED STATE8

and canada, via. pobtl-n- d, tacoiia,Seattle, Victoria and Yanoouteb.

- mountain resorts,r

Banff Glacier, Mount Stephen andFraser Canon.

Empress Lice of Steamers from VaocosYer

Tiokets to all points in Japan, China, India. and around the world.

X3T For Tiokets and General Information

THE0. H. DAVIES &'C0.,

Afionts Canndian Pacific Railway for1426-l- y Hawaiian Islands.

St. Hall.SAN MATEO, CALIFORNIA.

A School for boys. Twenty-sixt- h year. Sendfor Catalofr-- c.

Est. Alfred Lea Brewer, D.D., Esctor.N- -

1ES3 ly

C. HUSTACE,. (Formerly with D. F. Bolles Co.)

Whoiooalo and Rotall Crocor,111 King Struct, under narmony nail.

Family, Plantation, and Ships' .Stores sup-plied at short, notice. New Goods by ererysteamer. Ordere :ro the other Islands faith-fully executed.

1356 TELEPHO NE No. 119. 3

H. W. SCHMIDT & SONS,

Importers ad Commi-.fo-n Mmk,

Honolnla.

BUS BAZAAR!

HONOLULU.

AGENT FOR

California Ontical Co's Spectacles and

Eyeglasses.t

CW Assortments will be sent to other Is-

lands for the convenience of those who cannotcome to Honolulu. 1455-l-y

PIONEER STEAM

and Bakery,. . EC O rt T

Practical Confectioner, Pastry Cook and Baker1356 Tl Hotel St.. bet. Nnnar.n,andort y

MISS D. LAMBNotary Public

Ofllco of 'J. A. Maroon, Merchant street,near the Postoffice. ' ll-ly- .

Hawaiian Annual.

NO HAND-BOO- K, EXCELS THEHAWAIIAN ALMANAC and ANNUAL

for reliable statistical and general informationrelatlni; to thtte Islands. Price 75 cents; ormailed abroad ai S3 cents each. in' THOS. tl. THRirM. Publisher.343-l- y Honolulu.H . .1 as

PAU!

vrrsr-i- r , . wijiijipLki in, linn, A m. nmimigQmM

WHOLE(Jazette.

ADVERTISING.

honldbcaddrcscdtothe"Edltorof

ATTORNEY-AT-LA- W,

FortandQ.ueenSteets,Honoluln,

ItelMi

ANDERSON

opj..Dr.J.S.McGicw'

Matthew's

GOLDI

Candy.Manufactory

TBEEX'-QUEE- NON-SUIT- S HER

OWN CASE.

.. e Royalist Cause Collapses.

She Surrendered to the 3'rovljloual

Government Without Kecourse.

' The. substance o the followingdocument was contained in a Ho-

nolulu dispatch to the San Fran-cisco Morning Call several monthsago and created much comment inthe United States. " The documentshows'the CalL's dispatch was sub-

stantially correct, although Mr.

Neumann openly denied its truthat the time.

When Mr. Neumann returned toHonolulu, and severed his profes-

sional delations with the n,

he made certain disclosures to thegovernment which relieved themfrom any further secresy regardingthe matter and the cabinet determined 'to make it public wheneverthey deemed the circumstancesand the welfare of the country de-

manded. President Dole latelydecided that such a time hasarrived and the document is nowpublished in full :

To all persons and to the govern-ment of the United States of Americaand to all governments whatsoever;to all bodies corporate as well &3 bod-ies .politic; arid more especially to thePresident and to the Secretary of theDepartment of State of the UnitedStates of, America, I, Liliuokalani oftho city of Honolulu, in the Island ofUnliu, one 01 tue Hawaiian islands,send greeting:

Whereas, on the seventeenth .dayof January, a. "d. 1893, at the city otHonolulu, aforesaid,I did yield to theProvisional Government of the Haw-aiian" lslhnds'my authority as Sover-efgn'o- lt

the Hawaiian Islands, underprotest; and,

WhereAs, by so doing I clnim tobe entitled, by international law andin the high forum of conscience andequity, to receive consideration andprovision both for myself and family,and for Kalulani who was my legallyappointed successor as such Sovereign;and,

Whereas, it is my intention anddesire by these presents to authorize,secure, accomplish, and Anally tocomplete and to ratify such arrange-ments as may conduce to the greatestwelfare and benefit of nil the people ofthe Hawaiian Islands, and also of my-se- jf

and fanilly, and of the said Kalu-lani, and

Whereas, I repose the fullest con-fidence in the nbilltv. inteorritv andfidelity of Paul Neumann, Esquire, ofthe city of Honolulu aforesaid, coun-sellor at law, and have entrusted himwith full power and authority to actfor me in the premises; now, there-fore,

Know ye that in consideration cfthe promise I Liliuokalani aforesaidhave made, constituted and appointed,and by these presents do herebymake, constitute and appoint theaforesaid Paul JNeumann, Jsq., mytrue, lawful and sufficient attorneyfor me and in my name, place aqdstead; to negotiate, arrange and agreewith the united States of Americaand the. President and the Secretaryof the Department of State thereof,and with any other (if any) represent-ative or olllcial thereof having au-thority in the premises for. such olll-cial or other consideration, benefitand advantage, as in tho opinion ofmy said attorney, shall, may or canbe obtained from the United States ofAmerica as well for myself and fam-ily as for the said Kalulani in consid-eration of existing conditions and cir-cumstances. And if no official con-sideration for myself or said Kaiulani8hall,in the opinion of my said attorneybe attainable from the United States ofAmerica, then and thereupon, and insuch case to arrange and agree uponsuch pecuniary considerations, bene-fits and advantages as can or may besecured for myself and family and forsaid Kaiulani from the United Statesof America, and whether the sameshall be in the furmof payment atone time or a sum oi money to myselfor of distinct sums of money to my-self and said Kaiulani or in paymentsof stated sums of money annually orof tenor for a fixed terms of years, orfor a fixed period or periods of time.And upon ascertaining thatsuch pecuniary conaideration1,benefits, advantages or paymentsof money from jtud onthe part of the said United states canbe secured, to agree npon, reLfive andaccept the same and in ray ii.nc andbehalf to make, execute nnd deliversuch agreements, releases and quit-tances of all my claim, demand.--" and ispretensions whatever Uon the ti rone allof the Hawaiian Island- - nnd upon theGovernment of the United States ofAmerica as well as of the HawaiianIslands, and-po- n nil persons havinghad anything to do with, or havingbeen, or being in any way concerned

the said Provisional government,shall be requisite to accomplish

&j2.

and secure such pecuniary consideratious, benefits, advantages and pay-ments, or which shall be requiredtherefor by tho president or the secre-tary of the department of state afore-said, or by any other (If any) repre-sentative or official of the UnitedStates authorized to act or agree inthe premises. And all that my saidattorney shall do or cause to be donein tho premises. I do herebv for mv- -seii ana my successors, executors,administrators and assigns ratify andconfirm, and further I do herebvcovenant with my said attorney andhis executors and administrators andwith the President of tho UnitedStatesof America, and with any other personor persons representing the said UnitedStates of America in the premises,and with each of them and with theirrespective successors both lointlv andseverally, that all and whatsoever mysaiu attorney snau in my nenaii agreeor uo, or cause to ne none or agreedupon by virtue of these presents. I willandmysuccessors, heirs, executors and'aamimstrators snail ratify and con-firm, and that I will atany time andtimes thereafter execute, sign, seal,acknowledge and deliver such otherand further releases, acquittances,assurances and instrumentsln writingas shall in tho opinion of my saidattorney, or in the opinion of thoPresident of the United States ofAmerica, or of any officer or repre-sentative thereof having the matter incharge, be requisite and proper inorder to carry out the full intent andmeaning of these presents.

In witness whereof I hereunto, andalso to two other instruments of thesame date and tenor, have set mynana ana seal, at tne city of Honoluluaforesaid, this thirty-fir- st day of Janu-ary, in the year of our Lord one thou-sand eight hundred and ninety-thre- e.

Signed LiirnoKViANl.Signed, sealed and deliverod in the

presence of James W. Eobertson.Hawaiian Islands,

HONOLULU, OAHU.Jfab'On this thirty-firs- t dav of January.

a. D. 1893, personally appeared beforemo Liliuokalani, to me Known to bethe person described in and who exe-cuted the within Instrument, and sheacknowledged to me that she had exe-cuted the same freely and voluntarilyand for the uses and purposes hereinset forth.

Signed A. F. Judd.Chief Justice Supreme Court of the

Hawaiian Islands.Hawaiian Islands.

Honolulu, Oahu. J83"I, the undersicned. do herebv certi

fy that the above and annexed docu-ment Js a true copy of the originalPower of Attorney from Liliuokalanito Paul Neumann, Esq., pages 1 to 12,inclusive, and of the acknowledgmentthereto before the Hon. A. F. Judd,Chief Justice of the Supreme Court ofthe Hawaiian Islands, on the 31st dayof --January, A. D. 1893, this day pro-duced before -- me, tho same havingbeen carefully examined by mo andcompared with the said original, andfound to agree therewith word forword, and figure for figure.

In witness whereof, I have set myhand and seal this 25th day of April,A. D. 1893.

Signed Cabmen E. Vida,seal. Notary Public.

m

New Departure.Designs of the lines of the new

British yachts Calluna and Val-kyrie, obtained by some mysteriousmeans for tho "Tew York Herald,"indicate marked departures fromthe conventional model of the trimand sightly cutters that have here-tofore been the chief reliance oliritish yachtsmen in internationalcontests. The Calluna, which isexpected to defeat the Americanyacht Navahoe in English waters,is modeled substantially after ourshallow centre-boar- d sIoop9, withthe addition of a big fin keel ofabout fourteen feet draught. TheValkyrie's lines arc almost clumsyin appearance, owing to the heavyand bulky overhang of the vessel.But the Valkyrie is a racing ma-chine, built expressly to cross theAtlantic and contend for the Amer-ica cup ; and speed, not beauty, hasbeen the first and chief thought ofher designer. A contest in whichthis dangerous craft shall be "beatenwill be a memorable race, indeed.

Philadelphia Record.

U. S. Sugar and Rice Statistics.The Superintendent of Census

has issued the statistics' of sugarand rice production in the UnitedStates, compiled under the super-vision of Special Agent Hyde. Thetotal production of cane sugar inthe year ending May 31, 1890, was302,731,895 pounds, vatued at $12,-829,8- 24

on the plantation. Thetotal production of merchantablecahe molasses was 25,398,954 gal-lons, valued at $8,070,575. Thetotal production of rice was 130,--UrJ,l3 pounds, valued at $3,951,-11- 9

; 96.5 per cent, of the sugarand 58.G per cent, of the rice wereproduced in the State of Louisiana.

Very True.The demand for Chamberlain's

Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedysteadily growing from the fact that

who give it a trial are pleasedwith the results and recommend it totheir neighbors. We feel sure thatthe lemedy cannot be recommendedtoo highly. Wagley Smead, Drug-gists, Newton, Iowa: For sale by allmedicine dealers.

Benson, Smith & Co.,Agents for H. I. J

A NATIVE FEAST.

ROAST PIG AND 0THEK DELICA-

CIES GALORE.

now the Slasonlr le atertalne-The- lr

Guest at Kallhl.

The ladies composing the MasonicTemple furnishing committeeproved last week that they do not?do things by halves, and the luauwhich was given at Kalihi yester-day waa no exception to the role.The affair was given more as acompliment to the peoplo who at-

tended their series of lunches, andnot as a money getting device. Butnevertheless it turned out a moneymaker, as the receipts amounted to$379.75, with additional outstand-ing moneys to be collected.

The luau in all other respectswas a big success also. Everythingwas arranged so well and everybodypresent agreed that a better Ha-waiian feast could not be prepared.The food, as is usual in such en-

tertainments, was cooked under-ground by natives, and the tablesfairly groaned under the weight ofthe many dishes. Shortly afternoon the guests took their seats atthe tables, and for nearly an hourabout 350 people were kept busilyengaged in feasting. At the secondtable about 150 more guests weresupplied with all their hearts andappetites could wish for.

While the luau was in nrocrreaathe Hawaiian band played at intervals, and a portion of the suc-cess of the day is attributed toProfessor Berger and his' hiredmen.

The young ladies who had chargeof tho flower booth were very at-

tentive to their duties, and theirmotto seemed tobc "let no oneescape." They succeeded admir-ably. They took in $68.50 duringthe day.

After the feasting was throughwith dancing was in order, and atan intermission an auction saletook place which netted ?GS.50.The principal articles disposed ofwere an oil painting of DiamondHead and a wooden hatchet. Thehatchet was made entirely of na-tive woods and it was donated byMr. Jay Greene.

The whole affair was enjoyableand great credit is due to the exe-cutive committee Mrs. J. A. Has-singe- r,

Mrs. J. S. McGrew, Mrs. A.Fuller, Mrs. E. D. Tenney, Mrs. A.Brown, Mrs. M. N. Sanders, Mrs. J.H. Soper, Mrs. Chas. Williams.Mis3 Finkler, Miss D. Noonan.Mrs.T. Sorenson and Mrs. Dr. Wood.

The Downfall of a Tyrant. .A while since a telegram an-

nounced that the Khan of Khelat,being displeased with certain ofbis ministers 'and wives, had hadtheir beadB chopped off. The re-

cord of this wretch, who has beendrawing an annual salary of 125,000rupees from the British Govern-ment, proves to be a3 follows :

Has lately murdered 65 persons.Killed 4 wives.Burnt one alive.Murdered 3000 people.Therefore ho is declared to be

deposed. Calcutta cablegram inthe London Chronicle.

A Freak of the Missouri River.A South Dakota court is trying

a liquor case which involves thequestion of the State boundaryline. The channel of the Missouririver has shifted since the line waasurveyed and the defendant de-

clares that his saloon is situatedon a strip of ground that is notwithin the jurisdiction of eitherState. He i3 between the Scyllaqf prohibition in one State and theCharydi3 of high license in theother.

The number of gas and electriclamps required to illuminate NewYork after nightfall is 23,000. Thestreets lighted arc 523 miles inlength; the parks lighted covarsixty-si- x acres, and the piers twomiles. The whole cost of keepingthe city lighted is $800,000 a year.The city pays on the average

18 n. vnjir for the 2s furnished toeach lamppost.

Page 2: fl c ''y XXVIILNo. HONOLULU, TUESDAYS JUNE No....tf"Corrcapondencolntended lor publication, thellawa-lla-n Gazette, Post Office Box. O. " KB" Correspondence rclatlne to Advertise-ments,

iaioauuiiSazettt

12-PAG- E EDITION.

TUESDAY. JUNE A3. 1893

THE BOARD OF HEALTH.

The excellent work already in

augurated by the new board of

health is most praisewortny. inepresent board has probably done

more for the unfortunate inmates

of the leper settlement than any

preceding hoard in the same length

of time. The full reports of the

board's work, published in this

paper, have done much to attractattention to this department of the

public service.The work thus far actually ac-

complished, however, is but littlecompared with that which is left

to be done, and which, in the

interests of public health and

morality, the board iB preparing

to undertake as coon as possible.

The segregation of lepers is the

wi6e and humane policy which the

board will undoubtedly carry out

in a kind yet firm manner. Un-

fortunately this matter has not

been attended to as it should have

been by previous boards, but there

is no good reason for delaying itlonger.

The successful establishment of

a vaccine farm, and the determina-

tion to carry out the law of vaccina-

tion to the letter, will also receive

the hearty endorsement and ap-

plause of the public. It is to be

hoped that in carrying out further

reforms, the board will not find its

means too limited to secure good

practical results.

THE ACT.

Liliuokalani and Hon. Paul Neu-

mann builded better than they

knew for the cause of good govern-

ment in Hawaii, when they con-

spired to state the facts to theUnited States Government in thehope of reaping a golden harvestfor the benefit of the ex-roy- al fam-

ily. The document in question,published elsewhere, is the onlystatement of facts made from theroyalist side that will hold water.

At the end of two weeks afterthe seventeenth of last January theex-que- en hastened to ask the Uni-

ted States to recompense her withgold coin for the claim she hadalready released upon the throneof Hawaii. Her acknowledgmentof that release is couched in thefollowing words in the power ofattorney itself: " On the seven-

teenth day of January, A. D. 1S93,at the city of Honolulu, aforesaid,I did yield to the Provisional gov-

ernment of the Hawaiian Islandsmy authority as sovereign of theHawaiian Islands, under protest."

This document places the ex-que- en

in a pitiable position beforeth'e native peoplo.and the royalistsin an absurd one before the generalpublic. Since the arrival of Min-

ister Blount, the royalists have re-

peatedly insisted that the ex-que-

yielded "to the superior force of theUnited States of America." Thisplea has now been completelyknocked from under the royalistcause by her legally acknowledgedunconditional surrender to the Pro-

visional government.Before her former native subjects

she stands in a pitiable attitude,not only as the foolhardy destroyerof the monarchy, but as a mercen-ary ex-rul- willing and anxiousto sell out any hope of a restor-

ation which her native subjectsmight have, by an offer which,if accepted, would fill her pocketswith foreign gold. Not a dollarof this money did she propose todivide with her remaining loyalpartners in the

The document itself needs littlecomment; it is a clear and suc-

cinct statement of facts as far as itgoes, and its intent and purposemay be summed up in the threewords, "cash on delivery."

ON THE VpGE.

The revolution has ushered insome radical changes, and will be

productive of more before its work"

'ijr

JS-??- ip(1JrPl' '

6. rfA I VHMW i -. m p

is finished. The desperate natureof the disease which was threaten-

ing the existence of Hawaiian civil

liberty required the heroic remedy

that has cured it. .The blow which

royalty attempted to strike was

warded off; happily the royalist

knife did not enter deeply andfn;Vd in wnnnd our liberties as

sorely as intended.The conspirator and tyrant are

the worst of statesman. If the firstwere imbued with statecraft he

would not conspire; if the latterwere, the world would be blessed

with constitutional monarchs and

there would be little necessity for

evolving republics from monarch-

ical upheavals. In the littleworld of Hawaii the political con?

ditions of the past two years have

been such that the inevitable con

clusion was soon reached. Thereis no chance for a political relapse,as this would introduce an elementof political instability which would

speedily ct the undesirableand dangerous political drama of

the last five months. Having theaid of experience, its repetitionwould condense the whole into anact, and the act into a simple

scene, upon which the historic

curtain would drop forever. No

question of restoration would thenarise.

Perhaps it is much better for allconcerned, especially for those who

believed in sustaining constitution-

al government until it was mockedat and broken by the n,

that a lack of knowledge of revolu-

tionary measures and their defectshas caused a delay in the perma-

nent establishment of popular gov-

ernment in Hawaii. Br this delay, however, the final result willbe made more sure and undisputed.Those who failed to sustain themonarchy cannot restore it ; and itis futile to hope it can be restoredby outside influence. Such a coursewould prove at once impracticaland dangerous.

It is very certain the UnitedStates will not pursue a policywhich would certainly make Hawaii, within a lew months, tnepivot upon which would turn adispute international in characterand world-wid- e in its effects. Itis our belief the partition of thePacific has already been determined upon by the powers mostly interested, viz.: England and theUnited States.

WISE AND OTHERWISE.

Now let our Hawaiian scientistsprick up their ears. The Smith-

sonian Institute offers four prizesaggregating $13,000 and a medalfor new discoveries "in regard to

the nature or properties of atmo-

spheric air." As a starter one ofour local scientists might win aprize and probably the medal byproving that we have "atmosphericair" in Hawaii that has sustainedlife for the past six months inroyalist hangers-on- , out of a jobor too lazy to work.

The Philadelphia Record plaintsthus If Hawaii is annexed

will have to be paid to theplanters in sugar bounty. The edi-

tor from the "leather-hea- d state"then adds "This is the size oftheir planters' stake in the ques-

tion of annexation. But as thesugar bounties are likely to be re-

pealed by the next congress thestake is rather precarious." Is itpossible the Record has been pin-

ing faith to Claus Spreckels' sillyprattle about his representing theHawaiian planters and the annexa-

tion movement?

In Mexico they are about to takea new departure in treating theduelling question. The fiery"greaser," it seems, cannot be re-

strained from fighting duels at safelong range in the land of the cac-

tus. The legislature therefore pro-

poses to sanction duelling by law,but will also prescribe such weap-

ons and distance as will ensure thedeath of one or both of the com-

batants. A man will think twice,and long enough to get over hismad, before he sends a challengehereafter in Mexico, if the lawpasses.

The letter on the labor question

I

. .,,, Mvi v . i tfsiiAY. JUNE- " -, . j

:

:

which Mr. Spreckels wished the

planters to sign, to be presented to

Minister Blount, reminds one of thestatement of the case made by

southern planters "long before de

wa'," when it was alleged that free

labor meant ruination to the sugarHnduBtry. The southern planters

have learned since then that free

iabor does not necessarily meanunprofitable plantations. The Ha-

waiian planters have kept pacewith those of the south, and when

Mr. Spreckels shall have had moreactual and personal experiencewith modern labor methods, hewill be in a better position to ad-

vise the sugar interests of Hawaii.Cheap labor is not the chiefestactor in sugar raising. Stable gov

ernment with a sound financialbasis back of it, cuts some figure.

The amenities of party journal-

ism in the United States have beenlately exemplified by some of therepublican newspapers claimingthat in refusing to allow office

seekers to call on him, PresidentCleveland has practically cut theacquaintance of the Tank and file

of the democracy. The republicanpapers suppress the fact that Mr.

Cleveland has not gone back on

the "great unwashed," but hasmerely turned them over, impor-

tunities and persistency, to hisdemocratic heads of departments.

It is said that Ouida has deter-mined to put Gladstone into hernext novel as a villian. So itseems the "grand old man" is to be

forced into bad company in spiteof his good record and his grayhead. Naughty Ouida! Put inone of your own heroes instead andyou will make a literary tenstrike.

Henry George is still sanguineof his cause, even though the publichas almost ceased reading hisbooks. At a recent " single tax "dinner in an Eastern city, Mr.George, on the subject of ."Thework of the future," said: "Let usnot underrate it. We have first tocapture the democratic party ; tofire out the sugar-coate- d protec-

tionists ; to bring into it men likeJerry Simpson and our friends inthe republican ranks. We havethen to elect a president, a con-

gress and the courts." Well,Henry, you are a sort of a sanguinepolitical economist and no mis-

take.

In another column will be founda synopsis of the first conventionof the leaders of the republicanparty of the United States sincetheir defeat in November last. Itwas held in Louisville, Jventucky,and appears to have been an im-

mense and very enthusiastic gather-ing. President Clarkson of theNational League delivered theopening address, which was length'but intensely interesting. We canfind space for a few only of its para-graphs, in one of which he alludesto Hawaii, and arraigns PresidentCleveland for hauling down theAmerican flag which "gallant BenHarrison ran up in the name ofliberty in the Sandwich islands."If Mr. Clarkson will only wait alew months he may find that Presi-dent Cleveland has decided to "runit up" again, and thus take to him-

self and the democrats a little ofthe glory which Clarkson claimsfor his defeated party.

Perhaps greater caution shouldbe taken in tropical countries thanelsewhere in dealing with sanita-tion. For the past ten years ormore Honolulu has been luckyrather than cleanly. xs the newboard of health is institutingnumerous greatly needed reformsin sanitary matters, it will not beimproper to suggest that the hoardestablish a system of house-to-hou- se

inspection, such as is madein many of the large cities of theUnited .Stales and elsewhere. Theresult would be to abate hundredsof private nuisances, which peoplenow put up with rather than com-

plain. .Under proper regulationsfrom the board it would also eradi-cate some public nuisances whichit seems now impossible to abate,even with the alleged aid of thelaw.

yr

13 iy3.

Politics in Germany is. in asomewhat chaotic state at present.

The rupture over the army bill has

caused political parties to break up

into factions throughout the em-

pire. Even the conservative rankshave been affected. Politics in

Germany, however, is pretty muchlike politics elsewhere, and thereis little doubt that at the cominggeneral elections the factions willfuse, and there will be but two par-

ties represented one for and oneagainst the government militarypolicy.

Situation in Hawaii.A suggestive insight of political

affairs in the Hawaiian Islands isgiven in a recent letter from amember of the Hawaiian Commis-sion which negotiated the late an-

nexation treaty with this countryto a personal friend here. Hewrites under date of Honolulu,April 26, as follows :

" Spreckels came down here, andis here now to break up annexa-tion so he declfires. He calledon Mr. Blount on, Monday, and, sowe hear, declared his opposition toannexation unless the contractlabor system is protected. Of courseMr. Blount was just as ' mum ' withhim as with everyone else. Hethen declared that he waB opposedto annexation wants some sort ofrepublican form of governmentthere, with a United States protec-torate, etc. Mr. Blount asked himto put his desire in writing and hewould forward it to Washington.Mr. Spreckels, that evening, withthe assistance of two planters, at-

tempted to put his ideas in shape,and the next day (20th) had ameeting with the most prominentplanters and business men. Herather demanded that they shouldall sign his letter or statement toMr. Blount. Me was quietly op-

posed, and became very angrWhile gentlemen tried to speak,explaining their ideas that safeand responsible government wasfar more important now than con-

tract labor, he interrupted themangrily. He finally told them :

"'You shan't get annexation. I'llblock it ! You will never get intothe United States.'

"He is now trying to break upthe growing annexation sentiment.He is determined to succeed;boasts that his money will do it inWashington, and that he will getwhat he wants.

"In view of the statement thatMr. Cleveland entered the WhiteHouse with an ugly suspicion thatthe wnole annexation movementwas a move on the part of the trustto get in, I think theec facts arevery significant. Wo are feelingrather depressed, for he may beable to accomplish his purpose, andif we are delivered over to the tender mercies of a Spreckels oligar-chy protected by the United Stateswe shall soon have the floodgatesopened to the ignorant hordes ofAsia ; all or many white mechanicsand laborers will-b- e forced to leave,and much else of that nature.With annexation such a state ofaffairs is not possible.

"Mr. Blount is doing good work.He is a man of excellent judgment,perfectly fair, and no doubt by thistime thoroughly appreciates thesituation, and everything ho learnsredounds to the credit of the revo-lution and the party of annexation.The Provisional government growsstronger every day. More andmore of the native Hawaiians wheelinto ljne and favor annexation,,convinced that that, and that only,can ultimately benefit Hawaii. Ibelieve that Mr. Blount sees thatannexation and not a protectorateis the true policy." fNew YorkTribune.

m

The Record.Of all the human beings, .the

members of the Democratic partyin the United States should havebeen the last to spoil the annexa-tion of the Sandwich Islands.

The greatest record the Demo-cracy have made in this countryhas been by annexation. Theycertainly did not fight off Floridawhen it became, by natural attrac-tion, a part of this nation. If thiscountry has been Mugwumpedthen, as now, the Spaniards wouldhave held Florida as thev holdCuba.

There was a flurry of oppositionto the purchase of Alaska, but thatact was itself enough to confer last-ing fame upon an Administration.William H. Seward and CharlesSumner never showed higherstatesmanship than in the trans-action. The seal fishery was aloneworth more than we paid for theeast corner of the Continent andthe islands stretching across manydegrees of longitude into the Asia-tic seas.

The Whig party was smashedbeeuuseit had not the sagacity togo for the annexation of Texas andthe conquest of Mexico, with Jheannexation of Lower Pacific Statesand all the magnificently endowedcountry between Texas and Califor-

nia. Standard Union.

CONVENTION.

National League of RepublicanCluhs at Louisville, Kentucky.

Louisville, May 10. Undismayedby the ront of a few months ago whentheir political adversaries, for thefirst time in nearly three decades,secured control of nearly everybranch of the government, bat fall ofenthusiasm and hope for the future,the representatives of the young re-

publicans of the United States as-

sembled in annual convention inMacanley's theater today.

It was a pretty sight that greetedthe advance gnard of delegates to theleague of republican clubs when thedoors were opened. The platformhad been banked with the choicest ofgrowing flowers, palms and exotics,which shed their fragrance throughthe spacious auditorium. Before thechairman's table rested a mammothshield, supported on either side withsilken Hugs. Stretched across thoparquet from the procemum boxeswas a silver filigree transparencybearing the names of all tho statesand territories of the union. Fromgallery to floor the pillars weretwined with tricolored bunting, andthousands of miniature flags encir-cled the balconies, suspended fromtho chandeliers, and formed an arch-way through the long corridor andont to the sidewalk.

Over this there fluttered an im-mense "Old Glory."

The convention was opened withprayer by Rev. Dr. J. H. Hey wood ofthe Unitarian church. Mayor Tylerof Louisville, who wu3 heartilycheered, delivered tho address of wel-

come in behalf of the city. He saidhe was glad as the democratic mayorof a democratic city to greet so largeand influential a gathering of their;republican brethren, and the city ofLouisville would do its utmost togive them a genuine Kentucky wel-come.

PRESIDENT CLARKSOX'S ADDRESS.

As he advanced to the footlightstho delegates rose to a man andcheered again aud again. Twice hoessayed to begin his annual addressand as many rimes the applauseforced him to stop.

Quiet at last restored, PresidentClarkson spoke as follows:

"We meet here today in the nameof tho republicanism of Abrahm Lin-coln, Ulysses S. Grant and James G.Blaine. This is the republicanismwhose eternal word is human liberty.It is a republicanism that respectsitself, loves the lepublic and its fel-

low men, never hauls down theAmerican flag, reveres God, hate:;treason and tyranny, and despisesingratitude either in political partiesor in nations. It is a fight of repubilieanism, and all the world loves a J

man or a party that believes enoughin its own ca.ise to hgnt tor it.

"A majority of the voters of thoUnited States are republicans on thereal republican issues. The manyvoters have been .alienated amongBtrong elements by what might becalled the intolerance of morality,

LLot as make the platform bo broadthat any man, native or foreign born,any man of any church, or of any

may find a placo and nwelcome in our ranks.

"The democratic party, that saw inthe republican policies only robberyof the American people, has nowbeen in power two months and therobbery still goes on by democraticcousent and under, democratic au-spices. Wo have had a democraticPresident and a democratic Congresssixty days and there are some results.

ICloveland has done several things.Ho has hauled down the flag wheregallant Bon Harrison and tho repub-licans ran it up in the name of liber-ty on tho Sandwich Islands.

"On all tho cardinal issues of re-publicanism tho rights of men, pro-tection to American workingmen andAmerican interests, reciprocity with

nations, good andsufficient money and safo banking.op-positio- n

to monopolies and trusts,ju3tand sympathetic care of the Unionsoldiers, nnd tho rovival of the Americon merchant marine on all the seas,practical civil service reform, the re-striction of vicious pauper and con-tract immigration, the Monroe doc-trip- e

and the Nicaragua canal, thespirit of Americanism and respect forthe American flog everywhere, as announced at Minneapolis, wo standfor yet. Applause.

NEW DEPARTURES PBOP03ED.

President Clarkson continued atextreme length to refer to "nowgrounds and new departures" inwhich the republican party mightsafely lead.

Among these he enumerated a oneterm presidency, a new plan of civilservice reform, the election of UnitedStates senators by direct vote of thopeople, governmental control of tele-graph, courts of arbitration and con-ciliation for the settlement of labordisputes, improved roads, and equalpolitical rights for women. All thesesuggestions were Joudly applauded.

He concluded an address, whichhad occupied over one hour in delivery, with this exodium: "The cen-sus of 1890 showed that there was anincrease in the previous ten years of4,000,000 in the number of nien ofvoting age, or 400,000 new votersevery year. This will give 16,000,000voters in the election of 189G. A ma-jority of these men will believe inrepublican principles.

"Let ns make a door so open andbo wide that every voter may comein. Let us strike down and repudiateany such aristocracy or prejudice ofaction aa was shown in the course ofa social political clnb in thn 1nrrr.tcity of the country a few weeks ago

o --- .3uu m a opiuuuia

young American because of race orreligious prejudice.

"Makethe gates of the rppnblicanparty wide enough for republicanvictory."

ANNUAL TEA PARTY.

The Indies of Central UnionChurcli Entertain Friends.

The annual tea 'party given bythe ladies of the Central UnionChurch took place Thursday. Alarge number of guests were presentincluding the pastors of tho Hawai-ian Evangelical Association andtheir families.

The church parlors were converted into a cafe and small tableswere neatly arranged at which theguests sat to sip their tea and eatthe delicious cake which was fur-nished by the ladies. A bevy ofyoung ladies were tireless in theirattention to the wants of the peo-

ple present which made everybodyfeel at homo. After tea was servedtime was enjoyably spent in socialconverse.

ALL KINDS OF MONEY.

The Great Success of the MasonicLunch Serifs.

Sale of flowers $ 35 60Fancy table .. 27 00Table 106 30

Total $163 90Previous receipts 633 15

Grand total ;. $802 05

The last day of the masoniclunch was a hummer. The receiptsamounted to $168.90, and the ladieswere correspondingly happy. Aswill be seen by the foregoing tableof receipts, over .tight hundreddollars has been taken in duringthe series.

THREE NEW WARSHIPS.

The Navy Department Soon to In-

vite Construction Bids.Washington, D.' C, May 19.

The Navy Department wilr soonissue advertisements inviting pro-pos'a- ls

for the construction of threenew ships, authorized by the lastcongress. The plans propose ves-sels of about,1200 tons displace-ment, or about half as large againas the practice ship Bancroft, andnot so big as the gunboats York-tow-n

and Bennington. All threenraft nrfi lntnndprl fnr survicB phipf.ly in Chinese waters, where, on ac- -count of their light draft, one, atleast, will be able to ascend well upthe rivers. All three are to bo twinscrews, with triple expansion en-

gines, and the latest improvementsin machinery.

New York to Have the HighestBaildlng in the World.

New York, May 13. Founda-tions for the highest office buildingin the world are being laid onBroadway for the Manhattan LifeInsurance Company. The giantstructure will be 242 feet to themain roof and above that will risea tower 105 feet high, making atotal distance from sidewalk toflagstaff foot 347 feet. The founda-tions for the skyscraper will belaid CO feet below tho street inhuge steel caissons, which will bosunk to bedrock. The buildingwill contain 10 stories on theBroadway front and 17 on Newstreet.

O I theAgosiyOf Those who Suffer from

ScrofulaUood'M Sarsaparllla Purifies,

Soothes, Heals, CVRES.

Hr. T. V. JohnsonSan Joss, Cat.

"IhaTe for many years been a great suffererfrom scrofula breaking out on sny anasand legs; they were coreied with eruption andtores, discharging all the time. 1 tiled TKTTmany medicines and consulted physicians farand near, but constantly grew none. Ihate taken but three bottles of Hood's Sarsspa- -

Hood's Si Curesrula for rheumatism, and has derived to mueabenefit from It that she declares there b noother medicine on earth. We would not bewuhont It In the house U it costs :o a bottle."T. Vjl&lzt JomruKT, Saa Jose, CaL

N.B. Be sore to get Hood's flanaparma.

Hosd's Pills act easily, jet promptly isdeOcientiy, on the llrer and bowels. 26c

HOBRON. N'KWMAN & CO3336 Wholesale Agists.

Page 3: fl c ''y XXVIILNo. HONOLULU, TUESDAYS JUNE No....tf"Corrcapondencolntended lor publication, thellawa-lla-n Gazette, Post Office Box. O. " KB" Correspondence rclatlne to Advertise-ments,

kv

I

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ft

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BYAUTfiOKITY

Sale of Government Lands inHilo, 3uwaii.

On TUESDAY, July 11th, 1893, at 12

o'clock noon, at the front entrance of

Aliiolani ilale will be sold at PublicAuction, the following remnants of theGovernment Lands in Hilo, Hawaii:

1 Aleamai, containing an area of 79.7

acres. Upset price $150.2 Aleatnai, containing an area of 18.8

acres. TJpjet price $94.3 Alakahiand Mokuoniki, containing

an area of 571 acres. Upset price $500.

J. A. K NG,JEnister of the Interior.

Interior Office, June 9th, 1S93.

3403 14S3-- 3t

D. H. HITCHCOCK, Esq., has thisday been appointed Notary Public for theFourth Judicial Circuit of the HawaiianIslands.

J. A. KING,Jlinister of the Interior.,

Interior Office, June 9, 1S93.

34031483--3t

Executive Building,Honolulu, June 5, 1893.)

Notice is hereby given that his Excel-

lency WILLIAM 0. SMITH has beenappointed a Commissioner of Crown

Lands of the Hawaiian Islands, vice

Mr. Tueo. C. Porter, resigned.The Board now consists of .T. A. King,

William O. Smith and 0. P. laukea.3400-3- t 1483-- 1 1

Provisional Government of the")Hawaiian Islands. "i

Council Chamber, j

Honolulu, June S, 1893. j

J. P. MEND0NCA, Esq., has beenelected a member of the Advisory Coun-

cil of the Provisional Government, in

place of S. M. Damon, Esq., resigned.C. T. ROGERS,

Secretary Executive and Advisory' Councils. 3402 1483-l- t

The following persons have this day

been appointed Inspectors of Animalsfor the ports' of Mahukona, Kawaihae

and Honoipu:JOHN S. SMITHIES,E. P. LOW,

J. MAGUIRE.J. A. KING,

Minister of the Interior.Interior Department, June 8, 1893.

3402 1483-3- t

TENDERS POR PAIAI.

Offick of the Board of Health,Honolulu, June 7, 1893.J

Tenders for supplying the Leper Set-

tlement, Kalawao and Kalaupapa, Molo-k- ai

with PAIAI in quantities ordered bythe Superintendent, to average from 500

to 1000 bundles per week, will be receiv-

ed at this office until 12 o'clock noon,July 12, 1S93.

The PAIAI to be delivered at the Ka-

laupapa landing, to weigh twenty-on- e

(21) pounds net, properly wrapped in kileaves, and to be delivered once a week

for a period of two (2) years from tbejMtbday of August, 1893.

The contractor must file a bond withapproved sureties in the sum of not less

than $1000 conditioned for the faithfulperformance of the contract.

All bids ebould be marked "Tender for

Paiai."The Board does not bind itself to accept

the lowest or any bid.By order of the Board of Health.

WILLIAM 0. SMITH,3401-3-t 14S3 2t President.

m

TENDERS POR BEEF CATTLE.

Office of the Board of Health, )

j Honolulu, June 7, 1893.)

Tenders will be received at this office

until WEDNESDAY, June 28, at 12

o'clock noon, for supplying the LeperSettlement on Molokai with (1) GOOD

BEEF CATTLE, to weigh not less than350 lbs. when dressed, and (2) FATBEEF CATTLE to be delivered at theLeper Settlement in good condition at anaverage of 90 heads per month, more orless, for the period of six (6) monthsfrom July 1st to December 31st, 1893.

The tender for EAT BEEF CATTLEmust be for the price per pound dressed,that for GOOD BEEF CATTLE perhead. Hides and tallow to be the pro-

perty of the Board.Bids should be marked "Tender for

Supplying the Leper Settlement withBeef." The Board will elect which ten-

der to accept, and does not bind itself toaccept the lowest or any bid.

By order of the Board of Health."VYLLLIAM O. SMITH,

3401-- 3t 1483-3-t President.t

TENDERS FOR SUPPLIES.

Office of the Boabd of Health, )

Honolulu, June 7, 1893.)

Sealed Tenders will be received at thisftice until noon WEDNESDAY, June 14,

1893, for supplying the Board with the fol-

lowing articles for the use at the LeperSettlement, Molokai, from July 1st to De-

cember 3lst, 1893.

Bids may be made for all oranyof thearticles, to he delivered as ordered byAgents of the Board, f. o. b. islandsteamers.

All bids must be plainly endorsed "Ten-

der for Molokai Leper SettlementSupplies."

BCILDU.G MATERIAL.

Rough Northwest Lumber, up to 35 Mfeet, per M.

Tongued and Grooved, Northwest, upto 20 M feet, per M.

Redwood SrhiDgles, up to 160 M, perM.Redwood Surfaced, up to 3 M feet, per M.Redwood Battens, )s'x3, up to 400 feet,

per foot.Redwood Fence Posts, up to 2 M, each.Doors, 2x0x6, li, each.Sashes, 10x12 and 10x14, per pair.Iron Cut Nails, up to 50 kegs aOd basis),

per keg.Hubbuck's Boiled Oil, up to 150 gallons,

per gallon.Turpentine, up to 50 gallons, per gallon.White Lead, Hubbnck's, up to 3 M

pounds, per pound.Cement, up to 100 barrels, per barrel.Lime, up to 100 barrels, per barrel.Galvanized Iron Pipe, J, ? and 1

inch, per foot.Galvanized Iron Roofing, per pound.Washers and Screws for same, per pound.

PROVISIONS AND SUPPLIES.

Rice No. 1, up to 400 sacks.Medium Bread (good quality samples to

be furnished), up to 600 cases.Best quality Flour, J sacks, up to 800

sacks.Sugar No. 1, raw, up to 140 bags.Salmon, best red, up to 90 barrels.Brown Soap, bars, up to 200

boxes (100-poun- d boxes), per box.Matches, card, up to 250 gross, per gross.Salt, coarse, up to 250 bass, per ton.Kerosene Oil, up to 200 cases, per case.Coal, per ton.

Also, tender for supplying the Boardof Health for the same period namedabove, with the following articles, to bodeliverd at the Board of Health Stables,near corner of South and Queen streets:

Baled Hay, Up to 100 bales'.Bran, up to 100 bags.Oats, up to 100 bags.

The tender must be for weight deliver-ed at the stables.

The Board of Health does not binditself to accept the lowest or any bid.

By order of the Board of Health.WILLIAM O. SMJTH,

3401-- 3t 1483-2- 1 President.

Schoolhouse and. Teacher's Cot-tug- -a

for Kilxuea, Kauai.Tenders will be received at the Office

of the Board of Education, until WED-NESDAY", the 21st of June next, at 12o'clock noon, for the construction, in-

cluding material, painting, freight, etc.,of a Schoolhouse '26x48x12 feet clear,and a Cottage 36x12x12 feet with verandaand veranda rooms, at the place abovenamed.

Cartage of the material from the Ki-lau- ea

landing to the school site, will befree to the contractors.

Plans and specifications for the work,can be seen at the Office of the Board ofEducation, and at Mr. G. B. Ewart's,Kilauea, Kauai. .

These buildings, will be similar tothose recently erected by the Board ofEducation at Hanamanlu, Kauai.

The Board does not bind itself to ac-

cept the lowest or any tender.W. JAS. SMITH,

Secretary.Office of the Board of Education, May

31st, 1893. 1482 3395 3t- -

NOTICE.

Notice is hereby given, that in accor-

dance with the joint action of theExecutive and Advisory Councils of theProvisional Government of the HawaiianIslands, the President has this dayappointed and commissioned

SAMUEL MILLS DAMON, Esq.,to administer the Department of Financeof the Provisional Government of theHawaiian Mands,in the place of TheodoreCunningham Porter, Esq., resigned.

Government House, Honolulu, H. I.,May 29, 1893. 3395-3- t 1482-2- t

Sale of Government Lots, Es-planade, Honolulu, Oahu.

On WEDNESDAY, June 14th, 1893, at12 o'clock noon, at the front entranceof Aliiolani Hale, will be sold at publicauction, Lots Nos. 70 and 71, Esplanade,Honolulu, Oahu, containing an area of

10,000 square feet, a little more or less.Upset price $2,000 for each lot.

J. A. KING,Minister of the Interior.

Interior Office, May 16th, 1893.3382-4- t 1480-3-t

Notice to Owners of Brands.

All Brands must, by law, beprior to Jnly lst,lB93, or they will be for-

feited, and can thereafter be appropriatedby anyone.

Registration on Oahu shall be made atthe Interior Office.

On the other Islands it shall be done atthe Office of the several Sheriffs.

G. N. WILCOX,Minister of the Interior.

Interior Office, Dec. 2, 1802. 1456-t- f

J. M. KAPAHD, Esq., has this day beenappointed an Agent to Grant MarriageLicenses for the Island of Niihan.

J. A. KING,Minister of the Interior.

Interior Office, May 27, 1893. 1481-- 3

Mr. WILLIAM McWAYNE has thisday been appointed Assistant Luna totake up eslrays on all the GovernmentRoads and Lands" from Kamoiliili andDiamond Head, to and along Punchbowl

HAWAIIAN GAZETTis, TUESDAY, JUNE i3, 1893.

Street to Nnuann Street, Honolulu,Oahu.

.1. A. KING,Minister of the Interior.

ii.leiiorOffice. June 1, 1S93.

3397 14S2-3- t

C. H. BROAD, Esq.. has this day beenappointed n. member of the Board of In-

spector of Animals for. the Port of Knhnlni,Island of Maui, vice W. P. A. Brewer, re--sifi d. The Board cow consists as follows

W. Marshall, Executive Inspector.S. F. Chillincsworth, C. H. Broad.

J. A. KING,Minister of the Interior.

Interior Office, May 20, 1893. H82-- S

KDFDS A. LYMAN, Sr. Esq., has this daybeen appointed a member of the Road Boardfor the Tazation District of Puna, Hawaii,for the unexpired term made vacant by theresignation of B. A. Lyman, Jr.

J. A. KING,Minister of the Interior.

Interior Office, May" 29, 1693. 1482 3

ECHOES FROM THE BUSY HILLf

AND THE WORKSHOP.

News and HappenlDgs uf Special Inter-

est in the Various Fields Wherethe 3Iechan!c and Artisan

Hold Sway Nightand Hay.

Siam has one railway.An electric stove is a success.Boston had 763 fires last year.Idaho boasts a petrified forest.A Japanese god is 60 feet high.Virginia has a negro lady doctor.South Africans use Pullman cars.Londoners eat Australian butter.High license at St. Paul is $1000.Marseilles is the .human hair mart.Sedan chairs are made in London.London talks of a tricycle railroad.Savannah reports a flying machine.The artificial 'gem industry is thriv-

ing.Reindeer meat is canned in Nor-

way.Australia has made its first locomo-

tive.Von Moltke's baton is worth $150,-00- 0.

London buys Australian rabbitskins.

London is to have an 1150 foottower.

Phoenix, Ariz., reports the richestmine.

The Mersey handled 21.GS7 shipsin '92.

In Prance women act as stationagents.

Electricity is displacing hydraulicpower.

A ton of diamonds is worth $35,-000,0-

China manufacture is the oldest in-dustry.

Forests employ 200,000 families inGermany.

Brooklyn has an 116 foot belt 6feet wide.

World's Fair guides charge 50 centsan hour.

A Frenchman makes diamonds byelectricity.

Newcastle, Wyo., has a mineralsoap mine.

St. Petersburg will have a $14,000,-00- 0bridge.

A Venezuelan gold mine has yielded$33,000,000.

Chicago exhibits a 30,000 poundblock of salt.

American savings banks contain$1,654,000,000.

The Greenland whale has a heart ayard in diameter.

Michigan raises 15,000 tons of pep-permint annually.

South Americans get brandy fromwatermelonjuice.

Thirty boilers operate Machinerybuilding, Chicago.

The United Kingdom's annual fishproduction is 324,000 tons.

"West Harrisville, Mich., has a Chi-nese candidate for postmaster.

In New York the average numberof persons to a dwelling is 18J.

A gold coin depreciates 5 per cent,in value in 16 years of constant use.

Gloves with separate fingers wereunknown before the twelfth century.

A Frenchman is experimentingwith a phonograph upon the languageof hens.

A single piece of copper weighingnine tons was once taken from aMichigan mine.

It is estimated that Butte, Mon.,will produce 130,000,000 pounds ofcopper this year.

Cleveland has a larger proportion offoreign - born population than anyother large American city.

Green Meek is a Kentuckian whoruns a newspaper, a hotel, a postofficeand a line of steamboats.

Greek temples erected in honor ofthe superior deities were always un-covered or open to the sky.

Many mediaeval churches were originally constructed to serve, also,when occasion required, as fortresses.

The prohibition town of Portland,Me., uses $76,000 worth of liquor everyyear for "medicinal and mechanicalpurposes."

Statistics are said to show that theintroduction of machinery into manu-factories has decreased themumberofthe unemployed.

A ton of gold is worth $607,790.21;

of pure silver, 537,704.84; a milliondollars in gold weighs 36S5.8 pounds;of silver, 58,829.9 pounds.

More factories for the making ofhandles for implements have Deenestablished in the south during thepast year than in any five previousyears.

A Chicago man has constructed achecker-boar- d in which there are23,070 separate pieces of wood gluedtogether with the finest art. It isvalued at $1000.

The largest cut stones in the worldare in the Temple of the Sun at Baal-be- c.

Many are more than sixty feetlong, twenty feet broad and of un-known depth.

Between the years 18S0 and 1890there were $2,500,000,000 new life in-surance written in this country andbut $1,000,000,000 in the whole BritishEmpire.

San Francisco has one saloon toevery 93 persons, Albany is second onthe list with one to every 110 persons,and New Orleans one to every 121persons.

The largest bell in the world is inthe Kremlin, Moscow. Its height is21 feet, 41 inches; its circumference67 feet, 4 inches, and its weight is esti-mated at 443,772 pounds.

It will scarcely be believed thatwheat is sold in the United Kingdomunder nearly 200 different systems ofweight. There is almost as much di-

versity in regard to barley and oats.A cake of natural crystallized soda,

said to weigh 2840 pounds, taken fromthe Downey salt lakes, near Laramie,will be among Wyoming exhibits atthe World's Fair.

A Paris inventor believes that hecan calm the ocean waves around avessel by spreading over them a thincotton or silk net, made unsubmers-ibl-e

by being dipped in a certainchemical solution.

It is said to cost les3 to send the pro-duct of an acre of wheat from theStates of Dakota to England than itdoes to manure an acre of land inEngland so that it can grow goodwheat.

The largest gothic church in theworld is the Cologne cathedral. Itsfoundation stones were laid in 1248and the edifice was completed in 18S0.

The most expensive fur is the skinof the black fox of Kamschatka.These animals are scarce and bard tokill, and a single skin sells for about$1000.

Some curious things will be seen onthe World's Fair grounds if all thecranks have their way. One goodwoman from Kansas wants to open a"mending bureau" on the grounds.She thinks that a great many menmay lose a button or some womentear their gowns.

According to its accredited repre-sentative, the Sole Leather Truststands for not less than $175,000,000 ofcapital, and controls every avenuethrough which tanners derive theirsupplies.

The current year is the centennialof the cotton-gi- n. Eli Whitney in-vented it in 1793. It is said to havedone more toward the making of theSouth than any other one thing ex-cept the cotton.

The railroad constructed byStephenson, south of Liverpool, andopened for traffic in 1832, remained inuse, almost as the great Inventor leftit, until a short time ago, when a newline was constructed.

At the beginning of this year therewere $340,000,000 in gold and $251,400,-00- 0

in silver In the vaults of the Bankof France. It would require 683 carsof a capacity of ten tons each to movethe metals.

Within thirty years the world'sannual product of silver has increasedfrom $40,000, fo about $150,000,000.Thirty years ago the United Statesproduced less than $5,000,000 and to-

day over $60,000,000 a year.

Farmers of Mexico use oxen of onecolor in the morning and of anothercolor in the afternoon. They nave noreason for doing so beyond the factthat their forefathers did It, and theyconclude it must 'be the right thingto do

Thirty-on- e million four hundredand seventy-fiv- e thousand and nine-teen barrels of domestio beer wereconsumed in the United States lastyear about half a barrel for each in-habitant, if it had been equallydivided and all had "drunk fair."

A Prussian official mining experthas made investigations of the coalstrata of the world, and expresses thebelief that the coal deposits of Austria-H-

ungary, France and Belgiumwill be exhausted in five centuries atmost.

Holland has in view the vast project of draining the Zuyder Zee,wnereny it is nopeu to rescue ior cul-tivation a territoryl almost as extensive as the Duchy of Brunswick. Ithas been estimated tnat tins under-taking will cost about $100,000,000.

After Southampton, now Cardiffwill 'try for part of the tiansatlantictrade. Cardiff is coiner to snend S7.- -000,000 to improve her docks and har-bor, build new railway connectionsand generally bid for the American

traffic, which Liverpool hasEassenger up to this time.THe capital invested in the manu

facture of rubber goods throughout theUnited States exceeds 55,000,000.The daily production of rubber boots aud shoes is about15C pairs, or about 44,000,000pairs annually, amounting in value tounward of $20,000,000. The rubberclothing made in the United Statesevery year is valued at about $5,000,- -

000, and mechanical rubber goods arevalued at $15,000,000.

The official valuation of imports tothe United States during March was$92,503,480, an Increase of about 2,- -500,iA0 over a year previous. The aggregate ot exports was fwi,427,9i, adecrease of nearly $18,000,000. Theexcess of imports over exports was$26,075,494, which is the lanrt-- t excessever reported for one montl, whilethe value of merchandise expt rts wassmaller than for any preceding Marchsince Jsss.

Another new cannon has just !eeninvented in Germany, which is ex-pected to revolutionize the artillery ofall Europe. Krupp, it is reported, hasoffered 3.000,000 marks for the exclu-sive right to the invention, and theinventor, Herr Ehrhardt, has refusedthe offer. He proposes to establish aplant of his own for turning out his

guns. It will be the most rapid-firin- g

cannon in the world, so far.A report by the Director of the

Unite! States Mint gives the followIngas the total production of gold byall the mines in the world for the lastthree calendar years:

1890 $113,149,6001691 120,518,8001S92 130,816,600

These figures indicate a steady increasein the production of gold, the gain forthe last year being 8 per cent. Ofthis increase for 1S02, one-fourt- h passnow from the mines of Australasia,and the rest from South Africa. Theproduct of the latter reached the totalof $22,069,578 for last year, which isabout equal to the gold production ofRussia, and makes that region secondonly to the United States and Aus-tralia.

One of the largest and most success-ful blasts on record was recently madein the Palisades, two miles north ofFort Lee ferry, and about oppositeFort Washington, on the HudsonRiver. The blast removed about 1000feet of the face of the cliff", tearing itoff to the depth of 300 feet. The beautyof the blast was that although twotons of dynamite was used, It was soskillfully planned that when the minewas exploded by the electric sparkthe quarrymen stood within 300 feetof the spot without feeling the shockunpleasantly. Ex.

PAINTINGS BY STRONG.

They Are on Exhibition WithoutAny Charge.

The Pacific Hardware Companyhave been receiving some newgoods lately, and a visit to theirattractive store will be both satis-

factory and instructive. WhileMr. Dillingham was in the UnitedStates he selected many usefularticles, and one is a combinationlock to be attached to a closet dooror any other door. They are soldat a ridiculously low price. Anotheruseful Yankee notion is a filter tobe attached to a common faucet.For people who cannot afford topurchase a charcoal filter, of whichthey have many, they certainlycan afford to buy one of these.

They have a fine line of Bradley& Hubbard's lamps with patentburners. These illuminators areconsidered the beat. They havetbem in piano, banquet and hang-ing styles, and the prices are juBtright. If the reader is in want of anew range, this store can satisfyyou in size and price. They havethe Redwood and Universal brands,and both arc the best. If you don'trequire a new and handy lawnrriower at a low figure, you mayneed some good hose and a sprink-ler. If you do, this is the place forsuch necessaries.

A visit to the handsome art roomis free of cost, and the paintingsand works of art are well worth see-

ing. They have several largeby Joseph Strong, the

well-know- n artist, and a numberof water-color- s by Hugo Fisher, theeminent artist. In addition tothose, many other paintings canbe seen. On this floor a large roomhas been set apart for a pictureframe factory. They have a largestock of artistic mouldings, andany taste can be satisfied. At thisstore much more can be seen. Goand visit for yourself.

A Hopeful Forecast.The following paragraphs from a

private letter written by a gentle-man residing in Boston, who hasopportunities to learn the drift ofpublic sentiment in the UnitedStates, convey a hopeful issue forthe great question of annexation,which for the time being is in abey-

ance and will most likely remainso till autumn :

"The question of annexation hasbeen quite strongly discussed hereand the pros and cons have had itearnestly. There are those whocling strenuously to the 'Munroedoctrine,' and say hands off; othersoppose it on account of your hetero-genous population, so illy adaptedto become American citizens andassimulate with our people.

"On the other hand, there aremany who favor annexation as theproper thing forfhe United Statesto do. We need the islands forstrategic purposes, for commercialpurposes, and, not least, to recog-nize the growth of American ideas,as exemplified in your people ask-ing for it, as the product of the in-

fluence of our institutions that haveimpressed themselves on your peo-ple.

"It begins to appear that thepresent administration will be com-mitted to one thing annexation ;and the latest advice3 from Mr.Blount seem to foreshadow such aconclusion. And when that is an1nounced by President Cleveland, Ipredict that all croking will ceaseand a general aclaim will followthe act."

Tourists and others visiting Hilocan find the Daily Advebtiseband Hawaiian Gazette (weekly)on sale at the store of J. A. Mar-tin, Waianuenue street.

jfttro GtthJfrtisrmrnts.

m-- ,

SEVENTH ANNUAL MEETING

OF THE

IDIMWASSOCIilN

Tuesday July 4th, '93.

Official Programme.

Eaces to Commsnce ai 10 A. M. Sbarp.

1st RACE 8PRECKELSVILI1EPURSE, $60.00.

Running Race, J mile dash forHawaiian bred horses.

2nd RACE WAXLUKU'' PURSE,$100.00.

Running Race, j mllo and re--1 peat; free for all.J 3rd RACE HAWAIIAN COM--

MERCIAIi & SUGAR CO.'SPURSE, $100.00.

Trotting and Pacing, 1 mileheats, best 2 in 3 to harness, forHawaiian bred horses.

4th RACE WAIKAPU PURSE,875.00.

Running Race, mile dash, forHawaiian bred horses.

5th RACE KULA PURSE, $50.00.

Running Race, j mile dash, forPonies, 14 hands or under, tocarry 100 pounds.

6th RACE KAHULUI PURSE,$125.00.

RunningRace, 1 mile dash, freefor all.

7th RACE WA1HEE PURSE,$175.00.

Trotting and Pacing, 1 mileheats, best 3 In 5, to harness;free for all. Horses with a re-

cord of 2:30 or better, to carry180 pounds.

8th RACE LAHAINA PURSE,$100.00.

Running Race, 1 mile dash, forHawaiian bred horses.

9th RACE HANA PURSE, $25.Trotting and Pacing, 1 miloheats, best 2 In 3, to harness;for all horses without a record"

of 3:00 or better.10th RACE QUEEN LILIUOKA- -

LANI CUP, PURSE, $150.

Running Race, 11 mile dash,free for all.

11th RACE MULE RACE,PURSE, $40.

Running Race, mile da3h,catch weight, free for all.

12th RACE MANA CUP, PURSE,$125. ,Running Race, 1 mile dash,for Hawaiian bred horses.

13th RACE SWEEPSTAKES,$25 each; Association adds $25.

Double Team Race, Trottingand Pacing, 1 mile heats, best2 In 3, to be, driven by membersof the Association.

All entries close at 12 o'clocknoon on Thursday, June 22d, 1893,at the office of tho Secretary, andall entrance fees are 10 per cent-- ,

unless otherwise specified.

All races to be run or trottedunder the rule3 of the Association,and all horses are expected to startunless drawn by 12 o'clock noonMonday, July 3rd, 1893.

L. BI. VETTLESEN,1482-- 2 Secretary.

ITOHAN,NEAR CUSTOM BOOSE, HONOLULU.

Imported and Dealer in

Japanese Provisions,

Dry Goods,

AND EVERY LINE OF

JAPANESE 3IANUFAGTURE.

Island onieri faithfully fined at reaacsable prleei. in quantities to mt.

P. O. BOX 11B. . Jirr. TEL. 532M73-SI-

Page 4: fl c ''y XXVIILNo. HONOLULU, TUESDAYS JUNE No....tf"Corrcapondencolntended lor publication, thellawa-lla-n Gazette, Post Office Box. O. " KB" Correspondence rclatlne to Advertise-ments,

Ep

"Waumuim iMzete

11-PA- E EDITION.

TCFiiAW JUNE IS IS93

QOESTJOKABI.k METHODS.

Since the arrival of MinisterBlount in Hawaii people have verygenerally respected his position and

the delicacy of his mission. It was

hoped he would be allowed to finish

his work without parading partyjwlitics before him or attemptingto make him a participant in apolitical demonstration. This, how-

ever, has not been the case. Theroyalist leaders have been the firstto Ehow him such public discour-

tesy. That Minister Blount hasbeen forced to rebuke them in hisown defense, by refusing to replyto the substance of the politicalspeeches sprung upon him, onlyshows the greatness of the offense

committed against propriety andthe utter absence of palliationtherefor.

When Minister Blount left hereevery newspaper on the annexationside treated his departure with res-

pect The royalist papers, perhapsbeing posted on Mr. Cornwell'slittle plan, said several thingswhich later events show shouldhave been left unsaid.

It is true that the endeavor togive Minister Blount's visit toMaui a political significance hasfailed. It has failed very much inthe same manner that a similarscheme of the versatile Mr. Corn-we- ll

did to capture Wailuku byimporting the laborers of Waikapuand Spreckelsville. It is also truethat the affront placed upon Min-

ister Blount, as a visiting guest toMaui, should receive public dis-

countenance of all who do not wishto see him placed in an uncomfort-able and questionable positionwhile performing his delicate du-

ties here as an arbitrator in apolitical dispute.

DESERTED.

The exposure of theperfidy fell like a quick, sharpblow upon those of her native sub-

jects who yet retained faitli in herand the monarchy. The result isthe are deserting an unworthycause as rapidly as they learn thetruth. By Saturday night thebulk of the native Hawaiians onOahu had read the document in Hawaiian by which their "beloved

- queen" had attempted to sell outthe rights, title and interest of her"dear people" to the ex-thro- ofHawaii.on the best terms she couldmake for herself and familv. Assoon as the document reaches theother islands "her dear people" willwisely desert their ungrateful ex-rule- r's

cause, as they have onOahu. They will feel that inorder to be true to their own causethey must hereafter shun mon-

archy and its belongings.

And why should the natives befooled longer? They have too longproved true'to a cause overthrownaud deserted by an unworthy ruler.So long as thoy had no open act ofperfidy against themselves to com-ar- e

the perfidy againstforeigners with, they were, Hawai-

ian like, willing to accept herpromises of reform ; but the mo-

ment they read of her open andmercenary treachery to her own

blood, as it were, the bond thathas bound them to the kingly tra-

ditions of the past was broken for-

ever, never to be mended by- - prom-

ises, nor patched up by new schemesof the foreign and half-whit- e poli-

ticians. It will be as vain now for

the ex-que- to attempt to regainthe confidence of her people as itwould be for her to attempt to re-

gain the throne with the consent of

the foreigners resident here.

There is almost pity for the fool-

ish woman who has destroyed the

monarchy by her own suicidal

act and, if report ba true, has been

left almost a bankrupt in a few

short months by the political leech

es who, under the guise ot poli

tical advisers, have drained

fc JiMMMWWnSiBMPW"WB'"qgqg:PMg' " rSteI .:VJ2r:-M,--i-fck'S:rrH-CVBIMBIWEttVlgHWW

her

fxpn

private store almost to the lastcent The ex-que- has probablylearned by this time that the menwho cannot conserve their own for-

tunes are not reliable" cashiers ofthe private puree of an n.

It would not now be a public sur-

prise if the n, as soon asshe finds herself deserted whollyby native Hawaiians, should againturn her appeals to Americans andannexationists for the means where-

with to sustain herself, since herperfidy will leave her friendlessamong her own people, and penni-

less among the crowd of politicalhangers-on- , who have backed hercause for the money they could getout of it.

WISE AND OTHERWISE.

The United States press is latelydemanding that their governmenttake some stand regarding the Hawaiian affair. When that greatand popular political power knownas the American press makes a de-

mand it is generally heeded by theparty administration in power ; ifit is not, something generally dropsin the form of a political snow-

storm at the next general election,and it is likely to snow very deepwhen the issue involves a questionof national policy, like the annex-ation of Hawaii.

In Nicaragua three opposingpolitical parties compromised theirdifferences lately to organize a pro-

visional government, pending agreement on a stable and permanentform, and an armed neutrality,politically speaking, is proposeduntil that end is reached. Thegovernment that three politicalfactions in Central America wouldunite to overthrow must have beenabout as rotten as the Hawaiianmonarch'.

Kansas is certainly an unfortun-ate state. It has just been afflictedwith that terrible political diseaseknown as "hay-seed- ," or the "farm-ers' alliance," and now the execu-

tive committee of the women'sleague threatens it with an "equalsuffrage" campaign a year fromnext fall. In order to get theirhands in, so as to be able to turnthe metaphor of "bleeding Kansas"into a stern reality, the executivecommittee proposes to practice onthe cow boys of Colorado at thestate elections there this fall.

Emperor William is provinghimself a thrifty politician. Hedeclares he will not call in thePrussia a reserves this year, as itwould interfere with their harvest-ing, " and besides," concluded theEmperor significantly, "I do notwish to keep the men from thepolls in June next."

The Xew York Herald is failingto hold its own against the Ha-

waiian news published in its morereliable contemporaries the Worldand Sun. The Eastern newspapersreceived by the last mail show thatMr. Nordhoff is like the man whofell out of the balloon, as far as re-

liable news is concerned.

An appropriate scarf-pi-n for theaverage naoie royalist would ue agilt tabu stick surmounted with anempty calabash.

They have rather a suggestiveway of receiving neutral "mailsteamers in Cenlral America,owing to the .Nicaragua revolution.On their last trips up the steamersCity of Xew York and San Josewere welcomed at Corinto, belowNicaragua, by having a big Kruppgun trained upon them untilsearched by the authorities to seeif they carried revolutionists fromthe border who had a mind toseize their town. It is rumoredthe United States will investigatethis brusque manner of receivingneutral vessels.

We wibh to call attention to thecontents of the Maui letter, pub-

lished elsewhere. It has a peculiarsignificance which will be fully ap-

preciated and, no doubt, as fullyunderstood by all who have watchedHawaiian politics for "a year anda day."

DESDAY. JUNE 13 1893.

YOU SONG ACQUI1TSD 'OF THE

MAL1K0 GULCH MURDER.

.11 tubman Umtirrzlpmeut Can- - Coutln-ne- tl

Cmitt itofi. Etc.

The Juuo term of the circuit courtof the second circuit was begun onWednesday inorning June 7th, Hon.A. N. Kepoikai, circuit judge, pre-

siding, there being present G. K.Wilder, deputy attorney general hasprosecuting attorney or the govern-ment; S. F. Chillingwortb, sheriff ofthe island and the following deputysheriffs, J. C. Long of Wailuku, B.F. Hose of Lanaina, L. A. Andrewsof Makawao and M. H. Renter ofHana. Officers of the court presentwere Henry Smith, clerk of the judiciary department; tiooaaie Arm-strong, clerk of the circuit; W. L.Wilcox, Hawaiian interpreter; LiCheung, Chinese interpreter; J. W.Jones, stenographer, arid D. Naboo- -

Iowa, police officer from Honolulubavine charge of the alleged murderer.

Members of the bar present were:J. A. Magoon. A. Eosa, V. V. Ash-

ford, J. L. Kaulukou. John Richard-son, John W. Kalua and John Kala-ma- ;

also the following magistrates;Win. H. Daniels of Wailuku, Chas.Copp of Makawao and M. Kealohaof Honuaula.

Following is the order of tho casesand disposition of tho same:

Regina vs. Kamaka I w. , liquorbelling, appeal from Wailuku.- - Anolle prosequi was entered on tho10th; Bosa for defendant.

Provisional Government HawaiianIslands vs. Joe Boss, embezzlement.Tried on the 7th by a Hawaiian jurywhich returned an oral verdict of notguilty by direction of the court.Bosa and Richardson for defendant.

Provisional Government HawaiianIslands vs. Kuaokahala k.J, house-breaking. Defendant plead guiltyon the 8th and was sentenced thenext day to 6ix months imprisonmentat hard labor. Richardson for defendant.

Provisional Government HawaiianIslands vs. Puhipuhi w., polygamy.The deputy attorney general declin-ing to present an indictment, tho defendant was discharged on tuOjlUtn;it transpired that dofendant presum-ed that her former husband, n Chi-

nese, has either died or left tho isl-

ands soniu five years ago, hence hersecond marriage. Defendant in per-son.

Provisional Government HawaiianIslands vs. T. S.'Nahinu, suppressionof offenses, appeal from Molokai;nolle prosequi entered on the10th. Kalua for dofendant:

'The appeal of Geo Kalilikane,fonnd guilty of malicious injury bytho district magistrate of Molokai,was withdrawn on tho 7th.

Provisional Government of Ha-waiian Islands vs. You Sung, aliasAh Snng, charged with tho murderof a Japaneso woman at Malikogulch, in August of last year. Thodofendant was tried on tho Sth by aforeign jury, which rendered aunanimous verdict of not guilty.There was no direct evidence as rbthe killing, but the defendant wasseen going towards Haiku by half adozen school children, just after thedeceased had been seon by them alsogoing in the same direction; theevidence was altogether circum-stantial, although there was sometestimony to show a fonl play. Ma-goon for defendant.

Begina vs. Ah See, opium selling,appeal from Hana, heard on tho 9th,jury being waived ; judgment of thelower court affirmed; sentenced topay a fine of $100. Magoon for dafendant.

The appeals of Sam Geo and fourothers for maintaining lotteryscheme, Aiau and Ah Fan for gamb-ling and Aliona for larceny were dismissed for failure to hie notices ofappeal according to a recent rulingof the supreme court.

On the 9th a foreign jury wascalled to try the case ,of the Provisional Government of HawaiianIslands vs. Joao Gomez Jardine, aliasKaula, under a charge of assault withintent to commit rape; failing toagree upon a verdict, the jury wasdischarged after deliberating onehonr and a half. Ashford for defend-ant.

The cath bail (S125) of KiharaYozi, charged with distilling liquor,was declared forfeited for

also $10 deposited byE. Foran, under a charge of assault

Provisional Government of Hawaii-an Islands vs. Sakamoto and Simimon, conspiracy in the second de-gree; tried by a foreign jury on theSth, which rendered an oral verdictof guilty without retiring. Defend-ants had conspired in the arrest andtrial of some other Japanese beforethe district court of Makawao for thealleged larceny of a pig. Defendantshad no counsel, and were each sen-tenced to pay a fine of S200 on the10th.

A nolle prosequi was entered on

j2ii ttKxiiki JL&SU& 1.! --te.teiit,and,j C wt? IH? ' ' rlf, Jfi 'j vJ"PioWw""SWHBE-!-

aSSSBltefflggSisgS

latvaiIAN GAZETTE,

non-appearance;

the 10th in the case of Begina vs.Ahana, charged with gambling.Kichardson for dofendaut.

"William L. ilossman of Makawaowas arrainged on the lOtli under anindictment charging him with embezzlcment, and bis trial was continned nntil the December term ofcourt Ashford for defendant.

Manuel C. Boss was granted a di-

vorce from his wife on tho 7th on &eground of desertion. Bichardson for'plaintiff.

Tho conrt adjourned at 2 p.m. onSaturday until 0:30 aji. on Tuesday,tho 13th, and there are seven morecriminal, eleven civil cases aud twodivorce suits to ba disposed of.

COUBT NOTES.

Judpe Kepoikai overrulod Mr. Magoon's motion that counsel for theprosecution first address the jury inthe murder trial, which procedurewas claimed is the meaning of thopractice act, passed by the last session of the legislature, chapter 5G,laws of 1892.

Judge Austin of Hilo ruled lastJanuary, in the Costa murder trial,that the defendant putting in no evi-

dence, counsel for the prosecutionhad to go to the jury first.

Both Judges Whiting and Cooperof the first circuit have held that nosuch construction can be placed inthe said practico act. Only the supreme court will settle the matter forall time.

The requirement that notices ofappeals from tho district courts tohigher courts should be filed hasawakened soveral members of I thebar; the want of knowledge of sucha change on the part of tho districtmagistrates and appellants is attri-buted to the lateness of sending outthe laws in book form. The Hawai-ian version of the laws of 1892 wasdistributed only a week or ten daysago. Tho lawyers say it should havebeen out four months ago, and claimthat all Jaws should be currentlypublished and printed in book formaud be ready for distribution soonafter the adjournment of the legis-lature.. Sheriff and Mrs. Chillingwortb en-

tertained at dinner Judge Kepoikaiand officers of tho court on Friday.A fino menu was provided by thehosts, and all pronounced the tnrkovand cbiokon stow as. very good, peachpie and tho fruit cake, excellent.

THE MODERN BISHOP,

A Lancashire Lad's Views onChurch Matters.

Mr. Editor : I'm a Lancashirelad horn and bred and I was chris-tened an' confirmed i'th Churcho' England an' I thou't after readin'th' Bishop's letter I'd tell o' howwe sarved a Bishop i'tha owdcountry an' he was a gradely sorto' a chap to ; he was at th' bottom.He did'nt make mischief or be jelus :

but this is 'ow it was : Our parsonwus fond o' flowers an th' womenfolk wus th' same an our chuch o'a Sunday wus like a poey, but so'ommaundering loo' wrote the BiBhop,an' he wrote th' parson for t' stopit, but the women folk wouldn't, soth' Bishop cum himself, and th'church wus dressed wi' flowers,well ; he wus mad for sure, an' hesed we'd bin burnin sense an' wuspriestly-ite- s. I dun no what sort o'sense he inent, but mv owd womansed wee'd got no sense to spare, an'hoo sed th' Bishop did na appearto have too much naythur. How-sumdev-

th' Bishop tow'd th'parson aa how he wus a Pusseyite,an' he'd ha to appere to answerfor it.

Xow th' women folk caw'd ameetin', my owd woman i' th'cneer, an' resolved they wusn'tPusseyites, an' resolved they'dStan by th' parson, an' resolvedthey'd put flowers in th' church,an resolved they had no 'sense toburn. They sends this to th'Bishop, an' when lie seed th'women folk back'd th' parson, hosed hee'd bin mistook ; we wusn'tPusseyites, as we burnt no 'sense,an" iiowers didIf there wus

na matter no 'ow.some Lancashire

women i' this church, they'd soonennvart th' Bishop, they'd stick byth' parson, an' men folk '11 surefollow.

I'll tell 'o what, sur, th' ApostlePaul wi' a' his charitv wuld na dofor a bishop nowaday.

Lancashire Lad.Honolulu, June 10, 1893.

THIRTY IN A BUNCH.

Chinese Arrested Last Eveningfor Gambling.

A number of people will have toprepare their own breakfasts thismorning on account of a little in-

cident which happened last even-

ing about 9:30 o'clock. Atthe time mentioned the policemade a raid and captured thirtyChinamen who were engagedin playing a game known to theinitiated as fan-ta- The gamblerswen- - in a house on Young street.They uere marched down to thestation in a body ajid, owing to thelateness of the hour, most of themwere unable to obtain bail.

Artistic printing at the GazetteOffice.

SUNDAY SCHOOL' PICNIC.

The Central Union Children Enjoy Themselves at Pnualtou.

The annual Sunday school pic-

nic of the scholars of the CentralUnion Church was held yesterdayat Oahu College grounds. Severalhundred happy children were

present. A number of the olderfolk were there to help the childrenenjoy their holiday. All sorts ofgames were played by the smallboys and girls and they all en-

joyed the picnic.A large lanai, decorated with

flags of all nations, was erected onthe grounds and beneath it wasplaced the refreshment tables. Atnoon all were invited to draw nearand eat of the many good thingsprepared for them. The invitationwas heartily accepted. Refresh-ments were served by tho ladie3present, ably assisted by theyoung girls, until all were supplied.Many of the visitors improved theopportunity and viewed the collegegardens where many fine specimensof imported pineapples, as well asother foreign fruits and flowers areto be seen. Among the varietiesof pines are to be seen the commonkona, the Cayenne, and a patch ofsugar loaves. Among the latterwas a monster pineapple of peculiarand unusual shape, almost flat,which looked like an opened fan.It contains about fifty or more topsand looks as if six or seven pineshad joined together. Many otheryoung trees, which President Hofc-m- er

intends transplanting alongthe makai edge of the collegegrounds, near the gate, snowed ahealthy growth.

After lunch the children went totheir play again which was keptup until late in tho afternoon. Agame of baseball was one of enjoyable events of the afternoon.

CENTRAL UNION CHURCH.

Two Powerful Sermons Deliveredon Sunday.. .

On Sunday morning CentralUnion church was well crowdedwith people to hear Bev. W. B.Oleson preach the annual sermonfor the schools. In addition to thousual congregation the scholarsfrom Punahou, Kawaiahao semin-

ary and Kameham'eha school werepresent. Mr. Oleson preached inan impressive manner, and the at-

tention of the congregation wasclosely held. x

At the evening service at thesame church Bev. H. H. Parkerpreached tho annual home mission-ary sermon. It was one of thestrongest sermons ever deliveredby the reverend gentleman.

Saturday morning tho scholarsof Kawaiahao Sunday school en-

joyed a picnic on the churchgrounds. The affair was well at-tended and the children had a verypleasant time.

VICTORIOUS SCHOOLBOYS.

The Kamehamelms Win TwoLeague Games.

Tho base ball game between thoKarnehamehas and the Crescentswas witnessed yesterday by a good-size- d

crowd of people. The Cres-

cents were not allowed to make asingle run, while their opponentsmade ten tallies. Owing to theillness of George Angus, the boxfor the- - Crescents was occupiedby Willie Lucas, who pitched afairly good game, when his lack ofpractice is taken into considera-tion.

The game on Saturday was an-other one-side- d affair. It was be-tween the Hawaiis and the Karne-hamehas. The Hawaiis did nottally until the ninth inning, whenthoy Bad a lucky streak and piled upfive runs. Their opponents scoredthirteen times. The heavy battingand superb fielding of the school-boys kept the audience from goingto sleep.

Change for the Belter.The office-o- f Tax Assessor Shaw

has been removed to the judiciarybuilding. The old finance officewill be the tax office hereafter.

The tllntttruted Tourists' GuideThai hiiiilar mors, "Th ToBBi87a

Gurus Tbrouoii the Hawahas Isl-ands," is meeting with a steady saleboth at home xiu abroad. Tourists andothers visiting Mts& islands should beIn puwession ! copy of it. It is a per-fect mine of information relating to tnescenes and attractions to be met withhere. Copies in wrappers carrbe had attho publication office, 46 Merchantstreet, aa-- i at he J"ew Dealer. Pricettt cents.

m

307c-

J" utze i2,

The cholera season is athand again aud it behoovespeople to establish a quaran-tine against it. It is notnecessary to fumigate yourhouse with ill smellintr chemicals, the thing can be success-fully accomplished with theuse of an Ozonator forclosets and sick rooms, and theImproved Natural Stone Fil-ter.

The Ozonator has beenadopted by the managers oftrans-atlanti- c steamers and theresult has "been most satisfac-tory: the dangers of cholerabreaking out on the vessels hasbeen reduced to a minimumand at so little oxpenso that itis worth your while tryingit. The machine is so nicely ar-raug- ed

that it may be placedanywhere in the house and beconsidered as an ornament.There's no bad odor about thething and the effect is betterthan if there was, as a matterof fact there is neither healingquality or commercial value ina bad smell.

The filter mentioned above,is without exception the bestthat has ever been introduced,and they are more generallyused hero than any other.Being constructed of stone,they are easily cleaned and.have none of the troublesomecontrivances found in everyother filter sold: two minutesin the morning aud the use ofa small brush, makes the filteras sweet and clean as you wish.There is no limit as to thetime these filters last; we havethem in daily use at the storefor nearly four years, and theyare as good today as when webegan using them. Patholo-gists will tell you that morediseases eusue from the use ofbad or impure water than fromany other source, thev will alsotell you that to boil the waterwill not answer the purposehalf so well as to filter it. Ifyou believe what the doctortells you, you should believeour statement of the superio-rity of the Improved NaturalStone Filter and come and buyone.

The Hawaiian- - Hardware Co.,

307Street, Honolulu.

nimm Mnnthv

TABLE Olf CONTENTS.

MARCH - --

iSoi.

Fort

ISO.

Concerning tho Hawaiian Islands.The Hawaiian Reciprocity Treaty.The Next Louisiana Domestic Sugar

Crop.A Pica for Cocoa.Olowalu Plantation.Molasses as a Fertilizerfor SngarCaue. .Tobacco and its Culture. x . '

Cultivation and Uses of the Cow-Pe- a. V, 'Manures and their Application - .'The American Sngar Bounty. ''Twenty Years' Improvement in the

Wpst Indies. .Useful Data Keapfcting Mega from

Single and Double Crushing "'

Diseases of the Su::ar Cane. ,The Farmers on - ngar.Professor Wiley on Sugar Bounty. '

Diversified Farming ,APRIL 1893.

Hawaiian Commercial Statistics.Cultivating Tea Plants.The American Beet Sugar Crop.Labor on Hawaiian Plantations.A Misstatement Corrected.Electricity in Sugar Making.The Tea Industry of Ceylon.Handling Sugar Cane.Seedling Canes.Cultivatiun of Arrow Root.Kainit in the Stables.Some Phenomena of the Atmosphere.Report of the Hawaiian Commissioner

of Agriculture and Forestry.Fruits of Jamaica.Th Pine Apple.Cultivation of Cocoa in Cuba.Look Out for Insect Pests.

MAY-- .- - 1893.

Notes.With Our Headers.Some Observations on Burned CaneThe Rise in Sugar.Rananas for the Table.Sugar on the Rise.Rainfal for ADril. ifi?Manures and their Application.Kainit in the Stables.Tea. Culture. Part I.The Sugar Industry in Queensland.Our Insect Foes.Clove Culture In Zanzibar."Report on Coffee Leaf Fungi.The Sugar Industry in Cnba.Instruction in the Cultivation of theGrape Vine.Tea Culture as a Probable American

Industry.Resrarch and Ingenuity Increasing

Surroi-- Yields;High Temperature Clarification.

Ac

JQ

V,

Il

Page 5: fl c ''y XXVIILNo. HONOLULU, TUESDAYS JUNE No....tf"Corrcapondencolntended lor publication, thellawa-lla-n Gazette, Post Office Box. O. " KB" Correspondence rclatlne to Advertise-ments,

li-PA- E"EDITION".

TCFifAW JUKE IS IS83.

QGESTIOrUm.fc METHODS.

Since the arrival of MinisterRimini in Hawaii neoDle have vervgenerally respected his position andthe delicacy of his mission. It was

hoped he would be allowed to finishhis work without parading partypolitics before him or attemptingto make him a participant in apolitical demonstration. This, how-

ever, has not been the case. Theroyalist leaders have been the firstto show him such public discour-

tesy. That Minister Blount hasbeen forced to rebuke them in hisown defense, by refusing to replyto the substance of the politicalspeeches Eprung upon him, onlyshows the greatness of the offense

committed against propriety andthe titter absence of palliationtherefor.

When Minister Blount left hereevery newspaper on the annexationside treated his departure with res-

pect. The royalist papers, perhapsbeing posted on Mr. Corawell'slittle plan, said several thingswhich later events show shouldhave been left unsaid.

It is true that the endeavor togive Minister Blount's visit toMaui & political significance hasfailed. It has failed very much inthe same manner that a similarscheme of the versatile Mr. Corn- -

well did to capture "Wailuku byimporting the laborers of Waikapuand Spreckelsville. It is also truethat the affront placed upon Min-

ister Blount, as a visiting guest toMaui, should receive public dis-

countenance of all who do not wishto see him placed in an uncomfort-able and questionable positionwhile performing his delicate du-

ties here as an arbitrator in apolitical dispute.

DESERTED.

The exposure of theperfidy fell like a quick, sharpblow upon those of her native sub-

jects who yet retained faith in hernd the monarchy. The result is

they are deserting an unworthycattee as rapidly as they learn thetroth. By Saturday night thebalk of the native Hawaiians onOahu had read the document in Ha-

waiian by which their "belovedqueen" had attempted to sell outthe rights, UUe and interest of her"dear iope" to the ex-thro- ofHaraii,on the best terms she couldmake for herself and family. Assoon as the document reaches theother islands "her dear people" willwisely desert tiwir ungrateful ex-rule- r's

cause, as they have onOahu. They will feol that inocder to be true to their own causethey must hereafter shun

Mltr an) itc liAfnntrirv"'. """ """'B'"&' ;s.

inon- -

And why should the natives befooted longer? Thoy have too longproved troe'to a cause overthrownand deserted by an unworthy ruler.So long as U103 had no open act ofperfidy against themselves to cotn-Ir- e

the perfidy againstforeigners with, they were, Hawai-

ian like, willing to accept herpromises of reform ; but the mo- -

meat the read of her open andmercenary treachery to her ownblood, as it were, the bond thathas bound them to the kingly tra-

ditions of the past was broken for-

ever, never to be mended by prom-

ises, nor patched up by new schemesof the foreign and half-whit- e poli-

ticians. It will he as vain now forthe ex-que- to attempt to regainthe confidence of her people as itwould be for her to attempt to re-

gain the throne with the consent of

the foreigners resident here.

There is almost pity for the fool-

ish woman who has destroyed themonarchy by her own suicidal

act and, if report be true, has been

left almost a bankrupt in a few

short months by the political leech-

es, who, under the guise of poli-

tical advisers, have drained her

SbtZSamimBtrdTcS.KjMEggypjaMgEaapf-iyirwtiHtr- g

private store almost to- - the lastcent. The ex-que- en has probablylearned by this time that the menwho cannot conserve their own for-

tunes are not n.'liablc""csshiers ofthe private puree of an n.

It would not now be a public sur-

prise if the n, as soon asshe finds herself deserted whollyby native Hawaiians, should againturn her appeals to Americans andannexationists for the means wherewith to sustain herself, since herperfidy will leave her friendlessamong her own people, and penni-

less among the crowd of politicalhangers-on- , who have backed hercause for the money they could getout of it.

WISE AND OTHEKWISE.

The United States press is latelydemanding that their governmenttake some stand regarding the Ha-

waiian affair. When that greatand popular political power knownas the American press makes a de-

mand it is generally heeded by theparty administration in power ; ifit is not, something generally dropsin the form of a political snowstorm at the next general election,and it is likely to enow very deepwhen the issue involves a questionof national policy, like the annex-ation of Hawaii.

In Nicaragua three opposingpolitical parties compromised theirdifferences lately to organize a pro-

visional government, pending agree-

ment on a stable and permanentform, and an armed neutrality,politically speaking, is proposeduntil that end is reached. Thegovernment that three politicalfactions in Central America wouldunite to overthrow must have beenabout as rotten as the Hawaiianmonarchy.

Kansas is certainly an unfortun-ate state. It has just been afflictedwith that terrible political diseaseknown as "hay-seed- ," or the "farm-ers' alliance," and now the execu-

tive committee of tho women'sleague threatens it with an "equalsuffrage" campaign a year fromnext fall. In order to get theirhands in, so as to be able to turnthe metaphor of "bleeding Kansas"into a stern reality, the executivecommittee proposes to practice onthe cow boys of Colorado at thestate elections there this fall.

Kmperor William is provinghimself a thrifty politician. Hodeclares ho will not call in thoPrussian reeervoe this year, as itwould intcrforo with their harvest-ing, " and besides," concluded thoEmperor significantly, "I do notwish to keep tho men from thopolls in June next."

Tlio Now York Horald is failingto hold its own against tho Ha-

waiian news published in its morereliable contemporaries tho Worldand Sun. Tho Eastern nowspapersreceived by tho last mail show thatMr. XordhoiT is like tho man whofell out of the balloon, as far as re-

liable news is concerned.

An appropriate scarf-pi-n for theaverage haole royalist would ho agilt tabu stick surmounted with anempty calabash.

They have rather a suggestivewav of receiving neutral mailsteamers in CejRral America,owing to the Nicaragua revolution.On their last trips up the steamersCity of New York and San Josewere welcomed at Corinto, belowNicaragua, by having a big Kruppgun trained upon them untilsearched by the authorities to seeif they carried revolutionists fromthe border who had a mind toseize their town. It is rumoredthe United States will investigatethis brusque manner of receivingneutral vessels.

We wish to call attention to thecontents of the Maui letter, published elsewhere. It has a peculiarsignificance which will be fully ap-

preciated and, no doubt, as fullyunderstood by all who have watchedHawaiian politics for "a year anda day."

LiV rVAllAN GAZETTE, DESDAY. JUNE 13 ie3. vi

T

YOU SUNG ACQUITT5D OF THE

MAL1K0 'GULCH MURDER.

Jioiismaii Embezzlement Case- Coiilin- uetl Contt oten, Ktc.

The June term of the circuit courtof the second circuit was begun onWednesday morning June 7th, Hon.A. N. Kepoikai, circuit judge, pre-sidin-

there being present G. K.Wilder, deputy attorney general hasprosecuting attorney or the govern-ment; S. F. Chillingwortb, sheriff ofthe island and the following deputysheriffs, J.C.Long of Wailuku, K.P. Hose of Lanaina, L. A. Andrewsof Makawao and 11. H. Beater ofHana. Officers of the court presentwere Henry Smith, clerk of the judi-

ciary department; Goodale Armstrong, clerk of the circnit; W. Xi.

Wilcox, Hawaiian interpreter; LiCheung, Chinese interpreter; J. W.Jones, stenographer, and D. Naboo- -

lewa, police officer from Honoluluhaving charge of the alleged mur-derer.

Members of the bar present were:J. A. Magoon. A. Rosa, V. V. Ash-for- d,

J. L. Kanlukou, John Eicbard-son- ,

John W. Kalua and John Kala-ma- ;also the following magistrates;

Wm. H. Daniels of Wailuku, Cbns.Copp of Makawao and M. Kealohaof Honuaula.

Following is the order of tho casesand disposition of the same:

itegma vs. ivamaka w.j, liquorselling, appeal from Wailuku,. Anolle prosequi was entered on tho10th; Bosu for defendant.

Provisional Government HawaiianIslands vs. Joe Boss, embezzlement.Tried on tho 7th by a Hawaiian jurywhich returned an oral verdict of notguilty by direction of the court.Rosa and Bichardson for defendant.

Provisional Government HawaiianIslands vs. Knaokahala k.J, house-breaking. Defendant plead guiltyon the 8th and was sentenced thenext day to six months imprisonmentat hard labor. Bichardson for defondant.

Provisional Government HawaiianIslands vs. Pabipuhi w., polygamy.Tbo deputy attorney touornl declining to present an indictmont, tbo de-fendant was discharged on tboAOth;it transpired tbat dotondaut presum-ed tbnt her former husband, a Chi-

nese, has cither diod or loft tbo isl-

ands Hom five years ngo, bonce hersecond marringo. Defendant in per-son.

Provisional Government HawaiianIslands vs. T. S.'Nabinu, snpprobsiouof offenses, apponl from Molokai;uollo prosequi outured on tho10th. Knlua for defendant.

'Tho apponl of Goo Knliliknne,found entity of malicious injury bytbo district mngistrato of Molokai,wns withdrawn on tho 7th.

Provisional Government of Ha-waiian Islands vs. You Sung, aliasAh Sung, charged with tho murderof a Japnneso woman at Mnlikogulch, in August of Inst year. Tbodefendant was tried on tho Sth by nforeign jury, which rendered" aunanimous verdict of not guilty.There wns no direct ovidonco as rbtho killing, but tbo dofondant wasseen going towards Haiku by half adozen school children, just after thodecoasud bad been seen by them nlsogoing in tho saino direction; thoevidence was altogether circura-Btantin- l,

although there was somotestimony to show a fonl play. Ma-goon for dofondant.

Eegina vs. Ah Seo, opium selling,appeal from Hana, beard on tho Otu,jury being waived; judgment of tholower court auirnieu; sentenced topay a fine of $100. Magoon for dofendant.

Tbe appeals of Sam Geo and fourothers for maintaining lotteryscheme, Aiau and Ah Fan for gamb- -

ling and Aliona for larceny were dis-missed for failure to fiio notices ofappeal according to a recent rulingof the supreme court.

On the 9th a foreign jury wascalled to try tbe case ,of tho Provisional Government of HawaiianIslands vs. Joao Gomez Jardine, aliasKaula, under a charge of assault withintent to commit rape; failing toagree upon a verdict, tho jury wasdischarged after deliberating oneboor and a half. Ashford for defend-ant.

The cash bail (S125) of KiharaYozi. charged with distilling liquor,was declared forfeited for nonappearance; also 510 deposited byE. Foran, under a charge of assanltand battery.

Provisional Government of Hawaii-an Islands vs. Sakamoto and Simimon, conspiracy in the second de-gree; tried by a foreign jury on the9tb, which rendered an oral verdictof guilty without retiring. Defend-ants had conspired in tbe arrest andtrial of some other Japanese beforethe district court of Makawao for thealleged larceny of a pig. Defendantshad no counsel, and were each sen-tenced to pay a fine of 200 on the10th.

A nolle prosequi was entered on '

-- k :ue,9&,jnPWiafaf

the 10th in the case of Eegina vs.Ahana, charged with gambling.Bicbardsoo for defendant.

"William L. ilossman of Alakawaowas arrainged on the 10th under anindictment charging biro with embezzlpment, and bis trial was continned until the December term ofcourt Ashford, for defendant.

Mannel C. Boss was granted a di-

vorce from his wife on the 7th on feeground of desertion. Richardson forplanum.

Tho court adjourned at 2 p.m. onSaturday until 9:30 a.m. on Tuesday,tho 13th, and there are seven morecriminal, eleven civil cases and twodivorce suits to be disposed of.

COOBT NOTES.

Judge Kepoikai overruled Mr. Ma-goon- 's

motion tbat counsel for tbeprosecution first address tbe jury intbe murder trial, which procedurewas claimed is the meaning of thepractice act, passed by tbe last session of the legislature, chapter 5G,laws of 1892.

Judge Austin of Hilo ruled lastJanuary, in tbe Costa murder trial,tbat the defendant putting in no evi-dence, counsel for the prosecutionbad to go to the jury first.

Both Judges Whiting and Cooperor tne nrst circuit nave held that nosuch construction can be placed inthe said practice act. Only tho su-preme court will Eettle the matter forall time.

Tbe requirement that notices ofappeals from tho district courts tohigher courts should be filed basawakened soveral members of I thebar; the want of knowledge of eacha chance on the part of the districtmagistrates and appellants is attri-buted to the lateness of sending outthe laws in book form. Tho Hawai-ian version of tbe laws of 1892 wasdistributed only a week or ten daysago. Tne lawyers say it should havebeen out four months ago, and claimthat all Jaws should be currentlypublished and printed in book formand be ready for distribution soonafter the adjournment of tho legislature.- Shoriff and Mrs. Chillingwortb en-tertained at dinner Judgo Kepoikaiand officers of tho court on Friday.A fine menu was provided by thehosts, and all pronounced tbo turkoyand chicken stew as, very goud, poachpie and tho fruit cake, excellent.

m '

THE MODERN BISBOr,

Lancashire Lad's Views onChnrch Matters.

Mh. Editor : I'm a Lancashirelad born and bred and I was chris-tened an' confirmed i'th Churcho' England an' I thoti't after readin'th' Bishop's letter I'd tell o' howwe Barved a Bishop i'tha owdcountry an' ho was a gradoly sorto' a chap to ; ho was at th' bottom.He did'nt mnko mischief or bj jolus :

but this is 'ow it was : Our parsonwus fond o' flowers nu th' womonfolk wus th' sntno nn our clutch o'n Sunday wus like a pooy, but so'ommaundorlng foo wrote tho Bishop,iiti' ho wroto th parson for t' stopit, but tho womon folk wouldn't, soth' Bishop cum himself, and thchurch wus dressed wi' llowore,well ; bo wus mad for sure, an' hosod wo'd bin hurnin sonso nn' wusprlestly-ilos- . I dun no what sort o'sonso ho mont, but my owd womansou weo-- got no sonso to aparo, an'boo sod th' Bishop did na appearto Iiavo too much naythur. How-Biimdov-

th' Bishop tow'd th'parson as how ho wus ji Pussnyito,an' ho'd Tha to apporo to answerfor it.

Now th' womun folk caw'd atneetin', my owd woman i' th'cheer, an resolved thoy wusn'tPussoyites, an' resolved they'dstan by th' parson, an' resolvedthey'd put flowers in th' church,an resolved thoy hnd no 'sense toburn. Thru- - ennrln tl,in in 1.

Bishop, nn' when he seed th'women folk back'd th' parson, hoBed heo'd bin mistook ; we wusn'tPusseyitcs, as wo burnt no 'sense,an' flowers did na matter no 'ow.If there wus some Lancashirewomen i' this church, they'd Eoonconvart th' Bishop, they'd stick byin- - parson an' men folk '11follow.

sure

I'll tell 'o what, sur, th' ApostlePaul wi' a' his charity wuld na dofor a bishop nowaday.

Lancashire Lad.Honolulu, Juno 10, 1893.

-

THIRTY IN A BUNCH.

Chinese Arrested Last Eveningfor Gambling.

A number of people will have toprepare their own breakfasts thismorning on account of a little in-

cident which happened last evening about 9:30 o'clock. Atthe time mentioned the policemade, a raid and captured thirtyChinamen who were engagedin playing a game known to theinitiated as fan-ta- The gamblerswen- - in a house on Young street.They were marched down to thestation in a body ajid, owing to theIatene3 of the hour, most of themivere unable to obtain bail.

Artistic printing at the GazetteOffice.

SUNDAY SCHOOL' PICNIC.

The Central Union Children Enjoy Themselves at Paunltou.

The annual Sunday school pic-

nic of the scholars of the CentralUnion Church was held yesterdayat Oahu College grounds. Several"hundred happy children werepresent. A number of the olderfolk were there to help the childrenenjoy their holiday. All sorts ofgames were played by the smallboys and girls and they all en-

joyed the picnic.A large lanai, decorated with

flags of all nations, was erected on

the grounds and beneath it wasplaced the refreshment tables. Atnoon all were invited to draw nearand eat of the many good thingsprepared for them. The invitationwas heartily accepted. Refresh- -

ments were served by tho ladiespresent, ably assisted by theyoung girle, until all were supplied.Many of the visitors improved theopportunity and viewed the collegegardens where many fine specimensof imported pineapples, as well asother foreign fruits and flowers areto be seen. Among the varietiesof pines are to be seen the commonkona, the Cayenne, and a patch ofsugar loaves. Among the latterwas a monster pineapple of peculiarand unusual shape, almost flat,which looked like an opened fan.It contains about fifty or more topsand looks as if six or seven pineshad joined together. Many otheryoung trees, which President Hos-m- er

intends transplanting alongthe inakai edgegrounds, near the

of the oollcgogate, showed a

healthy growth.After lanch the children went to

their play again which was keptup until lato in tho afternoon. Agarao of baseball was one of enjoyable events of tho afternoon.

itCENTIIAL UNION CHURCH.

Two Powerful Sermons Deliveredon Sunday. t

On Sunday morning CentralUnion church was well crowdedwith people to hear Rev. W. B.Oleson preach the annual sermonfor tho schools. In addition to thousual congregation tho scholarsfrom Punahou, Kawaiahao semin-ary and Kamehamchn school wcropresent. Mr. Oleson preached innn impressivo manner, and tho at-

tention of tho congregation wnsclosely hold. x

At tho owning sorvico at thosame church Row II. II. Parkerpreached tho annual home mission-ary sormon. It was ono of thostrongest sermons uvor dolivorodby tho revurond gentleman.

Saturday morning tlio aohohirsof Ktiwnialmo Sunday school enjoyed a pioniu on tlio uhurohground!). 1 ho nfliiir was well at-

tended and the children had a verypleasant time.

VICTORIOUS SCHOOLBOYS.

Tlio KiimohtttnalittH Win TwoLetifluc Gutncti.

Tlio base ball giuno betwoon thoKamohnmohiiB and tho Crescentswns witnoasod yesterday by a good-size- d

crowd of people Tho Cres-

cents wore not allowed to mnko nsingle run, while thoir opponentsmndo ten tallies. Owing to thoillness of Georgo Angus, tho boxfor tho Crescents was occupiedby Willio Lucas, who pitched afairly good game, when his lack ofpractice is taken into considera-tion.

The game on Saturday was an-other one-side- d aflair. It was be-tween the Hawaiis and the Kame-haraeha- s.

The Hawaiis did nottally until the ninth inning, whenthoy had a lucky streak and piled upfive runs. Their opponents scoredthirteen times. The heavy battingand superb fielding of the school-boy- B

kept the audience from goingto sleep.

Change for the Better.The office-o- f Tax Assessor Shaw

haB been removed to the judiciarybuilding. The old finance officewill be the tax office hereafter.

The ninntrutcd TonrlBta' GuideThftt hlar nort, "Th Touiustb

Guide Tueocoh toe Hawaiusis meeting dtb a eteady sale

both it home ntl sbroad. Tourists andothers uniting utt& islands should beIn jwwession ot copy of it. It is a per-fect mine of information relating to tne

and attractions to be met withhere. Copies in wrappers carr be had atthe publication office, 46 Merchantstreet, aai at he Newu Dealers. PriceCO cents.

307;.

The cbolorn season is athand again ami it behoovespeople to establish a quaran-tine against it. It is notnecessary to fumigate yourhouse" with ill smelling chemi-cals, tho thimr can be success-fully accomplished with theuse of an Ozonator forclosets and sick rooms, and theImproved Natural Stone Filter.

The Ozonator has beenadopted by the managers oftrans-atlanti-c steamers theresult hasbeen most satisfac-tory; the dangers of cholerabreaking out on the vessels hasbeen reduced to a minimum

at so little expense that itis worth your while tryingit. The machine is so nicely ar-ranged that it may be placedanywhere in the house and beconsidered as an ornament.There's no bad odor about thething and the effect is betterthan if there was, as a matterof fact there is neither healingquality or commercial value ina bad smell.

The filter mentioned above,is without exception the bestthat has ever been introduced,and they are more gonerallyused hero than any other.T?oincr nnnef.riip.f.Pfl rf efrmnthey are easily cleaned andhave none of the troublesomecontrivances found in everyother filter sold: minutesin the morning and the use ofa small brush, makes tho filteras sweet and cleau as you wish.There is no limit as to thetime these filters lasb; wo havethem in daily use at the storefor nearly four years, and thevare as good today as when webegan using them. Patholo-gists will tell you that morediseases ensue from the use ofbad or impure water than fromany othor source, they will alsotell you that to boil the waterwin noc answer tne purposehalf so well as to filter it. Ifyou believe what the doctortolls you, you should believeour statement of tho superio-rity of the Improved NaturalStone Filter and come and buyone.

TnK Hawaiian Hardware Co.,

307Fort Sthket, Honolulu.

m fit 4 1

ie miters flf

rAULR

MAROH - -

loo

CONTKHT9.

1

tllj

Comwriiinu tliti ilnwniiun lalumte.Hie IlAwnitan Reciprocity Trty.

Tlia Nest Lotiliinn Dointwrio SonrCrop.

A IMw forOlownlu Plantation.Molnssos as a Furtllliur fur Sugar Caim.Tobacco and its Culture.Cultivation and Urn of the Cow-IV- a.

JInimroB mill ApiitloutionAmorican Sni;rTho

Twonty Years'West Indies.

Off

jitne

theiruuuty.

IS)-,- .

and

and

two

Cocou.

tnprovemnnt In tho

Useful Data Ueaixwtlnj: Mos?mw fromSlnclc and DoMile Cniiliing.

Diseases of the Huirnr Onne.Tho Farmers on - irgar.Professor Wiley on .Snpar Bounty.Diversified Kurmini?

APItIL isoa.Hawaiian Commercial Statistics.Cultivating Tea Plants.Tho American Beet Stiuar Oron.Labor on Hawaiian Plantations.A Misstatement Corrected.Electricity in Sn::ar Making.The Tea Industry of Ceylon.Handling Sugar Cane.Seedling Canes.Cultivation of Arrow Root.Kainit in the Stables.Some Phenomena of the Atmosphere.Report of the Hawaiian Commissioner

of Agriculture and Forestry.Fruits of Jamaica.The Pine Apple.Cultivation of Cocoa in Cuba.Look Out for Insect Pests.

MAY - . isoa.Notes.Vith Oor Readers.

Some Observations on Uurned Cane.The Rise in Sucar.Rananas or the Table.Sujjar on the Rise.Rainfal for Arjril. 1SManures and their Application,Kainit in the Stables. ""

Tea Culture. Part I.The Sugar Industry in Queensland.Our Insect Foes.Clove Culture In Zanzibar.Report on Coffee Leaf Fuajn.The Sugar Industry in Cnba.Instruction in the Cultivation of tbeGrape Vine.Tea Culture as a Probable American

Industry.Resrarch and Ingenuity Increasing

Sucrowj Yields.IJjgb Temperature Clarification.

--fee

j,

1

v

Page 6: fl c ''y XXVIILNo. HONOLULU, TUESDAYS JUNE No....tf"Corrcapondencolntended lor publication, thellawa-lla-n Gazette, Post Office Box. O. " KB" Correspondence rclatlne to Advertise-ments,

is

P 1VPV9Ibbbbbbbrbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbb w

13.

Ijf

.

-

to

AT TEE CAPITOL.

ilosDAY, Jnne 5th.

Tho conncils convened at theirnew quarters in the executive building at 2:09 pji.

The desks of ihe advisory councilwere arranged in two semi-circle- s infront of the old throne dais, on whichis placed the president's table, Immediately in front of the president'sdesk and below it is the secretary'stable. The ministers of interior andfinance, with the attorney-genera- l,

are seated at a long table on the"Waikiki side of the council chambers.On the other side, facing the president, cabinet and advisory councilrespectively, is the reporters' table.The windows along the side of thechambers were open. The newquarters are cool, commodioas andvery comfortable.

When President Dole rapped hisgavel npon the black ebony table,there were present Ministers Dole,King, Smith and Damon, and Coun-cilme- n

Hatch, Allen, "Waterhouse,Brown, Tenney, Suhr, Nott, Morgan,AYIlder, Bolte, Emmeluth and Men-donc- a.

The minutes of the two previousmeetings were read and approved.

Councillor Mendonca appeared forthe first time and took his seat nextto Mr. Bolte in the second semicircle.

President Dole handed the secretary a petition from Cnrator "Win. T.Brfgham of the Bishop Museum,asking that the custody of a list ofSS volumes of books from the

library be given to the mu-

seum.President Dole said there were

many valuable books in the collection, but that all was confusion nowand suggested a catalogue be prepared so that whatever action wasnecessary could be taken intellieentlv.

Minister Damon said he thought,as they were dealing with publicDroperty, that all the curios andbooks, if any, heretofore given intothe custody of the museum togetherwith those- - which might hereafter begiven, should be protected by aninsurance taken out by the directorsof the museum in favor of the Provisional government, which stood inthe light of custodian of publicproperty.

A resolution to this effect wasmoved and passed covering thethings already granted the museumas well as any to be hereaftergranted.

The petition of Curator "V. T.Brigham was referred to the mis-

cellaneous committee and Mr. Allento make investigations concerningthe ownership of the property refer-

red to.Attorney General Smith read a

petition which had been sent him byPeter Qninn, a prisoner at Oahu jail,asking pardon and a remission of thebalance of his sentence. Quinn wasconvicted of "mayhem and was sen-

tenced to serve six months im-

prisonment. He has yet twomonths to serve. Stated hisintention and determination toreform his life and set forth his goodconduct while under sentpnce inmitigation. On motion of the Attor-

ney-General, who said the prisonerwas evidently laboring under a mis-

take as to the powers of the Attorney-Genera- l,

m addressing the petitionto him, the matter was refened tothe judiciary committee.

Minister Damon said that beforereading his weekly financial state-ment he wished to say the financecommittee had not yet met, but ex-

pected to do so very shortly. Healso explained that in the report allthe military expenses had been in-

cluded in the charge of expensesagainst the Provisional government,as were other expenses not providedfor by direct approprotion.

The following financial statementfor the week was then read:FINANCIAL STATEStENT, AVEEK END-

ING JUNE 3, 1S93.

Cash on hand May 27, 1S93. $ 66,041 78Receipts, week, sale of

bond?- -. ... - ...Receipts, week, general

revenue- - 1I.3CS 35

6S.310 13General expenses for week 52,047 97

S 16,262 1G

Outstanding indebtedness:Treasury notes 41,000 00P. M. G. notes...-...- .. 169,000 00

$210,000 00

Overdue indebtedness:Treasury notes . 9,000 03P. 3L G. notes 130,000 00

$139,000 00, VPostal Savings bank memo. :

Due depositors, P. S. bankthis date 509,275 25

Notices maturing this date 12,440 00Cash on hand, P. S. bank,

this day 3,44 1 75

Expenses, Prov. Govt, memo.:Exps. Prov. Govt, to date 72,471 13" " daring week 7,595 60

Memo., cash in treasury:Cash in treasury to re-

deem certificates .........Road board fund in treas-Qx- y

. 34,030 11School board fund In treas- -

UX3T-- 636 00Available cash, as above 1C.262 10

Total cash In treasury. $362,92S 21

This covers all expenditures, in-cluding military and not appropriatedby the legislature. ie

The report waa received and placedon file.

Mr. Hatch, from the judiciary

committee, reported certain amend-ments to the act relating to the dos- -session of dynamite and other explo-sives, and recommended the passageof the bilL Took its regular course.

i Mr. Hatch also reported from thojodieiary committee amendments tolaw relating to pounds, estrays andbrand?. The bill took its usual course.

Minister Damon introduced a billamending tho postal savings banklaw. In introducing the bill he saidhe wished to say that lately thepostal savings bank had been some-what of a burden owing to tho lawgoverning it. The bank has paid outover 500,000, which has caused seri-ous drains on the treasury. This hadbeen largely caused by the paymentof large deposits. These had beendrawn too rapidly during tho crisis,and some arrangements should bemade for more gradual withdrawals.Depositors should not bo allowed towithdraw all their money at oncewithout sufficient notice to protectthe bank. The bill introduced wasmeant to cover these points. He alsoexplained the application and scopeof the bill, which upon motion wasreferred to the judiciary committee.

At 3:45 the councils went intospecial session.

SPECIAL SESSION?

In special session Charles T.Wider was appointed to be consul-gene-ral

at San Francisco in place ofP. S. Pratt, removed.

THE OLD DISPUTE.

A Member Suggests that Annexa-tion Woald Remedy Matters.Mr. Editor: Kindly grant a

short space to one of many whohas become heartily tired of thenever-endin- g discord between theBishop of Honolulu and the vastmajority of Anglican worshippershere. This discussion, whilst hav-

ing become a notorious "scandal"(disgrace), to quote his lordship,is now further from ultimate correction than ever.

The strength of the "second con-

gregation" is undoubtedly due asmuch to the untiring efforts of itspastor, aided by many of its fore-most members, as to the unity andlack of internal dissention. Main-ly to its efforts is due the credit forthe building of the present cathe-dral. It is a happy body of worship-pers.

Is it right, then, that the relig-ious peace of this body be subjectedto continual annoyance, by hislordship, the exemplar of ourchurch in Hawaii? Can he notleave well enough alone? Must heforever stir up strife i

The sparseness of his own con-

gregation is fair evidence of hislordship's popularity in the pulpit.Having driven such men as theRev. Mr. Gowen away in very des-pair, he has alienated likewise hiscongregation, when he might, hadhe been able, have gathered into itevery Anglican worshipper inHonolulu. In the face of this heseems aetermmea to iorce ins wayamongst the second congregationand scatter them in like order.

His lordship, correctly I pre-sume, claims "that there would beno place for the arrangement (twocongregations in the same church)in the American church." Shouldwe annex, the "place" would nothe required. This would cease tobe a field for "mission" work andwe would cease to require a "mis-sion" bishop j and under the juris-diction of an American Episcopalbishop there would be no cause forthe petty annoyances and feudswhich, it is a matter of general re-

gret, have marked the history ofour church m Hawaii, bublatacausa, tollitur effectus. Coercionof any kind is preferable to that ofthe church, and the implacablecourse that is being pursued bythe bishop can, if continued, onlyend in disruption.

Anglican.Honolulu, June 6, 1893.

FOR THE SOUTH SEAS.

Departure of the MissionaryPacket Morning Star.

The usual religious services wereheld on board the missionary pack-et Morning Star Wednesday afternoon prior to her departure for thevarious islands of the South seas.Revs. O. P. Emerson and S. E.iiisnop conducted the services,while Rev. E. S. Timoteo, in Ha-waiian, and Rev. S. E. Bishop, inEnglish, made brief remarks. Alarge number of ladies and gentle-men were present and they allheartily joined in the farewell exer-cises. The Misses Kinney andWilson, who were the only passen-gers down by the Star, received thewannest alohas of their numerousfriends. Amongthe Star's storesfor the missionaries, were six tonsef rjee, a ton each, sugar, salt andsoap, together with 2119 packagesof sundry merchandise. The cargo

valued at $6,707.09.i .

Daily Advertiser 50c. per month

Hawaiian gazette, Tuesday, jun is, isa3.

CLOSE OF THE TERM.

Exercises by the Scholars of Ka-waiah- ao

Seminary:A number of friends of the ao

Seminary were presentWednesday morning at tho closingexercises of that valuable institu-

tion. The scholars were put throughverbal examinations and the readvway in which they answered ques-

tions reflects great credit both onthemselves and their instructors.The blackboard exercises were in-

teresting, particularly when thegirls drew outlines of differentcountries on the globe without theaid of a copy. The penmanship ofthe scholars is excellent, and in factthey displayed great intelligence inall branches of study. At 11 o'clockthe school exercises were finishedand the audience and scholars ad-

journed to the diningroom where thedisplay of fancy goods was laidout. The articles were pretty anduseful, and, as a result, most ofthem found ready purchasers.Everything that was sold was madewithin the walls of the seminary bythe girls in the industrial depart-ment. The corps of instructors isas follows, and each lady is to be.complimented on the showing madeyesterday by the scholars :

Principal, Miss Kenwill; Mis.3Appleton, Miss Winter, Miss Arm-strong, Miss Hadley, Miss Kaneand Miss von Anglen.

Commencing at 11 o'clock, theHawaiian band, under the direc-tion of Prof. Berger, gave a concerton the grounds, which was appre-ciated by everybody present.

TYPHOID FEVER.

North Hilo Threatened with anEpidemic.

Word was received by theboard of health last week that ty-

phoid fever has been discovered inNorth Hilo district by Dr. L. S.

Thompson. In a long report tothe board the doctor states thattho cases he found had been treat-ed by a Japanese physician prac-ticing under a license from theboard of health.

The cases were at once quaran-tined by Dr. Thompson's orders.He js d the opinion the Japanese'physician has neglected his dutyby not reporting the cases as pro-vided by law. It is feared that thedisease may become epidemic, asonce before thereofit is not checked.One of the patients first discoveredhas since died. The board ofhealth has taken action in thematter.

r -THE VACCINE FARM.

Dr. Day reports that the vaccinefarm is now in working order. Wed-

nesday the first calf was innocu-late- d

with New Zealand virus, andin a week hence there will beplenty of lymph for the use of theboard of health.

Physicians on the other islandswill be notified by the outgoingmails to send in their orders forthe requisite amounts to carry outthe orders of the board for a generalvaccination under tho law.

A rather painful accident hap-pened to Rev. S. L. Desha, of Hilo,last' Tuesday while the Kinau'sboat was being rowed ashore atMakena. The reverend gentlemanfell down on to the seat of theboat, and his legs were seriouslybruised.

8 -

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Ayer'$ Sarsaparillauibts the proem of dlgetUon, sttatj- -Iates tho liver, strengthens the nerres,andbuilds np the bodrwben debilitated by Urtlgne or illness. Manx people waste moneyby experimenting wiUi compounds, the prin.cipal recommendation of which troald seemto be their " cheapness." The most reliablemedicines are costly, and cm be retailed atmoderate prices only when the manntactnr-In-g

chemist handles the raw materials InUrge quantities. U Is eMmy, therefore, toUse A jer" Sarsaparilla, the valuable com-ponents ct which are Imported, wholesale,from the regions where these articles arerichest in medicinal properties.Prtptrsd by Dr. J. C, Aver Jt Co., Ix well. Uu-P.- H.

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S-- " How to Cunt Bujoo akd Sias Htruoxs," 64 PS". y Dijeuej, jo IHustratKms, ami

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HOW PILLS

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Page 7: fl c ''y XXVIILNo. HONOLULU, TUESDAYS JUNE No....tf"Corrcapondencolntended lor publication, thellawa-lla-n Gazette, Post Office Box. O. " KB" Correspondence rclatlne to Advertise-ments,

6

pHMfiinKtette

12-PA- GE EDITION.

TUESDAY. JUNE 13 ISW.

THS BSSEB'S CHAE6S.

The Bishop of Hoaolulu hasissaed a pamphlet on the questions

in diseete between him and Ms

second ceogregatioa. As to the

merits of the unfortunate quarrel

referred to we do not express anyopinion. The bishop, however,

takes occasion to say the Adve-rtises is the government news-

paper. In this he is entirely mis-

taken. The AnvEBTisER is not the

organ of any government or party.It is wholly independent in theexpression of its opinions'. The

editor of this journal lias norestrictions of form or kind laidupon him in the interests of anyparticular party or government.

Pure politics and good government

are the objects always sought by theAdvestiser, and the moment aparty or government ceases torepresent these it will lose the

support of this paper.

THE MFFERESCE.

Our friends the royalists claimto be at a tees to know how theProvisional government was ableto raise 125000 without followingthe old royalist method of mort-

gaging everything in sight, andspending it before the notes felldue. They declare they are greatlyworried lest the money which wentto Mr. Spreckels and London is anadvance upon the taxes of thecountry. Will some of the royalistfinanciers, who so nearly ruinedthe credit of this country, pleaseexplain what kind of a public loanit is that is not an advance uponthe revenue of the country in some

shape or other? "Was Hr. Spreckels7loan otherwise, or the London loanof $2,000,000 (the royalistswanted $10,000,000), or would anyloan of gold coin to pay either ofthese be anything else than moneyadvanced upon the estimated futurerevenues ? The " pathetic cry :' ofthe royalists reminds one of thequerulous regrets of the over-confide- nt

politician who finds that,through his own blundering, he haslost the political " pay lead," thathad become indispensible to hislazy existence under the monarchy.Then there was credit and bank-

ruptcy ; now, there is economy andsolvencv.

MB-- IRWIN'S LETTER.

Mr. Wm. G. Irwin has publisheda letter in the Bulletin announcingthat he endorses Mr. Claus Spreck-els' political schemes. It is hardto understand what Mr. Irwin isdriving at. It does not surpriseanyone that he should endorse Mr.Spreckels' political and financialplans. It is understood that sinceMr. Spreckels return from Kauaihe has privately announced he wasout of Hawaiian politics. Thisfact was known before his return,and is quite likely to be emphasiz-

ed, if either of these gentlemen at-

tempt hereafter to manipulate Ha-

waiian politics for the purpose ofcarrying out the plans of the cor-

porations they represent.As far as the letter which Mr.

Irwin mentions is concerned, itshistory and contents are alreadyquite well known and neither thatdocument, nor Sir. Spreckels' ac-

tions connected with it, need anyexplanation at Mr. Irwin's hands.

Insofar as Mr. Irwin presumes tospeak for 3Ir. Baldwin or any otherHawaiian planter, except Mr.Spreckels, he is at fault. Theplanters are fully capable of speak-

ing for themselves, and have doneso in no uncertain tone, as boththese gentlemen are well aware.

The letter quoted by Mr. Irwinwhich was mt presented to Minis-

ter Biount, cuts no figure now. As

far as we are able to learn bothMr. Spreckels and his letter are

out of the fight. Perhaps Mr. Irwin has not yet learned this impor-

tant fact. j

IHE SIIUATIOS.

There is a growing feeling of

personal safety and general secur-it- v

since the Provisional government took .possession of the old

palace and converted it into a newexecutive building. It is not so

much the act itself that gives y,

as its evident meaning. Theeffect has been like that of a good

endorsement on a doubtful note of

hand j it has gained the publicconfidence immediately. There

was wisdom in not taking the Etep

until the government was safely be-vo- nd

the financial breakers with afair wind astern. The present suc-

cess has undoubtedly been a hardblow to the enemies of good gov-

ernment Jn Hawaii, but 3t thesame time it-ha- s made annexationand the Provisional governmenthosts of friends, especially amongthe Hawaiians.

Those among the natives whowere led to believe that the back-

ing of one royalist and his moneymeant defeat to "the annexationcause have been abruptly unde-

ceived. There is in fact no good

reason why surprise should not beadded to surprise during the nextfew months. We are inclined tothink that the introduction of thePostal savings bank law on lastMonday means, if it means any-

thing, that the Provisional govern-ment 'has come to stay. In anyevent its almost immediate effectwill be to put the question of futurefinancial worries to repose alongwith the evil monarchical systemwhich created them.

In the meantime the annexationmovement continues to grow anddevelop throughout the islands,the quiet stability of the govern-ment has been its own endorsement.Scarcely a mail comes in that doesnot bring news that the natives ofthe other islands, including almostwhole districts, are turning to an-

nexation and the Provisional gov-

ernment as the only hope for thefuture. The significant thing aboutthe native stampede to the annex-

ation movement is that the nativeHawaiian leaders, heretofore underroyalist influences, are proclaimingagainst the ex-que- en and hercourse, in twos and threes, first on

this island, then on that. The na-

tives are following their leaders inthe usual large proportion. Thesteadv growth of the annexationmovement means its ultimate uni-

versality in Hawaii. It is dailygaining strength exactly as it wasprophesied it would when the na-

tive Hawaiians began to fall fromunder the influence of their anti-Americ- an

foreign leaders.

This growing state of politicalconcord would have been reachedlong ago had not Mr. Spreckels,representing the sugar trust, thrownhimself into the breach with prom-

ise? whose performance he overesti-mated, if he ever intended to ful-

fill them. Fortunately for Hawaiithe time has passed when eitherhis political influence or the powerof his money can eway the desti-

nies of the country. Probably noman is more thoroughly convincedof this than Mr. Spreckels is at thepresent time. The government hascertainly treated him fairly welland with more consideration thanhe would have received in almostany other small country not entire-ly dependant upon him. That thegovernment declines his advice andaid in the future shows its goodjudgment, when his past record inpolitical matters is taken into con-

sideration.

Itjs quite evident the govern-ment is not pursuing a radical pol-

icy and this fact, while it hascaused some criticism by its friends,has generally strengthened it. Ithas endeavored to show that itrepresents the interests of the wholecountry rather than that of partiesand factions, and the policy ithas thus far followed has keptthis endeonstanUy in view. Thetime has now, perhaps, arrivedwhen a more aggressive coursemust be-- pursued aggressive inthe sense of upbuilding its position

inp 4&&Txw'ls&Ziw'i

HAWAIIAN GAZETTE, TUESDAY. JUNE 13 1S93.

to protect the immediate interestsof the islands. Stable government

we must have, with the concur-

rence and aid of the United States,

if possible, but in any event itmust be speedily forthcoming.

This we believe the Provisionalgovernment is able to offer, and itwill receive the support of thepeople of Hawaii in the future "to

even a greater extent than it hasin the past.

WISE AND OTHERWISE.

The refusal of the authorities toopen the Fair buildings at Chicagoon Sundays has brought out a pro-

test, accompanied by a threat, fromthe trades- - and labor assembly.President John Linehan, an Ameri-

can citizen with' a foreign name,said at a public meeting of theassembly that if the authoritiesdid not open the Pair on Sundays,after definite notice, he was infavor that the workingmen "shouldmarch to the grounds and taketheir rights by force." The tradesassembly will probably do nothingof the kind. The performance ofsuch an insane action would bespeedily and severely punished infree America, where one of the cardinal principles of government isthat individuals must respect thedecision of majorities. Congressvoted the Fair should be closed,and closed it will stav.

The foreign press is commentingrepeatedly on Eobert Louis Steven-son's "plunge into seclusion" on hisSamoan estate, two miles fromApia. If Mr. Stevenson wouldwrite a treatise on solitude, a la oldZimmermann, the world couldeasily forgive him for shunning itshighways. A book on such a sub-

ject' by such a writer would verylikely stand out prominently inmodern classics.

In speaking of the guarantee ofEngland and France of the inde-pendence of island government inHawaii, the S. F. Call takes theground that neither of these nations.would violate their former treaties,if occasion required, by interferingto protect their respective subjectsresident here. The Call "adds :

"Treaties are made for the timeand conditions existing, and withchanging conditions may be modi-

fied without incurring a charge ofbad faith."

As no one accused the Bulletinof anything, everybody is now won-

dering why that paper used half ofits editorial column yesterday todeny the authorship of that openletter in the California Magazine,and explain how it came to omitnoticing the article. It is perfectlyclear now ; the Bulletin knew thearticle was there fast enough, butthe editor had" left his magazineat home on the piano !

The Canadian government hasjust issued a blue book on trade re-

lations with the United Stateswhich admits the new tariff lawhas caused Canadian exports tofall off, and complains that theUnited States will not grant thedominion the benefits of commer-cial protection, unless trade dis-

criminations are entered intoagainst the rest of the world.

Smuggling Chinese into the Uni-

ted States has long since become aregular business on the borders ofBritish Columbia. The latest' dis-

patches state that the United Statesis now having trouble with largenumbers of Japanese landed at theporta of Washington under con-

tracts to work on the CanadianPacific railroad, in violation of theimmigration law.

New York has-- followed the ex-

ample set by California and passeda law to severely punish any news-

paper proprietor or editor who mis-

represents the circulation of thejournals they control. The law isa good one and looks directly to theprotection of the advertising class ;

it will protect as well reputablenewspapers from the unfair compe-

tition of those who have no scruples in misrepresenting their circu-- 1

lation in order to attract advertis-

ing patronage. Such a law would

be a good thing for this country.

The splendid performance of thearmored cruiser New York has at-

tracted the attention of the navalconstructors of the world to theUnited States. That country ledthe way nearly thirty years ago inintroducing the type of the modernwar "ship and cruiser; it now looksas if she was putting the finishingtouches upon the methods and ma-

chines of modern naval warfare,inaugurated in a moment of na-

tional need and naval necessity.

The Philadelphia Record states.that, the sugar bountv clause is avalid argument against the annex-

ation of Hawaii, and rather incon-

sistently adds that Congress shouldimmediately repeal the bounty, if,in the mean time the Supremecourt does not declare it unconstitutional.

The newspapers again call atten-

tion to the fact that the ministerialcrisis in Greece is ominous. Pre-

mier Triconpis is said to have giv-

en up the nation's finances in despair, anil it is intimatea the Kingof that bankrupt country will pro-

bably have trouble in finding someone to succeed the man, who hasmade Grecian finances a specialty.Perhaps if Greece would follow theexample of Hawaii and remove thecause of threatened bankruptcy,her finances would speedilystraighten themselves.

The United States Treasury Department issued on May i, instruc-

tions to the consular and medicalofficers of the United States in for-

eign countries, which requires thatthe baggage of all steerage passen-gers, bound to the United States,shall first undergo inspection.While this new order has beenmade mainly to guard against thecholera it is also expected to havet restraining effect upon the im-

portation of diseases of othernat- -

ures into the United States.

The state of Kansas seems to havebeen reforming too much. It wasthe only state in which that anom-olou- s.

political organization origin-ally known as the farmers' allianceobtained power. The rustic states-men of Kansas thought they sawthe political Millenium peepingthrough the proposed drafts of newlegislation. Now they are in pos-

session of the substance of theirpolitical folly" and find real estatevaluations diminishing and bank-ing and trust companieswithdrawing their capital fromthe state. Kansas has . al-

ways been a sort of political freak.

It costs money to support a navy,and the least of the expense seemsto be in paying for its construction.Honoluluans are aware that half adozen warships in port, especiallythose of the United States, means arevival of local trade. This will be'

more fully understood, perhaps,when it is stated the cruiser Balti-more's recent trip to China cost theneat sum of something over $300,-00- 0,

or about $850 a day. A navalstation at Pearl river would meanmuch larger expenditures here thanever before.

Some of the democratic leadersare of the opinion a new tariff billcan be agreed upon, framed andpassed within six weeks after Con-

gress meets in September next.Those who have watched thecourse of tariff legislation in theUnited States, during the pasttwenty years, smile grimly at theenthusiasm displayed and prophe-sy that at the end of six months thenew tariff hill will still be iri thehands of anxious and uncer-tain democratic leaders.

Something Good.I have sold and used in my family

for several yearsj Chamberlain's Colic,Cholera and Diarrbcea Eemedyandhave found it one of the most usefuland satiefacforr remedies I ever han-dled. C. H. Lewis, Druggist, SaltLake City, Utah. For sale by allmedicine dealers.

Besson, Surra & Co.,. Agents for H. L

"AugustFlower"

Perhaps you do not believe thesestatements concerning Green's Au-gust Flower. Well, we can't makeyou. We can't force conviction in-

to your head orxned-Doubtin- g

"cine into yourthroat. We don't

Thomas. want to. The moneyis yours, and the

misery is yours; and until you arewilling to believe, aud spend the onefor the relief of the other, they willstay so. John H. Foster, 1122Brown Street, Philadelphia, says:" My wife is a little Scotch woman,thirty years ofage and ofa naturallydelicate disposition. For five or sisyears past she has been suffering

from Dyspepsia. SheVomit became so bad at last

that she could not sitEvery Meal, down to a meal but

she had to vomit itas soon as she had eaten it. Twobottles of your August Flower havecured her, after many doctors failed.She can now eat anything, and enjoyit; and as for Dyspepsia, she does notknow that she ever had it." 6

CO Hardware,S always up to the

Plantationo a full assortment

o

1843.

n

Builders and Genera! ,

times iu quality, styles and prices.

Supplies,to suit the various demand .

Steel Plows,made expressly for Island work with extra parts;

Cultivator's Cane Knives.

Shovels, Forks, Mattocks, etc, etc

Carpenters', Blacksmiths'and Machinists' Tools

Screw Plates, Taps and Dies, Twist Drills,

Paints and Oils, Brushes, Glass,Asbestos Hair Felt and Felt Mixture.

Blake's Steam Pumps,Weston's

SEWING MACHINES, Wilcox & Gibbs, and Remington.

c.2

O "to

o (0

w

Hstn

tJJOo Lubricating Oils

O Generalwill

Cent.--ISSUED

The MutualOF NEW

Richard McCurdy,

Assets

various other policies Issued bv-be obtained of

fc

Hoes,

j just aa pair.

in

H

an &

BREAKING

Agricultural Implements.

Centrifugals.

M Reasonable Rates?!

2T"Enquire of

i B. ISENBERG

3395-l- w 14S2.2W Waialae.

Por Sale.

A FEW MASTIFF PUl'3for sale. Enquire of

' P. K. I3ENBERG,w 14S2-2- r Waialae.

Bftswsa & cda

Boston Line Packets.

IXIVOKTSKSWIL1, PI.KABBtake notice the

BARK MARTHA DAVIS

, Master,

To on or about AUGUST 1st, ifsufficient inducement offers.

particulars apply to

O. BREWER &

ia quality and efficiency surpassed

it is possible toevery thing we have, If

1893.

Life Ins. Co.YORK.

President.

$175,084,156.61.Mutual Insnran Hnmn. ,- - Ww wwbuwmuf ua

ROSE,Hawaiian Islands.

of- -

E3&

Of Elzea of Hi nan A1 nlength undressed JKid, best

HE--

2 !2Gram. a

Merchandise,

IHOESE

there is anything you want, come and ask for It, you bepolitely treated. trouble to show goods.

3278-tf--d 14G2-tf--

SEMI-CENTENNIA- L

5 Per Debenture Policy

A.

Information regarding form of policy, or any particulars concernine thforma of The

GREAT REDUCTIONS!new line

cms.

further

B.

Fine Tailors' Goods, Cashmeres!8BEGBS DIAGONALS, Etc., Etc.,

Entirely new patterns. Suits made to order at prices ranging to $25."Gooda cuaranteed to fit.

GOO HM, Nuuanu Street.

514. FOET ST., BEEWEE BLOCK.

Have received fulluioves at $1.75vaiue lown

3395-- 1

of

fine

9-K- or

CO.

by none.not list

Life

S.General Agent,

No

from ?I8

.In oar Millinery Department, we are showing alldesicnsm Hats am! Rnnni. Tr..t. m . l??..'?leBl

r

rvfl ateFei we received a nice line of those5fceo?Sait,ta' WLlCh We are 0fferinS at tb

tenSScra83 I'atteras'80rae very choice Pat--

3 &l

Eg

that

Sail

BY- -

line

this

t

M

tf

A

"PIft

' I W

,-- H

The Daily Advertiser'

50 CENTS PER MONTH.

m

rlJJfajjs W;. r ii.i 1" riiradai iiiririT ninr ' HC'feMfrfr Elfafri TTiif miaanfl yktetitjZbisii

llatHpMworTdlaglgaVAi.gHipifflJhJaBJEl

.--

?

1 ,- -

Page 8: fl c ''y XXVIILNo. HONOLULU, TUESDAYS JUNE No....tf"Corrcapondencolntended lor publication, thellawa-lla-n Gazette, Post Office Box. O. " KB" Correspondence rclatlne to Advertise-ments,

-r

r

4

ts

la the Supreme Court of the

waiiaa Is'aads.

IB BKBOEk

la tie Matter of ttte Estate f"

ieeedsed.

PeUK&n for revooatloti of orderwiB to probftt. and ap-

pointment of administrator.

SNKSBtac.' AX MET, --, (jBt. C. SD

SiSQOaUOEB.)

BPESKKC OF THBTOtt,-- J.

FES JBHIKE

This matter cooes Isere on anappeal from the decision of Mr. Jus-tice Dole overruling the demurrerand plea filed herein by A. A. Haa-lele- a

on behalf of the devisees underthe trill of Kealiiahonui. The deci-sion appealed from is as follows:

"The petition is based upon allegednewly discovered evidence of fraudand forgery. The petitioner isJunius Kaae, who filed a similarpetition in this Court in 1S90, towhich a former application for revocation by Kapiolasi (w.) and othersand a judgment dismissing it, were- pleaded in bar, which plea in bar wassustained on appeal by the fullCourt.

"A. A. Haalelea, a party in interestpleads these last proceedings in barto the present petition, saying "thatin a proceeding heretofore had inthis Court in which said JuniusKaae was a party, the identical matter now set up by said Kaae was liti-gated sad a judgment renderedagainst him."

Although the petitions in bothcases vere similar in the com-plaining part, charging fraud andforgery in the production of the willwhich they attack, they differ in "thestatement o the right of the peti-tioner to appear in the matter. Inthe first case Junius Kaae claims asexecutor of his deceased wife Kamehaokalani. who was, as alleged, aniece of Kealiiahonui. In the pres-ent proceedings, he claims as a pur-chaser of the rights of Jiapule whomhe alleges to be a niece and heir ofthe said Kealiiahonui.

It is difficult to see how. bv anvlegal principle, Kapule or hergrantee should be estopped by ajudgment disposing of the claim offvamehaokalani. The application ofrafdjadiczia to the case would notbe thought of if the two nieces hadappeared personally in their own in-terests; what difference then can itmake that the cjaira of one was madeby her executor and that of the otherby her grantee, even though the exe-cutor and the grantee are one andthe same individual. The matter ofthe two petitions is not identical."The essential conditions underwhich the plea of r adjudicate be-comes applicable, are the identity ofthe thing demanded, the identity ofthe cause of demand and of the par-ties in the character in which theyare litigants." (1 Hermann on Es-toppel and Bes Adjudicata, s. 102).

The plea in bar is therefore over-ruled.

A demurrer to the petition is alsofiled by the said A. A. Haalelea,showing for cause of demurrer: 1.That this Court has no jurisdiction atchambers to set aside upon motionthe judgment admitting said will ofKealiiahonui to probate.

2. That said motion does not showgood cause for granting a rehearingupon the probate of the will of Kea-Iiiahon-

in that it does not state thenames of the witnesses nor the na-ture of the evidence alleged to benewly discovered.

3. That the petitioner Junius Kaaeis estopped by his own laches andby the laches of those nnder whom heclaims from the right of being fur-ther heard upon the matter set up inhis motion.

The counsel for tho demurrer ar-gues that decrees in probate have thesame status as other judgments, asregards finality and the methods ofquestioning them, and consequentlymay not be except by pro-ceedings in equity, or by a bill of re-

view. He further contends that hereall probate powers are statutory, andno such power of reconsidering a de-

cree in probate has been conferredby statute.

Onr laws give the judges of thecourts of record power to prove wills,appoint administrators, to compeladministrators and excecntors to per-form their duties, and to removethem. The conferring of this gen-eral authority carries with it all nec-essary powers which are incident toa court of probate. One of these isthe power to revoke a decree admit-ting a will to probate. This is a use-ful and necessary quality of courts ofprobate and is recognized as suchwherever the common law has influ-enced legal principles and practice.

Oar own courts have so construedthe laws giving them jurisdiction inthese matters, and the followingcases, extending over nearly thewhole period of our judicial history,show a consistent sentiment in favorof the existence of this power in ourprobate courts.

Keiiipelapela vs. Pamano, 1 Haw- -282.

In re Paeimuai. 3 id, 141.In re Paalubi (Pobi). id., 722.In re Kealiiahonui, 6 iiL, 1, and 8

id. (321 of scrap book).

I- - '

Ha-- 1 The case of 'Waters vs. Stickney (1j Allea, 1), which is a trading cast-- oaihi qnetin, contains to followingpertinent ftatenseut of the law:

American authorities,

"hiven heu a will is proved msojenin furtn, it is within too juris-diction of the conrt. for sufficientcause shown, to revoke the probate.The English authorities recognize assufficient causes of revocation, for-gery of the will, fraud in obtainingprobate, neglect or mismanagementin conducting the suit, or the pro-duction of a later will." (Page A).

In Bowen vs. Johnson (5 IS. L,119-20- ), the Supreme Court of KhodeIsland held that the power to revokea probate once granted, althoughnowhere expressly recognized in thestatutes of that state, was a just andnecessary power to be implied fromthe statute conferring general au-thority to 'take the probate of willsand grant administration on theestates of deceased persons.' " (Page11).

"In face of these authorities (re-ferring to a number of cases) it isimpossible to deny the power of aconrt of probate to annrovo snhs--quent will or codicil, after admittingto probate an earlier will by a decree,the time of appealing from which ispast; or to correct errors arising outof fraud or mistake in its own de-crees. This power does not makethe decree of a court of probate lessconclusive in any other court, or inany way impair the probate jurisdic-tion, but renders that jurisdictionmore complete and effectual, andby enabling a conrt of probate tocorrect mistakes and supply defectsin its own decrees, better entitlesthem to be deemed conclusive uponother courts " (Page 15 )

As to the second ground of thedemurrer that the motion does notstate the names of witnesses nor thenature of the evidence alleged to benewly discovered ; the petition inthis case cannot be regarded as amotion for a new trial under Sections1155 and 1156 of the Civil Code.which must be filed within ten daysfrom verdict or judgment, and mustbe supported by affidavit of the al-

leged newly-discovere- d evidence.It does not appear that Kapule,

the petitioner's grantor, was ever aparty to any of the former proceedings relating 10 tnis estate, or nasbecome bound by 3ny of the decreesrendered therein ; she is then en-titled to be heard, and these proceed-ings are so far original in their na-ture, although the prayer that theprobate of the will be revoked, whichwould necessarily be preliminary totne granting or letters ot administra-tion, might perhaps be regarded asin the nature of a motion under theold proceedings.

It has not been the practice of ourcourt to require upon a petition likethis affidavits of the names of wit-nesses and the nature of the evidence,though it would, seem upon somegrounds that such a rule would bedesirable.

Such a rule would enable thecourt to consider more advantageously tne question or laches thethird ground of the demurrer. How-ever, as the petition recites that evi-dence has been discovered sinceJanuary, 18S9, to the effect that thesaid will was not signed by the de-ceased or by anyone in his presence,or by his request, knowledge or con-sent, and was not attested or sub-scribed in the presence of the de-ceased by the pretended witnessesthereof, it does not seem that thecharge of laches is well supported."Delay is immaterial as long as theperson delaying does not know hisrights, or is ignorant of the fact thatthe transaction can be impeached."(Hay on Fraud, 518.) " The right ofthe party defrauded to have thetransaction set aside is not affectedby lapse of time so long as he re-mains without any fault of his ownin ignorance of the fraud which hasbeen committed." (Kerr on Fraud.52.)

It is not for this court to considerquestions relating to the presentstatus of the property of the de-ceased, and the extent to which itmayor may not be affected by theseproceedings. Such questions are notnow nnder consideration.

The demurrer is overruled.'Br the CotraT:The above decision sets out the

case in foil, with the plea in bar andthe grounds of demurrer. "We are ofthe opinion that the decision on theplea in bar and the grounds set ontin the demurrer shouid be sustained,and we adopt it as the opinion ofthis Court. Bat a new point hasbeen raised by the respondent, viz.,"That petitioner under the deedwhich he sets forth took no right tomaintain this proceeding. It amountsmerely to the assignment of a chosein action, viz the right to attack ajudgment for an alleged fraud, andthat a right of this kind cannot beassigned."

In Anderson's Dictionary of Law,we find the following :

"The general definition of 'chosein action' is a right not reduced intopossession; a note bond, or otherpromise not negotiable is denomin-ated a chose in action, before thepromisor or obligor is liable to anaction on it, as well as after. A notefor money payable on time is a chosein action as soon as made."

--The term 'chose in action' is oneof comprehensive import It includesthe infinite variety of contract coven-ants and promises which confer onone party the right to recover a per-sonal chattel or a sum of money fromanother by action. A debt secured bya bond and mortgage is an example."

"In its enlarged sense a chose inaction may be considered as anyright to damages, whether arisingfrom the commission of a tort, the

This view is generally supported omission of a duty, or the breach of I

by English and a contract"

aAA I aifMiA i JUNE IS S

In BonvierV Law Dictionary wefind the following definition:

"'CIioj:' in action,' " a right" re-ceive tr recover a debt or mo:iey, or j

damages for brtMcit of contract, r i

for tort connected with contract, but I

which cannot be enforced without ac-tion."

Tho consideration named in the i

ueeu in question is iov; and attecuon, ;

an unuertasiug and promise of thegrantee to provide for the grantors acomfortable and suitable supportand maintenance during .the re-mainder of their respective lives, andthe sum of one dollar. These aregood and sufficient considerations;for these considerations the grantors"have bargained, sold, and grant,convey, assign, transfer, set over anddeliver unto tho grautee, all andsingular the lands, tenements, here-ditaments and appurtenances, goods,chattels and effects, rights, privilegesand equities, rights and choses inaction, and all property and propertyrights whatsoever of every name anduniuifl nuicu nun ueiong or wnicnshall hereafter belong, descend, re-vert, or accrue to or which is or arenow or shall hereafter be owned,possessed or enjoyed by said grantorKapule or her husband." Follow-ing this is a very full power ofattorney to the grantee..

We are of the opinion that this isan absolute deed to the petitioner ofall the rights, title and interest (ifany exists) of the grantors in thelands and estate of Kealiiahonui.This deed is on the same footing withmany deeds nnder which claimantscame into shares of the Charles Ka-nai-na

estate.On February 23d, 1S93, the follow-

ing stipulation was filed:The parties to this cause, namely,

Junius Kane the petitioner, and Mrs.A. A. Haalelea the respondent, andtheir respective counsel, do herebystipulate and agree as follows:

n hereas the Honorable S. B. Dole,formerly a Justice of said SupremeCourt, has resigned his seat upon theBench of said Court since the ap-peal of said respondent herein wasargued and submitted for decision toand by said Court, which consisted,for the purposes of said appeal andits decision, of Mr. Justice Bickertonand said Honorable S. B. Dole, thensnch Justice as aforesaid, and

Whereas by reason of said resig-nation of said Honorable S. B. Dole,no decision has been rendered uponsaid appeal in this cause; .

Now, therefore, it is hereby agreedthat the said Honorable S-'- Dolemay participate in, make, sign, fileand enter a decision and judgmentin this cause, upon said appeal, inlike manner as though he were stillin commission as a Justice of saidCourt. And that such decision andjudgment when so signed, filed and.entered (if concurred in by said Mr.Justice Bickerton), shall have thesame force and euect to all intentsand purposes, as though the samehas been made, signed, filed and en-tered by a majority of the Justices ofsaid Court actually in commission assuch Justices of said Court.

Dated this 16th day of February,1S93.

fSig. Ar.rRFT) S. HinrwELL.C. W. ASHFORO,Counsel for petitioner.

Sig. F.M. Hatch,Cousel for respondent.

Sig.l Jnxrus Kaae,Petitioner.

Sig. A. A. FTa atxt.fi,BespondenL

The decision of the lower Courtoverruling the demurrer and plea issustained, and the appeal is dismiss- -

A. S. Hartwell and C W. Ashfordfor petitioner; F. M. Hatch for re-spondent.

Honolulu, June 2nd, 1S93.

A FORECAST.

Prophetic Words WrittenThirty Years Ago.

Over

A student in Oahn college wrote,in an essay more than thirty yearsago, the following prophetic- - words,especially significant when put sideby side with the recently publishedletter of Minister Stevens.

"The tendency to a reaction to-

wards heathenism constantly dis-

plays itself. .We Eee itparticularly in the revival of' heathenish practices such as makingofferings to Pele ; we hear it in themonotonous sound of the huladrum ; we read it in the accountsof murders and nameless crimes.

"One circumstance is worthy ofattention, viz : lhat all these evilshave been in some way counten-anced in their origin by those inhigh rank. This is eminently thecase with the hula, with all its at-

tendant evils, and so also with thecrime of murder. Alluding nodoubt to a certain shooting affrdvin w.hich the king wa3 principalactor.

"Hawaiians still look, as wastheir old habit, to their rulere asexamples. The destiny, then, ofthe nation depends in a great mea-sure on them. If they livecorrect lives there may be somehope for the nation, but if bytheir example they open theflood gates of licentiousness andcrime, of heathenism and idolatry,the doom of Hawaii is sealed. Thepeople are fast dwindling away.

The best that can be hoped forthem now is that their doom be nothastened by a relapse into idol- -

lotry."

l:iil EXPLAINS

WAY HE INDOKSSS MR. SPRECK- -

els' Scheme.

Tcvf of the Zetter Xot Sent To

Bio ant.

In a communication to tho NewYork Sun, republished in the Star ofSaturday last, entitled, "Spreckels onPolitics," a statement is made to thoeffect that a certain letter read at ameeting of the Planters' labor andSupply Co. was drafted by Mr. PaulNeumann and myself, and that uponthe letter being rejected by the meet-

ing a request was made that it shouldnot be spread upon the minutes, andpledges were secured from everymember present that the Jotter shouldnot be made public

In justice to Col. Spreckels andmyself I beg to state the followingfact3 regarding the letter in question.Shortly after Col. Spreckels' arrivalhero he invited Mr. H. P. Baldwinand myself to his house to discussthe question of annexation as bearing on plantation interests, xueletter referred to wa3 written by meat that interview as expressing Col.Spreckels' and my own views on thomatter, and was to a great extent en-

dorsed by Mr. Baldwin. The letterwas read at a meeting of the P. L. &S. Co., and although approved of bya majority of those present it wasdeemed best not to forward it to Mr.Blount unless the approval was un-

animous. It was suggested to spreadthe letter on the minutes, to whichmotion I, acting for Col. Spreckels,who was not present at the meeting,readily gave my consent. No pledgeswere asked from members to keepthe letter secret, neither was thereany reason to make it public, thesense of the meeting not being takenon that point.

In conclusion I would say that Ifully agree with Col. Spreckels in hisopinion that annexation pure andsimple, without any regard to ourpresent labor system, on which theexistence of our sugar industry de-

pends, or protection of the civilrights pf Hawaiians against the hostof political intriguers who would nodoubt invade our shores as soon, asthe treaty was passed, would prove adisaster instead of a boon to theseislands. Wsr. G. Ibwix.

Following is the draft of letter sub-mitted to the trustees and membersof the Planters' Labor & Supply Co.,referred to by Mr. Irwin in the fore-going letter:

In viewing the political questionnow pending between the UnitedStates and the Hawaiian islands, oneof the most important points to boconsidered would be as to what extent the chief industry of tho islandswould be affected should they be an-

nexed to the United States, andthereby become subject to the lawsnow existing in that country regard-ing contract labor and the restric-tions imposed on the importation ofAsiatic laborers.

For many years past the matter oflabor and the possibility of furnish-ing a sufficient supply to meet therequirements of our planters hasbeen the subject ol many experi-ments and great expense, and labor- -

era from many parts of the globehave been brought to the islandswith a view of solving this muchvexed question, but with the excep-tion of those of the Asiatic type theexperiment has always proved a fail-ure either from the fact that it wasimpossible for laborers of the Scan-dinavian class to do field work inthis tropical climate, or by the rea-son of expense attendant oh laborfrom Portugal and similar countries.

Bealizing these condition's, theplanters have been compelled inorder to compete successfully withother sugar raising countries, toenter into negotiations for a class, oflabor competent to fill the require-ments of plantation work, and at arate of wages that would admit of aprofit to the planters. With thisend in view the Hawaiian legisla-ture, realizing the precarious condi-tion of our plantations, was inducedto amend certain portions of the lawsrestricting Chineso immigration, andto allow under certain conditions theadmission of a limited number ofChinese laborers. As this, however,was entirely inadeqt. ite to meet thedemand of the planta.ions, a conven

which labor from that countrysecured in sufficient quat.tity to meetimmediate demands, and aboutseventy-fiv- e percent, of the labor nowemployed on the plactatiLtis are oftms nationality, an or wix cameoriginally on three-yea-rs 'ntract.

The importance of the ntractsystem to our plantation' mi at beapparent to anyone at all ccqaaiitedwith the present condition otsngar industry of the Islands, fornot only does it secore to the planta-tion tbo payment of the heavyadvances which are made in order totransport the laborer from his nativecountry, but it also protects him

against "strikes," which miht occurat any timonndor freo labor system, ami which, from tho peculiarnatnreof the sugar business, mightprove ruinous to that industry on thoIslands. In this couuection, I wonldalso say, that not only is the contract

protection to tho plantations, butit was also ono of the conditions

which tho Japanese Governmentconsented to its subjects coming totho Islands, as tho contract insuredto tho laborer regular employmentand the faithful carrying out of itsconditions on tho part of the employ-er. Tho majority of tho planterswould no doubt prefer free labor ifthero was sufficient on tho Islands toguarantee him against "strikes" andlabor combinations, but isolated astho Islands aro from tho mainland, acombined action on tho part of thoJapanese, say for instanco about barvest time, would result in great lossto tho plantation, and until tho sup-ply of labor is fully to tho

it would appear as though thecontract system wero the only oneon which tho planter could rely forsafety.

Under these conditions it will boseen that while I fully appreciate thegreat benefits to be realized by thesexsi an as irom closer relations with thoUnited States, and that Annexationwould be a consummation greatly tobe desired, I cannot but feel that anypolitical change which would annulour present labor systom would sim-ply cripple our sugar plantations,and the United States, instead of ac-

quiring a prosperous and wealthygroup of islands, would be takingunder their protection a countrywhoso cheif industry might bo bank-rupted by the change.

CONSUL APPOINTED.

While the councils wero in ex- -

ecutive session Monday, June 5th,Charles T. Wilder received theappointment of consul-gener- al atSan Francisco in place of F. S.Pratt. One other name was men-

tioned for the place that of J. W.Girvin, the present consul at SanDiego. Mr. Wilder expects to de-

part for San Francisco on the nextAustralia to take up the duties ofhis office.

Mr. Wilder wns mentioned forthe place over two months ago.His friends circulated a petitionrecommending him for the position.At this time it was understood thathe was to receive tho appointment.but the advent of Colonel ClausSpreckels changed the complexionof things. Mr. Spreckels wantedPratt retained in office, and he sosignified his intention to tho execu-tive through Mr. Irwin. The gov-ernment, so it is said, did not wantto anger Mr. Spreckels, fearing thatif they did he would make a de-

mand for his $95,000 before it wasready to turn over to him, so nochange was made in the office atthat time. The money has sincebeen paid to Mr. Spreckels andthe government hastened to makethe greatly needed change, Mr.Spreckels to the contrary notwith-standing. If all tho articles whichhave appeared in the San Franciscopapers regarding Mr. Pratt are truehe should been removedmonths ago.

IA GRIPPE.

The Disease is Epidemic iaHauaBlatricU

Dr. T. Allen ha3 written to theboard of health that there is anepidemic prevalent in that districtwhich shows all the Bvmntoma ofT.fi rjwriT,o 'Tlin Anntnr' antra trta

illness lasts but a few days andyields readily to treatment. It isnot confined to any particular raceor nationality but attacks alikenatives, Japanese, Chinese, Amer-icans, and Europeans.

At least 200 persons beentreated by Dr. Allen during thepast two weeks and the disease isby no means abating.

The matter received extensivediscussion at the meeting of theboard Wednesday and the questionof sending an extra physician toHana waB suggested in case theepidemic continued.

Slandering the Dead.

Mb. Editor: I brand as falsethe black and conscienceless insin-uations connecting the late D. L.Huntsman wifh the sticks of giantpowder, and vial of fulminate ofsilver found in the rear of Dr.

premises.these vile slanders of the dead

tion was entered into with Japan, by i have been committed by personawas

aa t--

c

,

back

n

aun-

der

np

have

'

have

who are not by any means preparedj to substantiate their miserable at- -'

tacks.HAnnv von WERTirenN.

Honolulu, June 5, 1893.

Fntate Departares.

The following persons are bookedthe at the office of Hackfeld & Co. to

leave for the coast on the S. S.China, due here on the 18th inst.Misa M. L. Garten, W. G. Smith,M. Sanders, W. Nicoll, W. B. Ole-so- n.

NEWS FEOM HILO.

PLAN TO BEAUTJFYVOLCANO ROAD.

THE

A Ore it on Khort i:t lorn Sue r StaaonWlmllnc l'l lllnr of Dr.

It. it. YflUlitmn.

Hilo is tho best illustration of atropical arboroum on tho islands.Nature has its best chinco to showits truly beautiful sido. Situated asit is, protected from tho violonca ofstorms nud winds, nourished by abountiful supply of rain, and blessedwith a sufficiency of lifo giving Bun-shin- o

plant-lif- e in all its variousforms, nourishes in that perfectedform nowhore elso to bo found inthese magnificent islos of tho sea.Not elsewhere on these islands cantho trees bo found so shapely, thofoliage so thrifty and green, and thoface of nature so bright and smilineas here.

Daring tho past year or two thotown has shown a commondablo pro-gress in tho beautifying of tho lawnsand the cultivation of flowers Andshrubs, so that now it has thrown offthat appearance of neglect it formerlyhad, and yields to the eyo a pleasantpicture of well cared for and culti-vated gardens. But wo aro lackingin variety of treo life in onr midst ;wo havo not a sufficient variety oftrees to point out to tho stranger andto give more pleasing change to tholandscape. Passing around tbo townono sees n superabundance) of treesof massivo foliage, whilo thero is asparcity of tho taller trees and thosoof a moro graceful and featheryfohago. This might bo ascribed totho fact that thoso trees aro bestadaptod to the locality, but tho difaculty of tho past has most probablybeen tho inability or tho lack of know-ledge to get them.

With a commissioner of agricultureas activo as Mr. Marsdon is, a betteropportunity is now offered for secur-ing variety from tho governmentnurseries through his office. A suggestion in this lino has been madeby ono of our town ladies that Hilohave an arbor day, on which treeamight be set out around the town,adding variety and beauty to the

and also that tho volcano rotte especially thought of. From tb

eighth to Bay the thirteenth mlothere is no tall foliage of any kind,and it is on this stretch that a greatdeal of beauty and practical benefitmight be lont by the planting out offruit and foliage trees and. seedsalong the roadside. Now that thofruit season is on, advantage might betaken ot tho time, and if a day wereset apart in the early part of Julyand accepted and approved of by thocommunity, a great deal might bodone, with tho amount of rain we re-ceive, seeds regularly planted wonldbe very liable to germinate.

If this strip were partly filled upwith palms, foliage and fruittrees, itwould add greatly to tho beauty ofthe ride to tbo volcano, besides beingof great interest to tourists. It is amost fortunate provision of the crownland leases that tho woods imme-diately bordering on tho road arereserved from destruction, and alsothat tho mutilation of tbo lowerwoods has ceased. In a largo mea-sure, since- - tho tabu has been en-forced on tho crown land estate,naturo has repaired the damagewhich was such an eyesore a year ago.A ride up the road is now a most re-freshing, interesting and stimulatingouting.

Tho monthly social of the foreignchnrch was given this month at theresidence of Judgo and Mrs. S. L.Austin on Tuesday evening of lastweek.

In another month the sugar millswill bo about winding up the grind-ing of this season's crop. Tho runhas been a most successful one in theHilo district, tho exceptionally fineweather of last and this year givinga large yield of sugar in the cane.

Dr. Williams has been laid up forthe past ten days with a severe at-tack of fever, but is now convalescingand will soon be around again attending to his duties.

Mr. E S. Gillin occupied the pulpitof Bev. E. P. Baker yesterday duringthe latter's absence in Honolulu.

The third term of tho circuit conrfwill be held at Honokaa on July 5th,and will be presided over by JudgeAustin.

General regret was expressed atthe resignation of Mr. Porter as min-ister of finance. His services at thepresent crisis have been highly ap-preciated by tho community gener-ally.

Hon. Alex. Young is in town, batreturns to Honolulu in the Kinuu.

Mr. Ernest Lyman leaves todayfor the World's Fair, and also to at-tend college over east.

The brig Lurliue, Matson, arrivedon May 29th, twelve days from SanFrancisco, with a general cargo. Pas-sengers: S. A. Raphael, Jas. Sisaon,a. Jletchnm, wile and child, Mrs.Curtis, Miss Congbey.

The brig Geneva, Nelson, arrivedon June 3d, thirty days from SalinaCruz, in ballast She was seven daysgetting away from tho coast, and hashad baffling winds ever since. Pro-visions ran short and the men Wereon short allowance, l'he captain'swife gave birth to a baby sixteendays ont. Both mother and child aredoing welL

The bark Harvester is recoivio0the balance of her cargo today fromtbo steamer Hawaii, and will eat to-morrow with 1050 tons sugar.

Hilo, June 5, 1893.

Page 9: fl c ''y XXVIILNo. HONOLULU, TUESDAYS JUNE No....tf"Corrcapondencolntended lor publication, thellawa-lla-n Gazette, Post Office Box. O. " KB" Correspondence rclatlne to Advertise-ments,

MOLOKAI.

L CAi, TOBKiSTS 134- -

Dorian the early pan f feist xaoatfi

it ws y gee fertaae te visit thetsfend of Motokai. X ktadedatKau-ffv- i

TbefaadwgaUiib port is& poady contracted wharf. Toreloay

roio stoees heaped up in a loosezsaaaer coastitate vrfest tbey eall alaadia. It tras early in the morning

I reached the Hudiosr. I lookedarwtad aad sar bat tvro or threebosses. I required of the natives whocarae dovm to meet the steamer wherethe village was. I was toW the bouseswere bidden amidst the algarobagraves. I was taken to the residence

Sir. J. yawreta, jr., the assistantsohooteiaster of that district. Theroad to his boose was through narrow-path- s

hedged in on each side by tallalgaroba trees.

After a brief stay at Mr. Xaiareta'sfcesse, I left stSia. for Halawa,aboet thirty miles further to theaorthward. 3Iy guide conducted methroeghthe kiawe trees. When weemersed from these, we entered theJdkania boshes which crew on bothsides of the road for two or thrte milesbevoed KaaaakakaL On the landw&rd or mauka side of the road therewas nothing to be seen bat rocksscattered over the grocnd by thous-ands. The plains and hill sides lookKke a vast desert. No trees growthere, and the grass was dried by thetateose beat of the sun. This barrenbad extended for nearly four or livesafles aioac the shore and runs in-b- ad

to the mountains. My guide toldme that is olden tunes, the now bar-r- e

plain, was inhabited. Along thebeach were excellent fishing places.Fish aboends there in large qoantities.

At Kawefa, about rive miles fromfvTmfc-Or.- i u seen the first signs ofKe. There are three or foar largewpodee hooses here. The natives areenured in fishing, and every-- Satur-dsrtke- v

sell their fish at the lepersetueoeat. iae laiaau x .Lanauayafew ziiles to the southeast of thisplace. There is a native temple orheiaa still standing at Kawela. Afew hundred yards from, it there stillssiads an oW wiliwili tree which Issaid to be of historic importance.

Beyond Kawela vegetable life be-

gins" The bill sides, mountains andvalleys, are greener. Along the beachis the famous sand of iCIoliL FivemBes bevood Kawela we came to Ka-sa&I- o.

fiere we found the first Chi-Be- se

store, standing in an almost iso-lated place. Along the beach are therains of the Kamalo sugar zaili. Thesawke stack and several oathoosesmark the spot where a great sugarplantation ooce flourished.

Along the beach from Kawela toKamalo are no less than twenty, per-haps thirty, lokos or fish ponds," madeby natives during the reizns of theeaiy Kmehameh&. These fishpoads axe similar in. eoBstraetion to(&o-- e at Kualo, on the Koolau sideof Oaha. Tbeee are made of stone, i

with wails five or six feet high andtiirve or tear feet wide at the top.The length of the walls varies fromthree hundred to one thousand feet.Tbese fish poods were built at thecommand of the former chiefs of Mbio-ka-u,

and they reaain totiay in goodptc-e- i nation to tell the rMng- -

gener-a&o- a

of Hawaiian? what iniazirUxk?and hardworking men their ancestorswere. They were made at a timewhes Xotocai and the other island;:of the Hawaiian group were moremrmeroasty peoptedl On the mauka is&at C the road stood the remains ofvarioos heians. or old heathen tem-ples, and afco the restates of stonecbsrehe bcfrt by the early mbsion-arte- s

The latter stand in marked"ourast with toe modern churches.The old eharehes were built of stones,eemeoted with mod and day. Theworshippers who osed to assemblevatia one of those churches eocWbo: be aeeommodated in maay of oarmodern churches. Is otdee times na-tives marched from their grass hutstor many miles around to attend ser- -viee within those rudely-bm- lt edifices,At Pakoo is the okkst stone churchom Molokai Rev. Maaose is pastor.

It was dsk when we reached theJ&atiial little valley of Halawa. Oarparty was thes dbtnbated among thefeamaaiaas, the larger nsmber b?ingdomiciled at the residence of the Hoe.A. P. Paehaote.

HALAWA VALLEY.f

Tats valky is sapfo&ed to be themost beautiful spot on Mofofcai notexggpriiKr Kalae. the raountais hemeof Mr. B. TV. Meyers, agent of theleper settlement. Halawa valley isformed by a great gorge a thousandfeet deep. Halawa hay at its foot isaeirly three miles wide. The val-ley iveif is about four miles long.aad at the mauka end is the beautifulMsaalafalb. The natives of Halawa,aboet 20) men, women and children,are mostly engaged ia taro coltfva-tio- c

Sear one thousand patches oftiro are caltivited, which are nowrjeariyripe.

Gensice, old style Hawaiians arefeaad here. They are so far awayfxezx city life that they are not con-taminated by the loose habits of dvil-mt&j- n.

There are no sugar pianta-tfoesEearb- y

to call their" attentionfrom home We. Hen, women andehttdren axe all hard workers. Evenschool eMIdrea are to be seen work-- Jfcg In the taro patches before anaafter schooL isAKfcocgii it ia the largest viHige,

tteTersettte-xuss- s,

oa Molokai, yet tfcsreare onlyrwe feref gners foand here, Mr. H-r- sn

Giesenaada Chinaman. These arehardly to be called foreigseis for theynave resiueu iu the valley for over

k ""

tea year and are acquainted with thehabits and customs of the native--.

MOAOUV FALLS.

This noted waterfall is only about athree-mil-e walk from Paeliaole's resi-dence. Modula is the fall below andis about M feet high by 0 feet wide.About 380 feet higher up the streamfrom Moauk is a little waterfall andstill a few varus above it is Manianiafalls. This waterfall is a httle lanrer jthan Moaula and more beautiful, The ,

way to it is very steep and ditlteultsad oaly a few of the kamaainas haveever vestured there. Manianin is lo-

cated half way up the pal), and formsa large basin ia the middle of themountain. A smaller waterfall ismuad several hundred feet above Ma-niania. Probably nowhere on theislands can there be found so manywaterialls clustered so closely to- -

Igetner. At tnjs point oneeouiunoineip oeing s:rucK witn tne grandeurand majesty of the view presented.The sides of the waterfalls are dense-ly covered with mountain evergreenswhose fragrance mingles with theair.

The natives of Halawa tell a strangestory in connection with the falls ofMoaula. Although the basin of thefalls is over forty feet deep and be-tween three and four miles from thenearest sea beach, they state thatwhen Queen "Emma died the fall wascovered with sand resembling that ofthe seashore so that the way wasblocked as far as the pooL The sandhas since been washed awav bv thewater until row no trace of it re-mains.

LASIE&CU.

Lanikaula was a prophet or ma-kan- k,

who lived in a kiiktii grove inthe plain above Halawa. The kukuigrove is still standing, although di-

minished to less than half its originalsize, ine way 10 ic is so imc&iy cover-ed with Iantana bushes, horses cannotpenetrate on account of them. With-in the kukui groves was buried,over a century ago, the remains ofLarukaul3, the great prophet of Molo-ka- i.

The story goes, that he died avictim to the strategy of Polo, anotherand lesser prophet of Molokai. Imi-kaul-a

saw his end was nigh and hebrought together his three sons. Heasked them how they could best con-ceal his bones so that other chiefsmight not use them for fish-hook- s.

The eldest recommended giving hisbones to the sharks. The second sonadvised breaking up of his bones andfeeding the pigs with them. Theyoungest son suggested a better plan.which was accepted by their father.His plan was to dig a deep hole with-in the kukui zrove, lav his bones atthe bottom and put layers of paho3,

'or sharp-edge- d rocks, on top, so thatwhoever attemDted to unearth thebones would have his lingers cut by j

tue sioaes. .agncuiiuiai impiecieuiswere cot imported then. lianikaulafavored this plan, and his tomb islocated anions: the kukui trees. It isa place often visited by strangers, butthe Iantana bushes have shut out thetomb from view. I made two attemptsto see the grave, but failed each time.

THE KOOLAtT EIDE.

One day Mr. van Geisen and tennative boys took me to the mountainsoverlooking Kalawao, at the lepersettlement. After four hours' walkover hills and down valleys we arrivedat the top of the ridge of Haupu.

"When we reached the divide thesea was at oar feet The precipice hadcaved in about half way down thepan. it was a signt X can neverforget I was standing as it were onthe edge of a preeipiee 2500 feet high,which separated the leper settlement f

from the happy world without. Thetrati leadin? down to the little ham- -'let of Puahaunui is soeh that not oneout of a thousand would dare go down.It is even worse than the path. leadingup to the top of Makana. on Kauai.danseroos as that one is, vet I wastold that aged Hawaiians used to plantmeloBS and gourds at its base, andthey still bring up heavy bandies bythat very patbl

Kalawao was about six miles fromwhere we stood. Between were thevalleys of Wailau and PelekunuThese plaees; althoagh now not fre--qoenthr visited, were once thicklypopulated, fcteep precipices, somerising to over three thousand feet!high, extend all the way from wherewe were to Kalawao. The Kalalau i aside of Eaaai, preeJpitous as that mayseem to vtaiors, is notning m com-parison to the Koolau paiis of Molo-kai. Indeed it seems as if ic is oneside of a volcano, while the other half j

has been demolished and boned bythe waves. A student of geology' Icould not conceive of any other possible cause for so abrupt an endinz onthat side of Motokai. A small ex-tinct vokano is found at Kalawao,and the ancient leceod savs thatMadame Pele first dag a hole there, atbat when she discovered watef she i

abandoned it and left for Kilauea, '

Hawaii. er,Oh the side of the pali of Haupu,

about 3) feet from the edsT there,grows a solitary tree known as an. It ;

resembles pine in appearance. The!natives claim it to be as rare as Kalai--1pehoa wood, andequabV as sroodinits med winal qualities. These woodsare held in superstitioaa fear by thenatives as Idols were carved from ,

their trunks in olden times. The Ka--hupohoa tree is nearly extinct, butone native on Molokai claims that theroot still remains, and be is the only '

oue who knows where to find it. i

There are only two an trees known onMolokai, one of them growing on theside of the Haupu Bait A nativenamed Tvahineino, who by the way Isthe only person around ilaiawa whodares scale tho hj?iibts- - ri Anvwent down and cot an au tree for a !

certain person at Halawa. He ces- -cended by means of a rope. Whenthe wood wa. broozht to Halawa. the fold native folk began to show signsof fear, as they said it was a sacrilig-fousa- ec

Theyoangergenerationjiow-eve- r,paid no heed and no injury of

any kind happened.On our return to Honolulu ourparty

paid a visit to Kalae, the home of Mr.Meyers.

Jakes X. K. Keoea.Honolulu, June 1, 1S53.

An enidemic of fever and zrineaid to be fast spreading through. I

tee districts of Mzlo. KohiLa. 2nd.rTi'.rTT.ikTra and .throughout Hani. I

Several white people are Eofifiringfrom it but natives ore szid to be bethe greatest suSsrers.

HAWAIIAN GAZETTh. TUESDAY, JUNE 13, 1803.

"DA A TL II A I? TJT71 T "TTJJDWArUL' U.C nJfoAJ;JLJDL

REPORT OF INSPECTOR jjAVID

DAYTON.i

An Eccentric Penitent From-

Australia.

The board of health met yesterdayafternoon at 3 r. jr., with PresidentW. 0. Smith iu the chair.

There were present W. O. Smith,John Ena, Dr. Andrews, J. T. Water-hous-e,

jr., Dr. Day, C. 13. Reynolds,agent, and David Dayton, iuspector.

The minutes of the previous meet-in- swere read and adopted.

President Smith read the followinginteresting report from InspectorDayton, just returned from the lepersettlement:TO Honorable V. O. S.mtxh, Pres-

ided of the Board of Heautit.Sir : In obedience to instructions.

Dr. Goto and I sailed for the leper set-tlement, Molokai, in the steamer Mo--kolii on the loth ult., and arrivedthere on the ISth ult I called on SIs--ter Mariana, at the Bishop Home,then went to Kalawao.

On the 19th ult. I was at the hospi-tal the most of the day, as I was anx-ious for the hospital to" be in conditionto receive Dr. (jotcs patients.

On the0th ult. I was at the hospi-tal during the forenoon to see how thework was getting along, then went tothe Boys' Home at Kalawao and hada talk with Mr. Dutton and the Sis-ters.

They are very anxious to have thehome put in a better condition so thatit will be more convenient for themto do their work.

Sister Mariana wishes the buildingsmoved to the mauka side of the roadso that there will not be so much run-ning about. I think thev can bemoved and put in order for less than$500. Then it would be necessary tobuild a new cook house like the oneat the Bishop Home, and more build-ings would have to be erected for pa-tients, for the Home is full now, therebeing 91 persons there.

ine ijaiuwin Duiiuings are occupiedby thirty or more boys and the build'ings are neat and clean. Hon. H. P.Baldwin donated $W37.1S, and he iswilling to donate s3,9o2.S: more tomake the home what it should be.Buildings for lepers should be about20x30 feet, then they could be kept inbetter condition and the old buildingsshould be cut in two, for the smell inthem now is something terrible.

On the 22nd ult. we tried the boilerat the hospitals and took the waterfor the baths from the blow off-pip- e

at the bottom of the boiler, and fed inthe top of the boiler and we foundthat the water boiled on the surfacewhere it was only warm at the bot-tom of the boiler, so on the 23rd nit.we changed the pipes and fed in twoblow-of- f pipes at the bottom of the boil-er and tapped the boiler a little abovethe lower try-coc- k and we had boilingwater in 20 minutes, while the waterwas only warm at the bottom of theboiler, now it is impossible to drawthe water out of the boiler and burnpe tunes in tne Doner, ana it is a sav--mg ot coai ior mere is sumcient notwater abovs the pipes that leads tothe baths, to heat the water for thebaths at noon without firingup, and in the afternoon very littlefire will be required. I think'thut itwill require about one-ha- lf of a bag ofcoal per day for the boiler to heat thewater for the baths there.

On the 24th ult, Dr. Goto examined137 persona for treatment at the hos-pital and he selected 29 or 30 persons.and the next day those that heselected for treatment were notified toeome to the hospital to remain there.

On the 25th ult. I went to theBishop home and consulted with Sis-ter Mariana and others in regard to

heater for the baths there, to assistthe beater from the range; and alsofor an extension to the bathhouse, sothe patients would have more room tocool offin after having their bath.

I think a new bath bouse should bebuilt there, but owing to the expense

thought the old one would do if itwas extended, say 20 feet, so I sentthe requisition to the board for thepipe for the heater and lumber for theextension of the bath house.

I am informed that the waterupplythe home is insufficient, and that

sometimes they have no water forbaths, hence the necessity for a heat

for if the bath tub was filled in thenight the watercould be hot from thebeater.

On the 27th nit about twenty of thepatients took their first bath at thehospital and everything worked satis- -factory.

On the 25th ult. Ivisited the Bishophome, then I visited most of the ka-maaina houses along the foot of thepali, and in the afternoon I attendedthe funeral of Alex. Comio.

On the 30th ult the thirty patientsselected by Dr. Goto for treatmentwere all at the hospital, so the treat-ment was regularly commenced there.

There is sufficient room at the hos-pital for ten or twelve more patients.

On the 31st ult I was at the hospi-tal and everything was workingsatis- -factory, and aH the buildings andsleeping apartments are in a splendidconaiuon.

On the 1st inst. Dr. Goto and Iwent to the nospital, then to theBishop home and other parts of thesettlement.

On the 2nd instl left the settlementper steamer Mbkolii, vta way ports,and Dr. Goto went via the pali andgained the steamer at Kannakakai,and we arrived in Honolulu on the 3dinst, at 2 a.jc

The following number of persons 3rebeing treated by Dr. Goto at the set-tlement, viz.:

At the Bishop home 42" " hospital 30

Outside pa dents-- 19

TotaL 31

If Dr. Goto'spatfentaare to be ex-amined by ether physicians it shoold

done now.Something shooH be done in regard

' to kokuas marrying lepers. Quo casej lu point U where a man named

went as koku.t to his wife, amlHhcv. took their son, a small boy, withthem, and the woman died, and theman and his son continued to livo inthe settlement, though not lepers,ami now the son la married to a leper.So how lie has a claim to continue tolive in the settlement and draw Inswife's ration.

The mothers of children born in thesettlement, as I am informed is en-titled to draw oue half of a ration forthe child; then after the child quitsnursiug, the child is entitled to n fullration, so it is au inducement to liavochildren ami keep them at the settle-ment in order to obtain the extra ra-tion.

From the best information I couldobtain, there are about sixty non-lep- er

children at the settlement, andtney are increasing continually.

It appears to me that it is a crime toallow the children to remaiu thereand become a charge on the board,and permitting some of them to be-come lepers.

The visitors at the kamaaina housesare increasing, and the road up thefiali is about as convenient for the

to go up and their friends tocome down to the kamaaina housesas the .Nuuauu pah road is for personsto go to Koolau.

1 see no way to stop the traffic upand down the pali so long as the kule-an- as

are owned bv the kamaainas.At present, it i$ segregation in

name only and not in fact. In thesettlement it is looked on as a farce.

Trusting that the above report willbe satisfactory, I am, Sir,

Your obedient servant,David Daytox,

Agent on Leprosy.

In answer to a question by PresidentSmith, Mr. Dayton said that Dr. Gotointended to remain in Honolulu forthe next three weeks.

In answer to inquiries concerningthose left in charge of the treatmentduring the doctor's absence, Mr.Dayton stated the treatment was of aroutine nature. Tne doctor had left asupply of medicine at the Bishophome, and had .also furnished personsreceiving treatment outside with somemedicine, otherwise it was all underthe charge of oue man appointed forthat purpose.

The report was accepted and placeden file.

The sujiKestion as to movinc theboys' home and making other neededimprovements was discussed and tin-all- y

referred to Superintendent Mey-ers to report on cost, site, etc. Thehouses will probably be moved acrossthe road and a new cookhouse erectedmauka.

Dr. Day brought up the question ofexaminations of lepers by foreign phy-sicians and Dr. Goto.

Dr. Andrews spoke ot the import-ance of such examinations and sug-gested that a record of the name, ageand condition of the patient should Betaken.

The board ordered that a book, asper sample prepared and presented bythe board, be ordered printed, and thematter be referred to Agent Meyersto be carried out An examinationand record of the entire leper settlement is to be made as soon as possi-ble.

A letter was read from Mr. Mevers.recommending the purchase of pipeand suggesting that hereafter anyregulation of the board of health re-ferring to the government schools beforwarded to the board of educationfar promulgation, to avoid fntureclashing between teachers and phy-sicians.

A letter from Sister Mariana wasread, asking certain improvements inthe Bishop nome.

Agent Dayton said both homes weregreatly crowded.

The president brought up the mat-ter of the site of the Xorth PacificPhosphate and Fertilizing Co., andasked for the report. The report rec-ommended the company be allowedto erect work3 for the manufacture ofartificial fertilizers and acids at Holo-lo- a.

Adopted.The committee of physicians said

they were not ready to report on theact to mitigate, and asked for moretime. Granted.

An application was read from JohnTremayne, of Australia, fora positionatthelepersettlement Mr. Tremaynestated that he wished to do penanceby serving the rest of his life at Molo-kai doing good. He had 100 whichhe would donate to the lepers andwould pay his own passage to Molo-kai if they would grant his request.The secretary was ordered to informMr. Tremayne thatwhile his donationwould be acceptable to the Iepera atany time, it was not deemed advisableto grant his request

Applications from Drs. Emersonand Peterson were received for posi-tions as physicians to the governmentdispensaries. Ordered placed on file.

The application. of Dr. Wm. L.Moore of Hilo for a license to prac-tice was granted. Iteferred to --the3Iinisterof the Interior.

A petition was received from Hon.Hoapili praying that his daughter,M. K. Hoapili, sent to the receivingstation as a suspect, be released thatshe may be treated by Dr. Goto forone or more months. Thematter wasreferred to await the examination totake place at Kalihi next Tuesday.Mr. Hoapili to be so notified.

A letter was read from Dr. Allen ofHana, Maui, stating that la grippewas epidemic, in that district Thesecretary stated he had sent medicinesto Dr. Allen as per requisition en-

closed.A letter from Dr. Victor Capron

stated that about SOper cent of theschool children of Kau needed vac-cination.

Dr. Day said the vaccine farmwould soon be ready to furnish lymphfor vaccination purposes.

Dr. L. S-- Thompson of Xbrth Hiloreported by letter that cases of typhoidfever had been discovered there andone case had proved fatal.

It was ordered that Dr. Andrewsreply for the board, givingDr. Thomp-son such instructions ai he asked anaempowering him to call in Dr. "Will-iams of Hilo in case the disease spread.

Tenders for supplies needed by theboard of health were amended andordered published.

Dr. Thompson's previois suggestionas to death certificates went over tothe next meeting.

The question of planting trees at thesettlement from, seeds to be furnishedby the board was favorably commented upon.

At 4:4-- the board adjourned.

ifrip 5Uii)crttgtm"f

A NEW1 1NE OF Stoves and Ranges

SUPERB. APOLLO, WJELCOaih l'KIZE.WESTERN, DANDY. A suuplv of tlio

v favorite RKDV0"0I

Invoices of Goods ox Amy Turm-- r and Australia jut to hand for the

PACIFIC HARDWARE CO., I'D.A Water Kilter at Low Cost; Cone Filters for Water Cccks. A NEW LINE OF

CHA NDKLIKRS I

Hall, Bamiuetand Hauiim Lamps: ReereGanien lioso;Turkey and Ostrich Dusters ; Tuck's PatUtinu; (Joe's Wrenches,

Zinc and Brass 'iiers; Cow Bells ; Carrias and Machine Bolts ,Nuts and Washers ; Sal Sota ; x Bon s ;

Cut Nails, Galvanized nml Plain: Cotton Waste;

Horse and Mule Shoes, Horse Shoe NailsTinware. Riusim:, Dish and Dairv Pans, Cork Screws,Charcoal Irons, ard Brooais Iock, Night Latches, Yale .Locks,Disston's awb, hiles and Cane Knives, a fall atsortment;Katchet and p fibril Braces Hook Hinges, Brass and Iron Butts,

Chisels, Squares, Bitts, Chest Handles !

Cup Hooks, Paints, Lump Black, Putty, Brushes,Insecticide Wash and pray Pumps,

JOHNIMPORTER AND

ElfSiMMatflH

8TEEET.

Steel and Iron itanges, Stoves and Fixtures,HOCSEKBEPINO GOODS AM) aTXCHHI UTENSILS.

AWATK WAKE IN GREAT VaJUK'Hanil Silver-plate- d

RUBBER

95

HOSELIFT AND F0HCE PUMPS. WATEK CLOSETS. KETALS,

Plumbers' Stock. Water and Soil Pipes.

Mumbiiio;, Tin. Copper and Sheet iron Work,

CIMOHD BLOOK,

JUST ARRIVEDPER BARK C. BRYANT.BABY CARRIAGES of all styles, x

CARPETS, RUGS, and MATS in the latest patterns," Household" Sewing MachinesHand Sewing Machines, with the latest improvements.

Also on handWestermayer's Celebrated Cotfcigr- - Pianos !

Mor Organs, Guitars and other Musical Instruments.ISr or sale byED. HOFFSOHLAEOEK Co.,

King Street, opposite Castle & Cooke.

BROWNE'S

GHLORODYNE

Dr. GOLLIS

fJOUCHS,CLDS,

ASTHMA.BROHCHITI8.

DR.oftn. without nEinVmBVS'S'f?nut the cctchm tjitta wbea exhsJtei.

DB.vice

J. gyjLIWP CHLOHOOyjE

BBOWSE w oodoobttdlr the IWrvniDUieJre34atrreesimri.i!!Uw.,.iirse. Ad ,' S"l o ut It ludlmnrorato. wj Ttifi.jairis.isei.

N TnB&OUT' CACER,TOOTHACHERHEUMATISM.

NOTT,JN- -

!

and 97 KINO

Whit

X.

all

&

S THE GREAT SPECIFIC FORDIARRHEA,

DY8ENTERY,CHOLERA.

f?.?rERA& BOARD ot HEALTH Loadsit

Senllj'Baelent.

ouj(ri." " coartrrrtyccBTD xt or

EPH-EPS- SPASMS. COLIC,PALPITATIOH. HYSTERIA.

IMPORTANT CAUTF0H. -- Th IiuJJEI.6EHALE of thl.nEMElJY harWitnfrJff al?ar UH8CBUPCXOUB IMtTA--

J, T. DAVENPOBT.v., Ottu Battel! Street London W 0

jr

Page 10: fl c ''y XXVIILNo. HONOLULU, TUESDAYS JUNE No....tf"Corrcapondencolntended lor publication, thellawa-lla-n Gazette, Post Office Box. O. " KB" Correspondence rclatlne to Advertise-ments,

1

r

i

v

OCAL 4M EC.ERAA.

Hon. C. R. Bi&op hs donated: 0.000 to tfee l&waS&a boars,

The rsavacataetK eocncib wille; tibfe afiesaeera as 2 o'clock.

The EawaS&a QKRa Co.save an rafcastta ssocr in this

er of Fjoaiies T. C.Porter left w the Geest on theC:;v of Pekiac.

The KawaMaa head will --ive aconcert at ft? Ssas Seci w

evening.

The mail dispatched by die s.of Peking aggregated: 441?

ieuer? xad 1362 papers.

t'aited States Minister BkKia:and Mrs. Bkcat have reaimedfrom their visit to Maui.

The Ksansfeameiras and the Cres-v'a'- iS

trill meet acsln on next Sat-

urday at the leasee grooncs.

Taro Soar! a Iocs! pwdoet. Itis purely vegetable and from allaccounts it is a seed aracte.

The evangelical association hasdetermined to send another nativeirissionarv to Micronesia this vear.

The uniforms for the members ofthe Naiiftjal guard are expected onthe Aestraba, doe next Wednes-d&- v.

WIlMsm McWayne has been ap-

pointed assistant farm to take epstrays in KaKM and other dis-

tricts-

Andres A. Kssfelea has fied ananswer in the sapceeae coert in thematter of the estate of KesKia-loaa- i.

Egan Gnan have jst received. new iot of seofe. Their adver-useme- ct

in safe fcsoe will rejaayosmsal.

A two-sto- ry snaex is to be beiltt the Qoeen's Hospital with the

monev latehr donated by Hon. C.R. Bishop.

A nsoveeaeot is a wot to havethe stable of the late James Gaytake part in-t-he 4th of Jely racesat iwancftn.

Rev. V. B. Okson, the principalKamehaiaeha sehcoL expects to

leave for the United States oa the.19Ui instant.

Abraham Fernandez is no kmgerin the eraniov of E. 0. Hall i-- Son.Ee has worked for the firm for overtoorteen years.

Attorney - General Sinith hasbeen apftoiated a co aerofcrown linos in place of Mr. T. C.Porter, resigned.

A room has bees set apart in thettsemeot cf the exeartiTe boSdinr

i ropss rxn. for the officers oft' - Natiooai Guard.

Tj creditors of D. Jf. Growler, aiinirttot jot notified to appMir at

- cctat court os tfaeloioK.;rre their cJaima.

Holikter A Co, with theirzes resit?, farniahea theladies with 200eing r ak free of

The office c--f C. P. UaJcea,aisswoet of goTetmneBitaafc, has

beea iVtooved; to the old interioriffice in tb coort booce.

The Hawaiian National bandwill gin? a concert at the hotel

evening for the benefit ofthe Australia's paKe&fen.

It is stated thatKapiolani leqaested die other

dav to have ber name erased fromdie tolloftheHai Amhm Aioa.

The loraKsts are boasdng thatibev have on their raQs theof 13.000 women and 9G0Q

These inetade hoys and prls onderace.

Some mossier ntneapples are c

axbifaideo at tbe.Pict5e HardwareCo's. They were rated at PearlCity. Tnefe-aeag- e weight is 9pmnds.

The board of health advertise--for teases for bef eattfe, peiaiaai general ssppHes. Partieeiarstea be fotrad m its "by sniberii-- y

eolnmn in this issoe.

Walter G. Sentit, editor of theStar, has leased the Goaa place onJaaa street, and sent for his family,wbo will arrive from Californiaabost the middle ofJuly.

Subscribers to the Dafly Abvbs- -Tjbca&or Weekly Gazette, chsag-I-2

their places of residence, arertejeested to give written nsttce ofzke saiEe at the oSce of ppbBea-ao- n,

46 Mereaaat street.

Commissioner Marsden requestthat all persons having them willsave for the berean of 2griccltarethe foHowins: seeds, or anv of them : !

Msngo. sIKzatfK' pear, dtron. lime,oracle, camphor, encca or ethers.

LOCAL AN& GENERAL.

Paul Xesunann is expected to re-

turn on naxt Wednesdav.

Go to die L X. L. far Americanenameled button-bol- e buttons,flags, etc

The minister of the interior hasa notice ofa land sale at Hiio inthis issue.

D-- H. Hfastcock hes been ap-pointed a notary pubbe'tfor thefourth judicial circuits

The quarters of the regulars inthe basement of the executiveboikiinfr: have been supplied withelectric lights.

Messrs. T. S. Davies fc Co. havenotified the fernishiag committeeto call at their store and select alarge Soar rng for the new Masonictemnle.

The silk cap donated by a masonon board the Boston was sold ves-terd- ay

to Mr. C. W. Ashford'for53). The sale took place at theArlington.

The o&cers of the UjSjS. Adamsare daily engaged in target prac-tice. A small target has beenplaced at a distance from the sternof the vessel.

Miss Armstrong late of the Ka-waiah-ao

Seminary, has accepted aposition as teacher at St. Andrew'sPriory school for girls, and hascommenced her duties.

The mortgagee's sale of chattelswill take place today at noon atJas. Xott's plumbing establishment,corner of King and Alakea streets.This sale was advertised to takeplace yesterday, bat on account oftoe holiday it was postponed untiltcdav.

THE HAWAIIAN PASTORS.

To Call on President Dole ThisHoming at xr o'clock,

Yesterday morning by a vote of23 to 11. the Hawaiian EvangelicalAssociation decided to call on theProvisional government to showtheir respect. The association iscomposed chiefly of native Ha-waiia-

The pastors will meet infront of the judiciary building at11 o'clock, and accompanied bvmembers of the mission societies,they will march over to the execu-tive building and be received byPresident Dole.

Aronnd the Police Station.Cboog Fong was caught prowl-

ing around on Saterday night. Hecould not give a satisfactory ex-

planation of himself, so be was es-

corted to the police station. Whensearched eaoogh opium was foundon him to bring him within thepale of the law.

Three other Mongolians were ar-

rested for smoking the drag.Pour deserting tailors ate locked

up on a charge of vagrancy.

Xt a Hw!i Saeeec.Prof. Ruchwaldr appeared at

we upera boom on aatorday g

before a tnall aadience. Heappeared in a "grand magical,psychical, optical and moaieat

a the programmehad it The pronjanr's eflbruaaemed to meat with tavor althoughmoat of hi trick had a "ebegtratty" flavor.

JJe Xt Jlclgned.The Ka Leo's iseoe of Friday

Mates that George Beck ley, theparser of the Kinan, has resignedbis position. On inquiring agjtbeoffice of the WUdec steamshiprom-pan- y

ifwas learned that Mr. 1,'eek-le- y

bad not resigned and, as far asthey knew, be did not intend to dose.

The Enterprising Burglar.On last Friday night or Saturday

morning the residence of RobertCation, on Kinau street, was en-

tered by a berglar. Several roomsin the boose were ransacked. Thethief secured two wa'tebes andthen aecamped.

A Long Battle.There was a large crowd of peo-

ple at the fish market yesterdaynoraing to witness the tug-of-w-

contest between the aFish 3rarket"team and the Kapuukolo team.The Srst-nam- ed team was victori-ous after a pall which lasted nearlytwo boors.

Sold for a Song.The property formerly owned by

the Booth estate, on the comer ofXccasE and Hotel streets, was soldat auction for IS.OXTon last cai-- torday. Ferae years ago 43,000was nid wr th--j laud. I

HAWAIIAN tfAZBTTB, YOBSDAf, JUNE IS iSS.

MAUI NEWS.the courtesy ot Mx. and Mrs. w. 1.

invitations to this petitereception having been issnod ver-bally in English. Affec this fare-VIS1- T

xve compliment, then tbo Cfaudinotook her departure for Honoluln.

MINISTER BLOUKTS TO

SPH5CKELSVILLE.

Tie ivovaiisis Spring a Politico

Game.

Which rrur a Dtipulnttnrnt ami

WUI Iv TUrtr Oau- - LUOr Goutl.

After the arrival of the Glandineearly on Wednesday morning, the7th inst, a special train bore theBlount party, in which were Mr. andMrs-- Blount, Mr. andMiss Xordhoff,Messrs. "W. G. Irwin, Rudolph Sprec-kel- s

and others, to Spreckelsville,where they breskfasted. During theforenoon another special of the Ka-

bnlni K. R. Co. conveyed the gentle-men of the party to VTailuku, wherethey visited the court, then in ses-

sion, and other places of interest un-

der the guidance of Mr. V. H. Corn-wel- l.

At 1 f. il, they returned to Sprec-

kelsville. and at 3:30 p. sr. a party,consisting of Messrs. Blount, Xord-hof- f,

Spreckels, Hngh Center, Corn- -

well, Mrs, Blount, Misses ordaof,JCornwell, Yida and others, a few onhorseback and the many in carriages,set oat for Olinda and arrived at Mr.H. P. Baldwin's mountain house at9:30F.ir. On Thursday most of themviewed grand old Haleakala, and thewhole party, descending the moun-tain during the afternoon, spent thenight at Spreckelsville. .

Friday was spent in exploring thegreat plantation, a special H. U. & d.Co. train bearing the party throughthe different fields, past ditches andreservoirs to Maalaea Bay and back.All were much impressed by the im-

provements under way to obtain alarger supply of water. During theeveningof the same day nine Kabn-lni R.K. Co. cars bore 420 peoplefrom the Wailuku and Kahului depotstotheH.CCo.'s sugar planta-tion at Spreckelsville. Arriving thereat 7:10 p.- - the assemblage was ob--

lieed to wait in a drizzle for sometime till after the finale of an elaborate dinner. The scene of the waitingand the reception was the verandasand lawn of Manager Centers resi-dence. In the meantime the Sprec-kelsville employees had gathered to-

gether, and the crowd numberingsereral hundred people were com-

posed mostly of aikapu and Spreekelsville plantation laborers. JohnRichardson acted as grand cham-berlain in regard to introductwos, and Antone Rosa interpreted the different speeches. Thefollowing gentlemen made their littlebows, presented their complimentsand spoke brieuy about the " terribleburden now resting upon Ilnwniinei,r and boned that the UnitedStates Minuter would soon restoretheir queen to the throne, or wordsto that effect. John Ivalama repce-seatin-g,

Makawao : W. Edmonds,Waikapn; Tom Olark, Wailnkn tXawenioe, Waibee; Kamakte,Ivnlatand XnkaieU, Molokai.

At the dote of Uteee compliments,Minister litottat made a brief, non-

committal addre. wbieb, it wm remerited by good judge, ww interprwted to the astir in a somewhat

way by Mr. Hoa. Mr.Sirtisan something to this effect:Since coming to the island be badbeen pleased with many things thoclimate, bis recaption, and moat of allto see that U&watiana bad .o profile!by what Americans bad tangnt themwith regard to the Almighty God. asto refee tbera far above many paopiewho bad knowledge ot bim for aranch longer period of time- - It wasbis pleasure, and that of the President of the United States, who sentbim to reduce (the bitterness of)public feeling by having the tlagwhich floated over theirs (the Ha-waiian) taken down, and the UnitedStates marines returned to theirship. Since then he bad sought togather the opinions of residents ofall nationalities. Bnt they must understacd that, by the roles of diplomacy, he could not divnlgeto themthe intentions of the American gov-ernment with regard to its futureaction.

At intervals between the introdnctions and speeches, the Waihee gleeclub sang in a pleasant manner, and,after handshakings with the ministerand his wife, the crowd rapidly dispersed.

This reception was participated inby Tery few whites outside of em-

ployees of the Hawaiiam CommercialCompany, notices of the affair havingbeen given only in the Hawaiian Ian

lish tongue took the fact as a gentlehint that their company was not

To be sure th-- ; train wasfree, but this announcement mmade only in tho native language.Hany natives also stayed away, beingunder the imDresstcn that none butrovahsts were desired to attend.

Today, at 9 xjc, the Bloant pertyviewed the Kahului race track andthe horses, and thence vmted beantifnl Tao vallev. Ther luccfaed -- t i

i iv at th Cwnwell residence :uWaffcapc, sxA at 3 p k ,t

,

portnuits to moot Mr. and Mrs.Blount was given at Kahului through

Glider,

STSIY SCSIBBUXOS.

Tho AVaimanalo Steamship Co.have recently sold out to the Wilderline. There has been no sale of theliltla steamer Waimanalo herself, butonlyof tho present route. She willcontinue to fun to somo ports at certain times, a procedure which willnot conflict with the interests of"Wilder & Co., so it is said.

During Sunday, tho 4th, Wailukuwas the center ot interest to Portu-guese and other nationalities belong-ing to the Roman church. A special

t train of eight cars departed from' Paia in the morning packed to therailings and steps, even then letvingalarge number behind. The usualreligious rites and ceremonies pecu-liar to "Corpus Christi' day tookplace at the Wailuku Catholic mis-

sion, and were witnessed by hundredsof people. The procession marchedfrom tho church to the graveyardamong the sand hills, thence to thehospital, and then back again to thochurch.

"Monsieur"1 La Grippe is terriblyin evidence in Wailuku, district;nearly every person met is sufferingfrom his visitations or has had someknowledge of him during the recentpast. Quito a number of the chil-dren of the Wailuku and Waiheeschools are sick, and there is some.talk of closing the Waikapu institu-tion on account of this troublesomebut not serious illness. Tho wife ofJudge A. X. Kepoikai is among itsvictims.

During Tuesday night, Laea, thewife of Kaula, a Wailuku policeman,was taken suddenly ill while outwalking and expired a few minutesafterward on a friend's veranda,where she had taken refuge. TheJapanese doctor was immediatelysent for, and he pronounced thatdeath was caused by apoplexy. Thofuneral took place dnring the nextday.

During tho night of May 27th. it sohappened that Misses Cornwell andKilty Yida were left alone in thelarge house in V aikapu, their uncle,W. H. Cornwell, Esq., having de-

parted for Honolulu. Nothing .un-

usual took place till at a late hourthe slumbers of Miss Yida were dis-

turbed by a dark object movingsoftly to and fro in her room. Shemade no outcry though this object inthe course of its wanderings aprproached her netting three times andgazed through at her. She bravely re-

strained all impulse io cry out andkept close watching.

The celestial, for she recognizedhim by bis dress as the family wash-ma-n,

fumbled about the bureau,handling her jewelry and attemptingto open tbo bureau drawers. Healso made two visits into tho adjoin-ing room occupied by Miss Cornwell.Every now and then ho would returnand gaze at Miss Yida through thonetting. While tbo Chinaman wasplaying with an aulomizor in thoformer young lady's room, Miss Yidamade a qniot exit and aroused Mr.Decker who has charge of Mr. Corn-wall's horses and lived near by.

Returning, no midnight prowlercould not be found; be had escapedby sliding down a veranda post, buthad taken nothinr ot value withhim. Miss Cornwell on being- awakened was much surprised to hear thestory. The day Defore Air. Corn-wall's return from llonotnlu, thewashntso disappeared,

It is reported that between thirtyand forty rood burses will take partin tbo hit of July races at Itshnlui.

llis Wailnkn minstrels will notgive another exhibition this vening,owing to some dissension in theirranks. It was $118 UiMt ws turnedever' to the sisters for their new stableat the hospital.

There was a concert un Wednesdayeveninv in lb Wailnkn &kating rinkunder the direction of Rev. Mr. Kapuami ths Wailnkn T. M. 0. A. glaadnb There were twenty-fou- r num-bers on the programme, consistingmainly of solos and choruses Over$100 were realised and the proceedsare for furnishings fof Kaahnmannchurch.

11KSOS.lL HESTION.

The arrival on Wednesday morning of the Blount party and Meters.Irwin, H. P. Bskltvin. RadolphSpreckels and the court people randfquite a stir and talc on Jlani.

Messrs. Bsldwin and Irwin de-

parted on Wednesday evening, tho7tb inst. for Han a, intending to payReciprocity plantation a visit.

Dr. Prazer and daughter also ar-rived by the Clandine, and the gen-tleman will preach bis first sermon atPaia church on Sunday, the 11th.

ML's Kitty Moore ff San Franciscois visiting Mr. and Mrs. McLaughlinof Wailnkn.

R. Dunbar of Xew York ha beenspending some time in getting namesfor a new directory.

J. E. Beatty, Esq., principal of theUlspalakua school, is "at the Wailukuhospital seriously iJl.

The Alden Besse, Captain Fries,now lying at Kahuini, is loadingsugar.

Showers of rain have been frequentof late in the Mzkawao district butin Wailnkn there is dust and windja;t enough to make it unpleasantthe past few days.

Memorial Service.

The Oddfellows will bold a me-

morial service at Harmony hall on--uu. aiurnu-un- .. .wr urn

stmt tne graves of deceasedbreth'C--n vi'l ? dV''jrat-d- .

TOE KATE DAVENPORT.

ANCHORS NEAR WAIK1KI BUT

CLAIMS SHE WAS NOT

ON THE REEF.

Tho Captain Kxilaln Why Up Slay Oil

Thfrt" S tone.

At daybreak on Sunday morninga full rigged ship was seen off

Waikiki, apparently on the reef.

The report was sent in town, aud itcreated uo little excitement inshipping circles. A number ofpeople hastened out to tho beach tocatch a glimpse of the vessel, andfrom statements made by peoplewho saw the ship she was restingbroadside on the coral reef. About9 o'clock on Sunday morning thetug Eleu went to the rescue, andfour hours later the vessel wastowed into the. harbor. Sho provedto be the American ship KateDavenport, Captain Reynolds. Sheis from Port Blakely, and is ladenwith lumber for Allen & Robinson.

According to tho captain's storythe vessel was not on the reef andthe people who thought they sawher in that position must be mistaken. He claims that he arrivedoff port on Saturday night and onSunday morning about two o'clockha dropped both anchors. Thevessel was in ten fathoms of waterand in no danger of being dashedon the rocks as the wind from landcounteracted the force of the breakers on the port side. He explainsthe delay after tho tug arrived withthe statement that his donkey en-

gine would not work and it tooksome hours to get up the anchors byhand. There is something verystrange about the whole affair andthe question naturally suggestsitself, "why did the captain an-

chor off Waikiki?"

THE CITY OP PEKING.

Largest American Built SteamerAfloat.

' The S. S. City of Peking, R.R. Searle, commander arrived onSaturday from tho Orient. Shocame inside and docked at themail wharf. It is not generallyknown that the vassal is the largestAmcricnn built passenger steamoratloat.

She was built in IS7-- by JohnRonch and Sons of Xew York,iler gross tonnage is 5070. She is123 feet in length and IS feetbreadth. She is handsomely fittedup and for comfort no vessel (dyingin Pacifio waters can excel her.

tier arrival on paturdsy morn-ing was a great surprise to manypeople at she was four days over-due. The delay was caused byheavy weather in tho Island Seawhich caused a detention of 17hours. When Kobe was readiedunexpected storms caused anotherdelay of 13 hours. She left Yoko-hama on ths 80th tilt.

Rut few paatenHer were for thisport. In the cabin were Iter. M.C. Saunders, U. Names andMr. nud Mrs. Rmmnnta. Thorewere 30 Chinese and It Japanesewho will be dotaiued nt the quar-antine) station for soma day a.Tho Poking departed Saturday ntabout 1 o'olook for San Francisco.

On the Coast or Hawaii.Last Tuesday morning after the

bark Harvester left the Hilo harborthe wind died ' out and the vesselcommenced to drift toward thocoast between Onomea and Papni-ko- u.

A signal of distress washoisted and a tug went to her as-

sistance.

Closing Exercises.The closing exercises of the

Kaniehamelia preparatory schoolwill be held at the preparatorybuilding tomorrow afternoon, com-mencing at 3 o'clock. A cordialinvitation is extended to all friendsof the school to be present.

A Small Pire.An alarm was rung in yesterday

afternoon about 3 :15 o'clock for afire on Maunakea street. The blaze,which was a small one, was quicklyextinguished by 'the department.Damages, nominal.

- Illicit Liquor Selling.Ah At, Ah Sing, Keolewa, Awau

and David Noa me all under arrestfor selling swipes- - They were ar-retted on Saturday night.

t

RBVIYAZ OP Tllli mrmRIBBON.

TempciKince WorJt; Again Inangrtinted at Y. J. C. .1. Uall.

The musical and literary enter-tainment given at the Y. M. C. A.parlors on Saturday evening bytho temperance committee of thatinstitution was not very largely at-

tended. Mr. P. C. Jones, in open-

ing the exorcises, said that themeeting was a revival of the BlueRibbon meetings held there savend years ago, and spoke encour-agcing- ly

of the bicholride of goldtreatment for inebriates.

The following programme wassuccessfully rondorod, the MissesPaty, T. Gumming, and Mr. Mur-phy being encored :

Ylolln and Piano Prayer aud airfrom Der Friescliutx... Misses Faty

Song.. - -- Mr. Levi LymanReading Mrs. W.W.HallSong "Dear Heart,".Miss FlemmingRecitation............ -..- .....-Mr. MurphyTemperance Address Professor T.

Richards.' Prof. Richards, of Kamehemeba

schools gave a te talk onthe temperance question. Ho re-

lated of the conditions of intem-perate class of men he saw in New-Yor-

They were tho lowest andmost disreputable set of beings heever looked upon.

m

A GENERAL HOLIDAY.

Kameliameha's Birthday is Cele-

brated With a WilL

Karaehnmaha's birtlidav wasgenerally observed as a holidayyesterday. The banks and busi-ness houses were closed. Therewas no business transacted eitherin tho courts or government offices.In the morning the Hawaiian bandgave a concert on the grounds of '

the executive building, and at noontho battery company fired a soluteof twenty-on- o guns in honor of theday. There was plenty of amuse-ment for all, and many people,both old and young, took advant-age of the opportunity to take anouting. The picnic at Punahouwas well attended by tho scholarsof the Central Union Sundayschool and their parents ; the Ma-sonic luau at Kalihi proved to ho apopular event, and many peopletook a ride to Ewa to inspect thebig HUgar mill.

AFTER THE STAR.

An Editor's Life Is Not n HappyOne.

Walter 0. Smith, the editor ofthe Hawaiian Star. wa arrested onSaturday on a 'u.,rg- - o( libel atthe instance ( Uu- - Hpreckels.Mr. Smith wu allowed to go onhis own recognizance. The naeewill be called Mn- - morning in thedistrict court.

Mr. 8ptrck'l-a- n in iR - cent ion toeditorial wlm li a p.irnd in last

Friday's inane ' .-- tar It i

entitled ' Hirr lift s -- t hit'f vinKfiUenjftiiiiuer '

A Traveler Taken With CholeraMorbnm.

Whllo Mr. T. J. lii h-- v, of Alton,Mo., was traveling in K'a-m- he nntakett violently III with rholera mor-bus. He eslleil n( a rs ntore U mttome medicine iwd the Iras-a-

rMOiiuneiMlwl C'htnlrlnli' CHte,Cltolsm iwhI nturrlHP Hettmly mhighly lie oocldtl t try It. Theresult wm Immetlla'o relief, and afew itOiHts cured lilm mnpkttely. ItIn made far bowel onmplslnt andnothing else. It never fell. Pnrwl by nil mstlMne fen)?.

Bhnsow, Hmith A f'o ,Agents tr? 11 I.

A Visiting Clergyman.

Tho llev. M. .'. Sanders, an ar-

my chaplain from Punjaob, India,was a passenger b- - the . s. City ofPoking, and will remain hen- - amonth, paying a visit to the vol-

cano in the meantime At theSunday services of the second con--regatlou, Rev. Handsrs preached

t-- Andrew's cathedral.

A Gooil Pair.A native woman was arretted

last evening for hammering berlittle baby. A little later on a,waterman wat hauled in for ham-mering hia wife. They will harean opportunity this morning in

coort to explain tberaeselves.

Going to Kauai.Captain chlm-t- r of the polie

force hae resigned to aeeept a posi-

tion 33 Iuna on the Klkniea planta-

tion, Kauai. The vacaney on tha-polic- e

roll will not be filled for thepresent.

The Palace ice cream parlors areprepared to supply families sadparties with the best of ice cream iand confectionery.

Page 11: fl c ''y XXVIILNo. HONOLULU, TUESDAYS JUNE No....tf"Corrcapondencolntended lor publication, thellawa-lla-n Gazette, Post Office Box. O. " KB" Correspondence rclatlne to Advertise-ments,

n

"tSfissas JgfKlSn lt5S2m&wswM'hjjmefWr 4? ifch

10 HAWAIIAN GAZETTE, TUESDAY, JUNK IS, V8S

AT THE CAPITOL?

HE G05NGQ5 3KSI IK BEGH -

LAS SESSION,

ErMlrf BbH)-- w Bib rx to

The oomiak tffreai si 2:10

33nrs37 sSsaoao. There were

pressai 3Giasserf Dole. King, Da-r- a

sad Sshh. Geencikaea

Brown. iFeCaassey. "WsterliOGse.

Exrxaefaiii. Alko, Tracer, Teoney.

Yocac, Xoii. Morata. Baite. Mea-

dow aad SeHr.The miauies of the previous

mestiac tvere naad. ameaded andapproved.

Sir. Brown, of tbe jodicisrv com-laitie- e.

repxied tbe new Posis!Ssvincs bsr.V "txR. with s fewffiiaor snssjdraenis. snd recora-iaead- ed

its passase. The reportirss accepted, aad. on xaoaoa thebOl tcok Its osil coarse.

Tbe sarse corasdttee asked foriB&re time in which o report onthe petition for a pardon presentedby Peter Qmim, ooaSaed in OabujsIL Granted.

llr.ilorzan, of ibe miscelisneocscoraziiUee. reported on tbe petitionof Curator Wra. T. Brigbam, of tbeBishop maseom, for the loan ofeighty-de- nt volumes of books iig

to tbe government, andrecomoeaced tbat tbe loan becranted aeon tbe same conditions,with tbe privilece of withdrawal,coon whicii former loans to tbatInstitution bad been made.

First reading of tbe set relatingto tbe unlawful possesaoa and useof explosives.

On motion of Attorney GeneralSnath, tbe bill was considered sec-

tion by section.Section 1 was passed after several

minor amendments.Section 2. relating to licenses.,

wasread.Attorney General Smith, said that

a record of permits to use explo-sives sbooM be kept.

President Dole said the permitshould be more definite than pro-

vided for in the bilL A hunterspermit should not allow him to usedynamite.

"Mr. Damon thought it might per-

haps be as well to exempt the Chi-

nese using powder on their riceplantations.

fcPresident Dole said they should

get a permit which costs them noth-ing under tbe proposed law. Hethough; this permit should includeeverything tbey were io be allowedto use. and tbe kinds of explosivesshould be described in such per-

mit.Mr. Brown thought tbe kind of

explosive applied for should benamed in the permit; the use ofsay other kind, would then be inviolation of the iztr.

The attorney general offered awritten amendment covering thepoints raised. Carried.

Acoiher defect in the sectionwas then discovered.

President Dele stated he thoughtthere was still room for a doubleinterpretatioa and asked the at-

torney general to read the remain-der of the section to see if it con-flicted.

The section was finally amendedby the attorney general so as togive the power of granting bail,under the act. to the Attorney gen-eral, circuit judges sad the mar-shal or his deputies.

After considerable discussion asto the application of the penaltyin the act the section passed withthe understanding It might be fur-

ther amended on second reading.Section 3 was amended and

passed.Sections 4 and 5 were passed as

in the bill, and the bOl was passedto second reading.

First reading of an act to amendthe law relating to pounds, estrays.brands "d marks, by adding snew section.

Mr. Brown said the bill was theresult of a petition presented a fewmeetings ago from the graziers of&uaiasklng that corporatioas beprohibited from using brands notregistered according to law.

After slight amendments the Milwas passed to second reading.

Oa motion ofthe attorney-genera- l

the councils went into special ses-

sion at 3 il2 bjl.m

The Reciprocity.

Mr. W. O.Smith, president of iheBecfproeity plantation company;states that Mr. Glaus Spreckels hasitnf m?i? anr formal demand forthe money due him by the com- - J

pany, but that several propositions 1

in the ordinarv course of business j

sie under discussion between theparties interested, one of which isthe payment of the amount dueMr. Spreckels.

SlflXES.

' XORK TO THK FCKTaSE.

f "If this helps vou.M said the doc--

!:shj1'j scnpuoa "1 sbouhij be srlsd if voq wouki lei me know.": --If H doesn't helD sue, dec," replied tbe calter, in a clear, distincttoae of voice, as be banded overtbe required $5, Tll let you knowit yoe can bet a trunkfulof skele-to- a,

Gcod afternoon. ChicagoTribune.

ONE CEJLNCS tEJT.He read tbe directory ihreegfe

And test M took f sanow,Pter be feew! iast ae more man

From irhwn he now conid banaw.Chiracs later Ocean.

WIUINS TO CONDENSE.

"I I must not listen 10 you, Mr.Cappbesd. protested the blushingEirhwith eves downcast. You areonlv triSins:, and and besides it isgetting late."

"Please hear me out. Miss Helen ! pleaded the infatuated youngreoorfer. "Hi cut it down to 250words ! Chicago Tribune.

A TIP TO HOXOKISTS.

What are von working on now.Branson?

Tm writinc conundrams.cReallv? "Well, here's an answer

for you: 'One matches the frieie,and the other freeies the match.'If you ra get up a conundrum forthat you can have it. Harper'sBasar.

JL FSEAKISE JEST.

1 notice a queer thing about thedog&ce boy, said the ossified manat the dime museum.

"What's that?" asked the skele-ton dude.

"He has bear hands," returnedthe ossified man, and the skeletondude laughed until he fell apart.Harpers Barar.

WITH AN EVE TO TEE FTTCBE.

Mr. Billus was looking over theplans of a new bam he was prepar-ing to build.

I don't care about having 3nywindows on the side facing thekitchen yard, he said.

"But you will need them forlight," replied the architect.

"Tight nothing !' roared Mr.Bil-tu- s.

Those windows call for sixty-fo- ur

panes of glass, and Pve got aboy eight years old! Leave emout Tribune.

Are cable cars healthy?'' asksan exchance. As a matter of fact.neighbor, the grip never made its'appearance in this country untilthe introduction of the cable cars.

Yonkers Statesman.

A VALUABLE BOARDEB.

Mr. Xewboarder That is a verypretty young lady at the table.

Landlord Yes, I prire her veryhighly. Since she has been at thetable young gentlemen hardly eatanything at all, they are so dead inlove with her. Texas Siftings.

DIAMOND CCT DIAMOND.

Guest (Chicagoensis wearinglarge diamond) I trust you un-derstand my bringing a detectivewith me to your reception?

Hostess Oh. perfectly. Youcould easily be acquitted if wemissed anything. Vogue.

SCHKEfG tP.Warkie Ah, me boy. I see you

have an addition to your family.Newpop Yes, and one to carry.

A KOCTH FOB FX- E-

Wife: Xow, Tom, suppose wehad just all the money we wanted,do vou know what vou would buvfirst?

Tom: Yes, pie. Chicago Tri-bune.

AN rSTELUGEXT OFFICAL.

Lu Midwav Plaisance: "I sun--pSse yon hear a greater number oftongues here than any '

Guard: aSo, sir; the woman'sbuilding is right over in that direc-

tion. Chicago Tribune.

PiESTT OF PEACES- -

First World's Fair visitor: Thenthere are places where you can get25-ce- nt lunches.

Second World's Fair visitor:Yes ; you can get them all 'roundhere by paving a dollar. InterOcean.

XT5CH MORE DESIEABLE.

" What is sweeter than a friendyou can trust?' ssked Gus deSmith.

" To have a friend who will trustyou,5 replied Kosciusko Jones.Texas Siftings.

BEFOBi. AND AFTEB.

He thought that love and marriage"Were the acme of all Wis ;

And he Xound a guileless maiden"Who agreed with Mm in this ;

Bat when the twain were wedded,And ne neara tne baby scream,

He found domestic happinessAn iridescent dream.

Detroit Free Press.

EVOtrnON.As the betierily comes from the gaib

asg3TAnd bright as a Peisian rag,

So many a lovely jag todayComes oat of a dingy jcg.

2few York Press.

A BRIGHT BOY.

Old Gentleman What wouldvou like to be when you grow up?

Boy rd like to be a bricklayer.'That's a commendable ambi-

tion. Why would you like to be abricklayer'?"

" Cause there's so many dayswhen bricklayers can't work.'Good News.

"This is what I call solid com-

fort," was the remark of the younghusband when he partook of biswife's first sponge cake. BostonGazette.

A LABOR-SATIN- G DEVICE.

Baroness Clara bring me thosedoren pocket handkerchiefs inwhkh I told you to mark my mon-

ogram."Lady's Maid Here they are, my

lady."RsTi-in- p "Rnt Virnr is this? Yon

have'nt marked all of them withmv monogram?

Ladv-Mai-d Indeed. I have,my lady. I marked one with yourmonogram and I marked all theothers with the word 'ditto."Sheik.

HEK EXPLANATION.

Mistress (finding visitor in Iritch-en-)Who is this, Mary?

Mary (confused) My brother,nrm.

Mistress (suspiciously) You'renot much alike.

Mary (stammering apologetical-ly) We were, m'm; but he's justhad his beard shaved aS, and thatmakes him look different. Quips.

A GOOD REASON.

"Why do you invite Mrs. Ihstyleto vour tea when vou dislike herso?"

Wife Because I knew shewouldn't have iime to get a newdress. Chicago Inter Ocean.

AN UNEXPECTED OFFEK.

Visitor I have a poem here Iwish to sell

Editor Indeed? Are poemsworth anything?

Visitor Of course they are.Editor Well, I have a desk full

here. What'll vou give me for thelot?r-Detr- oit Free Press.

AFTES THE HONEYMOON.

Mr. Xewed There is one virtueabout these biscuits, my dear.

Mrs. 2ewed (blushing with plea-sure) "What is it, dearest?

Mr. Newed (brutally) If theywere worth their weight in gold wewould be everlasthjglv rich.Truth.

"In this poem of yours you makeuse of the phrase 'fair Hawaii"'said the writers friend.

"Yes.""You shouldn't do it. Hawaii

is not fair. She is distinctly abrunette." Washington Star.

ENGLISH AS SHE IS SPELLED.

A poor little fellow called VangfaanWas playing one day on 3 lauzhan,

When a whirlwind cane nijrh.Took him. tip to the skigfa ;

And none could tell where he hadsaughan.

Txnth.

Tommy "Say Paw!"Mr. Figg "WelirTommy rls a slipknot a knot

that will slip not, or is it a knotthat will not slip not?" fjndiana-poli- s

Journal.

"You don't offer any induce-ments to an editor in this 'town?"

"We don't? Jerusalem! Why,we've buried six of 'em, an' lettheir widders pay for their funeralsin installments!" Atlanta Con-stitution.

The Chinese Way.A native paper has the follow-

ing: A memorial from the Boardof War, which was found the otherday to contain a mistake in cali-grap-

and accordingly marked sowith a slip, enclosed within thememorial, by the President of theBoard, to draw the attention of theSecretaries, by some unexplainednegligence was not rewritten, butsent in to the Palace as it was, slipof paper, cross, dash, correctionand a!L This being a gross breachof etiquette and a mark of disre-spect to the Throne, an Edictdated the 3rd instant has consign-ed all the Presidente, Vice-Presiden-

Proctors, and Senior Secre-taries of the Eaid Board to the ten-der mercies of the Board of Punishments for. the determination ofpenalties on each and all of the of-

fending high officials. Hong-kong Press.

The beet sugar countries are Ger-many, 1,210,000 tons ; Austria,775,000; France, 600,000; Russia,460,000; Belgium, 185,000; Hol-land. 75,000; other countries, in-cluding the United States, 97,000tons. Total sugar for all countriesnamed: 1892-9-3, 6,697,000 tons,against 6,305.222 tons for the pre-vious crop.

Messrs. John S. Smithies, E. P.Low and J. Maguire have been appointed inspectors of animals forMahukona and otherports in Ha--wau.

"Xciu 3ltixrttsautnts.

BENSON SMITH & CO

IOKBING AND MANUFACTURING

PHARMACISTS

a Tcu.icx.eir

E-U- U 332TULSS,

CHEMICALS.

Medicinal Preoarations,

PATENT MEDICINES

AT THE LOWEST PRICES.

118 d 115 Pott Strtet. lSSi-- q

Metropolitan Market

T-t-- Street.

Choicest MeatsFROM

Finest Herds.

G. J. WALLER, Prop,

PA3HX.IES AND SHIPPING

SUPPLIED 0NSH0RTN0T1CE

AND AT THE

Lowest Market Prices.

B"A1I iititf dellieredfroati!slfirke:sretiosh!jchmei lanedlittlyirtertlllicgbje.i of i PitentDrx All

Ife: so treated rettirj ill ita jelcj

issq

BISMARK STABLES!

J&Bfmj J&!KGENERAL LJTEBY,

mi m m StablesHani Street, WaUobi, Maoi.

KOIICE

with reliable timers,SIKGLE or DOUBLES TEAMS,

SADDLE HOBSES,

Gentle for ose.

IS" Carriages iriH be at erery Steamerisr.rtiRg, on Steamers arrrral.

WE GOODNESS,HUi Proprietor aad Macager.

BEAVER SALOON

H. J. HO"-T- E, Proprietor.

Bezi to Eno3ce to hU rrlesdf sd ttepzille is sezer&l

That be has opened the above Sa-loon where firstdass Refreshments

will oe 1 erred iron 3 a. n. tin 10 p. a..csdert&e IrinedUte uperriilon o'I a CospeLCa.bVB IrKUUC

THE FINEST GBADES OP

Tobaccos.Cigars, Pipes and

Smoker's SundriesC&otea br penoial electic Iron Cxrt-e- lt

nasafictories. has leers obtained, acdwill be added to froa Hiae to tirae.

Oce 01 Brrfck & Balke't

Celebrated Billiard TablesIi cszecttd witi tie eitabliih-e- st, wherelorertoftgeejecag participate. IZSO-q

For Sale.

ALIGHT COVEBEDBUG-g- y

in good condition; price$100. Inqnireof

H. H WHITNEY,16 Merchant Street

3usurnucr "Notices.

INSURANCE

Theo. H. Davies & Co.,

$ AGENTS FOR

FIRE, LIFE and MARINE.

INSURANCE

Northern Assurance Co

Of London for FIRE & LIFE.

ESTABLISHED 1 836.aCCUKUlATEO FU1DS - - 3,975,000.

BRITISH AND FOREIGN

Marine Insurance Co.Ld

Of Liverpool for MARINE.

CAPITAL - - - 1,000.000.

Reduction of Rates

Immediate Payment of Claims.

THEO. H. DAVIES & CO., Agents

The Liverpool and. Ion--

don and Globe

rN"SUBAJN"OE COtESTABrJBHXD 1SJS.1

Aiaeta .8 40.0O0.000t Income.. 0,079,000

Claim Paid. . 113.599,000

Tiiei Bliki agalcit tt or Oasags by rireoa BsUdiESi.Hacalnerj.SagirMiUi , Drcllingiasd fcrclrare, on the raot Iarorable tarmi.

Bishop & Go.1382k;

Assurance CompanyPOUNUED l&Oi-uiatKJ- S.

Capital. . 6 ,000.e0oAssats, 3 9 000.000

Haiing been appointed Agsnu of thoabove Company we are now ready toeffect Insurances at the lowest rated ofpremium.

H. W. SCHMIDT A SON!

HE HUH AGMOF A. JAEGER.

Xo. IS Kaahsuaaau Street, - - - Honolola

HAMBURG-MAGDEBUR- G HREINSURANCE CO. of Ham- -bare. Germanv.

LION FERE INSURANCE CO. ofLondon. England.

ORIENT INSURANCE CO.Hartford, Conn.

NATIONAL fTBE INSURANCECO. of Hartford, Conn.

ISSt--T

TRANS - - - ATLANTICFire Insurance Company,

OF HAMBUEG.

Capital of tte Co. asd Beserre, Belchsarkj e.000,000

Capital their Conpanies

Total Beiehinarlc 107,650,000

NORTH CE RMANFire Insurance Company,

--OP HAKBDBO.

Capital of the Ca.i Beserre Beidia- -narkt. . 8,8,000

CapItallhelrBe-InsarasceCoinpanie- a

Total. Belcbi-ar- ki OSXfiOO

Tbe sadmlcBed, General A rata of titaboretwo conpssle for the Havallao IaUadi. arenreoared to lninre Bolldlnes. Fnrnltare. V .chandlie and Produce, Machinery, 4c, altooofir ua xuce June, ua Tetitjs lo the har-bor, lzilnlt Ioai ordasiage by fire, on the moatfaTorabletemj. H.HACKFZLD & CO '1556 It

W. H. HIOE,

STGK RAISE ai DEAL!BZZZDEB OF

Fine Horses and CattleFrom tbe Thoroughbred

Standard bred Stallioa, Nutwood by Nutwood, JrNoraa Stallion --Captain GrawlIfaliTe bred Etallion..... ...Boswell

IXEO a CHOICZ LOT OT

Bulls, Cows and CalvesFrom the Celebrated Bolls

Sussex, Hereford, Ayrshire & Durhamx tor or

FOB SALE.

2 nXRU BHEDHEREFORD BULLS FOR SALEBSPfeSS,3 Eirarsion Parties desiringSinde, or FonMn-han- d Team, orbaddle Horses can be accommodatedH. Bice'fl LiTery Stables. ""UB AH eosnnnieatlons to be addreseed to

Ia-1- VT. H.BICB. Lihne. Kanaj.

HOTICE.THE ROAD FROSr PAITATjA

jrtAtacto tra"e'; "rth"Se ' ,?AtMCiia'fnsrjv) I

4iw PETEai.EE. I

i'arcuyi SUiwrtioctncnhj.

into. n. oath. uanoui JAXton.

TIIE0. H. DiVVIES & CO.,

COMMISSION MERCHANTS,

12 & 13 Tho Albnn.LtVKItrOOL. l!8 1 j

Onlv "Pebble" Establishment

Muller's Optical Depot133 Jlontsomery St.. near Bash, S.K., Caw

CCSpoclnlty 3B Yoars."The mojt complicated diet of dcfcctUr

Tl.'lon thoroughly dlairooicd FREE OFCIIAROEv Orders by mail or express promptlyattended to.

AstlrraaUcLensesMoanted toorder at two hoar 'notice. 1K6 ly

FIRE INSURANCE.

Roval Insurance CoItlVERPOOL,

Capital and Funds, 29,000,000

UHI0N New Zealand,Capital, ... $ 10,000,000

takx arsts OS

BUILDINGS, MERCHANDISE.

JIACniNKRT, FURNITURE

And ill other Insurable Prop:ty atCnrrent Rates.

JOHN S. WALKER,iro-l- y Agent for Ilawatlan Island;.

EIKE AJS'D MAKHN'E

INSUEANCE f

The Alliance Assurance Company

AND

The Alto Marine k Gen'l Assurance

COMPANY, VD. OF LONDON.

Subscribed Capital $35,000,009Paid Up 3,700,000Assets ... 30,000,000

Bei? to infnrm tho nnhli thatFire and Slarine risks will bo accepted aiCurrent Bates.

J. S. WALKER,Agent for Hawaiicn Islands.

3136-l- m 143S-1- ?

MARINE INSURANCE

The undersigned is authorised to takaMarine Bisks on

HULLS, OAKGOEJ5,FREIGHTS and

COMMISSIONS.At Current Kates in the fonowins Con-panie- s,

viz:Union Fire and Marine, of New

Zealand,WilhelmaofMadgeburg Gen'l. Ins. CoSun Insurance Co., San Francisco.

JOHN S. WALKER,ltr" Agent for Hawaiian IManji.

UAaBBKCH BUEMEFire Insurance Company.

,.. r? .t O. cu ut,dk Deen appolated

mTi; aft .lurB onnnineand Brlelz

Marino Insurance Company,OF BERLIN

General Insurance Company,UP BEBLIK

..Toaabore Inenrance Companies baTeutmh.'nl6116?1.?67 he.and the nnderalened, Agents, art anthorUed to tai

?i& wf'S" ,he "iee oltbeSeuEe",",1" KatcnndoatbeXost Favorable Terms.1263 IrP. A.3CHAEPEH & CO..Qenerl Azts

GENERAL INSURANCE COMPANYPor Sea, KivorS: Land TrasapoTt '

OF DBESDEJT ,

,?nlln.Ubr,fbe5 A2r atHonoIala to.undersigned Geaerm.AjnU.areanthoriaed to UkeRlaksaaliuttlieDaaBerof tbe Sea

AT THIMotRaaoiiabIo Ratecand on tb

F.A.SCHAE7EC0PTOra1'10 TjSMtf Agent for the HawalianPsIscds

NORTH BRITISH AND MERCANTILE

insurance -- Company.Total Aasrra at Viczuzza 31T, 131

10,5,99 2. lid.CapIUI.3J300,CCO . rfSubicrlbed " .. 2;750C0C

3-- Lifej4- - 2.717J7712 9Annuity Fonda JO

l0,6X,m SllEerennePlre BranchKerenne Life and Annnlty x'3M'Ba- - - s

Braneh.... 1,033110 210

JH,K,872 8 S

... . .Th rrTTTMIfc-- i c-- j --.TiZrTlZZ-- 4 T-- M fUDa"' ae rue isd Lire

ED. HOFPSCHIiAEGEB & CO331r Agenti fortleHawIIinIland

Daily Aterfiser SDe. pjr monib.

i

(J

Page 12: fl c ''y XXVIILNo. HONOLULU, TUESDAYS JUNE No....tf"Corrcapondencolntended lor publication, thellawa-lla-n Gazette, Post Office Box. O. " KB" Correspondence rclatlne to Advertise-ments,

EXECUTIYB B AT.

iFOBHAL POSSESSION TAKEN

Th Military jiA the

TVe rirt,lUnllu Itand

Th ceremonies t the executivebaUding were very simple ifon-da- y

morning "when President Boletook formal possession of the build--,inc. At 10 o'clock there were anumber of people present on thegrounds. A detachment of Com-

pany E, under command of Capt.Good, was drawn np on the walk,likewise the Hawaiian band. Atthe hour mentioned President Dole,ifinisters Damon and lung, Attor-ney General Smith, Major Potterimd Auditor General Ross walkedover from the court house, and asthe party entered the gate of theexecutive building yard the sol-

diers presented arms and the bandstruck up a lively air. At the mainentrance of the building stood Col.Soper and the officers of the na-tional guard. "When PresidentDole and party ascended the stepsthey entered the finance officewhere the president made a briefaddress to Col. Soper and his staff.The president thanked them fortheir attendance. He stated thatthe protection of the governmentwas in their hands and closed bvsaving that under the new arrange-ment the work of the governmentwould be carried on with economvand efficiencv. When the briefceremony was concluded peoplecommenced to poor into the build-ing and very few left nntil theyhad explored every nook and cor-ner in the edifice. Everybodyagrees that it will make a splendidoffice building. In the afternoonthe councils of the government heldtheir first session in the old throneroom which has been transformedinto a council chamber.- - The room

' is high and airy and it is 3 vastimprovement over the room whichwas formerly pccupied in tne courtiiouse.

An Advxbtiszb reporter called.at the executive building Mondaymorning after the ministers werefairly settled in their new quarters.Meeting Minister Damon at themain entrance, the reporter visitedthe finance office with him first.The large safes were placed in eachend of the office. The ministersdesk was in the center, next to thelarge folding doors.

The registrar of public accountshas a paying ana receiving desk mone of the veranda windows-- Pri--ra- ie

Secretary Ashley occupies spart of the commodious desk of theminister, and can be found in theoffice every day during businesshoars.

The minister of finance has acosy private office upstairs in frontof the foreign oSce. He pointedoat to the reDorter where the newvault will be buih in the financeoffice proper, in the msoka corneron the Wsikikl side of the room.One of the old vaults at the courthouse will be used for storing legalpapers and documents.

In the niakai end of the interioroffice Minister King has his privateSee separated from the chief

clerk by screens. Mr. Hassingersdesk occupies the center of thelarge room, surrounded bv the desksof his assistants. The rnauka en-

trance, or vestibule, is reserved forthe desk of the cashier, licensecierk. eta, 2nd through this open-

ing all the cash, transactions of theoffice will be carried on and draftsoa the treasury issued. Miss Vidaftthe typewriter of the department,occupies the mauka tower roomadjoining the main office.

President Dole and staff occupythe two mauka rooms upstairs inthe Ewa end of the building. Whenthe reporter entered, President Dolewas dust" arranging ms oooss anapapers. With another gentlemanpresent, the three sat down to thelate king's round table, which willbe hereafter used for the deliberations of cabinet meetings. Festivekings and queens in pairs and Jonejacks and jack-pot- s will hereaftercot be in it. and the dignity of thenew shall in some degree atone forthe rolicking neglect of the old.

Passing across the wide hall-wa- y

the apartments of the attorney-gener- al

and his deputy were en-

tered. They are situated maukain the Waikiki end of the building.The attorney-gener- al was so busyhe could scarcely say "howdy,and a lot of workmen were busypetting the book-case- s into positionto receive the lesal tomes of the

i building will be nicely cleanedthroughout and the"niain floors

EVANGELICAL ASSOCIATION

ETairaiiaxr Pastors Open TheirYearly Session.

The Hawaiian Evangelical Asso-

ciation met Tuessday morning atKawaiahao church. The meetingwas presided over by Kev. J. M.Kealoha, the moderator of last year.

After the meeting was called toorder, Kev. J. Kauhane of Kau waselected moderator and Kev. D. K.Kahooniano scribe. After appoint-ing committees the body adjourneduntil the afternoon, when religiousquestions were discussed.

The following members of theassociation were present:

Ministers J. Waimau, J. M.Exera, J. Eekahuna, E. S. Timoteo,James Davis, J. Kanohe, J. M. Ke-aloh- a.

J. P. Ktria, J. JB. Kahaleale,G. L. Kopa, D. Kapali, M, Lntera,G. W. Waiau, D. K. Meheula, A.Pali, J. K. Iosepa, S. X- - Kaniaka-hik-e,

J. Hanaike, S. Kaniakabike,S. E. Sishop, 0. P. Emerson.

Delegates S. W. Kimo, Opunui,I. Xalua. Kane. Kamaunu, A. F.Judd, Xakanelua, Kalaiwaa Opio,D. Kanalu, L Opolo, Kaiawe.

The Hawaiian Evangelical Asso-ciation did not meet Wednesdaymorning owing to the fact that thepastors attended the exercises atHawaiahao seminary. The bodyconvened in the afternoon at 1 :30o'clock for a short session. Thechief interest of the afternoon cen-tered in several speeches whichwere made by members of theassociation.

Chief Justice Judd. who is adelegate from Central Unionennrcn. was made a member atlarge of the association. He readsome very appropriate resolutionsin regard to deceased brethren, ofwhich three have been added tothe roll during the past year theRev. J. D. Paris, Rev. James Bick-ne- ll

and Rev. S. Waiwaiole. Men-tion was also made of the death ofMrs. Louisa K. Kauwealoha, wifeof the Marquesan missionary.

After reading the remainingstatistical tables, the associationadjourned to attend the farewellexercises held on board ot theMornins: Star.

INSPECTOR ATKINSON.

Has Been Delayed in His Workby Sickness.

Word has been received at theboard of education "that while land-ing at Molokai on his trip up sev-

eral weeks ago, the inspector gen-

eral of schools, Mr. A. T. Atkinson,a drenching the burglar de-t-he

muted thmwh dnorlandinc. which resulted In a heavvcold. The disease attacked histhroat and soon developed in bron-chial trouble. Dr. Mouritz attend-ed him and for a week or more

him sick man.improving Mr. Atkinson vis-

ited the schools on Molokai andlast week left for Lahaina, Maui.to finish examinations there. It isprooaoie. it ne continues to im-prove, be will be able to performhis duties on that island so as toreturn to Honolulu in a fortnighthence.

"SugarMr. Charles Xordhog", whose ap-

parent mission at Honolulu hasbeen to find and expose ' the sugarniccer in the woodpile," hiddenfrom sight by the friends of annex-ation, has discovered that Mr.Clans Spreckels Is opposed to an-- 000. Ex.uciauiHi. riwn wis oisciosure nwould appear that tne sugarnigger"' was an invention. TheInterest of United States in theSandwich Islands is not in thesugar, nor in the islanders, but inthe islands themselves. They happen to be so located as to make

steamer hercommercial

nationsing United States for

oi Asia. Philadelphia

Future Collegians.F. Judd, Jr., and Jas. R. Judd,

sons of Chief Justice Judd, wfll

Chicago to take in the Fair, includHon. L. A. Thurston's cyclo-ram- a.

The first shipment of batter fromthe Hutchinson plantation

As soon as all is rearranged, the G &

:t

HAWAIIAN GAZETTE, TUESDAY, JUNE LS IShS. 11STARTING THEM RIGHT.

What the Kindergarten Systemis Doing for Qiiildren.

About 150 scholars who attendthe kindergarten were present ay

afternoon at Queen EmmaHall. The little ones representedthe Chinese, Japanese, Portugueseand Hawaiian races. They wentthrough a of exercises un-dert- he

direction of those indefatig-able workers. Frank Damon,Miss Fanning, Miss M. Kinneyand others.

The little gave a very credi-

table exhibition which amused andinterested the audience. theexercises were through with thescholars marched outside and tooktheir positions on the grounds afterwhich a photograph of the groupwas taken by Mrs. Hall. Thechildren's hearts made gladby receiving a generous bajr ofcandy, some cakes and other sweetmeats besides having a smallbouquet pinned on their coats anddresses. But few peonle are awareof the useful work that is going onabout them in regard to trainingthe young of this city. The teachersmake no display of their commend-able work but they are accomplish-ing a great deal in a quiet forthe cause of humanity.

kindergarten "for Hawaiianand Japanese children is at QueenEmma hall, where the young onesare instructed from 2 "until 4:30o'clock on school days. The teach-ers are Miss Fanning and MissOjawa. The Chinese kindergartenis on the grounds of the Chinesechurch premises on Fort streetMiss M.Kenneyis the instructor.Tne school-hour- s are from 12:30 to J3 o'clock.

The Portuguese children alsohave their own kindergarten, whichis connected with the Portuguesemission. From 9 to 12 o'clock inthe morning are their school hours.

Mr. Damon extends a cordial in-

vitation to the general public tocall at kindergarten during theschool hours and see what is beingdone for the children.

A BOLD BURGLAR.

Store of F. A, Schaefer &Co. Entered.

Some, during Wednesdaynight or Thursday morning thestore of F. A. Schaefer & Co. wasentered by a hurglar who gainedaccess through the roof by remov-ing the slates and cutting an aper-ture large enough to allow his bodyto pass through. The manner inwhich the reached theis in doabt but it is thought thathe ascended a flagpole.

S TtCT fATVtnfT tllA W nAr anreceived thorough in

( different & thesteamer's boat during roacha ! a wr with

pro-nounced a very

On

The Nigger."

the

ones

were

way

the

The

w -- Vw. ...uiour dollars in change, some post-age stamps and a seal ring. Heleft no clue so the authorities arein the dark.

New Missionary Vessel.The London Missionary Society,

in view 01 the expansion of itswork in the islands the Pacificocean, has at length decided tobuild a steamer io take the placeof the John Williams. The newmission in Xew Guinea promises,it Is said, to be more extensive andimportant than all the other SouthSea missions combined. It extendsover 1000 miles of coast, with sev-enty native evangelists from thedifferent groups. Navigation inthis region is difficult, and a vesselwith full steam power is deemedessential. It is proposed to build avessel which will cost ?S0.--

j

Return of the Boston.The TJ. S. S. Boston returned to

port last Wednesday, after be-

ing absent for target practice for aweek. She anchored in her regular position in the naval row. The

a desirable possession for the j KmaB" met near La-Unit- ed

States for and haina on Tuesday night-- Rear--mantinie reasons. It would be also i Admiral Skerret's flag is now. flyvery undesirable that they should : ing from her maintop masthead,fall under the control of any of the I -European who are contest- - ' When the Mail Goes.

wth the the '

trade Re--.

cord. '

Two

A.

i

dairv. -

.

Mr

After

time

thief roof

rt

. - .

'

'of

them

-

The non-arriv- al of the steamshipCity of Peking has been a disap-pointment to many people who de- -posited letters in the post office to

! be sent on her. Unless the Pekingputs in an appearance in the mean--

t time, the next UJOU will not be sentleave next month attend schoolto ; ont ntiI the 19th instj when tfaeat lale College. They will call at China is due from the Orient.

ing

course

The

To a School.At the meeting of the Hawaiian

Evangelical Association held lastunanimous vote was pass

Xaalehu, Hawaii, came bv the last ' ed to take una collection in all thedepartment, which were waiting in ! trip of the W. G. Hall. The 200 ; churches in the islands next Octo- -O'mxu-- - . tttM? ilnrrn ct?re ' lh. nf HntiAr TTArp mnnmioJ in TIT ! c 'm. iUn kCl U, T11VAU1C2C WrttViAJ UU'IU - - " . wv .ajAt.i VJ IF. V&l lA. IUC UUTZIH Ul UC flclJ UU.il U

Irwin Co.

about

Assist

school on Kauai.

FALSE.

DEPORTATION AND ' ASSASSINA-

TION DENOUNCED.

Tie Government States the Caseto the Advertiser.

The unreliable mouthings of theBulletin and Holomua for the pastfew days regarding the rumors ofthe deportation and assassinationof the ex-que- en caused an Adve-rtiser reporter to call on the Pro-

visional government Friday toinvestigate these royalist charges.

In reply to a question regarding the rumor of deportation, asnone but the government couldtake steps in such a matter, theattorney-gener- al said: "There isnot the slightest truth or founda-tion for the reports that the ex-que- en

is to be deported. The factis, we prefer to have her here ex-

actly where she is, and I believePresident Dole has so expressedhimself before when newspaper re-porters have asked the same ques-tion. I do not know, nor do anyof the ministers know, how theabsurd rumor originated, furtherthan it was reported to us that ithad sprung from the royaliststhemselves or from some of the oldpalace hangers-o- n for the purposeof exciting sympathy and incitingto deeds of violence."

In reply to a question relatingto the rumors and publications re-garding assassination of the ex- -queen the attorney general said :

"As to those rumors the govern-ment heard them with indignation.At first we considered both therumors you mention as not worthvof notice, but learning afterwardsthey were believed by Liliuokalaniand her friends, President Dolesent for Mr. Samuel Parker. Mr.Parker met the Cabinet this morn-ing Friday at ten o'clock.President Dole called his attentionto the rumors and asked him as toihe facts. Mr. Parker stated thatboth rumors, regarding deportationandassassination.bad come to themin such a way that they had be-

lieved them to be true. PresidentDole assured Mr. Parker that therumors were entirely without foun-dation and that if Liliuokalani'slife was in danger she was entitledto the same protection as any othercitizen.

The attorney-gener- al stated thatthe fact was, "the first the minis-ters heard of such rumors wasfrom Marshal Hitchcock, late onWednesday afternoon, who came tothe executive building to inquire ifthe government intended takingany such action as was rumored.

"Marshal Hitchcock was inform-ed that his information on the sub-ject was the first intimation theministry had received, and that hecould rest assured the rumors wereabsolutely unfounded."

CONLY IS 'COMMITTED.

Two Sailors Give Damaging Tes-timony Against Him.

Patrick Conly, the sailor on thebark Matilda, was committed fortrial before -- the circuit court byJudge Foster last week on a chargeof manslaughter in the first de-

gree. Two sailors on board of thevessel gave damaging testimonyagainst Conly, one of them statingthat he saw Conly push Stevensoverboard. The deceased was sit--ting on a rail forward and, accord-ing to the witness, Conly caughthim by the legs and deliberatelyshoved him into the water.

The Biabop Replies.Bishop Willis of the Anglican

church has issued a pamphlet ad-

dressed to the English-speakin- g

congregation of St. Andrew's cathe-dral. It is entitled: "The essentialneed of unity in the cathedralchurch." It is a reply to tfae reso-lutions adopted some time ago bythe second congregation.

n

Furnished Many Meals.Mr. Clark, who is repairing the

organ at Kawaiahao church, hasdiscovered that the man who lastrepaired the instrument used poiinjoining the parts instead of liquidglue. As a result the organ is in ashaky condition, as hungry ratsate the poi.

William Eassie of Kealia willleave on the 27th insL, for a visitto the World's Fair.

A. BIT OF HISTORY.

The Leap and Death of Kaoheleof Molokai.

During the early days of thereign of Kamehameha-nu- i (not theconqueror), of Molokai, there liveda famous warrior and kukini (run-ner), named Kaohele. While howas near Halawa one day, he wassought after to be killed by a bandof hostile natives. He was only ahiile then from the refuge of Kaili,down in the valley of Halawa, buthis enemies so blockaded the wayto it that he was compelled to seeksafety at the refuge of Kamehameha--

nui, over ten miles away.Above Halawa is a chasm twenty-thre- e

feet wide. Kaohele made asuccessful leap over the crevice.His pursuers paused on the brink,afraid to attempt the jump, andKaohele turned in a proud andhaughty manner, tauntingly said :,SE kul ka mama i loaa 0 Kaohele"(Increase your fleetness in order toovertake Kaohele). He thenturned and ran towards Kaluaaha,passing through several districts inhis flight. While his pursuerswere finding a path for them, Kao-hele was leading several hundredyards ahead of them. Kaohele ranas far as Kaluaaha, and whenwithin a few hundred yards of therefuge of Kamehameha-nu- i he be-

came exhausted and stopped by apool near by to drink water. Helaid down a while and spat blood,as he had been struck in the breastwith a sling stone, thrown at himby one of his pursuers.

The people of Kaluaaha, seeingKaohelc spitting out blood, at oncosuspected him of being a refugeeand killed him on the spot. Thusthe carreer of the great warriorKaohele was ended, but his Bayingof "E kui ka mama i loaa o Kao-hele" i3 still fresh in the memoryof the people on Molokai, and evenyoung children are taught the his-tory of this famous man, and thewide chasm where Kaohele madethe successful leap is shown withpride by the kamaainas ofJIalawato visitors.

MALCOLM BROWN TRAVELS.

His Friends are Close-Mouth- ed

Concerning His Affairs.An AnvEB-nsE- reporter called

upon the registrar of conveyancesThursday afternoon to inquireabout the rumors afloat concerningthe departure and financial situa-tion of Mr. Malcolm Brown, latedeputy registrar of conveyances.

In answer to questions, Mr.Thrum stated that he did not wishto say any more about the matterthan possible.. Mr. Brown hadsevered his connection with theoffice at the end of last month. Hedeclined to state whether he wasshort in his accounts with the officeor not. He was not aware Mr.Brown had intended leaving,tnougn ne was not surprised, anddid not know his plans or destina-tion.

The rumor that Mr. Brown was indifficulty on account of privatedebts was stated to several ofhis friends. There was some sur-prise expressed at the suggestion.as they all agreed in declaring that I

Mr. Brown had been enabled some I

time ago to settle his former debtsby the advances of friends, andthey were not aware that he hadbeen pressed for funds lately.

Excursion to Kahului.The Wilder Steamship Company

will run an excursion to Kahuluifor the accommodation of those whodesire to see the 4th of July racesat that place. The vessel wfll leavehere on 3Ionday, July 3d, at 5 P.M.,returning the passengers on Wed-nesday, the 5th, at daylight. Thefare will' be placed at $7.50 for theround trip.

Teachers to Leave.

Miss Louise F. Dale, musicteacher, and Prof. J. Q. Wood,teacher in English and mathema-tics, will sever their connectionwith Oahu College at the end ofthe present school year. Mr. Woodwill take up the study of law insome American college on his re-turn to America.

Paradise of the Pacific.The Paradise of the Pacific is

out&r the current month. Thepresent number contains muchthat will interest people abroad.This periodical has a new andhandsome pictorial cover. It re-presents Hawaii showing to theworld the different products of thiscountry. It i 1 good specimen ofthe lithographic art.

j&ftro 5tttotrttstnumt3.

Taro Flooris perfect, thatis, it containsnothing but tn-r- o,

the mostwholesome ve-

getable in theworld. "We knowit, so do you; wedon't mind re-

commending it'to you, and

you're glad wedo, .because ittempts you touse it and you'reglad you do, be-

cause it rids yourstomach of dys-

peptic tenden-cies and makesyou feel better.

$SThe gro-

cers sell it.

JUST -:-- IN"!

A LAEGE LOT OF--

SOLID G01D

Hard Enamel American

Mag

In order to move them

quickly they will be

sold for

11.50

'Uttons

EACH

FOR CASH!

Come in to-da- y and get youre,

or you will be too late.

H. I NUN.4

J. R. MAftMONT.

Boilers Inspected, Tested aod Repaired

KIM'GIVK KST'MATK KOlt NEWBoflera, Tank I'tpea, timoJcMtack.

FfamM, Bridges, end general Eheet fronwork. Boflen renalred at libera' rates-10- 0

lbs. cold water or steam pressor gna.ranteed on all work.

dm P. O. Box HTB.HonoInln.H I 3I HM--U

Notice of

NOTICE IS HKKEBY GIVENV. WniTSET and A. B.

SICIIOLS, both reildln? In Hsnolsls, 0ba.hire enUred Into a paxtoerihip tor the psrpotaot cmttjIbz n the bailnetf of SeoUiU and OfDcnu) HarztiT. la all branch, n&der the firjname of Whitney aai Nlehola, and that theirprincipal office and place of b itoMtlf oa thetooth cornet ot Hotel led 7ort itrreu on thetrrand floor. In Moimla!n.

Daied Honolulu, May 23. 1691. 1V1 3

Page 13: fl c ''y XXVIILNo. HONOLULU, TUESDAYS JUNE No....tf"Corrcapondencolntended lor publication, thellawa-lla-n Gazette, Post Office Box. O. " KB" Correspondence rclatlne to Advertise-ments,

r" , qf& jP1 " ?" 'JJ1V ??

12 HAWAII GAZETTE, TlJESfiF JUNE 13, 183

FOKKIGS SIATX SKKTICK.

Slecsttfaips win leave ftr and arrive from

San Frasciseo, on the foilowinc dates, tffl

the dose of 159S.

Leavx HsMartr Doe at Bosom-i-x

m SasFiuotbco. Fit- - Sax

Oh Prions Jane 6 Australia Jnel.China . ... Jane IS Miowera. from an- ,

Australia ..Jane 21 fnver ,Je '

Bdpc. . ..Jnne 27 Alameda JceMariposa ...Jnne29 China . . JolyWammoo. for Van-

couver-.Australia July 12 ,

Julv 1 WarriraTO,in Van-couverPern JnlyT July 21

Oceaate .Jnly 17 ilanposa July 27

Australia 3n!yl9 Oceanic .Atitr.TEio Janeiro .July 25 Australia . .Aug- - q

ilooowat ...Jcly7 3iotowai AncGaelic Anfi. 6 Australia sept--bi

Gtr Peiing Anc. 15 China . pri5 'AnrtraSa. .Anc. 16 Alameda sept.21Al anode Anc. 24 Australia.- - . vet.Australia .Sept. IS Oceanic.... 0e16.Mariposa. epSl Mariposa Oct. 19

Oceanic . fcept.25 Australia X0T.1IAustralia Oct. 11 llooowai -Monow&i Oct. 19 China vChina.... Sov. 6 Anstraha '.Dec 6Australia Kov. S Alameda uec. jiiAlameda Nov. 16 Oceanic . xiecOceanic .Dec i Australia.. ..Jan. 3Atxstraha .Dec C

Alameda. Dec 14

CStyl'ddng.. Jan. 2 i

Meteorological Record.

ST T OTXSXJT KTXT.JOAT.

MUX. TXXO I

s? . , s el ii?. 2 r - rf a

5 - ? j

san! 1 auwo-es-! crsi e.tri sjm J sMon 5 3J.lB33.0Gl 72 SI 6.H) 6 J xr 4

Tae 6 S3 JtSa-tS-. !T BIN ft Jn 4

Wed T 30.17 S3 .JO Ti SI .t S S ese 5Tt52 t.15 33.66! TD 0.C 71 XE S

Tri. S 33.1 Ja.K' 7l 7te.W 9 n 5Sat. J3.1S3X1S. t, Silfl.M 6 61 rsx S

ride! son and Moon.zx c.:.uss(.

i

.5!iy

si' i-- I?. El! s i

I !ojn.ia.ai.k.ia. pjn-- . nh z.t l.se' T.s,.' sa; S.4S1.50

Tcei X . S.10U.W 5.17 S.4Sj sets6.40

tr 4 5 S.4B .M41.4 5.IJ 6.4S T.HTJiorl" IS 5. e J3 SJ . .. 5.1S C.4S S.S3

I ii.m.Trt IB, . 0 S.40,10. 0 0.3&' S.1S 6.M P.4S

St 171 6.35 CBOB.a 1. u . "-- 10.S4

Sun IB T.3 7J0315 IJO S.1S 6.M 11.111

Sew noon en tie ISta at 7t. San. r. tuTime Unlitle blo at lb. 23. S4s. PJC ct

.Honolola tljae. trnlcii S the uat at Kh. tSn. Da.

cf Oreentrich time

SHIPPIKG 1NIELUGEKCE.

i:i;itai.s.MossaT. June 5.

bchr Mile ilorris from Koolau.Scar Haleatala from Kona.

Tcesdat, June 6.

Schr Kulumann for Puna, Hawaii.WrDSEEDAT. June 7.

U S S Bostonay, from Lahaina.Stmx Kinau, Clarke, from Maui and Ha--

raii.Strar James ilatec. Hapland l

Sunr Koala. Gahan. from Vaialua and"Waianae.

Schr Ka Moj from Htmakua.Thcesiut. Jnne S.

Sloop 'Waianae. from Waianae.Feiat, June 9.

Stmr Lehua. Wiesbanb. from Hooomu.Schr ilahimahi from Waialna.Schr Hawailani from Koolau.Stmr Pele, Peterson, from Makaweli.

SATCEtAr. June 10.

fctmr ilokola, McGregor, from Molokai.S S CitT oi Peking, from Yokohamafctmr J'A Cummins. Ueilson, from tvoo-la- u.

Stmr Pde. Peterson, from ilakaweli.Stmr Kaala. Gahan. from 'Waianae.Stmr Hawaii Hilbus. from Hilo and

Stmr James ilatee. Haglund. fromKapsa.

SrsDAT, June UL

i ship Kate Davenport, Eeynolds, 19dars from Port Townsend.

jitmr C K Bishop, Le Claire, from Kauai.Star Iwalani, Freeman, from Kauai.Stmr Claudine, Davies, from Maui.StmrWaialeale. Smythe, front Hamakua.

Modt. June 12.Schr Mokuola from Kwa.Schr Mile Morris from Koolau.

Modav, Juneo.Stmr James Makee. Haglund, for Ka-

paa.Stmr J A Cummins. Xeilsoa. for Koolau.Sunr Mokolii, McGregor, for Molokai.Schr Mile Morris for Koolau.Schr Sarah and Eliza for Koolau.Schr Moiwahine for Hamakua.Schr Liholiho, Berrv, for Waimca.Schr Kawailani for Koolau.

Tuesday, June 6.

Stmr C B Bishop. Le Claire, for KHaueaand Hanalei.

Stmr Waialeale. Smythc. for LshainaAnd Hamakua.

Schr Mary E Foster for Makaweli.Stmr Kaala. Gahan. for Kahuku and

Punaluu.Stmr W G Hall, Simexson, for Maui and

Hawaii.Stmr Iwalani. Freeman, for Hanamaulu,

Koloa and Waimea.Stmr Claudine, Davies. for MauLSchr Mnhirrmhi. for Waialua.Schr Kaaikeaouli for Kohala.Sloop Waianae for Waianae.

. WzDSTrsPAT. June 7.Stmr James Makee. Haglund, tor Ka-

paa.Am bk Albert. Winding, for Saa Fran-

cisco.Am bk S C Allen. Thompson, for San

Francisco.Am brgt W G Irwin. WiHiams, for San

Francisco.Ammisbkt Morning Star, Garland, for

Micronesia.Xhcesdat, June S.

Stmr Kaala, Gahan, for Waianae andWaialua.

Fetjjat. June 9.Schr Haleakala for Puna.Stmr Kinaa, Clarke, for Maui and Ha- -'

waii.SAttedat. Jane 10. '

S S City of Peking, for San Francisco.

ruSXUUK VESSE1JS EXPJECTED.

.fcXFlt. Where free Due.. .,-- a; t,. CUfir?i Tnti,

GerbkG K Wilcox ."Liverpool. Jair 4--

BrbkLadsteri .L'pool..Jnly 25-3- 1

GerbkJC Pflcger Bremen., .sept 5--15

Am bk Martha DzxU .Boston ...Dec 5

oAm fat Sharpshooter .Newcastle Jane 1

' Br bk Koutenbeci Newcastle JEne5-1- 0

! ArabUOoltua Gnataraala .Jnne 5

Ambit Hilo .SanFraa JaeJAm btt W H luaonLSan tran. . . .June JtAmbk Cerion.. .. San Fran Jnne 25ArnbtSorioina . ...San Fran Janets.Am bUSG Wilder San Fran June 19

Am brgt J D Sprecl-ei- s S F (Kah ) Jane riPPSSiliowera anconver jnne-- i.C P S S Wammoo Sydney - Jnlr 1O S S Australia ..Sin Fran June 11

BrSSChina China . .. June IS

Br S S BeJjnc China. .. .June 27OSS Mariposa Colonies June 29K X S S Alameda San Fran .June 29

FESSEl- .- t FOK!rrtl list does not iaciade oouten

XATAi TTSSIXS.

17 S J-- Boston, Day, from a cruue--CSa Adams, Xelson. San Francisco.

UEECHASTXTS.

Br&hGreU,Gariand,ewcastle.im schr Kins Crn, Christiansen, XwclcAn scar Ajvinail u x osier, un:, ntiintjcBk Amr Turner. Pendleton, from X T.Am bk "Matilda, Swenson, Kanaimo, B. C.Am bk Discovery, McNeill, San Fran.

,u.uu.,.,,-..- , ..- -.

PAssnnERs.

UTIKITAXS.

From Hawaii and Maui, per stmr Kinaa,June? Mrs G W A Hanai. Mrs KahiloHapai.Miss Jennie Hapai, A Young, EYoung. Ernest E Lyman. S A aphael. ItFLance.f ArmstroDc.J Y Monteornerv.Gcoakapuahi,EevS L Desha,P.-rM- C

Kealoha, Mrs J Makaena and son, T rs

Machado, Ben Kaapa, A TBannister and wife.Eev S W Kekuewa.Bev W M Kalaewa. and 114 deck passen-gers.

From Yokohama, per S S City of Peking,June 10-- AV E Barnes. Bev M C Saunders.Mr and Mrs Emmants, 30 Chinese and 6Japanese steerage pasenfiers.

From Kapaa, per stmr James Maiee.June 10 A la Johnson, G H Fairchild.

From Maai. per stmr Claudine, June11 Hon J H Bloant.Mrs J H Blount, ChasKordhoa", Miss Xordhoff, James Howell,H P Baldwin. 1 Hakuole, J Hakuole. Missi.ii Wood. Mrs Julia Aana, W S Wilcox,Henrr Smith, J "VV Jones, "" Porter Boyd,YYAshford, J A Magoon and servant,Mrs J "W Kalaa, 11 Chung, and 7o on deck.

From Kauai, per stmr Jas Makee. June11 M D Monsarrsr, AY A Wall, and 2 deckpassengers.

From Kauai, per stmr Iwalani, June 11A M McBryde, FK Archer, A Trask.ABoyd, SKseb, 3 Japanese, and 42 on deck.

For Kauai, per stmr Iwalani, June 6 GK Wflccx. M 1) Monsarrat. A Lindsar. MrBrash, C L Brito, Mr and Mrs Achock.EjBoyd and Kite, and alxut 3U on decs.

xor Hawaii and Maai. per stmr n txHall. June C For the A oicano. Mrs PLee and A Baessler. For wavnorts. KevEP Baker.Mrs Ikiuli, Mrs Dickens, MrKea-wehak- i.

Jas 1 Silva, K Ballentyne. MissMoore, Col Sam 1 orris, and about 20 ondeck.

For Maui, per stmr Claudine. June 6His Excellency and Mrs J H Bloant. J "WBoyd, Chas 2ordhoff,-Mis- s Xordhoff.Eu-dolp- h

Spreckels, Antone osa. J L Kanla-kou.Mi- ss

Frazer.Dr Frarer.GK "WilderandwiferC E Colvflle. Y V Ashford. J WJones, A Guild. Mr "Wilcox. Mr Smith, laCheung. H P Baldwin, W G Irwin, "W HBailer. Young Chuck Lan, Mrs F P Hast-ings, "WHCornwell, Miss Paris, J A Ma-goon and servant, and 23 on deck.

For San Francisco, per bk Albert, June7 Thos Porter. Dr A B Delamater andwife, W S Bartlett and wife. A E Moore,Miss Clark and H S Spear.

For San Francisco, per bkS C AllenJune 7 Miss 'Winter.

rorsanxranasco, per orgi uireia,Jane 7--HD Hall.

ForMicronesia.per mis stm bit Morn-ing Star. June 7 Miss Bose Kinney andJtiiss JfjuiK .tnau

For Maui and Hawaii, per stmr Kmau.Jane 9 For the Yolcano: EBenner. W WWarner. D W Deshler. Bev E Faber. ForHilo and way ports: Miss Appleton, D HHitchcock. Mrs Hendrv, child and nurse,Theo. Wolff. Miss E Cummins. FH Hay-selde- n

and familr. Kev M C Kealoha. EightEev Bishop of Honolulu and about 30 ondeck.

For San Francisco, per City ot Peking.June 10 T C Porter, 1 in the steerage, and35 through passengers.

rSIPOKTS.Ser Claudine &25 bags sngar, CO bags

bones. 2s0 bags potatoes. 79 bags corn, C2hides. 73 hogs, 2 horses. 119 packages ofsundries.

Per Kaala 1924 bags sugar for W GIrwin A Co.

Per Pele 3550 bags sugar.Per Mokolii 40 bags taro.Per James Makee 2550 bagi sugar.Per Iwalani 612 bags sugar,30 bags pia,

100 bags nee.Per C E Bishop 2750 baps sugar.Per Waialeale 2355 bags sugar.Per Hawaii J5 head cattle.

EXPOUTS.For San Francisco, perbk Albert, June

7 HHackfeld&Co.l'.-Ubag- s sugar; MSGrinbaum & Co. 2025 bags sugar; total,19,735 bags sugar.

For San Francisco.perbk S C Allen, June7 Castle & Cooke. 32:7- - bags sugar; TheoH Davies & Co. 3100 bags sugar; C Hreweri Co. 1292 bags sugar; total, 19,279 bags(2.324,309 lbs) sugar, domestic valne, J0,-237.1- 3.

For San Francisco, per brgt W G Irwin,June 7 W G Irwin & Co, 5397 bags susar;J T Waterhouse, 255 hags sugar; SingChoag Co. 1950 bags rice; M S Grinbacm& Co. 2310 bags rice; domestic value, $43,-34- 7.

BOKX.P.0THWELL In Honolulu, June 2, 1S93,

to the wife of J. G. Bothwell, a daughter.Y1YAS In this city, June 13th, to the

wife of J. M. Vivas, a son.

Her Confidence Was Well

Fonnded."I would rather trust that medicine

than any doctor I know of says ITrs.Hattie ilason, of Chilton, Carter Co.,ITo., in speaking of Chamberlain'sColic, Cholera and Diarrhoea .Rem-edy. This medicine can always bedepended upon, even in the mostsevere and danseroKs cases, both forchildren and adults. 23 and 50 centbottles for sale bvallmedicine dealers.

Besson, Smith & Co.,Agents for H. I.

For Tired BrainI'aellorsfonrji Acid Phosphate.

Tourists and others visiting Hilocan find the Daily AdvertiserEnd HAWAIIAN GAZETTE (weeklv)ori sae at the store of J. A. Mar- -.tin, Waianuenue Street.

WHARF AND WAVE.

Diamond Head, June 11, 10 p.m. :Weather, hazy ; wind, light X.

The steamer Likelike nill takeUp t.Ue LiauaineS rome laiS wees.She noes OUt at 5 O Clock this after- -noon.

The steamer Mikahala camedown from the marine railway onSaturday. She takes up her Kauairoute again this afternoon.

The steamship City of Peking.3129 tons register, K. R. Searles.commander, arrived early last Sat-

urday morning, twelve days outfrom Yokohama, and was dockedat the P. M. S. S- - Co.'s wharf at 7

aju. She brought Several paSSen- -gers and 1S5 tons of freight for thisport. The Peking was drawing 23feet when she crossed the bar. com-

ing into the harbor. She had 34European saloon passengers intransit. After unloading ier cargoshe left again on Saturday after-noon for San Francisco.

The "barkentine Discovery, Cap-

tain D. McNeill. leaves today forthe coast.

The steamer Claudine will go upon the marine railway tomorrow,and will remain there for severaldays.

The full-rigge- d American shipKate Davenport, Captain Reynolds,arrived on Sunday, 19 days fromPort Townsend, wi'th about 700,000feet of lumber for Messrs. Allen &Robinson. When she arrived offport she anchored in 10 fathoms ofwater and remained there until thetug Eleu went out and towed herinto port. She is now lying in thestream off Brewers whan.

The Lurline was to leave tt- -UllO

on Sunday last for San Franciscowith 10,000 bags of sugar. ,

The different vessels in the har-

bor were gaily decorated yesterdayin honor of Kamehameha day.

A remarkable sight was wit-

nessed off Sandgate and Hythe theother day, when the whole of thecoast between Sandgate and Lyddappeared reflected in the sea not astone's throw from the spectators.After an hour or so the illusion dis-

appeared. At the same time theFrench coast appeared reflectedwithin fifty yards of the Englishcoast. Such a mirage has not beenwitnessed for over forty years. Ex,

A STEAMER Soo FEET LONG.

The Monster Ordered by theWhite Star Line.

London. May 15. The "WhiteStar Line has given an order toHarland & Wolft for the construc-tion of a steamer SOO feet long,which, the firm is confident, willbeat anything afloat. The onlydifnculty for such a gigantic ves-sel will be the shallow water at theMersey bar, but the White StarCompany is arranging to have lar-ger tenders meet the great steam-ship farther out. The firm is atpresent hurrying the completion ofthe Gothic 500 feet long, and ofS000 tons. xThe Gothic is beingbuilt on ajnew principle as to theengines and steering gear, and isexpected to equal the speed of theCampania and her sister steamer,as yet unlaunched, the Lucania.The Gothic will be launched aboutthe end of June.

METEOROLOGICAL BECOBD FOR MAY.

Troia Observations 3tjule ait Oaltn Col-

lege by Prof. A. 11. Lyons.

7EXPZEATCEE OF A1E.

HoursHaiimum. MlTiinriri. ' Aver.

tion.

SDH a. m. , 75." May 11 . Os Slay 5 7.1130 c:... 6J May 15 , TC May 23 79.S9J0p. in. 7tV May 6 TV Stay 9 T3JAvenge 77" May 11 Tt May 23 75.2

Dew point (average for month), G3vIndicating moisture C4 grains per cubic foot.Dew point highest. t'.C on the 16th. .,Dew point lowest 57.8 on tie 23th.BelaUve humility at midday Q.JS per cent.Belative humidity in the night 3.6 per cent.Total rainfall Z29 inches.Mirimnm rainfaU in one day 0.S4 on the 12th.Bain exceeding .02 in. fell on 16 days in month.Trade wind prevailed throughout the month,

becoming Tery light, however, abont the 12th.Principal barometric maxima on the 7th and

25th. with minor ones on 2d, llih. 16th and 22d.A pronounced minimum on the 5th . miaor ones

on the 9H, lth, ISth, 25th and 3s t.Bains accompanied rising barometer on the 1st.

7th, 21st and 2Sth; falling barometer on thelth. 24 th and 21st.

BAEOXETES (COSEECTED EEADISGS.)

Hours ofObserva-

tion.2Iaximcm. iliaimum. Aver.

SJ5 a. m.i sa.19 Jiar2 30.M MiyS 30.143.30 p. m.1 33IS May 23 33X0 May 4 saxsiAverage.. 3017 May 23 S&SSSMayS so.m

Cloudiceas (is the. day time) 4S.4 percent.

He. WIXLIA3I McWATSB has thisday been appointed Assistant Luna totake up esiravs on all the GovernmentBoads from Moanalua to HaaliliamanuBridge, alone Liliha Street to Jcdd,Kuakini and School Streets to UnnanuStreet, Xanana Street from Hanaiaks-raalam- a

to Beretania Street, and uponall Government Lands in Kafihi, Hono-lul-n,

Oabn.

x JAMES A. KIKG,Minister oi the Interior.

Interior Office, Jnne 10th, ig93,S40414S3-3- t

ks jj3ssisaaiasawsjKS,'BBErt .rrr. -- . s:i::aim J iHa MMiaatj.;MuaM.iaiil

Cccuil uwrtisaiirnts.

COURT OF THECIRCUIT Hawaiian Iland. In Probate. In the matter of the Estate of ANDREALEXANDRE CARNIOT of Slolnkal. docea.ed.

A document imrsortine to be the last will and.

testament of Andre Alexandre Caroiot, deceased.havincontlic7th iTay ofJnnc, A.D.1S, been

, presented to aid Probate t'onrt and a petitionfor the Prx)baie thereof, ard for the iwianceofLetters Twlaaeotarr to F. A. Sehaefcr hlTinRbeen filed by F. A. schsefer

It i hereby ordered, that WEDNESDAY, the12th dar of July. A.D. 1SS8. at 10 o'clock A. It .of tid day, at the Court lCoom otfliiCourt.itUozolslc. Uahs. icAlliolani Hale, be, and thesamtU hcrehy appointed the time for provingiid win and heancj said application, jrhen ana

where any pervra intcrc5tcu may appear andcontest the eald will, and the grantingof LettersTejtamcntarj.

Dated Hosoln.n. H. I.. Jane 7th. 1583.Br the Cocrt .

GEO. LUCAb,Depntr Clerk. Circnil Coart. First ClrcciU

'iT'RrT7TT rrvnTtT rv tttttJ J First Circuit, Hawaiian Ilands In Pro--

". ik iac mailer oi me .bsiaic oi 11. t.JdcINTOSH. late of Honolala. deceased.On reading asdSUng thepetiUon and acconnta

ofM.Mtfncrny. Administrator of the estate ofH. W. Mcintosh, late of Honolulu, deceased,wherein he asks to be allowed S1.1S&S). andcharges himself with SA32I.55 and asts that thesame may be examined and approved, and thtta final order may be made of distribution of theproperty remaining in his hands to the personsthereto entitled and discharging him and hissureties from all farther responsibility as snchAdministrator.

It is ordered that WEDNESDAY, the 12th dayof July, A. D. 1S33. at ten o'clock A. SI., atChambers, in tse Coart House, in AlllolinlHale, Honolala, be and the same hereby is ap-pointed as the time and place for hearing saidpetition and account, and that all persons interestcd may then and there appear and jhowcacse, if any they bare, why the sumc shouldsot be granted, and msy present evidence as towho are entitled to the said property.

By the Court:F. WCNDEXBEBG,

!4&v Deputy Clerk of the Supreme Court.

I:n" the crRcuiT cotxrtCircuit of the Hawaiian Islands. In

the matter of the Bankrcptcv of W. AKCI of'orth Eohala of Hawaii.Order on Petition or Bankrupt for discharre.Upon reading and filing the petition of W.

Akui of North Kohala, Hawaii, alleging thatmore than six months have elapsed since he wasadjudicated a bankrupt, and praying for a dis-charge from all his debts.

It is ordered that FBIDAY. the 30th day ofJune. A. D. lS33,-i- c Aliiolani Hale, Honolulu, at10 A.M. of that day, at Chambers, be and thesame is hereby appointed for the heartcsr of saidpetition, at which time and place all creditorswho have proved their claims anlast said banl- -

i runtmav aDDear and show cause. If acr thev! . V- - ..,., . : --..f save, way me prayer oi aia oaucrupi snouia: n : be craated.

By the Court: GEO LUCAS,Deputy Clerk.

DatcdJnncS.IsJ3. t4SM

pIRCLTIT COtntT OF THEJ Firrt Circuit, Hawaiian Islands.. In Pro-

bate. In the natter of the Estate of JOHN D.KCEKY. of Honolulu. Oahu, deceased.

On reading and filing the Petition of Chas.L. Carter, administrator with the will annexedof said Estate, wherein he asks the approval ofthe Court to an agreement aled with said peti-tion, and for a final order discharging him andhis sureties from all further responsibility assnch administrator.

It is ordered that WEDNESDAY, the 5th dayof Julv. 1S33. at 10 o'clock A.lL,at Chambers,in the Coart House, at Aliiolani Hale. Honolulu,be and the same hereby is appointed aa the timetor hearing said petition and agreement, andthat all persons Interested may then and thereappear and show cause, ii any they have, whythe came should cot be granted, and may pre-sent evidence as to who are entitled to the saidproperty.

Dated at Honolulu, this 2Kh dayot May 1333.By the Court:

GEORGE LUCAS,3 Deputy Clerk.

LIT COURT OF THECIRC Circuit, Hawaiian Islands In Pro-bate, la the Matter of the .Kstate of JOHN S.WALKER, ot Honolulu, deceased.

A document purporting to be the last Will andtestament of Johh bmith Walker, deceased, hav-ing on the 1st day of June, A4D.1S33, been pre-sented to said Probate CouU, and a petition forthe Probate thereof, and for the issuance ofLrftters res taaentrry to U.K. iicintyre and vaneWalker, having been filed by H.E. Mclntyre,

It Is hereby ordered, that MONDAY, the 3rdday of Jnly, A.D. 1S33, at 10 o'clock A.M., of saidday, at the Court Room of said Court. AliiolaniHall, Honolulu, be, and the same is herebyappelated the lime for proving said Will andhearing said application, when and where anyperson interested may appear and contest thesaid Will, and the granting of Letters Testa-mentary.

By the Court.F. WCNDENBERG.

Dep'y Clerk of the Circuit Coart, 1st Circnit,14Mt

COURT OF THECIRCUIT Hawaiian Islands. In Pro-bate. In the matter of the Estate of JAMESGAY, of Waialua, Oahu. deceased,

A document purporting to be the last Will andtestament of James Gay. deceased, having onthe 1ft day of June. AJ). 1S33. been presented tosaid Probate Court, and a petition for the Pro-bate thereof, and for the issuance of LettersTestamentary to Hermann Fockeand Mary EllenGay. having been filed by Hermann Focie.

Ills hereby ordered, that MONDAY, the 3rdday of Jnly, A.D. 1831, at 10 o'clock A.M., ofsaid day, at the Court Room of said Court, atHonolulu, Oahu, in Aliiolani Hale, be, and thesame Is hereby appointed the time for provingsaid Will and hearing said application, whenand where any person interested may appearand contest the said Will, and the granting ofLetters Testamentary.

By the Court.P. WUNDENBUEG,

Depty Clerk of Circuit Coart, 1st Circnit.ltS3-3- t

FT THE CIRCUIT COURT OFFirst Circuit. Hawaiian Islands. In the

maUer or the Estate of ADOLF ASCHHEIM,late of San Francisco, California, U.S. A., de-ceased, intestate.

On reading and filing the peUtion of C Bolte,of Honolala, Hawaiian Islands, alleging thatsaid Adolf Aechheim died Intestate at Man Fran-cisco aroresaid on the 7th day of March, 1893,leaving property in the Hawaiian Islands necesaary to be administered upon, and praying thatLetters of Administration issue to him.

It is ordered that FBIDAY. the 23d day ofJune, 1693, at 10 o'clock a. m.. be and hereby isappointed for hearing said petition in the courtroom of this court at Aliiolani Hale. Honolulu.at which time and place all persons concernedmay appear and show cause, if any they have,"why said petition should not be granted.

By the Court:HENP.T SMITH.

Clerk Circuit Court First CircuitDated May 23. IS3Z US

Race Horses for Sale

"Senator Stanford,"Gray Stallion. Also,

"KAQLULAIMI,"Bay Mare by "Shenandoah.' fnU sister

to 'LoIoknlani.,,

raBotb animals in full training, and can beseen at KapusUni race track for about one week;For particulars apply to H. FOCKE.

145W

Heal Estate for Sale.

7 YALTJABLE PIECESof improved Property, locat-ed in different parta of thethe city of Honolnla-al- l bar-gains

cs r? Applv for foil aart- i-calars to

" BP.DGE&i.J CAMV7EIGHT

cgal 3uDtrti5r.mr.nts.

Jlortcasreo's Notice of Fore- -

closure.TX ACCORDA2? CE "WTT1I TIIEA provisions of a certain mortcag made byMoes Mahctona to W K Castle. Trustee, datedDecember 31, 1S. recorded In Liber IK. pascS3, notice I hereby given that the raortcagaeintends to foreclose the same for conditionbroken, to wit: of Interest.

Notice Is likewise riven thatafter the exnira- -

tion of three weeks from the date of this notice,the property conveyed by said mortgage will beadvertised for sale at public aucticn, at theauction rooms of James F Morgan. In Honolulu,OX TUUKbD.W. the 23th day of JUNE, lSll.at12 o'clock noon of said day.

Further particulars canoe had of Wit Castle.Sated Honolulu. June S, 1SS3.

W.It CASTLE. Trustee, Mortgagee.The prcnies covered hy said mortgage consist

oi:1 All of that ccttaln house lot in Honolulu

with the bnildlncs thereon, situated on PrintersLane, in Kawaiahao. known as the Maeha lot,conveyed to raortragor by deed of said Macha.recorded In Liber S3 page SW). and being part ofthe premises set forth In R I 4352, LCASSStoWaiakca.

- A certain lot of kalo land In Puunni, Hono-lulu, contalnms 510H fathoms, set forth In KP6t0, L C A 11,075 and devised to said mortgagor

by will of Maeha, deceased, and dulv admtttdeto probate.

3 The Ahupnaa of Kamlloa, Island of Molo-kai, being the same premises set forth In grantof the Hawaiian Government to Louise KIchard.set forth In Libet . page 209. and vested Inmortgagor by foreclosure deed of i ilclnerny,recorded In Liber 61. pge 175. llSMt

Mortgagee's Jfotice of Fore-closure.

TjS ACCORDANCE WITH THEJL provisions of a certain mortgaee made byGerge N. bhaw to Henry Smith. Trustee, datedDecember 12th, 1SVO. recorded Liber IS, page 19;notice Is hereby given that the mortgagee intendsto foreclose the same for condition broken,

of Interest and principal.Notice fa likewise riven that after the exnira- -

tlcn of three weeks from the date of this notice,the property conveyed by said mortsragcawlll beadvertised fcr sale at public auction? at theauction rooms of James F Morgan, In Hono-lulu, on THURSDAY, the 29th day of JUNE,ISSCat 12 noon of said day.

Further particulars can be had of W. R. Castle.Dated Honolulu. Mays?, 1S93.

HENRY SMITH. Trustee. Mortgagee.The premises covered by said mortgage con- -

Eufcoi:AH mortgagor's interest in certain premises in

Kaa. Hawaii, as eonvejed to him by llao (w), bydeed recorded in Liber ISO, page 13, as follows:

1. L. C A. SSS3B to Nawali. S acres in Nlnoie.2. L.C.A.STSttoKahaku. 2.9-1- 0 acres In N'l

noic.3. Grant 13E9 to Hoai (w), 19tf acres in Wailau.4. Grant 2133 to Kanaka, 157 acres In Nlnoie.3. Grant2W7 to Kanakalauai, 115 acres Ifi M- -

nolc. HSM

Mortgagee's Notice of Fore-

closure.

pST ACCORDANCE WITH THEJL provisions of a certain mortgage made byZEalo to Henry Smith, Trustee, dated January31, 1S91. recorded in Liber 129, page 1S9; noticeis hereby given that the mortgacee intends toforeclose the same for condition broken, to wit:

of interest.Notice is likewise given that after the expira-

tion of three weeks from the date of this notice,the property conveyed by said mortgage will beadvertised for sale at public auction, at the auc-tion rooms of James r. Morgan. In Uonolalu.oaTHURSDAY, the 22th day of JUNE, lS93,atl2noon of said day.

Further particulars can be had of W. R. Castle.Dated Honolulu. Jane 5, 1S9J.

HENRY SMITH. Trustee.Mortgagee,

The premises covered by said mortgige consistot:

1st. in Fauoa, Honolulu, being a finehouse lot with the appurtenances, more tallycovered by deed recorded liber 89, page SiU

2nd. 4S acres covered by Royal Patent &9 toEaandKekelainKspiwai, Panoa. .

, HS2-- U

Jlortgagee's Notice of Fore-

closure.ACCORDANCE WUTHTHE

provisions of a certain mortgage made by O.KAIO and G. W. NAKAA to William R. Castle.Trustee, dated March 14tb.lS91, recorded LiberIK, pac ISO. noUce is hereby civen that themortgagee intends to foreclose the same for con-dition broken, of interest.

Notice Is likewise given that after the expira-tion of three weka from the date or this notlo,the property conveyed byeald mortgage will beadvertised for sale at public unction, at the anc-tio- n

rooms of James FMorgan, in Honolulu, onSTATUKDA Y, the 1 st day of Jnly, 1S93, at 12 noonof said day.

Farther particulars can be had of W. R. Cjstle.Dated Honolulu, June 5, 1S33.

W. R. CASTLE, Trustee,Mortgagee.

The premises covered by said mortgage con-sist of:

1. acre in Fauoa, being a fine house lotand the fixtures appurtenant, covered by deed ofrecord in Liber 99, page 36.

2. 43 acres In Kapiwai. Honolulu. 14 S3- -t

Dissolution of Copartnership;

THE COPARTNERSHIPexisting between C. Borchgr.evink

and C. B. Hofgaard of the firm of C. B. Uofcaard& C-o- has this day been dissolved by mutualagreement, and the assets and liabilities of saidfirm are assumed by C. B. Hofgaard who willcarry on the business for his own account underthe firm name of C. B. Hofgaard & Co.

C. B. HOFFGAABD.C. BOBCHGREVINK.

Waimea. Kauai. Jnne 5. 1593. 1433-- 2

Administrator's Notice toCreditors.

THE UNDERSIGNEDbeen appointed administrator of the

estate of J. Wainnl Pit (k). late of Honolola. de-ceased, gives notice to all creditors of said es-tate topresent their claims duly Tented to theundersign edat Honolulu within six months fromthis date or they will be forever barred. Alldebts due said estate must be paid to the under-signed at once.

W.'i. KINNEY.Honolulu. Jnne 2nd. A. D. 1593. 1432-3- 1

Administrator's Notice.

AIiD CLAIMS AGAINST THEof the late KEKAnA (k) deceased,

of Waiehu, Wailuko, Maul. H. I., mast be pres-ented properly sworn. to before a Notary Public,to the nndersiirned who has been duly appoint-e-d

administrator of said estate within six monthsoftheywUlbe forever barred; ail debts owinzto said estate must be paid on or before saidexpiration of six months.w. H.DAXIELS,

Administrator of the Estate of Kekaba. daceased.Wailnkn. Maui. October 23. UK. Il3t-6r- a

EDWIN A. JONES,

NOTARY PUBLIC,Has opened an Office for transacting

all business in connection with

Trots, Pnrcaase and Sale of Bonds,

Stocb and Real Estate

And is prepared to Audit Accounts."0mcE: Cor. Fort and Jrercbant

fctreets.

P. O. Box 2fo. 55. 3250-l- y

To Let.px COTTAUECOrTAININGPAE-isa- .

f. Dining Room, 4 Bed Booms,Kitchen, Pantry, etc, come: oi

Beretania and Keeanmokn Sts., at pret-erit ocenpied by ilr.J. H. McChesney.Poaseasion given after April 15. Applvto lias. COWES, '

333H-- U 93 Hotel Street.

Sasiness (Ectrus

"WTLDER'S

STEAfflSHIP GO.'S

TIME TABLS

SHE. HNAU,CLARKE. Commander,

Wilt leave Honolala nt2 o'clock F. M.,touching at Lahaina, Maalaea Bay nadMakena tho same day : Mnhnkon.1, Eawni-ha- e

and Laopthoehoo the followinc day,arriving at Hilo at midnight.

LEAVES nOSOLtTLS

Tnesd.iy Dec. ISFriday. " 23Tuesday- - Jan. 3Friday.H. ..... .... " 13Tuesday 24Friday Feb. 3Tuesday ' 14Friday-- 24Tuesday. Mar. TFriday 17

Itetnrning leaves Hilo, touchinc nt oo

same day; Kawnibao a. m Mnhu-kon- a

10 1. m.: Makena 4 p. si.; Maalaea Bay6 r. it.; Lahnina S r. 31. the following dayarriving at Honolala 0 A.st. Wednesdays andSaturdays.

Aanrrr.3 at nosoi.oxu.

Wednesday- .- t Dee. 21Saturday " 31Wednesda- y- Jan. 11Satardax 21Wednesday Feb. X.

Saturday iWednesday. ,..., ;Saturday Mar. 4Wednesday- .- ' 15Saturday. g

t3T No Freight will ba received after 12

noon of dav of sailing.

STM; CLAUDINE.DAVIES, Conxraandor,

Will leave llonolala eTery Tuesday at 5o'clock P. ii., touchinc at Kahnlai. Hnelo,Hana, Eamoa and Kipaholo, Maci, and n,

Hawaii, lleturning will arrive atHonolala every Sunday morning.

Z3T No Freight will be received after 4

P. M. on day of sailing.Consignees must be at tho landing to

receive their freight, as we will not' holdourselves responsible after each freight h3been landed. While the Company will usodas diligence in handling live stock, wadecline to assume any responsibility in casaof the loss of same, and will not ba respon-sible for money or jewelry nnless placed inthe caret of Parsers.

W. C. WILDEB, President.8. B. KOSE, Secretary.

Capt. J. A. KINO. Port Sept. 13S?-- o

Sale of JiealEstatetby Admini-strator with the Will

Annexed.

UNDER AND BY VIRTUE OF'"nei1 Dt of tbe Circuit Court oftheFirst Judicial Circuit of the Hawaiian Isl-ands, dated the first day of June, 1S53, upon thepetition of Brace Cartwrlgbt, administrator withhe win annexed of BHaTw. Holt. deceaTed fo?leave to proceed with the talc of the real estatehereinafter deJcribed, and heretofore authorlxedto be sold upon the petition of Alexander JCartwright. deceased, executor of the lastand testament of saldEliuW. iini. jJliiithe 13th day of May , ISM. I am directed by thesa d Bruce Cartwright, administrator as afor

following described pieces or Darcelinh.n.1. Ail that piece or parcel of land situate atKapuukolo in Honolala. containing 1 03 of

"J""10" In Royal Patetit fS6, L.C.A1033, leased to J, F. Colbura for 8120 Drr annnn

A All that piece or parcel of land situate atEalawabine in said Honolulu, and known atrtheDolrou premises and the same as descrihedinRoyarpatent 1107. L. C. A. HW7.3. All that piece or parcel of laud situate onFort Street, In said Honolala. and occupied byJ. J. Cardenas a family residence. lease exnir

lnF ln.?Ji?' 1KM' J""" "ntal $130.

Fort ,Sf,?iece i?r,rcel. ?,Iand aate onHonolulo, and formerlvA' W Stark, " a family resIdTac5. All those pieces or parcels of land'"S." at"'mS f0""'d nd being Ananas IRoyal Patent 230J, E.G. A

tSSSlir" P,t28'' f" C. A. SOTfunder"JJL yearly rental of $80.The above sale la made subject to confirmationbythe Court issuing this order ofTerms Cash in U. S. Oold Coin.

Deeds at the expense of the purchaserplr,lcn'"8 "PP'r to Bruce Cart- -Wright.JAME8 F. MOROAN,

nouolalu.Jnnei.iKn. jgiF

Mortgagee's Notice of Intentionto Foreclose.

'PHE UNDERSIGNED CIL AFONG, the mcrtgagse named In a certainmortgage deed excnled by TheresaCartwright dated November 1B91, of Vo"rSif5.efei.Il2,Be2,.,,rarof ddstn Liber IKgiven to secure the payment oftwo promissory notes for $900 payable Idone and two years from date respectivelr withinterest at the rate of 8 per cent- - aunnn piy-f- n,,8,flInl,a", sl,M " that he intenaa--

tT.ec,0' m"teie ' condlUon broicn.wit, of said first note andterest upon both when due. and will sell at inTi11c auction e salesrooms of Jas. F. MoreaaIn Honolulu, on WEDNESDAY, the 23thJnne. A. p. 1893, at IS o'clock oFtheproperty described in said mortgage;

The land described In said mortES"e is sltnirfatKalnahole,PrV1.0'.000-3219-- " Sore folly alIn deed .f John Kamakala fid

Theresa dated 8fplember2l. 1SW. of reiotl Insaid registry In Uber 127 folio 77.Terms cashj deeds at purchaserMijAMWLAMO---Ma- y

1431- -t

Boundary Notice.irilhP.Pr,1ifi.tl0r?i.t? i".tlI5 iondrfcs of the land or

o'clock A. M.. In the court hoSse at H?Io'. Hawi"is the time and place set for hearing"5??. "? "r .bitlons that may be coffered?

adX'uW" Wen t0 thoWBJn,The heirs of L.KaIna arid the heirs of WaikipatheUndof Ponpouand Pulama; the Hawalthe lands of Ponpon.PoUtaand Kapaahu: the esUle of Queen

land cf Kamomoa; J. W fnr t?!,?,! 5?"" BlrtMthe land oi Keaaboa. Kao w t? ahir,,- - rXl

Commlssloeerof Boundaries for the Island ofHilo. Hawaii. May 13, 1633. 1131-- 8

Any kind of printing at the Ga-zette OffinA pnifnl fr, .l, A

j abroad.

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