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"t .2K HAWAII progress- - HOTiOMTTA Wi e.c OTlxe Life of t:be Land Is EstablistLed. iaa. Kigliteo-ULBrLess- J Vol. I. STo. 12. HONOLULU. SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1893. Per Month 50 Cts, m HawaMolomua IS PUBLISHED EVERY AFTERNOON EXCEPT SUNDAY BY THE Holomua Publishing Co. At King St. (Thomas block), Honolulu, H. I. SUBSCRIPTION, psr Month, 50 Cts. The paper is delivered bv Carriers in the town and enburbs. Single Copies tor Sale at the News Dealers aud nt the Office of r publication. Abraham Fernandez. - Manaaer I Edmund Morrie, - Editor jSTOTTCE. All Easiness Communications should be addressed to Abraham Fernandez, Hono- lulu, H. I. Correspondence and Communications for publication should be addressed to the Editor Hawaii Holomua. No notice will be paid ' to any anonymous communications. A. P. PETERSON, ATTORNEY AT LAW. ? Office: 113 Kaahumanu Street, Honolulu Hawaiian Islands. CHARLES CREIGHTON, ATTOENEY AT LAW. Office: 113 Kaahumanu Street, Honolulu Hawaiian Jslands . CLARENCE W. ASHFORD, ATTORNEY AND COUNSELLOR AT LAW. Office: Old Capitol Building, (Honolnlu Hale), adjoining Post Office, Honolulu. A. ROSA, ATTORNEY AT LAW, No. 15 Kaahumanu St. Honolulu, Hawaiian Islands. PAUL NEUMAN, ATTORNEY .AT LAW. 3M Merchant Street. Honolulu, Mutual Tolephone 415. J. M. DAVIDSON, ATTORNEY AT LAW, 306 Merchant St., Office (Milhial) Tel. ISO, Residence 67. t s. k. ka-n- e,' ATTORNEY AT LAW- - Office: Corner King and Bethel streets, up-stair- s. JOHN LOTA KAULUKOU, ATTORNEY AT LAW, Office, corner, IviugsttjJBetlieLSts. Wlnf Mow Chan, - IMPORTERS AND Commission Merchants DEALERS DT - China and Japan Tea, Provisions, Manila Cigars, GROCERIES, SILKS, - JMATTIG, Camphor "Wood Truaks, Ratkra. Chairs, etc., etc.' '. 904 King St, Honolulu,?.' OS Bx.No. 180, Mutual Tel.Ko!j&T ttm$z (Sards BRUCE & A. J. CARTWRIGHT Business of a Fiduciary Nature Transacted. Prompt attention given to the management of Estate, Guardianships, Trusts, etc., etc., etc. Offices, Carlwrighl Building, Merchant Street, Honolulu. P. H. REUWARD, CONTRACTOR and BUILDER, No. 506 King Street, Honolulu, Hawaiian Islands. MACFAELANE & CO. Dealers in Wines and Spirits Kaahumanu Street, Honolulu. Bell Telephono 3S1. p. o. Bos 32 W. TV. WEIGHT & SON, Carriage and Wagon Builders IN ALL ITS BRANCHES. 79 and SO King Street, Honolulu, H. I. H. E. McLNTXRE & BEO., , Gijooery, Peed Store & Bakery,- - Corner of King and Port Sts., Honolulu. J. PHILLIPS, - - PRACTICAL PLUMBER, GAS.FITTER " . , COPPER-SMIT- 33T House and Ship Job "Work Promptly Executed. No. 71 King Street, Honolulu. & CD,, Importers & Dealers in Groceries, Wines, Spirits, &c. Queen St. , Honolulu. Empire Saloon, 4 JAMES OLDS. Piotkietok. Fine Winefr Liqnorft BeePy ALWAYS ON HANDr Corner Nuuanu aud Hotel Streets LEWIS j. levey; Eeal Es&ite arid General Auctioneer. Corner Fort and Queen Streets, Honolulu Personal attention given-t- o Sales of Furniture, E.il Estate,, Stock and General -- . - Merchandise, . , . Mutual T,cleplionc23S. Kell Telephone $S1. "Post Office Box 32. tOf.WRIGHT&SON Caiwe IWap Bite cIn All Its Branches.,; Horseshoeing A. SPECIALTY. ' T9 and 80 King St Honolulu. guslncjs.s (Sards H. F. BEETELMANN, CONTRACTOR AND BTJILDER, 86 King St., Bell Telephone 107. HAEEISON BROS., "CONTRACTORS AND BUILDERS, 208 Fort St., Honolulu. THOMAS LINDSAY. Manufacturing Jeweler and WtdcJimalcer, McTnerny Block, 405 Fort St., Honolulu. MERCHANT'S EXCHANGE, S. I. SHAW,Pbofrictor, CHOICE LIO UORS and FINE DEER, Corner of King and Nuuanu Sts. , Mutual Tel. 423. t Honolulu, 6.W.IACFARLARE&C0., Importers & Commission MERCHANTS, Honolulu, - Hawaiian Islands Club tablesea, S. F. GRAHAM, Manager. Xiiyery, Feed and Sale Stables; Tort Street,- - betyeoneHoteL. and Beretania. Boh Telephones No. 477 dOnnected liirift HacJ j&and, Corner King & Bethel Sts. Both Telephones No. 113. H, MAY & CD,, Tea Dealers, Coffee Roasters 0 Provision Merchants 98 Fort Street, Honolulu Families, Plantations and Shirs' suppueu wnu cnoieest European & American Groceries California Produce.by Every " Steamer. Chas. T. Mick NOTARY PUBLIC , For the Island of Oahn. Agent to Take" Acknowledgments . to Labor Contracts.1 Agentto Grant Marriage Licen- ses, Honolulu; Oahu. Agent for the Hrnv'n Islands, of Pitt- - it Scott's Freight and Parcels Express. Agent for the BurliDgton Route. Eeal Estate Broker aniGeieral Afsit. Bell Tel. 34S; Mut. Tel. 139; P. O. Box 415. OFFICE: No. 38 MERCHANT Street, Honolulu, Hr I. CHOCK LOOK, MERCHANT TAILOR, No. 321 Nassau StoeJ, "ALL SUITS GUARANTEED TO FIT, and MADE in ' theBESTSTTLE. CLOTHES CLEANED and BEPAIBED. J encrat tlrcrflsemcntis U. LOSE, Notary !PubliQ;-- 1 Collector and General Business Agent. Mutual Telephore S. P. O. Box .T3S. Heichmt she it, Honolulu. Theo. P.SmBiy. A. W. Bolster. ALOHA :: GALLERY 513 Fort Street, Hokolclc. (Up-stairs- .J Portraits & Landscapes Finest Colkction of Hawaiian Views. P. O. Box 49S. "IF AT BOY." BAY HORSES SALOON! P, McttEINY, PROPraETOR, Fine, Liquors, Wines and Beer. GbusER BErnxi. axd Hotel Sts. lias Kaultriaau Wright DENTIST, j Corner of King anil Bethel Sts., Upstair?, Entrance on King Street. Office Hours-Fro- 9 a.m. to 12 m., 1 to i p.m. S Sundays excepted. . ESTABLISHED A. D. 1863. Pioneer Steam Candy Factory! IBAKERYamd Ice Cream Parlors F. HORN, PROPP.IETOR. , PRACTICAL Weta S Ornameutcr Iu aT branches of the business on these isknds. AMERICAN, FBENCH, ENG- LISH and GERMAN PASTE1ES HADE TO OBDER. Wedding and Birth-da- y Made of the ver- - best material, unsurpassed in richness of quali-tj'.an- d ornamented in unapproach- able style, at lower prices than any other establishment in Ho- nolulu. utaniljf (ftotoni FanciJ Bue&l, Guava Jelly, Preserved Tamarinds and Tamarind Syrup. ALL CONFECTIONERY Manufactured at my Estab- lishment are Guaranteed to be PosrnvELr Pure and sold at prices no other establishment can compete Tfith.w FACTORY & STORE, 2fo. 71 Hotel Street, Between Tunanu and Fort Streets BOTH TELEPHONES "Ko. 74. Late Eoreign $ewrs THE GREAT QUESTON WHICH IS PER- - PLEXINC CONTINENTAL TOWERS. London, Sept. 17. A rather dark and dubious picture is pre sented in the record of human events in Europe this week. Tho brightest spot in it is, to speak par idoxically, one hi the most sin- ister and ominous. France has throwu horself with tho abandon characteristic of her people into preparations for the coming inter- national fete. She will welcome the visiting Bussian naval squad- ron next month with extravagant hospitality, inspired not by love of her visitors but by hate of her noaror neighbors. No attompt is made to conceal the fact that tho matchless festival which is pre- paring is designed above all to bo a threat of defiance. Thissignificance of the coming event is accepted in Berlin, Vienna, Bome and in London. It would. be'foolish to iguoro it and it is freely discussed in all its bearings in the European capitals. The great question which still suggests itself is whether Great Britain will throw the weight of her influence, if not of her open into tho side of the t balance which makes for peace. . This moans, of course, on the side of tho triple alliance. Fox, no matter how loud the protesta- tions of pacific intentions that are made on behalf of tho Busso-Frenc- h combination, it will con- tinue to bo regarded as a menace and not a safeguard. A suggestive illustration of the delicacy of the European situation . is afforded by the proposal to amend the Geneva convention,. which apparently emanates fronv the Bed Cross Society. The inter- national position of the society, it is urged, Tequires'eraphasizing; owing to tho radical change in -- the conditions of warfare that have occurred since it was estab- lished. Among tho suggestions made is one to the effect that tho society, being cosmopolitan and concerned onty for the welfare of the wonuded, and generally for the relief of tho suffering, "should have an extra belligerent author- ity and be free to pass from army' to army in tho midst even of tho most crucial campaign." But this idea is laughed 16 scorn by those who have watched tho steady growth of the feeling of dread and tho hatred of espion- age in the chief military countries of Europo, and it Is pretty certain that tho next big war will bo fought without any alteration in the status of the men wearing the red cross. . . , The "Admiral "Nachirnoff." :' s Although we are not very rear neighbors, or perhaps, for thai-- . reason, Russia is sedulously , Ci Cultivating our friendship. Her d?4 ' recent part in the JSaval Review was not a mean one, yet she now adds to her representatives hero I Conti&ued on fourth page.) h & LS, . ft f - "? s , : - ." ., - ' " e- - j,- - S if- - .L. -- 5
Transcript
Page 1: ? HAWAII progress- HOTiOMTTA · "t.2K HAWAII progress--HOTiOMTTA Wie.c OTlxe Life oft:be Land Is EstablistLed. iaa. Kigliteo-ULBrLess-JVol. I. STo. 12. HONOLULU. SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER

"t

.2K

HAWAII progress- - HOTiOMTTA Wi

e.c OTlxe Life of t:be Land Is EstablistLed. iaa. Kigliteo-ULBrLess- J

Vol. I. STo. 12. HONOLULU. SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1893. Per Month 50 Cts, m

HawaMolomuaIS PUBLISHED

EVERY AFTERNOONEXCEPT SUNDAY BY THE

Holomua Publishing Co.

At King St. (Thomas block),Honolulu, H. I.

SUBSCRIPTION, psr Month, 50 Cts.

The paper is delivered bv Carriers in thetown and enburbs. Single Copies tor Saleat the News Dealers aud nt the Office of

r publication.

Abraham Fernandez. - ManaaerI Edmund Morrie, - Editor

jSTOTTCE.All Easiness Communications should be

addressed to Abraham Fernandez, Hono-lulu, H. I.

Correspondence and Communications forpublication should be addressed to the EditorHawaii Holomua. No notice will be paid

' to any anonymous communications.

A. P. PETERSON,

ATTORNEY AT LAW.

? Office: 113 Kaahumanu Street, HonoluluHawaiian Islands.

CHARLES CREIGHTON,

ATTOENEY AT LAW.

Office: 113 Kaahumanu Street, HonoluluHawaiian Jslands .

CLARENCE W. ASHFORD,

ATTORNEY AND COUNSELLOR ATLAW.

Office: Old Capitol Building, (HonolnluHale), adjoining Post Office,

Honolulu.

A. ROSA,

ATTORNEY AT LAW,

No. 15 Kaahumanu St. Honolulu,Hawaiian Islands.

PAUL NEUMAN,

ATTORNEY .AT LAW.

3M Merchant Street. Honolulu,Mutual Tolephone 415.

J. M. DAVIDSON,ATTORNEY AT LAW,

306 Merchant St., Office (Milhial)Tel. ISO, Residence 67.

t

s. k. ka-n- e,'

ATTORNEY AT LAW- -

Office: Corner King and Bethelstreets, up-stair- s.

JOHN LOTA KAULUKOU,

ATTORNEY AT LAW,

Office, corner, IviugsttjJBetlieLSts.

Wlnf Mow Chan, -

IMPORTERS AND

Commission MerchantsDEALERS DT -

China and Japan Tea,

Provisions, Manila Cigars,

GROCERIES, SILKS, -

JMATTIG,

Camphor "Wood Truaks, Ratkra.Chairs, etc., etc.' '.

904 King St, Honolulu,?.' OSBx.No. 180, Mutual Tel.Ko!j&T

ttm$z (Sards

BRUCE & A. J. CARTWRIGHT

Business of a Fiduciary Nature Transacted.Prompt attention given to the management

of Estate, Guardianships, Trusts,etc., etc., etc.

Offices, Carlwrighl Building,Merchant Street, Honolulu.

P. H. REUWARD,

CONTRACTOR and BUILDER,

No. 506 King Street, Honolulu,Hawaiian Islands.

MACFAELANE & CO.

Dealers in Wines and SpiritsKaahumanu Street, Honolulu.

Bell Telephono 3S1. p. o. Bos 32

W. TV. WEIGHT & SON,

Carriage and Wagon BuildersIN ALL ITS BRANCHES.

79 and SO King Street, Honolulu, H. I.

H. E. McLNTXRE & BEO., ,

Gijooery, Peed Store & Bakery,--

Corner ofKing and Port Sts., Honolulu.

J. PHILLIPS, - -

PRACTICAL PLUMBER, GAS.FITTER"

. , COPPER-SMIT-

33T House and Ship Job "WorkPromptly Executed.

No. 71 King Street, Honolulu.

& CD,,Importers & Dealers in

Groceries, Wines, Spirits, &c.

Queen St. , Honolulu.

Empire Saloon,4 JAMES OLDS. Piotkietok.

Fine Winefr Liqnorft BeePy

ALWAYS ON HANDr

Corner Nuuanu aud Hotel Streets

LEWIS j. levey;Eeal Es&ite arid General

Auctioneer.Corner Fort and Queen Streets, Honolulu

Personal attention given-t- o Salesof Furniture, E.il Estate,,

Stock and General --. -

Merchandise, . , .

Mutual T,cleplionc23S.

Kell Telephone $S1. "Post Office Box 32.

tOf.WRIGHT&SON

Caiwe IWap BitecIn All Its Branches.,;

HorseshoeingA.SPECIALTY. '

T9 and 80 King St Honolulu.

guslncjs.s (Sards

H. F. BEETELMANN,

CONTRACTOR AND BTJILDER,

86 King St., Bell Telephone 107.

HAEEISON BROS.,"CONTRACTORS AND BUILDERS,

208 Fort St., Honolulu.

THOMAS LINDSAY.

Manufacturing Jeweler andWtdcJimalcer,

McTnerny Block, 405 Fort St., Honolulu.

MERCHANT'S EXCHANGE,S. I. SHAW,Pbofrictor,

CHOICE LIO UORSand FINE DEER,

Corner of King and Nuuanu Sts. ,

Mutual Tel. 423. t Honolulu,

6.W.IACFARLARE&C0.,

Importers & CommissionMERCHANTS,

Honolulu, - Hawaiian Islands

Club tablesea,S. F. GRAHAM, Manager.

Xiiyery, Feed andSale Stables;

Tort Street,- - betyeoneHoteL.and Beretania.

Boh Telephones No. 477

dOnnected liirift HacJ j&and,

Corner King & Bethel Sts.Both Telephones No. 113.

H, MAY & CD,,

Tea Dealers, Coffee Roasters0 Provision Merchants

98 Fort Street, Honolulu

Families, Plantations and Shirs'suppueu wnu cnoieest

European &American Groceries

California Produce.by Every "

Steamer.

Chas. T. MickNOTARY PUBLIC, For the Island of Oahn.

Agent to Take" Acknowledgments. to Labor Contracts.1

Agentto Grant Marriage Licen-ses, Honolulu; Oahu.

Agent for the Hrnv'n Islands, ofPitt-- it Scott's Freight

and Parcels Express.

Agent for the BurliDgton Route.

Eeal Estate Broker aniGeieral Afsit.

Bell Tel. 34S; Mut. Tel.139; P. O. Box 415.

OFFICE: No. 38 MERCHANTStreet, Honolulu, Hr I.

CHOCK LOOK,

MERCHANT TAILOR,No. 321 Nassau StoeJ,

"ALL SUITS GUARANTEEDTO FIT, and MADE in '

theBESTSTTLE.

CLOTHES CLEANEDand BEPAIBED. J

encrat tlrcrflsemcntis

U. LOSE,Notary !PubliQ;-- 1

Collector and General BusinessAgent.

Mutual Telephore S. P. O. Box .T3S.Heichmt she it, Honolulu.

Theo. P.SmBiy. A. W. Bolster.

ALOHA :: GALLERY513 Fort Street, Hokolclc.

(Up-stairs- .J

Portraits & LandscapesFinest Colkction of Hawaiian Views.

P. O. Box 49S.

"IF AT BOY."

BAY HORSES SALOON!

P, McttEINY, PROPraETOR,

Fine, Liquors, Wines and Beer.GbusER BErnxi. axd Hotel Sts.

lias Kaultriaau WrightDENTIST, j

Corner of King anil Bethel Sts., Upstair?,

Entrance on King Street.

Office Hours-Fro- 9 a.m. to12 m., 1 to i p.m. S Sundaysexcepted. .

ESTABLISHED A. D. 1863.

Pioneer Steam

Candy Factory!IBAKERYamd

Ice Cream ParlorsF. HORN, PROPP.IETOR.

, PRACTICAL

Weta S Ornameutcr

Iu aT branches of the business onthese isknds.

AMERICAN, FBENCH, ENG-

LISH and GERMAN

PASTE1ES HADE TO OBDER.

Wedding and Birth-da- y

Made of the ver- - best material,unsurpassed in richness of quali-tj'.an- d

ornamented in unapproach-able style, at lower prices thanany other establishment in Ho-

nolulu.

utaniljf (ftotoni FanciJ Bue&l,

Guava Jelly,Preserved Tamarinds

andTamarind Syrup.

ALL CONFECTIONERY

Manufactured at my Estab-lishment

are Guaranteed to be PosrnvELrPure and sold at prices no

other establishment cancompete Tfith.w

FACTORY & STORE,2fo. 71 Hotel Street,

Between Tunanu and Fort StreetsBOTH TELEPHONES "Ko. 74.

Late Eoreign $ewrs

THE GREAT QUESTON WHICH IS PER--

PLEXINC CONTINENTAL

TOWERS.

London, Sept. 17. A ratherdark and dubious picture is presented in the record of humanevents in Europe this week. Thobrightest spot in it is, to speakpar idoxically, one hi the most sin-

ister and ominous. France hasthrowu horself with tho abandoncharacteristic of her people intopreparations for the coming inter-national fete. She will welcomethe visiting Bussian naval squad-ron next month with extravaganthospitality, inspired not by loveof her visitors but by hate of hernoaror neighbors. No attompt ismade to conceal the fact that thomatchless festival which is pre-

paring is designed above all to boa threat of defiance.

Thissignificance of the comingevent is accepted in Berlin,Vienna, Bome and in London.It would. be'foolish to iguoro itand it is freely discussed in allits bearings in the Europeancapitals.

The great question which stillsuggests itself is whether GreatBritain will throw the weight ofher influence, if not of her open

into tho side of the tbalance which makes for peace. .

This moans, of course, on theside of tho triple alliance. Fox,no matter how loud the protesta-tions of pacific intentions that aremade on behalf of tho Busso-Frenc- h

combination, it will con-

tinue to bo regarded as a menaceand not a safeguard.

A suggestive illustration of thedelicacy of the European situation .

is afforded by the proposal toamend the Geneva convention,.which apparently emanates fronvthe Bed Cross Society. The inter-

national position of the society,it is urged, Tequires'eraphasizing;owing to tho radical change in --

the conditions of warfare thathave occurred since it was estab-

lished. Among tho suggestionsmade is one to the effect that thosociety, being cosmopolitan andconcerned onty for the welfare ofthe wonuded, and generally forthe relief of tho suffering, "shouldhave an extra belligerent author-ity and be free to pass from army'to army in tho midst even of thomost crucial campaign."

But this idea is laughed 16

scorn by those who have watchedtho steady growth of the feelingof dread and tho hatred of espion-age in the chief military countriesof Europo, and it Is pretty certainthat tho next big war will bofought without any alteration inthe status of the men wearing thered cross. . . ,

The "Admiral "Nachirnoff."

:' sAlthough we are not very rear

neighbors, or perhaps, for thai-- .

reason, Russia is sedulously , CiCultivating our friendship. Her d?4

'

recent part in the JSaval Reviewwas not a mean one, yet she nowadds to her representatives hero

I Conti&ued on fourth page.)

h &

LS,

.

ft

f -

"?

s

,

:

-

."

.,

-

'"

e- -

j,- -

Sif--

.L. -- 5

Page 2: ? HAWAII progress- HOTiOMTTA · "t.2K HAWAII progress--HOTiOMTTA Wie.c OTlxe Life oft:be Land Is EstablistLed. iaa. Kigliteo-ULBrLess-JVol. I. STo. 12. HONOLULU. SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER

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PROGRESS.

The Life of the Land is Established

in Righteousness.

HONOUrjETJT SEPT. 30. 1893

TOPICS OF THE DAY.

The idiot" who in-

fuses "western civilization" into

the polurans of the Advertiser is

worried by Holomua cats-tot- ui

abstinence is not goodcfor theD. Ts. Try Brand' and soda

as usaul.

What a lot of breath and inkbas been wasted in uYn-mi.ci- n he

"fuesand feathers" f royalty by

the now ruling alleged democrats,

and what a lot of f;iss a .d featherand .tinsel and glitler is now on ex

bibition by the very same parties.The amount of gold lace and thesplendor of unif-ini'- now uaed by

the P. G.t its army and fficials hasnot been equaled. SincethejjooroldjKaimiioa which was the biuef con-

tention of the reform party, thegold-lace- d Colonel and C.nmiand-ers- ,

and Doctors and Qnirter-masters- ,

and generally uniformed

donkeys exceed the wildest imagin-

ation of any sovereign. ur any min-

ister in these islands but the 'paradjs for Dole take the cake-thoug-

This morning the Kinau camein from Hawaii and .Maui, and thepassengers on board wre treatedWiththe unusuals.ghtof a squad orabout fifty poluo nen drawunp inline on xhe wharf, dressed in theirbest suit of clothes and commanded,by Capt. Wttipa. A drum regular-ly beaten kept the boys awake,

while the crowd, waited for thejteamer. Deputy Marshal Brown pnfatigue uniform, danced around and

vStr-Mi- hie eyes to see if someibody was on the Bteamer. demand-ing the .attention of the whol."force." In tho background theac;ny w.ifl illuminated- - by HisExcellet.cy-th-e President of theBoard of H ilth with the rank ofAttorn ey-- G nerd who, with a "cho-

leraic" snnle- - nnd . "measjy'i ex-

pression, sat hia steed well anddreamvd of goat hunting and,Koolau. On. foot was the Beeond

in command. Marshal Hitchcockwho anxiously watched the coming,ateamct; a.t the.same time havingAn ye on the Philadelphia. A;

&ng ofsoldiera v a? ready to blazeawav.fr.oin the shire battery whiletin Minister of Interior in hisduplicate role; as superjufeudeut of.Wilder,'-,.8teiHer-

3 stood .preparedto ctcji the hawsers. ,, f,y.

What was the occasion for all'lie display? 'Mr. Sanford, -- B.

Dole- - was expected, to return fromHawaii, was the answer .given toour djjestionand because thatpoor sick.man was to crime homeho authorities considered" it

jaecessaryto make a display apdjueoB k themselves. Has he'done anything that it is neces--Sary to send half the police forcein whit oants for iiim? ' I inAts ;

& ItihtAd attorney-gener-al sowell TM4:ini etiquettes sealircoasxlar. t. soaad- - of' thiel- -'oatolnry gurohittg- - to ihe mow-4oiwoandt.- w

draiaa gurd:otfeor..vTo-i- t JootM K?r

4ike ywy ar&tiwi for. an 'estiM:JhHaatir

" ""W '""'M .

- Mr, Dole is a modest man; hea perfect gentlemau

and we are confident that be

would highly disapprove of any

display like the one prepared for

biro by his learned colleague W.

O. Smith. If this government

pretends to be anything, it pre-

tends to. .be democratic andsimple in its construction andform. To receive the head of

such government returning from

an excursion to a not distant partof the country witb drums and

salutes and police, is simply a

piece of sublime ridicule' from

which Mr. Dole undoubtedly.

will pray to bo relieved -- that is,

if President Dole is of the .same

mind as Judge Dole used to be.

In spite of all these wonderful preparations, the Presidentdid not arrive., and the whole dis-

play of Smith, Brown,-- and the"foorce" was of no use. JudgeDavidson, ?nd Mr. GifTard re-

turned by the Kinau, and lookedwtb some surprise we trust notapprehension, at the "foorce"drawn ; in line along the wharfbut there. was.;Jio sign 6f Dole.The drum sounded again and the"foorce," white pants and all, weremarched away and got about anhour's drill on Palace Square asan excuse-fo-

r having been rousedso early. After their white un-

mentionables had got sufficientlysoiled in the dust they were all-

owed to go home and bave themwashed, wbile all the generalswent to their --respective homesand enjoyed their respective"'am-an- d heggs" and coffee- - Inthe meantime Mr. Dole remainson Hawaii without any visibleimprovement in his health.

Bravo! Bravo! '-- This is from

the Advertiser, of this morningr"In any event the nevr govern-ment (of Hawaii) will be distinct-ively American in . form andprinciples, and will be guaran-teed by the protection of theunitea states. xt tnat canmean any kind of government,except, government of-th- e peb- -

pie, by the people, and for thepeople, wepaQinoc Know wnat a.

' governm ent distinctively Amer-ca- n

in form .nd. principles t;anmean. It xertainly cannot mearfgovernmentf'by-tlr- o 2.14 per centAmericans, who represent only4.66 per cent, of the voters, andonly pay 26 per cent, of thetaxesV-inclnd- lng the. 15 per centpaid by Claus Spreckejs, We areafraid that-Mr- . Johnstone's "pri-vate information" is, a little, outif it olls.iim .that a governmenton American.principles iseverJ A.

vmmonQr government,, or- - a'government -- by,, an Americancolony of no consequence what--eve- r.

We very seldom read the Starin ioio it would, be tooheavywork for us? toda'-i- n this weather,but last night wewaded throughevery column and. through everyline, and we now beheYO that we.were The?reason why we undertook the

Jhe oneroHsStast was, "Htfaafeuieyea were caught by thJ headingwhichV aiUfcid'A tiiat-aEiniate-

f-

Willis UooteHo i'WhitevsiS!)rrSociety Wetwere rather surprisedsat man

ltem1io4!xpjsent thcUnUed! 1

State - !, ouuuiu USTBxpfeeaed liimi4t:in!sacli aTmafc?

mteri? x.- - . h - J pretea as .dliurate inralTlo

um" vState and with tho opin-d- o

ions of Secretary Gresham isnow before the

Congress im.the sub-onera- te

messageject the President ma5 beexpected m about two iveeks.

x.

the Hawaiians in Hawaii, out

by looking through the . SW, anot find one single line which

substantiates the offensive head-- 1

lines, and we must therefore ex-- J

Minister Willis, and con--

... --i- ,;Mm nnbisnne oukbow vj r,. ;t, vamrA fn tho Star, its

editor and the "White Society,"

represented by that combinationand exhibited at the late PalaceBall. Consul-Gener- al Ellis Mills

will be able to give the ministerseveral good points on "the white

society." with which Mr. W. G.SmitlT wishes to entertain him,and we do not doubt that he hasdone so.

THE BOARD OF HEALTH,

HOW ITS DOSE!

We had to comment on Mr.

Lansing's suggestion a few days

ago, that supplies should be fur-

nished totheLeper Settlementwithout bids being called for be-

cause the Board of Health wouldbe "hampered" by calling for ten-

ders, and we allowed ourselves to"doubt h is disinterestedness. Wetake it all back. It doesn't makethe slightest difference' to thoBpard evidently, .if tenders are"advertised or not the contractswill be given not to the lowestbidder, butlto the favorite bid-

der.

A good illustration of this factI has been shown in regard to thegranting of the contract of furnishing medicine and drugs tothe Board of Health. --There were'two competitors foi the contract.HdJister & Co, made a bidwhich was $250 lower than thebid of Hobron. Newman & Co.The contract was neverthelessgranted to the lastnained firm."

xne reason wen me less saia inebetter. We shall be satisfied bycalling the public's,, attention tothet4act, that Mr! W, O. SmithPresident of the Board of Healthand Mr. John Ena, member ofthe Board .of .Health are bothinterested in the, firm of- - Hobron,.Newman '& Co. ' But of coursethat -- has nothing t,do,with; iihematter. . t..v. -- - :. -

THE NEW AMERICAN OF-

FICIAL IN "HAWAII.

The Washington Post in men-

tioning different new appoint-ments expresses itself as followsin regard,-to-th- e appointments ofMessrs:Willis and Mills.

We especially 'call the atten-tion df Mr. Smith of the Star tothe remarks concerning Mr. Mills- -

whom weare not to receive.". Of the foregoing nominations

the &reafc-s- t interest centered .inthat of Mx.j(WiUiaJ6be mini-- -sterto Swau.. The .nejwly.ap--

ul general toHawaii,and ,a:tumoiouco wuh :WtaryJaare&

1 - tt 1uil.Ta'ham on Hawaiian affairs at theState- - epartment - yesterdayafternoon. Mr. Blount said subsejjaeittly-that&'his-officia- l "con-

nection witii: the: Government hadceased; thatStbeHawaiiaQinat- -

:ter wS&ntiSfy;otblhndsYana.ne aia naoir now noia;tapoation, m sqaie people, suppos-ed, f specialxommii8iDner toHawaii:;. Whfte Mr' Bloakfa:stateaMnt ie technically true: it is

--alao.atactIka heill vcOBtiiiue

. rr Ji -- ?t -President' aid v gr--. Urg--.

AW o taC" Bawiui qaettioD.Xs oklr;; import ;H

M""-

- i At. CartTafnTV Oln r n i a s t inuiu -

--,, , , ... . r.niBViUna mere o. iviuis. .uu,"-- ,Ky., nominated for minister to

Hawaii, was born in Shelbycounty, Ely., January 22,, .1813.

His early education was receivedin the common schools, and hegraduated at the Louisville MaleTTiirfc School in 1860. Afterward

he taught school for four years,then studied law. and graduatedat the Louisville Law School' in1866. Since that time he hasbeen continuously engaged in thepractice of his profession. In1872 he canvassed the State for

the Democtratic electoral ticket.In 1870 he was elected attorney for

Jefferson county, and was re elect-

ed in 1871. His Congressionalcareer began in the Forty fifth

Congress, and he served in theForty-sixt-h, Forty -- s eve n feh ,

Forty-eight- h, and Forty-nint- h

Congresses, holding a high placein the-part-y councils and filling

the influential position of chairman of the Committee on Kivers

and Harbors. He was retiredfrom Congress on account of thepolitical fight over the Louisvillepost-offic- e during Mr. Cleveland'sfirst term.

Mr. Ellis Mills, the new con-

sul general to Hawaii, was bornin England thirty-seve- n yearsago, and came to this countrywith his parents when a. smallboy. His father purchased afarm" near Staunton, Va., anduntil 1879, wh3n 'he came toWashington the new consular,officer passed his time in workingon the farm, and for the ValleyVirginian and the Vindicator, twonewspapers of Staunton. Mr.Mills became a reporter of de-

bates fix the PnitldTStates Senatein 1879, and later was connectedwith various committees of "the

House of Representatives. ln,1886 Mr. Bayard, then Secretaryof State, made Mr: Milts "hisprivate secretary, and he remained in this? 'capacity until-'th'- e incoming of the Harrison adminis:tration, when Mr. Blaine trans- -

ferre$;Einx to the 'consula bureau'a8principall clerk of the corres-pondence division. Shortly afterthe present administration began,Mr. Mills was sentwith.Commis-sione- r

Blount as secretary anddisbursing-office- r oithe'Hawaii-- :an commissionr'-an- d 'had justreturned from Honolulu.

The appointment of Mr. Mills'was made entirely on the basis of

--merit. -- 'He jps&ota oindicttffe?for the place, and his name issupposed tdliaye been suggestedby Mr. Blount. Mr. Mills

who- - has- -

been.atHpuolulu for many years.':Thjr office paya'betweeni $7,000anolOaliriiallyJ IL.

The Baee for the IatenatkiMl

AGAIN ,THK BKITASNIA.

BYDr (Isle of Wight, September ll.-r-Crow- da of yachtsmen andtheit admiwaj&bwehereHhismnvninffitA v9m w l.a. i. .

wuw -w nimm lUBlHOI

. - UJtare races .between.

.--.- ih insyr..buvibuyacht Nayaboe and the Brltanaia

fortbalHa'Hi-x- w

yM&JiQ !if ictoficwm toNab.liJstihm.ifl'K.5t

ki.-t- &xs&55r;2 j. .iJCowef. a nHWfSMCWiyfcfMe

was.blowing ad the M:-wacV- Tr

i . --XV s y v

'tf i.i?.v "?"t?s 9 ts'"rVwiifvit, S

rough, rolling in short, heavy seaspeculiar to the British channel.

The Britannia beat the Navahoein a stiff breeze by fifteen minutes.

THE BRENTON'S REEF CCP.

Bvde (Isle of Wight), Septem-be- r

15. The Prince of Wales'

yacht Britannia won the race for

the Brenton's Reef cup. defeatingthe American yacht Navahoe,owned by Royal Carroll Pheips ofNew York, by two seconds. Itwas an astonishingly close raceconsidering t.ie fact that the course

w.as 120 miles in length.The yachts started at 11:15 ye-

sterday forenoon. -- They reached

the Leeds shortly before 11 o'clock

last night, the Britannia reaching

the winning line one minute andfour seconds ahead of her Ame-rican competitor. After allowing

time from the start it was decided

the British yacht won by two se-

conds onlj.On board the Navahoe it was at

first believed the latter yacht was

the winner, and the winning flag

was hoisted by her this morning.The race- - to the stakeboat at

Cherbourg was very close, the Na-vah-

having the beat of the turnat 5:12 p.m., going around 30 sec-

onds ahead' of theBritannia.Corrall.theownerof the Navaboe,

has decided to enter a protestagainBt the decision giving therace to the Britannia. There is

a question over reckoning the timeallowance. The course was never

sailed in such fast time before.

WON BY THE NAVAHOE.

Cowes (Isleof Wight), Septem-ber 14. The Navahoe has beenawarded the prize in the race for

the Brenton Beef cup, which, ac-

cording to the first calculations,was thought to be won by the

yaoht Britannia by two seconds,according to the time allowance.

'The time of the Britannia and

Navahoe was the fastest over the

dourae'oi'120jniies ever 'made.

FOR THE CAPE MAY COP.

Isle of Wight,,. September 15.

The yachts Navahoe and Britan-nia 'left, this morning to take part

in thWcefoirihe Cape May cup.

The course is froniNeedles to Che-rbourg and back 20 miles. Therace began at ,n6oh. in a verv lightwind, ai?d. it 'will probably taki

- . " a .swenty-ipu- r .nqurs to .complete tnrace.

The Cape May, cup, like theBreton's reef cup, which was won

from the Britannia by the Nava-

boe on Wednesday; was won fromthe American yachts, in thb raceitatNew York-- in 1885 and carriedto; England"by a British yacht,where they have femtined ever

since.The boats, were timed as they

passed "the Needle's lighthouse afollowB- - Britannia. 1:02:37; Navatoe," 1:05:15 The Britannia keptthe,, lead, and they began to dropbelow the ohtnern hnrZiXn iTiprB?:GL- - " 1 . , . ...appearea to De no change in tne'relative 'positions ofTheboafe.

WOX BY THE BBITTANIA.

;. Ibue .or,yioHTSept;;i6. The

Brittanii won" the Cape May

pup, passing the winning line in

,12:52, . Tbe Navahoe finished 36

WWrfO;seconds later.

DR. Mclennan,131 Fort Street.

i" Ji ' f-'i-r- &HX- -m m. -

faiMXnn. u w iou. ..tizvM.I'Vi - - -- tr.1' X " "ZLmjmm XI. Tl.''.jOHirJSCOLTENO,

. .J JC-- --- '" -

if& i: Honolulu

Page 3: ? HAWAII progress- HOTiOMTTA · "t.2K HAWAII progress--HOTiOMTTA Wie.c OTlxe Life oft:be Land Is EstablistLed. iaa. Kigliteo-ULBrLess-JVol. I. STo. 12. HONOLULU. SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER

";.

iim '?'"''

Foreign Mail Service.

Steamships will leave for and arriveirom San Francisco, on the following

dates, till the close of 1S93.

Leave HosolcutJDce at Hokolulxt

foe. Sax Fbancisco.-Fm- . Sax Fbanceco

Oceanic Sept. 25.Alanieda Sept. 28MioTcera, for ia Oct. 7

couver 0ct2Oceanic Oct. 17Australia...,. Oct. 14Miowera, from Tan--

Monowai Oct. 19 couver Oct. 23"Warrimoo, for sa Oct. 25

couver Nov. Australia Nov. 4China Nov. 6Monowai Nov. 23Australia. . . .Nov. 11 Warrimoo, from Tan- -

Alameda Nov. 1 6i couver. .. . . Nov. 23Miowera, for Yan-'Chin- a Nov. 27

couver Dec. 21 Australia Dec 2Oceanic Dc. 4'Alamefla Dec. 22A istralia Dec. 9'Miowera, from Yan--Mariposa Dec. 14s couver Dec. 23Wammoo, for Yan-iOcean- ic Dec. 25

couver Jan. J Australia.... Dec. 30,City Peking.. .Jan. 2 Warrimoo, from Yan--Australia Jan. C' couver Jan. 23Warrimoo, from Yan-- j

couver. .. .Sept 23'

gtm the Watcv-Jro- nt

Arrivals.Saturday, Sept. 30.

Stmr Kir in, Clarice, from Maui and Hawaii.Stmr Mol-oli- i, ilcGregor, from MolokaiBk Paul Isenberg, from Liverpool.

Foreign Vessels Expected.

This List does not Include Steamers

vessels. where from. due-A-m

bk Harvester SF(HiIo)..Ang 21Am schr Eobt Levers... SF Aug 25Haw schr J G North SF Sept 23Haw bk Andrew Welch.S F Sept 26Am schr Transit SF Sept 28AmschrAllenA Eureka Oct 1

US Cruiser Charleston.. OctAm bk Martha Davis. ...Boston Dec 20Ger bk Nautilus Liverpool. .Dec 30

Vessels in Port.TJ S S Adams, Nelson.U S S Boston, Day.U S S Philadelphia, Parker.Br sch Norma, Yokohama.Am sch Alice Cooke, Penhallow, Pgt SoundAm bk Discovery, Christiansen, S F.Br bk Dara. Peterson, Newcastle, NSW.Am bkt IrmganLSchmidt, Laysan .Island.Am bkt W H Dimond, Nelson, S F.Am bkt 8 G Wilder. McNeill, S F.Am sh Topgallant, Jackson, PjrtTownsendAm bk Detroit. Darrah, Nanaimo.Am bk Planter, Dow, S F.Am bk Ceylon, Calhoun, S F.Jap S S Aikoku Mara, Yokohama.Br sh Co of Merioneth S.-N- . W-- .

Haw Bk MaunaAlaS.F.

"BandC Concert.

"Weather permitting ProfessorBerger and his band will give aconcert at AEmma . ISquare thiBafternoon at JL:30 o'clock. Thefollowing pieces will be render-ed:1 March "A Bar in Vienna" SchOd2 Overture "StonpCity" Ferrari3 Waltz "Tout Park" Waldteufeli Selection 'MBHialBeTiw"....Biviere6 Mazurka "Nana" Co'receio6 Galop "Yxvaalyv ,, CoregRio- -

Hawau l'onoi.

C x :?"?"

Since.the Boston left there areno more excursions to lake Wa- -

terhonse, no more standing onthe bridge at midnight. Poorfellows! they could got be trans-ferred to the Philadelphia. Poorschoolmarma! they will --have to,wait for new fellows and newopportunities. Oh! how romantic'ms the love-maki- ng on thaBosh- -

ing waiersoniy aisraroea oy tnecommon herd Bashing, by, andobligiBg her to Bush "away from"

her Under brasr-brrttonv-,. The,season is over, the engagement isbroken, and sot is Lady.Jeftnettecome Philadelphia, Bush to theraecue, and heal the open wound.

Passengers from Haw,urandMaui, ptt? steamer K!i'n"au 'thisMorning, aM4asJbllows

Dr. Sharp, Dr. Hilbey, W. T.Brigham, J. tf. Davidson, MisKmmi Clarke, F. S. Lyman, , T.Yotoaoto,: Krs. XaUitkwaC TAh.

Wah: W. A. Wall, Mrs. L. Asea, ILDewst, John CB&lawitz, H. WelTJGhM, " Mrs.Aka, Mjsf Akijtv.: -

In Bis True Colors,

Writes a Letter.

TSE TEOY BUDGET PUBLISHES IT

THE CHIEF JUSTICE AS A POLITICIAN

The following letter from ChiefJustice Judd which appears inthe Troy Budget finally showsthat gentleman in his true light.It has heretofore been a puzzle,where he stood in the presentdisturbed state of affairs, and hehas so far successfully avoidedcoming out openly. "We need nocommentonhis letter, but shall re-

strain ourselves to remarking thathe ought to be complimented forusing official letterheads paidfor by tne tax payers, even whenhe attends to his private corres-pondence from Kualoa: -

Department of the Judiciary,Kualoa, H I. Ami. 8, 1893.Colonel C. L. Mac ArthurDear Colonel: I am taking arest of a few weeks, at a countryseat some twenty miles from Ho-

nolulu, beyond the pali, andwhile here have xead the file ofthe Troy Budget you so kindlysent to me. I have enjoyed theirreading so much that I am im-

pelled to write you to express mythanks and appreciation of thefavor. The Budget is evidentlya live paper, sound apparentlyon questions, and isnot fillednp with the murdersand crimes which occur all overthe United States, and which somany readers gloat over. Iespecially enjoyed' your racy let-

ters on Hawaiian affairs. With:a few unimportant mistakes, jdueundoubtedly to erroneous inform-ation, your letters are very cor-reotn- ot

only in their descrip-tions of Hawaiian scenery but inthe estimate you plac"e.uppn ourpolitical importance! the UnitedStates and;yo.ttx diagnosisiQf oursituation. I nopoordhoffandSpreckelsb.ave.not done'us muchharm. You saw and"-becam- e

- acquainted wi,thth6;rrscji8iwhjowere prominent inthe movementio-ri- a these islands of the. .in-cub- us

of monarchy, aud favoredannexation to the United Statesin order to give us stability ofgovernment and, thus invite andretain capital here to develop puryet untouchecl resources. "Youfound, them,. I thinkj.j tobe menwho Vera honest, sincere andpatriotic, notseeking their own

of the entirecommunity. - Nordhoff knew jibequally well but to carry , outhis preconceived opposition toannexation, distorted everythingto or disadvantage. . - ;

j Congress. j.at yesterday. Iam extremely anxious that thesilver menaee be disposed .ofsummarily witaoub uouyjruiioor conditions., and. thathen theComgreas give some conaider-ati- o

to 'little Hawaii. Have we.!.not Been in suspense long

enqaghtvJfcc ZvameimLernat has it Hawaiian affairs

' &

im bisu4haa they havebeen in for manrloBg years. I?

fcavaoade ttat ? thtf:Pridi.of the UniUd SkUe will restore...rt" .Mv'vQoaanYt out iirauijK)iVuthonUUWactiofi m iakaartsgwsiiMthigh shows

that lie has no such design, manytimidsonls, especially among theHawniians, fear to favor annex-ation, lest is fail, the Queen berestored, and then vengeance bevisited npon them! I am in thisbeautiful place, Kualoa, withMrs. Judd and seven ofmy child-ren, my two eldest sons havingrecently gone East to enter TaleUniversity. '

Yours sincerely,- A. F. Judd.

LOCAL NEWS.

The P.--G. Band plays thisafternoon' atOEmma-Squar- e.

The annexationists did notreceive much encouragement byyesterday's mail.

Judge Davidson and- - niece, re-

turned by the Kinau this morningafter a visit to the Volcano.

The grand clearance sale atM. S. Levy's store will- - be conrtinned to-da- y. Smyrna rugs andtable-cove- rs are a speciality.

By the Kinau we learn that Mr.T. W. Everett is still seriously ill,although there has been someplightimprovement inhis condition.

Mr. A. Hookings has been ap-- .poinded ,Deputy Sherift'.of Maka-wa-o

in the place of L A. Andrewsappointed on the Honolulu

'

"force.:" .

Judge Davidson reports theVolcano very active and brilliantand the weatherpleasant although'it was raining during the last

iew4ys-oLbia3ri8ifct- o the-wond-- er

of 'the worldT

Prince David Kawananakoa isexpected to retars to town, w

after a protracted visit toKauai. The Prince has been, suf-fering from ill health for sometime but has nowfulbrecovered.

The first of a series of recep-tions to-b- e Juld" on board of theU. S.F S. Pkiladelphia'wiU takeplace this afternoon Invitationshave been issued by the Admiral,Captain and Officers to theirfriends on shore.

There will lie a promiscuousdecapitation of useless'specials"to-day--in the police departmentLook out now-fo- r the wailing andgnashing of teeth among the faithful and the amount of cusswordsto be wasted against the P. G.

The conspicuouSy absence ofthe Hawaiian Minister and theP. Cr., special commissioner fromWashington dunai; lie past few"

mbmthsT has? eive, rise to th

imprIoB.mcytBjrhave practically aoaBaoaea the"

idea qfnafo,One-o- f th;f6t and 'highest

fiagstatta ever imported here waslandedfeoa-the.dfic- e Cooke. ThefUgstarf which i 139 feet abovegromnd al$ifiib4pwjia;.tbepfoperfy-oi-Mx- r 'WTU, 'Lrwin andwill bo erected $ his palatial

Mr. T. U.SkpsivwillW-A- h

OMsageasent omtoorrowjaf theftTOJ4aiayRWcf"Sn.wei.at Waisaki. Wejwoaavincedthat Mr. Sisipsem-'willv- a hiss- -

aaoXaecoauKHy( 5V, 3w- jffw

XT-- jNitijaanas; HiJW?WWH

tttfSanJitafertlwr- " sliMMriMT"

CHAS. GLBDLEB,

Importer and CommissionMerchant.

SPECIALTDZS: .

J. & P. Coats' Machine ThreadJonas Brocks' Machine ThreadBarbour's Linen ThreadPears Soap

P. 0. Box 35S. Mutual Telephone 35613 Kaahuroanu Street.

CHEAP FUEL3Jb?esli Algero"ba

3Jirewood -

$9.00 per Cord Delivered.

JNO. E. COLBUBN & CO.je2o lm

W. S. LUCE

Wine anil Spirit Merchant

Campbell Fire-pro- of Block,

MEBOHANT ST. HONOLULU

LEWIS & Co.,

Wholesale and Retail Grocers

PBOVISION DEALERS.FRESH CALIFORNIA SALMON ON ICE

By Every San Francisco Steamer.

Salt Salmon in. BabrelsA S?ECTALTr.t

iii Fort St. Honolulu. Tel. 240,P. O. Box 2p7--

NATIONAL IRON WORKS,

. Queen .Street,Between Alakea & Bichard Sts.

THE TJNDEK8IGNED are prepared toall kinds of

Iron Brass, Bronze, Zinc, ,.

Tin and Lead Castings., . Also aGeneral Bepair Shop. for Steam Engines,

Bice Mills, Corn Mills,Water, Wheels, Wind Mills, etc.

Machines for the Cleaning of Coffee,Castor Oils, Beans, Ramie, Sisal,

Pineapple Leaves & other Fibrous Plants,And Paper Stock.

Also Machines for Extracting Starch from'the Manioc, Arrow-Root- , etc. "

tST All Orders promptly, attended to.

WHITE, IJITMAN tt CO.

Long BranchBATHING

Establishment.

t ThisPirst-clas- s Bathing Besorthas been enlarged and is nowopen to the public. It is thebest place on the islands to enjoy

and there is no betterplace tb lay oft Special accom-modations for Ladieel Tramcafs-pas-

thTe doorevehalHiouranot'on Saturdays and Sundays everyfi!en minutes.

JMES SHERWOODT - Proprietor.

, Theo.P. Srvrarr. A.W.Botsnoi,

HAWAIIAN GALLERY,

467 Ncuasc 8TKXET,Ho!fonn.r;,(Oppo. Qoeea lm Hall).

Vievs pf-tHe.Xslan-d7

Ccmsiaatly ot'Bud, ntdi u""

jlr-- -Natives MakagPc4, .. OassHosMe

StzeeTkwsad HwrJi- -r F tjie Kicv MarawTkws.

& Lhk CoBitiWAfiaA Isidw Tinra at the

IiVafliT titinr sweated or

wiiwTWk giMtel. X,0. Sex 4M .

L. IL IDEE,Jobber of

fines, Spoils and m3EIOT35X, ST.,

Between Port and Bethel Streets.

Anchor Saloon,SOUTHEAST

Corner of King & Nuuanu Sts.

THE-

Finest BrandsOF

Wines & Liquors

HOT LUNCH DAILY

From 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m.

W. Jr. CUNNINGHAlfTManager.

JUST ARRIVED;

Baby CarriagesOF ALL STYLES,

Carpets, Bugs, MatsIN THE LATEST PATTERNS.

it jjHOUSEHOLD

Sewing MachinesHand Sewino MAGHCiESi

IAll With the Latest. IroprovcmeatsJ;

PABLOB

Oxgans, Gruitars,And Other Musical IcstnmenU.'

Wines, Liquors, BeerALWAYS ON BAND, AND 1

FOB-SAL- BY

ED; MF8GHUECER 100.King St.. oppo. C&stle k. Cooke's.

HO YENrKEEv&-COf- -

Tinsmiths and dealers in

Water Pipes Laid and Repaired,Plumbing Ke&tlj Executed.

No. 41 Nuuanu Sii, between- -

King and Hotel Streets,Asom Building.

WING WO A CO.,Manufacturers'' and Dealers in

1 Ladies', Gents' & Children's

No. 35, fit Honolulu,Nuuanu StreetfUPvOex 19 ,

Boots and Shoes made toisrderxin Beat Style; ,trWibralrc

- e.

mm wo ta! k c.,

C03OQSSI0N' 3ffiROHANTS,

GEIPl MERCBAKD1SE.

.Fine Maiula Gigars, Ch'tMMacaJarmaeaa CielL'zyiraraiMattiBgs,Yaaea o! all Ku3. CatpitorfocTrwiisi Battepfeaixs, a FlaAoftnfc'of Dre SilkM, BestBrands of ChiMse and Japanee:TbT of-X-tta 3lfWtai.laaption ,of mmQwdmJBspectfally Soiiottaar -

s&

-- ..i

w.

a

&K?2t

fMmi "SSP

t-- '

-- rtl- m1. .1-

-

' h - V,i ... ''r S j&

Page 4: ? HAWAII progress- HOTiOMTTA · "t.2K HAWAII progress--HOTiOMTTA Wie.c OTlxe Life oft:be Land Is EstablistLed. iaa. Kigliteo-ULBrLess-JVol. I. STo. 12. HONOLULU. SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER

Hiri:

I"J, I

i

BamUKV

fe?SBr

mam

A

m!P i

f?!$Pfc.-.- " Wi

tuX Jti0- -

8WI

J

!.vc aS,--jftfr

XW jiIS: f""?1S fF

,?'t

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HU'J

I (n$immft gotten

MARINE INSURANCE.

,

The Undersigned is authorized to take Marine Risks

4on- -

Hulls, Cargoes,IJhreiaiits and -

Commissions,at Current TJates in the fofiowing Companies, viz:

Alliance Assurance Fire ' Marine, - LondonWilhelma of Madgeburg Gen' 1. Ins. Co.

Sun Insurance Co., - - San Francisco

Affent for Hawaiian Islands

E. B. THOMAS,Telephones

Bell 351.Mntoal 417.

0fc

Eesidence :

410.P.O. Box 117.

Contractor d Builder

Estimates G-ive- n on All KindsOF

BRICK, IRON, 8T0NE & WOODEN BUILDINGS

All Kinds, of Jobbing in the Building Trade,'Attended to.

KEEPS FQE SAJLE:Brick, Lime, Cement, Iron1 Stone Pipe and Fiitings, i'

Old t Now Corrugated Iron. Minton Tiles,Quarry Tiles, assorted sizes and.colors;

California nnd Monterey Safid,Granite Curbing and Blocks, etc., etc.

Corner King ct Smith Sts.f Office Hours, 8 to 12 M.;

1 to 4 P. M. -- -

U

Holomua PublishingV.Co.,PUBLISHEES OF THE

HAWAII tiOLOMW. "v;-- - A--! JOxucncLl issued. Daily," --

(Sunday excepted) 4

In the English language, and pledged in policy to supportthe Eights iND Pkevileges of thd Hawaiian People, theinterests of the laboring men, nnd good and. honest Govern-ment for the whole country. - .,""',"

JTO03 3P3R.rXT?JEKS

AHBooKSnd Joa.PiUNTiN& neatly executed, at short noticeand at moderate figures.

-- bill heads, .

; letteb;vheat)s;;W. l

.. ,

. CABDS,

etc Fmished iii Tirst-Clas- s style.

Iskpd .Orders. solicited ndpromptlyj attended to;

Offict T Thoas Block, King Street,- Hsa61ulu, H. i

Mutual

xr-

? r- 1

Bi - -. . . .- . EOSTEES,"" " ":

a

-

TB.

(Continued from! Srsfpage.)

her finest armored cruisers. Itwas a happy, circumstance thatbrought the Admiral Naekinioffto anchor on our nation's birth-day. She arrived about dawn,and . her courteous commander,fearing to disturb Hie city's slum-

bers, reserved the thunder of hisguns till eight o'clock when thestars and stripes were run up tothe main peak and the salute of

twenty one guns was fixed.' The NachimofF ranks with the

Blake and the New York, thoughmore heavily armored than either.She mounts eight 13 ton,

; breech-loadin- g rifles; ten6 ton, breech-loadin- g rifles, four

nd rapid fire guns, sixmachine guns, and four lightweight guns. She also has fourtorpedo tubes. She mounts two

b.g turrets, one forward and oneaft, each shielding two of the 8

inch guns, and she has eightarmored barbettes. In additionto this, her sides are protectedby a two-inc- h composite armorbelt. All the guns and turrets are .

moved b' electric power, the ;

Nachimoff'being the first warshipto be thus equipped.

The crniser was launched in .

- 1885: She is 330 feet long, '61feni beam, and of 7,782 tons dis-

placement. Her engines are of8,UU0 indicated horse power. Herdi-c- k is protected by three inch1steel plating. She is propelledby twin screws and has.a record-ed speed, of 16i knots. She Jieslow in the water and is painted,black. She - has two square-rigge- d

masts and a single white '

smokestack.InEussia, ihe- - Nac!mn6ff is

called an armored cruiser, butin. our navy she would rank as asecond-clas- s battleship. TheNew York is more like her thanan' ship in our navy, but is much.

' faster, making about five knotsmore per hour. The Now York ,.

! is also fifty feet longer than the'".. Enssian ship and. Iras two mili-

tary masts. The Naeh'imoft" has.more heavy guns. The crew ofthe Nachimoff numbers .600 men,including a dozeu' or. two officers,and one passouger4 a Eassianartist, Leonide Blmoff,-wuo-w'a- s

commissioned by the Czar .topaint a picture of the Naval Be;view. . '-

-

" The ship has been on her way.. here since May 8, when she sailed '

from pronstadt, touching at .Port- -'

land. --England, on June 22v thed iv of the loss of the Victoria,"the news of. which met-..th- :

E'issintts n their arrival here, asdid, also that of the loss yf theVladivostoek, a shp vtfry'Hke.the.Ehyndai

The ojficors ptthe Nachiuiyff. .

are.profited by their visit to-Ne- w

York by. seeing all the bsauties .

of the Hudson and the neighbor- -

ing-conntr- The HI.- - American.

CITIf S1EAT KISBKETOppo. Queen Emma Hall,

Established. 1SS3. .'t 1

JOS. TINKER,

PAMTT.Y BTJTCHER

Maker of the Celebrated

" Gambridge; . Pork Sausage !

TrxThes. ... . : ,

Meat Delivered - 'to Anv Partofthe City and-Suburb- - -

Mutual Telephone Number 289. "- .

r? - hft vt;

' -, sa

A- -

gitftmuKC Uotirc

RQJAL INSURANCE.Gf;OE IrVlSRJPOOL.

The Largest in the Worlds

ASSETS, JAN. I, 1892,

"

$42,432,174.00,.

2 Fire Eisks on alL kinds.' of rnsuranceBroperttaken.at Current Bates by .

"' ''

. . Aerent for Hawaiian Islands.'

Fire? Life & MarineIIMSURANCE

Hartford-.Fir-e Insurance Co., 3- - rr Assets, 7,109;825:"49

?u

H1- -

,rc

London &, Lancashire Fire Ins.. Co., -- V ti V-'" Assets, $4,317,052:661,

'

Thames & Mersey Marine Ins. Co.pr'. " '

.

:-' - Assets, 6,124,057.00

lfew;-Y6r- Life Ins. Co.,L . Assets, '$137,499,198. 99.

cV -' CO. 3SEItGEIi,' ' General Agent for' Hawaiian Islands,.

c Honolulu, H. I.

H- - McINTYRE & BR0,IMPOETEES AND DEALERS IN

Groceries, Provisions & FeedEAST COENEE POET & KING STS. - .

- : ;

New Goods received by every Packet from the EastefnV-,- ;States and Europe. Fresh California Produce by every'steamer. - ;.

All Orders faithfully attendpd to, and Goods delivered; vto any part f the City Free of Charge.

"

;

Island Orders solicited. Satisfaction guaranteed; r'. '.

Postl Office Box No. 145. Telemione No. -- 92l .

GRAND OPENINGOF THE

Sew Eurnitiire Store !

Robinson Block, Hotel St., oppo. Bethel St.

FURNITURE,Iphelstery andCabinet

,r i .IntUt11 a 1 rialx'L'l

&:

ypfg

-- -

yf.L JL CI lv

"Tf

'.4

y

' ; on hand; an extensive assortment ' '.'

' . "WickerfW'axe :, .' ,

Oak Becboom.Suils':1 .;' .Chifibulers ; -- ' -- J& '

Sideboards;"etc5rWardrobes, Mafirasses, Pillows, tcf

. ....... 3AIE TO OEDEB. .v r

-'-

-.

'.'"' '"'

- f -

No Sectnd Haixj w Damped G4ds JCept on Hand.,

.

a- - j

& PdRTEE

- -

1

BqbiasbnBlueHotelSt,oppo. Bethel St.'

Page 5: ? HAWAII progress- HOTiOMTTA · "t.2K HAWAII progress--HOTiOMTTA Wie.c OTlxe Life oft:be Land Is EstablistLed. iaa. Kigliteo-ULBrLess-JVol. I. STo. 12. HONOLULU. SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER

HHSVT-

M

J . t,

t3

i vfl

I '?

' 3 jl-- B'i

,4 ;

I1'

M

(nsumrc goticc&

MARINE IETSUEANCE.

VThe Undersigned is authorized to take Marine Hisks

-- ox-

BCulls, Cargoes, .... ITreiorlits and ,

Commissions - -

at CuiTent TJates in the following Companies, viz:? '

.i

Alliance Assurance Fire $ Marine, - LondonWilhelma of Madgeuurg Gen'l. Ins. Go.

Sun Insurance Co., - - San Francisco

Agent for Hawaiian Islands

E. B. THOMAS,Telephones :

Bell 351.Mutual 417.

gjgg

Residence :

Mutual 410.P.O. Box 117.

onfractor d Builder

Estimates Oiven on All KindsOP

BRICK, IRON, STONE & WOODEN BUILDINGS

All Kinds of Jobbing in the Building Trade,Attended to.

' KEEPS; JFQP- - SAXE.:Brick, Liino, Cement, Iron' Stone Pipe and Fittings, t

Old it New Corrugated Iron. Minton Tiles,Quarry Tiles,. assorted sizes and colore;

California and Monterey Sand,Granite Curbing and Blocks, etc. etc.

Corner King ct Smith StsfOffice Hours, 8 to 12 M.,

1 to 4 P. M. " ' '

U

Holomua Publishing Co.,

PUBLISHERS OP THE

HAWAII HOLOMUA,'', A ftmr'n.al issnecl Daily,

(Sunday excepted)

In tho English language, and pledged in policy to supporttho Bights xd Piievileges of tho" Hawaiian People, theinterests of tho laboring mon, and good and. honest Govern-ment for tho whole country. - . ' , :.?

job ipxtrxTJsxsAll Books and JoB,PimrriSG neatly executed at short notice

. . and at moderate figures, "-

BILL HEADS, v'

k. CARDS,

.

LETTEE.KEADS, : FOSTERS,"" etcii Finished in Tirst-OIas- s style, -

LIsland .Orders, solicited and promptly attended to.

Omcx : ThtJmas'Block, King Street,' . j " Hoaolulu, H. X

v

jT-

l

"1

(Continued from? first page-- ) .

her finest armored cruisers. Itwas a happy circumstance thatbrought the Admiral Naehimoffto anchor on our nation's birth-day. She arrived about dawn,and . her courteous commander,fearing to disturb the city's slum-

bers, reserved the thunder of hisguns till eight o'clock, when thestars and stripes were run up tothe main peak and the salute of

twenty one guns was fired.The Nachimoft ranks with tho

Blake and the New York, thoughmore heavily armored than either.She mounts eight 13 ton,

' breech-loadin- g rifles; ton6 ton, breech-loadin- g rifles, four

nd rapid fire guns, sixmachine guns, and four lightweight guns. She also has four-torped-o

tubes. She mounts two

b.g turrets, one forward and oneaft, each shielding two of the S

inch guns, and she has eightarmored barbettes. In additionto this, her sides are protectedby a two-inc- h composite armorbelt. All the guns and turrets aremoved by electric power, theNaehimoff being the first warshipto be thus equipped.

Tho cruiser was launched in .

- 18S5: She is 330 feet long, 61

font beam, and of 7,782 tons dis-

placement. Her engines are of8,UU0 indicated horse power. Herdeck is protected by three inch'-.-"

steel plating. She is propelledby twin screws and has a record- -

ed speed of 16i knots. She lieslow in the water and is painted,black. She - has two square-rigge- d

masts and a single whitesmokestack.

In Russia, the 'Naqhiinoff iscalled an armored cruiser, b.utin our navy she would rank as asecond-clas- s . battleship. " The.New Xork is more like her thanan' ship in our navy, but is much,faster, making about five knots .

more per hour. The Now York ..

ii also lift feet longer" than- the "

, Russian ship and Iras two mili-tary masts. Tho Nachimoft'"-has- .

more heavy guns. The crew.ofthe Naehimoff numbers .600 men,including a dozeu or-- two officers .

and one passenger' a Russianartist, Leonide Blinoff. who --'wAscommissioned by the Czar.' .top.iint a picture of the Naval Jtei:view. r

' The ship has been on her w.ay:

ihero since May 8, when she sailed vfrom Cronstadt, touching at .Port- -'

;-- j

land . England, on. June 22A;.the.loss. oT the Victqiya,'

the news of' which inettheon their arrival here; as

did, also that of the loss of theYladivostoek, a shp very like,theRhymhu

The ojfieers o( the NacliimufT.are profited by their visit to:NewYork by seeing all the baautiesof theHndson and the neighbor-ing con ntrv. The Ml. American.

CITIf WSEftT MSRKETOppo. Queen Emma Hall,

Established 1SS3.

JOS: TINKER,

PAMTT.Y cBTTTCHEB

Jfakcr of the Celebrated

Cambridge Pork Sausage !

; , TKXTnE. J ':

"-- Meat Delivered to Any Part of"

the Gity and Suburbs." ' -

Mutual Telephone Number 28f ;' 'tel$: tt- -

- 9

ftijjutancc Dofkci

ROYAL INSURANCE CO.

OJ? LIVERPOOL.

The Largest in the World.

ASSETS, JAN. I, 1892,

33T Eire on all of InsurancoPropertytaken at Current Rates by

Aerent for Hawaiian Islands.

, Life tic

INSURANCE

$42,432,174.00

Marine

HartfordEire Instirance Co.-- , y . Cr--''

r- -t

AsseK7,i0982.;49- -

: ;r"' '' 'I -London & Lancashire Fire Ins. Co.,

:-- - Assets, 4,317,052.00

Thames. & Mersey Marine Ins. Co.psC ' "

,r - Assets, 6,124,057.00

itew'York' Life Ins. Co., :." Assets, '$137,499,198.99V -t

t CO. I3ER,GMEI2,,'" .. General Agent for Hawaiian Islands,.

. . t: Honolulu, H. I.

". ;H. . McINTYRE & BR0.,IMPORTERS AND DEALERS IN

Groceries, Provisions & Feed. . EAST CORNER PORT & KING STS.

New Goods received by every Packet from the EasternStates and Europe. Fresh California Produce by every-steame-

r.

All Orders faithfully attended to, and Goods delivered,to any part of the City Free of Charge.

Island Orders solicited. Satisfaction guaranteed:Posn Office Box. No. 145. Telephone No. 92.

GRAND OPENINGOF THE

Sew Pumiture Stoie!Robinson Block, Hotel St., oppo. Bethel St.

-- FURNITURE, j:

Uphlstery andCabinet Makil--Ab"

ON BAND AN EXTENSIVE ASSOBTMENT OF

Y ickei "Ware,A.ntiane Oak Bedroom Siifts:

SidefooardsreterWardrobes,; Maftrasses, Pillows SEM

'?:ei.Z .".:':---

Risks kinds

MAIE TO ORDER: . . .-

- . . t. . -- . . f

Secintf Hanf w Daratd 6Was iept on Hand..

C r&PQRTER,r

-- . .; BqbinSbaBlucHotel Stjoppo. BettfeliSV

X

fc . iStf

- -


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