VOL. VII.-N-O. 45. HONOLULU, HAWAIIAN ISLANDS, WEDNESDAY , FEBRUARY
22, L888. PRICE 5 CENTS.
5?uslnfiSiS Cards.KlwtiiStments,THK DAILY
CAPITAL - 10,000.000 UNLIMITED LIABILITY.
Insurance oi all descriptionFire be effected at Moderate Rates of
Prem um, by the undersigned.
WM. O. IRWIN A CO 20-d&- Managers for Haw. Islands
UNION Fire and Marine Insurance Co.
Of New Zealand. CAPITAL,. : 10,000,000
Established an Asrency atHaving- -
for the Hawaiian Islands, the un- dersigned are prepared to accept
risks against Fire In dwellings, stores warehouses and merchandise
on favorable terms. Marine risks on cargo( freights, bottomry,
profits and commissions.
Losses promptly adjusted A payable 19-d- wtf WM. U. IRWIN &
CO.
J". 1ST. S. Williams, AGEMT FOlt
SANGERHAUSER
The Risdon Iron & Locomotive Works,
Corner of Beal and Howard Streets
SAN FRANCISCO. .'. - .CALIFORNIA
Estimates and illustrated Catalogues on application.
1. O. Box 380, Ilono'nlu.
iEMER SALOON. NO. PORT STREET.
Opposite Wilder fc Co.'si
H. J. Noite, Propr. OPKX JTOH 3 A. M. TILL 10 P. M
F1EST-CLAS-S LUNCHES, COFFEE,
Cigars and Tobaccos OF BEST BRANDS
Plain and Fancy PIPES personally selected from
the Manufacturers, and a Large Variety
of BEST QUALITY
SROKSWICE & CO. BILLIARD TABLE
from his Friends and the Public generaUy
who may desire a
BILLIARBS.
Draw Exchange on the principal parts of the world.
Will receive deposits on open account, make collections and conduct
a general banking and e cchange business.
Deposits bearing interest received In their Sav ln ;s Department
subject to published rules and regulations. 17ocStf
PARDEE'S
EllSfM
icrofula, Salt Rheum, Heurcdgia, Ring Worn
And all other Skin and Blood Disease?. IT EEGTTIiATES THE
LIVER AND KIDNEYS. urea Indgeatlon and all diseases arising:
rYcra
an enfeebled condition of the system.
Dr. Martine, of London, the ceK :iied specialist, says of
PAEDEE
. iEMEDY : " I have used it for tweni . jars for Blood Diseases,
such as
Bait Rheum, Teter and Cancer .ill cannot recommend it too
highly.'
The Uev. Dr. Thomas, ot Kong Konr nina, says: 11 PARDEE'S
REMEDY
for tho Blood; a wonderful medicine liavo prescribed it hundreds of
time. r Leprosy, and when given in tim
'. always cured the patient. I cai uly say that Leprosy will never
breal .t on persons who take Pardee'.'
regularly, and I advise all pei ma li ving in countries where
Leprosy
; prevalent to take Pardee's Remedy ! a preventive." "1 SkUl BY ALL
DRUCCISTS IN HONOLUL"
BUHACH !
Beware ot Imitations, Which are being put upon the market.
THE GENUINE BUHACH
sold only by
Merchants in
Poreign Domestic IFrnit, 500 Washington, and Cl, 603 & 605
Sansome Sts.,
SAN FRANCISCO.
SL'BSCRIITIONS :
........ .ft 00AvKKTiHKB,oneyjrrun.Y V.C Ia1lV 7 uvkktiskr, three
months 1 50 I,A"' p r' Xdvkktiskr, per month 50 lun v vVkktiskr,
one year 5 00
KUiscription, W. P. C. A. (including 50
postal p((i Invariably in Advance
THE PRISONER OF THE BASTILE.
the One All-Importa- nt Matter J Secrecy
raisins the Sentinels j !Tle Gentleman's Magazine.!
rnder the ancient monarchy in France I .et.recy was the one
all-importa- nt mat- ter whenever prisoners of state were 1
wni.trned. To them the Bastile was as
?w..vt n the crave so ions ts uiey wero I orders for im- -
nitL.:,.mont were Liven by lettres de i cachet, ami these were
scrutinized with I the greatest care, 'the lettre de cachet J
waS)in fact, a letter signed with the I kind's seal, and containing
an order ! fro;Q him, but the orders that have come j most
frequently to our notice were ! orders for imprisonment. I Those
th.tt related to the Bastile had j to be signed I'rst by the king,
afterward 1 V,. o niinif.ir At thfi l)nt!"fiTTI fif tllft
LiA lUl- - l v - - - - " " "- s l
1
i order the governor signed a receipt. -- nd in nearly every case,
be. ore t lie arrival or uie prisoner, the governor had
already
I r t ive l instructions to enter in the I raster his name, the
cause for his ar-- I
Ttk and by wiiose order the arrest had been made. I nless these
preliminary ra'.es had been observed entrance into the castle was
forbidden.
io effect the arrest either rorce or cunning was the means usually
em ployed, for it was above all things nee-essar- y
to avoid publicity. An ollicer touched the shoulder of the man whom
he was about to make prisoner with a white wand, and ordered him in
the king's name to follow, i esistance was not often shown, for all
knew that it would be ineffectual. A carriage was kept in
readiness, or when that was not possible the first vehicle that
could be found was seized again in the king's name and into that
the prisoner was made to enter, two or three officers sitt-
ing beside him. Before opening the gates of the Bast-
ile the first sentinel cried, "Qui vive." I The chief escort
answered, "Ordre du ! roi." A subaltern of tlie guard inside j the
castle demanded to see the lettre de j cachet. Then he allowed the
gates to I be opened, and a bell was tolled to warn I the oilicers
inside. The king's lieuten- -
ant and the captain in command of the gates recei ed the prisoner
in due form as he alighted from his carriage.
1 be hfcuuevillc who was a political I prisoner in . bastile during
the latter
years of the reign of Louis XIV, and I 'io Las left us a long
though not al-- I
"ays a trustworthy account of his lm- - prUonmeut an 1 of his
sufferings says:
1 'At last we reached the dreaded spot. I On entering, as soon as
the sentinels
saw us. they put their caps before their faces. I have since
learned that they observe this strange custom because it K
forbidden them to look at the faces of the pri,soners.
Why a Drunken Man Escapes. Scientific Journal.!
.One sometimes sees a drunken man pitched violently from a horse,
and Jhen the bystanders rush to find him
they are astonished to discover hat he has been little injured. In
his scrambles Among the High Alps,"
Leslie Stephen tells the story of a guide who, while drunk, fell
over a precipice so deep that a fall over it seemed almost certain
death, and who yet sustained little injury. Stephen ac- cordingly
gives his readers the advice either not to fall over a precipice,
or to get thoroughly drunk before doing so.
the reason of this immunity is that intnorve centers are so much
paralyzed f ! ,tlrunken man as not to be af-ect- ed
by the shock of the fall, which, jn a sober man, would have acted
upon inem so violently as to stop the heart,
circulation, and cause instantdeu vry Ling and Very Plou.
lExchanse.1 the address that Arabs place on let-je- r
is very long and very pious. Here if ? a ?etter seDt t0 a writer in
The
mlrr)) Ta2bjatt: "In the name of the jnerciful i od, the
beneficent. This writ-- frL v ,m one who serves his Lord, it ' tbe
sou of X: and if God wills Siri r
gei int, tne hands of our friend u the son of Hamdalla, thefca - th
Christian, in the city of
fan m- ,-' Trioli' the illustrous, the
' Prese've 1 ruit In Good Conditfon.lceo Journal. Li kept in
Perfect con- -
ceSP covering the jars with by the Putrefaction is caused Cooking
th?flb1-- . creaturs in the air.
the ?ruitPtVSS throuSh cotton bat-a- n
Protected will keep Proved ft Pe"0il: Tydall has
8. L.. STANLEY. JOHN srBnixcK
Spruance, Stanley & CoM Importers and Jobbers of Fine
WHISKIES, WINES AND LIQUORS
H. P. BERTELMANN, Contractor ind Builder.
ESTIMATES FURNISHED ON WOOD, BBIOK OR STONE.
PLANS DRAWN Cabinet and Carpenter Work don to order.
86 KING STREET. Bell Telephone 10 711Jel6tf
THE INTER-ISLAN- D STEAM NAV-
IGATION COMPANY,
(Limited), Keep constantly on 'nnJ, lor sale, STEAM FAMILY and
BLACK. 1 1 ii n , : , and ft general assortment of BAR IKON.
Mbly
Schweitzer c: Co. Importers and ,fobi-- i"
HOSIERY, GLOVES, CO, : 5 j b, Wblte Uoods, Einbroideri, I
:inJU'.
cliietV. JaceH, Riblou, Lmiift" v C'hilureiiH I'uJlerwwu.
29 and 31 Battery St., San Francisc 485 feblO'BH
E. H. Buclmam & Co Manufacturers and Dealers In
SHIP STOVES, Tin, Copper, Crockery and Sheet iroaWares, Ship
Lauterns and ;
Signal Oil, 22 Stewart St., bet. Market and Mission
SAN FRANCISCO, CAL. Ship and Job Work and Stove Repairing of
al
kinds a specialty. 487 feblU'88
To tlie IPnblic.
BOTH TELEPHONES NO.- - 15.
I am fully prepared to do all kinds of drayagd, hauling or moving
Work, all of which I will guat antee to execute faithfully.
Manager.
Mutual Telephone 391.
General Commission Apfe General Agency for Hawaiian Islands of
the
Burlington and Chicago Kailroad
Connecting at Boston with the AzoTes ana Madeira.
Merchandise stored and sold on commission. Consignments
solicited.
fgTProperties Leased, Rented and Sold. Lega. Documents Drawn. Books
Audited and Adjuttei Accounts Collected.
Authorized Collector Mr. Moroff. 7Saugl2t
H. HAOKFELD & 00.,
PAUL NEUMA;;YS
tf
BUB FACTORS and Coinmiswlou & AGiNTb. Uoaolulu VL. I. lt-tfw-
rf
TARO FLOUR FACTORY, Wailuku, Maui,
OPERATIONS ON THURSDAY,COMMENCED and are now prepared to supply
TARO FLOUR in any quantities.
With new and improved machinery and other apparatus, the present
Manager guarantees to supply Tato Flour that will make a better
class of Poi than ever produced.
All orders to be sent to W. H. CUMMINS, Manager, at the Factory,
Wailuku, Maui ; or to W. O. IRWIN & CO., Agents,
Honolulu.
657may27tfdw
Fish Market. Dealer In choicest BEEF, VEAL MUTTON , FISH,
etc.
Family and Shipping Orders, carefully attended to. Live Stock
furnished to vessels at short notice, and vegetables of all kinds
supplied to order. 29
VVENNEU & (JO. 92 Fort Street,
Have on hand Nef Foreign and Homemade Jewelry.
Watches, Bracelets, Necklets, Pins, Lockets, Clocks,
And ornaments of all kinds.
Silvar and Gold Plate, Elegaut SoIil Silver Tea Sets.
Suitable for Presentation.
ENGRAVING AND NATIVE JEWELRY A Specialty.
Repairing: iu all Itw brandies. T Sole Agents for King's Eye Presi
vers.
American Biscuit Co.
Nan FranclNco Call forn
3m
Pacific Commercial A:Mrtiser
Office will from this date be presented or nient monthly.
Honolulu March 2. 1385.
E R. EYAN,
Boat Biaildei:' And General Jobber.
All kinds of work and repairs and other work executed with
promptness on reasonable terms.
Workshops at the rear of Lucas' Planing Mill.
J. EC. SOPEE, Successor to
J. M. Oat, Jr., & Co.,
STATIONERS & NEWS DEALERS,
Hawaiian Gazette Block.
FOR SALE.
TTTE HAVE A LARGE QUANTITY OF OLD V newspapers on hand, which will
be sold
for 25 cents a hundred. They are useful for wrapping parcels,
laying under carpets, etc.
P. C. ADVERTISER.
Paper Manufacturers, AND DEALERS IN
Paper Bags, Twines, Etc., 414 and 416 Clay street, SAN
FRANCISCO
Pioneer and San ueronlmo Paper Mills. South Coast Paper Mill,
Soquel, Santa Cruz
Conuty, CaL If jai5 d8
BROWN, ATTORNEY AT LAW AND CECIL Public, Campbell's Block, Merchant
Btreet. 77Gaug9tf
M, THOMPSON,
ATTORNEY -- AT-LAW,
Office in Campbell's Block, corner Frt and Merchant streets,
Honolulu, tt. l.
PRACTICES IN THE COURTS
B"When desired, will give the lvw m a writ- ten opinion, as to the
probable result of the contention upon the facts stated 44tf
J. IY1. MONSARRAT, ATTORNEY AT LAW
AND
NOTARY PUBLIC. Estate In an.v part of tlie Klii(CsKeal Bought, old
and Leased on Commission
Loan 8 Negotiated and Legal Documents Drawn
NO. 27 MERCHANT STREET, Gazette Block, Honolulu. a-- tf
III
Steam, Coffee and Spice Mills. Importers oi Teas, Coffees,
Spices.
Chartres Java Coffee, Yeast Powder, Cream Tar tar, Soda,
Salseratus, Ground uonee, for-
eign and Domestic Matches. 410-41- 2 Clay St. bet. Sansome fc
Battery
SAN FRANCISCO, CAL. P. O. Box 1580. 635mayl3'88
BOM MEAL!! The under signed are now prepared to r
ceive orders for this Celebrated Fertiljzei from the manufactory of
Buck & Ohlandt San Francisco:
The following is a report of the compo- nent parts, as obtained by
Chemical analy gist
Water 8.10 per cent Organic Matter 29.18 " 44
Silicious Matter 4.65 44 " Lime 31.70 44
Phosphoric Acid. 23.11 " 44
Carbonic Acid 1.89 44 4
Alka Salts 52 44
100.00 Nitrogen 2.7 per cent. Orders Received will have
Prompt
and Careful Attention.
2
AND
HOUSE AND SHIP JOB WORK PROMPTLY ATTENDED TO.
Bath Tubs, Water Closets, Wash Bowls, Pluinb-n- g
Goods of all kinds always on hand, 705-junel- 5tf
Geo. C. Shreve & Co., MANUFACTURING
JEWELERS AikI Importers of
Diamonds, Watches, Silver and Silver Plated Ware, Decorated Chi ha,
Art Brass Goods, Fans, Canes, Umbrellas, Berlin and Vienna Leather
Goods, Opera Glasses, Clocks, Etc.
Montgomery and Sutter Sts.. SAN FRANCISCO. 443ja25'88
This Is the oldest established hon-t- e In this line of business in
San Francisco, and'vre are prepared to fill orders of all kinds in
our line.
SPECIALTY in PACKING all kinds of FRUIT for long distance
markets.
fourTatronage Is Solicited 545 maxlO'8
PACIFIC COMMERCIAL ADVERTISER, FEBRUARY 22, 1888.
.aDIttriistintnls.
has in his residence at 10 East Thirty-fift- h
street, what looks wonderfully like the famous peachblow vase which
so mysteriously disappeared when it was sold from the Morgan
collection for $18,000. Mr. Ives said that one of the conditions of
the sale of the vase to him was that he should not inquire who
owned it before. "How many peach-blo- w
vaspa are there in America ?" was
0 F- -
How the Chinese Train Fijhtin Turtles. Wonsr Chin Foo in Chicago
News.
Turtle fighting is very common in the east, and I am surprised the
sport has not been introduced into this country. It's quiet, nice,
and very satisfactory. Two kinds of the reptiles are good for
fighting the mud-turtl- e and the snap- per. The latter is cuicker
and more ferocious, oung and old ones are no good. The best run
from seven to twenty pounds in weight, and are from 5 years old
upward. After being caught they are regularly trained. We feed them
with raw meat, raw fish, and a strong drug whose name I don't know.
To make their jaws strong and their
IS PUBLISHED WATEBPROOFS SILKS! SILKS! SILK E V FRY MORNING.a j
asked of Mr. Ives. "I understand there
j are three, but I only know of. one, and Direct From Paris, Jiovr
O-- A N Dvou see it before vou."-- :o:-
A T THE! eyes quick, we tease them twice a day
India Rubber doing Popular Millinery Hon s
The condition of the Crown Prince grew worse February 9th, and the
diffi-
culty of breathing increased so much that a telegram was sent to
Dr. Bergman at Berlin, ordering him to come to the patient's
assistance without delay. The doctor arrived in the afternoon, and
shortly after 4 o'clock he performed the operation of tracheotomy
on the Crown Prince's throat. The operation was a success, and the
patient at once showed signs of relief. The physicians are
- 10-- 4 Fort St., Honolulu.FOK SALE AT
tkkms or NrnsnuPTios. Per annum - f 5 00
Six moaths 3 00
ff4Mubritioiis layable Always iu AI vauce.
Communications from all parts of the Kingdom Ul always be very
acceptable.
Persons residln? in any part of the United states ran remit the
amount of subscription due by Pos Office money order.
Matter intended for publication in the editorial columns should be
addressed to
Editor Pacific Commercial Advkrtiskr. Business communications and
advertisements
snoult be addressed simply P. C. Advertiskk,
an 1 not to individual
J
witn woouen sucks ana wun rags uea up to look like another turtle's
head. Then we fix up their jaws and teeth. We file them and fix
them until they are sharp as the blade of a knife.
A few months' training is all they want. They'll snap a pencil at a
bite, or crush and bite through a bamboo in a minute or two. A week
before a fight they should be teased every two or three hours and
given red pepper on their food. They get crazy mad and will attack
their trainer at very chance. TVhen they are fighting we throw red
pepper on their wounds to make them more savage. You want to be
very careful, tho- - gh, in training and fight- ing them, because
they'll snap at you every time. If they get hold of you a piece
comes out or a finger comes off, and sometimes their bites are
poisonous and the trainer dies.
S. SACKS, PKOPIUETOK,rEd. Hoffschlaeger & Co.,
Kins: ami Betliel St roe s. d&w
Black Gros Grain Silk, Black Jinadama Silk.
White and Cream lflnnliiina
By J. I). Strong, V5
Pacific Commercial Advertiser i
Who accompanied'the Hawaiian Embassy,
Black Cashmere Sliawls and S VERY RICH AND STYLISH.
ear; Is now lor sale daily at the Following place:
J. H. SOPER Mercnaatstr.t A. M HEV.TT r Merchant street T. O." i ii
RUM Fort street WM. HTrt . LMANN Hawaiian Hotel
Five Cents per Copy.
J. J. Williams, Photographer,
Street, Honolulu,101J Fori Has on
PARIS, and will ha sold at!7These Goods are DIRECT FROM tionally
LOW PRICES.ofSalea Series
Views ofFebruarv 22dWEDNESDAY
pleased with the results of the operation and confident of the
patient's speedy
The Prince bore the operation bravely.
The largest perfect emerald in the world is that in the most
valuable neck- lace ever made in this country, which is now in the
possession of William Rie-ma- n
of the Astor House. There are thirty-tw- o emeralds and thirty-nin-
e dia-
monds in the necklace, but the big emer- ald was one of the jewels
in the crown of the Shah of Persia. Four years were oc-
cupied in securing the stones, and in a short time the necklace
will adorn a prominent society lady. Her husband gave Rieman carte
blanche to secure the best stones which could be found.
The Grant Monument Association has issued a circular addressed to
artists, architects and sculptors, inviting com- petitive designs
for a monument to be erected over General Grant's grave, to cost
$500,000. Prizes of $1,500, $1,000, $500, $300 and $200 are
offered. In-
formation as to the rules governing com- petition can be had on
application to Richard T. Greener, Secretary, No. 140
Broadway.
Millard F. Brown, about six weeks old, has been put on exhibition
at Hor- ticultural Hall, Boston, Mass, by his parents, a Lynn
couple. The child is just ten inches in length and properly formed.
His wrists measure one inch in circumference. Each foot is just 1)
inches long. The infant is wrapped in cotton-battin- g, and lies in
a cradle 14 inches long.
The Rome "Tribunal" announces that every vessel in the navy has
been or-
dered in readiness for active service and that the naval armament
at Naples has assumed extraordinary activity. These
1876. GEO W. LINCOLN.A PHILANTHROPIC CONSUL.
Samoan Life & Character And 'Historical Incidents
'connected
with the Hawaiian Mission to Samoii. BUILDEEImmense Variety and
Great ArtisticAn
merit.
Tricks of the Stage Corumer's Trade. fNew YorkS-jTi.-
The reporter asked the customer if h? could mai.e a crooked leg
straight, and he replied that he often cured people of
bow-leggednes- s, and made their legs straight an operation beyond
the skill of the most accomplished surgeon. Padding out the hollows
and a judicious proportion of padding at other points is all that
is required. Of course, there are special ways of padding for cer-
tain lines of character, and the cos-tum- er
can turn a shapely man into a hunchback or into a fat man.
A slim actor need not be afraid to play a heroic character; for he
can be made stalwart one-ha- lf as big again if neceesary. For him
there are pad Jed shirts which give him a splendid chest, and also
arm and shoulder pads. There are special arm pads for Roman
characters, and shoulder pads are often used to make the shoulders
even, for frequently one shoulder will be lower than the
other.
There are special cases in which the deficiencies are so di.iicult
to remedy that a plaster cast is taken of the de- ficient limb, and
a skillful workman set to work to make a special pair of tights
which will hide the deficiencies shown in the plaster cast. This
usually has to be done in case or bow-leggednes- s;
also in case of large calves and small thighs, in which case the
tights have to be nicely graduated. As an example of the
difficulties he sometimes had to deal with, the costumertold of a
case in which he had to proportion a pair of legs, the calf of one
being twelve and one-hal- f
inches '": that of the other fourteen inches. The deficiency he has
most frequently to remedy lor women is the dent made by the
gartc-rs-. Actors most fre luently want calf and thigh tights. The
reporter was surprised to hear that the wearing of padded tights is
as com- mon among actors as it is among actresses, .Nine out of ten
actors pad. Of the women on the stage the ballet-dancer- s
make the greatest demand for tights, as the exercise of dancing
hard- ens and thins the legs.
Call and See Them. Bell Telephone No. 275. P5 Mutual Telephone
.;
It is pleasing to note the zest with which Mr. Theo. H. Davies, the
British Vice Consul, enters into any movement of a character
calculated to have a beneficial influence upon the moral and
intellectual welfare of society. Almost immediately upon his return
from England Mr. Davies was found engaging in work of the kind, and
has been ever since at fre-
quent intervals, either in connection with the Y. M. C. A., Blue
Ribbon League or some other organization. On Thursday evening an
entertainment, of which he is the promoter, will be given to the
employees of the Iron Works. In fact, he is in his element when
devoting his attention to such matters. If there were more men of
this stamp in our midst political animosities would prob-
ably be a less prominent feature in local circles than is now the
case.
PACIFIC J OHN NOT T. Commercial A.Dr li :tr ). - - h. i .:. J ' - '
:"
Aclvertisei SUGAR IN UTAH.
preparations are in accordance with cipher instructions from the
Govern- ment.
Prince Phillip of Bourbon, son of the Duke of Aquela and nephew of
the Em- peror of Brazil, has been sentenced by default to thirteen
months' imprison- ment and to pay 5,000 francs damages for a
swindling jewelry transaction.
8TKA M" BOOK AND JOB
A despatch from Salt Lake City, Feb- ruary 3d says: "In the Council
to-da- y a bill was introduced and referred to the Committee on
Manufactures to encour- age the manufacture of sugar in the
Ter-
ritory of Utah. The bill provides that to encourage the production
and man- ufacture of sugar in Utah there shall be rid nut of anv
monevs not otherwise
Stores, Ranges and Housekeeping GuOds.C T. Ordn ay nnd the Wild
Dors. The San Francisco "Examiner" of
February Sth has the following: "The PRINTING OFFICE appropriated,
to any individual, firm or J
Plumbing, Tin, Copper and Sheet Iron (77
Is prepare d to do 1I kind o
H. E. Alelntyre & Bro.,
corporaiion who, wiiuin me next ensu- ing two years, or before the
1st day of
March, 1890, shall manufacture mer- chantable sugar within the
Territory of Utah from raw materials produced in said Territory a
bounty of 2 cents per pound upon all merchantable sugar made,
provided that the quantity made .shall not be less than 100,000
pounds in any one year, and provided that the total of such bounty
for said full period of two years shall not exceed $20,000.
IMPORTERS AND DEALKKM INCommercial & Legal Work
Groceries Provisions and Feec
How Calcutta Was Founded. Ran Francisco Call.l
Since the advent of the British into power in India the fearfnl
rite of suttee, which condemned to be burnt along with her husband
his widows, has been prevented; and though, even at this day, a
Hindostani burning is a sight by no means pleasant, it was much
more fearful when along with the burning dead husband were burned
one or more of his late wives.
The first time when that sacrifice was clearly brought home to
Englishmen was when Job Charnock, half-pirat- e,
half-adventure- r, saved the life of a beautiful Bengalee widow as
she was being thrust upon the burning pyre of her husband. Job
Charnock laid the foundation of the present capital of India,
Calcutta, and it was at its present site where the gallant sailor
per- formed this hazardous saving feat. Charnock had penetrated up
the Hoogly in the quest of adventures, and seeing from his vessel
preparation for the burning of a Hindoo he watched the process with
curious excitement; but when it came to cremating living reople,
and above all a young women, all the generous impulses of the
sailor's heart were stirred, and calling to his com rades he leaped
ashore, and with the aid of their knives he soon dispersed the
heathens, and afterward married the woman and founded
Calcutta.
Having just Received a'.Complete and. New Assortment of
EAST CORNER FORT AND KINO STREETS.
New Ooods received by every packet from the KuiUern States and
Europe. FfhProduce by every steamer. All orders faithfully attended
to, and floods df li r d to any rhrt' city free of charge. Island
orders solicited. Satisfaction jfiiaranu-d- . Postotlire Vox
!
Telephone No. 92 tof
rti t i m-rpner- n u-ti- fail to rfffJ"'"
Of the Latest Stvlee, from the meet Cel bra ted Foundries of the
United States,
and employing only Experienced and Jastv Workmen, we are
prepared to turn oat Tiar,Pr r( jtuUtIv are reauested to
Jliiiai1 T'i
who arrived from Hawaii a few-day-s
since on the schooner Lurline, "are getting to be very troublesome.
There are hundreds, if not thousands of them on Halalei, and they
are extremely destructive to the goats and sheep that graze there.
Owners of stock have ex- pert native Kanakas hunting for them all
the time, but they make little head- way. It is rare that they kill
any. They are too cunning.
"They also have tried trapping and baiting them with poisoned
meats, but this does not fetch them either. They are as wily and
suspicious as a fox, and refuse to have anything to do with that
which looks the least bit suspicious.
"These wild dogs are of a dirty yel- lowish color, with sharp, almo
t white, nos ?s and upright sharp etrs th: t look as if snipped off
with shears. Their teeth are as sharp as needles, and a couple of
them stick out very long. They weigh about 75 pounds each, when
grown, and can rnn like a deer.
"They are by no means particular about using their legs, however.
They are very vicious, especially when their young are with them,
and enjoy a fight. The Kanakas are afraid of them. It is not known
how these dogs got wild, for everybody I met at Halalei told me
they were always there.
"They are breeding pretty fast, and the residents of the island
don't know what to do about it. They roam in bands , of from four
to six usually, and sleep in the lava-cappe- d hills and clefts of
the rocks. Lately they have been getting away with not only the
sheep and goats but the calves even up to a year old.
"Two or three wild dogs can easily down a yearling, while the
others in the pack stand round and nip the other cat- tle and keep
them at bay. Once the calf is down they cut his throat and suck the
blood.
"Tli,ti i:T..... r .il
the fact to the office withon delay ephone No. 78.
MAMMOTH SHIPMENT
Sale at
LOWEST MARKET PRICE. J. E. BROWN k CO. ARK AljH MESSRS. to colUct
subscriptions for tte PACIFIC COMMERCIAL ADVERTISER- -
Honolulu, January 17, 188. ISIOX FEED CO., II. ISTOTICI
Pneumonia and Ozone. Scientific American.
Dr. Draper, of the meteorological ob- servatory at Central park,
New York city, has called attention to the fact that during the
past eight years there has been an apparent connection be- tween
the death-rat- e from pneumonia in New York and the presence of
oone in the atmosphere. The epidemic has been particularly fatal
during the pres- ent year, and it is stated on good au- thority
that the death-rat- e 'from this cause has exceeded that from
cholera itk 1S54. It has not been determined whether the connection
between the disease and the ozone in the air is sim- ply a
coincidence, or whether there are scientific reasons for their
joint
A man has been found in England who will face Sullivan. John
Knifton writes to the "Sporting Life" as follows: "If your readers
will refer to your report of the speech made by J. L. Sullivan
prev-
ious to his departure from America, in which he stated he hoped to
meet among others Smith, Mitchell and Knif- ton, and to battle for
the championship of the world, they will think me want- ing, not
only in courage but in patriot- ism, if I fail to try to uphold the
honor of old England. I therefore say I shall be glad to accept 200
to stand in front of Mr. Sullivan for six rounds, or to fight him
in the prize ring of $200 a side, this amount being the limit of my
resources at bank at the present time, and I can only depend on one
backer who has hitherto nobly supported me, viz : Ben Clark.
Advices from Brownsville, Tex., Feb- ruary 9th, give a brief
account of a re-
cent attempt to assassinate General Martinez, the Mexican
revolutionist, who is an exile at that point. The story is that a
Major of the Mexican artillery was sent to Matamoras, ostensibly to
in-
spect a battery, but that he really was under instructions from the
capital to se-
cure the assassination of Martinez ; that two deserters from the
Mexican armv were released from prison and were dep- utized to do
the murder; that they and another Mexican undertook to do the job,
but it was discovered by the Gen- eral, and the conspirators have
been ar
TO ARRIVE BY TIIK
Meal Cheeks, Milk Tickets,
HortgraKe Blanks, Leases,
Calendars,
Blotting Jadi And in fact everything which a first-cla- ss
office can do.
Apples, Sweet and Baking.
Pears. Prunes. Jam anJJ'
Canned Fruit.---. Potatoes, Onions.
A D ff.rence in Delicacy. 113 Nuuanu jStreet,'It is true," observes
M. O'Rell. with
(Jarlic.IMPORTERS EAND DEALERS IN El
Chinese & Japanese Goods Walnuts, Hazel Nuts. Italian
Chestnut.
. Almond
roaming'
a smile of superioritv, "that in England you find soap in hotel
bedrooms, but
nglish people and their American cousins will perhaps be surprised
when we tell them that a French gentleman would feel perhaps as
much repugnance to using a well-wor- n cake of hotel soap as an
Englishman would feel to putting in his mouth a toothbrush that he
hap- pened to find on the dressing table of a lodging house. We
will even venture to add that many French ladies carry delicac so
far as to take their own bed linen with them on their
journeys."
Jumbo's heart weighed l,t00 pounds.
"We havenow a steam nut chine in full rut.ning order.
Fire Crackers, New Designs in Cups and Saucers, Tea, Cigars, and
all kinds of Fancy Goods.
uuififin iruui any oiner species of wild dogs I have ever yet heard
of. It is thought that only regularly organized forces will be able
to thin them out, and the scattering residents of Halalei are now
preparing to make war upon them in earnest with imported greyhounds
and guns loaded with
rested and put in jail at Brownsville, i cornextra
heavy2yTwenty-liv- e
turkeys on hand.Regular sbij meats by every steamer. The third man
escaped to the Mexican side of the river. The affair is said to
have created a good deal of excitement.
Brayton Ives, the banker of New York, J California Fruit
King Mtreet.POST OFFICE BOX NO. 255.
PACIFIC COMMERCIAL ADVERTISER, FEBRUARY 22. ioe8.
LUUAL AND GENERAL. duetusments.
PACIFIC HAEDWARE CO, L'D
13oi!e- - Exploiions. IChicar o Journnl.
Recent statistics show that in 1884 the number of boiler e -
plosions in theUnited States was 152, being less than in the
previous year. There were 254 persons killed and 261 in ured in
them, however, and the number is muchlarger than it should be.
Fifty-si- x ofthe explosions took place in saw-mill- s,
where the so-calle- d engineer finds a too facile fuel in shavings.
Men chosen for these positions should have the gumption to perceive
that such firing generally creates steam too rapidly for safety.
These people can reduce the general death rate if they wish, and
can espec- ially reduce the present high percentage of mortality
among saw-mi- ll engineers.
mnlemeiitsMm. AHicnltraa
AND GENERAL
Alonj; the II mis on Kirer. Cor. Cincinnati Commercial
Gazette.
In the other settlements, in towns not more sleepy, but more aged,
are cedars and flowers set all in rows. 1 he houses are real Dutch
houses, clean and straight. Mademoiselle, who has spent years in
Holland and Austria and Eng- land, points out the various nation-
alities of the residents unerringly by their homes and their
habits.
"There is something touching to me," said my friend, "to see in the
Sew World how the people try to keep a remem- brance of the old
homesteads. The Dutch built as near li e their forefathers as
possible; the English have their great houses, and the Cermans
their garden flowers, and through all the years of change following
the settlement of the country these "differences have been
maintained. These Dutch hamlets have, too, the more vivid green and
the pecul- iar high colors of Amsterdam; the trees, even, are not
like other trees: they have been trimmed and fed and cul- tivated
the whole aspect is one of iirift, and the descendants of the
knickerboe ers are prouder of their queer homes and ancient vines
than of any modern landscape garden."
How lSew Mexicans Make Blankets. 1 Denver News.)
The curious blankets for which there is such a rage nowadays are
made- - at Aguas Calientes, at altillo, and other old Mexican
cities. They are woven on a hand-loom- , which is stretched from
one tree to another. These looms are exceedingly primitive,
although they are run by a foot-treadl- e which is an improvement
on the looms used by the New Mexican Indians. The shuttle and
needle arc both of wood, and the
'threads are held together more firmly by the insertion of small
sticks of different lengths. The Indians show great skill in the
blending of colors in these blanket Many of them are ex-
ceedingly rich and handsome, and there is little inharmony in the
shades. These blankefs are very expensive, and are the proper thing
nowadays for portieres to bo used in halls, libraries and studios.
The Nava.io is the principal blanket-makin- g New Mexican
tribe.
New Style Steel Door Mats,
WOVEN WIRE ROOFIXG, Entirely New, Translucent, Waterproof,
Durable.
The following are some of the purposes to which it is applicable :
Veraudaa, l WnvQ Rnflt UniKPs. and Kncine Room Skvliulits.
Conserva- -
tories, Ferneries, Garden Frames and Horses and Cattle, rJarns, Low
nouses ana onepnerus nuu.. imu i r,
tv.,l IIo.o or.,1 WannaL SL-T--1 irrhta Fnftnrv Windows. Woi
liftilOUS. Markets, Schools, Laundries, Portable buildings, mgs
requiring lo ue iigiu anu ury.
LEWIS & Co., Ill Tort Street. Importers and Dealer lu
Staple and Fancy Groceneb. FRESH GOODS
By every steamer from California, and always on hand, a full and
complete line of
Provisions, Etc. Etc. jt'MftMi guaranteed. Telej hone No. 240. P.
O. Pox No. 297.
EAEE CHANCE BETTER THAN A
OFFERED
Equitable life Assurance OF THE UNITED STATES.
ASSETS OVER :::::: $80,000,000. The protection of Life Insurance
combined with the Investment Principles of a Savings
Bank. Example of a 20-ye- ar endowment policy for $10,000, taken
out at the age o 25 years; Annual premium, $487. Total premium in
20 years, 89.740. Cash fund then due, 18,110. Equiv-
alent paid up policy for life, ?43,800. Or, annuity for life,
?1,310. Estimates for different amounts and different ages
cheerfvlly given. Protect your family
from future want or provide for your own old age. Policies Free,
Indisputable, Nonforfeitable Etc., Etc. For further particulars
apply to
Alexander J". Cartwrilit, General Agreut, Hawaiian Island.
George Washington's birthday. Many happy returns of the day,
George.
Reception and dance on the Vandalia this afternoon.
Services at St. Andrew's Cathedral at 7:30 o'clock this
evening.
The moonlight concert at Thonas Square was well attended last
night.
A German was arrested last night on Merchant street in an
intoxicated condi- tion.
Prayer meeting at the vestry of the Cen-
tral Union Church this evening at the usual time.
The admission to the Iron Works enter- tainment at the Y. M.C. A.
Hall on Thurs- day evening will be by ticket.
This evening Company A of the Hono- lulu Rifles will give a ball at
the Armory. It promises to be a brilliant affair.
Black gros grain silks, black and cream Rhadama silk, cream Tricot
silk, direct from Paris, and just opened at Sachs' store.
The Blue Ribbon entertainment for next Saturday evening has been
postponed for one week, owing to two other entertain- ments taking
place during the week.
The Amelia sails for San Francisco to-
day, and a mail will be dispatched, closing at the Post Office at 1
p. m. All letters marked "per Amelia" will be forwarded.
Cashmere shawl in pink, cream and blue; also handmade and woven
shawls in colors, black embroidered cashmere shawls at low prices
at Sachs' store. 104 Fort street.
If you want a handsome black silk dress or a fine embroidered
cashmere shawl or scarf, go to Sachs' store. These are im-
ported direct from Paris, and will therefore be offered very
low.
The San Francisco "Chronicle" says: "William Lowthian Green, the
present Minister of Finance to the King of the Sandwich Islands,
lias written a book en-
titled 'Vestiges of the Molten Globe,' which he says are exhibited
by the figure of the earth, volcanic action and physiography. The
work is in three volumes, the first of which only has been printed,
that which has been published being devoted to the figure of the
earth."
The Jailer of Onlm Prison. En. P. C. Advertiser Sir: It is
with
pleasure that I take the opportunity of stating through your
columns that we, the unfortunates or convicts now at Oahu Prison,
have a fatherly and good jailer. Therefore, the appointment of
Captain Staples has been a blessing to us. lie is a man of good
understanding, and furthermore kind to all our appeals, and does
not hesitate to perform for our needs and comforts as far as the
rules of
the .prison allow him to do. He is the first man that has been
appointed to that position who we can call the right man in the
right place, and v.e ever pray that he may remain there as long as
Oahu Prison stands. The statement made in the native paper about
his being in the wrong is a great falsehood from beginning to
end.
Yours etc., Puahale.
A Royal Visit. Her Majesty Queen Kapiolani, ac-
companied by their Royal Highnesses Princes Kawauauakoa and
Kalaniemaole and a host of female servants, left yes-
terday afternoon by the steamer Mika-
hala for Kauai. The Royal party will be away about two weeks, and
will visit Nawiliwili, Kapaa, Kilauea and the beautiful valley of
Hanalei. H. R. H. Princess Poomaikelani, Colonels C. P. Iaukea and
J. H. Boyd and Mr. J. L. Kaulukou were at the wharf to bid
fare-
well to the Royal party.
police court. BEFORE POLICE JUSTICE DAYTON.
Tuesday, February 21st. Blackburn, Kukapu and Kahololio had
each to pay the usual amount for drunk- enness.
Four Chinese were charged with gam-lin- g.
Two were fined $10, one .$20 and the other $15, with six hours
imprison- ment. These are the men arrested by Officer
Hopkins.
Mrs. Mary McGurn, remanded for malicious injury, was
discharged.
Piipiilani, charged with larceny of
fence boards, was sentenced to imprison-
ment at hard labor for twenty days. Keliihokano (k) and Anna (w)
were
charged with adultery. The former was fined $40, the latter
$20.
Supreme Court. BEFORE M'CULLY, J.
Monday, February 20th. In re estate of Kahula (w), of Hono-
lulu, deceased. The Court heard the ap-
plication of Karnola (w), sister of de-
ceased, for probate of will. The will was admitted to probate and
letters testamentary issued to petitioner with-
out bond. The property devised is situ-
ate in Nuuinu Valley and valued at $1,000. M. Thompson for
petitioner.
The will of the late George Kngel-har- dl
was filed in the Clerk's office, and March 13th set as the day for
hearing of
proof. Kanakanui et al. vs. F. L. Leslie.
Appeal. The Court sustains the opinion ot the Court below, where a
decree was filed in defendant's favor.
The will of the husband of Kiha (w) was "filed by the latter, and
March 13th set for hearing.
! BEFORE DOLE, J. j Tuesday, February 21st. ! In probate festate of
Manae. Tried be--
fore a Hawaiian jury, who return a ver-- I diet for the
contestant.
! imilnie , ',v.ntoall employees of the
l orn ) ...i,.,..13 I" " .
anient. " Hawaiian Treasury on way a ' vouchers forinev, Xo
present
,lt.fore M..'l t all per- -
4tleriieu M.amut ot me v,u,w .1 bivin"' "
'e to ,I;lke their returns be no delayt,st t!.,ttl, re may
VyZe lconnU tor the fiscal renod end- -
-' . ... t4. Minister of Finance.
ni;r.Ais r i is Ti ksday. Fehruary 21.
for Maui and Ha- -j,,,tn.en,smr Km:"' at iffcilnU I n eman, for
Xawiliwili, Wai-t",t:- .Jr
W H..U. lUtes. for Maui and Hawaii
at '..'V'h MaW. Macaulay, for Kilauea and
K;5txr Surfrlse. for Hawaii, at 12 m . '.'r UV:r.i. for
"r for Kauai Vi r Kiwailaiii. for Koolan. Oahu
AukIh.NV Nt whall, for San Fra-
iler v I ktiit- -
vLrUw. lor hol.a.i ,.lrKiwail.iin. tor KooM.i virMiiuuokaw.ii. for
koolau
in rrjHn roreisn ports ,sY;iml;ilui.K;ir Admiral Lewis A
Kimherly,
frw larkOO "wiiitniore. I H Vard. from Port f
i ss Marion. Iyer, Irwin Aeapulco U,w slir Jruuie Walker, 15
Anderson, from
r .....j.'s I!aml VubT'k folus.i. Backus, from San Diego, Cal Urn
l..k Lady Harewood, Williams, from Houg- -
1 c D Brvant, I Lee, from San Francisco : t k pritzeiif-ur.-
Ahrens, from Hou&kont?
C S Friis, frmAiul 'tne John V Spreekels, Sin 1 rui.i-o- o
, i'ii:ti I'oris,MxH' I NVih M's S Zilveren Kruis, Jocke, from
S
'hie Mar ;j!aik Will W Case, Kohertsou. from San
due at Kihului, Jan 5
Hi J MSTsukui.a, from Tahiti, due April 1-- 20
! t,rr hark Ieut:hland, from Bremen, sailed (vt.i'.fr-'Mh-
, due February ! Aml.k Martha Davis, F M Benson, from Bost-
on, due March 1
Am shir Mystic Belle, Cooke, from Kework, March
lint tik St Thomas Bell, sailed from Cardiff, o, toi'fr".'d, due
March 1--
V.nt hark Xituua, sailed from Liverpool Nov :".ith. due M
irch
Am Ik Sarauac, sailed from Liverpool October ."'th, dw I'ehruarv
-'.
Am Ik Edward May, Johnson, from Hongkong, due Jau "J- 1
Am hktne Hattie X liaim?, Bangs, from Hong-kotif- i.
due Feb 1-
I S S Adams, L Ktiiipll', from Samoa, due Feb
Aml.rstne W G Irwin, Mcf'ul loch, from San fruii'i.-c- o, due Feb
-.- "i 2'J
Am hktne Mary Wikelman, J II Blake, from San Fraucisco, due Feb
20.2't
Am l.k leylou, M Calhoun from San Francisco, due Feh 20-li-
'J
ian?kxi-;ks- .
DEPARTURES. Fur Mini and Hawaii, per stmr Kinau, Feb
F A S haefer, Hon J L Richardson, Mrs J W Kiiua, Mrs F Spencer, J
Cushi nham, Miss Tay-- !
r. W L Rose, D Mc(iregor, Rev Adams and wife, We Pierce and wife, R
W Boyd, W Berlowitz, a::.i50 deck t a.Hsenerd.
For Maui and Hawaii, per s'mr W G Hall, Fr: :1 Juvl'e J W Kahia, A
Zeiler and wife, O
ni;, Mrs T Lee and child, Mr Wallace, J Maj Kahalewai, Rev Father
Leonore,
Mrs Fisher, Mis Holt, and 7.3 deck passengers. F rKviai, per
steamer Mikahala, Feb 21 Her
y tie Queen, their Highness Princess Ka-vii- ii
aI1d J Kalanianaole, E K Lilikalani, aa.ukou, EStrelig, MrsLalau,
Mrs Lu-'ir- ?
Ultphaut, A Uivier and wife, J Mark-- f iki le.Miss F Markham, Miss
Dushalsky,
Nllc'Jx. Mrs Hattie Titcomb, F Fukus- -I w. .Mr; T M.ika ..Piano,
and about o deck pas- -
AURIVALS.
m;i;ti.g xiti:n. The American clipper barkeutine Amelia, r'UUl Wui-
- Xewhall, sails to-da- y for San Fran-c-owi- th
a fun cargo of sugar. steamer Waialeale arrived February 21st
Kinai w,th i.b-i- hags sugar. She leaves this afirrujon for
Hanamaulu, Kilauea
Hanalei.
,11.L" steA''r C. R. Bishop arrived February trum Kuaa, Maui, with
2,5a0 bags sugar. '1
' irk " D- - 1?r-vul-
Jt has been docked nearH Pacific Mail Co.-- s Wharf to discharge
her
j.T!!P !'ark Whit-nor- has finished unload-lumbe- r and has been
moved to near thenu- Meamhip Company's wharf to com-- n
reviving SUgur.
''i with m bags sugar and- rice.
di!ZkL0OUei' JeUui Walker ha3 e"Jy nniahsdlMLari,'ng Ler
cargo.
n,1 her'" ' nM hM fiUiSbfd UU"
Satnr lv iT""' 3 PXPect o sail next
car.n7; nU f San Francisco with a full-- ouyar aud rice. a'"trS
K'UU aUtl J Ato-d- tf fmaiuin s are due
1U ,Wr ugar 'o'this sland with
Kut::"r " Bi h l- -ve for all"'xt Monday.
io sl!,ie,Sara,,ac has fiuii discharg-&i- n
Fau.-isc- o al,'eacly received sugar for
fhe hark c " i ''whf where T heeU mved to the Kinau exIted to
1
coml,lete fading, and is sugar UrT UJXt Saturdy with about
34,000
Francisco. , schooner
veuiug. Latrinaaud KaiulK)w arrived Several wh a ersrtay. r
cruising off port yester- -
Klaml Vl'ws- -Bv r iii 1,onsalves Photo-'- n'gallerv r rt
view ; Street' 'ou can ton!;,Ul??ifferent !oitB of in- -
of th. at, , 1!5ian of the Krouu and aU ylea. 1hotgrapi8 taken
in
t
MERCHANDISE.
Summer Houses, Sta.ded, Loose Jtoxes lor
Temporary Structure, . .! .m "ifr build- -
FOR INVESTMENT. GOVERNMENT BOND.
nd Bozea POWDKRED
TEAS Blue Mottled Soap
SALMON ('ases Corned Beef.
OIL s FUEL and LUBRICATING.
LIME I CEMENT G alvanized Ivor. " :r.
RIDGINC SCREWS and WASi.-i- ..
CORDAGE. Manila and Sisal, Panana Twins, Whale Mas
Reed's Felt Steam Pipe
Advertisements.
mmm Absolutely Pure. This powder never varies. Amarvel of
purity,
strength and vholesomenes?. More economical ttian the ordinary
kinds, and cannot be sold in coro-petit- io
i w ith t he multitude of low test, short weight, alum or phosphate
powders. SoldONLTIH cans. Koyai. BAKUNa TowDtit Co.. 106 WaU-rt-
J
sl y. WSf. T. COLENAN CO., Atfents.
SAN FRAKCISCO. CAL.
H. E. McINTYEE & BK0THER
ROCTJSY FEED STOKE,G Corner of Fort and King Streets, 79-w- tf
Honolulu, II. I
ED. HOFFSCHLAEGER & CO
Australian Mail Service.
FOR SAN FRANCISCO,
MsJRJJPOS" th Oceanic Steamship Company, will be due
at Honolulu from Sydney and Auckland on or about
March 11th, 1888, And will leave for the abwve port wtth mailn and
passengers on or about that date.
For freight or passage, having SUPERIOR ACCOMMODATIONS, apply
to
Wm. (j. Irwin & Co., AOJSNTS.
For Sydney and Auckland.
ALAMEDA. 39
Of the Oceanic Steamship Company, will be due at Honolulu from San
Francisco
or or about
March 15, 1888. And will have prompi di3patcn with malls an
assengers for the above ports. For freight or passage, having
SUPERIOR AC-
COMMODATIONS, apply to
Notice of Removal.
Resources of the Company as at 31st Dec, 1882
1 Authorized Capital 3,000,000 2 Subscribed " 2,000,000 3 Paid up "
500,000 4 Fire Fund and Reserves as at
31st Dec, 1883 1,274,661 5 Life and Annuity Funds.... 3,855,529 6
Revenue Fire Branch 1.107,124 7 " Life and Annuity
Branches 484,798
563wmar28tf
For Measuring; the I jitlM : S loals. Boston Budget.)
There has recently been brought for- ward a simple and ingenious
appliance for indicating the depth o ' shoals hi ex-
ploring rivers or shallow lakes. It con-gist- s
of a long sounding rod, ten feet long or more, hanging ver- tically
over the boat's side, and turn- ing freely on a horizontal center.
This center is in the middle of a dial marked with feet and in
lies. In passing over a shoal the one end of the rod drags on the
bottom and the other points out on the dial the depth in feet and
inches. Moreover, after a little e perience, by noting the jars of
the rod a fair idea can be got of the character of the
bottom.
The Day After he Wedding;. V hi a lei h v Call. I
Wife Muffms all right, my darling? Husband Perfection, my pet. Wife
How 'hesitates and trembles) how is the co.ee.' Husband Excellent.
Wife (greatly agitated) Xot so good
as your mother used to make, my dar- ling?
Husband (calmly) My mother never knew how to make coll'ee at all,
prec- ious.
(Wife falls into a deadly swoon. Tab-- ' leau.)
Forest Product vs. Oohl and Silver. Boston Transcrint.l
The forest products of the United States are worth to-da- y not
less than $800,000,000, which is a good deal more than the value of
the metal and mineral output of all our mines of coal, gold,
silver, copper, iron and lead all put to- gether.
The annual yield of our gold and sil-
ver mines is worth less than one-tent- h
of this enormous total, and forest pro- ducts, in a vast number of
direct and indirect ways, are essential to every in-
dustry in which civilized men engage.
A Curiosity in Kugineering. Van Nost rami's.
A little curiosity in engineering has been constructed by an
ingenious clock-make- r,
D. A. Buck. This is in all probability the smallest steam-engin- e
in the world, for it is almost microscopic in its dimensions. The
whole machine weighs only about a gram, or fifteen grains, and is
entirely covered by an ordinary thimble. The stroke of the piston
is a little over two millimeters, or one-twelft- h inch, and its
diameter is something less than a millimeter and a half.
Nevertheless it is built up of 140 distinct pieces, fastened
together by fifty-tw- o screws, and three drops of water suffice to
fill the boiler and set the toy mechanism in motion.
Communion Services in Olden Time. Exchange.
Some curious details regarding the communion services in olden
times have just been developed. One noticeable thing was the
quantity of claret and Burgundy consumed. In 155)0 there were used
at the first communion a puncheon and nine gallons, and at the
second a puncheon and six and a half gallons. The total cost was
$510. In 165(5 the corporation of Glasgow paid for the same purpose
as much as $800.
Shipment of Live Iobiters. Chicago Tim?s.
An experiment of interest is now be-
ing made by the maritime province of Canada in the introduction of
live lob- sters to the English market. The steamer Clifton, from
Miramichi to England, recently took out a tank con- taining 500
live "lobsters, aud if they reach England in good condition a large
business is expected.
iiiAt San et Time. C mm rc a' Bulletin.!
"The young lady is in evening dress,' said one of Dr. Holmes'
friends as a rather elaborately dressed damsel stepped out on the
hotel piazza to ad-
mire the sunset. "The close of the day, my dear sir,"
remarked the witty professor. "That is Holmes-pun,- " was the
reply. "I am worsted," concluded the poet.
Soraeth ay; ew in Sl'ppers. . A cheap slipper made of wool
and
bound in imitation fur, with the sole in three thicknesses of white
felt, is a new thing in England.
GRASS seeds. COCKSFOOT, RYE GRASS, ENG
LISH RED CLOVER, COW
GRASS.
ATTENTION OF ALL INTERESTED IN THE the pasture lands of the Islands
is called to the above valuable seeds, which we offer for sale in
lots to suit purchasers.
We have also on hand sample lots of White English Alsyke. Timothy,
Rib Grass,
Crelted Dor's Tail, Tall Fescue "JftGrass and Lucerne seeds, which
small lots for trial, and will also receive orders for quantities
of not less than half a ton weight, and execute same with
dispatch.
WM. G. IRWIN CO.
MANILA - CIGARS,
Of the Best Assorted Brands 1 n the Market, which
we will sell at lowest Prices, either In
Bond or Duty Paid.
jVrEE FOISTG & CO..
Waterlionse & Lester, IMPORTERS OF
CARRIAGE MATERIAL 16 to 22 Beale street. 8an Franeisco. apl9
M. PHILLIPS & Co., and Wholesal eJf1ImportersBoots, Shoes,
Hats, Furnish
tng and Fancy Goods. No. 11 Kaahumanu Street Honolulu. H. I.
25tf-w- tl
r 9 niR 8 3 BROWN
T. J. BASS & CO. Importers of and Dealers In
Artists' - Materials, Paints, Oils, Glass, Varnishes,
Turpentine.
Manufacturers or Mouiaings, nciure Frames, etc., etc., etc.
14 and 16 Ellis Street near Slarket, SAN FRANCISCO, CAL.
634mayl4tf
jjibtrtistmniis. TWO TRUTHS.
Adverfisctm mere IS THE
A Remarkable Case. Under the above heading the "Don-cast- er
Reporter" of July 6, 1887, pub-
lishes the following in its editorial col-
umns :
Our readers may recall the circumstance of a young clerk, named
Arthur Richoid, falling insensible on the Wheatley Lane in this
town some time ago, and being picked up, as he continued perfectly
helpless, and taken in a cab by two gentlemen to the office of F.
W. Fisher, Esq., the solicitor who employed him. On restoring
him-t- o
consciousness it was ascertained that he was afflicted with what
seemed to be an incurable disease. When he was able to speak he
said he had been to his dinner and was on his way back to his work,
when suddenly his head was in a whirl and he fell in the street
like a man who is knocked down. On coming to his senses in the
solicitor's office he' thought what this might mean, and feared he
was going to have a fit of illness, which we all know is a very
dreadful thing for a poor man with a family to care for.
With this in his mind he at once sought the best medical advice,
telling the doctors how he had been attacked. They ques- tioned
him, and found that his present malady was exhaustion of the
nervous system, resulting from general debility, indigestion and
dyspepsia of a chronic nature. This in turn had been caused by
confinement to his desk and grief at the loss of dear friends by
death. The coming on of this strange disease, as described by Mr.
Richoid, must be of interest both to sick and well. He had noticed
for several years previously, in fact, that his eyes and face began
to have a yellow look; there was a sticky and unpleasant slime on
the gums and teeth in the morning; the tongue coated; and the
bowels so bound and costive that it induced that most pain-
ful and troublesome ailment the piles. He says there was some pain
in the sides and back and a sense of fullness on the right tide, as
though the liver were enlarg- ing, which proved to be a terrible
fact. The secretions from the kidneys would be scanty and
high-colore- di with a kind of gritty or sandy deposit after
standing.
These things had troubled Mr. Richoid a long time, and after his
fall in the street he clearly perceived that his fit of giddi- ness
was nothing more than a sign of the steady and deadly advance of
the com-
plaint, which began in indigestion and dys-
pepsia. His story of how he went from one physician to another in
search of a cure that his wife and little ones might not come to
want is very pathetic and touching. Finally he became too ill to
keep his situation and had to give it up. This was a sad calamity.
He was appalled to think of how lie should be able to live. But God
raised up friends who helped to keep the wolf from the door. He
then went to the seaside at Walton on-the-Na-
but neither the change, nor the physicians who treated him there,
did any good. All being without avail he visited London, with a
sort of vague hope that some ad-
vantage might happen to him in the me-
tropolis. This was in October, 1885.
How wonderful, indeed, are the ways of Providence, which dashes
down our high- est hopes and then helps us when we least expect
it.
While in London he stated his condition to a friend, who strongly
advised him to try a medicine which he called Mother Seigel's
Curative Syrup, saying it was gen-
uine and honest, and often cured when everthing else had failed. He
bought a
Office, 46 and 48 Merchant Street, Honolnli
-- :o.-
THE ADVERTISER Represents the Interests of the Politician, the
Merchant, t!
Planter, the Storekeeper, the Lawyer, the Workman, and, i
fact, all Ch sses of the Community.
THE ADVERTISER Has for many years been noted for its Reports of
Legislativ
Proceedings, Important Law Cases, etc. These are record!
Verbatim when the importance of the occasion warrants it.
THE ADVERTISER Is a necessity to Every English. speaking Inhabitant
of .(,
Kingdom who desires to keep pace with the times.
THE ADVERTISER
Helen Hunt Jackson. "Darling," he said, "I never meant
To hurt you;" and his eyes grew wet "I would not hurt you for the
world 1
Am I to blame if I forget?1' "Forgive my selfish tears l" she
cried.
"Forgive! I knew that it was not That you would mean to hurt me
love;
I knew it was that you forgotl" But, all the same, deep in her
heart
It inked this thought, and rankles yet. When love is at its best,
one loves
So much that he can not forget 1
THE SOFTENING TOUCH OF TIME
Doesn't Get Half a Chance to Beautify the Buildings at
Washington.
IJoaqain Miller's Letter. Now I have "made a covenant with
mine eyes," a3 Job said, to not find fault. Having in previous
letters per- suaded United States senators to keep their big
schoolboy heels down off the desks; having laughed them out of the
foolish idea of going into "executive session," and clearing the
galleries merely because they wanted to smoke, and having also
banished the ever-.prese- nt
spittoon, or at least reduced the annual bill for spittoons more
than one-hal- f,
I feel that I have done enough for the capitol, and that more
interference or advice might be misunderstood. But I must pronounce
against this business
this brutal custom of 'scraping down our marble buildings as soon
as they begin to take on the dignity and come- liness of time and
color.
Now, wnat would you think of a man who would go into the Dresden
gallery and give Haphael s Madonna a scrub- bing with soap and sand
and ashes I Or let us suppose the Greeks or Romaics had scrubbed
and scraped their marbles as we do in Ameri a. How much of them
would have been left for us to look upon Let me tell you, for a
fact, that if any mary, or even any munici- pality, should attempt
to scrape or scrub a building or any marble of any kind in Italy,
why, the artistic and sensitive Italian would simply "make Home
howl."
Why can not people who have charge of our great structures learn a
little something from those ancient states where art first took
form in marble. The Greeks and Romans always let time and the
elements soften the outlines of their temples, and no piece of
architecture
.was complete that had not been rounded down and subdued in tone
and color by the perfecting touch of time.
t ut hero at Washington the build- ings are perpetually defaced by
scaf- folds; and scrape, scrape, scrape. All the year through, and
nearly every- where you lift your eyes, it is scrape, scrape,
scrape, till the noise, the dust, the ghostly, glaring sight of the
newly scraped; and skinned, and scratched, and mutilated columns
and walls drive you out of town.
Why, even England, half-civilize- d as she is in many things, knows
much bet- ter than to lay profane hands on mar- ble. I have been
very familiar with St. George's gate, Hyde park, the past fif- teen
years. It is almost black. But it has not been touched since it was
placed there. It will never be touched. Nature must take care of
marble after it has found its place. And the sooner it takes tone
from the elements and the softening touch cf time, the sooner it
becomes "a thing of beauty." For what so offends the eye as this
bold and glaring and glittering white marble?
Use of Electricity in Bleaching. (Chicago Herald. 1
Cotton manufacturers in St. Peters- burg are much interested at
present in the successful application of electricity for the
purpose of bleaching cotton and flax fibers, as well as tissues.
The ma- terial is steeped in water, which is then decomposed by
electricity, the o :ygen which is thus set free at once acting on
the fii'.ers. This process has been found to occupy very
considerably less time than the ordinary one.
The Chinese Legend of the Creation. Chicago Tribune.
Chinese legends say that in the lie-ginni-
a vast egg was divided into two parts, and a being came forth
called Poon-- K Wong. He took the upper half of the shell from
which he had sprung and formed the heavens; out of the lower he
made the earth. Two clouds of vapor met and blended, and there
sprang from the union a son and a daughter, whose descendants are
the millions of China.
Studying iVarine Animals. lArkansaw Traveler.
A French physiologist, Dr. Pegnard, is endeavoring to study marine
animals under their natural conditions, an ap- paratus designed by
C ailletet enabling him to .watch the creatures in water under any
pressure ' up to that of G50 atmospheres, which corresponds with
that of the sea at the greatest depths at which dredgings have been
made about four miles.
A new hobDy-hors- e has" been devised for boys. It consists of the
model o. a horse mounted on a tricycle. It is driven by means of
the forward wheel, as in the case of an ordinary tricycle, the
steering handle appearing above the horse's neck about which the
bridlo should be held. Motion is given to the horse's legs by
crauks connected with the wheels.
Terr: tori 1 Statistics. Recent statistics demonstrate that
England has G." square miles of colony to the s ;uare mile of her
own area; Hol- land, 54; Portugal, i0; Denmark, 6.30; France,
1.1,0, and Spain, 0.86 square miles.
Cdns Found in Jumbo's Stonncli. Chicago Times.
A great many coins English shill- ings, sixpences, coppers, and one
Can- adian piece were found in Jumbo s stomach by the gentlemen
having charge of his remains.
Powr KurnUhe.l by the Tunnel. It is calculated that the water
power
furnished by the Sutro tunnel is suffi- cient to run five
forty-stam- p mills, which could crush 600 tons of ore in
twenty-fou- r hours.
The Snv l!e,t Boo'i in the World. "S The smallest book in the world
is half
v5?ze of a Postage stamp, and is an edition of the sacred book of
the Sikhs, belonging to the earl of Dutlerin.
The prison population of Great Britainwas twice as large in-185- 0
as it isnow.
ceased,
HAVING, BY AUTHORITY OF MY OFFICE, charge of the estate of the late
Will-
iam Turner, a naturalized citizen of the United States, who died
intestate, I hereby notify per- sons to present their claims
against said estate within six months from this date, and persons
knowing themselves to be indebted, to make settlement within thirty
days.
J. H. PUTNAM, feb8 15 22 29 Consul General.
REMOVAL.
stock of goods to their
New Store on Kii St,
Opposite Messrs. Ca3tle & Cooke's, and
Bethel St., 0pp. Tost Office.
Ed. HoMIaeger ft. Co. lmw
THIS PAPER IS Oti FILE AT
rALMER 8l REY'S
AND AT
46 Tribune Builiing, NEW YORK".
Where Advertising Contracts ca l be made.
IIAMBlTllU-iriACDElSril- U
FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY OF HAMBURG
mi;k II vmisi:, FlBuiLDixftS, insured against Fire on the most
favorable terms
A. .TAvItJG JSR Agent for the Hawaiian Kingdom. 95-del- 8
WING WO CHAN A CO.,
Commission Merchants,
Importers and dealers in all kinds of Chinese Provisions,
Merchandise, Cigars, Ebony Furniture, Ebony and Marble
Tables.
Chinese and Japanese Crockery Ware. Dinner Sets, Tea Sets, Vases of
all
kinds. Mattings, Camphor Wood Trunks,
Rattan Chairs, Clothing Baskets, etc. Silks, Satins. Embroidered
Silk Hand-Kerchief- s.
Grass Cloth, Crape Shawls and Crape Silks.
All kinds and all styles of China and Japan Teas, of the latest
importation.
Opposite W. C. Peacock & Co., Nim-an- u
street, Honolulu, H. I. Mutual Telephone No. 18. P. O.
Box 186. 3m
JOHN W. AKANA
Employment Office, Makai side of Hotel and Ewa side of Smith
street at the corner.
CHINESE COLLECTING A Specialty.
the utmost diMpatcIi.
GRA TEFUL COMFORTING
EPIPS'S BHEAKFAST.
. "By a thorough knowledge o. the natural laws Thlcb govern the
operations of digestion and nu-ttitio- n,
and by a careful application of the fine properties o well-select-
ed cocoa. Mr. Epps has provided our breakfast tables with a
delicately flavoured beverage which may save us many heavy doctors
bills. It is by the judicious use of such articles of diet that a
constitution may be gradually built up until strong enough to
resistevery tendency to disease. Hundreds of subtle maladies are
floating around us ready to attack wherever there is a weak point.
We may escape many a fatal shaft by keeping onrselves well
fortified with pure blood and a properly nourished frame."
Seearticle in the Civil Hervice Gazette, f
Made simply with boiling water or milk. Sold in Mlb. packets by
grocers labelled thus
JAMES EPPS &, CO., HOMOEOPATHIC CHEMISTS.
96 --n25 London; England.
UNLIKE many kinds of cathartic do not make you feel
worse before you feel better. Their op-
eration is gentle, but thorough, and unattended with disagreeable
effects, such as nausea, griping pains, etc.
Seigel's Operating Pills are the best family physic that has ever
been discov- ered. They cleanse the bowels from all irritating
substances, and leave them in a healthy condition.
The best remedy extant for the bane of our lives constipation and
sluggish liver.
These Pills prevent fevers and all kinds of sickness, by removing
all pois-
onous matter from the bowels. They operate briskly, yet mildly,
without anv pain.
If you take a severe cold, and are threatened with a fever, with
pains in the head, back, and limbs, one or two doses of Seigel's
Operating Pills will break up the cold and prevent the fever.
A coated tongue, with a brackish taste, is caused by foul matter in
the stomach. A few doses of Seigel's Operating Pills will cleanse
the stom- ach, remove the bad taste, and restore the appetite, and
with it bring good health.
Oftentimes disease, or partially de-
cayed food, causes sickness, nausea and diarrhoea. If the bowels
are cleansed from this impurity with a dose of Seigel's Operating
Pills, these disa- greeable effects will vanish, and good health
will result.
Seigel's Operating Pills prevent ill-effe- cts from excess in
eating or drink ing. A good dose at bedtime renders a person fit
for business in the morning.
These Pills, being sugar-coate- d, are pleasant to take. The
disagreeable taste common to most pills is obviated.
For Kale by all Chemists, Druggists and 9Iediciue Vendors.
PROPRIETORS:
HOLLISTER & CO.,
Druggists and Tobacconist?, WHOLESALE AND DETAIL.
09 Nuuanu Street, and cor. Fort fc Merchant Sts, 83 wtf
Is copious and prompt in the publication of Local News, and
its readers are kept constantly posted as to the course of
events
in other parts of the world, particularly in the United
States.
ig Wily Piifie Gnod Advertiser
Is specially adapted for residents of the outlying portions of the
group.
Terms of Subscription :
per half year 3
C3" " to Foreign Countries
SUBSCRIPTIONS PAYABLE IN ADVANCE.
bottle of a chemist in Pimlico, and began using it according to the
directions. He did this without any faith or hope, and the public
majr, therefore, judge of his surprise and pleasure when after
taking a few doses he felt great relief. He could eat better, his
food distressed him less, the symptoms we have named abated, the
dark spots which had floated before his eyes like smuts of soot
gradually disap- peared, and his strength increased. Before this
time his knees would knock together whenever he tried to walk. So
encouraged was he now that he kept on using Mother Seigel's
Curative Syrup until it ended in completely curing him.
In speaking of his wonderful recovery Mr. Richoid says it made him
think of poor Robinson Crusoe, and his deliver- ance from captivity
on his island in the sea; and added, "But for Mother Seigel's
Curative Syrup the grass would now be growing over my grave."
Our readers can rest assured of the strict truth of all the
statements in this most re-
markable case, as Mr. Richoid (now resid- ing at Swiss Cottage,
Walton-on-the-Naze- ,)
belongs to one of the oldest and most re-
spected families in the beautiful village of Long Melford, Suffolk,
and his personal character is attested by so high an au-
thority as the Rev. C. J. Martyn. We have deemed the case of such
importance to the public as to justify us in giving this short
account of it in our columns.
Bone Meal! Bone Meal
iSan Francisco. Orders fot this
Celebrated Fertilizer will now be received by the undersigned.
Planters are requested to send their orders in early, so that there
will be no delay in having them filled hi ime for the planting
season. Also,
Super- - Phosphates, A Fine Fertilizer for Cane.
Ordersrecelved in quantities to suit. 2l-w- tf WM. G.IRWIN &
CO., Agents.
S. C. ALL. EX, M. P ROBINSON.
ALLEN & ROBINSON, AT ROBINSON'S WHARF, DEALERS
LUMBER and all kinds of BUILDING MATERIALS, Paints, Oils, Nails,
etc., etc.
AOKXT FOR SCHOONERS -
ParvihV. flrvmrriAivviQl ArlvArtisei - w vV VVX11111V1 VllUl JUL
VI. I
THE JOB PRINTING OFFICE
The Job Printing Department
Every descriptiou of BOOK WORK. Books and Blank Forms Rul'J
order.
Prices are strictly other office in the city.
moderate anil will compare favorably with those oi " i