4
.9 if L j la to $1 J II p j vi 1 , 'if 1s4 ifH ji III 44 f ' ) Vol. XV. No. '?. HONOLULU, il. 1., FRIDAY EVENING, AVUL 21, LS91. 0 OENIS UbHOHIPTIOn PtR MONTH it1 Mi) ' nm v niL . nni'M 0 ansff rxiiniii. . i ... i .i Ik G. Irwin Cooipauy, JUOGE NOT. SPECIAL SELECTED Jersey Stock ! THE ADELINE BUCK STOCKINGS ! NOW FOll N. S. SACHS', 10 4Fort St., : : : : Honolulu. Adeline Black Stockings ! Are guaranteed to be'fast black, will not stain or crock, nor discolor the water when washing, they are soft and pliant. For Ladies, Misses and Children. Also, in (ilenllenien's Socks. CALL FOR THE "ADELINE BLACK STOCKING" FOR SALE ONLY AT THE POPULAR MILLINERY HOUSE. . 101 Fort Street, Honolulu. Telephones, No. 175.- - OFFER AT BED 'ALIFORNIA HAY, OATS, BRAN, OIL CAKE MEAL, LINSEED MEAL, BARLEY, ROLLED BARLEY, MIDDLING GROUND BARLEY WHEAT AND CORN FLOUR. FLOUR ISAlta, Golden Gate & Salinas -- m FLOUR -- IS l'CJHUSHEU- - Eviry Afternoon Except Sundays At tin Olllee, Queen street, Hunuliiltl a. i. ARTHUR JOHNSTONE. ...Editoi DANIEL LOGAN .Manage! -- FOK TIIK- - Daiiy Bulletin Publishing Company, (Limited ) Ml'HKCItlPTlOX: Daily Bui.i-Ktin- , 1 year 86 00 " " (i months 3 00 " " month per (de- livered) 50 Weekly Bulletin Summary, 1 year 5 00 foretell. 00 -- illh l'rl-l'- No. nan. -- e JsaJr" Address all business eommiinlca-tiou- s Daily Bulletin." t3fAd(livss all matter for publica- tion "Euitok Daily Bulletin." I'. O. It..x N. Iloiiolii'.n. II. I. DRS. BKODIB & FURRY, Physicians. Oll'ice: 81 Bere-aui- a street, Honolulu, 11. 1. I M. MONSARRAT, J Attorney at Law and Notary Public. Mercliaut street, Honolulu. ALFRED MAGOON, T Attorney at Law and Notary Public. No. 'l Merchant street, Hono- lulu. DAVID DAYTON (Kewiki) be iu his private office from 12:30 to 1:30 P. m. Office: 91 King street, (up stairs). HW. Schmidt & Sons, importers & Commission Mer- chants. Fort street, Honolulu. HHACKFELD & CO., Commission Agents. Corner Fort and Queen streets, hono-lul- u, fl. I. GW Macfarlanb & CO., importers and Commission Merchants. Queen street, Honolulu, H. i. GONSALVES & CO., Grocers and Wine Merchants. Beaver Block, Honolulu, H. i. T. WATERHOTJSE, JOHN importer uud Dealer in General Merchandise. Queen street, Honolulu, H. I. CASTLE & COOKE, and Commission Mer- chants. Importers and Dealers in Gen- eral Merchandise. No 80 King street, Honolulu. 7 ILDER & CO., Vl Dealers in Lumber, Paints, Oils, Nails, Salt and Building Materials of every kind. Corner Fort aud Queen streets, Honolulu. 1 ewers & Cooke, j Importers aud Dealers in Lum- ber and all kinds of Building Materials. Fort street, Honolulu. C. BREWER & CO.. (I.I.UITKO), General Mercantile AND Commission Agents list of officers : P. C. Jones, Jr. . .. President & Manager J. O. Carter Treasurer & Secretary directors: Hon. C. K. Bishop. S. C. Allen, il. Waterhouse. CASTLE & COOKE, laroKTKKM, Hardware, Shipping Commission Merchants DE A LICKS IN General Merchandise ! Plantation AtjanU, Life, fire & Marine Inturane Age j'i. 1J HONOLULU, II. I. 91 P. 0. Box 145.- - SALE AT -- Cor. Edinburg & Queen Sts. CO hat &tm ROCK TRICES Telephone No. 92. E Ei BRO., -- r. O. Box 372. -- P. O. Box 297. ICJ10- - & COOKE. s. (I.imiti:i.) offer for sale ' JLiinio Ac Cement, PARAFFINE PAINT CO.'S COMPOUNDS and ROOFING, REED'S PATENT Felt Steam Pipe Covering, all sizes. FERTILIZERS : WOOL DUST, BONE MEAL, FISH GUANO, ALSO BUCK & OHIiAJNDT'3 High Grade Chemical Cane Manors. GRASS SEEDS : COCKSFOOT, RYE GRASS And CLOVERS. Refined Sugars, Fairbank Canning Co.'s Corned Beef, 1 and 2 lb. tins. SALMON IN .BARRELS. Baldwin LocGinouves. The undersigned having been appointed sole agents fur the Hawaiian Islands For the Celebrated From the works of Barham, Parry, Williams & Co., Philadelphia, I'enn., Are now prepared to give estimates and receive orders lor these engines, of size and style. The Baldwin Locomotive Works are now manufacturing a style of Loco- motive particularly adapted For Plantation Purposes, A number of which have recently been received at these Islands, and we will have pleasure in furnishing plantation agents and managers with particulars of same. The superiority of these Locomotives over all other makes is not only known here but is acknowledged throughout the United States. Win. O. IIIWIN & Co., Ld, Sole Agents for Hawaiian Islands. fi g. mwm & GO, (LIMITED.) Wm. G. Irwin. .. ..President & Manager Clans Spreckels nt Walter M. Oiffard Secretary & Treasurer Theo. C. Torter Auditor SUGAll FACTORS Commission Agents. AGENTS OF TUB Of man i'ranrlNvo, Cal. STEAM GAIDI PiClOH A.:S1 liAli-JKltV- . F. iiOKN, Practical Coufceliuuer, Pastry Cook Jt Baker. 71 Hotel St. -- Jtir Telephone 74. lil Metropolitan JudcP not; the workings of hl brata An.J or hi heart tliiui canst not aeu; What loolu to thy dim eyes a ttaiu la OoU's pure giffht may only b A war, brought from some well woo Add, Where tlioa woulJst only faint and yield. The look, the air, that frets thy Blunt May Im. a token that bolow Tlie soul hH cloned in deadly fiht With some J fiery foo, Whose Klaaoe would scorcli thy anilllns graeo. And caxl toee slmikierlnR on thy fucel 9 And Judge none lot, but waft and soa, With hopeful pity, not din. lain; The depth of the abyss may be The measure of the height of pain And love and glory that may raise Tliin soul to Ood in after days! -- A. A. Proctor DICK IIUYL The writer owes to Dick Huyl a debt, not exactly of gratitude, as the story will demonstrate, which she, by writinff his biography, seeks to discharge. Dick Hnyl's history will never be written by me, nor by any one else who knew him, to alorn a Sundcy ehool library; ho was not that kind of a boy. Dick was an Apache Indian, with all the character- istics of total depravity that the word Apache conveys or suggests. We were children together. Dick and 1. We lived, fought and played together for two years in the same army post. On one memor- able occasion, Dick, instigated by the devil for 1 firmly believe in the devil, if only for Apaches dropped down the neck of my. frock a live toad. It was the cause of my first fit of hysterics, and I determined, if 1 ever grew old enough, I would tell the whole world how bad a young Apache could bo. In 1872. if 1 remember rightly, Gen. Crook had succeeded, after years of bloody war and the loss of hundreds of good men. in subduing most of the bands composing the Apache nation of New Mexico and Arizona. They had dwelt in the strongholds of mountain and desert, from which they frequently emerged to rob and murder all miners or emigrants that thoy could ambush, leaving nothing for the human mind to conceive of in the way of cruelly when- ever a white man fell into their power. At the reservation, although they wero well fed and quite decently treated, it was necessary to watch them constant- ly, und large bodies of troops were for that purpose. Nevertheless, scarcely a week paused but a small squad of Apaches, usually led by some attract- ive squaw, would slip quietly past the guards and escape through the darkness into their beloved cactus plains aud mountain barrens. Roll call nearly every morning developed these absentees, and next day would come news of murder, rapine and horrors generally. A favorite Apache mode of disposing of the unsus- pecting freighter, miner or emigrant whose camp they had succeeded in raid- ing, was to tie the victim by the four limbs to stakes, and then to build a fire on that portion of his body designated in the old fashioned almanacs as "virgo." There seemed to be something par- ticularly fjtscinatiug to the Apache tem- perament in this form of torture. Death being loug in coming, it gave the squaws and pappooses plenty of chance to invent small torments, on the side, as it were. The women and children emigrants but enough. Suffice it to Bay that the absolute hatred entertained by these In- dians for the whites was fully recipro- cated, especially by the soldiers. It was no easy matter to track and eaccessfully follow the runaways through ae cactus and mesquit thickats, over 'the barren deserts and deso&te mountains that make up the topography of Arizona. But in that parched country water is only to be found at certain springs and "water holes," between which days of travel often intorvene, but which are equally well known to soldiers and to Indians. So when the morning report showed to Gen. Crook that so many warriors, squaws and pappooses were missing, the grim old warrior would make no sign of pursuit, but on the night following, or perhaps the next one, a squadron of mounted men would file silently out of the reservation bearing orders to move as rapidly as possible to the water hole of Palo E'into, or to Agna Grande Spring, or to some other place where the presence of the precious fluid favored a camping place for the renegades. The troops were always positively instructed to bring back no prisoners, all matters of detail being left to the officers in com- mand. One June morning there was re- ported missing eight Indians, eleven squaws and pappooses, including Wah-uem- than whom a more depraved and cruel Indian never existed, even in Ari- zona. Two nights afterward a squad of the Twenty-thir- infantry, Crook's own reg- iment, under Lieut. Huyl, a splendid young fellow, who has since left the service, was sent out on a scout with the usual orders. No trace of the renegades was found, but a burned ranch and stage station ami a cremated cowboy gave suf- ficient evidence of Indians ut large. The next nifiht, or rather just at dawn, after a long iiu l fatiguing march, the sco'tts reai hi d a natural rin k basin at the foot of one of the tl epest and most inacces. bible 1:11.4m to bo found in deflate Aj i on:t. This b:ifiiii had often ciUlecti-- a mjiplv of acrid water, which, however, wan tirirkublu enough iu that country. A thiu vajMij- of umukit front a nearly rpeiil lirti ciiiiviiii'iil lUu lroomi that Hair nighf man u had not biu iu vain, Ulid nit creej ilig up 1 I'liwe us polliii llio hiwlili' with outlined utfuitu't tUu I'ocUn, filil aln p, 'J ho liUlu sqUlldl'iill till till) ib pluVnl mil ho in to UVoid mli-dl- l U I lli.-il- o klii't, IMPORTERS AND DEALERS IN Groceries, Provisions and Feed, EAST CORNER FORT AND KING STREETS. his im;i,.;iii;.'i' :i m: ! i ut t.!i,, the irr.'t-ir.- t, gnashed their iv.'t- - " dvlh in rage at the v.ita ef l;ic nil heathen. They were iciLvvl at !;..f. by the Brriv.-.- of Lieut, li'nyl, who bore in hi h.iiid a new target ride, received only the d..y before the KcutiM t.wrtml. This wolidt rful ,".usl M'.n gnanirit '"d to curry I I'd''.',' t I.IOi) ya.--V wi-.- mid lhi' lienie iant, win) was o::? of the lHwt in vhe w.rl 1 iu ;.1"ti'. but quite cold lu nrled and blood- thirsty where Apaches were concerned, annomieeJ tliitt while lio was doubtful of his gun carrying near the Indian, yet he was going to try. The Apache, feeling seem-- against their earbiue.-t- continued his taunts until Huyl, taking deliberate aim. with sights raised fir 1,000 ynrJs, fired. His aim was 1nie, and the gun nil (hat it was bon-siei- The old savage plunged faeo forward over the ledge, and cm:ilied down tho rocky mount ain side nt the very feet of his slayer. The attention of the soldiers waa now directed lo tho pappoose tho subject of this sketch. That interesting infant still calmly occupied the ledge aud was evidently turning the situation over in his mind. The troopers, with Lieut. Huyl at their head, slowly and painfully clambered up tho rocks and finally ap- proached tho orphan, who, instead of squalling as a civilized Christian child would have done, commenced throwing stones at his pursuers, hitting Lieu!:. Huyl squarely on the nixse with a half pound rock and drawingblood copioudy. He followed this success by other geo 1 throws, causing as nearly a panic as pos- sible. At last, by flanking him, our Apache was knocked down by a blow from a saber and stunned. His capture was now easy, but the lieutenant's or- ders were to return no prisoners. "What shall wo do with the little devil!'" .".sited one cf the men. "Shoot him or throw him over the cliff after his father?' Tho "little devil" had re- gained consciousness by this time, and deliberately set his teeth into the calf of the soldier's leg. Lieut. Ilnyl wiped his bloody nose and replied: "A baby vvlio fights this way ought not to bo killed in cold blood.. By George, I'll take him back to 5an Carlos if it costs me my commission I" A gag was put into tho young one's mouth to prevent any more biting, and with a soldier holding each hand ho was landed on the plain below. There ho was placed on horseback, a lariat tied to ono'foot, passed under tho horce and tii d to the oilier, and thus the troopersi re- turned to tho reservation. Lient..IIuyl was a great favorite with Gen. Crook, but he had disobeyed or- ders and confidently expected to be put under arrest. But the general had al- ready heard something of the stone throwing affair, and had enjoyed a hearty laugh over Hnyl's broken nose. When the lieutenant in making Ins re- port reached the point where Wahnemo was killed the genera! interrnptdd willi, "By the way, I think you had belter not let me know officially any more of this scout than you have already told." Then glancing at the swollen nos-- he burst into a rour of laughter, iu which all the other officers joiued. The young Indian was'confined in the armory until bis first fright was over- come. The soldiers of Company A named him Dick Huyl, and fit ling him out with a uniform fashioned from loo lieutenants' old clothes regularly adapted him into the service. In less than a month the small recruit learned to express himself tolerably in English, and in a very short time had accumulated all tho accomplishments of tobacco chewing aud profanity possessed by the soldiers. He also picked up a wonderful knowledge of bugle calls mid evolutions, always turning out at roll calls and taking his place nt the extreme left of the company when iu line. When 1 first knew him he had been under the refining influences ot the United States service two years. If that Indian had improved in that time lam very glad I did not know him before. He was not beautiful according to classic standards. The Apaches flatten the heads of their babies between boards, and this, as much as anything eke, served to render Dick unattractive to us children. Then he had such a predilection for carrying snakes in his pocket. The soldiers spoiled him, of course, and upheld him in ever)' villainy he chose to perpe! rate. When he shot the mules in an ambu- lance filled with women and children, causing a runaway aud a miaslmp, one soldier thrashed him with a barrel .stave, and a dozen more gave him five cent pieces to comfort liim. They alternate- ly pounded and petted, but it was ail one to him. Ho seidom laughed and uever cried; ho waa an Apache. I said he never cried. I w ill note an exception. Every Saturday afternoon the men took him out behind the quar- ters and gave him a bath. This proLVMi was very simple. They stripped oif his clothing and turned the hmo on him. On these ncea;;ioiu the hhriik i of the lii-tl- u savage could be heard nil over iho post. I have tint seen De k sine-- ' I was 9 years old, but I like to think ' hat he i;ri'W lip uiid r .''.dai ly i :.i : 'i in ihu i. Id refill. ei;l uiid is now nil i to tlm Service- .- "C.e.i.ni-!ieniwi-- in J,' .v Vuik Tribune,. riii i i ;m.i. "Horry, b ar," I .J. I il. V. bm youth, "I I tei M.i'i i i . e..l,e-- . age l i t' l! ) iel li t j.i .t Uiid It. i u ; ili lli't yi ii." r.v, I it." "Al l iiul It ! 11, ,, ill t li 'i' "V.- I r. it. I.. ', I It t,v..i i '. a ! le 1 ' IV, 111" i.i ' U "II iv. i" i I i nasi tr... i ... i i tll. ei. I. " I.. I I ' c, i. .i IKE HE THonOULHBRED JERSEY BUlL r-i .... II U1IA'S KING," Cit"!lr-t.rt- ill .Jersey Herd loakiii 1890. See Jtetfislry Cei'tiliale). Jteeently imported direct from the Island of Jersey iu the ship "Fifushire," Will Stand for a Limited Season .M,V ! At the slables of lion. W. U. Irwin, at Kapiolaul l'aik. The I'edigiee of tins thoroughbred nniinal is ot the line.4 ''Jersey Held Hook" pii.'S as follows: S'RE "Xestor (ilh." No. 1028. lie by Xestor :ird. No. 7'J"i (Sire) ; tiambage, No Oslli (Dam). DAM 'rim's Fet," No. 2501. She by AesMr 2nd, No. nS'.l (Sire) ; Una 2nd, No. I."i.i7 (Dam). I The above registration numbers refer to those given each animal by the "Jersey Herd Hook," to which reference cnu be had on application to the under- signed. " For terms aud further particulars, apply to W. M. (IITFAUD. 48 3m REMEMBER ! WHEN YOU WANT Fistores Fraaed BuDatnO. Curlain 1'oles, Cornices or Window Fittings, Artists' Materials of any kind, sl'l II'AS Etchings, Engravings, Wateicoliirs or 1'astels, I'hoto or Autograph Albums, Wall Brackets, Leather Purses, Bags, Mirrors or Easels, Etc., CiO TO KING BUOS., I lotel HI cotit . Who devote their whole atten- tion to the Picture Ffimiiig & Art Gtifeds Business Vv'itli 12 years' experience. If you want something nice to send away, got one of their 4 ' ouvenir of Hawaii," A collection of .00 Choice Hawaiian Views done in photogravures. Price, if 1.00. 71 1 m S:.. ee,silS. e i CO CO 1IC mum rim PRM!" Cjui 45 ILf5.. nidw i .it KASii--: ikV mm, ailin g ra FOli T STREET. 7 tf 37o. S. The 1'.- -t "iVt.ii v biood noisnn of scrofula ijnvj lops in the delicuto tissms ir Hie i r:i:,i, niciiial Tve Knes-e- s nun infirmities, iitii.cv mid insanity. It en- i'lrees tin) claiii'sof the til out, impairs 'he, seiise oi smell am! tius'o or breaks. Inlo ei.n tin.::' ; nice s on iho n ck. It if stmyi tile I 1.., i r liiis them with tulnTculoiiH t' I", 'iocs 1' cit away ho (iialiie.r ot' Hi stiiniiich, nila ges I he liver, i In; s li.h ki buys, crc.tes roimiipatlon in. il ii.;!-.ei.- pile , No hnnmii ion ney Can n spe. iiuy, ptr " "Oy mid eeiiiiiiniieiiily cleaiisi) tin i"f H. I'jf'ilo'H I i.l oil, rlenr till , ..vinii mid si. in, w ii'l" aiiil I I I'tiUl'i IU1 .. 't, the lui.il I .nhi. r. i niev's HsaOing Soap l! , !. " ' '....l '!,!, fit f.tlr Ii .1 .1. I e ' Ul I i ,!,, ' t, i 111 ''I KlllU-K- f ,.. ,,: I: ei UJltlUllli. New Goods received by every packet from Eastern States and Europe, Fresh California Produce by every steamer. All orders faithfully attended to and Goods, delivered to any part of the city freo of charge. Island orders solicited. Satisfaction guaranteed. 1 owiiRaifMMa Telephones, No. 119.- ias. Hustaco, ling Street Having leased the stores in the brick building known as the "Lincoln Block," nearly opposite the old stand, and having disposed of that portion of my stock damaged by the late lire, and being in receipt of New Goods per last steamer, and more on the way, I am prepared to till all orders as before.- - Thanking the public for the liberal patronage bestowed on nie for the past seven years, I hope by prompt attention to all orders to merit a continuance of the same. At the new stand shall be pleased to see all my old cus- tomers, and as many new ones as may find it to their advantage to call. Island orders solicited and faithfully executed. CHAS. MUSTACE. 1 Telephone 240.- - LEWIS & CO,, 111 Fort Street, HONOLULU, II. I., Importers, Wholesale & Retail Dealers in Groceries & Provisions, -- O.X By each sleauier of the O. S. ,S. Co. froifl California fresh California Roll Butter, Frozen Oysters and Fresh California Fruits, Fish, Game, Vegetables, etc., etc. A complete line of Crosse & Blackwell's Sc J. T. Morton's Canned & Botllt d Goods always on band. Also, just received a fresh line of German Paten ami rotted Meats and Buttled IVi'served Fruits, Lewis & Co.'s Maltese Brand Sugar Cured Hams and Bacon, New Breakfast Cereals, Cream Oat Flakes and Cream Wheat Flakes, Sicily Lemons and California Riverside Oranges, Oregon Bui hauk 1'utatuos, Etc., Etc., Etc. Satisfaction guaranteed. CASTLE ijiioi'ti';i. Shipping & Commission Merchants, I'IjA NTATION & l.VSUItAMJK AUK NTH, -- i.kihh i HONOLULU IRON WORKS, Uuuolula, I I H I. Steam Kuiiieii, Sugar Mills', Boilers, t'oolro; Iron, iiu ami Lead I'asllii;;; ll.ii liiiii i v of every description made lo nidi r. J'ai'lli'ulai' Hlli'iitiou paid to hliip'n ltliirkiiiillilng. .lull Wink ill hull iioliiu. l'l Tt I. WALK Kit, (y'ltltl ' ''! Ill' ll tlllltf, III irk, M'lir Mini U'ltmli'li llldlillii)f fll-l- n ili yhi li, I l ine ill y W in k mill .liilj-,,n- y ii i di d In. 'i Kiii) t. rt( Dunn-jti- !, Jii i. I. jlii.lil'lur U Ul lr. ..Ml-:i(Si)N i. rl i .in ilii i lit No, t.l.M nll n. lu l l Il I Hi krl ' tin im I l.llin i, tl.MU.i U n II M . 4 In .S I' M I"HII i.i., ui.iM4.ji .. ill . im.ii. S.i. , lll.i llll Mu. b fvill.ui U tut Builders' and General Hardware, Agricultural Implements, IM.A M I I IIIV l U'l'l.l lit. C ii,i iiler', Mm ksinillis', Machinist' 4 i'luinbi'M' i'ooU, IIOUSH FURNISHING GOODS ! kill' III II I'd llill.i, I l '. VnrliH-l.ru- , Lump Omnia Mild (mmh-iii- I iM itiftiillM (Jlake'ij Steam Pumps, Weioa'i CoKir:Iial4, Ci!)th, & iiuuiofitoD Sewing Maclilnes, Dr. J.tjcc 4 Sods Paslli Mltlm Meat Company M KINO STKKKT, G. J. WALLER, - Manager. Wholes! ft Retail Butchers A N- ONA VV CONTHACTOUS. i i"l Ht tile Wold i f lullllli.lll.l 111. 1, kill UH lii'illy eieiy mie nf l ' Imh .ua, ' 'Jin uli.-- J.;. 1 i... tiW I') I'm ! lit' I'i'i'. Jii' 'i.'.v lw uiiiiUH ivi im i n'lih tuii mil ii4)f.ir ' nl 4 lii is lll.t-- J llig li o ii.ii J. ! ; iii.rf M lliiti..iiiiiiiiK' .. tint.? o u Us i.! li i i .it . i I I t. i. i, ' . .. I i i I i ji iiu.i I il i,i; .' .1 I . f! . . i ii ' U i "X H '' I I u, li. ' I li.ii i. l 4vU HUi l mi-- IM Ui4uiil IU VttMf l.aU.iSii'R & CO.. D ' ,11 U4 .' 1 1,1,1 .le. i Ai'liU,

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Page 1: p ji III f

.9

if L j la to

$1 J II p j vi 1 ,'if 1s4 ifH ji III 44 f' )

Vol. XV. No. '?. HONOLULU, il. 1., FRIDAY EVENING, AVUL 21, LS91. 0 OENISUbHOHIPTIOn

PtR MONTH

it1 Mi) ' nm v niL . nni'M 0 ansffrxiiniii. . i ... i .i Ik G. Irwin Cooipauy,JUOGE NOT. SPECIAL SELECTED

Jersey Stock !

THE ADELINE BUCK STOCKINGS !

NOW FOll

N. S. SACHS',10 4Fort St., : : : : Honolulu.

Adeline Black Stockings !

Are guaranteed to be'fast black, will not stain or crock, nor discolor thewater when washing, they are soft and pliant.

For Ladies, Misses and Children.Also, in (ilenllenien's Socks.

CALL FOR THE "ADELINE BLACK STOCKING" FOR

SALE ONLY AT THE

POPULAR MILLINERY HOUSE. .

101 Fort Street, Honolulu.

Telephones, No. 175.- -

OFFER AT BED

'ALIFORNIA HAY, OATS, BRAN,OIL CAKE MEAL, LINSEED MEAL,

BARLEY, ROLLED BARLEY,MIDDLING GROUND BARLEY

WHEAT AND CORN FLOUR.

FLOUR ISAlta, Golden Gate & Salinas --m FLOUR

-- IS l'CJHUSHEU- -

Eviry Afternoon Except Sundays

At tin Olllee, Queen street, Hunuliiltla. i.

ARTHUR JOHNSTONE. ...EditoiDANIEL LOGAN .Manage!

-- FOK TIIK- -

Daiiy Bulletin Publishing Company,(Limited )

Ml'HKCItlPTlOX:Daily Bui.i-Ktin- , 1 year 86 00

" " (i months 3 00" " monthper (de-

livered) 50

Weekly Bulletin Summary, 1

year 5 00

foretell. 00

-- illh l'rl-l'- No. nan. --e

JsaJr" Address all business eommiinlca-tiou- sDaily Bulletin."

t3fAd(livss all matter for publica-tion "Euitok Daily Bulletin."I'. O. It..x N. Iloiiolii'.n. II. I.

DRS. BKODIB & FURRY,Physicians. Oll'ice: 81 Bere-aui- a

street, Honolulu, 11. 1.

I M. MONSARRAT,J Attorney at Law and Notary

Public. Mercliaut street, Honolulu.

ALFRED MAGOON,T Attorney at Law and NotaryPublic. No. 'l Merchant street, Hono-lulu.

DAVID DAYTON (Kewiki)be iu his private office from

12:30 to 1:30 P. m. Office: 91 Kingstreet, (up stairs).

HW. Schmidt & Sons,importers & Commission Mer-

chants. Fort street, Honolulu.

HHACKFELD & CO.,Commission Agents.

Corner Fort and Queen streets, hono-lul- u,

fl. I.

GW Macfarlanb & CO.,importers and Commission

Merchants. Queen street, Honolulu,H. i.

GONSALVES & CO.,Grocers and Wine

Merchants. Beaver Block, Honolulu,H. i.

T. WATERHOTJSE,JOHNimporter uud Dealer in GeneralMerchandise. Queen street, Honolulu,H. I.

CASTLE & COOKE,and Commission Mer-

chants. Importers and Dealers in Gen-

eral Merchandise. No 80 King street,Honolulu.

7 ILDER & CO.,Vl Dealers in Lumber, Paints,

Oils, Nails, Salt and Building Materialsof every kind. Corner Fort aud Queenstreets, Honolulu.

1 ewers & Cooke,j Importers aud Dealers in Lum-ber and all kinds of Building Materials.Fort street, Honolulu.

C. BREWER & CO..(I.I.UITKO),

General MercantileAND

Commission Agentslist of officers :

P. C. Jones, Jr. . . . President & ManagerJ. O. Carter Treasurer & Secretary

directors:Hon. C. K. Bishop. S. C. Allen,

il. Waterhouse.

CASTLE & COOKE,laroKTKKM,

Hardware, Shipping

Commission MerchantsDE A LICKS IN

General Merchandise !

Plantation AtjanU,Life, fire & Marine

Inturane Age j'i.1J HONOLULU, II. I. 91

P. 0. Box 145.- -

SALE AT

-- Cor. Edinburg & Queen Sts.

COhat &tm

ROCK TRICES

Telephone No. 92.

E Ei BRO.,

-- r. O. Box 372.

-- P. O. Box 297.

ICJ10- -

& COOKE.

s.

(I.imiti:i.)offer for sale '

JLiinio Ac Cement,PARAFFINE PAINT CO.'S

COMPOUNDS and ROOFING,

REED'S PATENT

Felt Steam Pipe Covering, all sizes.

FERTILIZERS :

WOOL DUST,BONE MEAL,

FISH GUANO,

ALSO

BUCK & OHIiAJNDT'3

High Grade Chemical Cane Manors.

GRASS SEEDS :

COCKSFOOT,RYE GRASS

And CLOVERS.

Refined Sugars,Fairbank Canning Co.'s Corned

Beef, 1 and 2 lb. tins.

SALMON IN .BARRELS.

Baldwin LocGinouves.

The undersigned having been appointedsole agents fur the Hawaiian

Islands

For the Celebrated

From the works of

Barham, Parry, Williams & Co.,

Philadelphia, I'enn.,Are now prepared to give estimates andreceive orders lor these engines, ofsize and style.

The Baldwin Locomotive Worksare now manufacturing a style of Loco-motive particularly adapted

For Plantation Purposes,

A number of which have recently beenreceived at these Islands, and we willhave pleasure in furnishing plantationagents and managers with particularsof same.

The superiority of these Locomotivesover all other makes is not only knownhere but is acknowledged throughoutthe United States.

Win. O. IIIWIN & Co., Ld,Sole Agents for Hawaiian Islands.

fi g. mwm & GO,

(LIMITED.)

Wm. G. Irwin. .. ..President & ManagerClans Spreckels nt

Walter M. OiffardSecretary & Treasurer

Theo. C. Torter Auditor

SUGAll FACTORS

Commission Agents.AGENTS OF TUB

Of man i'ranrlNvo, Cal.

STEAM GAIDI PiClOHA.:S1 liAli-JKltV- .

F. iiOKN,Practical Coufceliuuer, Pastry Cook Jt

Baker.

71 Hotel St. -- Jtir Telephone 74.lil

Metropolitan

JudcP not; the workings of hl brataAn.J or hi heart tliiui canst not aeu;

What loolu to thy dim eyes a ttaiula OoU's pure giffht may only b

A war, brought from some well woo Add,Where tlioa woulJst only faint and yield.

The look, the air, that frets thy BluntMay Im. a token that bolow

Tlie soul hH cloned in deadly fihtWith some J fiery foo,

Whose Klaaoe would scorcli thy anilllns graeo.And caxl toee slmikierlnR on thy fucel

9And Judge none lot, but waft and soa,

With hopeful pity, not din. lain;The depth of the abyss may be

The measure of the height of painAnd love and glory that may raiseTliin soul to Ood in after days!

-- A. A. Proctor

DICK IIUYL

The writer owes to Dick Huyl a debt,not exactly of gratitude, as the storywill demonstrate, which she, by writinffhis biography, seeks to discharge. DickHnyl's history will never be written byme, nor by any one else who knew him,to alorn a Sundcy ehool library; howas not that kind of a boy. Dick wasan Apache Indian, with all the character-istics of total depravity that the wordApache conveys or suggests. We werechildren together. Dick and 1. We lived,fought and played together for two yearsin the same army post. On one memor-able occasion, Dick, instigated by thedevil for 1 firmly believe in the devil,if only for Apaches dropped down theneck of my. frock a live toad. It wasthe cause of my first fit of hysterics, andI determined, if 1 ever grew old enough,I would tell the whole world how bad ayoung Apache could bo.

In 1872. if 1 remember rightly, Gen.Crook had succeeded, after years ofbloody war and the loss of hundreds ofgood men. in subduing most of the bandscomposing the Apache nation of NewMexico and Arizona. They had dweltin the strongholds of mountain anddesert, from which they frequentlyemerged to rob and murder all minersor emigrants that thoy could ambush,leaving nothing for the human mind toconceive of in the way of cruelly when-ever a white man fell into their power.

At the reservation, although they werowell fed and quite decently treated, itwas necessary to watch them constant-ly, und large bodies of troops were

for that purpose. Nevertheless,scarcely a week paused but a small squadof Apaches, usually led by some attract-ive squaw, would slip quietly past theguards and escape through the darknessinto their beloved cactus plains audmountain barrens. Roll call nearly everymorning developed these absentees, andnext day would come news of murder,rapine and horrors generally. A favoriteApache mode of disposing of the unsus-pecting freighter, miner or emigrantwhose camp they had succeeded in raid-ing, was to tie the victim by the fourlimbs to stakes, and then to build a fireon that portion of his body designatedin the old fashioned almanacs as "virgo."

There seemed to be something par-ticularly fjtscinatiug to the Apache tem-perament in this form of torture. Deathbeing loug in coming, it gave the squawsand pappooses plenty of chance to inventsmall torments, on the side, as it were.The women and children emigrantsbut enough. Suffice it to Bay that theabsolute hatred entertained by these In-

dians for the whites was fully recipro-cated, especially by the soldiers. It wasno easy matter to track and eaccessfullyfollow the runaways through ae cactusand mesquit thickats, over 'the barrendeserts and deso&te mountains thatmake up the topography of Arizona.But in that parched country water isonly to be found at certain springs and"water holes," between which days oftravel often intorvene, but which areequally well known to soldiers and toIndians.

So when the morning report showedto Gen. Crook that so many warriors,squaws and pappooses were missing, thegrim old warrior would make no sign ofpursuit, but on the night following, orperhaps the next one, a squadron ofmounted men would file silently out ofthe reservation bearing orders to moveas rapidly as possible to the water holeof Palo E'into, or to Agna GrandeSpring, or to some other place wherethe presence of the precious fluid favoreda camping place for the renegades. Thetroops were always positively instructedto bring back no prisoners, all mattersof detail being left to the officers in com-mand. One June morning there was re-

ported missing eight Indians, elevensquaws and pappooses, including Wah-uem-

than whom a more depraved andcruel Indian never existed, even in Ari-

zona.Two nights afterward a squad of the

Twenty-thir- infantry, Crook's own reg-iment, under Lieut. Huyl, a splendidyoung fellow, who has since left theservice, was sent out on a scout with theusual orders. No trace of the renegadeswas found, but a burned ranch and stagestation ami a cremated cowboy gave suf-

ficient evidence of Indians ut large. Thenext nifiht, or rather just at dawn, aftera long iiu l fatiguing march, the sco'ttsreai hi d a natural rin k basin at the footof one of the tl epest and most inacces.bible 1:11.4m to bo found in deflate Aj i

on:t. This b:ifiiii had often ciUlecti-- amjiplv of acrid water, which, however,wan tirirkublu enough iu that country.A thiu vajMij- of umukit front a nearlyrpeiil lirti ciiiiviiii'iil lUu lroomi thatHair nighf man u had not biu iu vain,Ulid nit creej ilig up 1 I'liwe us polliiillio hiwlili' with outlined utfuitu't tUuI'ocUn, filil aln p,

'J ho liUlu sqUlldl'iill till till) ib pluVnlmil ho in to UVoid mli-dl- l U I lli.-il- o klii't,

IMPORTERS AND DEALERS IN

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

his im;i,.;iii;.'i' :i m: ! i ut t.!i,,the irr.'t-ir.- t,

gnashed their iv.'t- -" dvlh in

rage at the v.ita ef l;ic nil heathen.They were iciLvvl at !;..f. by the Brriv.-.-

of Lieut, li'nyl, who bore in hi h.iiid anew target ride, received only the d..ybefore the KcutiM t.wrtml.

This wolidt rful ,".usl M'.n gnanirit '"dto curry I I'd''.',' t I.IOi) ya.--V wi-.-

mid lhi' lienie iant, win) was o::?of the lHwt in vhe w.rl 1 iu ;.1"ti'.

but quite cold lu nrled and blood-thirsty where Apaches were concerned,annomieeJ tliitt while lio was doubtfulof his gun carrying near the Indian,yet he was going to try. The Apache,feeling seem-- against their earbiue.-t-

continued his taunts until Huyl, takingdeliberate aim. with sights raised fir1,000 ynrJs, fired. His aim was 1nie,and the gun nil (hat it was bon-siei-

The old savage plunged faeo forwardover the ledge, and cm:ilied down thorocky mount ain side nt the very feet ofhis slayer.

The attention of the soldiers waa nowdirected lo tho pappoose tho subject ofthis sketch. That interesting infantstill calmly occupied the ledge aud wasevidently turning the situation over inhis mind. The troopers, with Lieut.Huyl at their head, slowly and painfullyclambered up tho rocks and finally ap-

proached tho orphan, who, instead ofsqualling as a civilized Christian childwould have done, commenced throwingstones at his pursuers, hitting Lieu!:.Huyl squarely on the nixse with a halfpound rock and drawingblood copioudy.He followed this success by other geo 1

throws, causing as nearly a panic as pos-

sible. At last, by flanking him, ourApache was knocked down by a blowfrom a saber and stunned. His capturewas now easy, but the lieutenant's or-

ders were to return no prisoners."What shall wo do with the little

devil!'" .".sited one cf the men. "Shoothim or throw him over the cliff after hisfather?' Tho "little devil" had re-

gained consciousness by this time, anddeliberately set his teeth into the calf ofthe soldier's leg. Lieut. Ilnyl wiped hisbloody nose and replied: "A baby vvlio

fights this way ought not to bo killed incold blood.. By George, I'll take himback to 5an Carlos if it costs me mycommission I"

A gag was put into tho young one'smouth to prevent any more biting, andwith a soldier holding each hand ho waslanded on the plain below. There howas placed on horseback, a lariat tied toono'foot, passed under tho horce and tii dto the oilier, and thus the troopersi re-

turned to tho reservation.Lient..IIuyl was a great favorite with

Gen. Crook, but he had disobeyed or-

ders and confidently expected to be putunder arrest. But the general had al-

ready heard something of the stonethrowing affair, and had enjoyed ahearty laugh over Hnyl's broken nose.When the lieutenant in making Ins re-

port reached the point where Wahnemowas killed the genera! interrnptdd willi,"By the way, I think you had belter notlet me know officially any more of thisscout than you have already told."Then glancing at the swollen nos-- heburst into a rour of laughter, iu whichall the other officers joiued.

The young Indian was'confined in thearmory until bis first fright was over-come. The soldiers of Company Anamed him Dick Huyl, and fit ling himout with a uniform fashioned from loolieutenants' old clothes regularly adaptedhim into the service.

In less than a month the small recruitlearned to express himself tolerably inEnglish, and in a very short time hadaccumulated all tho accomplishments oftobacco chewing aud profanity possessedby the soldiers. He also picked up awonderful knowledge of bugle calls midevolutions, always turning out at rollcalls and taking his place nt the extremeleft of the company when iu line.

When 1 first knew him he had beenunder the refining influences ot theUnited States service two years. If thatIndian had improved in that time lamvery glad I did not know him before.He was not beautiful according to classicstandards.

The Apaches flatten the heads of theirbabies between boards, and this, as muchas anything eke, served to render Dickunattractive to us children. Then hehad such a predilection for carryingsnakes in his pocket. The soldiersspoiled him, of course, and upheld himin ever)' villainy he chose to perpe! rate.When he shot the mules in an ambu-lance filled with women and children,causing a runaway aud a miaslmp, onesoldier thrashed him with a barrel .stave,and a dozen more gave him five centpieces to comfort liim. They alternate-ly pounded and petted, but it was ailone to him. Ho seidom laughed anduever cried; ho waa an Apache.

I said he never cried. I w ill note anexception. Every Saturday afternoonthe men took him out behind the quar-ters and gave him a bath. This proLVMiwas very simple. They stripped oif hisclothing and turned the hmo on him.On these ncea;;ioiu the hhriik i of the lii-tl- u

savage could be heard nil over ihopost.

I have tint seen De k sine-- ' I was 9

years old, but I like to think ' hat hei;ri'W lip uiid r .''.dai ly i :.i : 'i in ihui. Id refill. ei;l uiid is now nil i to tlmService- .- "C.e.i.ni-!ieniwi-- in J,' .v VuikTribune,.

riii i i ;m.i."Horry, b ar," I .J. I il. V.

bm youth, "I I tei M.i'i i i . e..l,e-- .age l i t' l! ) iel li t j.i .tUiid It. i u ;

ili lli't yi ii."r.v, I it."

"Al l iiul It ! 11, ,, ill t li 'i'"V.- I r. it. I.. ', I It

t,v..i i

'. a ! le 1 ' IV, 111" i.i '

U "IIiv. i" i I i

nasi tr... i ... i i

tll. ei. I. "I.. I I '

c, i. .i

IKE HE THonOULHBRED JERSEY BUlL

r-i.... II

U1IA'S KING,"Cit"!lr-t.rt- ill .Jersey Herd loakiii 1890.

See Jtetfislry Cei'tiliale).

Jteeently imported direct from the Islandof Jersey iu the ship "Fifushire,"

Will Stand for a Limited Season

.M,V !

At the slables of lion. W. U. Irwin, atKapiolaul l'aik.

The I'edigiee of tins thoroughbrednniinal is ot the line.4 ''Jersey HeldHook" pii.'S as follows:

S'RE "Xestor (ilh." No. 1028. lieby Xestor :ird. No. 7'J"i (Sire) ; tiambage,No Oslli (Dam).

DAM 'rim's Fet," No. 2501. Sheby AesMr 2nd, No. nS'.l (Sire) ; Una 2nd,No. I."i.i7 (Dam).

I The above registration numbersrefer to those given each animal by the"Jersey Herd Hook," to which referencecnu be had on application to the under-signed.

" For terms aud further particulars,apply to

W. M. (IITFAUD.48 3m

REMEMBER !

WHEN YOU WANT

Fistores Fraaed BuDatnO.

Curlain 1'oles,Cornices or Window Fittings,Artists' Materials of any kind,

sl'l II'AS

Etchings, Engravings,Wateicoliirs or 1'astels,I'hoto or Autograph Albums,Wall Brackets, Leather Purses,Bags, Mirrors or Easels, Etc.,

CiO TO

KING BUOS.,I lotel HI cotit .

Who devote their whole atten-tion to the

Picture Ffimiiig & Art Gtifeds Business

Vv'itli 12 years' experience.

If you want something nice to sendaway, got one of their

4 ' ouvenir of Hawaii,"A collection of .00 Choice HawaiianViews done in photogravures. Price,if 1.00. 71 1 m

S:.. ee,silS.

e i CO

CO 1IC mum rim PRM!"Cjui

45 ILf5.. nidw

i .it KASii--: ikV

mm, ailin g raFOli T STREET.

7 tf

37o. S.The 1'.- -t "iVt.ii v biood noisnn of

scrofula ijnvj lops in the delicuto tissmsir Hie i r:i:,i, niciiial Tve Knes-e- s nuninfirmities, iitii.cv mid insanity. It en-

i'lrees tin) claiii'sof the til out, impairs'he, seiise oi smell am! tius'o or breaks.Inlo ei.n tin.::' ; nice s on iho n ck. Itif stmyi tile I 1.., i r liiis them withtulnTculoiiH t' I", 'iocs 1' cit awayho (iialiie.r ot' Hi stiiniiich, nila ges

I he liver, i In; s li.h ki buys, crc.tesroimiipatlon in. il ii.;!-.ei.- pile , Nohnnmii ion ney Can n spe. iiuy, ptr" "Oy mid eeiiiiiiniieiiily cleaiisi) tin

i"f H. I'jf'ilo'H I i.l oil, rlenr till, ..vinii mid si. in, w ii'l" aiiil I

I I'tiUl'i IU1 .. 't, thelui.il I .nhi. r.

i niev's HsaOing Soap

l! , !. " ' '....l '!,!, fit f.tlrIi .1 .1. I e ' Ul

I i ,!,, ' t, i 111 ''I KlllU-K- f,.. ,,: I: ei UJltlUllli.

New Goods received by every packet from Eastern States and Europe,Fresh California Produce by every steamer. All orders faithfully attendedto and Goods, delivered to any part of the city freo of charge. Island orderssolicited. Satisfaction guaranteed. 1

owiiRaifMMa

Telephones, No. 119.-

ias. Hustaco, ling Street

Having leased the stores in the brick building known as the"Lincoln Block," nearly opposite the old stand, and having disposedof that portion of my stock damaged by the late lire, and beingin receipt of New Goods per last steamer, and more on the way, Iam prepared to till all orders as before.- - Thanking the public forthe liberal patronage bestowed on nie for the past seven years, Ihope by prompt attention to all orders to merit a continuance of thesame. At the new stand shall be pleased to see all my old cus-tomers, and as many new ones as may find it to their advantage tocall. Island orders solicited and faithfully executed.

CHAS. MUSTACE.1

Telephone 240.- -

LEWIS & CO,, 111 Fort Street,HONOLULU, II. I.,

Importers, Wholesale & Retail Dealers in Groceries & Provisions,-- O.X

By each sleauier of the O. S. ,S. Co. froifl California fresh California RollButter, Frozen Oysters and Fresh California Fruits, Fish, Game, Vegetables,etc., etc. A complete line of Crosse & Blackwell's Sc J. T. Morton's Canned& Botllt d Goods always on band. Also, just received a fresh line of GermanPaten ami rotted Meats and Buttled IVi'served Fruits, Lewis & Co.'s MalteseBrand Sugar Cured Hams and Bacon, New Breakfast Cereals, Cream OatFlakes and Cream Wheat Flakes, Sicily Lemons and California RiversideOranges, Oregon Bui hauk 1'utatuos, Etc., Etc., Etc. Satisfaction guaranteed.

CASTLEijiioi'ti';i.

Shipping & Commission Merchants,I'IjA NTATION & l.VSUItAMJK AUK NTH,

-- i.kihh i

HONOLULU IRON WORKS,Uuuolula, I I H I.

Steam Kuiiieii, Sugar Mills', Boilers,t'oolro; Iron, iiu ami Lead I'asllii;;;ll.ii liiiii i v of every description made lonidi r. J'ai'lli'ulai' Hlli'iitiou paid tohliip'n ltliirkiiiillilng. .lull Wink

ill hull iioliiu. l'l

Tt I. WALK Kit,

(y'ltltl ' ''! Ill' ll tlllltf,III irk, M'lir Mini U'ltmli'li llldlillii)f fll-l- n

ili yhi li, I l ine ill y W in k mill .liilj-,,n- y

ii i di d In. 'i Kiii) t. rt( Dunn-jti- !,

Jii i. I. jlii.lil'lur U Ul

lr. ..Ml-:i(Si)N

i. rl i .in ilii i lit No, t.l.M nlln. lu l l Il I Hi krl ' tin im I l.llin i,tl.MU.i U n II M . 4 In .S I' M I"HII

i.i., ui.iM4.ji .. ill . im.ii. S.i., lll.i llll Mu. b fvill.ui

U tut

Builders' and General Hardware, Agricultural Implements,

IM.A M I I IIIV lU'l'l.l lit.C ii,i iiler', Mm ksinillis', Machinist' 4 i'luinbi'M' i'ooU,

IIOUSH FURNISHING GOODS !

kill' III II I'd llill.i, I l ' . VnrliH-l.ru- , Lump Omnia Mild

(mmh-iii- I iM itiftiillM(Jlake'ij Steam Pumps, Weioa'i CoKir:Iial4,

Ci!)th, & iiuuiofitoD Sewing Maclilnes,

Dr. J.tjcc 4 Sods Paslli Mltlm

Meat CompanyM KINO STKKKT,

G. J. WALLER, - Manager.

Wholes! ft Retail ButchersA N-

ONA VV CONTHACTOUS.

i i"l Ht tile Wold i f lullllli.lll.l 111. 1, killUH lii'illy eieiy mie nf l ' Imh .ua,

' 'Jin uli.-- J.;. 1 i...

tiW I') I'm ! lit' I'i'i'. Jii' 'i.'.v lwuiiiiUH ivi im i n'lih tuii mil ii4)f.ir

' nl 4 lii is lll.t-- J llig li o ii.ii J. !

; iii.rf M lliiti..iiiiiiiiK' .. tint.? o

u Us i.! li i i .it . i I

I t. i. i,'

. .. I i i I

i ji iiu.i I i l i,i; .' .1 I . f! . . i ii

' U i "X H '' I I u, li. ' I li.ii i. l

4vU HUi l mi-- IM Ui4uiil IU VttMf

l.aU.iSii'R & CO..D ',11

U4 .' 1 1,1,1 .le. i Ai'liU,

Page 2: p ji III f

BY AUTHORITYTHE MUTUAL LIFE INSURANCE 00. OF NEW WL

JtllllAltl A. JIf CI IUV. i I'Mtiift'ihi.

who is attempting to secure sufficientinfluence with native Hawaiians tosell them out, if the chance offers,at the next election. To whom will

they sell out? 'To the first' who offera consideration. Patriotism' bah!

patriotism is not in it!

Issues Every Desirable Form of Policy !

It has paidits members since its organization THREE HUNDRED AND FOUR MILLIONS OF DOLIARS.Its New Distribution Policy is the most liberal ever offered by any Insurance Company.

I& For full particulars apply to

N. 11. liOSK,l"'1 General Agent for the Hawaiian Islands.

25 Heifers in calf from milkingstock.

The bidders have the privilege of

bidding for single lots or for thewhole, the Board reserving the rightto apportion the cattle bid for.

The Board will assist in receivingcattle on the beach at Kalaupapa,free of charge, but will not assumeany responsibility.

The Board of Health does not bind

itself to accept the lowest or any bid.DAVID DAYTON,

President ot the Board of Health.90 lOt

Sale of Government Land nearHaaliliamanu Bridge.

LlawaiiaLi Jockey Cluu PACIFIC HARDYARE CO., L'd.,Fort Street,

"ZEPHYRS" WORK fHEM.

Just think of a twelve-foo- t Aerino-to-rrunning a'six-inc- h pump and till-

ing a thirteen hundred gallon tank inless than an hour! Do you know ofany other wind motor that will dothis? We try to keep posted on suchthings but fail to lind anything inwind History Unit even approachesthis record. The mills we speak offorce water five hundred feet and ele-

vate it twenty-fiv- e hard to believeisn't it, but it's a fact. They are asstrong as the strongest material andgood workmanship can make themand cheaper than any other mill onthe market, two points of excellencein their favor.

Another thing in their construc-tion, or mechanism, whichever youprefer, is the fact of their being madeso that they will not fall to pieces bybeing overworked. They make threerevolutions and pump once. Thestrain is not all put on the wheel ateach revolution, it is equally dividedand consequently the wheel lastslonger than the ordinary run of windmills. We are not afraid to talk nboutthe Aermotors now that they havebeen tried and proved satisfactoryright here at home. We have had topublish testimonials from parties at adistance because Aermotors were newhere and had not been tried, but nowthat we have sold so many and every-one has been satisfactory to the pur-chaser we can get on all right by re-

ferring parties to those people whohave tried them here. We continueadvertising them because they arestill a comparatively new thing on theIslands before long they will notneed a tingle notice in the newspapersbecause- they will sell themselves. Wewant people to try them and if theyare wrecked in a wind which does notlevel your house at the same time wewill refund the money. A bold offerbut it is a way we have of doing busi-ness. We know they are strongenough to warrant our guaranteeingIhcin, and that one wili probably lastlonger than the purchaser will haveany use for it. If you want a wind-mill remember that the Aermotoreoldliy us is cheaper, stronger and betterthan any windmill on the market andwill do more work than any wind-mot-

ever invented. For sale onlyby the Hawaiian Hardware Company,Fort street, opposite Spreckels' Block,Honolulu.

New Goods ! Just Received !

Cut, Blown and Etched Glassware I

Tumblers, Goblet, Wines, Sherries, Decanters, Claret Bottles,Etc., Etc., Decorated & Plain Toilet Sets, a line assortment ; aselection of "Minion's" Earthenware, Scraper Mats. New lines of

I3irtiir5 1Y1 on 1 cling m gjPicture Framing in all its branches, Winsor & Newton's Colors, Oil Paint-ings, Photogravures, Artotypes, Etc., Etc., Sisnl & Manila Rope, Magging& Wrapping Twines, Market Baskets, Sauce Pans, Fry Pans, Tea Kettles,Galvanized Buckets & Tubs, Galvanized & Black Fence Wire & Staplesbest quality ; Vacuum Lubricating Oils,

JvlSItOwEAlS on,.In lots to suit. The very highest test oil in the market.

CYCLONE WIND MILL !

WiT" Inquiry of parties who have used these for years will satisfy youthat they are in EVERY RESPECT THE BEST. A large invoice of

Planet, Jr.. Cultivatoi & Plows, Piantation Supplies, Etc.

LliBlii'SWE HAVE RECEIVED Ex "AUSTRALIA" THE FINEST

ASSORTMENT OF

LUBIN'S PERFUMESDirect from the makers, ever shown in this Kingdom.

In Plain & Cut Glass Containers.ALL SIZES 1 mot&-- ALL PRICES !

o

HOLLISTER & CO..109 Fort Street. : : ; : : : Ilonolnln. II. I.

Honolulu.

Lite AssuranceUnited State?.

& CO.,

OFFICIAL PlUHi UXnilh)FOR

THORSDAYjEQe 11, 1891.

1st Race QUEEN'S PLATE.

Running Race. Mile Dash. Freefor all.

2nd Race FUTURITY STAKES.

Running Race. Sweepstakes $50.Mile Dash for 2 year olds. Ha-

waiian bred. Entries closed on Feb.1, 1891.

3rd Race LUNAMAKAAINANA PLATE.

Trotting and Padua. Hawaiianbred. Best i in 3 to harness. MileHeats.

4th Race PRINCE CONSORT CUP.

Running R i

waiian bred,

5th Race KEALIA STALLION STAKES.

To be run for annually. One MileDa h. Free to all Hawaiian bredhorses; the produce of stallionsowned and kept in the country,whose owners shall subscribe eachyear a sum of Twenty-Fiv- e Dollars,and the payment of Ten Dollars en-

trance. Subscription and entrancemoney to be divided as follows:

Up to $100 to the winner.If more, up to $50 to second horse.If more, up to V50 to third horse,etc., etc.

6th Race WAIMANAL0 PLATE.

Running Race. 1 Mile Dash. Ha-

waiian 4 year olds.

7th Race QUEEN LlLlUOKALANI PLATE.

Running Race. Mile Heats. Best2 in 3 Hawaiian bred.

8th Race KAPI0LANI PARK PLATE.

Trotting and Pacing. Best 3 in 5

to harness. Mile Heats. Free forall.

9th Race R0SITA CHALLENGE CUP.

Running Race. 1 Mile Dash. Freefor all. Winner to beat the recordof "Augie A," 1:454.

10th Race KALAKAUA CUP; formerly Hit

Nlaj.sty Cup.

Running Rare. Mile Dash. Ha-

waiian bred horses owned by mem-bers of the Jockey Club. Cup tobecome the property of the one win-ning It twice.

Wou in 188 by 'Poui Moi "Won in 1887 by "Wonder."Won in 1890 by " Willieluiiiie."

11th Race PRESIDENT CUP.

Running Race. 1! Mile Dash. Freefor all.

12th PLATE.

3 Minute Class. Trotting and Pac-ing. Best 2 in 3 to harness. MileHeats. Open to all horses that havenever beaten 3 minutes.

13th Race OCEANIC STEAMSHIP CO. CUP.

Running Race. Mile Dash. Freefor all 2 year olds.

14th Race JOCKEY CLUB POST MATCH.

Sweepstakes $20. Trotting andPacing. Mile Heats. Best 2 in 3to harness. Free for all. To bedriven by members of the JockeyClub.

15:h Race K4WEHAMEHA PLATE.

Running Race. Mile Dash, Ha-waiian bred.

16th Race PONY RACE.

Running Race. 1 Mile Dash. 14bauds and under. Hawaiian bred.

the executive: commjttke.83 tf

NOTICE TO (S HIPP IS ItS.

Hereafter all freight for LAUPA-IIOEHO- E

will be taken by steamer"Likelike." No piore freight will betaken by the "Kinau" for above port.

WILPJSK'K 8. S. CO..Tun 20 1891 17 tf

THEO.

The EquitableSociety of the

New A8surance.";Written in 1890 $ 203,826 107 00Income 35,036.683 24Surplus (from which dividend will be made) 23,740,447 34

EVENING CLASSES FOR YOU G

MEN.

Editor Bulletin :

The suggestion contained in a let-

ter published in the Bi i.li.tin somedays ago seems a good one. 1 havespoken to several gentlemen on thesubject of instituting evening classesin science for the benefit of youngmen living in Honolulu, who may bedesirous of devoting a few hoursweekly to Every-body seems to think that such a thingis desirable.

I write to invite anybody interest-ed in the idea to meet at the Y. M.J. A. rooms on some evening to be

announced later when we maydiscuss the subject, and, if possible,decide on a plan.

F. M. English.

INDIAN OP.UM TRAFFIC.

London, April 12. The Times,referring to Friday's vote on theopium question in the Commons,thinks the Government will do wellto find an opportunity to settle thequestion whether Parliament is inearnest on the opium question or hasmerely been subject to "a spasm ofcheap Puritanism."

The Standard hopes the Secretaryof Slate for India will refuse to bethe medium of bringing a pressure tobear to plunge India into bankrupt-cy, because 180 out of 070 Common-ers me foolish or weak enough to in-

dorse the demand of a coterie offussy sentimentalists. The Standardfurther says the suppression of theIndian opium traffic simply meansthe additional growth of Chineseopium, and holds that the traffic isno more demoralizing than England'staxing of alcohol and narcotics.

DAD KICKS.

A boy. a girl,A wavy curl

Blown out by the frolicsome wind.A waist, an arm ;

Sure what's the harmIf arm about the waist Is twined?

A dewy kiss,Oh, my what bliss

Alasl boy's pleasure ends in woe:A scream, a shout,A foot lit out,

An impress left of daddy's toe.Om. G.

COINC OUT WITH THE TIDE.

lie was fair as a groom could be,She was a grateful bride;

Crowds of people they went to sea,And all went out w ith the lied.

Philadelphia Times.

PRACT CE VERSUS PREACHINC.

lie taught his wife the sin of dressWith eloquence and power.

And then played billiards all day longAt sixty cents an hour.

Cloak Review.

A COCO REASON.

We do not speak as we pass lvThough neither heart Is broken

For, 'tis a fact I can't deny,We never yet have spoken Pnek.

A LATE LINGERER.

When Winter lingers in the lap of Spring("lis shocking to narrate),

lie's very apt -- the horrid thing!To linger there quite late.

Harvard Lampoon.

ON A HOMELY MAN.

He was so very ugly, thisExtraordinary man,

That when in battle he faced deathDeath tin ned away and ran.

New York Herald.

SHE DID THE REST.

Only a lock of auburn hair( augbt on the front of his vest;

He thoughtlessly touched the button,His wife -- the did the rest!

New York Sun.

CELEBRATIONOK THE

SEVENTY -- SECOND ANNIVERSARY

OK TIIK

Independent Order of Odd Fellows

TO UK HKLI) IN

Harmny Hall, Honolulu,

SUNDAY, April 26th, at 2 p m.

l'ItOGIt.VIiPrayer. By (. haplain

A nniversary Hymn.Heading of Anniversary ProclamationSong "The Three Calls"

iiro. W. O. AtwaterAddress I5ro. J. D. TuckerSong "F arewell Marguerite''

..Miss Alice MeBrydeOration,

The Eiiializiag Tendency of Odd Fol- -lowship on llumanllv... Bio W. K. Ilerrlek

Song Mr. Paul IsenhergRecitation F. M. English, B. A.Song Mr. It. C. Monteagle

Benediction by Chuplain.

W All members of the Order residingin the Kingdom and visiting Brothers,and Msters of the Rebecca Degree, arecordially invited to be present with theirfamilies. 97 2t

Employment Wanteda man used to work in a store.1)Y Can read and write Portuguese,

understands English, and wi'l'ng to been"rnlly useful. Apply at this olHee.

05 3t

tiUAXO for sale;OA TONS of Fanninsr'B Island Guano)U (Phosphates of Lime) for sale.

Apply to74 tf J. S. WALKER.

WORK of all kiuds executedJOB neatness at the Daily Bulletin.

Foreign OlHre Notice.

Regulations, amending those ofFt brnary 21, 1888, fur the control ofChinese Immigration into the

Kingdom :

REGULATIONS.

By virtue of the authority conferredU; on me by an Act entitled "An Actto Regulate Chineso Immigration,"E) proved December 20,1887,1 herebypublish, by and with t lie consent oftl e Cabiuet in Council, the followingli gulutiims:

1. Each application by a Chineser sident in thin Kingdom for a per-

il'., t to enter the Kingdom shall bearcompanied by the applicant's re-

ceipt for taxes for the current year;his passenger ticket; bis CustomTouse passport, and a fee of five dol-

lars. Such applicant shall make itfcppear to the satisfaction of theJiinisterof Foreign All'airs that helias resided within the Kingdom fortwo years, and that he is not a vag-r:in- t,

criminal professional beggar,Vser of opium, or one likely to becomea charge upon the country. The Mill-i- t

ter of Foreign Aflairs may in hisliiscn i ion require from any applicantropies ot photographs showing fullLice and profile views.

2. Applications for permits to be

issued ty Chinese women, childrent.nd families under Section (1 of themid Act, must be accompanied by

u certificate that the women are of

;ood character, or are the wives of

Chinese residents in the Kingdom, or

lhat said children orTamilies aresuchus permits are provided for in saidSection G.

3. Section 9 of said Act is asfollows: "All permits issued underprovisions of this Act are personaland not transferable, and a transferor attempted transfer shall be deemedto be a cancellation and a forfeiture;and the person making or attemptingto make such transfer, and any personaiding or abetting him in so doingbhall be liable on conviction, to a

penalty of Two Hundred Dollars, orto imprisonment for a term not ex-

ceeding six months at hard labor.SAMUEL PARKER,

Minister of Foreign All'airs.Foreign Otlice, Honolulu, April 2.'i,

1891. 90 3t

In accordance with Section 1 ofChapter XXXV. of the Session Lawsof 1888, the Government Pound atKohololoa for the impounding of

in the District of Honolulu, willbe removed on the 30th day of April,1891, to an enclosure situate at thejunction of Pensacola street and thenew Punchbowl road, and oppositetlieMakiki Cemetery, Honolulu, Oahu.

0. N. SPENCER,Minister of the Interior.

Interior Office, April 22, 1891.

Mr. Kalei has lieen appointedpoundmaster for the above Govern-

ment Pound his Commission datingthe 30th day of A pi il, 1891.

90 3t

To Depositors in the HawaiianPostal Savings Bank.

Dkpartment of Finance, )

Honolulu, 11. I., April 9, 1891. J

Notice is hereby given that on ap-

plication at the Treasury, CouponBonds will be issued in denominationsof $1000, $500 and .$100, bearing in-

terest at the rate of Five Per Cent.(5 per cent.) per annum, payablesemi-annuall- Ihese Bonds are is-

sued under the authority of the Act,approved on the 0th day of August,1890, and styled the "Postal SavingsBank Loan."

H. A. W I DEM ANN,Minister of Finance.

91 lm-l- G 4t

Irrigation Notice.

Honolulu, H. I., April 17, 1891.

Holders of Water Privileges orthose paying Water Rates, are herebynotified that the hours for usingwater for irrigating purposes are from6 to 8 o'clock a. m., and 4 to 6 o'clock

JOHN C. WHITE,Supt. Hono. Water Works.

Approved :

C. N. Si'BNCER,

Minister of the Interior.92 tf

SEALED TEM)f KS

Will be received at this office untilTUESDAY, May 5th, at 12 o'clocknoon, for delivery on the beach atKalaupapa, or Leper Settlement, i,

in good condition, on or before

June 5, 1891, the following number of

Beef Cuttle, iz :

100 old Sleere.3)0 old Steers and Heifers,

(one-ha- lf or more to be Heifers j.25 Cows not having had more than

one clf.

An Investment Worth Kr owing About I

On WEDNESDAY, May 0, 1891,

t the front entrance of AliiolaniHale, at 12 o'clock noon, will be sold

at public auction a piece of Govern-

ment land (water lot) on the makaiEwa side of Haaliliamanu Bridge andcontaining an area of 67-1- 00 acresmore or less.

Upset price, $300.C. N. SPENCER,

Minister of the Interior.Interior Ollice, April 2, 1891.

79 4t

On and after this date all adver-tisements of over two inches in lengthmust be handed in at the Bi u ktinOffice before twelve o'clock noon, toinsure publication the same day.All advertisements of less than twoinches must be received by oneo'clock p. m. if intended for publica-tion the same afternoon. No devia-tion will be made from this rule.

Notice is also given that nowill be received, for publi-

cation the same day, after ten o'clocki. m.

Patrons and correspondents willplease make note of this announce-ment, as there will hereafter be nodeviation from the rule of going topress at an established hour, exceptupon extraordinary occasions.

Honolulu, Feb. 23, 1891.

r ii j?".

Pledged to neither Sect nor Party,But established for the. benefit of all.

FRIDAY, APRIL 24, 1891.

Sissy Scissors is not writing for

Ka Leo. The attempted impositionand literary piracy of this morning,by Ka Leo, was ''somewhat Irish"and consequently "less nice," a9

Byron says.

Those who advocate a republic for

Hawaii, and are attempting to bring

this theory before the native publicof these Islands for endorsement,are making a serious mistake. Thereis little or no doubt that these politi-

cal gentlemen, disappointed in not

securing the offices coveted, themarshalship for instance, have deter-

mined upon a hold move, which theyare in hopes will catch public favor.

Suppose the public are favorably im-

pressed by the financial necessitiesof these nondescript gentlemen, who

are vainly endeavoring to get theirpolitical fingers into the fat of a

Government billet are they betterthan the hangers-o- n of the old Re-

form parly?Patriotism is a chi:p political

commodity. A journalist generallysticks to his trade, and it may be

broadly assumed that when a

patriot assumes the lion skin

of journalism to reach an office, lie

is playing a role in which he hopes

to deceive his "dark-skinned- "

brothers, and impose upon his haole

supporters.The National Reform party is a

broader political institution than is,

perhaps, as yet realized. It was

brought into existence by the abuseof cliquism under the revolutionaryadministration. The soreheads of

the National party, like the sore-

heads of the Reform party, are some-

thing very incomprehensible. Be-

tween the two the interests of the

Kingdom would certainly be allowedto go to eternal gras3, as far as any

sacrifice of personal interest on

either side is concerned.No "ruin" has as yet been dealt

the interests of Hawaii, except' by

those who are posing as self-style- d

patriots. There are two classes of

these gentlemen ; one class believes

in annexation to the United States,the other class wishes to start an

independent republic. Both arefoolish enough, when it is consideredthat the majority of these agitatorsare neither Americans nor Hawaiians.

The gentlemen who are at presentattempting to urge tbJ native Ha-

waiians to republicanism are foreign-

ers born ami bred, who are usinghalf-whi- le or half-nativ- e ability in a

fruitless attempt to retrieve certainpolitical disappointments, wherein,as self-style- d leaders of both parties,in the last campaign, they put them-

selves forward.Who are these gentlemen? Each

and tvery one of them is s foreigner

Before assuring your life, or investing your money, examine the Twenty-Yea- rTontine Policies of The Equitable Life Assurance Society of the U. S.

Policies maturing in 1891 realize cash returns to the owners, of amountsvarying from 120 to 176 per cent, of the money paid in, besides the advan-tage of the Assurance during the whole period of twenty years.

The following is one of many actual cases maturing this year:

Endowment Policy No. 64,925.Issued in 1871, at age 27. Amount, $5,000.

Premium, $239.90. Total Prems. Paid, $4,798.

at End of Tontine Period in 1891 :

Cash Surrender V.ilue. $8,449.45(Equal to 8176.10 for each $100 paid in premiums, which is equivalent toa return of all premiums paid, with interest at 7 per cent, per annum.)

Or, in lieu of cash,

A Paid-u-p Lifa Policy for $19,470(Equal to $405.80 for each $100 paid in premiums.)

Or,

A Life Annuity of $633.55.

Auction Sales by Levis J. Levey.

Administrator's Sale!

T am instructed by Dr. G. Trousseau,Administrator with the will attached ofHis lato Majesty David Kulakaua, to sellat Public Auction

On WEDNESDAY, April 29,AT 1 O'CLOCK OOX.

At the Boat House, the following belong-ing to said estate :

Two Boat Houses,Wha'eboats, Gigs,Barges, Itaeing Shells,

Boat Fixtures, 3 Native Canoes,

And a lot of FISH NETS, Also, the

Furniture of said Boat House,Pictures, Etc., Etc.

Tl Itl C4MII.

LEWIS J. LEVEY,DC 5t Auctioneer.

A. F. MADEIIiOS & CO ,

Merchant Vjj Tiiilnrtt,

Inform their customers that they havejust reoflved a new supply of the bestFrench and English Tweeds of the latestpatterns. Do not fail to give your ordersearly. 05 4i

ul to Scotchmen in H I.

SCOTCHMEN are requested to meetback of Anderson &

Lundy's Dental Parlors on Hotel street,at 7 :H0 o'clock r. M., MONDAY. April27th, to consider the propMety of form-ing a Scottish Social Club.

(Signed) W. EADIE,R. B. SCOTT,W. McKAY,

96 4t Chairman

PAINTEli!

IF yon want a lirst-clas- g job of paint-ing of any description done, call on

the Practical Painter, J. L. Meyer, only.Fort street 130 Post Ollice Box 37.

9ti-l- y

FOB SALEr HE large estate known as

1 Kahuku Kancb, Kan,Hawaii, with all its belong-ing- s.

The Ranch contains1S4,000 acres. There is on

the Ranch a large and valuable forestof Koa and Ohia. For further parti-culars, apply to KAHUKU,1 tf Kau. Hawaii.

ELECTION of OFFICEKS.

AT a meeting of the stockholders ofthe Fashion Stables Co., (L'd),

h.ld April 3, 1R01, the 'following officerswere elected for the coming year, vi. :

J no. J. Sullivan President,H. R. Macfarlaiie. ..Vice-Preside-

lohn Buckley , Treasurer,D. II. Duvis." Secretary,E. C. Macfuilane Auditor.

D. 11. DAVIS,90 3t Secretary.

SEALED TENDERS17ILL be received by Jas. Gay,u Chairman of Waialua, Oahu.

Road Board, until THURSDAY, the311th day of April 1891, for erecting aNew Bridge across the Waimea streamon the boundary of the'' Waialua andKoolauloa districts.

Plans and specifications for said bridgecan be seen upon application at theoirice of the Siipcrimeudent of PublicWorks, at Honolulu, or nt the residenceof Mr. VV. C. Buiek. at Waialua.

The Hoard does not bind itself to ac-cept the lowest or any bid. '

A bond w ith approved surety in thesum of one-foiir- lh of the bid will be re-

quired to accompany each tender to In-

sure the jrood faith of Uie bidder, fi td

ALEX. J. CARTWRICHT,General Agept for the Hawaiian Islands, Equitable Life Assurance Bo?

cieu of the TJ. S.

H. DALIESGENERAL il PORTERS

SADDLERY & HARNESS,LAWN TENNIS & CROQUET SETS,RUBBER COATS & OIL SUITS,LEATHER BELTING,FLAGS,' FLOWER POTS,MIRRORS, CHAIRS,5? SILVERWARE, STATIONERY,

ETC., ETC., ETC.

LINOLEUM, CARPET & RUGS,IRON BEDSTEADS,TRUCKS & VALISES,TAILOR GOODS.CLOTHING,HATS & CAPS,BOOTS & SHOES,HOSIERY

STOCKHOLM & COAL TARS,PAINTS & OIL, CYLINDER OIL,

ROPES, ANCHORS & CHAINS,SHEET LEAt),

CHARCOAL TIN PLATES,

1 waM SOAP,

t 1y WELSH TEAMJ W CEMENT,

Kerosene Oil "ALOHA,"ENGLISH,

SCOTCH,

COAL,LIME,

FIRE CLAY,FIRE BRICK,

: RED BRICK, ETC.

Cutlers & ( tine Kniv 8.

AMERICANFRENCH,

Eutl,elynewto thti trade.

Chaff

HUV nf(YQ. ?

i7n x ji wyiu I

INDIAN GOODSPl

Groceries, Feed Stuffs, Hardware, Cutlery, Crockery & Glassware,

FERTILIZERS:- - Ohlendorf's Dissolved Peruvian Guano, Ohlendorf's Special Cane Manure.LON DON PURPLE: Effectual destroyer of Potato, Cotton & Canker Worms, Etc.SCRUB EXTERMINATOR Destroys all Noxious Weeds & Scrubs.BAGi Sugar, Biee, Paddy, Coal. TWINE, H&ivJP CA-V- AS, NAVY OAKUM.FILTER PRESS CLOTHS & BAGS: Embracing the latest'miprovemeuts in nmterUl and texture,

Galvanized Water Pipe, Corrugated iron, Fence Vire, ripe Fittings, Etc., 3tcShortly expected a

fine line of

Page 3: p ji III f

Cii'J-i-Moouliilit-i-l'k-oic RESHlG, DELICIOUS

. LOCAL & CENTAL .NEWS.

Am, aboard for Remond Grove!

Intukkstixo reading matter on thefirst and fourth pages.

The prop al for evening scienceclasses is taking practical shape.

Tiikrk will be no service of theSecond Congregation ,f St. Andrew'sCathedral this evening.

DRINKS !

OAHU RAILWAY & LAND CO.'S

TIME TABlE.

To Tttkn I. licet October a.1. ISUO.

A.M. A.M. l'.M. p M.

Lravs Honolulu... .6:1a 8:45 1 4:30tArrive Honouliuli... 7:20 !:!!) 2:4!) 6:8otLeave Konouliuli...7:H0 10:J1 8:51 6:4"tArnvo Honolulu.. ..8:35 11:55 4:55 61501

Sundays excepted,t Saturdays only.

MANUFACTURED BY THE

Mertooiici' I'lll.Tto'ouz'.x t'.ii- i.iiioilni-tio- of a net'.:: it i:i li :! t'mt ill- - In Iter class

of imitation fur that are worn no ex-

tensively will bo dono away with, andonly tlw cheaper qualities will fiad asale hereafter, unless the prices of theoUir articles are materially reduced. Aprocess has been so far perfected thatsamples of the goods have been turnedout, and all that remains to be done iato complc-t- the business eud of the mat-

ter by arranging tho firm which is tomanufacture the stult'. Everything con-

nected with the manufacture of thismechanical fur has been amply protect-ed by patents, and is so well covered thatno infringements can bo mado upon it.Tho new imitation, fur is manufacturedfrom was to fur, and so woven in that itis even firmer in place than the naturalhair is ou the skin.

Water does not affect it in tha least,and even after it is wet the fur whendried assumes its former smoothness andgloss. Tha material when fresh fromtho loom, or whatever the machinemight bo that turns it out, is firstboiled in u solution of soda aad water tocleanse it. After it is dry it is cardedand treated much tho same as naturalskins. Tuo fabric canbeiuado in anywidth,' that usually adapted for the finerfjrades of plush being the one that willhe used most, and garments will bo madewith very littlo waste and no more seamsthan ara necessary to tho construction ofa cloth coat or cloak. No ouo woulddoubt from the appearance of the sam-ples that a garment made from such ma-terial would ever bo taken for anythingbut natural fur and of a fine quality.Mew York Telegram.

Tahiti Lemonade Works Go.

.'. SARSAPARILLA & IRON .'.

ABSOLUTELY PURE 1 --mt&- REASONABLE IN PRICE !

DELIVERED TO ANY PART OF THE CITY,

o

Mutual 3GO. --mB&- TELEPHONES Bell 372.97 3tn

ELECTRIC LIGHT V; DRK3.

Mr. H. W. Superintend-ent of Public Works, is supji vis.in,n

the construction of the foundationfor the new IVlton wheel at theElectric Light, Station. It is beingmade of solid concrete, with surfacedimensions of Hi fi.. x 11 ft., and 1)

ft. deep. From the wheel, on theoutside of the building, a shaft is toconnect with the dynamos, which areall IQ boon the ground floor and alsohave concrete foundations. Theheavy plant now in the secondfloor is jarring the building "ail topieces," but with the improvementsunder way this will be ended.

The new wheel is of 150 horsepower, estima'ed to be ample forrunning tbe 1000 incandescent houselights and three street arc light dy-

namos of 50, 30 and 12 lamps' capa-

city respectively. All the iron workfor the alterations is being made bythe Union Iron Works of Honolulu.A great increase of ellieiency may beanticipated in both street and houselighting systems from the new wheel,under the able direction of Mr. JohnCassidy, Government electrician.

The workmen of the station arenow supplied with insulated p'yersand rubber boots and gloves, bymeans of which Ihey ca i handle livewires with impunity. They are alsoprovided with nickel badges bearingthe initials "II. E. L. ," giving themthe entry to the inner circle a't tires,when their services may be requisitefor preventing serious results fromthe grounding of wires.

SUPREME TAT CHAMBERS.

Friday, April

before Jinn, c. .?.

Estate of Wong Yee Kee, of Hono-

lulu, bankrupt. Hearing on applica-tion of F. M. Swanzy, assignee, forapproval of his account and finaldividend and his discharge. Present,the assignee, no one appearing looppose. The Court examined theaccount, comparing it with thevouchers, approved it, and orderedthe assignee's discharge, to takeeffect upon the filing of creditors'receipts.

BEFORE DOLE, J.J. W. Puni and others vs. A. K.

Mika and others. New evidencewas taken in accordance with thedecision of Judge Dole previouslypublished. W. t). Smith for plain-tiffs ; A. P. Peterson for defendants.

B. F. EHIEES & CO.1M FOHT KTUKKTr.

The attention of ladies is respectfully invited to our complete and elegantline of New Goods just received.

fisi Sis, New Sateens,

Xew Trimmings, I

Xew Parasols,

New Pineapple Tissue, Ladies',

tW Our immense stock surpasses incannot be equaled.

HAWAIIAN HARDWARE CO

Customers who notice our shelves so well-fille- d

with fine goods wonder at our having' no old stock.

The problem is simple! "We are constantly selling

tind ever replacing the goods with others. We

have two warehouses filled with goods and we draw

from them as we need and so keep our stock well up.

You don't often ask us for what we do not have,

we keep up with the times and by so duing can

supply your wants. The Aermotor is a fair illus-

tration of the fact.

By recent arrivals we have received the .finest

assortment of General Hardware, ITousefurnishing

Goods and Silverware ever imported to this city.

AVe wish to call your attention particularly to the

Silverware because it comprises articles which you

are no doubt in need of and have been unable to

procure, some pieces are marvels of the silversmith's

art. Competent judges think Ave have the best

stock of goods in our line in the city, we believe

their judgment is correct.

FORT ST., oppo. Spreckels' Block.

OF THE

Healani Boat ClubTO

REMOND GROVEON

FRIDAY EYENJN5, April 24th.

Music by the Royal Hawaiian R u 1.

TICKETS (including refreshments) $ ,50

B&" Trains will leave Honolulu fi :45and 7:15 P. m.; return leave Grove 10:00aud 11 :30 p m. 01 lw

ONE HOUR

!

To be held under tho auspicesof the

IIOXOLULU

ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION,

AT THB

Oymiiiiium Hull,o.v

Saturday, April 25th.Doors (peu at 7 :30 v. m. ; from 8 to 8 :15

there will be a

Performance on the Horizontal

KAU :

After which the race will begin.

Jf" A Gold Medal for first prize anda Silver Medal for second prize will beawarded the winners iu the race.

It? Reserved Seats for ladies andtheir escorts.

t?T lee Cream and Coffee may beprocured ou the premises.

Admission, : : 50 CentsVoir Entries may be made at C. .1.

McCarthy's; close at 9 o'clock, April24, 1801. 03 Gt

DR. A. LUTZHas removed to

No. 40 Alakea Street,

Oppo. Y. M. C. A. Hall.

;T Office Hours 10 to 12 o'clocka. St., and from 5 to 7 o'clock i m.

00 2w

Prctectli Apmst Fire !

All housekeepers should purchase

SAFETY MATCHES!AT THE

Auction & Commission House,

Cor. of Xuuiinu Jh King sts.IW The best Safety Matches iu town

at 7i cents per gross; every nia'eh gua-ranteed to burn (if not mom y returned).

04 2w

1IUSTACE,

RoD8rtsonHitchcoGk,

DRAYMEN.All orders for cartage promptly attended

to. Particular attentionpaid to the

Storing & ShippingOf good iu transit to the other Islands.

Also. Black & White SandIn quantities to suit at lowest prices.

taf Offick: Xext door to Jas. F.Morgan's auctiou room.

Mutual Telephones IeT Bell 414

THE ARLINGTON,Hotel i Honolulu.

J. II. FISHER, Piop.

TF.RMS :

Board and Lodging, per week, (ac-cording to location of rooms,..

10 00 to $12 00Transient, per day 2 00Table Hoard, per week 7 00Single Meals 50

ttif Visitors will find this cue of themost comfortable and convenient housesin the city, the rooms being large, lightaud airy. Hot and cold water baths.

CARPENTER & CONTRACTOR.

.JOHN COOK, 131.E.MOVED from Alakea street to 177I V Fort street. Will contract for

building all kinds ol wooden buildingsand do all kinds of jobs. 81-9- 1

Pkof. Biskell's organ recital on t hegreat organ of Kaumakapili Churchwill take place this evening.

The International Uille Associationwill meet this evening at Brito Hallat 7 :30 o'clock. The members are in-vited to attend.

The U. S. S, Mohican has reachedSan Francisco and, alter inspectionby the Admiral, will probably go outof commission.

The Steiiit. Chess Club hud noinoruin for its annual meeting lastnight. Au adjourned meeting is call-ed by the Secretary.

The Police Court is running onfull time. About all the legal talentof the kingdom may be seen employ-ed there in the course of a week.

All the ariangements have beenmade for the Boat Club picnic and itwill no doubt eclipse anything thatlias been done in that line for sometime.

The seventy-secon- d anniversary ofthe Independent Order of Odd Fel-lows will be celebrated at HarmonyHall Sunday next at 2 o'clock. Aninteresting program will be found inthis paper.

Special arrangements hive beenmade by the H cabin i Boat Club, withthe Tramways Co. for tramcars, whichwill meet the 11 :30 p. m. train fromKeiiiond Grove tonight. The extracars will run to the plains and upNuuanu valley

Hon. John A. Cummins has beenfor the last day or two superintendingthe Kapiolani Park renovation. Alarge gang of workmen are employedputting the track in order for the 11th-o-

June, which the managers of theHawaiian Jockey Club propose tomake a gala day for Honolulu.

The wheels of justice in the Su-

preme Court have been brought al-

most to a standstill by the lawyers'failing to be ready for trial in jurycases. A large amount has been paidfor the attendance of juries, for whichneither litigants nor the public re-

ceive any benefit. There has been nojury trial this week.

Mr. Theo. II. Da vies conducteddevotional exercises at the Y. M. C.A. anniversary last night. Mr. H. W.Peck reported for the devotional com-mittee, Hon. A. F. Judd for the com-mittee on the Hawaiian branch, Mr.S. D. Fuller, General Secretary, forthe work generally, and Mr. T. K.Walker, retiring President, reviewedthe year's operations. An address bythe incoming President, Mr. G. P.Castle, closed the exercises, afterwhich came refreshments and socialconversation.

ADVERTISING NOTES.

Who found a $.r)0 hank note?

Dit. Itowat has a notice of removalin auother column.

Hawaiian Council, A. L. of H., iscalled in regular session this evening.

An adjourned annual meeting ofthe Steinitz Chess Club will be heldWednesday evening.

The refreshing and delicious drinksof the Tahiti Lemonade Works Co.will be delivered to buyers in anypart of the city.

Advertising pays. Good proof ofthis is found in the fact that the mostsuccessful merchants of Honolulu areheavy advertisers.

STOLEN CLlV RECOVERED.

Some months ago Mr. S. G. Wil-

der missed from his possession aSmith hammerless gun, worth about$100 and one of six or seven of thiskind of arms in the country. A few-day- s

ago Mr. W. M. Cunningham,who is owner of a. similar weapon,was consulted as to the value of thegun, by an intermediary on behalf ofa man to whom a Portuguese onPunchbowl was trying to sell such agun. Knowing of Mr. Wilder's lossMr. Cunningham communicated withhim, and, on a search warrant beingobtained, the gun was recovered bythe police. The holder of it wasarrested and said he had bought thegun from a man who was gone awayto St. Miguel. He was arraigned intLe Police Court this morning andremanded till Wednesday.

ILLUSTRATED HAWAII.

Frank Leslie's Popular Monthlyfor May, now out, contains an illus-trated article on "The Sandwich Isl-ands and their Volcanic Fires," byMr. Edward Spring. The illustra-tions with one exception are verywell done and include street scenes,His late Majesty Kalakaua, DiamondHead, The Pali, Hula CI ills, volcanicscenes, etc. There is a full pageillustration of "Mauna Loa, viewedfrom the sea, (luring an eruption,"which is depidedly off proportion.Mauna Loa is represented us anabrupt sugar loaf spouting a coiumof flame into the air. The picturewas probably copied from the titlepage of some handy geography itcertainly has no type in Hawaii.

NEW

The Naval Bureau of Ordnance atWashington has prepared plans fora hydraulic disappearing mount for

h breech-loade- d rifles. It isintended to adopt these carriages onmonitors, as being less complicatedthan the pneumatic mount. Onfiring, the recoil is resisted by thebearing of plates on the water, whichIs forced through little grooves at arate sullicicnt to bring the gun to aneasy stop at the loading position.

TiilCM. Hun nml .IEooii.BY C. J. LYONS.

3 J tDAY.

'I alas a aarc? r5

Ii.in. ii. ni. a. in. p. in.)Mem, :au 1 no o :io rm 00' 8 :!7l (i 21 8 54Tuua. 121 J 00 1 20: (i 20 80, & :iU, 0 21 4 2!l

Wed. 122 2 80 2 00 7 00 8 40 6 SB V 22 8 04

Tliui-8- . 123 8 40 8 00 7 501 9 ,10 S 36 6 221 8 30

JFi-i- . 24 H0 8 30' 8 80 10 20 8 34! 6 22 7 10fcut. i2" 8 1(1 4 80 20 11 00 ft 33j (J 23! 8 05Bun. I2ii l6 r0 S 30 10 00 11 60x 8 32jB 2:i 9 0,i

Full moon April 23, 71i. 34m. p. in.The time sijjniil for tlie port in (fiven nt 121i.

O111. Once, (lniiluiirliti of Ureeiiwlch time orHi. 2mii. Msec, p. 111 ol ( I 11 l 11 observatorylime. It is driven ly tlie uleum wliinlle of tlieIlonoliilu I'biiiiiin Mill, a lew Uoms uliovetlio Custom House. The huiimi whistle isHouiiHeit eorri'i'tly nt Honolulu mean noon,Oliservaloiy lueridiiin, or loh. 31in. 2see. oflireenuicli time.

1 11 1J

FRIDAV, APRIL 24, 1891.

ARRIVALS.April

Sehr llnleakala from KomiN:hr Lavinia from Laie

DEPARTURES.April 23

fcchr Salvutor, Peterson, for J uget SoundApril 24-S- tinr

V 11 Bishop for LaieStmr Kaiiniloa for Kauaibelir Kulamaiiu for Paauliau

CARGOES FROM ISLAND PORTS.

Htmr Kilauea Hon 3350 bags sugar and4n head cattle.

Sehr llaleakala 50 cords wood.

PASSENGERS.

For Maui and Hawaii, per stmrKinau, April 23 Hon F li Haysel-de- n

and wife, Master llayselden,Miss llayselden, A St Chad

A Hilda, Capt D II Ward, D HHitchcock, M Makalua, W A Wall,Miss B Smithies, J W Smithies, PaulJarratt, G J 'Vright, Miss L Urooks,1) II Kahaulelio, Mrs L Aseu, C ABartlett and wife, and 43 deck.

FOREIGN VESSELS IN PQRi.

USS Iroquois, Keud, from SamoaAm hk Monoum, Lee, from Newcastle, X

S V

Ain bk C 1) l:ryant, Jacobsen, from SanKiancisco

Nor bk Vivax, Thorseu, from New Yorklik Cowlitz, Kobinson, from Newcastle,

NSWSw bk Svoa, Afzelaus, from Newcastle.

NSWAm bk Ceylon, Calhoun, from San Fran-

ciscoAm ship ivy, Lowell, from New'castlo,

NSWAm )k K K Ham, Cove, from Newcasle,

NSWAm brig W G Irwin, MoCullueli, from

San Francisco

FOREIGN VESSELS EXPECTED.

It M S S Alameda, Morse, from theColonies

Am bktne Amelia, Newhall, from PortTownsend

Am bk Annie Johnson, Miller, fromLiverpool

Am bg Geo II Douglas from S F for ui

Am bk Colusa, Backus, from Newcastle,NSW

Am bk Georginn, Stauley, from New-castle, NSW

Nor bk Uorghill, Ilaugland, from New-castle, NSW

Ambk Ceylon, Calhoun, from S FBk Isle, of Krin from SydneyBk Jean Pierre from Sydney '

Ger bk II llackfcld froin LiverpoolGer bk J C Glade from LiverpoolGer bk Sabino from Berry

SKIPPING NOTES.

The steamer J A Cummins goes on theMarine Railway this morning.

The steamer Kilauea Hon came intoport yesterday morning minus her maintopmost. She is alongside the brigau-- ti

tie W G Irwin, where she will proba-bly tranship her sugar.

The bark Sonoma took in all the J A

C'uuimins' sugar yesterday.The Nor bark Vivax is taking in sugar

from I he steamer Likelike.The Am schooner Salvator, Captain

Peterson, sailed for Puget Sound yester-day.

The schooner llaleakala brought 50cords oliia wood from South Kona thismorning. Hur captain reports sightinga schooner s:anding off and on the lee-ward side of Lauai.

TO VISIT ALASKA.

The Senate Committee on Terri-tories has not yet completed its ar-

rangement for visiting Alaska, norhas it been fully decided which mem-

bers of the committee will be able togo. So far only Senators Piatt(Chairman of the committee), But-

ler, Davis and Carlisle have deter-mined fully lo make the trip. It isexpected, however, that SenatorStewart will join them, while it isvery doubtful whether Jones ofArkansas or Manderson of Nebraskawill be able to go, owing to personalmatters. The committee will notleave before the last days of May,and failing in getting a special ves-

sel for their use, it lias been con-

cluded that possibly it would be bestto take one of the tegular steamers,which would enable the committee tosubmit to the Senate the informationdesind concerning Alaska at an ex-

panse much less than would be in-

curred from special transportationservice. This matter, however, willbe determined upon early nest week,iind'it will form the basis for makingdefinite arrangements for the trip.

Ex., Washington, April 12.

ISoy Soldiers til Mexico.One of tho most interesting things to a

strango buy iu Mexico is tho regiment ofthe school of correction at the City ofMexico. This is composed of nearly athousand naughty boys, who, instead ofbeing sent to jail or allowed to run thestreets, are sent to school and trained tobe soldiers.

They have a full field uniform, withliUlo kuap-uck- and little rifles, and abrass band of some twenty pieces, whichplays pretty good music, although noneof the players is over 14 years old andfew of tlieiu over

The regiment is divided into companiesaocoiuii.g to tho size of the boys, thelargest being made up of boys from 12to and tho smallest of boys from 7to 8.

All the officers except tho colonel andthe leader f the band nra small boys,ami some of tho officers are uot morethan 10 years old. Besides these thereis a battalion of boys too small to carryanus. These, too, are nil in uuifortp andhave a band of little buglers.

Every week or two all these little sol-diers have a parado in the streets iu fulldress, when they go through their drill,marching and countermarching, andmaking all the military movements, bothprivate soldiers and officers looking asearnest and proud as those of an armyjust returned from victory. T. S. VanDyke in Youth's Companion.

DnYA. R. ROWATHas removed to his new veterinary dis-pensary on King street, Honolulu. 07 tf

LOST

I VF.TWEEN Sinilh's Bridge and W-illi tei house's store, a $50 Bank Note.Finder will ji ease leave at this olllce

1)7 fit

31LET1NG iNOTJCK.

nAWAII,X Council Xo. C89,of Honor, meets

THIS (Friday) F.VEXIXG, at 7:30o'clock, at Harmony Hall, King street

J. ECKAKDT,'" It Secretary.

MEETING KOTIC'E.

VN adjourned annual meeting of theSteinilz Chess Club will be held at

the Club room on Alakea sir. et onWEDNESDAY KVKXING, April 2!Uh,at 7 :,10 o'clock. W. It. SIMS,'J7 5t Secretary -

AOTKJE

VJOTH'E is hereby given that Kan1 Buiur and Gen Gin both of Puna- -lei, Hilo. have no authority from me(the undersigned) to sell the Koong KongGinger Ranch at Puna'ei, Hilo, and allpersons are hereby cautioned not to buyout said ranch or any part thereof with-out my consent and niv signature to thesame. KOONG KONG.

Honolulu, April 22. lS'll. ).-- 2

Vl.L persons uro notified that I willbe re ponsible for any debis

contracted in my name without mywritten order 11. C. VIDA.

Honolulu; April 21, 1801. 04 m

CHANGE of NIGHT I

"S'HE regular meetings of Oahu Lodgei Xo. 1, K. of P., will hereafter be

held on FRIDAY EVENING of eachweek. Geo. WILLIAMS. P. C,

K. of R. Jt SHonolulu, April 21, 1801. 04 lm

TO LET

(COTTAGE, next door to2:i J Anderson & Luudy's

&i!2s2? denial olllee. Inquire ofS7 U A X DEKSON & LUX DY.

U. NAPOLEON & A. P. RYAN,

Boat Builders & Carpenters.

Suui'i Mauuakoa and Queen streets.

f ?" All work done with neatness anddespatch. Give us a call. 4S 3m

V. patrons ot the Oceanic S. S. Co...re hereby notilled that hereafteinud trip or excursion tickets will

ed for any of the through mai'.. is. These tickets will, however,

be i sued us customary for the local'M s "Au-trali- a" and 'Zealandia."

i ,eers who hold round trip ticketsi ! to take the through mail

r will be charged au extia fare o(

i uiilcr o' the Oceanic S. S. Co.Wm. G. 1RWLN & CO.,

"it if General Agents.

Tea and Chocoliit of the('OFFEE, ijUality served daily from(i::iu A. m. till 11 r. si, at the "Klite IceCream Parlors." 01 lw

New Gloves, New Laces,

Xew Embroideries,Xew Curtains,

Children's & Infant's Wear.

variety all former aeaaons, aud low prices

All Night Hack I

FRANK LI LLIS,

Hiiolc KSggr Wo.Hereby notities his friends aud the pub-

lic generally, that he can becalled at

All Hours of the Xightlfcf-St- aud at Club Stables. Tele-

phones No. 477.Honolulu, April 20, 18U1. ly

PAPER HANGING!

GIVE J. L. Meyer the Tainter a callhave your paper hanging done

prompt I v and neatly 130 Fort street.I O. llox 37.

BARTLETT SPRING MINERAL WATER

THE KING OF WATERSFor Rheumatism, Gout, Sciati a, Brights Disease, Dropsy, Liver & Kidney Com-

plaint, St Vitus Donee, Dyspepsia, Skin & Blood Dis-

eases. Malaria, Indigesti m. Ec. o

tup: vvatek of the celebrated and would renowned

Bartlett SpringsIs now being bottled at the Springs by L. E. MeMahan & Sons, sole proprietors.The water is taken from below the suff ice of the ground and bottled without ex-posure to the air, so as to retain its full medicinal qualities. This is without doubtthe most remarkable water on the American Continent for medicinal use, and isrecommended by all physicians, ijgr Kou Sale by

LOVliJOY Ac CO.,Agents for Hawaiian Islands, 15 Xuuanu street, Honolulu.

86T Mutual Telephone 308. 01 2W-1- 6 2t

MAKEE ISLAND CONCERT.

The initial concert by the RoyalHawaiian Band at Makee Island, Ka-

piolani Park, last night was a greatsuccess. Although the weather wasnot the best in town, it was perfectat the park. As usual the band leftno opening for criticism, and theisland was crowded with all sorts andconditions of people. The adjoiningavenues were lined with carriagesand the good condition of the parkroads was well appreciated by themany who took spins over them. Afour hay cart made itselfconspicuous during the evening,driving around with a party of merry

SUPREME COURT-APR- IL TERM.' Friday, April 21.

BEFORE BICKER-TON"-, J.

Daniel .Ilanley vs. KeliimahiaiHanley. Divorce granted on theground of respondent's adultery.Carter for plaintiff; Rosa for de-

fendant.

Organ Recital I

Kaumakapili Church,

Frldsy Evarg, 'p?il 24th.

PltOF. A. T). RISSKLL will aive it

recital on Ilie organ of KaumakapiliChurch next Friday evening, nssl-te- bithe Kainehaiuf ha Ulee Club.

ritOOKAM :

1 Tempo de Menuetle Guilniant2 Prelude and Fugue, G minor

(Greater) Bach3 Trio, F Sharp Merkel4 Daylight Warble

Kamehiiineha Gleu Club5 Souala Pastorale. .... 1

Pastorale. Menm-tt- Kheinb rgerFugue J

0 Offertoire, D Major (op 8) ... .Batiste7 In Ahsi nee Buck

Kami'hai'eha Giee Club.8 Andante (Kreul.er Sonata;

Beethoven9 Marche Triomphale Lis.t

Tickets will be on sab? Wednes-day morning at Thrum's bookstore andmay also be obtained from Pi of. Bissell

JJ 5t

UOYAL

i mi mmL.J.Levey, : Lessen & Manager.

Mr. Levey has Dm honor to ann iuncethe ajiearanee at the Opera

House for

ONE NIGHT O Ti L Y !

On the arrival of the S S. 'Mon,iwar'on or about May 7th, of

Mme Sarah BernhardtUnder the, direction of i i y !;. Abbey

and Mainiie Gran, in ihc greatplay in Five Acts, :

" LA DAMS aux CAMaiAS,"

(Camille),

By Alexander Dumas the Younger.

Pricks : Dress Circle, I'toqne'i,. :nidFront Row liah-on- (reserved; sWOO:Baieonv (unreserved) 0U; Ghllery82.(M.

(a? Reserved Seats can now be ob-tained at the vlllee of Mr. L. J, Levey.

Vi U

J. L. MEYER,

House and Decorative Painter.Papr Hanging: a Specialty.

130 Fort St., - - Honolulu.deo-24- J (Opposite Club Stables). . 1890

Dr. M.E. Grossman

WILLby the S. S. "Australia"

RETURN ,luu on tlie 281,1 instant'

A. IS' I

RESUMEat his former ollice

PRACTICE

98 Hotel Street.Honolulu, April 11, isai. S6 tf

Page 4: p ji III f

4ir'niiiiixi-

DAILY BULLETINtiuNuiiS in cd.Ntoss.iiciiiic Sisaiiip Go'sP. 0. BOX ISO.

Prompt Upt urns Mario on

MUTUAL TKL. 00.

(Soods Sold on Coimniosion.

Auction & Commission House,Fire-proo- f Building, West, Corner of Nuuanu & Kins? street,

Honolulu. 11. 1.

S. V. IjlCOHfiUKU. l'riri,Hor.XTA11 kinds of Second-han- d Furniture Bought and Sold for CushjJjJ

ll

Htuj !lrt

llmls man never fiat hi the senate. Mr.Blair leaves the Kctiatu even poorer inpurse than when he camo to it, twelveyears ago, practically' without a dollarin tho world. Could one leave a betterrecord behind him? In these twelveyears Mr. Blair has introduced morebills, made more speeches, filled a great-er number of pages of The CongressionalRecord than any of his colleagues. Hisindustry has been marvelous. He hasalso suffered the greatest disappoint-ments. Few if any of his plans for theamelioration of the evils which besettho human raco have found their way tothe statutes, and the final defeat of hisgreat educational bill, after ten years oflabor and advocacy such as no othermeasure in congress ever had from itsdevoted author, was a tweutyfold harderblow to Mr. Blair than Ms failure to wina

In Mr. Eustis the senate loses not onlyan orator of great power, but one of itsmost popular members and its finestFrench scholar. Mr, EuBtis can speakjust as eloquently in French as in En-glish, and he is, perhaps, the only mannow in public life who subscribes for andreads the leading Parisian magazines andreviews, and who makes an effort to"keep up" with current French litera-ture. Senator Eustis has been noted asthe best natured and most indolent manin congress. "I plead guilty," he saidthe other day, "to the first part of theindictment, but not to the latter. Atany rate, I am not so lazy as to precludemy going back to Louisiana and hustlingfor a seat in the house of representa-tives." This will not be the first timeMr. Eustitf has retired from the senate,and his friends say it will not be thelast.

Another popular man whose departureis generally regretted is Mr. Spooner.There s.ms to be something in ex-

tremes of physical .proportions whichconduce to good nature and the popu-larity which attends upon it, for Spooneris the smallest man in the senate andEustis the largest. The little gentleman

GRAND CLEARANCE SALE !

FROM NOW ON UNTIL WE MOVE INTO

Our IS'ew Store. i''ort Street,(Brewer Block),

AVE WILL OFFER OUR ENTIRE STOCK OF

Dry k Mi Gooas, Clatnmt, Uats, Caps,. Ms, Etc.,

AT GREATLY REDUCED PRICES.

S. EHRL1CH.

"TEMPLE -- OF.COKNEJt FOICT & HOTEL STKEKTH

o

Iiew Goods ! New Goods !

WE JUVI RECEIVED PER "AUSTRALIA," A LARGESTOCK OF

SATINS & GINGHAMSIN LATEST PATERNS. ALSO.

HOSIERY !

jJlack Grenadine,Cbambrica in all colors,Oriental Flouncing,Victoria Lawn,Swisses,Silk & Lace Caps,Flowers & Feathers,Boy's Waists in all colors,

SPECIALTY

losterVS. EH R LI CM & CO.,

Corner Fort & Hotel Streets.

IS'tMii fori.

S. LEVY.

FASHION

HOSIERY !

Ladies' & Children's Sailor Hats,Blankets & Shawls,Cashmere & Marino,Ladies' Men's & Children's Shoes,Gent's Furnishing Goods,Men's & Boy's Clothing,Ladies' & Children's Parasol,Etc., Etc., Etc., Etc.

Glovew.

NOTT,& Ut Iiinr " r-- t.

, 5 1

r ii www

v

and Tin Ware

: Manager.Superintendent.

Iron Founders,Esplanade, Honolulu.

Iwr's Mil .1

TTJIU TAItLU:

STMR. 'KINAU,'CLARKE, Commander,

Will leave Honolulu at 2 o'clock P. m.

touching at Lahaina, Mnalaea Bayand Makcna the same day ; Muhu-kou-

Kawaihae and Laupuhoehou thefollowing day, arriving at Hilo atmidnight.

LEAVES HONOLULU.

Friday April 24thTuesday May 5thFriday ,(

" 15thTuesday . " 20'thFriday ! . . .Juno 5thTuesday " 10thFriday " 2(iihTuesday July 7th

Returning leaves Hilo, touching atLaupahochoe same day ; Kawaihne,A. m. ; Mahukona, 12 noon; Makcmi,6 p. m. ; Maalaea Bay, 8 P. M. j Laha-ina, 10 p. m. the following day J arriv-ing at Honolulu 6 A. M. Wednesdaysand Saturdays.

ARRIVES AT HONOLULU.

Saturday May 2ndWednesday " 13thSaturday " 23rdTuesday June 2ndSaturday " 13lhWednesday " 24thSaturday .July 4thTuesd y " 14th

Arrives on Tuesday in order toconnect with out-goiu- g mails for SanFrancisco.

ti)0 No Freight will be receivedafter 12 noon of day of sailing.

stmr.'claudine:DAVIES, Commander,

Will leave Honolulu every Tuesdayat 5 o'clock P. m., touching at Kahu-lu- i,

Huclo, liana, Hamoa and Kipa-hul-

Returning will arrive at Hono-lulu every Sunday morning.

JB No Freight will be receivedafter 4 P. M. on day of sailing.

Consignees must be at the landingsto receive their freight, as we will nothold ourselves responsible after suchfreight has been landed. While theCompany will use due diligence inhandling live stock;-w- decline to as-

sume any responsibility in case of theloss of same, and will not be responsiblefor money or jewelry unless placed inthe care of Pursers.

W. C. WILDER, President.S. B. ROSE, Secretary.

CAPT. J. A. KING, Port Supt.1--

fl. Hackfeld & Go.

Just Received

PER IRON BARKS "CHARLOTTE" AND

"J. C. FFLUGER," FROM GER-

MANY AND ENGLAND :

White Bros; Portland Cement,

(full weight);

Fire Bricks, Fire Clay,Rock Salt,Steel Rails, Fish Plates, Bolts and

Spikes,

Sugar Coolers,Sheet Lead, Sheet Zinc,Fence Wire Staples, black and

galvanized ;

Stockholm Tar,Bags, Bagging and Twine,Wrapping Paper, Piinting Paper,

AN ASSORTMENT OF

Slack & BmdIow's filters,

Vienna Furniture and Iron Gar-den Furniture,

Pianos, etc.,

GROCERIES,Mineral Waters,Litjuors, Beer, etc.Crockery and Glassware, Demi-

johns, etc., etc., etc. 75 tf

74 Kiug St. HJ 74 King St.

Importers of

Rattan aid Reed Furniture.

Pianos and FurnitureMoved With Care.

Matting and Carpets Laid.

CORNICE ROLES.

Fine Upholstering & Bedding

A Specialty,

CMAIltS TO ItEINT.

G. MULLEIi & Co.,PBACTICAL GUN & LOCKSMITHS,

Bethel Street, 'Damon's Block,"Corner store.

Surgical & Musical Instruments neatlyrepaired at reasonable rates, sewingMachines and repairing of all kindsspecialty. All kinds of Safes & Scalesrepaired. Household Sewing-- Machinefor sale. i- -s

Steam Prntins

OFFICE

This office having added a large varietyof the latest styles

Elegant Type I

To Its Job Printing Room

Is better prepared than ever to executeall orders in that line, comprising:

Books, Pamphlets,Bill Heads,

Business Cards,Law Blanks,

Letter Heads,Circulars, Invitations,

Plantation Blanks,Banking Forms,

Wedding Cards,Calling Cards,

Posters, Handbills, Dodgers,

Programmes, Etc, Etc.,

ALL AT LOW RATES.

256-EO- TH TUIErHONES-2-56

Address

"Daily Bulletin Office,"

Honolulu.

Jewelry, Silverware,MANUFACTURED BY

SMITHUN BUTTKlt 1ST.,

San rranciwo. : i 'itlll'nia.

Christmas Novelties:Diamonds, Watches,

Silverware, Silver Jewelry,Silver Mounted Canes,

Silvor Mounted Umbrellas,Onyx Mantel I locks.

Gold Pens & Pencils,XMiie lc-utli-er Goods,

Reliable Goods at Reasonable

(SP" Catalogue sent to any address freeon request.

BffirM'iil orders promptly aud care-fully executed.

USTDiainonds and Precious Stonesmounted in the latest styles.

may

BEATER J4 RAM

The Best Lunch in Town,

Tea and Coffee at !1 HoursThe Finest Brands of

Tobacco

Always on Ilium.

K B. THOMAS.Contractor ggjgjj & Builder.

Estimates Given on Trick, Iron, Stone& Wooden Buildings. Jobbing

Attended to.

KEEPS FOB SALE

Brick, Lime, Cement, Plaster of Paris,

Marble Dust, Wire Lath,California North Beach & Santa

Cruz Sand.Quarry Tiles 6x6 -- red, white and blue;Minton, Plastic and Encaustic Tiles invarious patterns, all kinds of DrainageWare.

8 Office Southeast corner Ala-k- ea

and Queen streets.Mutual " Telephones Bell 351

nib

GEORGE LUCAS,t.CS

Contractor Buildcr- -

Honolulu Steam Planing Mills, Espla-nade, Honolulu.

Manufactures all kinds of Mouldings,Urai kets, Window Frames, Hinds,Sashes, Doors, aud all kinds of wood-work finish Turning, Scroll and BandSawing. All kinds of Sawing andPlaning. Morticing ami Tenanting.ITg1-

- Orders promptly attended to andwork guaranteed. Orders from theother islands solicited.

EEDWH & HO WEIL,

Contractors V Builders,Brick, Stone and Wooden Buildings;estimates given. Jobbing promptly at-

tended to. 7tJ King street. Hell Tele-phone No. 2. P. O. t 0x423. ap-5--

TH0S. LINDSAY,

MANUFACTURING

Joveler fc WuttliiiuUerKUKUI JEWELRY a SPECIALTY,

King Stree! , Honolulu, II. J,

8 Particular attention paid to allkinds of repairs. 9

WEKNER & CO.Mi nufactarliiB J filers.

NO. fc3 -- OUT eTHEET.Constantly on band a large assortment

of every description of Jewelry. WatchesGold uid Silver 1 lated Ware, &c.

968 ly

WHEN THE PRESENT SESSION CLOSES

MANY WILL GO OUT.

Wtlter Wellraan Write. Entertaininglyand Instructively of the Men Who WillThen Retire anil Those Who Will ComeIn to Ti.ke Their Planei.

8ieclal CoiTfBponUrnoe.

Washington, Feb. 10. Two weekshence this con;;ross will expire, and awholesale exodus of stutesinen will oc-

cur. Some of those who go will never re-

turn, while others may sooner or later heseen in their old seats. One of the in-

teresting phases of life in Washingtonis this procession of coming and goingstatesmen, this fleeting show of am- -

ON THE TOBOGGAN.

bition gratified and pride humbled. Fewmen have been so great or strong as tobe safe from the assaults of rivals or thechanges of public opinion. There areexamples in our history of popularitywhich never waned, and which wasstrong and steady enough to give itshappy possessors life leases of congres-

sional seats.But such instances are rare, and every

other March 4 brings to our view in thehouse and senate a large number of menlong familiar to the public eye standinggripsack in hand, railroad tickets in theirpockets, ready to return to their homesand private life. Never before was theresuch a large number of retiring membersof the house 175, or more than one-ha- lf

of the total number of representatives,dropping out at the end of this congress.In the senate there are many to go, butnot so many as on other similar occa-sions. Twelve senators retire March 4.

They are Blair of New Hampshire, Evartsof Nev York, Hampton of South Caro-lina, Brown of Georgia, Eustis of Loui-siana, Payne of Ohio, Farwell of Illi-

nois, Spooner of Wisconsin, Moody ofSouth Dakota, Pierce of North Dakota,McConnell of Idaho, and Ingalls of Kan-sas.

A greater number of senators have leftthe chamber in a single day in the past,but it is said that the ancient and honor-

able body never lost so many of its prom-inent and able members at one fellswoop. In one group we see four fa-

mous old men Payne, Hampton, Evarts,Brown. Their combined age is 297

years. Mr. Payne at 81 is a lively oldgentleman. It was nearly sixty years agothat he began the practice of law. Heis one of tho few men that have sat sixyears in congress without making aspeech. But if Mr. Payne has notshone as a debater he has been a goodlistener.

No senator has been in more constantattendance than he, and while in thechamber he likes nothing better than tosit in his chair an intent and alert ob-

server of the proceedings. In WadeHampton and William Maxwell Evartsthe public service loses two of its great-est and most interesting figures. Eachis TA years old, and Mr, Evarts will in afew days celebrate the fiftieth anniver-sary of his admission to the bar. Whata distinguished career is now to bebrought to a closel Half a century,nearly, one of the foremost lawyers ofhis time, attorney general of the UnitedStates, counsel for President Johnson inthe famous impeachment trial, counselbefore the Geneva claims tribunal,counsel for President Hayes before theelectoral commission, of which his friendand retiring brother senator, Mr. Payne,was a member, secretary of state andsenator,

Mr. Brown, at 70, is the youngest ofthe quartet, though the oldest in p- -

CUMBING UP THE GOLDEN STAIRS.

pearance. He has not been in his seatthis winter, but is said to be as active asever in business. It is nearly thirty-fiv- o

years since he was elected governor ofhis state, and he has been prominent be-

fore the public eye ever since. v One ofthe coincidences of this ever coming andgoing procession of public men is foundin the fact that Governor Brown

Gen. Gordon eleven years ago,and now Gen. Gordon succeed Gov-

ernor Brown.In Iugalls and Eustis the senate lose

two of its greatest orators and most in-

teresting characters. No man in con-

gress has been more talked, written andgossiped about during the past ten ortwelve years than John James Ingaljs,His quaint figure, his statuesque man-ners, his rhetoric, his wit have movedmany tongues and pens. What the news-paper writers will do without Ingalls,at whom shall the Capitol guides pointthe gaze of their customer, the curiousstranger, are conundrums of the hour.Minus Ingalls the senate will lose muchof its attractiveness, and the scribes arehoping his successor, Judge Peffer, willprove to be as iuteresting in his way asthe departing senator. Ingalls has beenpighteen years in the senate, and he andSamuel C. Pomeroy, his predecessor,filled one seat during the entire thirty-year- s

that hare elapsed since Kansaswas admitted to tho Union,

Another picturesque figure soon to de-

part is that of Mr. Blair. With all hispeculiar! tiaa, men earnest oonaciao- -

TIN V, TAItl.tt:LOCAL LINK.

Arrive Honolulu. Leave Honolulu

Apr 28 Australia May 5

May 12 Zculandia May 19

May 2b Australia June iJune 9 Zealumlia June 16

J u ne 23 A ustralia June 150

Tulv 7 . . uiy iJuly 21.. . , .Australia July 28

Aug 4 Zeidandia Aug 11

Aug 18 Australia Aug 25

Sept 1 Zealaiidia Sspt 8

Sept 10 Australia oepi, nSept 29 Zealundia Oct 6

Oct LI Australia Oct 20

THROUGH LINE.

Arrive from Sau Arrive from theFrancisco. Colonic.

Mouowai May 7 AlamedaAlameda Jun 4 MariposaMariposa July 2 ...... MouowaiMonowai J uly 30 AlamedaAlameda Aug 27 MariposaMariposa Sept 24 MonowaiMonowai. .. .Oct 22 Alameda

Nov 19 Mariposa

Hail Service !

Viiii MIX FSSASiCIKCO,

The New and Fine Al Steel Steamship

44 Alameda,"Of the Oceanic Steamship Company will

be due at Honolulu from Sydneyai:d Auckland on or about

May 7, 1891.And will leave for the above port with

mails and passengers on orabout that date.

t&P For freight or passage, havingse perior accommodations, apply to

Wm G. IEWIJT & CO.. I'd, 'Agents.

For Sydney and Auckland !

The New and Fine Al Steel Steamship

" Rflonowai,"Of the Oceanic Steamship Company will

be due at Honolulu from SanFrancisco on or about

May 7, 1891.And will have prompt dispatch with

mails and passengers forthe above ports.

fcgT For freight or passage, havingsuperior accommodations, apply to

Wm Q. IKWIK & CO.. L'd,Agents.

NEW YORK

Life InsuranceCOslPAWY.

km, : : $105,053,600.96

'facts art- Sliiiifiurc Thlags."

At every age, on very premium

table, arid in every year, the AC-

TUAL RESULTS of Tontine Policiesof the New York Life Insurance Co.

have been LAltGER than those OF

ANY OTHER COMPANY issuing

similar policies.

$0" For particulars apply to

C. O. KF.littttK,Gen'l Agent Hawaiian Islands.

FIRE,LIFE AND

MARINEINSURANCE.Hartford Fire Insurance Co.,

Assets, $5,288,000.London & Lancashire Co.,

(Fire & MarineJ,'

Capital, paid up, $2,000,000.Thames & Mersey Marine Ins. Co.,

(Limited; ,

Assets, $6, 1 24,057.New York Life insurance Co.,

Assets, $ 05,053,600.96.

C.O.BERGER,HONOLULU.

General Agent for Hawaiian Islands.

CASTLE & COOKE,

Lite, Fire & Marine

Insurance Agents !

AOKNTS FOB

New England Xntoal Life Ins. Co..

OK BOSTON,

tna Fire Ins. Co. of Hartford.

U1VIOIV

Insurance Company.Klrr A !W trine.

OF SAN FRASCISCO, CALIFORNIA.

JOHNDimoiid fllot'U." Now.

rWjfofi

fiJ 7Msra

Granite, ironChandeliers, Lamps and Lanterns,

WATER PIPE and RUBBER HOSE,House Keeping Goods,

PLUMBING, TIN, COFFEE AMDSheet Iron Work.

91

THEY ARE NOT IN IT.

from Wisconsin has been in the senateonly six years, but in that short period,as senatorial careers go, he has managedto climb a goi many rounds of theladder, and retires one of the most influ-ential members of the body. The secretof his success is a very simple one work.If there is a senator who has workedharder than "Little Spooner," as he iscalled, his name does not readily occurto one who tolerably familiar withsenators and their ways, as a member ofone of the most onerous committees ofthe senate, the committee on claims.

Mr. Spooner has had thrown upon himenough work ton two or three men of hissize. Some people entertain the notionthat senators do not work, but Spoonerhas for years sat up two or three nightsa week till near dawn studying at claimscases, bringing to bear upon them an in-

dustry and a lawyer's painstaking inves-tigation and analysis which would havecost Uncle Sam very fat retainers and fat-ter fees were he a private individual andthe senator his legal adviser. UncleSam is not as thriftless as hi is said tobe, for he pays his lawyers but $5,000 ayear, and out of many of them, like''little Senator Spooner," he manages toget $30,000 worth of work.

Three of the retiring senators, Pierce,Moody and ' McConnell, are new men,who came in with the new states in thenew west, All are young men, as sena-tors go, igid may be expected to showtheir faces here again ere many yearshave passed. The last named, indeed,had not, when word was received fromhim a few days ago, abandoned hope ofbeing his own successor. Mr. Farwell'sretirement will be generally regrettedin the senate chamber. Not a brilliantsenator, one who never makes speeches,he leaves behind him a very good recordas a "worker. He is the most candid,blunt speaking man the senate hasknown for a long time. In an atmosphere which inculcates in many men alove of mystery and secretiveness, he hasgrown in candor till he is known as thestatesman without a secret,

Old habitues of the capital say theynever saw a more interesting group thanthe dozen we haye been writing aboutclear out their desks, pick up their hatsand leave the senate chamber together.It is recalled by an observer that thegreatest exodus ever known from thesenate was at the end of the Forty-thir- d

congress, when no fewer than twentymen, or more than h of thewhole number, retired to private life.That was only sixteen years ago, yethow many of those retiring senators arealready forgotten. Few of them, in-

deed, are still alive, and of their suc-

cessors only three out of a score are nowin the senate. Walter Wellman.

OF LOHUOIt.

H. W. SCHMIDT & SON,Agents for the Hawaiian- - Islands.

0. NAPOLEON & A. P. RYAN,

Boat Builders & Carpenters.

Shop i Mauqakea and Queen streets.

rST All work done with neatness anddespatch. Give us a call. 4 3m"

is rriji: i

rPHE patrons of the Oceanic S. S. Co.L are hereby notified that hereattei

no round trip or excursion tickets willoe issued for any of the through mai'steamers. These tickets will, however,be issued as customary for the localsteamers "Australia'" and "Zealandia."lasseuiers who hold round trip ticketsand wish to take the through mailsteamer will be charged an extia fare of

I'pr order o the Oceanic S. S. Co.Wm. G. IRWIN & CO.,

M U General Agents.

UNIONJ. N. 8. WILLIAMS,R. MORE, : :

Engineers &Office & Works,

MASUFACTUItKllS CUP

Sugar Machinery, Irrigating Machinery, Steam Engines,Steam Boilers, Juice Tanks, Coolers, Molasses Tanks, Sugar Cars,

Cane Cars, Elevators, Conveyors, Furnace Fittings,Wrought & Cast Iron Work for House Builders,

Water Wheels & Gearing, Bar Iron, Etc., Etc., Etc.

Diffusion Machinery in all its Branches.

tolP AeentM Hawaiian Island tor the

PELTOfl WATER WHEEL0T" Repairs of all kinds of Machinery done at reasonable rates and

tjshort notice. 696 tf