6
VOL. IV.-- NO. 312. HONOLULU, HAWAIIAN ISLANDS, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 1885. PRICE 5 CENTS. THE DAILY Unsinws Car&s. A&vcrtistmtnt$. Pantheon Stables, ROYAL INSURANCE COMP'Y OF LIVERPOOL. H. HAOKFELD & CO., GENERAL COMMISSION AGENTS. Qneen St., Honolulu, K.I. . commercial Advertiser j PUBLISHED iomw Except Sundays. G. W. MACFARLANE & CO., A BANKING NOTICE. T. BAKNINS. W. UA1CRTEK8. P OPTEB.QKLT ED. HOFFSCHLAEGER & 00., Importers fc Commission Merchants. Honolulu, H. I. H-- tf . A. S. CLEGHORN & Co., Importers and Wholesale antl Retail General Merchandise, Corner Queen aud Ka&humanu sts. 15-- tf CLACK .PkECKEI: M. Q. IRWTK. j WM. G. IRWIN & Co., V ! m. phillips & Co.. i I r"iorters and IVholeaale Dealers lu L Clothing, Coots, Shoes, Hats, Men's Furnish- - ' 8. L. STANLEY. JOHN SPRCANCK. Spruance, Stanley & Co., Importers and Jobbers of Fine WHISKIES, WINES AND LIQUORS, 410 Front Si., San Francisco. 57 tf Aw JOHN UTSCHIG, Fashionable Boot Maker, Xo. SCd Bushfct., San Francisco. Cal. Will fill orders in his line at the shortest possible notice. Planters will find it te their advantage to call on MR. UTSClllu befora going elsewhere. r2 tf&w S. I3. Taylor fc Co., Agents South Coast Paper Mills. Proprietors Pioneer and San Geronimo Pape r Mills. STRAW PAPER, BOOK MANILA, ETC. Manufacturers and Dealers. 441 and lift Clay street, San Francisco, Cal 1 OS jy 10 ly --Fulton Iron Works, HINCKLEY, SriEKS & HAYES, Of Wan Francisco. All kinds of Machinery and Rollers. Specialties ICE AND REFRIGERATING MACHINERY, CORLISS ENGINES, BARCUOK A WILCOX BOILERS, DEANE AIR, VACUUM AND STEAM PUMPS, LLEWELLYN HEATERS, ETC., ETC. YOSEM1TE KOLIjEII FLOUR. The undersigned beg leave to announce that they are now manufacturing FAMILY AND BAKERS' FLOUR, By the ENTIRE ROLLER PROCESS, and are prepared to till orders, guaranihig complete satis- faction. Our Hours have gained an enviable repu- tation on the Pacific Coast, and among bakers and general consumers are more popular that any other. Address orders to SPL1VALO & FORMAN, No. 415 Buttery street, San Francisco, Cal. 107-oct- !) I. HALL & SOIST Commission Merchants, NEW YORK, SAN FRANCISCO, SYDNEY. ly Dunham, Carrigan & Co. HAEDAEE, IKON AND STEEL MERCHANTS, San Francisco, Cal. 122-au26-- ly Demiii Palmer Milling Co., OF TIIE CAPITOL MILLS. PROPRIETORS 204 Davis street, San Francisco. Manufacturers of and Dealers in Flour, Grains of all kinds, Oatmeal, Bran, Middlings, Cornmeal, Ground and Rolled Barley, Cracked Wheat, Cracked Corn, Buckwheat Flour, Oil Cake Meal, Hominy, Etc., Etc. , 124-au2fl-- ly . YOLO MILLS, NE. Corner Mission and Main Streets, SAN FRANCISCO, Cal. lluiz & Flascmann, Proprietor. Dealers in all kinds of GP.AIN and Manufacturers of MILL IJEED, FAMILY FLOUR. MEALS OF ALL KINDS, PEARL BARLEY, SPLIT PEAB, HOMINY, FARINA, ETC., ETC. Special at- tention ia called to our celebrated NORMAL NUTRIMENT for babies, nursing mothers and convalescents, highly recommended by leading physicians for its excellent nursing qualities; war- ranted to keep In any climate. Orders will be promptly tilled and satisfaction guaranteed. ' 125-au2-- ly EXF ASK FOR Goodyear's Eubber Goods, RUBBEB HOSE, . PACKING CLOTHING, BOOTS AND SHOES. Goodyear Rubber Co. S-N- AGENTS. 126-nov2- (i San Franclwo. Chas. Oppenheimer & Co., Manufacturers, Importers and Wholesale Dealers in BOOTS AND SHOES. Salesroom, 113 Battery Street. Factory, Corner Drummand Washington Streets. 120se22 SAN FRANCISCO. KLINE & CO., Importers of HATS and CA!PS. Nos. 20 and 23 Battery Street, S. E. Cor. of Tlue, 121a2-S- G SAN FRANCISCO. mm BUSIlTESa COLLEGE, To$t Street Riii-- i in Near Kearny, San Franciteo. Cat. (Send for Circular.) The Full Business Course includes Single and Double Entry Book-keepin- g, as applied to all departments ot business; Commercial Arithmetic; Business Penmanship; Mercantile Law; Business Correspondence; Lectures on Law; Business Forms, and the Science of Accouuts; Actual Busi- ness Practice in Wholesale and Retail Merchan-disn- g, Commission Jobbing, Importing, Rail- roading, Express Business, Brokerage, aDd Bank- ing; English Branches, including Reading, Spell- ing, Grammar, etc.; Drawing and Modern Lan. guages, consisting of practical Instruction in French, German and Spanish. Special Branches are: Orr.amental Penman- ship, Higher Mathematics, Surveying, Naviga- tion, Civil Engineering, Assaying, Short-Han- d, Type-Writin- g, Telegraphy, etc. For full information address. JG. v. in: A J.I A CO., 103-d2- ? SAN FRANCISCO, Cal, Cor. Port & Hotel Streets. LIVERY, BOARDING, AND SALE STABLES. Carriages for hire at a!! nMurs of the dry or night; also, conveyances of a'.s kinds for parties going around the Isi-n- d. Excdleiit Sa!IIe Uiu '.ch tor Eadies aud Gentlemen. jik:ti'ti.?teetl Cientle. Carrias: Xos. 2. ii, 4, 47, 48, 49. 50, 31, CIS ami 5:i. J Double and single teams iii'vuvh t5 Ve had ou livery at the most reasonable rntes. Iarge and small omuibus for picnics and excur- sion parties, carrying from lu to 40 passeugers, can always be secured by specie! nrraiigements. Omnibus time tables can te obiained oy apply- ing at the office. Tiie Louk Braucii iiaitiiiiK' IIoumc can always be secured for !ieiiK- - or excursion purties by applying at the ofiio-- . Corner Fort antl lft'l Streets. Telephone No. 31. JAS. D0DD, Proprietor. 2Stf UNION FEED CQ Queen rfc Edinburgh Streets, WHOLESALE J. RKTAIL . Dealers b. HAY AM) URAIN, Telephone No. 175. Goods deliverc.1 promptly. Islam! Orders Solicited. 91.f GRAHAM PAPER COMPANY, St. Eon in. Ho. Manufacture and Supply all kinds of Rook. News, ' Flat and Label Papers, Rlnders' Boards, Twines, Etc. W. G. RICHARDSON, RESIDENT AGENT, 205 EeidesdortT Street. Telephone No. 47. SAN FRANCISCO. N. R.Special Attention given to Large Contracts. 58 tf&w TELEPHONE 55 PNTERPRISP ? PLANING MILL. ? Alaliea. near Uueen -- C. J. HARDEE, Proprietor. Contracting & Building. MOULDINGS AKD FINISH ALWAYS ON HAND. FOR SALE Hard and Soft Stovewood,.Cut and Split. 2i-t- f BUEGESS, 84 King: Street, Honolnln CARPENTER AND BUILDER. All kinds of Jobbing attended to. BAGGAGE AND GENBRAL EXPRESS. Draying and Steamer Freight carefully and promptly handled. Soda Water, Ginger Ale and Tahiti Lemonade, Cigars, Tobacco and Cigarettes. The best in the market. 84 KING STREET. - - - BURGESS. 99 nov28 JOHN COOK, Carpenter, No. 31 Alakea Si, WW attend and contract for all kinds of work In his line. REMOVING, RAISING or REPAIRING old or new buildings. Work to be paid for when complete. Satisfaction guaranteed, or no pay. Charges as low as the lowest In the town. Post Office box 135. GASOLINE! GASOLINE! IX TEN GALLON WBE3IS, Ex MEN DOT A, for sale by Castle & Cooke. 87-t- X 4 r.ADV""'. nl0nlns i 50 ,?'r iPVETiB. per mouth .... 50 one year.. & uu ffi$n. W. P. C. A. (including u ftW Invariably in Advance. Si Fine Assortment j OF- - 1 Goods GBOX VIEW IN THE ROOMS ABOVEJ s. 6. Irwin & Co's On Fort Street, OX AND AFTER May, August 12th, CO'i:ffi'ii ll FA KT Or jpese Curios, Silks, 3. Shawls, Handkerchiefs, Jfe? Dressing; Gowns, $ Shawls, Screens, Kavelains, Bric-a-Bra- e, pi gant Tea Sets, ET-- , KTC, ETC., p wwlrs will lie sold at reasonable ! SALMON L ; . H. DIMOND. 'I 11 1 Jit i Fsh iqk sale by; Jstle & Coole. W-t- t Smith & Co., AGISTS, iET0RsOFrHE aile Colos; lie, M STREET. 6s-se- pt 27 I!t'W PAYMENTS. t .... j V4chj beted for pay." CAPITAL . 10,000.000 UNLIMITED LIABILITY. FJre Insurance ot all descriptions be effected at Moderate Rates of Preml um, by the undersigned. WM. G. IRWIN & CO. 83-d&- Managers for Haw, Islands UNION Fire and Marine Insurance Co. Of New Zealand. CAPITA I. : : 1 0.000,000 a vingr Established an Ag-enc- at iionoiuiu, ior tna Hawaiian islands, the un-- &S are prepared to accept risks against Fire tn rtwellings, stores warehouses and merchandise, 1 avoraoie terms. Citrine tisks on cargo, Losses promptly adjusted A- - payable, 82-d- wtf WM. U. IRWIN & CO. GREAT WESTERN INSURANCE COMPANY. XXJISDO OFFICE, oO WALL STREET, NEW YORK The above Company having? an Agency at Honolulu, for the Hawa iian Islands, the undersigned is authorized to accept and write MARINE RISKS ON Merchandise, Freights. Treasure Commissions, and Hulls. At current Rates. WM. C. IRWIN & CO., 81-dw- tf Managers for Hawaiian Islands UH HOE OFFICE OF LONDON, ESTABLISHED 1710. EFFECTED UPON EVERY INSURANCES property at the current rates of premium. . - Total sum Insured in 1884 - - 318,599,316 Claims arranged by the local agents, and paid with promptitude and liberality The Jurisdiction of the Local Tribunals recognized. G. W. Macfariane & Co., 10d&wtf Agents for the Hawaiian Islands. C. O. BERGrER, OEXKEAL ABEXCY NEW YORK LIFE INSUBANCE -- CO., Assets f 00,000,000 CITY OF LONDON FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY, (Limited) . Capital flO,(00,000 SOUTH BRITISH AND NATIONAL IN- SURANCE CO. Fire and Marine. Combined Capital f20;000,00 HARTFORD FIRE INSURANCE CO., Asset 4,500,000 COMMERCIAL INSURANCE COMPANY, Fire and Ma bine. Capital 1200,000 MACNEALE & URBAN SAF E S! Fire Proof, Burglar Proof, Fire and Burglar Proof. TIIE CELEBRATED SPRINGFIELD GAS MACHINE. Gas Fixtures of Mitchell, Vance fe Co. C. O. BEEGEE, 100 my29 HONOLULU, 11. I. . Notice to the Public. -- T7 TAKE PLEASURE' IN ANNOUNCING to the public that, In addition to our PASTRY AND CONFECTIONERY business, we will, open an Ice Cream Parlor, Which has been fitted to suit the rcqilrements of our first-clas- s trade), on . . SATURDAY. APRIL 251 H. Our Creams will be of SUPERIOR QUALITY only, being made of Genuine Cream, a supply of wnlch we have secured from the Woodlawn Dairy. From samples furnished us. wa are able to guarantee the best quality of Ice Cream. The following assortment of Ice Creams and Bherberts will be furnished on our opening day, SATUR- DAY, APRIL 25TH: ICE CREAMS Vanilla, lemon, Chocolate, Coffee, Pine Apple, Strawberry, Coffee Glace. SHERBERTS Orange, Strawberry. We are also prepared to furnish Ice Cream to parties, dinners, etc., and to customers at their homes. uui .ranora iu uc wucvh uu evening, except Sunday, parties aesinng zee rrream on Sunday must give their orders for the same on Saturdays before 9 o'clock P. M. The Cream will be delivered before 10 A. M. Sunday mornings, packed so as to keep hard eight hours. Motrin ir to ret a share of public patronage In of our business, and thanking the public 'or their liberal favors in the past, we remain respectfully, MELLER & HAX.BE, lil'M 4w . Iiacola BlckKInf txeet The undersigned have formed a co- partnership under the firm name of Claus Spreckels & Co., for the purpose of carrying on a Bank of Savings and Deposits, and for trans- acting a general Banking and Ex- change business at Honolulu, and such other place in the Hawaiian Kingdom as may be deemed advisable. Claus Spreckels. Wm. O. Irwin. Honolulu, April 15, 1885. Referring to the above, we beg to inform the business public that our Banking establishment will be opened for the transaction of business on Monday, May the 4th, when we will be prepared to receive deposits in our Savings Bank. We will also be prepared to make loans, discount approved notes, and purchase exchange at best market rates. We will receive deposits on open account, make collections and con- duct a general Banking and Ex- change business. Our arrangements have been com- pleted, so that we can draw exchange on the principal parts of the world. 77-- tf Claus Spreckels & Co. Biirr & Finck, The Leading Fashionable Tailors OF SAN FRANCISCO. No. 620 Market St., Opposite Palace Hotel. Having already a large trade with Honolulu, they respectfully solicit further Island patronage, and are prepared to complete orders at qpe day's no- tice. Perfect satlsfacUon guaranteed, and the finest stock of latest goods constantly on haud. 61 tLw BRICKS ! BRICKS ! Ex. W. H. DIMOND. 39 OOO California Hard Bricks FOR SALE BY Castle fc Cooke. 79tf WM. McCANDLESS, Xo. 6 Queen Street, FISH MAEKET. DEALER IN CHOICEST Beef, Veal, Mutton, Fish, Etc. Family arid shipping Orders carefully attended to. Live Stock furnished to vessels at short notice, and vegetables of all kinds supplied to order. 102 tf Metropolitan Market IIN STREET, G. J. WALLE.R, PROPRIETOR. Choicest Meat from Finest Herd Families and thlpping supplied on SHOP.T NOTICE andjartbe Lowest Market Prices. All meats delivered from this market are thor-ongl- y chilled Immediately after killing by means of a Bell-Colem- an Patent Dry Air Refrigerator. Meat so treated retains all its jaicy properties, and is GUARANTEED TO KEEP LONGER AFTER DELIVERY THAN FRESIILY-KILLE- D 3LH.AT, 143-- tt Cor. Fort & Queen Sts., HONOLULU, II. I. Sole Agents for tills Favorite Sraud of O KL 1L I AGMV K. 56tM5 w "flORDOM KOUGE" EXTRA DRY V.7 VLHAb ..... l -- wy.. MORUfflOlHB 84.423 G. W. MACFARLANE & CO., Cor. Fort & Queen Sts., HONOLULU. 11. I. Sole Acelits for this Favorite Iiraud of CHAMPAGNE. 55 U fc w ' JLi. M. TOUSSAINT, Wishes to announce to the. TRAVELING PUBLIC that he will open on Saturday, June .6, 1885, An Elegant sample Parlor at HILO, where every- thing in the line of LIQUOR3 WILL BE KEPT IN STOCK. Noue but the best Wines, Liquors and Cigars kept. Also, ALES, BEERS, and all kinds of FANCY DRINKS served in best style. 144 dtf&w 2?:0: S3 AVER SALO fJ. NO. T FORT STREET. fOpposlte Wilder & Co.'s J. Noite, Propr. 1 ; 1 OPKK FOM 3 A. M. TIIX 10 P. M FIRST-CLAS- S LCXCHES, COFFEE, TE1, S0D1 WATER, GLVGEli ALE, Cigars and. Tobaccos OF BEST BRANDS Plain and Fancy PI FES personally selected from the Manufacturers, and a Large Variety of BEST QUALITY SMOKERS' l' AK.TICI.ES. Lovers o BILLIARDS will find an Elegant BR15WICS 4 . C0. 'BIUUBD UM on the PremLses. The Pi oprletor would be pleased to receive a call from Lis Friends and the Public generally who may desire a I.UXCXI. A SMOKE, OR A GA3XE OF BILLIARDS. H. J. N0LTE. 26-t- f inland Fancy Goods. No. 11 Kaahumamt stree t. I Honolulu, II. I. 13tf-w- tf i MACFARLANE & CO-- , riIOI.ESALE DEALE11S AXD E Tf era! Jobbers in WINKS and LIQUORS. No. 12 Iiaahuinanu Street, HONOLULU. 19-- tf M. 8. Grinbaum & Co., . IMPOBTEHS OF Ueneral Merchandise aud Commis- sion Merchauts, Honolulu, II. I. No. 124 California street, San Francisco, Cal. 104-jyl-- ly J. M. Oat, Jr., & Co., STATIONERS & NEWS DEALERS, Hawaiian Gazette Block. 27 Merchant St., Honolulu. II.I. 65 t THOMAS LINDSAY Manufacturing Jeweler, No. 60 uuauu Street. Opposite Holllster fc Co. Honolulu, II. I. Particular attention paid to repairing:. 22 tf FRANK GERTZ, FImjorter anfl Mannfactnrer J) Of all Descriptions of BOOTS & SHOES XT" Orders from the other Islands solicited. No. HI Fort St.. Honolulu. 20-tfw- tf J. UOf. LYONS &VJY , A notion eers AH t General Commission Merchantsf iieaver Block. Queen St., Honolulu. ales of Furniture. Stock, Iteal lis tale aud General Merchandise properly attended to Sole Ag-ent- for: African & European Hercluiiiise. 17-tf- ALVIN H. RASEMAN, BOOK OBIISTDER, Paper Baler and Blank Book Manufacturer. B3T"Bookblndmg of all descriptions neatly and promptly executed, and at reasonable charge. . Cazotto Building, 27 U , MERCHANT STBEET. J. J. WILLIAMS NO. .102 FORT STREET, LeaiB2 Pbotograplier of Honolulu, WORK FINISHED IN Water Colors, Crayon. India Ink, or Oil, Photo. Colored, tc. The only Complete Collection of Island Views Ferns, Shells,? Cariosities, &c. CHARGES MODERATE. 2otf WENNER & CO. 92 Fort Street, Have on hand New Foreign and Homemade - , Jewelry. ! Watches, Bracelets, Necklets, PlllS. LOCKetS, ClOCKS, . - , . . , I And ornaments or an Kinas. Silver and Gold Plato i Elegant Solid Silver Tea Sets. Suitable for Presentation. ENGRAVING AND NATIVE JEWELRY t i - A Specialty ' - ! i . Repairing iu all its urancnes. VT Sole Agent for King's Eye Preservers. Smar9-l- T

University of Hawaiʻi...VOL. IV.--NO. 312. HONOLULU, HAWAIIAN ISLANDS, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 1885. PRICE 5 CENTS. THE DAILY Unsinws Car&s. A&vcrtistmtnt$. ROYAL INSURANCE COMP'Y Pantheon

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Page 1: University of Hawaiʻi...VOL. IV.--NO. 312. HONOLULU, HAWAIIAN ISLANDS, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 1885. PRICE 5 CENTS. THE DAILY Unsinws Car&s. A&vcrtistmtnt$. ROYAL INSURANCE COMP'Y Pantheon

VOL. IV.-- NO. 312. HONOLULU, HAWAIIAN ISLANDS, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 1885. PRICE 5 CENTS.

THE DAILY Unsinws Car&s. A&vcrtistmtnt$.

Pantheon Stables,ROYAL INSURANCE COMP'Y

OF LIVERPOOL.

H. HAOKFELD & CO.,

GENERAL COMMISSION AGENTS.Qneen St., Honolulu, K.I.

.commercial Advertiser

j PUBLISHED

iomw Except Sundays.

G. W. MACFARLANE & CO.,

ABANKING NOTICE.

T. BAKNINS. W. UA1CRTEK8. P OPTEB.QKLT

ED. HOFFSCHLAEGER & 00.,Importers fc Commission Merchants.Honolulu, H. I. H-- tf .

A. S. CLEGHORN & Co.,Importers and Wholesale antl Retail

General Merchandise,Corner Queen aud Ka&humanu sts. 15-- tf

CLACK .PkECKEI: M. Q. IRWTK.

j WM. G. IRWIN & Co.,

V

! m. phillips & Co.. i

I r"iorters and IVholeaale Dealers luL Clothing, Coots, Shoes, Hats, Men's Furnish- - '

8. L. STANLEY. JOHN SPRCANCK.

Spruance, Stanley & Co.,Importers and Jobbers of Fine

WHISKIES, WINES AND LIQUORS,

410 Front Si., San Francisco.57 tf A w

JOHN UTSCHIG,Fashionable Boot Maker,

Xo. SCd Bushfct., San Francisco. Cal.

Will fill orders in his line at the shortest possiblenotice. Planters will find it te their advantage tocall on MR. UTSClllu befora going elsewhere.

r2 tf&w

S. I3. Taylor fc Co.,Agents South Coast Paper Mills. Proprietors

Pioneer and San Geronimo Pape r Mills.

STRAW PAPER, BOOK MANILA, ETC.

Manufacturers and Dealers.441 and lift Clay street, San Francisco, Cal

1 OS jy 10 ly

--Fulton Iron Works,HINCKLEY, SriEKS & HAYES,

Of Wan Francisco.All kinds of Machinery and Rollers. SpecialtiesICE AND REFRIGERATING MACHINERY,CORLISS ENGINES, BARCUOK A WILCOXBOILERS, DEANE AIR, VACUUM ANDSTEAM PUMPS, LLEWELLYN HEATERS,ETC., ETC.

YOSEM1TE KOLIjEII FLOUR.The undersigned beg leave to announce that

they are now manufacturingFAMILY AND BAKERS' FLOUR,

By the ENTIRE ROLLER PROCESS, and areprepared to till orders, guaranihig complete satis-faction. Our Hours have gained an enviable repu-tation on the Pacific Coast, and among bakers andgeneral consumers are more popular that anyother. Address orders to

SPL1VALO & FORMAN,No. 415 Buttery street, San Francisco, Cal.

107-oct- !)

I. HALL & SOIST

Commission Merchants,

NEW YORK, SAN FRANCISCO, SYDNEY.ly

Dunham, Carrigan & Co.

HAEDAEE,IKON AND STEEL MERCHANTS,

San Francisco, Cal.122-au26-- ly

Demiii Palmer Milling Co.,

OF TIIE CAPITOL MILLS.PROPRIETORS204 Davis street, San Francisco.Manufacturers of and Dealers in Flour, Grains ofall kinds, Oatmeal, Bran, Middlings, Cornmeal,Ground and Rolled Barley, Cracked Wheat,Cracked Corn, Buckwheat Flour, Oil Cake Meal,Hominy, Etc., Etc. , 124-au2fl-- ly

. YOLO MILLS,NE. Corner Mission and Main Streets, SAN

FRANCISCO, Cal.

lluiz & Flascmann, Proprietor.Dealers in all kinds of GP.AIN and Manufacturersof MILL IJEED, FAMILY FLOUR. MEALS OFALL KINDS, PEARL BARLEY, SPLIT PEAB,HOMINY, FARINA, ETC., ETC. Special at-

tention ia called to our celebrated NORMALNUTRIMENT for babies, nursing mothers andconvalescents, highly recommended by leadingphysicians for its excellent nursing qualities; war-ranted to keep In any climate. Orders will bepromptly tilled and satisfaction guaranteed.

'125-au2-- ly

EXF ASK FOR

Goodyear's Eubber Goods,RUBBEB HOSE,

. PACKING CLOTHING,BOOTS AND SHOES.

Goodyear Rubber Co.S-N- AGENTS.

126-nov2- (i San Franclwo.

Chas. Oppenheimer & Co.,Manufacturers, Importers and Wholesale

Dealers in

BOOTS AND SHOES.Salesroom, 113 Battery Street. Factory, CornerDrummand Washington Streets.

120se22 SAN FRANCISCO.

KLINE & CO.,Importers of

HATS and CA!PS.Nos. 20 and 23 Battery Street, S. E. Cor. of Tlue,

121a2-S- G SAN FRANCISCO.

mm BUSIlTESaCOLLEGE,

To$t StreetRiii-- i in Near Kearny,

San Franciteo. Cat.(Send for Circular.)

The Full Business Course includes Single andDouble Entry Book-keepin- g, as applied to alldepartments ot business; Commercial Arithmetic;Business Penmanship; Mercantile Law; BusinessCorrespondence; Lectures on Law; BusinessForms, and the Science of Accouuts; Actual Busi-ness Practice in Wholesale and Retail Merchan-disn- g,

Commission Jobbing, Importing, Rail-roading, Express Business, Brokerage, aDd Bank-ing; English Branches, including Reading, Spell-ing, Grammar, etc.; Drawing and Modern Lan.guages, consisting of practical Instruction inFrench, German and Spanish.

Special Branches are: Orr.amental Penman-ship, Higher Mathematics, Surveying, Naviga-tion, Civil Engineering, Assaying, Short-Han- d,

Type-Writin- g, Telegraphy, etc.For full information address.

JG. v. in: A J.I A CO.,103-d2- ? SAN FRANCISCO, Cal,

Cor. Port & Hotel Streets.

LIVERY, BOARDING,AND SALE STABLES.

Carriages for hire at a!! nMurs of the dry ornight; also, conveyances of a'.s kinds for partiesgoing around the Isi-n- d.

Excdleiit Sa!IIe Uiu '.ch tor Eadiesaud Gentlemen. jik:ti'ti.?teetl Cientle.

Carrias: Xos. 2. ii, 4, 47, 48, 49.50, 31, CIS ami 5:i.J Double and single teams iii'vuvh t5 Ve had oulivery at the most reasonable rntes.

Iarge and small omuibus for picnics and excur-

sion parties, carrying from lu to 40 passeugers, canalways be secured by specie! nrraiigements.

Omnibus time tables can te obiained oy apply-ing at the office.

Tiie Louk Braucii iiaitiiiiK' IIoumccan always be secured for !ieiiK- - or excursionpurties by applying at the ofiio-- .

Corner Fort antl lft'l Streets.Telephone No. 31.

JAS. D0DD, Proprietor.2Stf

UNION FEED CQ

Queen rfc Edinburgh Streets,

WHOLESALE J. RKTAIL

. Dealers b.

HAY AM) URAIN,Telephone No. 175.

Goods deliverc.1 promptly.

Islam! Orders Solicited.

91.f

GRAHAM PAPER COMPANY,

St. Eon in. Ho.

Manufacture and Supply all kinds of

Rook. News, '

Flat and Label Papers,Rlnders' Boards,

Twines, Etc.

W. G. RICHARDSON,RESIDENT AGENT,

205 EeidesdortT Street.Telephone No. 47. SAN FRANCISCO.

N. R.Special Attention given toLarge Contracts. 58 tf&w

TELEPHONE 55

PNTERPRISP? PLANING MILL. ?

Alaliea. near Uueen-- C. J. HARDEE, Proprietor.

Contracting & Building.MOULDINGS AKD FINISH

ALWAYS ON HAND.

FOR SALE Hard and Soft Stovewood,.Cutand Split.

2i-t- f

BUEGESS,84 King: Street, Honolnln

CARPENTER AND BUILDER.All kinds of Jobbing attended to.

BAGGAGE AND GENBRAL EXPRESS.Draying and Steamer Freight carefully and

promptly handled.Soda Water, Ginger Ale and Tahiti Lemonade,

Cigars, Tobacco and Cigarettes. The best in themarket.

84 KING STREET. - - - BURGESS.99 nov28

JOHN COOK,

Carpenter, No. 31 Alakea Si,

WW attend and contract for all kinds of work Inhis line.

REMOVING, RAISING or REPAIRING oldor new buildings.

Work to be paid for when complete.

Satisfaction guaranteed, or no pay.Charges as low as the lowest In the town.

Post Office box 135.

GASOLINE!

GASOLINE!

IX TEN GALLON WBE3IS,

Ex MEN DOTA, for sale by

Castle & Cooke.87-t- X

4

r.ADV""'. nl0nlns i 50

,?'r iPVETiB. per mouth....

50one year.. & uu

ffi$n. W. P. C. A. (includingu ftW

Invariably in Advance.

SiFine Assortment

j

OF- -

1

Goods

GBOX VIEW IN THE ROOMS ABOVEJ

s. 6. Irwin & Co's

On Fort Street,OX AND AFTER

May, August 12th,

CO'i:ffi'ii ll FA KT Or

jpese Curios,

Silks,

3.

Shawls,

Handkerchiefs,

Jfe? Dressing; Gowns,

$ Shawls,

Screens,

Kavelains,

Bric-a-Bra- e,

pi

gant Tea Sets,ET--

, KTC, ETC.,

pwwlrs will lie sold at reasonable

! SALMON L

; . H. DIMOND.'I

11 1 Jit i Fsh

iqk sale by;

Jstle & Coole.W-t- t

Smith & Co.,

AGISTS,iET0RsOFrHE

aile Colos;lie,M STREET.

6s-se- pt 27

I!t'W

PAYMENTS.

t ....

j V4chj beted for pay."

CAPITAL . 10,000.000

UNLIMITED LIABILITY.

FJre Insurance ot all descriptionsbe effected at Moderate Rates of Preml

um, by the undersigned.WM. G. IRWIN & CO.

83-d&- Managers for Haw, Islands

UNIONFire and Marine Insurance Co.

Of New Zealand.CAPITA I. : : 1 0.000,000

a vingr Established an Ag-enc- atiionoiuiu, ior tna Hawaiian islands, the un--

&S are prepared to accept risks against Firetn rtwellings, stores warehouses and merchandise,

1 avoraoie terms. Citrine tisks on cargo,

Losses promptly adjusted A-- payable,82-d- wtf WM. U. IRWIN & CO.

GREAT WESTERNINSURANCE COMPANY.

XXJISDO OFFICE,oO WALL STREET, NEW YORK

The above Company having?an Agency at Honolulu, for the Hawa

iian Islands, the undersigned is authorized to acceptand write

MARINE RISKSONMerchandise, Freights. Treasure

Commissions, and Hulls.At current Rates.

WM. C. IRWIN & CO.,81-dw- tf Managers for Hawaiian Islands

UH HOE OFFICEOF LONDON,

ESTABLISHED 1710.

EFFECTED UPON EVERYINSURANCES property at the current ratesof premium. . -

Total sum Insured in 1884 - - 318,599,316

Claims arranged by the local agents, and paid

with promptitude and liberality

The Jurisdiction of the Local Tribunals recognized.

G. W. Macfariane & Co.,

10d&wtf Agents for the Hawaiian Islands.

C. O. BERGrER,OEXKEAL ABEXCY

NEW YORK LIFE INSUBANCE -- CO.,

Assets f 00,000,000

CITY OF LONDON FIRE INSURANCECOMPANY, (Limited) .

Capital flO,(00,000

SOUTH BRITISH AND NATIONAL IN-

SURANCE CO. Fire and Marine.Combined Capital f20;000,00

HARTFORD FIRE INSURANCE CO.,

Asset 4,500,000

COMMERCIAL INSURANCE COMPANY,

Fire and Ma bine.

Capital 1200,000

MACNEALE & URBAN

SAF E S!Fire Proof, Burglar Proof, Fire and

Burglar Proof.

TIIE CELEBRATED

SPRINGFIELD GAS MACHINE.Gas Fixtures of Mitchell, Vance fe Co.

C. O. BEEGEE,100 my29 HONOLULU, 11. I. .

Notice to the Public.

-- T7 TAKE PLEASURE' IN ANNOUNCINGto the public that, In addition to our

PASTRY AND CONFECTIONERY business, wewill, open an

Ice Cream Parlor,Which has been fitted to suit the rcqilrements

of our first-clas-s trade), on . .

SATURDAY. APRIL 251 H.

Our Creams will be of SUPERIOR QUALITYonly, being made of Genuine Cream, a supply ofwnlch we have secured from the WoodlawnDairy. From samples furnished us. wa are ableto guarantee the best quality of Ice Cream. Thefollowing assortment of Ice Creams and Bherbertswill be furnished on our opening day, SATUR-DAY, APRIL 25TH:

ICE CREAMS Vanilla, lemon, Chocolate,

Coffee, Pine Apple, Strawberry, Coffee Glace.

SHERBERTS Orange, Strawberry.

We are also prepared to furnish Ice Cream toparties, dinners, etc., and to customers at theirhomes. uui .ranora iu uc wucvh uuevening, except Sunday, parties aesinng zeerrream on Sunday must give their orders for thesame on Saturdays before 9 o'clock P. M. TheCream will be delivered before 10 A. M. Sundaymornings, packed so as to keep hard eight hours.

Motrin ir to ret a share of public patronage Inof our business, and thanking the public

'or their liberal favors in the past, we remainrespectfully,

MELLER & HAX.BE,

lil'M4w . Iiacola BlckKInf txeet

The undersigned have formed a co-

partnership under the firm name ofClaus Spreckels & Co., for thepurpose of carrying on a Bank ofSavings and Deposits, and for trans-acting a general Banking and Ex-change business at Honolulu, andsuch other place in the HawaiianKingdom as may be deemed advisable.

Claus Spreckels.Wm. O. Irwin.

Honolulu, April 15, 1885.

Referring to the above, we beg toinform the business public that ourBanking establishment will be openedfor the transaction of business onMonday, May the 4th, when we willbe prepared to receive deposits in ourSavings Bank.

We will also be prepared to makeloans, discount approved notes, andpurchase exchange at best marketrates.

We will receive deposits on openaccount, make collections and con-

duct a general Banking and Ex-change business.

Our arrangements have been com-pleted, so that we can draw exchangeon the principal parts of the world.77-- tf Claus Spreckels & Co.

Biirr & Finck,The Leading Fashionable Tailors

OF SAN FRANCISCO.No. 620 Market St., Opposite Palace Hotel.

Having already a large trade with Honolulu, theyrespectfully solicit further Island patronage, andare prepared to complete orders at qpe day's no-

tice. Perfect satlsfacUon guaranteed, and thefinest stock of latest goods constantly on haud.

61 tLw

BRICKS ! BRICKS !

Ex. W. H. DIMOND.

39 OOO

California Hard Bricks

FOR SALE BY

Castle fc Cooke.79tf

WM. McCANDLESS,

Xo. 6 Queen Street,

FISH MAEKET.DEALER IN CHOICEST

Beef, Veal, Mutton, Fish, Etc.

Family arid shipping Orders carefully attendedto. Live Stock furnished to vessels at shortnotice, and vegetables of all kinds supplied toorder. 102 tf

Metropolitan Market

IIN STREET,

G. J. WALLE.R, PROPRIETOR.

Choicest Meat from Finest Herd

Families and thlpping supplied on SHOP.T

NOTICE andjartbe

Lowest Market Prices.

All meats delivered from this market are thor-ongl- y

chilled Immediately after killing by meansof a Bell-Colem- an Patent Dry Air Refrigerator.Meat so treated retains all its jaicy properties,and is GUARANTEED TO KEEP LONGERAFTER DELIVERY THAN FRESIILY-KILLE- D

3LH.AT, 143-- tt

Cor. Fort & Queen Sts.,HONOLULU, II. I.

Sole Agents for tills Favorite Sraud of

O KL 1L I AGMV K.56tM5 w

"flORDOM KOUGE"

EXTRA DRY

V.7 VLHAb .....l --wy..

MORUfflOlHB

84.423

G. W. MACFARLANE & CO.,

Cor. Fort & Queen Sts.,HONOLULU. 11. I.

Sole Acelits for this Favorite Iiraud of

CHAMPAGNE.55 U fc w '

JLi. M. TOUSSAINT,Wishes to announce to the. TRAVELING

PUBLIC that he will open on

Saturday, June .6, 1885,

An Elegant sample Parlor at HILO, where every-thing in the line of

LIQUOR3 WILL BE KEPT IN STOCK.

Noue but the best Wines, Liquors and Cigars kept.

Also, ALES, BEERS, and all kinds of FANCYDRINKS served in best style.

144 dtf&w

2?:0:S3

AVER SALO fJ.

NO. T FORT STREET.

fOpposlte Wilder & Co.'s

J. Noite, Propr.1; 1

OPKK FOM 3 A. M. TIIX 10 P. M

FIRST-CLAS- S LCXCHES, COFFEE,

TE1, S0D1 WATER, GLVGEli ALE,

Cigars and. TobaccosOF BEST BRANDS

Plain and Fancy PI FES personally selected from

the Manufacturers, and a Large Variety

of BEST QUALITY

SMOKERS' l' AK.TICI.ES.Lovers o BILLIARDS will find an Elegant

BR15WICS 4.

C0. 'BIUUBD UMon the PremLses.

The Pi oprletor would be pleased to receive a call

from Lis Friends and the Public generally

who may desire aI.UXCXI. A SMOKE, OR A GA3XE OF

BILLIARDS.

H. J. N0LTE.26-t- f

inland Fancy Goods. No. 11 Kaahumamt stree t. I

Honolulu, II. I. 13tf-w- tfi

MACFARLANE & CO-- ,

riIOI.ESALE DEALE11S AXD ETf era! Jobbers in WINKS and LIQUORS.No. 12 Iiaahuinanu Street,

HONOLULU. 19-- tf

M. 8. Grinbaum & Co., .IMPOBTEHS OF

Ueneral Merchandise aud Commis-sion Merchauts, Honolulu, II. I.

No. 124 California street, San Francisco, Cal.104-jyl-- ly

J. M. Oat, Jr., & Co.,

STATIONERS & NEWS DEALERS,

Hawaiian Gazette Block.

27 Merchant St., Honolulu. II.I.65 t

THOMAS LINDSAY

Manufacturing Jeweler,No. 60 uuauu Street.

Opposite Holllster fc Co.

Honolulu, II. I.Particular attention paid to repairing:. 22 tf

FRANK GERTZ,FImjorter anfl Mannfactnrer J)

Of all Descriptions of

BOOTS & SHOESXT" Orders from the other Islands solicited.

No. HI Fort St.. Honolulu.20-tfw- tf

J. UOf.

LYONS &VJY ,A notion eers

AH t

General Commission Merchantsfiieaver Block. Queen St., Honolulu.

ales of Furniture. Stock, Iteal lis taleaud General Merchandise properly attended to

Sole Ag-ent- for:

African & European Hercluiiiise.17-tf-

ALVIN H. RASEMAN,

BOOK OBIISTDER,Paper Baler and Blank Book

Manufacturer.

B3T"Bookblndmg of all descriptions neatly andpromptly executed, and at reasonable charge. .

Cazotto Building,27 U , MERCHANT STBEET.

J. J. WILLIAMSNO. .102 FORT STREET,

LeaiB2 Pbotograplier of Honolulu,WORK FINISHED IN

Water Colors, Crayon.India Ink, or Oil,

Photo. Colored, tc.The only Complete Collection of

Island ViewsFerns, Shells,?

Cariosities, &c.CHARGES MODERATE.

2otf

WENNER & CO.92 Fort Street,

Have on hand New Foreign and Homemade- , Jewelry.

! Watches, Bracelets, Necklets,PlllS. LOCKetS, ClOCKS, .- , . . , I

And ornaments or an Kinas.

Silver and Gold Plato i

Elegant Solid Silver Tea Sets.Suitable for Presentation.

ENGRAVING AND NATIVE JEWELRY t

i - A Specialty ' -!

i .

Repairing iu all its urancnes.VT Sole Agent for King's Eye Preservers.

Smar9-l- T

Page 2: University of Hawaiʻi...VOL. IV.--NO. 312. HONOLULU, HAWAIIAN ISLANDS, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 1885. PRICE 5 CENTS. THE DAILY Unsinws Car&s. A&vcrtistmtnt$. ROYAL INSURANCE COMP'Y Pantheon

PACIFIC COMMERCIAL ADVERTISER, SEPTEMBER 7, 1885.

i .i

with the sugar consumption in England,THE DAILY congratulate the gentlemen whomanaged this affair upon their perfectfaith and business courage. If theydo well, the community will be bene-fitted; should they fail, their loss willbe regretted by all.

J (ROYAL PSffolfl XJ

This Space is Reserved for

('HAS. J. FISHEIS

Opening Announcement.112 aug5-l- y

-- J

i

)

Light on his airy crest his slender head.His body short, his loins luxuriant spread ;

Muscle on muscle knots his brawny breast,No fear alarms bim, no vain shouts molest ;

"O'er bis right shoulder, floating full and fair,Sweeps hi3 thick mane and spreads its pomp f LairSwift works his double spine, and earth around

'Rings to his solid hoof that wears the ground (Viboh..

VENTURE.This well-know- n Trotting Stallion is now standing at the corner of Tancljloil t

Queen streets, and breeders, horsemen and stock-owner- s should take ajvanti"e of if

opportunity to obtain his blood while they have the chance. He is now looliaj Jfeeling nearly as well as he ever did in his life, and moves as lively and bis eve ina br- -

and he is as vigorous as a four-year-o- ld horse.It does not require a great horseiaan to discover Rrtat points of cxctllfta

VENTURE. The ordinary citizen, upon beholding him, will be imnresRud imm Jwith his grand make-up- , magnificent length, and elegant finish. If he ig not the fWhorse that ever came to this country, l.e is hun ly one of the greatest, and ai t turfformer, be towers as far above them al! a he does above a suckling col, in statue.

A great deal of importance has lately been attached to the value of a LomtLi:being kept for stock purposes, whether he is standard or not, and the rresident U j

National Association of Trotting Horse Breeders in America Klrminly adviwi ito patronize stallions that are not standard bred, and he also udvi.scH them to select

not only standard bred, but if possible one that is standard by hu own perform;?which is a public record of 2:30, or better, and even more than this ly the perform:of his get also. Now, if this rule was rigidly applied, it would exclude all nuchfshorses as Electioneer and the sires of Maud S. and Jay Eye See, etc., for while thev L;become greatly renowned by the performances of their get, they new were turf j!formers themselves. .

Now, we will see, for curiosity, how near VENTURE comes to poxxexHiiiK thetliqualifications, namely : Breeding, performances and performances of his get.'

As to breeding, he is the peer of any horse on oaTth, and I don't except tie grt

LOCAL AND GENERAL.

Iolani College School opens this morningat 9 o'clock for the fall term.

Tbe Oceanic steamship Mariposa is due tomorrow from San Francisco with three days'later news.

All Government schools on, the Islandswill open on Monday next, the 14th instant,for the fall term.

Captain T. D. Bligb and Mr. J. B. Gay- -

lord, managers of Fryer's circus, left by theZealandia for Auckland.

Mr. L. L. Van Slyke, the newly-appointe- d

Professor of Science for Oahu College, is toarrive by the Mariposa.

Sixteen prisoners, all Chinese exceptthree, were brought down from Maui on Saturday by the stsamer Likelike.

Mr. E. C. Fishbonrne has been awardedthe tender for furnishing the Oahu prisonwith supplies for the ensuiug year.

At Wailuku, Maui, last Thursday evening,Major H. C. Dane delivered a lecture on"Up the Rhine and Over the Alps."

In our "By Authority" column is a noticefrom the Tax Assessor, stating the time thetax books will be open for inspection.

A meeting of the Strangers' FriendSociety will be held this morning at 11

o'clock at the rooms of tbe Y. M. C. A.

There will be a total eclipse of the sun to-

morrow, visible in the South Pacific Ocean,but invisible here. Totality at Wellington,New Zealand.

A special meeting of the Board of Repre-sentatives of tbe Honolulu Fire Departmentwill be held this evening at the Bell Towerat 7:30 o'clock.

The Pacific Mail steamship Zealandiabrought thirty-fou- r bags of mail for tbe PostOffice. It was handled with quick despatchby the staff of the office.

Hon. W. C. Parke has been appointedassignee of the bankrupt estate of Goo Hoy.All persons indebted to said estate are re-

quested to make immediate payment to bim.It is a long time since our streets looked

so lively in an evening as they did lastSaturday. This was owing to the steamerZealandia's arrival, most of her passengerscoming ashore.

The funeral of J. M. Daigle, machinist,took place on Saturday afternoon, and wasattended by the members of Oahu Lodge, Eof P. The remains .were interred in theCatholic Cemetery.

On Saturday evening it commenced torain very heavily, and continued to do so,with little cessation, until 9 o'clock Sundaymorning, when the sun came out, and itcleared up somewhat. The rain was accompanied with a strong wind.

Through carelessness on Saturday morning an express driven by a white man andanother driven by a Chinaman came intocollision on Fort street opposita the Honolulu Planing Mills. The white man's car-

riage was turned completely over and con-

siderably damaged, while ; the Chinaman'sgot off with broken shafts.

Mr. Julius H. Smith, Superintendent ofPublic Works, returned from Eauai onSunday morning by the Iwalani, He re-

ports the bridge at Anahula completed andthe ferry boat' across the Wailua river inrunning order. The small bridges on theHanalei side will be all completed in a fewdays. The promptness with which thework has been done has pleased thepeople on Eauai very much.

At St. Andrew's Cathedral Sunday morn-ing at 11 o'clock, the Rev. Geo. Wallace ad-

ministered the Holy Communion. Thesermon was preached by the Rev. C. E.Grosser, his subject being "The effect ofGod's word upon an unconverted mind."The text was taken from the ninth chapterof Acts, sixth verse. In the evening theRev. George Wallace discoursed from thesecond verse of the third chapter of St.James: "If any man offend not in words heis a perfect man."

3ticrUscmtni5.

51. D.M0NSAEKAT,

SUE VE Y o.n ,Can be found at his

Office, No. 227 Me reliant Street.Honolulu, Sept. 5, 1885. 157sel2

NOTICE.

The undersigned has been appointed Assigneeof the Estate of Goo Hoy, bankrupt. All personsIndebted to said estate are hereby notified to makeImmediate payment to me at my office.

W. C. PARKE, Assignee.Honolulu, Sept. 5, 1885. 158se8

BRICKS ! BRICKS!

Ex. W. H. DIMOND.

39 OOO

California llvwh11 1111

FOR SALE BY

Castle & Cooke,79tf

WM. McCANDLESS,

No. 6 Queen Wtreet,

FISH MAEKET.DEALER IN CHOICEST

Beef, Veal, Mutton, Fish, Etc.

Family and .Shipping Orders carefully attendedto. Live Stock furnished to vessels at shortnotice, and vegetables of all kinds supplied toorder. 102 tf

KLINE & CO.,Importers of

HATS and CAPS.Nos. 28 and 23 Battery Street, S. E. Cor. of Pine,

121a22-8-6 SAN FRANCISCO.

where it amounts to 80 pounds per headof the population. The duty on importedsugar in America amounts to 60 per cent.,which presses hard upon consumers. Itremarks, however, that as sugar is evi-

dently becoming a serious item in theexpense of living, it is within the rangeof probability that the questionable practice of taxing it so heavily will pressitself for consideration by Congress.

2os K

O1K K

CO - HnO

C nca P Bi cr

B 3 p

3 apBJOrs

eHJO Wcc

Wa w1

rs o o on t tsa C aO

Hrs urs no 3 "fil 3nv suoninont) s3

05

d

ors ft 'tZ "Sn V suonwjont)a (9

3

HcaC CO atrs

r n3 ?

ST9

grsi--t 5" r--.

B ro (0 IZTlivji jo uopipuOD

Refined In New York Strong, with a good demand.

Granulated 6 1 V. Last quotations, 6',.European beet crop 750,000 tons snort.

Rice Market.By our San Francisco advices we learn

that rice had been declining in valuesince the arrival of the Mariposa, whichlanded 2,721 bags Hawaiian. Up to thatdate it was firm at 6 cents. Latest reported sales of Islands rice were on thebasis of 5 cents regular terms for lots.Mixed rice is flat at $4 50 to $4 55 perdouble mat. Reports from China speakof the injury to the rice crop as beingvery serious, and Chinese merchants onthe Coast say that prices must improveJapanese rice in 50 & bags was a pointeasier than at the sailing of the AlamedaBuyers pursue a hand-to-mou- th policy,and there is entire absence of speculation. The condition of the rice marketin the Southern States is set out in A.Thomson & Co.'s circular, dated NewOrleans, August 20th. It says: "Owingto continued rains throughout the producing districts, receipts of new crop ricehave not been as liberal as was expected,and an improved demand for local tradeas well as for shipment is observable."

Personals.Among the passengers to arrive by the

Mariposa to-morr- are: Mrs. Eldridgeand daughter, Mrs. P. C. Jones, Miss IdaJones, Mrs. J. E. Hanford, Miss LilianDixon, Colonel George Macfarlane, E. C.Macfarlane, Charles Hug, Captain J. C.Lorenzen, A. B. Sperry of the StocktonFlour Mills, accompanied by his wifeand his mother, Mrs. B. W. Sjerry ; D.L. Beck, a San Francisco commissionmerchant ; L. L. Van Slyke and T. KMoore, an Eastern tourist; Geo. A.Jackson and wife, R. J. Lillie, A. Henderson, F. Striker, A. Wenner and wife,Miss May Parrott, Miss S. V. Hopper,Mrs. McLaughrey.

His Excellency Paul Neumann, who isrecovering from his recent accident,will not arrive by the Mariiosa to-m-or

row, as it is deemed advisable that heshould not attempt to travel until he isagain in complete health. He is spending a few days at Monterey.

Viscount Torie returned from Maui onSaturday by tbe Likelike.

The steamer Kinau arrived in port onSaturday at tbe usual time. Captain Kingreports very beavy weather, particularly atMahukoua and Kawaibae, and the Hawaiichannel. The Captain can never remembersuch windy weather - as be experienced atKawaibae this trip. At Eobalelele it tookthem two hours to land two passengers.

The P. M. S. S. Zealandia arrived in portshortly after 5 o'clock Saturday evening.She brought the mail, four cabin passengersand fifty-si- x Chinese. Quite a number ofpersons, includiug the circus troupe, tookpassage by her for the Colonies. Her timeof departure was set for 9 o'clock, but it washalf-pa- st 10 before the vessel left the dock.This delay was caused by the large amountof work attending the shipping of the circusbaggage and ponies. AH was got safely onboard and in very quick time, consideringwhat had to be done.

On Saturday morning as Officer Tell andOfficer Reynolds of tbe Board of Health,were examining' the houses and premisesnear Smith's bridge they came across aChinaman smoking opium. A pipe and ahorn box half full of opium were captured.In a room adjoining the one where this man,Loy Sau, was caught, there must have beenfour or five men smoking, judging by thenoise they made in effecting .their escape.The fumes from this room were almost suffo-

cating.The report of the progress of the four

Island boys attending school at St. Mat-

thew's Hall, San Mateo, California, for themonth ending August 19th, is very satisfac-tory. Eawananakoa is marked 100, thestandard of perfection, for punctuality,writing, deportment and military conduct,and 98 for French. His average is high inother studies. Eeliiabonoi has obtained 100for punctuality, military conduct and writ-ing, and 99 for deportment. Ealaniaolo ismarked 100 for writing tnd military conduct, punctuality 98, deportment 90, and iswell up in other studies. T. P. Cumminsmakes an exceedingly good showing. Forpunctuality, military conduct, writing anddrawing he is marked 100 each, 9d deportment, 95 history, and 90 arithmetic.

Paciic Commercial Advertiser

IS PUBLISHED

EVERY MORNING.:o:- -

TEUJIS OF SUBSCRIPTIOS,?6 ljier annum

months 00Six -Per montb - 50c

&0-Snbt- erf ption Payable alwHys inAdvance.

Communications from all parts of tbe Kingdomwill always be very acceptable.

Persons residing U any part of the United Statescan remit the amount of subscription due by PostOffice money order.

Matter Intended for publication In tbe editorialcolumns shcuM L.o addressed U

Editor Pacific Commercial ajpvkbtisek."Business communications and advertisements

hould be addressed simply" P. C. ADVKKTI8EE."

and not to Individuals.

THEPacific Commercial Advertiser

Is now for sale daily at the Followlriff Places :

J. M. OAT fe CO Merchant streetT. G. THRUM Merchant streetCRYSTAL SODA WORKS Hotel streetN. F. BURGESS King streetWOLF fe EDWAEDS...Cor King and Nuuanu stsC. J. MCCARTHY Hotel street

Five Cents ier Copy. tl

MONDAY - September 7th.

NEW SUGAR CONTRACT.

We devote a good deal of space to-

day to particulars regarding the con-

tract between the American SugarRefinery Company of California andthe agents of certain planters on theseIslands for the purchase of their cropfor the next three years. If ourspace had permitted, we would haveprinted everything that appeared inthe Coast papers on this subject. Asa first installment, however, to-da- y's

publication will do.We sincerely hops and trust that

the new departure may be for thegood of all concerned. By that wemean that the planters will deriveadvantage from the new arrangementto compensate them for the risk anduncertainty attending all sudden dis-

ruptions of established business con-nections which have proved satisfactory over a series of years. Andthat Hawaiian planters have had reason to be satisfied with their businessrelations with Colonel Spreckels andthe California Itefiuery, no unpreju-diced person will attempt to deny. Itwas a business arrangement, however,and the planters, through their agents,had a right to make the best termsthey could for the disposal of theirproduce. And they are undoubtedlyjudges of what is best for themselves.

As we understand the contract, itis to be for three years on the Cubanbasisfthat is, the price of duty paidCuban sugar at New York lesscent. This was the rate of the lastSeptember contract, and it is thereforeno special advantage to planters.Indeed, at the request of the plantersthemselves the California Refinerychanged the basis from Cuba toManila just as they thought it wouldbe best for their interests, so that inany case they have had no reasonablecomplaint to make against ColonelSpreckels or the refinery of whic h heis tbe head.

The planters under this contracthave the right to choose their ownshippers of freight. This may suggestthat the Oceanic Company cinchedthe planters in freight charges. Thisis not the case, however. Two yearsago Messrs. Spreckels reduced steamerfreight from $8 per ton by the PacificMail Company to $5 by the OceanicCompany, and from $5 to $4 per tonby sailing vessel. If the new com-bination will do as much "for theIsland trade as the Oceanic Companyhas done in the matter of freight, weshall be the first to recognize itsmerit.

Another point should be mentioned,and we commend it to the thought-ful attention of the planters who arepecuniarly concerned. WhereasMessrs. Spreckels paid in gold coinfor all sugar from the Islands,amounting roughly to five millionodd dollars a year, it is understoodthat the new arrangement providesfor part payment in coin and part instock in the American Sugar RefineryCompany, which has been reorganize-d-with a capital of $1,000,000 onthe strength of this Hawaiian con-

tract. The old company had a capitalstock of $300,000, and since the newdeal the old shareholders are said tobe preparing to realize on the Islandboom. The idea of floating stock ina California company by impoundinga part of the price of the sugar sold toit is certainly a novel one. It maybe successful - also, but unless theplanters who are to be incorporatedin this way absolutely control theconcern, by holding the majority ofthe stock, they are at the mercy ofthose who are in that po3ilion. Ofcourse, everything may go alongsmoothly and well, and the plantersxnay find assessable American Re-

finery stock more profitable than tak-

ing payment in cash for their sugar.We sincerely hope they may. Timeyili tell, however. Meanwhile we

Hermit, who is the most popular stallion in England, and whose service feo ii I'M'being the sire of three Derby winners.

As to his own performances, he meets the requirements, having a public record

2:27 U 2:30 being the standard of admission.His get are now just beginning to be appreciated in California, one of wL

(Vengeance) won a trood race auite latelv in Sacramento, in straight beat, mitn;

OUR SUPPLEMENT.

We publish a full page supplementof foreign news to-da- y. There isnothing very startling or importantin it. Spain has .got into a snarlwith Germany about the assumptionof sovereignty by the latter over theCaroline group of islands. The Jjonhas put on bis war paint and feathers,and is prepared to do battle witn tneGerman Kaiser about these far-o- n

islands. It is hardly probable thatthe two Powers will come to blows,because they are not at all equallymatched. The time has long sincepassed when the Spanish infantrywas the most formidable militaryforce in Europe, while the Germantroops won the foremost place amongEuropean armies in two great warsa few vears ago. At the same time,it is a fact that Spain has far greaterclaims upon the Caroline group thanGermany or any other Power, and itis to be hoped that superior force willnot be used to disposses it. Outsideof this there "is nothing of inter-national importance. The news sup-

plement is backed with an advertise-ment from that old, opulent and lead-

ing San Francisco firm, Wm. T.Coleman & Co., to which attentionis called.

SUGAR MARKET.

Points of Interest from X,eaIIaigr Commercial Centers.

Our San Francisco correspondent reports that there was an active local tradein refined sugars, without change of

prices. The principal feature of theCoast trade since our last previous ad-

vices has been the arrangement betweencertain agents of Hawaiian planters andthe American Refinery of San Francisco,under which the latter buy all the sugarcontrolled by the former. A great dealof prominence has attached to thismatter, judging from the San Franciscopapers, and opinions are divided regarding the merits of the transaction.

The "Bulletin" states that the price is3A cent less than Cuban sugars -'

duty paid at New York. Thecontract is for three years, treaty orno treaty, and shipments are to be madeas they please. Heretofore they receivedcash for sugar on its arrival at the Coast.Under the new arrangement, as it is un-

derstood, payment is to be made partlyin cash, the balance representing a prorata interest in the American SugarRefinery stock. The " Grocer andCountry Merchant," which has beensystematically opposed to the interests ofthe California Refinery, says :

"There is considerable interest exhib-ited just now in the sugar business, anddealers are anxious to know what effectthe late developments will have onvalues. For the remainder of the yearthe market is in the hands of the California Refinery, and if there was a disposition to advance prices it is in the powerof this company to secure a handsomeprofit during the next four months.Whether this course will be pursued ornot no one can tell ; we only mention itas among the possibilities. This is not anew feature of the situation, but the factthat after January 1st, 1886, the situation is likely to be somewhat changed,may have the effect of changing thepolicy of the refiners, temporarily atleast."

HIGHER PRICES ANTICIPATED.

The conviction generally prevails inNew York and England that prices mustadvance, owing to the shortage in theEuropean beet crop. Regarding theprobable shortage of this crop in Europe,and its effect on the sugar market, theprivate circular of Willett & Hamlin,dated August 20th, says : "Estimates of30 per cent less crop have been cabled, butare accompanied by cautious approvalsThe tendency of the belief in the shortage is toward this estimate, which means750,000 tons less crop than last year. Theeffect upon prices of such a shortage, ifrealized, can scarcely be estimated. Bycable message we learn that the drouthcontinues and is increasing. France isbuying off coast largely."SUGAR CONSUMPTION IN THE UNITED

STATES.

"Bradstreet's," in its admirable reviewof the sugar trade for the past fiscal year,shows that the consumption of foreignsugar in the United States during theyear ended June 30, 1885, was 2,442,357,-44- S

pounds, being an increase of 272,843,-80- 5

pounds over the previous year. Con-

sumption was greatly stimulated by lowprices. The last fiscal year embraces theperiod of the lowest range of prices everknown in the history of the trade. "Theactual imports for the year were scarcely50,000,000 pounds less than those of1883-8- 4, but the value amounted to only$73,519,514, against $98,262,597 for theyear previous. Thus it will be seen thatthe nation's sugar bill was about $25,000,-00- 0

less, while the imports were nearlyas large. Cheap sugar, therefore, ' hasproved to be a national blessing, andwould have been still more so if our fiscalsystem did not make sugar the mediumfor collecting about $50,000,000 of reve-nue. In 1883-- 84 the per capita tax uponsugar amounted to no less than 85.51c,and this year it will be even more."There was also a total consumption ofdomestic sugar cane, maple, beet andsorghum amounting to 269,052,903pounds, exclusive of that made frommolasses, which is variously estimated atfrom 45,000 to 55,000 tons a year. Thisgives a total sugar consumption of 47.58pounds per capita. The duty per capitawas 85.51c. "Bradstreet's" contrasts this

record of 2:31, and is said to be able to trot close to 2:20, when called upon to don.

With these facts before us, VENTURE looms up as one of the greatest Lorixonly on this but in any other country, and the day is past when people hruiijthing but the very best; and while the death of two such great horses a B'ellBazaar is greatly deplored bv all true horsemen, still it is & great consolation tlnttl!is so good a horse as VENTTRE to rill their place.

VENTURE is an aged horse, but he is one year younger than Dictator, bKsold only last year in KenUcky for $25,000, on the strength of bia being themreol kEye See. His stud fee is $300. lie is also ten years younger than Volunteer (sire a s

Julien), whose fee is.$500. All things aken into consideration, I cannot see hj U

TURE. is not as desirable a horse to breed from as any of them, or why heww'f

worthy of the patronage of the public. Below I will give his pedigree, of which J wa.

a comparison with that of any other horse in the country :

YF!NTTTTtF!. cllpsfnnf. In-ra- 1 fl Vionlo fnalo1 in ISfil : sired by Uelmoat, U

Absolutely Pure.Thi3 powder never varies. ' A marvel of purity.

6trenlh and vholcsomeness. More economicalthan theordinary hinds, and cannot be sold in convpetitioi with, thj multitude of lo.vtest, shortweight, alum or phosphate powders. Sold oxvrvtcan! Koyau IUki-n- o Puwdkh Co.. lOti W&U-S-

N. Y.9 d-- w tf

JULES TAVERNIER,

AETIST.Studio: Boom G, Spreckels Block.

IIOURS: 3 to 5 p. m. 3m

THE CENTRAL

Cip-a- r and TobaccoEMPORIUM,

Canij bell's Block, Merchant St., Honolulu, If. I.

rMIE CENTRAL HAS BEEN OPENED FOR1 tne accommodation m tne lovers oi ine

choicer article of the weed. I intend to keep atthe Central a fine variety of Cigars and Tobacco,and have made special arrangements with iniiporters from abroad. Trusting a liberal share ofpatronage, I remain, respectfully,

115 tf J. E. WISEMAN.

TO RENT.: ises situated at Kalihi, adjoining Mrs. Beck-ley'- s.

The house is 13x24, with every accommodation. There Is about four acres of land fencedin with stone wall. Terms very easy. Apply toDeputy Marshal Dayton, at the Police Station,from whom all particulars can be obtained.

ll'Jtf

Yoseuiite Skatin Rink.

' m !r j, -- y-

Will be open every afternoon and evening asfollows :

MONDAY, WEDNESDAY, THURSDAY andSATURDAY,

To the public in general.

TUESDAY and FRIDAY EVENINGS, andWEDNESDAY and SATURDAY

AFTERNOONS,

For ladies and their escorts.

By request of the ladies and gentlemen whotok part iu .the last Masquerade at YosemiteSkating Rink, preparations are being made tohave another, September 25th, when we will havethe Grand May Pole Dance also. 142 tf

Notice to Graziers.

"ITT ANTED FROM 2,500 to 3,000 HEAD OFVV store cattle, from 3 to 5 of age, in lots

of not less than 20 head, delivered at HonouliuliRanch, Ewa, Oahu. Communications as to pricesto be sent to CECIL BROWN,

135-sI- S Merchant street, Honolulu.

JUST RECEIVED

- AND FOR SALE AT

Lowest Market Eates,A Large Stock of the Most Favorite

Brands of

BRANDIES, WHISKIES,

GENEVAS, SHERRIES, RRUMS,

PORTS, MADEIRAS, ALES, STOUTS,

And BEERS, LIQUEURS, ETC

THISTLE DEW WHISKY.(iufcases and casks,)

lT.I.I.ISSOX'S BRANDY,(TJind 10 years old,)

MEL.CIIKR-- S "ELEPHANT" GIN

AND

Eudweiser Lager Beer,For which we are the Sole Agents in the Ha-

waiian Islands, are particularly recommended.

Town aml Conn try Orders Filled

Promptly, and Satisfaction Guaran-teed.

Freeth. & Peacock.23 Nuuanu street, Honolulu, IT. I.

Telephone-No-. 46. P.O. Box 362.110 Ja24.d86

1 , '

i

' 4

? .

V:,

?!

3

if4

1

1 i

v:t

t

American Boy, hevby Sea Gull, he by imp. Expedition.1st dam, Miss Mostyn, by American Boy, Jr.2d dam, by Kenner's Oray Medoc.3d dam, imp. Lady Mostyn, by Tenncirs.4th dam, Iavalid, by Whisker.5th dam, Helen, by Hambletonian.6th dam, Susan, by Overton.7th dam, Drowsy, by Drone.8th dam, by Old England.Oth dam, by Cullen Arabian.

lOtb dam, Miss Cade, by Cade.11th dam, Miss Makeless, by son of Greyhound.12th dam, by Partner.13th dam, Miss Does, dam by Woodcock.14th dam, by Crofts Bay Barb.15th dam, Desdemonas, dam by Makeless.16th dam, by Brimmer.17th dam, by Dickey Pierson.18th dam, Burton Barb. Mare.

D!" For any additional particulars, terms, etc., apply to

C. B. MILES, PrctHTaul2tf

Chemically Pure --AMBER. SOAMtenMfw

Don't be a 01amcaGO

COv'-- in

anu uo Biiusneu wiiii lnienor aniens, j" " j v1 a 41, i ri .... look arouna.sjiiivu u,")cu tiit'jii lor years. ivuivt' up un' -

rtetand see what arc the latest and hest soaps in the ma : 7

t 1 i 1 . far washing3 vt; unit vuu mive ueen using mah ;v

d cleansiner mirnoseft m.nnifaetured from Foapstone, y -

and diseased fats, that give all kinds of diseases, fucg3 itch and salt rheum, and make the skin full of p

You did not know that these diseases were the n . :

impure soap Deing usea in wasmng y y , out

8 know you did not. You thought that your "iO,"'t?m0fof order, and you have been trying to rid )'or 5

irv.wii;a vr iJrin,, medicines, an(i . . ?

5. same time the system lias been absorbing r0is0 j.your ciotnes oeing wasnea wnn niipuiu Pwr-- . y,

The "Amber," Washing and Cleansing boap i g

jj cany .rure, auu. j iuu ti'v.v ndoP SGO market. It is manufactured from- - a recipe c

c3 the highest medical authorities as a 1'ure ouay.

H FOR SALE BY AVL GROCERS- -

ChemiccllyPure AMBER SOAP-Csic- sI:f

iff

CO, Age !

0.MHonolulu

6. W. MACFARLANE &

113

Page 3: University of Hawaiʻi...VOL. IV.--NO. 312. HONOLULU, HAWAIIAN ISLANDS, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 1885. PRICE 5 CENTS. THE DAILY Unsinws Car&s. A&vcrtistmtnt$. ROYAL INSURANCE COMP'Y Pantheon

3

I SOOTpmmemu Urn mm oIj2(m

SCANDAL. QOWNES1 DOWNFALL. A BRITISH BARIC MORALITY. IMMORALITY, AN IMPERIAL MEETING.

I v

A BOSTON

A PROMINENT PASTOR CAUGHTIN THE WRONG BED.

THE SOCIAL SENSATION CAUSEDBY THE BOSTON PASTOR.

WRECKED IN A FOG AT POINTREYES.

THE TRAFFIC IN WHITE GIRLSSPREADS OVER EUROPE.

THE MONSTER DEMONSTRATIONIN HYDE PARK.

UNEASY LIES THE HEAD THATWEARS A CROWN.

Sensation

f by a

f3pastor.

L.

A scandal involving the pastor of a prom-inent Baptist church and the wife of one ofbis parishioners, is the talk of Boston. Inthe Police Court Rev. W. W. Downes andMrs. Annie Taber were arraigned on acharge of adultery. "The story was fullytold by the police and the husband of Mrs.Taber, who is the complainant. Both Mr.and Mis. Taber are members of the Bow-doin-squa- re

Baptist Church, of whichPowiitrS has been pastor for five years.Tab. r suspected that the relations betweenII v. Downes and his wife were too intimatbami he was ou the lookout for evidence to --

support his suspicions. He saw Ri.-v-. Mr.Downes enter his wife's house about themiddle of the evening. Taber, with twocompanions, also obtained admission insome way, and carried with them a twenty-poun- d

dumbbell. They waited until thewife and clergyman had locked themselveshi a chamber. A few minutes later, afterlistening a while at the door, W. S. D.Smith, one of Taber' s companions, brokedown the door with the dumb-bel- l. Allthree rushed in and one of them turned onthe glare of a dark lantern which he carried,finding complete evidence of the criminalintimacy of the clergyman and Mrs. Taber.The gas was turned on, and just as the in-mates had recovered from their momentaryfright Smith shouted out, in a voice so loudthat they dare not disobey, ''Don't you dareto move!" Without more ado ho set theluavy iron down on the floor and seatedhimself as guard in the doorway, whileTaber hastened to the police station andsoon returned with Policeman Warren. TheReverend Pastor and Mrs Taber had con-siderable trouble in getting "bailed out."

PANAMA FEVER AT SAN FRAN-CISCO.

A Whole Crew Stricken With tlieDisease,

The Norwegian bark Jorsalfarer bound toVictoria arrived in San Francisco on August...8th. She was boarded by QuarantineOfficer McAllister, who found the crew in avery bad condition, every man, with theexception of the chief officer, being nearlythe whole voyage from Acapulco down withintermittent fever. The vessel left Acapul-co on July 9th, and on the first day outheavy gales were encountered, which droveher up the gulf. On the same day theCaptain was stricken with the fever andfell on deck as if paralyzed, and from allaccounts he suffered most severely. Thecrew one by one were stricken down, and,after the vessel got out of the gulf," shemade her way helplessly northward, themate for a period of twenty-fiv- e days beingthe only man able to work. At the end ofthat time the crew one by one commencedto show signs of improvement, and wereable occasionally to take a little "spell atthe wheel,'' and gradually improved untilshe reached the latitude of San Francisco,when there were enough men able to workto enable the master to attempt to reachthat port for medical aid. One of thecrew died on the passage, and the masterhad a very narrow escape, as for over threeweeks he was lying at death's door. Thedisease was caused by the water takenaboard at Acapulco from the swamps.

August 20tli.A Portland female doctor has been sued .

by a patient for $10,000 damages for injur-ies received while under treatment .Ger-many has consented to the resumption ofthe importation of swine from Austro-Hun-gar- y.

The City National Bank of FortWorth, Tex., was robbed of $30,000 by itsPresident, John Nichols. The Chinese inTonquin are preparing to attack theFrench.

llochefort's Itaeket.Rochefort in his paper, X' Intransigeant,

continues to demand vengeance on Eng-land for the alleged murder of Olivier Pain.He stiH thinks Lord Lyons, the BritishEmbassador, should be made the object ofattack by the friends of Pain, and advisesthem to rmblicly insult that gentleman.

In the Soudan.A dispatch from Cairo says the Egyptian

War Minister is compiling a proclamationto the Arabs, urging the necessity of the est

of the Soudan for Egypt. TheSheikh Morghani of the Beniamar tribehas started for Suakin to try and inducehis tribesmen to assist in the relief of Kas-sal- a.

diladstone's Jaunt.The yacht Sunbeam, on which Gladstone

and his wife and daughter are guests ofSir Thomas W. Brassey, has reachedBergen, Norway. Gladstone has alreadybeen greatly benefitted by the trip. On17th August while the yacht was at anchor,he went ashore and walked from Eid Fjordto Veringfors, a distance of 18 miles, not-withstanding the road was a rough one.Gladstone was not fatigued and was de-

lighted with his jaunt.The Maxwell Mystery.

St. Louis specials represent Maxwell in avariety of moods. He admits that his nameis Hugh M. Brooks, that he chloroformedhis traveling companion to death, and willtry to prove that it was accidental, and thathe is the son of Samuel N. Brooks of Che-shire, England. Brooks Sr. is a memberof high standing in the Masonic order. InLondon it is said that Maxwell is a son ofthe National Schoolmaster at Hyde, nearManchester.

Ueriuauy and Spain.Spanish irritation over Germany's as-

sumption of possession of the Caroline is-

lands is increasing. The newspapers saythe act ignores the ancient rights of Spain,and they declare that the Spanish Consul,long before the annexation was made, noti-fied Germany that the Spanish Governmentof the Philippine Islands had since lastMarch been making preparations for effect-ing the occupation of the Caroline islands,and insist that in vipw rf all these circum- -

The scandal of Bev. W. Downes andMrs. Taber continues to set Boston by theears. It rivals any social sensation for agenerat'oa. Downes' dec'aration that hawin continue to preach creates a favorableimpression among his parishioners. Oneprominent gentleman said: "The chargesnow pending against Downes were antici-pated by some of his parishioners as farback as last January. At that time thepas'. or was somewhat frivolous, and appear-ed too intimate with some ladies, amongthe number being Mrs. Taber. Mr. Downesthen went so far ,as to neglect his churchduties, and this is partially the reason thatthe Church Committee kindly suggested "

that Downes resign. Everybody knowshow this suggestion was received by thepastor. He was furious, ungentlemanly,and even worse. If he had taken the ad-vice of his friends he might have left thetown with a good reputation, but now hehas, so to speak, hung himself with a ropeof his own twisting.' There is no doubtthat Downes will have the largest congre-gation next Sunday morning that evercrowded the historic church in BowdoinSquare.

Foreiffu ' Affairs. m

The cholera is rapidly spreading at Mar-seilles. Mexican capitalists, fearing a re-volution, are sending much of their moneyinto the United States. There were 32new cases of small-p- ox at Montreal yester-day.

Queen Victoria and the Prince of "Walsshave started for Norway on one of the royalyachts. The Princess of Wales and herdaughter have gone to Ymuiden to visit theDuke of Cumberland.

Alfonso Aroused.The King of Spain has, in order to show

his displeasure at the assumption of Ger-many of the control of tho Caroline islands,resigned the honorary .Colonelcy of the Re-giment of German Uhlans, which was sometime ago bestowed upon him. Count VonSelms Sonnewalde, German Minister toSpain, has protested against the dispatchof Spanish cruisers and troops from Manilato "Xapa, the largest of the Caroline islands.He is received with marked coldness incourt and social circles.

In the Son dan.The news that the rebels have taken and

occupied Debbeh and Ambugusi and arenow marching on Dongola is confirmed.The Italian expedition for the relief of Kas-sal- a

will mass at Keren in September andmarch early in October,

A Suspected Spy.It is supposed that the priest known as

Father Kanovies, who was arrested at Co-

chin, on the Malabar coast, on suspicion ofbeing a spy, has been sentenced to sixmonths' imprisonment. During his exa-mination he admitted that he had been inEgypt and was acquainted with OlivierPain, but he refused to answer furtherquestions.

I'arisiau 1'rauks.A rich maiden lady named Mentray re-

cently disappeared. A female servantnamed Mercier told the neighbors that thelady had entered a convent, leaving her tomanage the property. The servant broughther own relatives to the house to live. Sus-picion being arous.ed the police entered thehouse and discovered the body buried inquicklime in the garden.

England and Turkey.An eminent Turkish diplomatist declares

that the Sultan and Grand Vizier opposethe alliance of Turkey with England againstRussia.

The Standard urges the great importanceof securing an alliance between Englandand Turkey. It expresses the hope thatSir Henry Drummond "Wolff will be suc-

cessful in securing the desired alliance.

LON CON'S LATEST.

Phases and Features of the PearceFrancis Scandal.

Tho Pearee-Franc- is scandal has assumed .

a new phase. Pearce shows that attemptsto blackmail him were made by the familyof the alleged victim. Miss Francis, who .

admits that she was intimate with Pearce,has written the following remarkable letterto the Pall Mall Gazette:

"In the account in your paper of whathappened between my father and Pearce, itwas stated that Pearce had seduced me.Now, you do not consider how such state-men- ts

affect me or my name, and it is mostcruel to me. It is so well known to everyone that for some time lately you have beenexposing all the wrongs done to young girls,that I feel sure, from what has been . saidabout me, that every one would class mewith those unhappy girls; so I ask you insimple justice to print this letter in yourpaper. In the first place I am nearly 25years gold, so that when I left my father'shouse last January I was 24. Pearce hadnothing at all to do with my leaving, andwhat you said about Pearce having seducedme is quite false. I am not bound at myage to tell you why I preferred to leave myfather's house. For some time now, I havebeen living in the house of a gentleman ascompanion to his wife, but after the publicmention you have made of me. and thecruel wrong you have done me, I may haveto leave, and if I do I cannot at thi3moment see what is to become of me.Surely, then, it is only fair and just to methat you should insert this letter.''

Pearce's Project.The solicitor for Pearce publishes a letter

in which he says that he has been instruct-ed by his client to refrain from prosecutingthe girl's father on a charge of common as-

sault and battery for the caning he inflict-ed upon Mr. Pearce the other day, on thoalleged ground of his betrayal and crueltyto the young lady, because of the trivalpenalty that would attend conviction, bntto prosecute him on a far graver charge.The solicitor asks the public to suspendjudgment on the whole case until its meritscan be developed by the courts.

Indemnity Claimed.The Sultan of Zanzibar claims indemnity

from Germany on the loss of the nativesoldiers who were killed on the East Afri-

can expedition. Admiral Paschen, theGerman commander, admits the justness ofthe claim, and the matter has been sub-

mitted to Sir John Kirk, the British Consul-Genera- l,

who will decide upon the terms ofindemnity.

A Iliot in Iiondonderry.

There was a riot in the city of London-derry Forty soldiers beat a crowd of civil-

ians, 'when the latter turned upon the sol-

diers and the picket guard had to be calledout. The guard was obliged to carry fixedbayonets for self-defens- e. Order was finallyrestored.

The Emperor Francis Joseph yesterdayX, "'-- wiuer vi me urana urosa oiSt. Stephen upon Grand Duke George,second son of the. Czar, and appointedhim to a Lieutenancy in the Imperial Aus-trian Uhlans. The Grand Duke is in Idasixteenth year. An eye-witne- ss of thewhole pageant at Kremsier asserts that,despite the efforts to make it appear thatno dread of personal danger to the Czarwas entertained, Alexander was really alertand uneasy, and he added to the secret pre-cautions arranged for his safety more thanone device of his own. He was pale andcareworn daring his entire stay, and sug-gested several precautions to the Austrianauthorities. The Czar owns a mastiff pos-sessed of uncommon strength and intelli-gence. The mastiff has been carefullytrained as a body-guar-d, and is well-know- nm St. Petersburg and Moscow, and watchtfbeside his master's couch every night. Thisdog accompanied the Czar to and fromKremsier.

From the Sea.The steamer British Princess arrived atQueenstown and reports passing a large

dismasted vessel. On the I7th she saw aship on fire. She bore down on her, buther spars were gone and her hull in flames.The ship was of American build. TheBritish Princess stood by for three hoursand fired rockets to attract tho boats of theburning ship, but saw none. She wastimber-lade- n and her name was burned off.

Foreign AfTaira.Parnell's speech at Dublin has caused a

sensation in England. Germany is willingto submit the Caroline islands dispute fcjarbitration. Queen Victoria has gone toBalmoral.The furlough of Russian navalofficers has been extended. The Britishmilitia, which was called out at the time ofthe Penjdeh incident, has been ordered todemobilize.

The German Flag Removed.The German flag recently hoisted on a

French island off the Victorian coast, inthe South Pacific, has been removed byorder of Prince Bismarck at the request ofFrance.

After Maxwell.Maxwell, the murderer, complained of

the tone in which some of his lady corres-pondents are addressing him. He receiveda letter from one who informed him that shewas going to assist in his prosecution andwould certainly secure his conviction, asshe had been studying criminal law fortwo months with a prominent lawyer andwas fully equipped with legal knowledge.In the event of her failing with the ion

of the Circuit Attorney and his assist-ants to convict him by next October she in-tends to inflict upon him condign punish-ment of a nature which she would neverreveal before hand, but which would be tooterrible for utterance.

August 28th.Renewed reports are given of the out-

break of a volcano near Mammoth City, inthe Sierra . Baldwin's Rapido won a raceat Saratoga. Three thousand pounds ofnitro-glyceri- ne exploded at Bradford, Pa.,

John L. Sullivan has arrived at Cincin-nati, where he is to fight McCafTery Theweather is cold in New York. HenryWard Beecher will deliver an eulogy onGrant at Boston.

Foreign Affairs.A mob prevented the police from making

evictions in Killarrey, Ireland. Therewere 1498 deaths from cholora in Spain onAugust 36th.---Effor- ts are being made torestore harmony between Germany andSpain. President Diaz favors a reductionof Mexican import duties. King of Mon-mouth won the race for the great York-shire stakes in England. Minister Ooxwas cordially received by the Sultan."

Hanlan Ahead.For the final heat in the professional

sculling race at Geneva, the starters wereHanlan, McKay, Hamm and Hosmcr. Thedistance was three miles with a turn. Hanlan field the lead throughout and won by alength. Time, 21:38. McKay was sec-ond. In the consolation race Dabinet,Hosmer, Ten Eyck and Lee were the con-testants. Lee won. Time, 21:48. TenEyck was second.The Steamship Zealandla Ubeled

Joseph D. Redding, acting for A. K.Kron& Co., filed a libel for $5000 on the steam-ship Zealandia, Captain Webber command-ing. The plaintiffs allege that a consign-ment of 1000 hides brought to them on theZealandia from Australia arrived in a dam-aged condition. The plaintiff paid $283.12freight and filed a claim for damage, whichthe agents of the ship refused to allow, andthe libel was filed yesterday just as the shipwas about to sail. Messrs. Dodge andRosenfeld filed a bond for $10,000 for theZealandia' s release.

A Fatal Fire.A fireworks factory at Civita Vecchia,

Italy, which took fir on 27th August, isstill burning. Ten bodies have been re-covered from the ruins.

Hon. Paul Neumann, whose unfortunateaccident was mentioned in the last issue ofthe ilercliant, is rapidly recovering fromthe injury that he sustained. We are pleasedto learn that no serious results are subse-quently anticipated from what might havebeen a very complicated case. Mr, Neu-mann's return to Honolulu will necessarilybe delayed for a few weeks. S. F, Mtr-chan- t.

Hon. R. M. Daggett, the late AmericanMinister to Hawaii, has been in San Fran-cisco within the past week. Mr. and Mrs.Daggett have gone to Virginia City whichwill be their future home. S. F. Merchant,

Hawaiian Viticulture.

Editor S. F. Merchant: Will you pleasedescribe in the Merchant the Chaintresystem of pruning ? I have a small vine-yard of grape vines and have taken onemedal for the best Muscatel grapes shownat our Agricultural Society's meeting. -- 1have been a subscriber for the MerchavU,and now am, through Messrs. J. II. Oat,Jr. & Co., news dealers here, and say theinformation received through the Merchanthas richly paid me even far more thanthe price of the paper.Yours respectfully, Wiixixzi Bab cock.

Honolulu, August 15, 1885.To describe fully the Chaintre system of

pruning would occupy at least one issue ofthe Merchant, so that we are afraid friendBabcock's request cannot be complied with.However we send him the last Annual Re-port of the Chief Executive ViticulturalOfficer, in which the Chaiutra system ofpruning is far more elaborr-d- y explainedthan we could altempt.i'ti. MercJiant.

The reports of outrages upon females In"France, Germany and Italy have so in-creased that the French Government hasinstructed its police to exercise additionalstringency toward licensed houses.- - In Am-sterdam, Rotterdam, Hamburg and otherports houses of this character have beenvisited by the police and all their femaleinmates have been ordered out, unless cer-tified to be 18 years old or over. The Gov-ernme- nt

officials in Naples, Rome, Florenceand Trieste are enforcing the law against"free houses.' In Rome society has beenscandalized by the discovery that an ex-offi- cer

of the Government is a principal inthe organized traffic in girls from the in-terior provinces in Italy. He had officersin Rome, Naples and Spoleto, whence hefurnished to America girls recruited in theseprovinces. Intermediaries in New Yorkpaid for each girl 1000 to 2000 francs. Tenarrests of his agents have been made.

The Russian Market.Girls gathered at Jassy are chiefly sent

to Prussia, Austria and Russia. The lead- - --

ing traders' depot is at Odessa. Germangirls, gathered at the Prussian frontier, areexported to Riga or Wilna, where Russianmerchants have the first opportunity ofselection for St. Petersburg and Moscow.The next best paying station is Nijni Nov-gorod, whence the girls are distributed be-tween Southern Russia and Siberia. AHebrew, who deals in these white slavesfor Buenos Ayres, recently made his ap-pearance in London. He secured manyyoung girls, finding plenty for sale in in-terior English towns.

August 23th.The story that Prellier is alive has been

revived at St. Louis. The U. S. Govern-ment has suspended the Chinese intepreterat San Francisco and the Deputy Collectorat Port Townsend. Defaulting TreasurerAdams of the South Framingham (Mass.)National B.mk committed suicide.

Foreign Affairs.Preston, the rebel leader, is in prison at

Aspinwall. The dispute over the Carolineislands was discussed by a Spanish Cabinetcouncil. There were 25 more cases ofsmallpox in Montreal yesterday. Therewere 1950 deaths from cholera in Spain on23rd inst. The steam dredger Beauforthas been lost off the Bermudas, and hercrew of 10 or 12 probably drowned.

China.There is great distress in Kwantung after

the floods. American missionaires haveorganized relief parties.

A Chinese man of war, arrived at Shang-hai from Port Hamilton, reports 13 Britishmen of war at anchor in the latter place.

Corea.The famine in the Zenrado, Corea, is

very severe and far-reach- in but as theCorean Government is so poor as to be un-able to give any assistance to the sufferersthe number of deaths from starvation dailyoccuring is alarmingly great.

Chinese troops in Seoul were withdrawnon July 18th, and Japanese troops on the20th.

The Austrian Minister will proceed toCorea to conclude a treaty with the CoreanGovernment.

Japan.More than 12,000 poor persons rendered

homeless by the disasters in Osaka and theneighboring districts are receiving Govern-ment assistance at the drill ground nearthe castle, where large sheds were built forthe accommodation of these helpless'people.The authorities intend to give them someemployment for livelihood.

The cargo remaining in the City of Tokiowas sold at auction at Yokohama on July6th, and realized $600.

It has been decided to establish a navalyard at Mihara, the place having beenfound to be admirably adapted to the pur-pos- e.

The estimated cost is 7,000,000 yen.The Rig Ronauza.

The report of Captain Andrews of theAmerican ship Big Bonanza, which arrivedat Yokohama from New York, is most re-

markable. He made the passage fromSandy Point to Yokohama anchorage in125 days without once tacking ship.

August 26th,The upper floor in A. Lusk & Co.'fl fac-

tory, San Francisco, fell through yesterdayand by a marvelous coincidence the 300men, women and children were not at work,a delay having occurred in the arrival ofthe fruit cars . Ex-Govern- Feuton of NewYork dropped dead at Jamestown. A cy-

clone did much damage in the South.

Foreign Affairs.The Emperors of Austria and Russia met

at Kremsier. The cholera panic has ex-

tended to all classes at Marseilles. Thetrouble between Spain and Germany overthe Caroline islands is still unsettled. Onehundred pilgrims were drowned in the Gulfof Aden by the wrecking of their vessel.Eighty new cases of smallpox are reportedin Montreal.

In the Soudan.Two hundred and forty friendly natives

in their own steamboats accompanied theEnglish steamer to the village of Shinat,which was attacked and destroyed. TheBritish and their alius killed a number ofhostile Arabs and captured enough grainand cloth to make a cargo.

African Explorers.The arrival at Cape Town is announced

of the Portuguese explorers Capella andIvens, who started from Mossamedes inMarch, 1884. The explorers have traversedCentral Africa from west to east, whileStanley and Cameron crossed it from eastto west. They reach, d Quillman in June,1885, after having marched 8000 kilom-eters, 5000 of which had never been explor-ed before. They discovered the sources ofthe Lualaba, a tributary of the Congo, in acountry rich in copper. Eighty of the J 20men employed as an escort died on theroute.

August 27th.Lucian White has been arrested at St.

Louis, charged with being implicated in ascheme to counterfeit Brazilian bonds.Senator Sherman opened the Republicancampaign in Ohio at Mount Gilead. Therewas a run on the Spring Garden Bank inPhiladelphia. The strike on the Wabashrailroad system continues. The GrantMonument Fund in New York has reached$62,000. The first cable car Tine in NewYork was successfully tried. Many housesin Boston were damaged by lightning.The nail trade at the East is looking np.

Eighteen Men are Drowned and onlyTwo are Saved.

The Bristish bark Haddingtonshire, Cap-tain Mackenzie went ashore three milesabove Point Reyes, Marin county.Eighteen lives were lost, only two persons,a man and a boy, escaping.

An Eventful Voyage.The Haddingtonshire was a new vessel

making her first return trip from the Col-umbia river to Glasgow. She had a crewof 24 men, all of whom were shipped atGlasgow. She was rated as a staunch ves-sel, and with a full cargo the voyage wasbegun on the 4th of July, with the fairestprospect of a favorable voyage. All wentwell until the tropics were reached. Thenthe ship encountered a succession of fiercegales which finally culminated in a hurri-cane on the equator. For days the vesselwas driven before the tempest. All thatcould be done was to keep her before thewind, and in this effort four men werelost, swept overboard by the heavy seas.

Making for Port."When the storm passed it was found that

the ship was so badly disabled that itwould be hopeless to proceed on the voy-age. They knew that they were far out oftheir course and that their only safety wasto reach San Francisco, where repairscould be made. But the Captain foundthat he had lost his chronometer duringthe storm, and, therefore, the navigation ofthe vessel must be made by dead reckon-ing, which at best is only guesswork. "Withall these drawbacks the ship made fairway and would have reached port in safet'but for the dense fog which shrouded thecoast.

Driven Upon the flocks.Early in the morning, when the fog was

so dense that the lookout could not seeten yards in front, the vessel drove uponthe big reef which juts out beyond PointReyes. The wind was blowing a gale, thesea ran high, and it is an iron-boun- d coast.The ship struck, and in a moment was atthe mercy of the waves, which washed overher and began the work of destruction. Ofthe 20 men on board only two succeeded inreaching the shore alive. The remainder,in-cludiu- g

the Captain, went down in the surfor were dashed against the rocks.

Her Cargo.Nothing could be done to save the cargo

which was a valuable one, consisting of 12,514 barrels of flour, valued at $50,056, and17,G9G cases of Columbia river salmon,valued at $53,400. The cargo was fullycovered by insurance in England.

The Vessel.The Haddingtonshire was an iron vessel

and was built by Russell & Co., at PortGlasgow, last year. She was 215 feetlong, had 35 feet beam and 21 feet depthof hold; her gross tonnage Was 1119 andher under deck 1068. She was owned byF. Law & Co. of Glasgow, from whichport she was dispatched to the Columbiariver, where she was cleared by Sibson,Church & Co. of Portland. The vessel wasworth about $60,000, and, like the cargo,was fully insured in English companies.

August 22 nd.President Cleveland is in good health.

It is expected that the tariff will form thechief subject of discussion in the comingsession of Congress. Maxwell was arraign-ed in St. Louis and it is said the prosecu-tion has proof that Preller was strangledor smothered to death after being placed inthe trunk. The Puritan beat the Priscillain the first trial race to decide which yachtshall meet the Genesta. Nine vessels, in-

cluding six condemned United States war-

ships, were burned at Plum Beach, R. I.Foreign Affairs.

There is intense excitement in Madridover the seizure of the Caroline islands byGermany, and King Alfonso fears that hewill be deposed unless Germany recedesfrom her position. A riot occurred at thecapital of the Canary islands because theCaptain-Gener- al of Cadiz landed withoutobeying . quarantine regulations. Therewere over fifty deaths from cholera in Mar-

seilles yesterday in nine hours. Twenty-fiv- e

fresh cases of small-po- x are reported inMontreal.

A German Corvette Eost.The report of the wreck of the German

corvette Augusta, in a cyclone in the RedSea, is confirmed. Her crew 238 officersand sailors was lost. Her value was $1,-750,0- 00.

THE AFGHAN AFFAIR.

Almost a Repetition of the PenjdehIncident.

A dispatch from Meshed, Persia, near theAfghan frontier, to the Times states that acollision between the Russian and Afghanposts nemiy occurred on the 13th Augustat Karatepe, eighteen miles from Chamani-ba- d.

Some Russian troops approachedKaratepe and the Afghans stood to theirarms. The Russian officer ordered histroopers to unsling their carbines, and hewas shot and severely wounded by theaccidental discharge of one of these weap-

ons. Before the exact nature of this acci-

dent was ascertained there was considerableexcitement and confusion. The Afghansthen detained the Russians until they re-

ceived orders from Herat to let them go.During the detention the Afghans treatedthe wounded Russian officer with great kind-ness, bandaging his wound and sent himback to the Russian lines. The Russiancommander exonerated the Afghans andpromised that the troopers should not againadvance beyond Chamanibad. Four Eng-

lish officers continue to supervise the workof repairing and strengthening the forts ofHerat.

August 23rd.Cleveland contemplates a visit to Ohio

before the October election. The New Yorkbanks hold $58,841,473 in excess of the 25per cent rule. The yacht Priscilla beat thePuritan by 6 minutes in the second ofthree races to decide which shall competewith the English yacht Genesta in the racefor the America cup.

Foreign Affairs.An English firm has contracted to build

a railroad connecting Peking with the Yel-

low sea. There were 1220 deaths fromcholera in Spain yesterday. It is reportedthat Russia has abandoned her claims tothe Zulfikar Pass. --

Yacht Sunk,A steamer ran down and sank the yacht

Kalafish, off Oban, Scotland. Two of thepersons aboard were saved, but all theothers, including the owner, Mr. Crossman,and his wife, are believed to have beendrowned.

The morality demonstration in HydePark on August 22nd was attended by anenormous crowd. Thousands of womenwere in the crowd and ten times as manymarched in procession. One of the wagonsin the procession carried 24 little girlsdressed in white who held aloft a bannerbearing the inscription, "Shall the ihno- -.

cent be slain?" Another cart carried alarge fac-simi- le of the Queen's letter toMrs. General Booth approving the Salva-tion Army's work in rescuing young girlsfrom vice. The East End contingent hadthree bands and carried 60 banners all hav-ing inscribed on them such mottoes as"Save our daughters," etc. This body hadin line 20 four-hors- e wagons, and with theexception of the one bearing the 24 girlsunder 13 years of age and dressed in white,the wagons were laden with women dressedin the deepest mourning, the vehiclesthemselves all heavily draped with black.Following these wagons were about 2000men on foot. All traffic had to be suspend-ed during the progress of the processionalong its entire route.

Ten platforms were improvised aroundthe Reformers' tree in Hyde Park. Reso-lutions were passed simultaneously at allthe platforms, pledging the meeting to as-

sist in enforcing the provisions of the Crim-inal Amendment Act. The affair was adecided success. The entire proceedingswere orderly. The number of persons pre-sent in Hyde Park was estimated at 150,-00- 0.

The Bishop of London issued to be readin the churches of his diocese on thefollowing day a stirring pastoral on theprotection of young girls.

RUSSIAN RASCALS

Who Commit a Sold Bank Robbery.An astounding bank robbery has just

been reported from St. Petersburg.. Theplundered institution is the State Bank ofRussia, and the amount of the robbery was143,000 roubles, which was taken bodilyout of the vaults of the bank between twodays. The vaults were . found securelylocked on the morning of the discovery andthere was no evidence of violence or ofburglary. The robbery was committed bya party of the minor employes who had noright of access to the vault, but who hadbecome thoroughly familiar with the rout-ine of the institution and were enabled toconcoct a plan by which one of their num-ber was locked in the vault at the close ofbusiness hours and released during thenight by his confederates. Before theywere able to penetrate to the treasure vaultsthe conspirators had to forge the signaturesof the high officials of the bank. The chiefcriminal has fled and there is no probabilityof the recovery of much of the stolenmoney.

The Record Eowercd.The Cunard steamer Etruria made the

fastest Western trip on record, the time ofthe passage from Fastnet light to Five is-

land being six days and two hours.Water Waifs.

A forfeit of $200 was put up betweenPaul Boynton and Wallace Ross for a five-mi- le

race in rubber suits. A three-mil-e

sculling race has been arranged betweenHanlan and Ross. The articles are to besigned in New York on September 5th.

The race at Rockaway beach betweenHanlan and Lee was won by the former intwo lengths.

Perils in Peru.An officer of the Government troops, who,

after two days' imprisonment managed toescape from Canta, says that the numberof Caceres troops engaged on the 15th was1500, with four guns. They lost about 200men. All of the north coast is in the handsof the Government and free from Mont-ero- s.

August 24th.Robbers are at work on western bound

trains from Chicago. The political situa-tions in England is at a standstill, pendingthe opening of the fall campaign. Roche-fort- 's

efforts to cause trouble over the allegedmurder of Olivier Pain by the British havenot met with success. There was a greatanti-Germ- an demonstration in Madrid.

An Underground Collision.A disastrous collision occurred on the

Metropolitan Underground Railway atEarle's Court, London. The signals hadbroken and become unmanageable and twotrains came in collision, engine against en-

gine. One engineer was killed and a stokerand five others are so badly injured thatthey cannot recover. There was a horriblescene.

The Silver Problem,The Belgian Government offers to renew

the Latin convention under the obligationthat Belgium should not demonetize thesilver nc piece for a term of years afterthe dissolution of the Union. France,however, refuses to agree thereto.

A Fatal Fire.There was a fatal fire at Haxeton, a poor

and crowded quarter of London. Owingto lack of room it was impossible for thefireman to work effectively. There was aterrible scene when a lodging-hous- e full ofpeople took fire, and in spite of the gallantefforts to rescue the inmates, a man andtwo children were burned to death.

A German Sugar Ring.At a meeting of sugar manufacturers at

Magdeburg a ring was formed to prevent afurther fall in the price of sugar. Themanufacturers subscribed a fund of 100,000marks for combined operations against adecline.

Frontier Force.General Macgregor has been appointed

to command the Punjaub frontier force.This i3 believed to foreshadow the forma-tion of a separate military command on thewhole Afghan frontier, as recommended bythe Indian Army Commission. .

ParnelFs Proposal.At a banquet to Mr. Parnell in Dublin,

he eulogized his followers for their courageand self-deni- al. He said there was onlyone thing on their programme, and thatwas to restore the Irish Parliament. Whenthat Parliament assembled in Dublin itwould develop the Healy clauses of theLand Act, make tenants owners of theirholdings, and secure to laborers a share inthe land. Parnell dwelt upon the import-ance of securing loyal and self-denyi- ng

members in the next Parliament for thefinal battle for home rule, before which hehoped to pass further remedial measures.He sketched the tasks of the Dublin Parlia-ment, which would consist of a singlechamber. He hoped that the coming party

ould be strong enough to restore the ndependence of Ireland.

RAGING.ISO

,d Features

, pearce

RASCALS

a

, Bark at

t Eeyes.

Tires J--u

ta Saved.

U MEETING- -

ir .1V Morality Meei- -

la Park.

7 on thefban Con--

sat

Afi MARKET.

"i Arrived atr

IS'JCAR RING.

5 JM-Vi- ce at Vienna

awr-Spa- iu anili!wo Arousedtalo-A- n I n.i Collision

jiSu AlTai- r-

k kalian.

at the Southern!. Ky., is vtry fine,

--i JLiTt-i- l will" claimfSffiBTrfd-s-- of cLIoro- -

:3SfK uij-ir- hy aner I W. Ft-ltoi- i at

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J3 ilfairv

t:TVic,roy of Ire- -

"iIaiul. There;wvi-r- a in hpaiu on" Liiya Las consid-jLa- s

W11 coii-ai- dfor,.., 'ri.,.

to locate on theirTr-- f aeo.-- The Gov- -

ks p,mW the. ::rd,:'a interior

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PviJow the

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relationsrii5v dramatized at

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klUia aiSst

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V4 "lrl who

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al law is inexcusable.

August 21st.The Democrats of Ohio renominated

Hoadley for Governor. It is reported thatPresident Cleveland is ill at his camp inthe Adirondacks. Aufdemort, the default-ing New Orleans Sub-Treasu- ry clerk, wasarrested at - Monterey, Mexico. AssistantTreasurer Brooks has been ordered to takeimmediate possession of the Sub-Treas- ury

at Sah Francisco. Jennie "Wilson, a Cap-tain in the Salvation Army.has been arrest-ed at Elizabeth, N. J., on a charge of big-amy. The City National Bank at FortWorth, Tex., suspended owing to the de-

falcation of its late President, Nichols.Courtney and Conley defeated Gaudaurand Hosmer in a double-scu- ll race at Plea-sure island, near Albany. Hanlan and Leehave challenged the winners.

Page 4: University of Hawaiʻi...VOL. IV.--NO. 312. HONOLULU, HAWAIIAN ISLANDS, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 1885. PRICE 5 CENTS. THE DAILY Unsinws Car&s. A&vcrtistmtnt$. ROYAL INSURANCE COMP'Y Pantheon

dGfjO'TjoEediiiiODnU Uqd0

. v r-- m m.

' r(T)Ya i IM-L-L-

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Haw akia Hot ijp!oBaaas Sos: Ww, Meltable

1 FWd)EKF 9

K

ROYAL BAKING POWDERTHE ROYAL MAKESk'4

is a

THE

ABSOLUTELY PURE. FLAKIEST BREAD.

COMPARATIVE WORTH of BAKING POWDERS.ROYAL (Absolutely Pure). . . .i,.-::- - L1 "1 -- '1CBANT'S (Alum Powder) . . . EfTI" vy. - a .,.,.1,.rT.,

EUMFOKD'S (Phosphate) fresh .SlJrr''"':-:- - li . " ., 1. 'I1' - i

IIAXFO&D'S, when fresh llrJJ'm!rmr?-rm,-Tmu.-.- ,"- - " " !. iBEDHEAD'S '

I1.: --. -

CUlEil (Alum Powder) E"--.?- !

AMAZON (Alum Powder) . ..rr-Jy"-f-- "' .- --i

CLETELAXD'S ULll' j-

PIONEER (San Franclflco) r?TT ".ri..J-v- 1

DR. PKICE'8 rSTJiMi!:"?..'" 7

S3T01T FLAKE (Groff', St. PauDI. J y.'f i;

E!TO1:' V.fCOXCBESS gJlL'-J-

L." !:'' J.M7

DECREE'S.... ...I.All9'" ' 1

CILLET'S "I

HANFOBD'S, when not fresh. ..AND REWS& CO. (contains alum- )-

(Milwaukee.) "Regal." ...Jn...3BULK (Powder sold loose) fT-- 3

BUXFOBD'S, when not fresh. . .JREPORTS OF GOVERNMENT CHEMISTS

As to Purity and AYliolesomeiiess of the Royal Baking Powder."I have tested a package of Royal Baking Powder, which I purchased in theopen market, and find it composed of pure and wholesome ingredients. It is a creamof tartar powder of a high degree of merit, and dees not contain either alum orphosphates, or other injurious substances. E. G. Love, Ph.D."" It it a scientific fact that the Royal Baking Powder is absolutely pure."" H. A. Mott, Ph.D."

I have examined a package of Royal Baking Powder, purchased by myself lathe market. I find it entirely free from alum, terra alba, or any other injurious sub-stance. IIenby Morton, Ph.D., President of Stevens Institute of Technology."" I have analyzed a package of Royal Baking Powder. The materials of whichIt Is composed are pure and wholesome. S. Dxna Hates, State Assayer, Mass."

Ror powder received the highest award over all competitors atthe Vienna World's Exposition, 1873 ; at the Centennial, Philadelphia, 1876 ; at theAmerican Institute, and at State Fair3 throughout the country.No other article of human food has ever received such high, emphatic and uni-versal endorsement from eminent chemists, physicians, scientists, and Boards ofHealth all over the world.Note. The above Diagram illustrates the comparative worth of various Baking

Powders, as shown by Chemical Analysis and experiments made by Prof. Schedler.A one pound can of each powder was taken, the total leavening power or volume iaeach can calculated, the result being as Indicated. Thi9 practical test for worth byProf. Schedler only proves what every observant consumer of the Royal BakingPowder knows by practical experience, that, while it costs a few cents per poundmore than ordinary kinds, it is far more economical, and, besides, affords the advan-tage of better work. A single trial of the Royal Baking Powder will convince anyfair minded person of these facts. Jiji

7 YrQ diagram shows some of the alum powders to be of a higherof strength than other powders ranked below them, it is not to be taken as hxSclUSSSSS31 atam powaer8' no ttcr how 8trth,

ROYAL BAKING POWDER ! ROYAL BAKING POWDER !

USE THE ROYAL AND YOU NO HARMFUL ADULTERATIONS

WILL BE SUEE TO

flf- : 1.

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AVOID POOE DOUGHY BREAD. ROYAL BAKING POWDER.

T5V 53

Br

C0LBMA1 CO., 0G . MACIA1LA1B & CO,

SOLE AGENTS FOR THE PACIFIC COAST. AGENTS FOR HAWAIIAN ISLANDS- -. , . f

- i11

Page 5: University of Hawaiʻi...VOL. IV.--NO. 312. HONOLULU, HAWAIIAN ISLANDS, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 1885. PRICE 5 CENTS. THE DAILY Unsinws Car&s. A&vcrtistmtnt$. ROYAL INSURANCE COMP'Y Pantheon

is PACIFIC COMMERCIAL ADVERTISER SEPTEMBER, V. 1885.

PORT OF HONOLULU, II. I. NEW SUGAR DEAL. quantities, for want of facilities for refiuin and a few others, among whom was thTRIAL TRIP OF THE LIKELIKE.

Sketch or the Perils Encountered byInduct anil Water.

jSTOTIOE.

lll i if

"left one," got away for Paia, passedCanton hilii, on through luxuriant canefields to Dickey's, where, after a drink oficed ginger ale, away we went for Kahului. Shortly afterwards the rest of theparty arrived on the special Pullmancars of Manager Williams, and allaboard for home. AVe left Kahului atabout 6 p.' hi., arrived at Kaunakakaiabout 10 p. m., took on board mails andpassengers, 'arriving at Honolulu about5 a. m., thus terminating one of the mostenjoyable excursions ever had.

The machinery of the steamer workedto a charm ; nothing was wrong with it ;

the boiler was a credit to the home manufacturers; the steamer demonstrated aspeed of nearly 14 knots; everything wassatisfactory and everybody was satisfied,and all were loud in their praises of theHon. S. G. Wilder and his corps of ex-

cellent assistants. One and all wereready and willing to go on another trialtrip whenever ordered, and the excur-sionists unite as one in wishing long lifeto all who made the time pass so pleas-antly. Left.

LATEST NEWS.

Continued from our full-pag- e supple-ment.

August 29th.A filibustering expedition Is said to

have sailed for Cuba from Key West.3?wo policemen were found murdered

in the streets of Geneva, Illinois.A British man-of-w- ar has left here to

occupy Ambo, situated on Tajourah bay,East Africa. The object is to anticipatethe occupation of the place by France.

Farquharson, the defaulting managerof the Munster Bank, has been traced toSpain. He has written letters to nu-merous friends in Dublin.

Gladstone states that his cruise toNorway and his travels through thatcountry have greatly benefited him inhealth. He pronounces Norway admirable and says its inhabitants are veryhospitable.

The London "Standard" says severalthousand unemployed workingmen assembled at Hackney last evening andadopted a reiolution demanding that theGovernment assist them to emigrate.

Irish agricultural statistics show thatthere are 5,000,000 acres of land undercrops in Ireland, an increase of 81,000over the acreage of 1884 ; there are 10,- -

250,000 acres of grass land, a decrease of i

200,000 acres, while bog, barren andmountain land has increased 27,000 acres.

The British ship Cilurnum, CaitainBeadle, from Newcastle, England, forSan Francisco, has been burned. Hercrew is at Pernambuco.

The manufacturing establishment ofS. Maw & Son and of S. Maw, Son &Thompson, London makers of surgeons'instruments, was burned ; loss, $250,000.Four hundred men are thrown out ofwork.

Russia snd Turkey.. A dispatch from Constantinople states

that" Kussia is making overtures for analliance with Turkey, and holds out asan inducement the prospect of Turkey'srecovering possession of the Balkinpasses and fortresses. Tiie TurkishMinisters are divided as to the accept-ance of the proposals.

The Simulsli-Oenrmiii- c Trouble.. All Spanish officers, on furlough, havebeen ordered to return to their regi-ments. Several large Spanish mercan-tile houses have been canceling all theiroutstanding orders for German goods. Itis stated that Emperor William of Ger-many, through a feeling of sympathywith King Alfonso, has made a personalinterference in order to obtain a settle-ment of the Caroline Islands affairavorable to Spain.A $100,000 Ethel Suit Against M. II.

De Young-- .

C. W. Mack has sued M. H. De Youngto recover $100,000 damages for libel.The complaint sets forth that on August29, 1884, the "Chronicle," of which thedefendant is proprietor, published alibel against the plaintiff, headed "Ahusband in name the revelations of aMarin Court. An employer and his handmarrying another man's mistress andfathering another's offspring. ' ' The articlecontained a statement that a certain suitfor damages in the Superior Court ofMarin county would make public a bigscandal. The title of the suit in questionis Christian vs. Mack. It appears thatChristian was an employee of Mack's athis country house on an island on thecoast of Marin county. At the housewere Mack's wife and children and ahandsome domestic servant. Mack andthe servant were on too close terms ofintimacy, the "Chronicle" stated, andthe latter became enceinte. Mack, it ischarged, compelled Cliristian to marryher, and six weeks after a child wasborn. Mack, in the complaint for libel,denies the whole story.

Rescued from the Ice.The steamer Nova Scotia, which ar-

rived at St. John, N. F., on the 28th ofAugust, brought Captain Seablossom andtwenty-on-e men of the crew of the Amer-ican whaling brig Isabella, which waslost in the ice on Hudson Strait. TheIsabella sailed from New Bedford May27, 1884; and entered the ice pack July11th. She was crushed in the ice on the20th of the same month, twenty milesnorth of North Bluff. All of the crew,twenty-thre-e in number, and a stow-away, were saved. They wandered abouton the ice for four days, suffering in-

tensely from the cold, and finally reacheda settlement called Acalier, and remainedthere until September 9th, when thewhaler Eira arrived off the place, andthey were all taken on board and kindlycared for. Nwing to the scarcity of foodon the Eira, both crews had to be put onshort allowance. While on board theEira one of the Isabella's crew, a Swede,named Francis Pemro, died of scurvy.The rest of the men are all in goodhealth.

From all we have been told by both sides,before this new move came forward to biasopinions, we believe that Manila raws areequally cheap with Hawaiian, even on thefavorable terms on which Mr. Spreckels nowgets them all, and on which the Americanwill in future eet a large portion of them.

1 From the "Evening Po8t.'iAmong the jobbing trade very little stock

is taken in the yarn about a big sugar fight.The tendency of all the sugar markets ofthe world is towards higher prices, and theplanters of the Hawaiian Islands will realizehandsomely on their crops this year. Agentleman who ought to know says that thecrop will approximate 80,000 tons, of whichthe California Refinery will handle at least50,000 tons, including the 12,000 tons of theHawaiian Commercial Company's planta-tion, and the American Refinery will handle30,000 tons if its-- capacity is sufficient. .

The "Call" and "Post" publish interest-ing interviews with Colonel Spreckels, andthe "Chronicle" attempts to injure him andhis commercial interests in these Islands bypublishing an imaginary or at least unau-thenticat- ed

interview in which the cropoutlook was spoken of unfavorably. The"Chronicle" likewise made a vicious edi;torial attack, repeating the oft-explod- ed ar-guments anent monopoly. It also followedup its attacks in elaborate articles, thefoundation and superstructure of which areto a great extent devoid of truth..

EASTERN OPINIONS.New York, August 25th. II. C. Have--

meyer, of the well-kno- wn sugar firm, saidthis morning regarding the new PacificCoast competitors of the Spreckels monopoly announced in the dispatches here: "Ifthis association has the backbone and manages it3 affairs well; it can hurt Spreckelsvery much, for there really is no reason whythese planters should pay tribute to middlemen, iney might just as well have theirown agents and conduct their Own business."

"Have the planters ever attempted to selltheir product in this market?"

"Yes, they sent 3,000 tons here at onetime. If they had sold it at the marketprice they would Lave theu made money, butas is common they held oil', the market fellaud New York buyers got the sugar at theirown figures. Still there is no reason whythe experiment should not succeed. It isall a question of price. The Manila marketis the one to study if shipments hither arecontemplated by the Sandwich Islands. Theplanters of Manila make the price for thePacific sugars."

New York, August 2Gth. Leading men inthe sugar trade here express doubts regard-ing the reports that the reign of ClausSpreckels over the Pacific Coast sugar mar-kets will come to a close in consequence ofthe reorganization of the American SugarRefinery. It is doubtful whether the newcompany has control of so large a shareof the Hawaiian crop as reported, viz.: 55,-00- 0

tons. It is believed fully 75 per cent ofSpreckels' requirements are still covered byhis contracts with Hawaiian planters, thusleaving only 25 per cent to be obtained fromthe Phillipine Islands, the product of whichis open to the world. The interest of East-ern refiners, they say, will not be at all af-

fected by the new deal.. a

Baseball.The Honolulu and JVIarried Men met

on Saturday afternoon to try conclusionsin a game of baseball. Unfortunatelyrain interrupted the game in the secondinnings, and it was called by the um-

pire. The game will probably be playedsome afternoon during the week. Whenthe game stopped the score stood 6 to 4in favor of the Honolulus, the latter hav-ing to finish their second innings withonly one man out. The attendance ofspectators was. very fair. Mr. E. G.Boardman officiated as umpire. TheMarried Men were first at the bat. Leveytook first on Markham's error, stole sec-

ond, reached third on a passed ball, andhome on another error by Markham.Chas. Wilder worked round to third, butwas put out on the home plate. Lish-ma- n

went out at first, and Foran on afly. One run. For the Honolulus,Wodehouse, Whitney, Markham andChan. Wilder each made base hits.Lowe hit for two bases, and aided bypassed balls and an overthrow by Parker,the Honolulus scored five times. In thesecond innings Scott took his base onballs, Winter hit for two bases, Parkertook his first on Markham's error, andassisted by passed balls, three runs werescored. Lishman fouled out, Dowsett onthree strikes and Spencer at first. Forthe Honolulus, Whitney took first onParker's error, second " on Lishman'soverthrow, and reached home on passedballs. Wodehouse flied out. Markhamwas at the bat when rain put an end tothe game.

-Police Co ore.

BEFORE POLICE JUSTICE BICKERTON.

Saturday, September 5th.Kamaoha had to pay $6, and Napole-on- a

$7, for drunkenness.. L. P. Anderson, for deserting the bark

T. R. Foster, was fined $10 and $3 costs.In default of payment he will have towork out twenty days on the reef.

Frank Davis was charged with larcenyof twenty bottles of brandy, thirteenbottles champagne and seventeen quart-bottl- es

beer, valued at $50, the propertyof S, J, Shane of the Commercial Hotel.From the evidence, it transpired that theliquoi was stolen Sunday evening, May31st. The .next morning the defendantand two others were seen with a largequantity of liquor. A shoe found out-

side of a window of the Commercial themorning after the liquor was "missing, issaid to belong to the defendant,. As animportant witness is missing, the de-

fendant was remanded until moved onby prosecution.

Mr. M. D. Monsarrat, the surveyor, andfamily returned from Molokai on Saturdayby the Lehua. He has ; finished . the surveyof the western end of the island, the firsttime that a complete survey has been made.Mr. Monsarrat will remain in Honolulu forfive or six months. , ;

The German steamer Raiatea, whichtouched at this port August 11th, fromTahiti, arrived in San Francisco August24th, after a passage of thirteen daya

ARRIVALS.Satukday, September 5.

P 51 S S Zealandla (Brit), Webber, 7 days fromBan iTancisco

Stmr KiDau, King, from Hawaii and MauiStmr Iiikellke, from.KahuluiStmr Lehua, Davis, from KahuluiStmr James I Dowrsett, Smith, from a circuit of

JloloKalStmr Mokolll.JMcGregor, from Molokai- -

'

Schr Ehukal, from WalaluaSchr Kainbow, from KoolauSchr Rob Boy, from KoolauSchr Manuokawai. from Koolau

Sunday, September'6.Stmr IwalanI, Freeman, from Waimea and

Koloa

DEPARTURES.Satitbday, September 5.

PMSS Zealandla, Webber, for the ColoniesStmr James Makee, Weir, for Kapaa, Kauai,

direct, at 3 p mAm bk Fresno, Lewis, for Port TownsendHaw bk Thomas R F oster, Rugg, for Port

Townsend, W T

Vessels JLenvftis: Till Day.Htmr Lehua, Davis, for Kahului, at 4 p mStmr James I Dowsett, Smith, for a circuit of

Molokai, at 5 p mStmr Mokolii, McGregor, for Molokai, at 5 p mStmr Waimanalo, Keilson, for WaimanaloSchr Kulamanu, for HamakuaSchr Kauikeaouli, for KohalaSchr Ehukai, for WaialuaSchr Manuokawai, for KoolauSchr Kawailanl, for Koolau

.Schr Sarah and Eliza, for KoolauSchr Rainbow, for KoolauSchr Rob Roy, for Koolau

Vessels Expectetl from JForelg-- I'orts.Brit bark Jupiter, from Liverpool, due July 30Brit bark Lizzie Iredale, from Glasgow, due

October 30Am bark Martha Davis, F B Benson, from New

York via Boston, due October 25 30Am bk Hope, I) B P Penhallow, from Port

Townsend, W T, due Sept 5-- ioAm bktne Klikitat, R D Cutler, from Port Town-sen- d,

W T, due Aug 26-- 31

Am schr Courtnv Pnrd. va tartrt ffrnr T-- v

Townsend, W T, due Aug 30thNorwegian bark Lovespring, Thompson, fromNew York, due Nov 20-- 25

Brit bk Chllena, Davies, from Liverpool, dueJan 1--10

OSS Mariposa (Am), Hayward, from SanFrancisco, due Sept 8Am blc A hf PTl Roaaio trrm PMi.ni r .VI Hwiiu. J I tTK Jll ,

en route to Hongkong, due Nov 1- -5

.rii a leDanon, Maxwell, from Hong-kong, en route to Mexico, due Aug 27-- 30

H. B. M. shin Constance. Donmault, due now.

Hawailai brig Alice Rowe, J B Holland, fromHongkong, due October 25 30.Hawaiian stpamtr Pinner t ron..A.

San Francisco, due October 1-- 5.

German bk C It Rishon.Nov 5 15

Am bktne Amelia, w Vowhuii rrm i..- -Townsend, W T. due Sept 2030Hawaiian schr Jennie Walker, B Anderson,from Jaluit, S 8 I, due Nov I 10

Am schr Anna, McCulloch, from San Francisco,due at Kahulni Sept 5 15

FOKFJUN VENNCLN IN PORT.Am brgtne Claus Spreckels. E. P Dw.frmSan FranciscoAm bktne Ella, E M Howe, from San FranciscoAm Dictne alary WInkelman, Backus, from LSan

Francisco

PASSENUEUN.ARRIVALS.

From Hilo and way ports, per steamer KInau,September 5th Miss Minnie C Kinney, Miss M ESpooner, Mrs Kaaihue, J Wilcox, Mrs A P Brick-woo- dand daughter, C L Wight and son, V S May,

Masters A and P May, Miss M Daniels, Mrs C LHopkins and 4 children, Major H C Dane.C Bolte,Mrs Kanaulelio, Rev S S Bishop, A Fitzsimmens,and 106 deck passengers

From Waimea, Wahiawa, and Koloa, Kauai,per steamer Iwalani, September 6th Miss Lula LMoore, Dr J M Whitney and wife, Mrs A F John-son, Mrs Butler, P Rice, J A Dower, Mr Keiserand wife, Dr J K Smith, J J Dower, Miss Hille-bran- d,

Armstrong Smith, Captain J Ross, MissMcBryde, Miss McGrew, Master T McGrew, MrsMcBryde, Miss A McBryde, D Kau, wife andchild, Mr Kalauwa, Miss E Kealohi, Miss L" But-ler, Miss L White, Ah Lee, Miss T Luyan, TonWen-- , Mrs E Lana and child, Miss J Hahn, U Tua,J Gomez, Ton Sang, Ah Lee, Glem Kim, Miss Ko-lak- l,

J Kamani, Julius II Smith, and 84 deck pas-sengers

From Kahului and liana, per steamer Lehua,September 5th Mrs Armstrong, Mrs Davidsonand 3 children, Mrs J E Barnard, Miss Barnard,Miss Unna, Mrs W Mutch and 2 children, MissSarah Emmes, Miss Ira Campbell, M D Monsar-ra- t,

wife and servant, and Thos E CookFrom Kaunakakai, per steamer Mokolii,

tember 5th Rev C M Hyde, D D, Mrs Love, Mas-ter James Cockett, and 12 deck passengers

From San Francisco, per steamship Zealandia,September 5th Mrs R. Crichton, nurse and twochildren.

From Kahului, per steamer Likelike, Septem-ber 5th Hon S G Wilder, Hon W C Parke, HonH M Whitney and wife, Major Benson, Consul RW Laine, J M Oat, J K Wilder, T C Wilder, ChanWilder, T K Lucas, W F Graham and wife, S MWhitman, Thos Wright, Mr Tucker, J G- - Young,Hon G O Nakayama, Viscount T Torii, Mrs Pferd-ne- r,

L Ahlo, C Winters, J Winters, Mrs Altmanand daughter, B D Baldwin, FEAtwaterandwife, P Peterson, and about 40 deck passengers

DKPARTURKS.For Waianae and Kapaa, per steamer James

McKee, September 5th Hon H A WiJemann,Moses Mahelona, and about 30 deck passengers

For Auckland and Sydney, per steamer Zea-landla, September 5th Paul Petrovits, A H Ken-yo- n,

R W Fryer, J B Gaylord, Captaia T D Bligh,Len ShUlito, L Samwells, Mr Durand and wife, WKarl, Mrs T Kettle and child, M J Stock, Wm Mc-Dona- gh

and Geo McDonagh

SHIPPING NOTES.The schooner Rob Roy brought 200 bags rice

from Koolau, September 5th.

The schooner Rainbow brought 4C0 bags paddyfrom Koolau, Oahu, September 5th.

The steamer Mokolii brought two steam pumpsfrom Olowalu, Maul, to be repaired at the Hono-lulu Iron Works.

The Oceanic steamship Mariposa may be ex-

pected early from San Francisco.The schooner Maggie C.Russ, Captain Peterson,

left San Francisco August 27th for Honolulu, viaRockport, with 269,500 feet of lumber.

The Hawaiian brig Hazard, Captain Goodman,arrived at Hilo, Hawaii, August 28th, 16 days fromSan Francisco, with a cargo of general merchan-dise. She is consigned to the Pacific NavigationCompany.

The steamer James I. Dowsett brought 105

sheep, 60 barrels molasses and 10 head cattle fromMolokai September 5th. She was hauled on theMarine Railway to be repaired and will be loweredthis morning.

The steamer Kinau brought S92 bags sugar and110 packages sundries from windward ports Sep.tember 5th. Reports very rough weather. Shewill be laid up for repairs, and the steamer Like-lik- e

will occupy her route this week.

The steamer James Makee took a 5-t- on ferryscow to Kealia, Kauai, and also Colonel Z. S.Spaidlog'8 thorough-bre- d calts.five In all, Septem-ber 5th.

The schooner Ehukal returned from WaialuaSeptember 5th, empty. She was hove down atthe old Custom House wharf to be cleaned.

The American schooner Rosario, Captain E.arrived at Kahului, Maui, early last week

from San Francisco.Mr. V. F. Williams' 5-t- yacht Pokll, was

launched at the Likelike wharf September 5th.The steamr Iwalani brought" Us, bags rice, 11

bead cattle, 40 bags sugar, 100 sheep, 14 hides and50 packages sundries from Kauai September 6th.Reports rough weather coming up the channel.

TheFacinc Mall steamship 'Zealandla, It. H.Webbr commander, arrived In port 5 p. m., Sep-

tember 5th, 7 days and 2 hours from San Fran-

cisco. Sailed from San Francisco August 29th, atI p. m. For the first. two days experienced calmweather and afterwards light easterly winds andsmooth seas to Honolulu. She brought 56 Chineseand no cargo for this port, and has 43 saloon and59 steerage passengers, and 23,915 packages sun-

dries In transit for New Zealand and'Hyduey.She proceeded on her way the same night at10:30 p.m.

The Ber. Alexander Mackintosh wife andson were heard from by the Zealandia. Theyhad tUited Niagara Tails and were on theirway to Quebec, from which city they in-

tended starting for England on. August 22d.

They were all well and enjoying themselves.

Contract With the American SugarRefinery by Hawaiian Agents.

Extract from the California Pres-s-Eastern Opinion.

Considerable interest was manifested onthe arrival of the Zealandia when it becameknown that an arrangement had been madewith the American Refinery to buy a por-tion of the sugar crop of the Islands, therebysevering the connection of the plainer sorepresented with the California Refinery.Space will.not admit of reprinting all thenewspaper comments on this transaction.The following, however, fairly present thefacta and conclusions in the case from theSan Francisco press:

From the S. F. "Bulletin."The proprietors of the American Refinery

have recently closed contracts with certainHawaiian planters for about two-thir- ds ofthe sugar crop for the ensuing year. Thismeans 55,000 tone, and possibly 60,000 tons.The contract is to run three years. Hereto-fore these contracts have been madeannually, and for the past two years theCalifornia Refinery has been the purchaser.As that refinery already controls about athird of the crop from its own plantations,the purchase of the other two-thir- ds gave itpractically the entire crop of the Islands.This has been the case during the year nowdrawing to a close. Two years ago the con-tract was on the Manila basis, which meantthe cost of dutiable sugar from the Philip-pine Islands delivered at San Francisco.Last September the contract was on theCuban basis at New York less ho per lb.The contract just made by the AmericanRefinery is also on the Cuban basis, whichmeans the price of dutiable Cuban sugar athew York less He This is the best rateever made with the Hawaiian planters, asthe Cuban basis at New York is invariablylower than the Manila basis at San Fran-cisco. The. Hawaiian planters have theoption of getting their sugars to San Fran-cisco In their own way. If they can save $2per ton in freight it will make a differenceof over $100,000. The commission forhandling the sugar is also a considerableitem in favor of the contracting parties.The works of the American Refinery arebeing enlarged by the addition of wharfwarehouse and manufacturing facilities.The business has also been reincorporatedwith enlarged capital, which is now $1,000,-00- 0.

.The new life infused into the enter-prise is supposed to argue well for its suc-cess, and at the same time will prove agood thing for consumers.

IFrom the "Market Review." J

It would not be for the interest of thecity or coast to have this degenerate into alife or death struggle of any long standing.Manufactories require to be promoted andfostered. Sugar refining among us has hada remarkable growth, and it is one theleading one of those industries that havebeen able to sustain themselves and holdtheir ground in the face of Eastern compe-tition, and this despite many obstacles. Ithas now attained a value of sixteen to seven-teen million dollars a year, and every yearincreasing. We have encroached on theterritory of Eastern refineries and havedriven them almost altogether from thismarket. It is our interest to be able to dothis. Were both refineries closed,

we should be deluged with Easternsugars, and not only that, but our grocerssvould find these same Eastern men selling totheir customers at their very doors. It is,therefore, all important that we should holdon to the sugar trade. Brisk competition isthe life of trade, but a competition thatkills is of questionable benefit.

From the "Herald of Trade."lOn Saturday last the American Sugar Re-

finery Company was incorporated, with acapital of $1,000,000. This is a reincor-poration of the American Refinery. It waswhispered soon after the steamer Mariposasailed for Honolulu on the 1st instant, thatMessrs. Glade, Jones and Atherton, repre-

senting the sugar factor firms of Hackfeld& Co., Brewer & Co. and Castle & Cooke,having failed in making any contracts withthe California Sugar Refinery, had gonehome to consult their friends on some newproposition, which, if it were carried out,would make sugar matters lively in thisState. It was said that one or all would re-

turn by the Mariposa. They did not, butthey sent papers which clinched the busi-

ness, and which put the American Refineryon a new footing. We learn that pU thesugars controlled by the three firmmen-tione- d,

and those manipulated by Theo. II.Davies & Co. and Schaefer & Co., have beencontracted to the American Sugar RefineryCompany for three years, on the same termsthat the California had them last yearnamely, three-quarte- rs of a cent a poundbelow the value of equivalent Cuban rawsugars in New York on the day which suchHawaiian sugars may arrive in this pof t.The nuantity which may be expected in thecoming year, beginning December 1st, fromthe plantations interested in these contract!is variously estimated at 40,000 to 55,000 toni.The American Sugar Refinery Companycannot at present melt over 125,000 poundsof raws a day, but on the strength of thiscontract, which the stockholders considera Tery favorable one, an addition is to be

made at once to the present refinery (thatbuilt by the old Bay Sugar Refinery at thenorth end of the city) , which will increasethe melting capacity to 350,000 pounds aday, at least. It is further stated that plansfor the new buildings and machinery havebeen quietly preparing for some time. Mr.Spreckels' Refinery, which is said to be thefinest and most complete in the world, ha3a capacity for melting 1,000,000 pounds aday, or nearly three times what the en-

larged American Refinery can do.The California Refinery will receive next

year very nearly if not quite one-ha- lf of allthe sucar srrown in the Islands. Besideswhich theefinery haa now on hand a stock j

of raw sugar valued at $3,250,000. Mr.Spreckels will probably draw a larger pro-

portion of his. raw material than formerlyfrom the Phillipine Islands and Batavia,and to a less extent from Central America.There can be no possible scarcity of rawsugar in the Northern Tacific. On theother hand, the American Refinery, in thefirst few months of the coming year, willhave to store up sugar beyond the usual

The rules of Wilder's steamship Company, which heretofore have beenlikened to those of the Medes and Persians, were suspended on Thursdayafternoon, and "thou shalt not pass,"etc. was. a dead letter, for did not thegenial President invite a favored few, tojoin him in an - excursion? And verilyit is a green spot in the memory of allwho participated. At about 6 p. m. westeamed gaily out of the harbor, andwereLSOon off .old Lealii, where we met astiff breeze. The fore and aft sails wereset, but the steamer, as if in remonstranceagainst obliging her to do more, causedan Irish reef to be taken in the mainsail,and it was lowered down. We weregoing about twelve knots per hour. Wemade, splendid time to Molokai light,soon after wliich we slowed down, arriv-ing bright and early at Kahului. Assoon as we moored the bark FerrisThomas and schooner Rosario dressedship, and presented a beautiful appearance.

After a bountiful breakfast, which alldone ample justice to, excepting an oldsailor and a young landsman, who wereso sick, the excursionists went ashore,and took the train for Wailuku. Therun was made up there by that princeof drivers and genial good fellow, Parker,in seven minutes. We found convej'-ance- s

ready at the station, and theparty were soon off some to Waihee,others to Waikapu over one of thefinest roads on the island. It was evi-

dent the Road Supervisor understood hisbusiness. Our road wound up andthrough a splendid lot of cane, and webowled along until we met the genialSheriff, Colonel Thomas Everett, whowas driving a spanking pair of bays. He,on learning we were on a tour of inspection, turned about and accompanied usto his splendid residence, where hisamiable and hospitable vife vied withhim in doing unto us as they have doneto hundreds i. e., made their visitorsfeel quite at horn's. After sampling themountain water, partaking of a nicelunch, and admiring the garden, thePoha orchard, and the beautiful grounds,we took the back track, calling on II.Cornwell, Esq., whom we were all gladto find improving in health. We thencalled on W. II. Cornwell, Esq., andfound our genial President with hisparty, who, having returned from Wai-hee, had visited Waikapu to investigatethe properties of a mineral spring re-

cently opened by order of Mr. Cornwell,we found the water slightly sub-aci- d,

effervescing, and most delightful to thetaste. Esculapius described this springto the ancient, who remarked, "he hadheard of it before," and wanted to know"if the water was used for irrigating?""Oh, yes," said the "left one," "to acertain extent." After another drink ofwater we adjourned to the stable, andwere shown a 14-mont- hs' filly that is asfine an animal as can be seen anywhere.Hancock was led out for our inspection,and he looks better than ever a perfectpicture. Mr. Cornwell is raising somefine animals, which will make fast timeon the track at no distant day, and hesays he intends to raise fast horses forsale. He will probably ship some of hiscolts to the Coast ere long, for as theclimate of the Pacific Coast excels thatof Kentucky, where the best horses havebeen bred, so that of Maui excels theclimate of California, and there is noreason why the horses bred there shouldnot excel those raised on the Coast.

We were obliged to llasten our depart-ure, as our chief had notified us to be atthe station at 11 :15, so bidding our hos-pitable host (whom may the gods love), areluctant adieu, we started down thegrade to Wailuku. Arriving there ontime, we found the kind and obligingconductor, Mr. Pettis, awaiting us, andaway we went for Kahului, on anotherseven-minut- e trip. After abluting, wewere invited to the residence of the man- -

ager, Mr. Lowrey, where we found him incompany with his wife and olivebranches, eager to wait on us. Wepassed to the dining-roo- m and sat downto a bounteous repast, to wliich amplejustice was done. The "left one," asusual, was the last, but as this wrs hisfirst meal since the previous day, he wasexcused and allowed to fill up. As soonas dinner. was over, "all aboard forSpreckelsville" was the order, and awaywe went, all but the "left one," whofound himself never left before, but leftbehind. (All rights reserved.) As soonas his absence was discovered, thatseven-minut- e man was requested to un-

couple his engine and go for him, and hedid. In seventeen minutes he was backat Spreckelsville, with the derelict, andhad it not been for Brown, who insistedin overhauling the pipes of the enginebefore he could be induced to get aboard(or even a plank), and wasted threeprecious minutes, lowering Parker's rec-

ord, the express trip would have beenmade in fourteen minutes. All theparty are prepared to wager that Parkercan run his train in seven minutes toany place, and the President of the com-

pany intends to try tcv beat him by add-

ing two miles more of road towards themountains, but Parker laughs.

On arrival at Spreckelsville the major-

ity were taken in charge of by the man-ager, Geo. C. Williams, who, failing tolodge his statements of the thousands oftons of sugar he tajkes off in a day,thought he would give them somethingeasy, and took them through miles andmiles of cane, and he filled one of theparty as full as a tick, for every once ina while he would say, "Only think of it :

he takes off five hundred carloads a day,and the crop this season will amount to atrifle less than 50,000 tons ! I wouldn'thave believed it." Ah, Esculapius!.George dosed you that time. The chief

UNDERSIGNED HAS BOUGHT THKTHE and the lease of the See Wo Com-pany, who has been carrying on tailor business atNuuanu street, No. 47. The Trustees In the SeeWo Company Ching Al, Chung Hee, Chan Hee,and Tan Bun will settle all claims against theSee Wo Company. The undersigned will con-tinue the business from SATURDAY, September12, 1385. CHTJNQ TUNO.

Honolulu, September 3, 1885. ISSJieptll

NOTICE!COXSCLATK GEKBBAL OF THK UXTTKD STATES, I

HOXOIXXTT, H. I., August 27, 1883. fThe estate of the late KDWARD L. HARVF.V,

being In the hands of the United States Consulfor settlement, all persons having claims againstthe said estate are notified to present them, prop-erly verified, at the Consulate within thirty daysafter this date.131-t- f J. H. PUTNAM, Consul-Genera- l.

BEMOVAL.CHARLES MICHIELS,

"Louvre of Brussels,"Begs to inform his friends and the public gener-ally that he has moved from the corner of Kingand Alakea streets to the more central location ofFort street. Just below Merchant, where he wUlopen on MONDAY, August 31st, with an entirenew stock of

Gents Clothing, Furnishing Goods,Hats, Trunks, Valises, Etc., Etc.,

Novelties in Ladies' Hats, Ruschings, Laces, Em-broideries, Etc.

A decided bargain in Table Linens and Napkins.

16 YARDS CALICO FOR $1.

147-feb2- 8 LOUVRE OF BRUSSELS."

THE"SHAMROCK" IflaTbl

Unsurpassed for Quality, Durability andBeauty of Designs.

One Hundred Years' Reputation.MEDALS Belfast, 1844, 1870; London, 1851, 18C2

and (Gold) 1870; Paris (Gold), 18G7; Dublin, 1865,1872; Philadelphia, 1876.Also, Huckaback and Fancy Towels, Glass and

Tea Cloths, Etc.Made of the BEST IRISH and Courtral Flax;

spun, woven and bleached in Ireland. Patternsare designed by IRISH ARTISTS, who have formany years excelled those of any other country.

WHOLESALE AND RETAIL OF

The Irish Linen Agency.131-t- f W. C. SPROULL, Manager.

T. J. SPENCE,.SPECIAL AGENT FOR

The Michigan Portrait Co.,Producers of the Finest Grades of India Ink,Water Color. Crayon and Pastel Portraits. Head-quarters at King Bros., Hotel street, HONOLULU.

129-sep-

Win. (. Irwin & Co.

OFFER FOR SALE

Sugars.D R VGRAN ULATE D

In Barrels,Half Barrels,

And Bores.CUBE

In naif BarrelsAnd Boxes.

POWDEREDIn Boxes.

GOLDEN C. (COFFEE)In Half Barrels

And Boxes

Teas.ENGLISH BREAKFAST,

JAPAN,

OOLONO,

POWCnONO.

Soap.BLUE MOTTLED,

FAMILY LAUNDRY.

Salmon.CASES l ib TINS,

CASES .

HALF BARRELS,

BARRELS.

Flour.FAMILY (in'quarter sacks),

BAKEB'H EXTRA (in half sacks).

Cases Medium Bread.

Lime and Cement.

MANILAAnd

HIMAL CORDAGE.

Reed's Felt Steam Pipe

and Boiler Covering.

50 KEGS BLACK BLASTING POWDER.25 A" TENTS , (suitable for camp-iD- g

and surveying parties.)

Also, a few Iron Wheelbarrowsbutlittle used, will be sold low,

113 tf

I IA notice wall perbythL district, wo 1have

!: m law during the

ie:4cc: book win benew

!tb- - Friday. September

K", 12th, and Monday,&tem: ' nrsof 9 a.m. and

T f een i"i

i .of iv occupied ostore ioruc"' --

ppEv..

sit-a- te on thefe CO.,

t, adjoi.ingtbe morsto theh, old at auction

lU front entrance of

from Oct. J, "83.

jrsie434rteIly" noUais (1100) perr:f Buuur: Tnr.1 ilinisier

- ,Dl'. i.ju-uu- -"

Hawaii

,'h.maby. ,

NBY WEEKS.

j.WEVfEUI.

J.1UHWKI'.

..Of CRITK.V.J bTirr""tPAAKIKI.

... . f TJ, V. HUA

S.H00KANO.

W.F.MIO.

Maui.

j IHOS. C.FORSYTH,

j A. PALI.

T.W. EVKKETT.

I.W.MAKAKOA.

W.H. IHl-STEA-

C.K.KAPULK.

IGlil'SWAl.D.J.KIVAIKI

CP.lRKEK.D. MA.VASK.

Oahu.

A. HERBERT.

J.W.SAIKANA.

D. MALO.

. K. EUHAXO.

J.F.AXDEBSON.I. IAIAIK AWAH A.

I. KALl'HI,1. L.XA1LI.

T. A. LOYD,

I. PAIKILI.

Kauai.j 1. B. HAXAIKE.I I. W. KEKAHIMOKU.

KEALOHA,

I K. KAUilUALII.

8. KAPALEHUA,EAALOA.

kapahu kapuniai,"APA INAUNA.

HOSEA.

j JXO. M. KAPENA,f Minister of Finance.pBWmfnt.Sept.4, 1885.

ftPrtmeUt-Bure- au or Im-uigrati- an.

j'Uf rontl .... .

kj" of Immigrants introducedtK

a DD,ler the auspices of theiiaiion.viz.:!ii?Gn0RX' General.

tq., Intipector of JapaneseEmigrants.

lJu;r:4.is,5.IW.terpreter and of

l'2;'Iuteri)ret and Sub-Inspect- or

laiagraau for the Island of

,,S'T-GULICK- 'ttnd President Bureau of

"Pti I54.sep7.w3

? bst a.rranSements for

;&a grants into thisi torUM re1uest tha' se ,( --

of ProcuringtvB--

heontract abor

W?eirPP:ation3 to.Ma? Co- - the

the BoaiS

that these appli-ri- it

tf'm w'thout dVlay,l,'UCLparties ordering

Ct,1311 be for theth" the nee--

).. "Miction 0 these

T. GTTT.Tr.tr

I 351 , 1885.

Page 6: University of Hawaiʻi...VOL. IV.--NO. 312. HONOLULU, HAWAIIAN ISLANDS, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 1885. PRICE 5 CENTS. THE DAILY Unsinws Car&s. A&vcrtistmtnt$. ROYAL INSURANCE COMP'Y Pantheon

PACIFIC"" COMMERCIAL ADVERTISER, SEPTEMBER ? 5.

HOLTJRT1?.-- dATTORXETS-AT-LA- W. o

(X5 0qVOLNEY V.ASUFOBD,

CLAJtKKCK W.ASHFOBD. Have been appointed agents for the Hawaiian jaia

THEGREAT REAL ESTATE

AND -

INTER-ISI-AH- D

Steam Navigation Co.(LIMITED.) m

OfficesGeneral Business

M. W. McCHESNET & SON

-- have received;- -

Xlay 8t2x Per Uariposa, 1,754 Packages;

XUay 22d Per Alameda, 1,922 Pacliasca ; .

To Arrive Per Consuelo, 332 Packages,

BARRY'S TRICOPHEROUS,

BARRY'S PAIN RELIEF,

ALSO AGENTS FOR HOYT'S GERMAN COLOGNE,

OF- -

STEAMER W. G. HALL,(MALULANI,)

Will run regularly to Maalaea, Maui, and Hon aand Kan, Hawaii.

CHEESEB0R0UGH VASELINE

J. E. WISEMAN,IIONOL.UJ.lT, H. I.

P. O. BOX 81&. TELEPHONE 172.

(Established 1879.)

cowPARKE, DAVIS CO.'S FLUID EXTRACTS, IiLLs vA SSOETED GEOCEEIES,

Ashford Jfc Asliford,ATTORNEYS, COUNSELORS, SOLICITORS,

ADVOCATES, ETC.

Office Honolulu Hale, adjoining: the Post-offle- e.

9-- n2

BROWN, ATTORNEY-AT-LA- W ANDCECIL .Public, Campbell's Block, Merchantstreet. 20

A. ROSA,AT LAW AND NOTARYATTORNEY with the Attorney General, Alii

olani Hale, Honolulu, H. I. 67 mr28-12-- tf

J. M. MONSARRAT,

ATTORNEY AT LAWAND

NOTARY PUBLIC.

Real Estate In any part or theBought, Sold and Leased on CommissionLoans Negotiated and Legal Documents Drawn.

Xo. 27 MEKCIIAXT STREET,Gazette Block, Honolulu. 16-- tf

FURNISHED RO05IS.

IN FOWLER'S YARD, 61 AND 63 HOTELThe only one dollar house in Hono-

lulu. Rooms per night, 25 cents ; rooms perweek, fl. 89-nl- 8

' m

54 MERCHANT AND 77 QUEEN 8TEEET.ENTRANCES. ELEGANTLYTWO rooms. Spacious grounds and fine

location. Terms reasonable.96-n2- 2 MRS. DAVID OXLEY.

Iluuanxi Street. 74-apll'- 8G

STEAMER PLANTER,.(LILINOE,)

CAMERON ....Commander

Leaves every Tuesday a5 p. m. for Nawiliwill,Koloa, Eleele and Waimea. Returning, will leaveNawiliwili every Saturday at 4 p. m., arriving atHonolulu every Sunday at 5 a. m.

WHICH Messrs. J. E. Pelllson & Co. Vide Public Health. re a11 Present ta tha,

"Will be Sold at tlie Lowest iMietrket Rates,STEAMER TVVALANI,

FREEMAN Commander

Will run regularly to Hamoa, Maui, and Kukui-hael- e,

Honokaa and Paanhau, Hawaii.

Uncolored, Unsweetened, Pure Old Br aBittled at Cosnac, for Medicinal and Domestic Uses as a

j"a,m'J-Opinion-

sVWe call the attention of all readers to the following ex trart Lof the Press: - the Anaiy,te. k"Laboratory, Gresham House, 21 IlolWn I"Thin brandy is a pure grape spirit, remarkably rich in fragrant ethers- -

U(X '

tannin, derived from storing in oak casks, which imparts to fine old braniir ,4lrKi.nal properties, and will be of the greatest value to the physician in thn m,lne 01 its t.t'"French brandy Is the most useful of all medicines. "umeroas ca

EDMUND R. S0UTIIBV M f. i

The only two qualities shipped "Seven and Ten Years Old" can be had I

FEEETH"

& PEACOCK""!Sole AcPr,is f., ... I

M. W. JMCcOliesiiey & Son,42 and 44 Queen Street, Honolulu.

" im

STEAMER C. R. BISHOP,MACAULEY Commander

Leaves every Saturday at 8 a. m. for Waianae,Gahu, and Hanalel and Kilauea. Kauai, Return-n- g,

leaves Jlasalei every Tuesday at 4 p. m., andtouching at Waialua and Waianae Wednesdays,and arriving at Honolulu same day at 4 p. m.

rTiMMFBTlAL WORK.Wit wv -- -. .

' i ArtisticCo!or Printing. LEWIS & CO.PHOTO- - N CRAVING

GLOSSED LABELS.Hi - 1HIIS

STEAMER JAMES MAKEE,

The following various brunches of business willenable the public on the Islands and from abroadto gain general information on all matters In thefollowing departments:

Real Estate DepartmentBuys and sells Real Estate in all parts of the

Kingdom. m

Values Real Estate and Property in city andsuburbs.

Rents and leases Houses, Cottages, Rooms andLands.

Attends to Insurance, Taxes, Repairing andCollecting of Rentals.

Draws legal papers of every nature SearchesTitles, Records, Etc.

Employment DepartmentFinds Employment in all branches of industry

connected with the Islands.

General Business HattersKeep Books and Accounts, collect Bills, loans

or invest Moneys. Penmanship, Engrossing andall kinds of Copying done.

Procures Fire and Life Insurance.Advertisements and Correspondence attended to.Information of every description connected

with the Islands coming from abroad fillyanswered.

Custom House Broker.Merchants wiil And this Department a special

benefit to them, as 1 attend to entering goodsthrough power of Attorney and delivering thesame at a small commission.

Soliciting Agent for tke "MUTUAL LIFEINSURANCE COMPANY OF NEW YORK,"the largest, grandest and soundest InsuranceCompany in the world.

AGENT for theGreat Curllnirton Hallway Route,'

In America. Travelers journeying by rail inAmerica will find this route the moat comfortableand most delightful. Tbfcscenery is the grandestgoing East, and with the PULLMAN PALACESLEEPING CARS and good meals along the trip,polite attention from employees and reason,able fare no route can excel this. MR. C. K.MILLER, my Chief Clerk, specially attends tothis Department, and for information, guidebooks,maps, etc., he will extend every courtesy.

AGENT for the .

Honolulu Royal Opera House.Managers ot first-clas- s companies abroad will

address me for terms, etc.

--u; 4 hWholesale arid Retail Grocer

'C7 aDd GJ Hotel street. P. O. 13ox 297. 0.1 ai.d Nt Tf icii ,

ii?vr nnnris irsT RKfiv.TVKh nv ifi.' ivh rvi; ....

RESTAUR AXTS.

HONOLULU RESTAURANT,OF MERCHANT AND NUUANUCORNER Coffee Saloon and Restaurant. Cof-

fee and Cakes, 10 Cents ; Meals, 25 Cents ; Boardf 4 50 per week. 95-- tf

THE OLD CORNER.RESTAURANT, CORNER QUEEN ANDTHE streets, has been d. Every-

thing neat and clean. The table always suppliedwith the best the market affords. Board perweek $4 50, payable in advance. Single meals,25 cents, L28-sep2- 6 HOP . LEE, Proprietor.

WEIR.. Commander - . u v.iiiuiiim rnut. Kr.shCtu,.,. Iand a full line of Fauor and Stanle Groceries. Goo.ls dplivcr.i t,. ..iWill run regularly to Kapaa, Kauai.

AND SATISFACTION GUAHAX TEKD. ..'T. R. FOSTER, President.

J. Ena, secretary. 73-ap7-

?3 P&ZLOUEANJt1 STEAMSHIP CO.Fred. Johnson.Mrs. Robt. Love.

THE HONOLULU lim WORKS' ftjfllave MmiIf tel and otrer tor k1c (lie lulluuiiij; ii?r,viE

IMPAIR COMPOUND STEEL B01LEKS SSaft2!3I MAIN ST.,

CISCOFa

THE NEW AN D ELEGANT KTEAMHIP8

'MARIPOSA' & 'ALAMEDA.'Will leave Honolulu and San Francisco on the

FIRST and FIFTEENTH of each month.

1 Combination Boiler, 12 ft. x 5 ft. 0 in.

"1 Combination Steel Boiler, 12 ft. x 4 ft.,aLso

1 Second-Han- d Tubular Boiler, 12ftxi

io5-je27-- Apply to The Honolulu Iron Works Co

LOVE'SSteam Bakery,

73 NUUANU STREET.

ROASTED AND GROUND.COFFEE Ship Bread executed at short notice.Old bread rebaked. Every description of plainand fancy bread and biscuits. Fresh Butter,Island orders promptly attended to.

COFFEE SALOON AND CHOP HOUSE inconnection. Cool, airy room. Attentive waiters.Everything first-clas- s, at reasonable rates.

94-no- 20

PIONEEESteam Candy Factory

AND BAKERY.

CASTLE & COOKEHAVE RECEIVED AND OFFER FOR SALE. .

Ex. " MEND0TA," and Other Late ArrivalsPI. K. Molntyre & Bro.,

IMPORTERS AND DEALERS IXFrom New Yorfc and Sau Francisco, a Lm'ge and Vniied Assortment of

Merchandise, Suitable for

PASSENGERS may have their names bookedin advance by applying at the offiee of the Agents.

PASSENGERS by this line are hereby notifiedthat they will be allowed 250 pounds of baggageFREE by the Overland Railway when travelingEast.

EXCURSION TICKETS for round trip, f 125.Good to return by any of the Company's steamerswithin ninety days.

MERCHANDISE intended for shipment by thisline will be received free of charge, In the Com.pany's new warehouse, and receipts issued forsame. Insurance on merchandise in the ware-house will be at owners' risk.

WIM.IAM O. IRWIN fc CO.,24-- tf

DEPARTMENTS.Real Estate Broker.

Custom House Broker.Bloney Broker.

Fire and Julie Insurance A (rent.Employment Asent,

Railroad Agent andGeneral Business Agent.

Plantations, Country Stores and Families,F. HORN, Practical Confectioner,Pastry Cook and Baker.

Hotel street. 78 tf Telephone 74

cmrT nTUim A TTT A VTrnlioiuiv nuuarj ixijo i.ju jxjix x ,

THE HOP WO COMPANY,

Proprietors.ThoAhnve Restaurant havinsr recentlr chanced PACIFIC MIL' STEAMSHIP CO

IEAST CORNER FORT AND KING STREETS.f

New Goods received by every packet from the Eastern States and Europe. .'reshCt.Produce by every steamer. All orders faitlifully attended to, and Goods delivered to any facity free of charge. Island orders solicited. Satisfaction cuaranteed. Postofflce Box S A

Telephone No. S2.

Wrm. S. WEBSTER, j

Consulting JEngineer. J

CAMPBELL BLOCK. MERCHANITSSTREET, - - Uli.fl;.- IDrawings, Estimates, Surveys of Boilers, Engines and Machinery made out. f

New and Second-han- d Machinery of every description bought and sold. Plantmiodvhaving such to dispose of, or requiring the same, would do well to communicate.

The following Second-han- d Nlachinery, in good order, FOR .SALK: j

One 4ft x 12ft Multitublar Boiler, one Cin x 8in Portable Engine, on Min x 3fiiu SliJe Valif '

one eft Vacuum Pan, with Engine and Pump complete; three 500 Galls. Clarinr, Uo w V

trifugals, one Mill 20 in. by 54 in., one Mill 20 in. by 32 In. IW 4t

ADDRESS :

J E. WISEMAN,86 HONOLULU, H. I.

CONOVER BEOS'.PIANOS,

105 EAST 14TH ST., NEW YORK

CONSISTING IN PART OF

Palace Kerosene Oil the highest test oil in the market. Vulcan and Electric Kero-

sene Oils, Lard Oil in barrels and cases, Sperm and Cylinder Oil, Albany CompoundPlumbago, etc., Galvanized and Plain Cut and "Wrought Iron Nails, Galvanized Cor-

rugated Iron, Plain Iron and Basket Fence Wire, Plain and Perforated Sheet Zinc,Galvanized Wire V Cloth, Centrifugal Wire Cloths, Centrifugal Rubber Springs,Blake Pump Company Patent Rubber Valves and Springs, I. R. Hose,

inch to 2 inch, 3 and 4 ply. Steam Packing, round, square and flat, allstyles, Anvils.Vises, Hydraulic Rams, Jack Screws, Paris Steel Breaking Plows- - theboss plow yet; Molisse Furrowing and Breaking Plows, all feizes, Cultivators, HoiseHoes, Gang Plows, Planters Hoes, our own make, inch Goose Neck Lane'sPlanters' Hoes, Shovels, Spades Rakes, Forks, Scoops, Bush Scythes, Feed Cutters,Cane Knives, our own make and superior quality; Lawn Mewers, Road Scrapers,Cart Axles, Fairbank's Scales, three sizes; Grindstones, all sizes, Axes, Hatchets,Pick and Ax Mattocks, Pick Axes, Horse Shoes, Machine Bolts, all sizes andlengths, a full and superior line of Shelf Hardware, Builders' Hardware a full line,Locks, Buts, Screws, Hinges, Staples, Tacks, Brads, etc., Planes of all kindsBailey's Patents, 'etc., Machinists' tools of all kinds, Hammers, etc.. Paints, Oilsand Glass.

TIAlfi TABLE.

Pacific Mail Steamship Do.

Lands, It will be carried on In future in a mannerto defy competition. Bill of fare best in the city,and prices most reasonable. FRESH FISHEVERY DAY: Our Chief Cook worked in thesame capicity for Hart Bros, during a period ofsix years, giving entire satisfaction to his em-ployers and through them to the public. Wehave therefore every confidence that a fair shareof patronage will be accorded tons. .In order to.meet the requirements of these hard times, weoffer 21 meal tickets for $4 50, order what youplease. Board in the Private Dining Room, asper agreement, all according to the requirementsof customers.

GEO. CAVENAQH, Manager.P. S. Civil and attentive waiters. Customers

promptly served with their order. No lingering."Try the new deal. 132 tf

BUEEKA !

S- - .. .-- .. .a

For , San FranciscoAustralia.., On or about September 27th JOHN N OTT,

jot:cu , - ftoMos h

- 44-..- .-. iiuSrC'''.-..--

For Auokland and Syu-uey-

Zealandla On or about September 5th23-tfw- tf . rr ""

At- 'firm- -

We have received a consignment of the mostEconomical ajid Valuable Feed for all

kinds of Stock, viz.:

COOKED LINSEED MEAL.It Is the greatest Flesh former, Milk and

Butter producer In use.

3

f; "

The most artistic Upright Tianos ever prolucHl,both for quailty of tone and wonderful and elasticactions. The coming upright pianos of the world,.send for illustrate. I catalogue, description andprices to

White Lead and Zinc, Rubber Paint, Boiled and Raw Oil, Valentine's Varnishes,Turpentine, Patent Dryers, a larga variety of small paints iu Oils, Chandeliers, GlassLamps, Lanterns, a large variety, Stationary Ink-- , Tin and Hollow Wnrt, Medicine.

BLUE DENIMS, 8, 9 and 10 oz. at bottom rati s.

FINE RED SALMON, iu barrels.

BENICIA MILLS Family Flour.

CRUSHED and GRANULATED SUGAR, in Lalf barrels.

GIANT POWDER. GELATINE POWDER, very effective.

New Caootls Expected per KteitiiiMliii Alameda.

BLAKE BOILER, FEED, LIGHT SERVICE and VACUUM PUMPS IN STOCK.:

. - 86 tr

Oil Cake Meal shows about 27 per rent, of nu

tritive matter; tlu'a nearly 39 per cent.100 E3. ol tMs meal Is equal to 30O Its. of oats,

or 318 as. of cor.-i-, or to 767 fis. of wheat btan.

For Sale in Lots to Suit.Also, oni Unrivalled MIXED FEED, as well as

our usual supply of the best kinds of

llay, Oats, Wheat, Corn, Etc, Ec.

P. W. SPEItfCER A CO.,

Pacific Coast Agents,

23 and 25 Fifth Street. SAN FRANCISCO.59 tfAw

CO.LAINE &,' 18 tf At the Old- - Stand, No. 8 Kaahumarn H

IMPORTER gAND (DEALER IN ALL THE LATE-S- UAWV!

PACIFIC HAEDWAEE COMPANY,(LIMITED),

Successors to Dillingham & Co. and Sainnel Sott.

STEAMER KINAU,(King, Cummanner),

Leave Honolulu as per following schedule,touching at Lahaina, Maalaea, Makena, Mahnkona, Kawaih&eLaupahoehoe, Hilo and Keauhou:

Tuesday, June 23, Volcano and way ports.Tuesday, June 30, Hilo and way ports.Tuesday, July 7, Hilo and way ports.Tuesday, July 14, Volcano and way ports.Tuesday, July 21, Hilo and way ports.Tuesday, July 28, Volcano and way ports.Tuesday, August 4, Hilo and way ports.

. Tuesday, August 11, Volcano and way ports.Tuesday, August 18, Hilo and way ports.Tuesday, August 25, Volcano and way ports.Tuesday, September 1, Hilo and way ports.Tuesday, September 8, Volcano and way ports.Tuesday, September 15, Hilo and way ports.Tuesday, September 22, Volcano and way ports.Tuesday, September 29, Hilo and way ports.PASSENGER TRATNS will connect with the

Kinan at Mahukona.The Kinan WILL TOUCH at Honokaia and

Paauhan on down trips from Hilo for Passengersif a signal is made from the shore.

and. Kangev8toesBONE MEAL!

BONE MEAL !!

BONE MEAL !!

jr fit,1

iONT-ARIO- "

1STEVI1JL,E & CO.,'. SOLE AGENTS,

SAN FRANCISCOMADE FROM AI 18AMA BOTTOM COTTON.

FREE FROM SIZING

AND NOT LIABLE TO K0ULD.

WAREANTE DThe Best and most Durable Sail Buck

IN THE WORLD.For Sale in Honolulu.

RubberHo.se;Galvanized Iron nd I

Sheet Lead and CoWIroo-Ston- e Drain Plp- -

Granite Iron Ware, Plain and Nickel-Plate- d ;Tin "Ware, of all kinds;Chandeliers ;

Lamps and LanternsPumps;3

Ma1e from onr

own patterns.

FIRST PRIZE,

1884. .

BREAKER-S- ,

Double Furrow

AND

Light Steel Plo8. JSTEAMER LEHUA.

Plumbing, Tin, Copper and Sheet Iron lj

Th undersigned are now prepared to re

ceive orders for this Celebrated Fertilizerfrom the manufactory of Buck & Ohlacdt

San Francisco:

The 'following is a report of the compo-ne- nt

parts, aa obtained by Chemical

(Davies, Commander)

Leaves Honolulu every Monday at 4 p. u. torKaunakakal,Kahului, every week; Huelo, Hana

and KIpahnlu , Keanae, Mokulau and Nun everyother week. Returning, will stop at the aboveports, arriving back Saturday mornings.

For mails and passengers only.

OPt ALL KINDS, ATTENDS. 10.

GAUDIT'S PATENT

They are the BEST DOUBLE FURROW PLOWS we ever used." C. A. CHAPIN, ManagerKohala Plantation.

"It is the BEST BREAKING PLOW I ever used." J. L. RICHARDSON, Manager WaianaPlantation,

"The VERY BEST BREAKING PLOW I ever used In this or any other country." WM. YHORNER, lAhaina, Maul.

New Goods received per Morning Star" and other late arrivals : Silver Plated Ware, Stoves,Ranges and Tinware ; Refrigerators and Ice Chests ; House Furnishing Goods, Chandeliers, Lninpand Lanterns ; Soap and Candles. Balance of consignment of Clocks very low.

OIL 1 OIL ! OIL I OIL 1 .OIL 1 OIL I OIL !

Skidgate,' Genuine Albany Cylinder, Lubricating, Lard. Peanut, Castor and Neatsfoot. PaintsPaint-- Oil, Turpentine, Varnishes. California Wind Mills, the best in use. A very complete stock olHardware and Agricultural Implements. Correspondence solicited.

A Variety of House Furnishing Goods, too TarloU w gaeU"'LHLm "J? JL IXT cs--P

"Water 8.10 per cent .STEAMER KILAUEA HOTT,

fWelsbarth, Commander),

Will leave regularly for Paauhan, Koholalele,Ookala, Kukaiau, Honohina, Laupanoehoe, Haka-la- n

and Onomea.

Organic Matter 29.18 "Silicious Matter 4.65 'Lime... 31.70Phosphoric Acid 23.11 "Oxilo of Iron 85 "

ly

Made from the Very Be6t

Hard Woye Cotton Buck.

ISTEVILILE & CO.,SOLE AGENTS,

SAN FRANCISCO.THE BEST

PACIFIC HARDWARE COMPANY, Honolulu..Carbonic Acid .. ... 1.89

: Alkali Salts.. 52

1100.00Nitrogen 2.7 per cent.

STEAMER MOKOLEL,

(McGregor, Commander,

Leaves Honolulu each Monday at 5 p. m. forKaunakakal, Kamalo, Pnkoo, Lahaina, Moanui,Halawa, Wailan, Peleknnu and Kalaupapa. Re-turning, leaves Pukoo Friday 6 a.m. for Honolulu,arriving Saturday morning.

E2IVIEJG BEL1

Orders Received will have Prompt

and Careful Attention.

WILDER &; ' Co.,IMPORTERS AND DEALERS IN

LrxmberA and. Goal.y

Doors, Sash and Blinds. AH kinds of BEHXDERS HARDWARE, Paints, Oils, Glass.iMattinfCorrugated Iron, Portland Cement; STEEL NAILS much superior to Iron, and cost but littl

no, - ioi-xny- a7

Neither Heat or Dampness aCeetatnen.

Tkey do wot ptrefcli.Stronger than Leather,

Hetter than Subber,WIIX OUTLAST BOTH. '

For Galo in Hcnolnln.2-- tf

3" The Company will not be responsible forany freight or packages unless receipted for, norfor personal baggage unless plainly marked. Notresponsible for money or jewelry unless placed incharge of the Purser.

All possible care will be taken of Live Stock, toutthe Company will not assume any risk of accident.

SAM'L. O. WILDER, President.3. B. ROSE, Secretary.

OFFICE Corner Fort and Queen streets.6?-- iy 1zx 39

SAM JOSE, CAUW. GK Irwin & Co.,

Asents or the Hawaiian Islands. .- . 85tf