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i<br />
PRINTING<br />
BOOK<br />
ESTABLISHMENT!<br />
AND JOB<br />
! <strong>HAWAIIAN</strong><br />
1<br />
S GAZETTE. Every Wednesday Morhiaf,<br />
AT 8.00 PER AKStfS.<br />
THE "GAZETTE" OmCt MaUrrl ta FerrlRn SnbacHbrr at ft.,.<br />
1 my prrpurd U extort all revlen for j Owes Oa MerchMt rtreH; wwt'or<br />
ha Post 0w, Ilonolala, H. I. ' '<br />
pyn m m mm<br />
VVITJl 2ATSXSS<br />
or xvekt mcEirnox.<br />
AXD DISPATCH VOL. Y NO. 14.1 HONOLULU, "WEDNESDAY, APEIL 2l3 1869. 6.00 PER YEAR. OoT.raa.at<br />
commnntcat'ot<br />
Priotri aad<br />
rrtntinr<br />
matt ba<br />
iXof.<br />
br<br />
JJmrJ.<br />
J. to Man<br />
whom Sntx.<br />
alt euimts<br />
at th<br />
BUSINESS NOTICES.<br />
rust ihtx. cnruT os.<br />
BROVHV Jt CO..<br />
IHPQKTrES & "WHOLESALE ItT'T.TKS<br />
la Hm, Sfixiu, Air, Pa-tr- As, Jlnduol Si--,<br />
X. C<br />
. A. urxx.<br />
CUAELA3IEL. .t CO..<br />
UEPOSITSS AST) UEALEE5 IS "WISES,<br />
SperHJ. AVrv ir N S. Jmu Strait, oprtaiu<br />
uirra.atftreet. Hwtlh.<br />
IS-- lr<br />
c B. leveiis. J. c<br />
LEnTKS A-- DICKSOX<br />
ttPOBIESS ACT DEALERS 15 ITXBES,<br />
Aal all Uasls rt lteiVsar. UsterU-!- , Fart Sirrrt,<br />
llaaelalt.<br />
a. c m rrmi. yi. d<br />
POET ?KY5ICIAS, ASH STJEGEOS.<br />
OSnul c -- AUric. lira," Frt sane,<br />
IIlllC.<br />
aoicv sjtccimr. n. u.,<br />
PETSICIASASD STTEGEOS,<br />
C&iaH.I.CkaM-BnUiac.rt5rrr- OSre<br />
IwiK a--.<br />
ESs-- t Tea c. ud oista Tarrr ta<br />
FrTr-c- . iUiidiBt. oa Chap-an- .<br />
Street, ll..eu<br />
.Nssui ui Feet ftrxu.<br />
AI1YE5" & CEILLDrGWOHTH, !<br />
rLAIVAIlIAK, HAWAII.<br />
I<br />
THHk erettaa tar rrersl Merrae- - od Sbifycag. :<br />
VasiBi 1. .1 tbe aarnr wrt .Em. tWr my aretar- - i<br />
mal rack Air Kr .r. r rW<br />
JOIEY T. Tr.VTKKHOrSK.<br />
;<br />
ECPOSTES ASK DEALEE DT GE5XEAL .<br />
XEECEA5XISE. ,<br />
S Que. Scrrt. BMc H. t. 3j ,<br />
IV. L. GltEE.<br />
GESEEAL CO JQCISSI0SAGE5T & EEOEEE<br />
OSr Ib Tfcr-ira- r BMUnrn SB Csrcs Strrrt.<br />
Hmiafe. IL I.<br />
c. s. srcxciK. b. xacrxKLAxa.<br />
CHAS. A". SPECEIt CO..<br />
GESESAL C03QOSSI0S XEECHASTS,<br />
3Ic;OL.CS.Oi" .t JOID'SOX, j<br />
MERCHANT TAILORS,<br />
10 rirt K . nenanirc rp.il T. C. Htata'a. ljt<br />
C. E. AVILUA31S.<br />
HASnTACTUEEE, DCOETEH. t UTAT.fTR<br />
la rwKraf crerr awcriTQaa. Fatattarp Warv-Sx- n<br />
anrftSlw,niOaj' Pkfia?h<br />
CBiry Varkiba:Uco.'.suadaaHaui<br />
SOrrt. - rrt. iWrn Tr.-- tfx<br />
1 irtaafc fnaarar .Kudu! ra. .lyt<br />
V. B EAZVEXX.<br />
BOOT ASD SHOE yyfTTi,<br />
KVtt Strxt. ti1 1, tlx BliL Hiwhh.<br />
'<br />
31. X. DOXAELL.<br />
CAEISET yTTTt ASS UPHOLSTEEES,<br />
Ktaf Strfrt. Ilaualula, VrwV Cr iaop,<br />
il) TOpytaiiet wwataaa Tarartara. flji<br />
JOEX nCT.<br />
THOf. to&cssox.<br />
XIBBEXS Jc SOKE3iSO.<br />
SHIP CARESKTEBS St CAULSZSS<br />
AtD.TcttrfcCo'$OIdSpa,<br />
i<br />
i<br />
XIIEO. M. DAVIES,<br />
fLuxJxMx.Gtu?CV<br />
j<br />
rjEPOBXES C0X3OSSI0S XESCHAST,<br />
AxaABcrrraa<br />
litp' a IirrT faarrariurt.<br />
XrttHa aaa IXaivirm XinH laraaarr Oa. aaa<br />
Xanana Imun Ckqur<br />
IIY3IA3T BBOXIXEKS.<br />
TJEFOSTEES ASD WHOLESALE DEALEES<br />
Ia Ortafac Ho. CajW. Beott. Saora,<br />
aaa mn rirt, of CraeVata'. FaraHaiaf 6ali.<br />
SaOalat. S! trriujl iTfv. Hoartahi. .SO-l-<br />
J. S. WALCXK. a. c AUXX.<br />
IVALKKK Jc ALLEX,<br />
SHTPPISG & COEXISSIOS JgEBCHASTS,<br />
M Qarm gcrrt. Hanotala. H. I. Qjt i<br />
A-- I XOKBERX.<br />
DEALEE IS LTJXBEB ASD ETEST ETSD<br />
OF BCTLDDTG XATEEIAL. '<br />
H Omo Catacr Cam as fart tarra. ly .<br />
BOJULES Jc CO<br />
yvrrp CHASDLEES ASD C03DOSSI05<br />
XXSCHA5TS,<br />
Cra Strrrt, llmalulL FanKaUr atwotac pail<br />
tatr naw aW safe of Havaaaa rroJaea.<br />
- urixi it nxjasaos r<br />
CLEiaU.-d.aOi- v H BaMM t Co.<br />
CSnrraCa, )C L Bicaud. a Ca,<br />
J C VUfsu Xf, rCutlf (Ma S<br />
i<br />
IRA KICHARDS03.<br />
EttPOSIEE & DEALEE EST 200IS, SHOES,<br />
Aaa daaUrawc'c lara&f&iBg Givxi. corarf Feet<br />
Mt.1i n:l rit Slrrfti. Hraalala.<br />
.ED)X JOSES.<br />
GEOCEE. Ai'D SHIP CHA5DLZS, bss<br />
Lalialna, Haal.<br />
31scrT aaa Ercrdti farard tp 5td OS thrrt<br />
M) tiTaraMr trrga.<br />
CHOG HOOA".<br />
rv 1..'.-- Xertiaat aal Gtaerxl Ajtat,<br />
lajvrtrt- - of Tr, aa odwr CUmm aaa<br />
G.XU. mnifoir Dtrr ia Haaa&w iToiara, aa4<br />
Anat Tub! aad AattxaSa fcar lliata-tt- a.<br />
Tirr-rnK- Starr oa Xeaaaa Sarrt. Ww<br />
Kiac.<br />
a-i- ?<br />
AFOSG Jc AClirCK.<br />
l?ortrrv. Vhelm'.t a-- Ettail Seslen<br />
la Canal Xercaaadua aat Caiaa Cwds. ta tar<br />
tf curroaNaBaaaSInrt. catar tar PciJic<br />
ua.vnua<br />
BariErfwttiarorJiwtLrber. '<br />
ktBa, Keen. Sasaes. JBuxSs. SaSi. raiascrtc,<br />
3S ataifiMrtaadcatarEriiaadr. Pl<br />
I<br />
F. A. SCHAEFER A;<br />
HEECHA3STS.<br />
I<br />
ST, Haaatarc !s. H. L p?<br />
ED. E0FFSC3XAEGEE & C0<br />
EEPOEXEES & COXISSX0SCZXCHA5TS<br />
Bsoetate. Oaaa. H. I. Tj<br />
THEODORE C HECCK,<br />
2XF0SXE2 t: C0JOOSSI0S XESCR&5T.<br />
lj Hcawhat. OaVa. H. L Pt<br />
M. HACCFE1UD Ac CO<br />
GEXEEAL COXXISSIOS AGESTS.<br />
t--q Pawn Sowt. Hjppiala. H. I.<br />
CH-IOCE- Y C BEAXETT,<br />
DEALEE IS 3EWSPAFZSS, XA6A2TSES,<br />
Aad PeruScaU. Fcrt ftratt. HwhOa. (iij I<br />
. r. rw! rg A. jazczz.<br />
B. F. EBXEES 4c CO- -.<br />
DEALEES IS DST GOODS aTl GESESAL , ue<br />
XEECHA5DL5E, i<br />
nrTfcnaf Surrce Tort Ssrrrt. aSwre Odd Feanx<br />
Bag. XMt4<br />
THE TOX XOOEE TAYEB5.<br />
srr O'xirxx, t<br />
SI CaartCSiztailriSBt. (lp j<br />
BUSINESS NOTICES.<br />
"IV3I. ItYXV<br />
TTTBJrPIES STORE CHOICE GSOCERIES<br />
OcnKr..Nwa8FUK-TgEa- . rtMr<br />
'<br />
..,.-,..- ., .<br />
COMMISSION MES CHANTS,<br />
HOXOLULr, II. I.<br />
AGE.VTS Of tbr notion aunt Ilonolnlu<br />
J'ArWcf Line.<br />
ACEXT-P- or Ihe Mm.krc, WallakB and<br />
Il.na Plant.tlcm<br />
AGEVTS FUr tbr PnrcixBK and ale of<br />
lklanrt Prodncr<br />
F. A. SC11AEFEK.<br />
for tnr BllOItX BOARD<br />
AGKXT<br />
Apt ix ta Tmsu ou rf r&amerv .T.T<br />
c r. ABXXS.<br />
. wilses.<br />
AI.4J1S fc WILDER,<br />
AUCTIOX & C03HOSSI0S XEECHAKTS<br />
C. B.VKTOIV.<br />
AUCTIONEER,<br />
Sftsm Qsvr SsrrK, dxir five K&a<br />
sun Ssrvet.<br />
j4<br />
II. --V. "VIIEI.1.<br />
NOTARY PUBLIC.<br />
& Mkx MX UT Ilcwr IlnBliMll 7t--<br />
31. S. GK1ATI.VI."3I Jt CO..<br />
IHPOSIEES ASH 'WHOLESALE DEAIXSS<br />
1. tt.vr CVOuap H.U. Caf. Boot. SIkws<br />
fec 6nxS 5tcrr a MtXp-- 't Wort, Qwre 5tn,<br />
rTwhlr, H. X<br />
(Ift-l-<br />
JOIIX II. PATT,<br />
Sctsrr Pailit aad Coataussicaer of Seedi<br />
KaihaBaaa Snyft. Ha.<br />
G. IV. .OKTO..<br />
COOPEH AND GAUGES,<br />
At tie Sew Stssd cr tic Isplaaide.<br />
H y jrrpmA h anral t.' at! vrrc is H &<br />
astkcfiufMxttf ta CsKca Hoa--. iknktaa<br />
W fffaaii a: mZ avkisc aws. Sc W on haad<br />
ana 1.V - iV Cai aad Burvb of 3 enaS fisM,<br />
btw aaa vaKa a tI! wit at tar tot L?ft<br />
'3tJCtKal. AUavtaiat iaata.ncasiaar<br />
aa4 aarraalrd to pre MlwfMtMa. AU toad. c<br />
Owtxtiar Malwfaii aaJ IVoi fee ade. ls<br />
F. II. Ar G. SEGCLKH.<br />
ITS, ZTKC ASD COPPSS SUITES,<br />
ASD SHEET IE OS 70SSEES,<br />
Saaaaa Srreei berwtta Herciaat t Qaee.<br />
Hr NvaulT an haaa, StorM. Pj.<br />
Taats Inm ruv. r&ua aaa Htv BibU.<br />
fca ladai KckW HM-hali- f.'t.<br />
ad papecvaaaMe. s. aaa 1m a<br />
titj la-j-r of Tiaar of rrT 4K7ftKC<br />
lT:jr anmm r1. to SaaWrt Orier<br />
fitxataa odxrlduoa a I earrMrr amsard fcv<br />
aut&i u tar Cutia. f Hoaoia aw! Sa<br />
Islaab praKaUT tar Uboat UrsaacT lb<br />
p. aitTrtrirt attrstMC to besoM, tBMru<br />
tk an foe tar Jatsre.<br />
JA3IES L, LEWIS.<br />
COOPEE AND GAUGEE.<br />
At ti.t OH Sai, etraer Ei-- g- & Eetae! Sa.<br />
A Lkrare S&xl; of OH flw tad All kii Cm- -<br />
fatreaajr tifa W aai arrtcCsn rora, aaaiar<br />
awmtrsffitfiauii. ia<br />
a. it. XII03IPSOA-- .<br />
GENERAL BLACESMITH,<br />
Qaeea Street, Hcaalzla,<br />
Has Mllulj oe hoi a tr ttk U the Lowrt<br />
Ptms. a aNrt c'tac Em ra<br />
rlirlrca aaa tar Sm? BUwta f CW. SvljS<br />
Jxa. xorr. SUl XTT.<br />
JOICV 3iOXX A: CO..<br />
COPPEE AND TIN SMITHS,<br />
St, cae dcr abeve Hitaer'j.<br />
rs la.Tr tc jaaina Ibr peauc taat tbrr arr rrr-a-n<br />
t; firai-- k al) Uaai of Cnpfrr Wart as<br />
ftaas Mrii Paas. srnam Wanas. faatps,<br />
rtc. Ahr m Mt afall at t TSa Warr<br />
aa r ftr nlr at tar laawt Xutrt Pncw.<br />
All saaas of Kfirif Ajar vita "oUav aad<br />
KTca. Onirf tma tbr rtao- Itataas afE bn:<br />
ana roa anrabaa. Ib<br />
IE. KYCItOFT,<br />
HOUSE ASD SEEP PXTKEEE,<br />
Eir.g St, two doors west of C&stle t Cocke's.<br />
Bas M kui Bua-Ta- WatR-Ooirt- Wasb-Ba-<br />
rial, rK aaa le Fasint. Lrad aad 6alTaaiil<br />
Itaa Pipes, aad najalrr" Brv-wr- Erirr tar<br />
rolTltaabiTiatarertT.araillrxKatr aaorarrw--<br />
tnistM t. aua m a aorxauciikr taaaar.<br />
3IK. J. COSXA.<br />
JxTrTELER AITD ZSGSATEE,<br />
Tort Street, opposite Odd EeSows HaU,<br />
Is jcrgaii lourratrwiUi fraptatA aD srt ia<br />
tear ItsuM. saea a. Watra aad C3cct rrpu--aap-<br />
U.'drtry.j: Jtmtirr ac Eagranap. la<br />
GEORGE 1VIEEIA3IS.<br />
IICZ5SZD SEIPPLXG- - AGIST,<br />
0ce ca Jaes Eaaiaioa 4 Co'i Viarl<br />
Ccatiaae. tiir Varans aloa 4u st arttfaag<br />
vita Cja aad Maxaiss 2KasrdiiaiT oa taetr faq-?-<br />
ata&fxSca Harisr ao 4art or teevrcx<br />
wt4 aar oarAttasc rstahfasatarct. asd Sa-Sa-e<br />
M da ta t cuiiectrd ic axoe. ferbtfrata<br />
pre as pwl ;iftB ia tar fitare as kr aas ia<br />
tarpbt. la<br />
EEVERE Ak HOUSE,<br />
fBfjiljtat,.<br />
"<br />
THIS FAVORITE and trrli-know- Ti<br />
JL iahriat i. ix Bcanlc aaa<br />
Traasarst Tissors.<br />
Tar Ecs tar Xirtn aSjrls, cf rrerj Tarirtr, a<br />
alnrt br prmin, aita coc.adun.<br />
pre ari fX0ap SUITS. &oa Sain.<br />
ai AK HffX. Fraariruc.<br />
H. TREMPEB,<br />
Piano-Fort- e Maker & Tuner,<br />
Has Ecturatd Arila.<br />
ABccdrrskAattartRrStarrcf<br />
X. S Co.. torsrrse Fort ui<br />
s I<br />
uotrt Nmu. cc at "c Jucarf.<br />
farafearr Hoed iarrt. tB<br />
tarrt witi isardnat anraco. Hoc<br />
BICKS03 tBOLSTEE,<br />
House, Sign & Ship Painters, '<br />
Kint strrrt, .car nn.<br />
Crahdag. Jiarbfes fari.<br />
. .<br />
-<br />
. .<br />
v - 1 .l<br />
' .' '.L'll . mr u. l<br />
iat-.-nl BoacAaadoatar asot rouataUc<br />
VOLCANO HOUSE,<br />
CEAXEE OP ETLAOEA. HAWALL '<br />
THIS ESTABLISHHESTH<br />
JE aajratirtae rtcrrcwo tt Tisitan u .<br />
iMaao U3Bs.ao uy rctT en<br />
ras. a rood taUc, aad procsaC atasskiaaee.<br />
Erntnenca csdos lxtar Ccator atvaTscai baad.<br />
SnXAH ASD STLPHC2 BATHS !<br />
fSeraes Gzstzei cad SnHed if Decrtd.<br />
CHARGES REASONABLE.<br />
ParTiBaEciaeToScaas Ta Etta, caa prcecrt<br />
varraxto! ta - J - ta 1avTT7fT bt JJu H.<br />
HTCTCTcr, Ea;.<br />
Xr-l-<br />
, EOREIGN NOTICES.<br />
LEO IT. Mr.lTRS --V rs.<br />
j QCPQ2TXSS AST) KAXTrFACTCEEES OF !<br />
I mure a axtbtkav :<br />
( iUilA. Crate, iljoaawna. HMteim, Tivahs,<br />
I TiTt ru-- is., it. s Mrt scwi re--<br />
s. . iimug c. t mil. i<br />
SEV5SAXCE, CLASS 5: C0<br />
COMMISSION MEECEANTS '<br />
ASD SHLPJETG AGESTS,<br />
'<br />
404 Proa: Si earner of Qiy, Saa Xrsariit.<br />
's wsi uicii utbcuittf fcpeaad n tinJ. i<br />
c5LLU SvrSf.Ir :<br />
iBrftwu- - ;<br />
s. r. cu. ,<br />
nrtrrr . i ii<br />
"- - & CO.,<br />
j<br />
xoawASBlSB ASD :<br />
, COMMISSION MERCHANTS,<br />
Portland, Orrgnn.<br />
n.Ticr i .mrtfrj i ccr tcwt Mit r. I<br />
! fldua a Strr. Sjmps Kk,<br />
Pan. Ohcjtc. flf--. to airaatAe. CbDiUB9 e.<br />
PiBr aaliakX fcr lh Orrpo XUrlt, l akt<br />
Jviwu alMMl 1 b v- - aaj cpoc vkh caa<br />
aiTaacr. aiH be daS vba tvfcmL<br />
urixxscxi<br />
CaiHr. IT Enx&t sa rnacim<br />
JCXIfTTTHiCte<br />
IS Itn<br />
Baifyr ratrpcr.<br />
Jaaws JUrK a Ob "<br />
TToTfVTrnia k Cv ......<br />
StrvM. lUlrr I O. "<br />
AunaLrwv IxtliaJ<br />
TaJdiTjKa.<br />
Xxesara GiMa. lOri i<br />
E. 31. TAX REED.<br />
'<br />
nmHTVURCTn-K- -<br />
WTBPmvm (<br />
Kn.p , Japan, j.<br />
mnt!ijtKtttMuatanb2rtt3,cTO.1<br />
fl<br />
. wtaoCT, alsa dt.a2tli.<br />
It-l- jl<br />
.<br />
"WTLLIAKS. BLAKCHAED & CO..<br />
KTfrppTTO mwtstiAr vrrmrre<br />
S05 Pnat Street, Saa Traacitcts. 16<br />
IAHGLZY, CaOYTELL & CO :<br />
WHOLESALE BEUGGISTS. !<br />
' !<br />
, Ccr.SiirT t CiXT Su, Starraaciseo.<br />
AMERICAN EXCHANGE<br />
EETOTZEJI..,<br />
Suivmr Strata Svn Francltco,<br />
ExtSEjrfTvc fcruito St. t UlWci 5trft<br />
rTAVIXG BEE RECEXTLT HEX-X- L<br />
crnac W bevtr TteniffL ta&fct h ih<br />
HOTEL is tk Bn rettrtoly kex: it of-<br />
feet trrrj faAacgarsi fx Boaw Mta aad the Frb--<br />
T fWaU vfll la wwrT-?r- r ctwK. rwt-- r<br />
inttrT a aAri.t xvTd. ite Antficu rTrhtngV j<br />
Paw- T- - T ,T . . ka lTV.u ..4<br />
rr. cenrpT ta tb Hrf tr. i<br />
My TUIOTUT SAX8EST, Irop'r.<br />
SEEDS! SEEDS!<br />
pbesh srppnr np f.<br />
AXD TIIEE SEEDS, j<br />
UrttirrJ Xxttj 5:ar AX<br />
!<br />
CRASS & CLOVER SEEDS,<br />
Of fcKikVf rarSrn ir tik m-n.- canidEf<br />
Xlte laret collection of Seed '<br />
To br txat ta Coast.<br />
Adtrca !<br />
GEO. f . STX,TESTER,<br />
Srrd.mati,<br />
at Wuiiapoa Strtrt. Sac Fmacixa.<br />
: ,<br />
INSURANCE NOTICES. ,<br />
.<br />
3IERCIIAAXS 3ICXCAX. j<br />
XAEDiTJ IKSUBASCE CO HPAST<br />
Of San Francisco.<br />
j<br />
ITXDERSIGXED r brrn<br />
THE Aresti tx tar ab9rr OtrpasT .arr '<br />
prrparrautMoriweMoci-armors- , trmgnt<br />
aad Trcaiurc. j<br />
WALEEE t STTT--<br />
Arrets. HoBOtslc<br />
i<br />
i<br />
IIA31BITRGII BRE31EA i<br />
FLEE fXSUEASCE C0HPA5T. ;<br />
rSDER?IC.ED tta-rlnr- brrn<br />
THE Arrat. of tar airr Cnur. arr<br />
t almost us.<br />
ca<br />
!<br />
quar-jj- 7<br />
r?XicHAErrE<br />
Insurance Notice.<br />
rpHE AGE3TT FOR BRITISH<br />
rd.irTcrsTrdntrorriou to rrdnir tar ntrsu<br />
IkeiwWwi BKaiaaadPiKUiatarrrtc.<br />
aadMajcraMTdtoara, rend--<br />
, ttr ioiS<br />
ar?rrdiarrrtp5t- -<br />
itf uprt Era. rtr. Jta-- . 11. c. Ltiu&).<br />
IS SO:<br />
Sound Health to be Obtained at last !<br />
;<br />
Tie STST to obtain Sound Health!<br />
" j<br />
"a JSE thr Stomach &om<br />
aa cdTeiTr aoccsataoons. vaica i cstaar rra- -<br />
ner fnctiaBAl &msnaKt Trrj.rl I'm<br />
and Ptrifj tar Kwd Srooiaa acrid aad correct<br />
AWDor. aadTosaifiraCTrtt.rca26r thrrrrat- -<br />
HtKjtuof iicmm vakfa aOcsMusTaf ttr '<br />
a REnEDT, tHrtj yrar, npai--<br />
racr. cayawr cc rctiar saca a craraasc aad m<br />
fi tar i<br />
WntLrlUn O<br />
r DfDiri-- n nrr r r--<br />
ILULI1BUL flBUIUOflLWi<br />
TZSb FB30QS Mrdidae hu prorrd its ia Dts--<br />
,K. r i rt phtst i t c r ,<br />
OAVrnZefhTir<br />
'<br />
jrnrT-vT7- rLTrrc otEilj sprrv tiis-- i<br />
fLOOTaadoSaS u.r<br />
BaJXU jr lj Jji. j<br />
Filliv&--;<br />
Si.TE'fJOZ.'4f?rZif??l<br />
r a,adtT an Oiexasts aad 3ttmr TeaAzr ia ,<br />
Tar aadsrsiitard ba. acwd a saea ia praise of<br />
WBELPToys SAFE VEGETABLE PILLS&am par--<br />
aaa tare csrd thess, Ih,T ar caa ...a<br />
taca vila fcrfret cscacraos.<br />
F JOES TH0XA5 'WAIE2H0BEE.<br />
TJOIKS EAS.TER3T CODFISH,<br />
pcrouuLAi. rcsaierr<br />
1--1 BOLUS a CO.<br />
CALIFOKJfIA TABLE FRCITS,<br />
aad)Sxaa. rrulr<br />
br EOLLES a CXL '<br />
l-- cBBrciis paxest zisc PAxa x j<br />
1 M Tar test article ca tac irrprTtrd. For i<br />
astr<br />
BOLLESACa<br />
A Vo-rn-r- e to the F(itl.<br />
TXETK srXTEEX.<br />
Wrini fee ta Gurtta.<br />
TbB fte!' oar 0 board.<br />
a wet. drizzficg one. aad the wind blowing<br />
thoach quite prepared to do S3. The mate<br />
toot the opportunitr to -- wort-op<br />
and rajrself, settiar ni8 to taratag the grind-<br />
stone, for the orpenter, vai Jia to slnsh- -<br />
in? aolrn topsasts. How we were<br />
sna3 oar shipaates, sneered at and<br />
CrioneJ at bv the alJ black cook, and pass<br />
" T ia ominous silence by the captain<br />
oEcers-- nd how we rared with lonc- -<br />
ing ejes upon the pleasant shores of Rewa.<br />
a-- straTinsr br the banks of the beacti--<br />
fal river, beneath the jcrqyes of cocoancU,<br />
bread-frcitsnd- treei,iadulirici:.Resieaa- -<br />
lite, ia the romaa-J- c dreaias of the saperi--<br />
oritr of esjonaenl to tie bad in a -- life of<br />
nitare," nntramiaeJled with thearti5cjal<br />
stuff i; boriih dreams made of.<br />
From the time the two deserters were<br />
broarht on board, caul the ressel saild<br />
wocn was tne next rJar bat one not a<br />
canoe was seen near cs. while before, there<br />
was scarceJj a minate during the dav that<br />
there was not a dozen or more alongside,<br />
trading oS their rams, fowls, hoes and<br />
frait. An latfrdict had nndonbtedlr been<br />
T ,T. i"<br />
Telf mterpreted to be on oar ac--<br />
connt. as a precantion arainst ocr attempt- -<br />
, .<br />
a wuuo epe-- nin a new, per--<br />
P. f an? oat of any ,dea of at- -<br />
tempting to swim on shore a distance of<br />
oair a qsarter of a le aboat desk, a<br />
skart-hw- Wtea with a piece of pork<br />
oropped ore.-- the stern. I was set to<br />
watch the Kne, and in a verr few ninnies<br />
in less time than 1 codd swim a dozen<br />
yar ,s a inoEstrous shark, of the mac<br />
rater fcockeL creature<br />
as at least twelre feet in Iensth. and as<br />
....<br />
ii aosocerea aoosi ana latny taaae tee<br />
water boil, all the while snapping its lice<br />
jaws and showing its rows of saw-lik- e<br />
teeth, it was a horrid object, aad consti<br />
tuted a scSeient practical argument to de<br />
ter me from attempting to swim on shore,<br />
had I entertained the thoaght which I<br />
bad Dot. Hanled cp afoegside. with its<br />
head oat of water, three casket baHs were<br />
vd in ssccessioa down its osea throat<br />
aad then it vras bouted in on decked est<br />
open. Id iu paench, cilod; oUier ci&U<br />
ters, iras found tie ehH of a large turtle,<br />
and the Itand jmd ivt if tH m nf<br />
life.<br />
that time after the creatare had been<br />
disemboweled, it bit fiercely at a stick of<br />
wood inserted between its jaws. After<br />
catting off the head, for the purpose of<br />
preserving the teeth, and taking oat the<br />
liver to try it oat, for lamp oil, the carcass<br />
was thrown overboard. It had hardlv<br />
touched the water before there was a creat<br />
splashing alongside, and in the moonlight,<br />
two or three fins of sharks coald be seet.,<br />
arcfipg aboat and making an evening meal,<br />
caaaibal-Hk- e, off their late chnm. I don't<br />
tbere as gold enough ever dag<br />
that coald have tempted me at that mo<br />
ment to have ventured overboard.<br />
On the feHewin? moraicsr, the wind.<br />
though fight, was off shore, and fair for us<br />
to go through the break ia the reef, aad<br />
so we got under-weig-<br />
h for the last time in<br />
FijiL Bat shortly after we had passed<br />
beyond the boiling, thundering breakers<br />
that fine the entrance of the Xckclan<br />
I standing along parallel with the reef, eo--<br />
deavor to get an oEag. Things begaa to<br />
look omiaous for the safetv of the vessel.<br />
There was a heavy sweH from seaward,<br />
stUD? 10 w ,v- - coral reef, on which<br />
jj-- 1; rose as high as ourlower- -<br />
masts. For every foot we wen: ahead.<br />
ve went sideways two feet towards the<br />
land. The captain evident! v saw and ap--<br />
P"" toe danger, for his countenance<br />
wore an expression of great anxiety. There<br />
as no use in trying to aachor, for the wa- -<br />
ter was prooawy a fcendred uinoms deep<br />
noderoar keeL Everr stitch of canvas<br />
that would draw was Set, but Tet she<br />
Sim edged down towards the reef, and it<br />
seemed as thoagh there was no hope for<br />
her. dead silence reigned fore and aft,<br />
as aH anxiously watched the sails and pray-<br />
ed far the wind.<br />
Let me here confess, that I was wicked<br />
J . I L. . 7 i .1.<br />
Mu ",UUUCM " Iook DPa<br />
iffinendinir dpstmrlion of th ikI arith<br />
Tage cocpcency. Aside from the<br />
wretched maHce of the thoaght, the folly<br />
of it was still worse, for should the vessel<br />
trike, it w cot likely that a angle soul<br />
. .,.<br />
03 board would nave lived to tefl tne tale.<br />
TTe were within about two hundred and<br />
fifty yards of the reef, when the silence<br />
was broken by the captain, as coolly and<br />
ia as quiet a tone of voice as if ordering<br />
to hoist the Snzg-jS- ) saying to the<br />
mate, "Mr. HzrtweU, have the boats en-<br />
listed and lowered away, and we win try<br />
aad tow her round on the other tack."<br />
The men worked silently, but with a will.<br />
aad in a few minutes after the order was<br />
gireo, the two bcttU were fthead, and tbe<br />
prroarrd iassre ris acatt Fire. o Stonr aad . passage, the wind failed and what<br />
Brick BnlidLnps. aad Irrr bandlsr<br />
fMcrd tarreis. oa ta EKt tsrorabir trrnu. rw httle there was bad hauled into such s<br />
cc.<br />
' 83 cosspelkd us to brace sharp up, and<br />
THE<br />
r<br />
irurrf<br />
past<br />
Tatar<br />
TI<br />
.<br />
'<br />
.<br />
tica<br />
na<br />
liad"<br />
Jim<br />
.<br />
some<br />
A<br />
crew straining at their oars to pull the bng<br />
around. Just then, the little wind we re--<br />
vionsly had, died entirely away, and the<br />
vessel, rising and falling on the heavy<br />
swell, fell off in spite of the tugging or<br />
the boats, aad she now pointed head oa<br />
to the reef, which by this Ume, was<br />
cit more than a hundred yards distant,<br />
The thundering of the surf was almost<br />
deafeninc I was stationed at the wheel,<br />
and as I watched the compressed lips and<br />
stern bearing of the captain, and the pallid<br />
countenance of the mate as he stood on<br />
the heel of the bowsprit, and ever aad<br />
anon glanced anxiously up at the sails<br />
mr sentiments as to the desirableness of<br />
having the old Gotaiia go ashore, under--<br />
went a considerable chanir. I becaa to<br />
take ina realizaUon of the fact thatTif we<br />
once struck anion? those terrible breakers,<br />
all must inevitably be lost. My thoughts<br />
went back to the home I had left, far off,<br />
many thousand miles away. I doubt wheth-<br />
er I didn't feel worse than when, at Mali.<br />
I was m clanger of being killed and eaten.<br />
Suddenly, the mate, from the bows,<br />
shouted in stentorian tones " Here it<br />
comes! Hurrah 1 All forward V<br />
It was the wind coming off from the land,<br />
first in gentle airs, and then gradcally in-<br />
creasing to a good, four-kn- breeze. VTe<br />
were saved! The brig slowly swung round<br />
with her head seaward, and as the wind<br />
freshened, we soon cot a good oEng.<br />
Hoisting in the boats, we steered away to<br />
the eastward, under ail sail, for the open<br />
sea, runnier throosrh the channel bitween<br />
the Islands of Mbent--a and Kantsvu. At<br />
sundown, we were ocrjosite the latter is!<br />
and.withaspankingbreererightafU The<br />
hirh blue mountains of Yiti Leva, under<br />
the shadow of which by Rewa. with all<br />
its charms as well as its abominations<br />
were dimly discernible ia the distance, far<br />
astern, while the sharp peaks of Kantavu".<br />
oa oar left, were gilded with the rays of<br />
the settisr sua. We had on board a<br />
Tonga man. who had lived many years at<br />
Iivouka and Mbau. among the chief fami-<br />
lies. Shortly before oar departure from<br />
the islands, his favorite wife had died, and<br />
he became discontented with the people<br />
and the country. Expressing his desire to<br />
see foreign countries, the captain received<br />
him oa board for the home voyage, with<br />
the understanding that he was to make<br />
himself generally nsefcl. lie was tall and<br />
stout over six feet high and coald make<br />
himself sensibly felt on a rope. He was<br />
rood humored, but at times, appeared to<br />
be lost in melancholy reverie. Oa the<br />
evening when the islands were slowly<br />
fading from our sight amidst the waves,<br />
Tonga, as we called him. leaned his brawny<br />
arms over the vessel's rail, and with eyes<br />
fixed on the fast disappearing land, he<br />
chanted in low tones, and with a musical<br />
voice, a mournful farewell to Yiti, while<br />
the tears ran down his cheeks. Although<br />
I did not shed tears myself, yet 1 felt sad<br />
enough, and sympathized with Tonga, self-exil-<br />
though he was.<br />
During the evening, when my tarn had<br />
come to take the wheel again, the captain<br />
came on deck, puffing his invariable cigar<br />
he always kept a stock of Manila che-<br />
roots on hand and, after taking two or<br />
three teres up and down the weather side<br />
of the quarter-dec- k, exchanging now and<br />
then a word with the mate, leaned over<br />
the rail for a moment, and turning his head<br />
partially round to where I stood, asked, in<br />
a rather gruff tone "How does she head ?<br />
Course, sir," I replied. Don't let her foil<br />
off from that" "Aye, aye, sir." Then<br />
taking a tern or two more up and down<br />
the quarter-dec- k, he came and looked into<br />
the binnacle where the compass was, and.<br />
seeing that I had got the brig just oa the<br />
exact point which had been ordered, he<br />
turned, and standing just alongside of me,<br />
said What an infernal fool you must be,<br />
to Lave thought that yon could run away<br />
from me at these islands. And wouldn't<br />
I have bad a nice yarn to spin to your re-<br />
lations when I got home, if I had left you<br />
out there among those savages. I should<br />
never have beard the last of it-- But I<br />
want to know what were your reasons for<br />
running away from me ? Didn't I always<br />
treat you well, and try to learn you navi-<br />
gation and seamanship V This was the<br />
longest speech I had ever heard from our<br />
captain, who wa3 generally a man of very<br />
few words, and what with my perturbation<br />
in trying to ad words with winch to an<br />
swer him, and my attempts to revolve the<br />
wheel so as to keep the brig on her course,<br />
she naturally got to yawing about. His<br />
seaman's eye detected this in an instant,<br />
and saying to me sternly, "Mind your<br />
course there,' he went below. Just as four<br />
bells struck, and I was aboat to be reliev-<br />
ed, he came on deck again, and stood in<br />
the waist as I went forward on the lee<br />
side. He called me to him. and gave me,<br />
in a few words, as fatherly a lecture as one<br />
might expect from a pater famxhxa, and<br />
not from an old salt. It attached me to<br />
him thenceforward, and I now remember<br />
him he must be quite old sow with sin-<br />
cere regard.<br />
The passage from Eewa to Manila, was<br />
through tropical seas, unvexed by gales;<br />
the Pacific here being truly dessrringcl<br />
the came it bears. The wind blew steadi<br />
ly tut gently, frcra the south-ea- st a quar- -<br />
tcrlyorfree wind for uj and we were<br />
wafted along pleasantly. Ocr course lay<br />
among scattered groups of islands, with j<br />
here and there an isolated one. It was<br />
not desirable to go too near any of these<br />
islands, on account of the savage character<br />
of the inhabitants, and as our boarding<br />
nettings were stowed away below, and our<br />
guns secured by lashings, wo would have<br />
been incapable of making a defense against<br />
a large force of the savage islanders. So<br />
we kept our course out of sight of land,<br />
thoogh frequently by varying a half a<br />
point by compass, an hour's sailing would<br />
have brought us close in with the land,<br />
Once only during the passage did we ret<br />
'<br />
sight of land, and that was for the purpose<br />
or pro vine the accuracy of the chronom- - i<br />
eter. Heasant Island, as it is named on !<br />
' the charts, is a small, low island, densely !<br />
covered with cocoanuts and other tropical<br />
trees, and cannot be seen until you get<br />
within a few miles of it-- The inhabitants<br />
are said to be fierce and warlike. Find-<br />
ing the chronometer all right, we soon left<br />
'<br />
Pleasant Island astern.<br />
Taking advantage of the fine weather<br />
and smooth water, stages were rigged over<br />
tlle ioi ,he old bri? " scraped and<br />
painted afresh. While this was going on.<br />
all hands were kept at work, the afternoon<br />
watch below being dispensed with. One af-<br />
ternoon, the wind as usual, rather light, dar-<br />
ing my "trick" at the wheel, 1 was the<br />
only person on deck besides the cook,<br />
everybody else, including the captain, being<br />
on the stages outside, busily scraping and<br />
painting. Castinr tar eves around the '<br />
. - .....<br />
k. V.<br />
conxon, l ooserved a very liart-Iootin- g<br />
j cloud rising rapidly in the S. As I<br />
watched its increasing size and blackness,<br />
I suddenly saw it form two or three loni<br />
tapers, descending down from the body of<br />
the cloud, which was now fast approaching<br />
the brig.<br />
I had never seen a water-spou- t, but<br />
from descriptions which I had read, I at<br />
once concluded that I was now witnessing<br />
the formation of one of these wonders of<br />
nature, not very often seen except by those<br />
who go down to the sea in ships. Should<br />
one of these whirlwinds strike a ship, she<br />
would doubtless be dismasted, if not cap-<br />
sized.<br />
Stepping to the side, I said "Captain<br />
Waliis, I believe there 13 a water-spo-<br />
forming to windward, and it appears to be<br />
coming down apon us." He immediately<br />
jumped on deck, and after one look in the<br />
direction I indicated, he shouted lor all<br />
hands to tumble and stand by the<br />
halyards and clew-line- The jibs were<br />
hauled dorrn and the light sails clewed np.<br />
Fortunately, the water-spou- t passed clear<br />
of us, but within thirty yards only, of our<br />
stem. It was boiling and hissing cr<br />
rather, the ocean was as the surcharged<br />
cloud poured itself into the sea. At the<br />
same time, a drenching shower of rain fell<br />
within a radius of a quarter of a mile round<br />
the spout. It used to be a favorite theory<br />
with seafaring men, that the salt water as-<br />
cended, but my close observation of the<br />
spout I have mentioned, convinced me that<br />
it was rain water descending.<br />
f To be continued.<br />
Tee following clipping from the Oakland<br />
Real Estate Cazttte, Is not only worthy of<br />
perusal, but of remembrance and rejection.<br />
An attention to its hints would save many<br />
heavy lawyer's fees. j<br />
"All deeds, mortgages, contracts, or other<br />
Instruments aceciing real estate should be<br />
drawn with great care and accuracy. An er- - .<br />
rjneus date, the omission of a word, or a<br />
careless description of the property may, at<br />
DO distant, asy, cause a ureal deal of trouble,<br />
as well as a Urge bill of expenses. Very<br />
many blackmail titles are based upon some<br />
infumulity in conveyances, which, by care-<br />
ful nursing at the bands of those who make<br />
a business of bleeding the timid, eventually<br />
becomes a cloud upon title. Fortunately,<br />
the statute of limitation cures many of thee<br />
informalities. We are ltd to refer to Ibis<br />
subject, from having recently had occasion<br />
to examine a conveyance of a valuable piece<br />
of property, of which the owner wished an<br />
apprisa. The former owner, having '<br />
and sold several pieces of property, I<br />
and being able to write a decent band, con-<br />
sidered<br />
!<br />
himself as ou Jait In conveyancing, I<br />
and was satisfied that, with the use of a<br />
printed blank. be could draw a deed as well<br />
as a lawyer, and save that five dollars.' Tet<br />
be so signally failed to describe tbe properly,<br />
that a surveyor was unable to tell in which<br />
oart of the city It was located. Another I<br />
deed, which passed through our hands not<br />
long ago, described completely a piece of ,<br />
propertv distant over a mile from tbe one in ...<br />
tended to be conveyed. Another conveyed<br />
lot No. five In Oakland no number of block<br />
being given, or other description. Some-<br />
times, descriptions by metes and bounds<br />
crosses a street or fails to enclose the prop-<br />
erty- Such outrageous carelessness Is per<br />
fectly Inexcusable. Tet those whose busi<br />
ness It is to examine real estate conveyances<br />
will tell you that such instances are by no<br />
means uncommon. Accuracy in conveyance<br />
becomes a question of title, upon which all<br />
agree that none but an attorney or searcher<br />
of records should pass. For this reason,<br />
deeds or other Instrument afiveting real es-<br />
tate, should be drawn only by those experi-<br />
enced In tbe business of conveyancing.<br />
Upon the execution of a deed. It should be<br />
immediately filed for record In the office of<br />
the County Recorder. It Is also well to pre-<br />
serve carelally aH old deeds, mortage, tax;<br />
receipts or other paper relating to any prop-<br />
erty, aa a safe guard, In case of accident to<br />
the records."<br />
Logic. A man who was np to a thing or<br />
two, once offered to bet that be could prove<br />
that this side of tbe river wa the other tide.<br />
Bit challenge u accepted, and a bet of 110<br />
made; when, pointing to the opposite shore<br />
of tbe rirer, be shrewdly asked:<br />
" Is cot that one side of the river!"<br />
" Yes." wa the immediate answer.<br />
"Agreed," said the man; "and Is not til<br />
tbe other sider<br />
" Tea," said tbe other.<br />
"Then," said the man, "par me tbe flO.<br />
for by your own confession I have proved<br />
that this side of the river a tbe other.'<br />
The dumb-founde- antagonist, overcome<br />
by the profound logic, ismediatdy paid the<br />
money. a<br />
Ms. Colfax, ou rvslctilrgthe Speakership<br />
j of the ReprestauLves, addressed the, House<br />
' as follows :<br />
The rortlnr word amount friends about<br />
to separate Is always a regretful one; but the<br />
larencil wmcn iskcs me irura uu nan, m<br />
which so many jesrs hste been spent, ex-<br />
cite In me emotions which tt would be use<br />
let to attempt to conceal. The fourteen<br />
rears daring which I have been associated<br />
with the Representative of the people here,<br />
hare been full 01 cTcotful legislation and<br />
exciting Issues; of crave qnettloci and de-<br />
cision vitally street! nz the entire Republic<br />
AU this, with the sccompsujlng scenes which<br />
so often produced In this arena of debate tho<br />
a snath of feeling of our antacoolzlni; con-<br />
stituents, have passed Into the domalu of<br />
hlstorr. I but refer to them to express the<br />
Joy which Is apparent? sbtred by the mas<br />
of our countrymen, that the storm-clou- d of<br />
war which so lone darkened our national<br />
welfare has patted away, lea-l- ng our Imper-<br />
iled Union saved, and that by decree of the<br />
"ftVnf.'bDt enrotUghOUt<br />
But 1 can not leave you wltbont one word<br />
&!3t<br />
With our rolllurr power, almost unlimited<br />
'Jll<br />
and the to the op-<br />
pressed of other lands .our vast scrlcnltnral,<br />
mechanical, manufacturing and mineral ca.<br />
picnics; our Irontage on two crest oceans;<br />
our almost completed Pacific Railroad, unit-- I<br />
Inir those opposite shore, and becoming the<br />
highway of uatlons the United State com- -<br />
...... .4 ... . ... .......... I.. tM.,M nf h.<br />
"world which Insures tb maintenance of ill<br />
Its nstlonil tights and the security of all Its<br />
citizens from Injustice and oppression abroad.<br />
Kor Is this alt. The triumphaut s<br />
of free lusiltutlons here has bad Its potential<br />
Inflneuce beyond tho sea. The Hunt of th<br />
people to govern, based on the principle that<br />
all ruvcrnments derive tbelr Just powers<br />
from the consent of the governed. Is every<br />
where advancing, not with slow and meas-<br />
ured tread, but with a rapidity that, within<br />
a few years, has been so slirnally Illustrated<br />
In Great Britain. Spain, Italy. Prussia, Hun-<br />
gary, and other lauds. May we not all hope<br />
that, by the moral but powerful force of our<br />
example, the fetters may everywhere be<br />
broken, and some of us live to see the happy<br />
era when tvrauur and slavery shall be no<br />
more knowu In the world from the rivers to<br />
- 1. ..f n ..<br />
LUL lllUI u, ,UvT V.ltU.<br />
t en not cmm that In the share I have<br />
-g<br />
& the<br />
ber "d lXll<br />
have always done that which was the wisest<br />
and best In nord and act, for none Is Infalli-<br />
ble; but that I have striven to perform faith-foll- y<br />
every doty, and been devoted to the<br />
prindp.es"! have deemed correct, and that<br />
the honor ana glory oi our country nave<br />
always been paramount and above arty ties,<br />
I can conscientiously assert. That 1 have<br />
sought to mltisatc rather than Intensify the<br />
asperities which the collusions of opposing<br />
parties so often evoke, most be left to my<br />
fellow members to verify. In the responsible<br />
dntics or the psst six years, I have endeav-<br />
ored to administer your Isws, bothln letter<br />
and spirit, with impartiality, uninnueneeti ny<br />
political associations or antagonisms. I may<br />
be pardoned the expressioo of gratification<br />
that while no decision of mine has been re<br />
Tersed, there litis bevn no appeal ever decided<br />
by a strict party vote. If. In the quickness<br />
With which the presidium officer Is often com<br />
peiled to rule, hour after hour, on parlia-<br />
mentary points, and in the performance of<br />
his duty to protect all members Id their rights,<br />
and advance the progress of public business<br />
by preserving order, any word has fallen<br />
from my lips that Justly wounded any one, I<br />
withdraw it unreservedly.<br />
I leave this Hall with no feelings of<br />
towards any member with whom I<br />
have been associated in all the years of the<br />
past, hoping earnestly that I have tried to<br />
practice thatpesson of life which commands ca<br />
to write our enmities on sand, but engrave<br />
our friendships on granite.<br />
The last word can not longer be delayed.<br />
1 bid farewell to a faithful, confiding con-<br />
stituency, whose affectionate regard has<br />
sustained and encompassed me through all<br />
the years of my public life. Fsrewell, this<br />
Hall, which, in lis excitement and restless<br />
activity, so often seems to represent the<br />
throbbtngs and intense feelings of the na-<br />
tional heart; and finally, fellow members<br />
and friends, with sincere gratitude for the<br />
generous support you have always given me<br />
in the difficult and often romplex dntles of<br />
tbiscbsir; with the warmest wishes for your<br />
health, happiness and prosperity one and<br />
all I bid you farewell. Great applause.<br />
Aetipicial Sprit axd its uses is Medi-<br />
cine. An English paper says: Everybody<br />
must have seen, and most people mnstiiave<br />
used, a little toy that was exhibited a few<br />
years ago In the shops of druggists and<br />
under the name of the Perfume Vap-<br />
orizer. It consisted of two glass tubes, set<br />
at right angles, and with the fine orifice of<br />
one reaching partly over ttiu rat tier wider ori-<br />
fice of the other. By placing the latter ver-- I<br />
tlcally In a bottle of scent, and by blowing<br />
pretty strongly throngh the former, which<br />
would then be horizontal, two effects were<br />
produced the verllcle tube was first ezhaus- -<br />
ted of its air, and then the liquid in the bot--<br />
tie, as It rose to fill the vaccnni, wis broken<br />
br tbe breath current Into a cloud of fine<br />
spray, and diffused In the atmosphere. If<br />
tbe band or face ere so placed as to receive<br />
the stream of spray, a sensation of refreshing<br />
coolness was produced by Its contact and lta<br />
speedy evaporizatIou,but the llqold was so<br />
finely divided or pulverized that tbe quanti-<br />
ty deposited wonld be scarcely enough to<br />
wet tbe skin<br />
This method of dispersing liquids was<br />
soon found to be of much use In medical<br />
cractice: and one of its early tDpIIcatlons<br />
was Dr. Richardson's employment of either<br />
spray as a means of rapidly freezing tbe (kin<br />
for the purpose of producing insensibility to<br />
pain in surgical operations. In order to<br />
keep up a continuous supply, a small bahd- -<br />
bellows of .India-rubbe- r was used as the<br />
source of the current, and tbe tubes them<br />
selves were variously modified In order to<br />
fulfil Tarious requirements. Among other<br />
applications tne spray lias now Been largely<br />
,mninr4 mdalihumi hpn,iiiiii-Mi- ii<br />
of applying lotions to the eyes, nostrils,<br />
montnand.....<br />
throat.. Its advantage . being that<br />
.<br />
lis nne aivision insures us penecr contact<br />
with tbe whole of tbe diseased surface, and<br />
that it Is carried by tbe air to parts not ac-<br />
cessible by ordinary means. The intricate car-Pi-<br />
of the nose and the part of the throat<br />
that are below those reached by a gargle,<br />
andperfectlr exbosed to a current of spray,<br />
and spray has even been used as a means of<br />
Introducing remedies directly into tbe lung<br />
themselves. The benefit of this Is, however,<br />
at present questionable; and It is for tbe<br />
throat, above ill other parts, that spray la<br />
especially valuable.<br />
The ordinary gargle Is not only disgusting<br />
and comparatively Inefficient, but It is In<br />
some case positively Injurious, becaase 4b<br />
effort of using it exert and disturbs an In-<br />
flamed part. The spray, on the other band,<br />
only require the patient to open bis ausB.<br />
Tbe palate I in a great degree saved from<br />
the contact of tbe remedy ; and the abt-ttat-e<br />
quantity deposited on tbe surface U 10 tmtil<br />
that thu may be of a higher degree of con-<br />
cent ration and power than weald he pos-<br />
sible with any llqold that wa to be fakes la<br />
bulk Into the mouth, 'me<br />
geoa and of aecfaafilcan dm bees wusHy<br />
exercised In contriving Improved and lesx-pensl-re<br />
Instruments for tfiaprodactlOB of<br />
spray; aad Is Use ieUreaU of Use )rjf-e-tlo- n<br />
of tbe public who suffer frosa occasion-<br />
al ion throat, we bops nvtMnei' eases<br />
the bominatioa.of the gtrglev if comblaed<br />
hastiness and leefBcleney, wHl shortly be<br />
only known a tntlUion of lira past.<br />
Madbid, Hsrea 38.-- Tbe Oard XoMe ka<br />
been organized io Andalusia to enforce the<br />
conscription aad collection of taxe.<br />
Pik, March 33. Gen. Almonte, femtrly<br />
Mexican GesenJ, is dsad. r
<strong>HAWAIIAN</strong> GAZETTE.<br />
J. 1I0TT SJUTH,<br />
Director of the Government Press.<br />
HOXOWLU:<br />
WEDXHSDAT, APRIL 21, 1869.<br />
BY AUTHORITY.<br />
R. K.fcowiisi has this day been appoint- -<br />
ed Road Supervisor for ike District of ilaka -<br />
wan. Island of Maui F. W. HrrcBisox.<br />
atiakter cf the Interior.<br />
Home OSce, April IKh, ISai.<br />
to as<br />
institution as<br />
should<br />
of<br />
to<br />
Htssits. C R. Bishop, J. Kamoikehuebu j does all in its to iojnre<br />
and H. A. Widetnann have btei appointed . .<br />
to asses, the value of (he pri- -, P"3 sneering articles ont of foreign le<br />
property required for the opening of pers recardins the King, attempts<br />
Street. LZ'JS?Z, to stir op trouble between and<br />
Htm oa. Apra , thejf as is the case with both the<br />
OScial information has been reeeired it this I Papers pnblished by private enterprise, and<br />
department, that during the temporary ab--<br />
the United State at IlUn. Cna. B. Wrrx oke,<br />
Eicj., of Hilo, ha been appointed acting Vice<br />
Consul of the United States at that port, and<br />
he will be respected accordingly.<br />
SrerHrx H. Phillips,<br />
Minister of Forein ASslra, ad<br />
Dvparuuenl of Forelcn AtUurs,<br />
nwololn, April IT. J<br />
yoUhmirpxt&yamctihi!:<br />
or 10th, 1569. the Board of Health pass--<br />
ed a resolution, suspending, from this date.<br />
rule 1st. of the Quarantine Regulations and<br />
January ctn. I56S.<br />
By order of the Eoard of Health.<br />
En. Fcsasd,<br />
0V of the Board of I! filth. 1<br />
HoooUlo, April 14, 1869. f<br />
Secretary.<br />
Ot'R AXVETISIG.<br />
It seems to be a part of the editorial<br />
a<br />
possible,<br />
ad-<br />
vantage<br />
are<br />
obliged and<br />
Commiuicm<br />
themselves<br />
calling for one to himself and his en- - , to economize for them and lose<br />
terprise np; to tell the public what an as- - j we snaI put fc the prices to their old<br />
tonishing influence he has on the same standard. II we we make money and<br />
public, on the principle that each indi- - j tave their support, we if possible, yet<br />
vidual, as he reads the j farther reduce<br />
will, for want of evidence, pro or ve propose, likewise, to carry on the<br />
con, on the subject, believe the statement business in our own way, subject to the<br />
of the particular " we." as true of every approval 0f the people, who own the<br />
else, except himself, and take it as j perty, will express<br />
evidence of his wide-spre- popularity and j or withhold in tie and we<br />
influence. The of bis circulation<br />
is something enormous in fact, does<br />
an immense amount of into his<br />
own pockets, and will do so into the pock-<br />
ets of all who advertise with him.<br />
are like ths Razor-Stro- p man. in explain-<br />
ing all the possible and impossible ad van- -<br />
to papers, well do<br />
redact<br />
shall have<br />
any<br />
people. Competition<br />
the<br />
combinations<br />
prejudicial<br />
"We tnut cearlv<br />
that<br />
whole connnnity<br />
the capital thej<br />
invest here, the wages which<br />
power<br />
them, which<br />
which<br />
School<br />
laborers,<br />
tateriat.<br />
April<br />
make<br />
money<br />
shall,<br />
astounding facts, them,<br />
better<br />
pro-o- ne<br />
they undoubtedly<br />
Legislature;<br />
amount<br />
con-<br />
vey money<br />
Some<br />
which<br />
which<br />
mnst pay. doing so, we do<br />
duty. The very statntf. rommanding<br />
establishment and maim fiance<br />
oSce, directs that if amount appropri-- !<br />
ated by the Legislature should not bo<br />
ficient expenses thereof, -- he<br />
the Director shall have power to pay for<br />
the same, out of the receipts of his office,--<br />
thus by a clear indicating<br />
that we are to obtain "receipts." which can<br />
I only be done by worsting tor wno<br />
see fit to their work done here. If<br />
, . r .v j--<br />
peopie cuoose iu mvur, hiui turn mim.<br />
and advertisements,an establishment which<br />
especially the Kuolxxi that 13 their<br />
basin ess, not ours. It is a free country,<br />
each one can do as he best.<br />
AVe keep the even tenor of our<br />
way, writing their defense, support-<br />
ing their bearing abaso and de-<br />
traction in their offering to work<br />
for thju, at fait. economical prices,<br />
. . .<br />
( managing their property in as economical<br />
a manner as we are able, thoueh as all<br />
j onr fellow citiiens know, extra<br />
labor are thereby rendered<br />
not add one cent to our<br />
propose to carry on busi-<br />
ness, entrusted to our care, as profitably<br />
possible. If we find we do not have<br />
the snpl)ort 0r tj,e public in oar attempt<br />
further propose, to do that which would<br />
not hinder if we could, and could not, if we<br />
would, let other people conduct their<br />
business in their<br />
CORKESPOSDiaCE.<br />
Is not his statement entirelytrue, which they<br />
as an Illustration of the impartiality, and<br />
that the tone the article, signed<br />
"Justice" is similar, as respects Mr. Castle,<br />
editorial in the issue, is it<br />
muca to say that U is to the suspicion<br />
U cot eoinddence at ail,<br />
but "Correspondecce" of the Hercld,<br />
ad ..Jcjtice.<br />
not written by the tame hand, all -- t<br />
from the same source from "there," or<br />
"thereabouts;" that, in fact, the writer<br />
took Castle's signature after having seen<br />
his article! Ton see, Mr. "Justice"<br />
deals in wholesale and the paper<br />
make itself the of<br />
"Ifaplanter should be suspected oppos-<br />
ing a Minister, a fewpolnted directions to the<br />
' To m PcEUC: Mr" CasUe onS" to fed<br />
tares or doing business with them, in their<br />
Utile line. Thev likewise think it to be a j J!0 " ht M<br />
j fens of duty, he comes out, over his own<br />
tnck or the trade their<br />
proper to decry j<br />
nal0A , denj whlt hjs denied at Jea5l<br />
rivals to inform the people who would a hundred times the slanders which a<br />
otherwise be ignorant of the facti that no ; respondent" chooses to tend from here to<br />
one reads that rascally sheet that is so the San Francisco Herald and forthwith,<br />
characteristically edited'bvPotU<br />
'<br />
or Slurk, ; editorially, and anonymously over the slg- -<br />
natare r " Jcs0ce'" oct oa Mm- -<br />
as the case may be. .<br />
'When a man is out over his own came, it<br />
jvow for ourselves, we simplv. sav that .<br />
would be supposed that anv person who<br />
we can and do afford to those adrertis- -<br />
would<br />
, pr0pOies t0 e personal cominenU,<br />
ing in our paper, the means of a most ex- - , have the to farcUli his. By keep-tensi-<br />
communication with the people or leg it back, he likens himself to one firing<br />
this country. It is quite true that there is '<br />
from behind a wall, at another walking bold-n- o<br />
Church Organization to nrce upon the 'J" alonS the peblic highway. 'o one can<br />
people the taking of the Au Olwr, but it j "Justice," who adopts the same<br />
signature as subscribed to a most calm<br />
can do without it, make its wav, not<br />
and n article In the colnmn<br />
only wjthout that aid, but without misrep- - of tbe 6ane is he wbo<br />
resenting the actions or motives or any wrote for the Herald; but it is open to that<br />
one. It is true that we have not, what j suspicion. The correspondent seeks to earn<br />
some seem to think, the advantace or com- -'<br />
five, or perhaps ten, dollars, and Is willing to<br />
mending onrselres and vannting'our inde-- j oMain atm ln thc T whlcl1<br />
.his mild and gentlemanly character--<br />
manner,<br />
pendence by publishing slurs and sneers at<br />
f ires in the following words: "The writer,<br />
the and those whom he<br />
Eng. may happen j koowf & ,oir, c CTmjl<br />
to honor with his confidence, or reckon that there is no such system as that which<br />
among his friends. But we entertain the the language forced Coolie servitude<br />
that our neighbors make a little "J8 iaea of, to an American or English<br />
mistake in supposing that course com-- 1 ah" FortllwiUl tome one-fro- 015 am"<br />
: bush fires at him the epithet of "willing tool,"<br />
mends itself, very innch, to the inhabitants who has obtained some " crnmbs" to com-<br />
er this country. jpensatehlssadfalL mat fall? fellow is<br />
office is established, by the Legis- - Uens. Was not every word of Mr. CasUe's<br />
latnre, for the good of the people. The article true ! and to yon all to be so J<br />
papers which are issued from it are condue-- j But listen to the Editor: "His conversation,<br />
ted for the benefit or the people. There-- J. eTen 1158 T7 Wt,<br />
. has been toned down on its present kev ever<br />
fore, there is no sense no, not the .<br />
. . since welL ever since he was made a mccrZer<br />
least in saying that all 1U resources .<br />
oJ o,, Paf5iDi: bj tte<br />
should not be put into acUve operauon to 60rdlty, that a now arrived at 60<br />
tid in carrying on business, and reducing. years of age, is corrupted by a seat in the<br />
IT possible, expenses thereof. TTe '<br />
Privy Council, and that " his in life has<br />
have the presses, types cad buildings, been toned down" by association with the<br />
must keep them." We moreover mcsl i members of that body-tho- ngb the meetings<br />
keep smploy a sufficient force of men i VMxUtf "<br />
Is not his "walk in life" pure<br />
print these as as to the<br />
the<br />
the<br />
the<br />
vu,w H"u uruereu oy .Legislature, say is a " fib or falsehood " ? Is he not fnlly<br />
Or necessary in the ordinary transaction of ' in accord with onr most worthy, philan- -<br />
the public business. Would it not, there-- ; thropic, and virtnons with thoe<br />
fore, be the height of folly would it not diTtctJ' interested in agriculture, and those<br />
be un&ithfulness in administering the pub-- 1 not Intercfted at ""P1 so far as the<br />
, of their neighbors influences their<br />
lie property to let men stand idle, in ...<br />
own! Cerfainlr, is so. Then let a man,<br />
order that some one else may charge the even or each character, attempt to defend<br />
public the owners of this Press a high- - himself and the community from injurious<br />
er price for job-wor- k than it can be fur-- aspersions, and that paper which asks jour<br />
nished for, from this office ? "Would that support mnst not only open upon him, itself,<br />
be to administer the public property with j which, though unpleasant enough, has the<br />
eerains quality that, in trJscase, the Ed--<br />
economy! Governments can not tnrn tra--<br />
. Hor is known, and consequently the men are<br />
ders. But this is a different thing. This ,<br />
. ' pitted tce to face, and if Mr. CasUe chooses,<br />
office is obliged to be maintained, and the j he t the ad omi argument-b-nt<br />
is aa incident to iu business. allows anonymous writers to follow in his<br />
Bat says our neighbor, the reduction ' track. Well, "every one to his taste." Per-wi- ll<br />
oppress the worthy mechanic "because P it is all right If our fellow citizens<br />
expenses most be curtailed,"!, e, wages i think so 11 mnst to"<br />
But there are two or three other UUle<br />
willberednced. Wedont think so. Vol that are worthy of notice. We are at liberty<br />
printers need be afraid that there will be<br />
.<br />
to say that the first article, in thc same paper,<br />
any necessity oT reducing wages, as long j ed "Justice," was written by Mr. Castle,<br />
as good hands are so scarce. "We axe Xow, in view of the fact that the calumnies<br />
anxious to take on all fall hands that will condemned by him are indorsed editorially,<br />
offer, at full prices; and even those that ih.e preceding by the statement that<br />
P0' Ioofa at passing events<br />
are not full hands, or what we caB full<br />
hands, can get here the most liberal etn<br />
ployment and we do not intend to<br />
wages. So thai if any are oat of work, i<br />
let them come on, and they it,<br />
more especially those who work both<br />
kngrsges. Xo, we do not wish to drive<br />
oae ort of the country; we wrsh aH ,<br />
to Ere here, grow rich, and be good citi- - j<br />
jHT wb want 10 conouct tins oace j<br />
in as economical way as possible, for the<br />
good of the whole<br />
'is life of baaaess, and monopolies or<br />
to keep sp prices, when they<br />
oagkt. to cose down, k to<br />
every community.<br />
this<br />
and<br />
get the<br />
talk<br />
find<br />
they In onr<br />
or this<br />
suf<br />
to pay the<br />
very inference,<br />
loose<br />
ret<br />
;<br />
more<br />
and thinks<br />
will<br />
in<br />
interests,<br />
cause,<br />
ana<br />
such care<br />
and as neces-<br />
sary, do<br />
emolu-<br />
ment. "We this<br />
as<br />
we<br />
viz:<br />
own wav.<br />
of second<br />
last too<br />
open<br />
that<br />
Mr.<br />
2nd<br />
slander,<br />
willing propagator it<br />
of<br />
"Cor--<br />
that<br />
and<br />
next<br />
this<br />
known<br />
""aP0011.<br />
genUemen<br />
the walk<br />
and<br />
in<br />
me<br />
citizens,<br />
prosperitr<br />
facts<br />
issue,<br />
in<br />
I District Judge iu bis neighborhood, a word<br />
'<br />
to the Boncdarr Commissioner, a hint dron- -<br />
ped ln thc Board of Immigration, a signifi-<br />
cant cod to the Commissioners or Crown<br />
Lands, and, if his opposition is sufficiently<br />
notorious, a word in the Suprerre Court,<br />
such as 'we mnst support tbe Government,<br />
centemer, will soon surround him with a<br />
cordon of influences that will bring him Into<br />
subjection, or drive him from the country.<br />
Unfortunately for the country they generally<br />
yieiato the powers that be, and If sufficiently<br />
badgered will soon begin to write for the<br />
Government press. If so, the spell is broken;<br />
favors from the Board of Immigration are<br />
showered upon him, DUtrict Judges and the<br />
various commissioners see things in a tuuer<br />
ent light and E3Cophancv meets with its<br />
reward."<br />
Is there the smallest foundation for this<br />
wholesale calumny! Some of It, of course.<br />
is pure nonsense, as for instance: "asignlfi.<br />
cant nod to the Commissioners of Crown<br />
Lands" lnce, by the Statute, two out of the<br />
three Commissioners must be trom the Cab<br />
inet and therefore need not "nod" to any<br />
body on the subject, either significantly or<br />
insignificantly; and, besides, they are admin<br />
istering an estate which has no more to do<br />
with any individual planter, than his own<br />
estate has to do with the Commissioners.<br />
Where has a Boundary Commissioner jet sat<br />
to hear and decide any case! Tbe former<br />
Sole Commissioner, Judge Robertson, sat<br />
on two, in which the same Commission<br />
ers of Crown Lands were actual parties<br />
to the record. How, then, docs any man<br />
presume to write, and any paper pre-<br />
sume to publish, that the Commissioners, or<br />
any of them, have been influenced adversely<br />
to any claimant, by corrupt or unworthy mo<br />
tives or solicitations of anyone much less<br />
third parties! Where Is the planter who<br />
will say that thc District Magistrate of his<br />
district has been directed, advised, or Influ-<br />
enced adversely to him or his interests !<br />
What planter, or other man of business, has<br />
been litigant in the Supreme Court and has<br />
said, or will say, or has had cause to say, that<br />
the Judges, or any of them, have been, or<br />
could.be, influenced In their decision by any<br />
intimation that thc litigant is unfriendly to a<br />
Minister orall of them with the expression<br />
"We mnst support the Government, gentle<br />
men!" But, fellow citizens, that paper,<br />
which It is claimed merits and receives your<br />
liberal support, does not hesitate to sap your<br />
prosperity by seeking to spread the idea that<br />
justice Is insecure, and even yonr courts are<br />
venal though the contrary Is<br />
the fact ! Tears, position, a long life of use-<br />
fulness, are no protection from the slanders<br />
of a penny-a-line- whose sole idea is to earn<br />
a few a very few dollars, by this dirty<br />
work.<br />
Ton have all heard the story of the crowd<br />
in Dublin, when one cried out, "Don't nail<br />
that man's ears to the pump." The crowd,<br />
being ripe for such things, took the hint<br />
though they had not thought of it before, and<br />
thc man's ears were called to the pump So<br />
this good citizen proceeds on the same prin-<br />
ciple, with hints that we have seen, and heard<br />
before, from the same and similar sources,<br />
that domestic violence would be desirable.<br />
Hear him, and see thc counsels which he,<br />
as well as some others, (who may not be<br />
spoken of, on account of the sacredness of<br />
their office, and their immense ecclesiastical<br />
elevation,) see fit to give:<br />
" Physical demonstration is tbe onlv cor<br />
rector of evils In an absolutism. This is not<br />
to be expected here. The native population<br />
are too listless and too much under the su-<br />
perstitions of old, to appreciate the evil. The<br />
foreigners mainly come here to make money,<br />
and only care for that"<br />
The remark made about the native popu-<br />
lation is very significant, and if they should<br />
awake from their lisUessness, one day, it<br />
would not be surprising if it were the worse<br />
for those who thus outrage a peaceful and<br />
unoffending people.<br />
I have thought it best to address this to the<br />
public, rather than to tbe Editor of the Ga-<br />
zette, and hope that he will give it an inser-<br />
tion. Fjjlsteb.<br />
Ed. Remakes. Probably it may 6afely be<br />
asserted that the calumnies commented on<br />
by our correspondent were "invented by the<br />
author."<br />
Mb. Editor. Probably no proposition<br />
has been made, within the memory of the<br />
"oldest inhabitant" so fraught with the des-<br />
tinies of this kingdom and the "rest of man-<br />
kind," so calculated to awaken the most<br />
lethargic, or to "add new vigor to this de-<br />
caying people," as that ofyour wise neigh-<br />
bor when he says in his last issue, in rela-<br />
tion to Inter-Islan- d steam, that "This whole<br />
question, reduced to a focus, amounts to<br />
this shall we have steam or not!" I sup-<br />
pose that he means to be understood, that<br />
when the rays of thc wonderful light which<br />
he has thrown upon the subject, are concen-<br />
trated, with the assistance of a powerful<br />
lens, an admiring world will at once be able<br />
to perceive, that we ore ritAer to Aare, or not<br />
to hare" Inter-Islan- d steam!" Sow, I defy<br />
any other man, to so satisfactorily settle so<br />
important a question in so few words.<br />
With him, it is inspiration and possible, with<br />
others, it would be darkness,and, perhaps, im-<br />
possible. He also proves, in the same<br />
article, beyond a reasonable doubt, that<br />
we should at once offer $25,0001 thought<br />
my offer of 40,000 was, if anything,<br />
too liberal to the .Xorth Paciflc Trans-<br />
portation Company to indnce that cor-<br />
poration to put on suitable Inter-Islan- d<br />
steamers, prorlded of course, that they will<br />
consent to perform the service with vessels<br />
under the American flag, which they would<br />
probably consent to do. Only a few ques-<br />
tions have suggested themselves to my mind,<br />
whlh would have tbe effect to make me<br />
hesitate in giving my " unmitigated" support<br />
to the above proposition. Among the most<br />
simple of these questions are the following:<br />
Firstly: If a "responsible Ministry" were to<br />
permit vessels under a foreign flag to engage<br />
in the coasting trade, would there not be dan<br />
ger that the ghost of the Constitution of<br />
1S52, outraged beyond endurance at such a<br />
palpable disregard for a plain and explicit<br />
lax, might arise and hurl them from the<br />
proud positions they cow occupy ! Second-<br />
ly: How would it work in case this Gov-<br />
ernment should demand the use of one of<br />
said steamers and be refused, and then take<br />
her by force, and use her for the purpose re-<br />
quired, might'et the bin be heavier than the<br />
service done would seem to deservend who<br />
would be likely to attend to the collection,<br />
and who would be the judge of the necessity<br />
of such use by Government! Thirdly:<br />
Tour brilliant friend talks thus: "In fact<br />
tbe contract should contain such a provision<br />
as is made by the American and British Gov-<br />
ernments with their subsidized steamers."<br />
Please sir, mark the word "their." Are<br />
there now any British steamers, subsidized<br />
by the American Government as coasters, or<br />
American steamers, subsidized by the Brit-<br />
ish Government,? coasters, "which are bound<br />
upon demand, to enter the service of the na-<br />
tion by which they are subsidized. And if<br />
there are any each incase of a "little dif--<br />
rlZLTZZ<br />
take, and what would become or them IT<br />
they happened to be caught taking the<br />
wrong side !<br />
Don't you answer these questions Mr. Ed-<br />
itor. I want thc JoVerfiscr to do so, out of<br />
that rare and priceless copy or Puffcndort<br />
Sever having spoken one single word, with<br />
any Minister, or other official of this Govern-<br />
ment, about steam, I am unable to give the<br />
Ministerial views on the question; but let ns<br />
hope that they are as sound and as "broad<br />
and national" as those of the advocates of<br />
foreign subsidy. Tours, Stxav.<br />
P. S. If another and greater "ring" has<br />
"subsidized" any one, to advocate the little<br />
scheme above referred to, St is to be hoped<br />
that they have made the thing sufficiently<br />
remunerative to warrant a man ln making<br />
himself supremely rediculous. 8.<br />
Me. Editor: I venture to trouble you<br />
with a few reflections, which have been sug<br />
gested to my mind by recent events, In re-<br />
gard to the character of the responsibility<br />
resting upon those who undertake the con-<br />
duct of a newspaper In the Hawaiian lan-<br />
guage There arc, I hold, few positions ln<br />
this country, of more grave and solemn res-<br />
ponsibility than that of one who undertakes,<br />
from week to week, to Instruct and amuse<br />
this people through the medium of the press.<br />
There is no calling lu which, he who under-<br />
takes It is required to be possessed of a<br />
calmer, or more matured judgment, a wider<br />
phUanthrophy, or a greater amount of that<br />
charity, which is inclined to look at the<br />
actions of all men from the most favorable<br />
point of view. The great want of books of<br />
a general character, in his own language,<br />
renders the Hawaiian (who is unable to read<br />
foreign books and papers) entirely depen-<br />
dent upon his newspaper, not only for a<br />
Knowledge of the progress of events, but for<br />
guidance in the great moral and political<br />
questions of the day. The confiding nature<br />
of the Hawaiian, makes him particularly sus--<br />
ceptible to thc views of those to whom he<br />
looks as his teachers. It Is therefore a thing<br />
much to be regretted, If there should be any<br />
professed teachers of this people, who.in their<br />
papers, are rabid, bitter, and denunciatory<br />
towards any. There seem to be some people,<br />
wbo, although they must be aware, that<br />
honest men of like intelligence, have dis-<br />
agreed on almost every subject that has<br />
arisen since the world commenced are per-<br />
fectly Incapable of comprehending how any-<br />
one can disagree with (Aem, and be honest<br />
So man can hotutUg feel this way, unless<br />
he is perfectly satisfied that in himself Is the<br />
very sum of human wisdom and perfection;<br />
and, I mnst say that a man wbo leels thus,<br />
must be a happy man, and has a perfect right<br />
to be proud of himself. A majority of re<br />
flecting people are very apt to mistrust that<br />
those who appear to be filled with this belief<br />
in their own Infallibility, are not alto<br />
gether sincere; and not unfrequently, attri<br />
bute designing and wicked motives, where<br />
the utmost professions of the purest motives,<br />
are made. Without attempting to discuss,<br />
as to whether this mistrust is well founded,<br />
I venture to make the assertion that people<br />
such as these, are not the proper persons to<br />
conduct a native Hawaiian newspaper nor<br />
for that matter, any other: because they do<br />
not elevate, and are not capable of elevating<br />
and enlightening the people, but on the con--'<br />
trary, are the persons who are best calcnlat-- 1<br />
ed to do the very reverse. If they, assuming<br />
to occupy the very highest moral, religious<br />
and political ground, denounce those who do<br />
not see things exactly as they do, as dis-<br />
honest knaves or incompetent blockheads,<br />
they are teaching the people to become in-<br />
tolerant ; besides, they are telling them what<br />
in ninety-nin- e cases oct of well, we'll<br />
say niacfy-nw- Is not true. If they continu-<br />
ally tell the people that they are down-trodde-<br />
and oppressed, when the people are not<br />
down-trodde- n and oppressed; the people,<br />
you know, will after a time lose faith in<br />
their advisers and friends, and there will<br />
cornea time when these advisers and friends i<br />
of the people, will be utterly Incapable of do-<br />
ing the dear, down-trodde- n people any more<br />
good. Indeed, this reflection would make<br />
me quite inconsolable, were it not for the<br />
fict that, at that time and thereafter, they<br />
will not be able to do the people any more<br />
harm. This last reflection goes a great way<br />
towards fully reconciling me to the harrow-<br />
ing possibility of the first ; indeed I am so<br />
far reconciled by it, as to be fully of the<br />
opinion that the sooner that time comes the<br />
better for all concerned particularly for Oie<br />
people. V.<br />
The following extract from the report to<br />
the A. B. C. F. M., may not have met the<br />
eyes of all our readers, and therefore we give<br />
it the benefit of our circulation.<br />
The persistent efforts and inficenee of the<br />
Papacy, and of Reformed Catholics in hosti-<br />
lity to the labors and counsels of the mission-<br />
aries, are a perpetual hindrance to their work.<br />
The g and benevolent labor of<br />
years, and the expenditure of hundreds of<br />
thousands of dollars, with their manifest good<br />
and wide-spre- results, have been wholly<br />
ignored, disregarded, and as far as practicable<br />
circumvented and destroyed, by interfering<br />
emissaries from European Christian communi-<br />
ties. Still, the addion of 27 new members<br />
to the native churches, and contributions from<br />
native members of near 30,000 dollars, to--<br />
gttner witn tne almost entire support of their<br />
own churches, and the sending of their own<br />
missionaries to the islands beyond them,<br />
show their deeply rooted. Evangelical piety,<br />
and the presence and blessing of God's spirit<br />
This whole mission and its fruits, gave the<br />
richest encouragement to the American Church.<br />
and to the Christianity of the world, to com-<br />
mit itself, promptly and unfalterinclr. to the<br />
great work of converting all the nations of<br />
ine eartn to tne religion of the Lord Jesus<br />
It is a subject of regret that our Congrega<br />
tionalist and Presbyterian friends think that<br />
the work of their of other denomi<br />
nations is to prejudicial, and that the mani-<br />
fest good of then own labors Is " practically<br />
circumvented and destroyed " by the hostile<br />
efforts of the others. But others, disinterested<br />
and impartial, think taat the seal of our<br />
friends causes them to exaggerate the hind.<br />
ranee to their work from the sources mention-<br />
ed. There is room enough for all. Neither<br />
of the two denominations mentioned lias the<br />
smallest hostility to tbe labors and counsels<br />
of the Hawaiian Evangelical Association, nor<br />
wish to " destroy or circumvent" the manifest<br />
good and wide spread results of their benevo-<br />
lent labors. They undoubtedly differ very<br />
strongly on polemical subjects. but most<br />
clearly, one diSers as much from the other as<br />
the other from the one. Inasmuch as religious<br />
tenets and theories are not demonstrable, those<br />
esgaged in pressing different Tiewt, too fre-<br />
quently become so identified with them, as to<br />
think that any who differ from them, "hin-<br />
der" their work. and. it is to be honed, that<br />
the idea that any religious denomination is<br />
" hostile" to the efforts of the others, or ii<br />
interfering" to crevent a from doin-- .<br />
good, may .disappear, and that all will work<br />
logetner, or separately, for the common good,<br />
CALIFORNIA CORRESPONDENCE.<br />
FROM OCS REGULAR OOKBESrOSDEST.<br />
Sax FBAsasco, March as, 1SB9.<br />
The Paclfle Railroad.<br />
Only about one hundred miles of track<br />
now remains to be laid, and the Continental<br />
Railroad will be completed. The Central<br />
Pacific is finished to within about forty miles<br />
of Monument Point or the north end of .Salt<br />
Lake, and the Union Pacific has about sixty<br />
miles ot tract to lay to reach the same point<br />
The Central Pacific is laying from three to<br />
four miles a day, and has Its grading com-<br />
pleted to Monument Point; this gap ts<br />
almost certain to be closed by the flrst of<br />
May, some say by the middle of April.<br />
Some parts or the Union Pacific Road are<br />
understood to be very badly constructed.<br />
A correspondent who has lately been over<br />
the road writes as follows :<br />
As to the construction or the Pacific Rail-<br />
road, It Is not done according to contract<br />
from Bryan westward: tbe grade Is low. in<br />
some places made ot chunks or (rozen dirt.<br />
wucn win soften Into mush In the spring;<br />
thc culverts and bridges are all or wood,<br />
temporary structures.<br />
Tbe obstacles In the construction or this<br />
road have been prodigious, and the tempta-<br />
tion to construct portions or the road in a<br />
temporary manner have been very great<br />
One or the very first things President Grant<br />
did, after stepping into office, was to remove<br />
two of the three Commissioners or the Union<br />
Pacific Railroad. These men had undoubt-<br />
edly been unfaithful to the trust reposed in<br />
tbera, and they were removed at once. They J<br />
were too ready to accept the railroad. As<br />
soon as a ribbon section of twenty miles was<br />
run out, it was promptly accepted and the<br />
government subsidy paid. President Grant<br />
thought it best that the Railroad Company<br />
should not own the Commissioners.<br />
It is said that "emigrant trains" will be<br />
placed ou thc road dally, or<br />
weekly, as tbe demand may require, and<br />
passengers by these trains will be brought at<br />
ranch cheaper rates than ever were heard of<br />
before. Emigrant passage tickets, will be<br />
sold at a price not exceeding fifty dollars,<br />
trom .Neir iorK to any point in lamurnia.<br />
The rates of fare on the overland roads arc<br />
two and a half cents a mile, between Sew<br />
Tork and Chicago, five cents a mile on thc<br />
Union, and ten cents a mile, gold, on thc<br />
Central. At these figures, and reducing thc<br />
charges through to gold rates, we get the<br />
following approximate estimates or tbe cost<br />
of a first-clas- s through ticket:<br />
Jftt. rtm.<br />
Sew Tort to Chicico 900 SIS 75<br />
Chicago tc Omaha 1 44 17 41<br />
Omaha to Salt Lata 1,070 40 13<br />
Salt Lake to San Francisco. 77j 77 SO<br />
Total! S,29 353 91<br />
In the statement of distances, six miles<br />
should be added for ferriage from Oakland<br />
to San Francisco, making' a total of 3,905<br />
miles.<br />
The Central Pacific Company promises to<br />
reduce its rate of fare in Jnly next and<br />
this would reduce the charge on the Central<br />
to gold, and the cos! of a through<br />
trip to $115.25. Tbe cost of meals and other<br />
incidental expenses along the road need not<br />
cost more than S25, for a trip consuming<br />
onlv six to eight days.<br />
Tbe final completion of this great road<br />
will be a distinguished event the twenty<br />
years dream of California will be realized,<br />
and a new era of rapid development and sub-<br />
stantial prosperity will begin.<br />
The Alaska Fur Bnslness.<br />
A Committee of the Chamber of Com-<br />
merce of this city, iu a report to that body<br />
on the Alaska For Trade, have made some<br />
Interesting statements They say that the<br />
Russian American Fur Company are reported<br />
to have taken from the various points, within<br />
their field or operations, during 1SC0 and 1S67,<br />
137,943 fur seals, 10.S35 foxes, 13,476 beavers,<br />
7,970 muskraU, 3,905 sea otters, 2,703 land<br />
otters. 6,733 martins, 55S lynx, and 226 bears ;<br />
the skins and oil of all estimated at $1,400,-00- 0.<br />
The fur trade Is the only present wealth<br />
of the country, and 6hould be carefully<br />
guarded. Under proper restrictions, they<br />
see no good reason why the fur trade may<br />
not be thrown open to all The fnr trade is<br />
the key to the commerce of the country, and<br />
they think It nuwise and unfair to allow<br />
one or more companies to have a monopoly.<br />
They recommend that a Territorial Govern-<br />
ment be organized at an early day.<br />
Tbe Orel-lan- alalia,<br />
Have been very badly interrupted, during<br />
thf TMEf mnnth Tt ts caM .. n 1a.m.<br />
.,.,... . . , ,<br />
Ogden City, the Western terminus of the<br />
Union Pacific Railroad. The distance from<br />
Ogden City to the eastern end of the Central<br />
Pacific Railroad, Is some 1C0 miles on a direct<br />
course; but owing to the bad condition of<br />
the roads, and the locations of Mail Stations.<br />
Wells Fargo & Co's coaches pass Ha Salt<br />
Lake City, by which route, the distance is<br />
greater than stated. Letters sent by Wells<br />
Fargo fc Co's Express are as much behind<br />
time as those by the maU.<br />
It is probabletbatthe mails will not assume<br />
their wonted regularity for a month to<br />
come.<br />
The long delayed malls are expected to<br />
arrive In this city night This<br />
delay has been the worst we have experi-<br />
enced In a long time, and business has<br />
actually suffered by It ALdTKiZ.<br />
NOTICE! -- S3gr<br />
EEDUOTIOiraPKICES!<br />
FROM AND AFTER THIS DATE,<br />
TH7XZ Will. Er<br />
A REDUCTION OF 25 PER CENT<br />
From Former Prices,<br />
For all Advertisements<br />
IN THIS PAPER,<br />
JOB DONE IN THIS OFFICE.<br />
SPECIAL DM ABBAIGEMEITS<br />
Will be Made<br />
When Advertisements are published, both<br />
in this paper, and in the An Otoa native<br />
paper.<br />
Hemp Canvas,<br />
VTO. 0 TO .. LIGHT EAVENS DUCK,<br />
JLl Heavy Ravens Duck,<br />
Hemp<br />
e,<br />
Cotton<br />
e,<br />
. SaE Needles,<br />
EeeiWar, etc.<br />
For Sale by 38-3- B0LLE8 CO.<br />
NEW ADVERTISEMENTS.<br />
A. S. CLKCmORA',<br />
WHOLESALE AND RETAIL SEALER<br />
In Merchawlla. Fireproof Store, romwof Qoera<br />
and Kaatnuuanu Stratta, Retail EiUMI.lmi.oU, on<br />
Xuoana Stmt, and on th eorntc t Fott and Ilot.l<br />
SITMta.<br />
14-l-y<br />
DOUGLAS PASKK,<br />
HOUSE AND SIGN PAINTER,<br />
Ktcr Stmt between DoBn't Market and Camp.<br />
bell- - Tailor Shop. U-i-<br />
NOTICE.<br />
EDWARD EVERETT will<br />
MR. all business for me, by P. wr<br />
of Attorney, daring my temporary absence<br />
from the Islands, and Mr S. G. WILDER has<br />
kindly consented to act as Auctioneer.<br />
l4t<br />
C. S. BARTOW.<br />
JUST RECEIVED<br />
IDAHO,<br />
AND<br />
X. O. 3Va.TJJbr8JO A TT.<br />
milE UNDERSIGNED has receiv<br />
JL ed by the above vessels.<br />
A Fine Assortment of New Goods<br />
WELL SELECTED,<br />
For thc Wants of this Market,<br />
CONSISTING IN PART OF<br />
Boys Cassimere Saita, Boys' Linen Suits,<br />
Bots' White and Colored Shirts.<br />
Boys' White A Speckled Straw Hats<br />
Boys tassimero Hats,<br />
Boys' Boots and Shoes,<br />
Neck Ties, Socks, etc.<br />
A Fine Selection of Gent's Goods<br />
Gents' Fine Black Cloth Frock Coats,<br />
Gents' Fine Black Doeskin Pants a Vests,<br />
The Finest Ass't or White Shirts In<br />
Honolulu every lite, fm 131 to<br />
22 inches neck. Gents' Fiae<br />
Cassimere Suits, various<br />
Styles a Patterns,<br />
Linen hem'd Kerchiefs and Neck Tics,<br />
Cotton. Merino. Linen and Lisle Thread<br />
Half Hose, an Elegant assortment of<br />
Gents Hats, all styles a colors,<br />
Genu' Silk Umbrellas,<br />
Tbe Best Assortment of Gents'<br />
Furnishing' Goods In Town.<br />
Undershirts and Drawers, in Cotton, Linen,<br />
Canton-Flanne- l. Merino, Silk a Buckskin,<br />
Boots and Shoes, iu great variety.<br />
Trunks, Valises a Travelling bags<br />
Lmen and Paper Collars,<br />
Suspenders, very choice<br />
Hair Oil, Perfumery<br />
White Kid Gloves<br />
A FINE ASSORTMENT OF<br />
Genuine SlieiHelu Cutlery.<br />
Westenholm's finest quality<br />
Wade i Butcher's Knives,<br />
Singleton's, Fred. Ward's, and<br />
Other Maker's Knives,<br />
SOME VERY SUPERIOR RAZORS which<br />
for excellence of temper, is unrivalled. Ev-<br />
ery Rator which I sell, is warranted to give<br />
entire satisfaction, or to be returned:.<br />
Badger's Genuine Hair Shaving Brushes,<br />
The tienmne i.merson s rtaxor ctrop.<br />
Ladies' Scissors J. Rodger's make.<br />
Button-hol- Nail, and other styles, supe<br />
rior to any in town.<br />
In Dry Goods,<br />
Will be found Heavy Linen Sheeting,<br />
Linen Pillow Casing,<br />
Fine Piece Linens, Linen Diaper,<br />
Superior English Prints,<br />
Ladies' and Misses' Hose,<br />
Brooks' Spool Cotton,<br />
Button Rings, etc.<br />
Boots and Shoes.<br />
Ladies', Missscs' and<br />
Children's Boots and Shoes,<br />
In great Variety,<br />
All These Goods will be Sold<br />
AS LOW AS POSSIBLE.<br />
Ladies and Gentlemen from the surrounding<br />
Islands, send your orders, and they will be at<br />
tended to with promptness.<br />
yi. McEVEKIVY,<br />
Corner Fort and Merchant Streets.<br />
Honolulu, April 20, 1S69. ll--<br />
LIST OF LETTERS<br />
T) EMAIMXG ES' THE POST OFFICE,<br />
Xli Honolulu, April 1st, 1569.<br />
It<br />
Allen, A D Eamaihnl Krnpp, John<br />
Ajlttt, John Kennedy. John<br />
Justin, W A Kedzle. Papa<br />
Elmo, PUikano 2<br />
BasMlUU<br />
BasteL B Lougee, J B<br />
Bartholomew, W Wallace Long, C J 3<br />
Bratlej, Edwin K Leonard. Thomas<br />
EUbon, M W Lnthrope, J H<br />
BrownTilI. Allen F 2 Ltonnard. (1<br />
KroJi, TV D 4 Lour, John T<br />
BurjrW, C R Lnttral, William<br />
Bucklin, II 0<br />
Boatner, Louis 31<br />
Bond, D<br />
Brick, Geo A Martin, Blchard M<br />
Mann. Mrs J<br />
Mill, Mrs<br />
Mason, MUs Eunice<br />
Cooper, J Marsb, George<br />
Canrar, Prince W Hale, 31<br />
Coppernuth, Jorins Manrice, Edmon<br />
CranlaU, W B 2<br />
CtraTeUnd. D II 2<br />
Coleman, O TV<br />
Crowell.J M N'orris, J<br />
Cashmao, Jaa Jfoble, MrsTS<br />
Coffln. C W<br />
Coorr, W F 2<br />
Carter, Joseph<br />
Celoch, Cow PDoontU. John<br />
Cooper, E ffBeUly, Rtr Patrick 2<br />
I<br />
2rew, Francis D Parker. T 2<br />
DtWs. II 8 Park, Thomas It<br />
Daris, Eoloraan 2 Pspra, Herman<br />
Dibble, Andrew B Pierce, Frank A<br />
Downs, VT11 Proctor. Fred'k W<br />
Drake, David P. 6 Paxton. John A<br />
It<br />
HirUge, Capt Henry 2 Robinson, Capt 0 G 3<br />
Riler, Tnoniaa<br />
F Carl W<br />
Fletcher. John S<br />
Filler, Xathaniet L<br />
Terrier, W II SylTester, Joseph<br />
Saner, Adam 2<br />
Sherman, Horace 2<br />
Sveetman, Jobn<br />
Gwrita, H H Sltnga, Joan<br />
Gonzales, Loots Seeley, Henry M<br />
Gardcer, Nathan L Seymour, W B<br />
Gardner, C W Shoemaker, Jackson B<br />
GiSord, John II Squirt, ZO<br />
Green, James R Spalding, Geo II<br />
II<br />
Tbrnpp. John<br />
Wnhelm<br />
Bober,<br />
Tratk. Wm<br />
Jamea J<br />
Harper,<br />
Tulloch, JB<br />
Holla, trilllam<br />
Ilarrigan, Patrick<br />
IV<br />
Hoxle,UeurvM s<br />
Heddeo, EHK Williams, William 2<br />
Holler, Cpt a Williams, Sam<br />
Ilattua, Wm William, WB<br />
Humphrey, James Wllson.CS<br />
HJoes, Charles<br />
Wilson, ChasL<br />
Hubert, William<br />
Wilson, Chas<br />
HaUtead, Thomas Wilsrjo, William<br />
wrigbt. William<br />
Wright, p L<br />
WUcox. WE<br />
Jernegan, Cbas "V7 4 Whalon, Gideon B<br />
Jaduoo. John Wilbur, William<br />
Jamc, John Walter, James II<br />
Jennings, lotnam L WJdger, Almeda<br />
Johnson, James H Wilts., 8.<br />
Jost, Jlaimel<br />
Persons calling tor the above letters, wlH pins<br />
say, advertised.<br />
A. P. BEICKWOOD, .<br />
12-- 3 - Postmaster General:<br />
Best English Pickles,<br />
0E SALE B7<br />
EOLLES CO.<br />
PACKET LINES:<br />
nsr. t. nr. oo.<br />
The Company's Steamship<br />
Mk IDAHO,<br />
R. 8. FLOTD, . . Commander,<br />
Will leave her wharf tot San Francison on<br />
THURSDAY, the lid of Arril. at 4 o clock<br />
P. M, It. HACKFELD 4 CO.,<br />
IMt<br />
Agents.<br />
<strong>HAWAIIAN</strong> PACKET MM.<br />
For San Francisco.<br />
tbc RiarxAR racKtt<br />
D.C.MURRAY, jfe<br />
IT.T.BEW2JETT, . . . Master.<br />
Having the most or her cargo engaged, wilt<br />
havo IMMEDIATE DISPATCH for the abovo<br />
port.<br />
For freight and passage, having superior<br />
accommodations for Cabin and Steerage Pas-<br />
sengers, apply to WALKER & ALLEN,<br />
IS Agents.<br />
For Bremen.<br />
The A 1 Hawaiian Clipper Bark<br />
K A MOI. dH<br />
II. G AIUIKLS, .... Master.<br />
Will hare DISPATCH fur the above port.<br />
For freight or passage, apply to<br />
II. HACKFELD A CO..<br />
10 Agents.<br />
North Pacific Transportation<br />
Company'<br />
San Francisco and Honolulu Line.<br />
The Company's Splendid A 1 Steamship<br />
IDAHO,<br />
WILL RUN REGULARLY BETWEEN<br />
Honolulu and San Francisco.<br />
Depart vi rea. Arrivals.<br />
i ruui'co. noyotrtc. six raa.i'co. auxotctj.<br />
Mon. April t Thr. April ! WedSlT sat. April IT<br />
Wed.Majf 12 Frld. Mai 2S Thn. Jnns 10 inn. Mar 23<br />
Thr. Jena KlSafy Joijr SlFrid. Jnly 19Mon. Jane2S<br />
alillscml Advances KIntle on all<br />
Shipments per Steamer.<br />
Cargo Tor San Francisco will be received<br />
at the Steamer's Warehouse, and receipts for<br />
the same given bv the undersigned. No<br />
charge for storage or cartage. Fire risks in<br />
Warehouse not taken br the Company.<br />
Insurance guaranteed at lower rates than by<br />
sailingvessels. Particular earn taken of ship-<br />
ments of Fruit.<br />
All orders for Goods to be purchased in San<br />
Francisco, will be received and filled by return<br />
of Steamer.<br />
yShipments from Europe and the United<br />
States, intended for these Islands, will be re-<br />
ceived by the Company in San Francisco, If<br />
consigned to them, and be forwsrded by their<br />
Steamers to Honolulu, mrx or chakok, ex-<br />
cept actual outlay.<br />
SSuPajsenrers are requested to take their<br />
tickets before 12 o'clock on the day of sailing<br />
and to procure their Passports.<br />
All bills against tbe Steamers must be pre-<br />
sented before two o'clock on the day of sail-<br />
ing, or they will have to lay over till the re-<br />
turn of tbe Steamer for settlement.<br />
H. HACKFELD & CO.,<br />
Agents.<br />
<strong>HAWAIIAN</strong> PACKET LIKE.<br />
For San Francisco.<br />
The following First-Cla- ss Ves- -<br />
Siii sels will run regularly In the<br />
Honolulu Lino:<br />
I). C. MURRAY,<br />
CA3II.RIDGE,<br />
clara r. sirru,.<br />
For Freight er Passage, havinz Superior<br />
Accommodations for Cabin and Steerage Pas-<br />
sengers, apply to<br />
WALKER A ALLEN,<br />
3 ra - Agents.<br />
For Hilo and Onornea, Hawaii.<br />
: Schr. Annie,<br />
Will run as a regular packet to the above<br />
ports. For freight or passage apply to<br />
WALKER & ALLEN, Agents.<br />
For Hilo and Kaupakuea, Hawaii.<br />
Schr. Active,<br />
Will run as a regular packet to the above<br />
ports, touching at LAHAINA. For freight or<br />
passage apply to<br />
WALKER A ALLEN,<br />
Agents.<br />
For Nawiliwili, Kauai.<br />
THE CLIPPER tCHOOXZR<br />
H A T T I E,<br />
CAPTAIN NIICA,<br />
Carrying the Hawaiian Jfail vitiont Siltidyl<br />
Will Leave Honolulu Every Saturday,<br />
at Four o'clock p. x Returning, will leavi<br />
Nawiliwili every Tuesday afternoon.<br />
ror freight or Passage, apply to<br />
D. FOSTER 4 CO.<br />
Regular Packet for Lahaina.<br />
Schr. Kamaile,<br />
BALLISTEU, .... Captain,<br />
Will run as a regular packet between Hono<br />
lulu, Lahaina and Molokal, touching at<br />
and Pukoo. For freight er passage<br />
apply to the Captain on board or<br />
11. i'KKSUKKQAST, Agent<br />
PIANOS FOB SALE.<br />
$250. PIANOS. $250.<br />
These are the Beat and<br />
most reliable Pianos manufactur<br />
ed, noted for standing In tana and<br />
wearing well. They are made of the Best<br />
Seasoned Materials, with all tbe modern Im-<br />
provements, Rosewood ease, with seven oc-<br />
taves. emc W. FISCHER.<br />
icences Expiring in April, 1869.<br />
Oahu. Honolulu. 1st JI.<br />
RETAIL 21th Apo, lit B. F. Ehlers, 2Mb S.<br />
Maguire. ISth A. Siderr, 1st U. Dimond, 15th<br />
H. Melntyre, 20th Mossman and Son, 1st W.<br />
Fisher. Maui Lahaina, ?6th B. W. Brown,<br />
6th E. Jones, 15th W. G. Needbam ; Hana,<br />
10th Asa Hopu ; Makawao, If th N. F. Saver.<br />
30th Davis k Genet ; Waflnku, 16th Kepolkal.<br />
Hawaii Waimea, 17th C. No tier; Kona,30tt<br />
Apanahana ; Kailoa, 30th Ah Hon i Hilo. 3d<br />
Ahlic A Co. Kauai Uanapepe, 22d . Chnlan<br />
T, . ,--i ,n,L i<br />
xireiacrs , iiiiuniu, u lu aulqq j xioloa, 234<br />
Alai A Co : Moloaa, 14th Bertleaann r Wai.<br />
mea, 6th Ala.<br />
WHOLESALE Honolulu, 17th H. Hack- -<br />
'eld A Co.<br />
AUCTION Honolulu, 13th E. P. Adams.<br />
PLANTATION Maul, 10th Halka Plan<br />
tation.<br />
VICTUALLINO Hawaii Hilo. SMI.<br />
Welsh.<br />
BUTCHER Oahu Honolulu. Tth W. !.<br />
Wood.<br />
PUBLIC SHOW Lahaina. Maal, Beliser.<br />
A Boat. ' "<br />
A Large BOAT, such as used bv sohoasM<br />
for taking off freight. For sale by - ,., ,<br />
10-l- WALKER & ALLEN.<br />
Dry Green Jairit';<br />
TTIOR SALE BY<br />
X" 12-- 1 ra L. L, TORBERT.<br />
- " - - - - .JT"7c'5ggSWi -- .ZsiJ.a,. - S. S gLW<br />
t - . . ;. : iz 7
CO.imERCIAI..<br />
BOXOLXTLV. APRIL 20. 18C9.<br />
The bark Ethan Allen, arrived on the ISth,<br />
St days (rem Sydney, and tailed on the ISth<br />
for San Francisco.<br />
The steamer Idaho armed on the 15th,<br />
with merchandise, mails and passengers, to<br />
agents. The Idaho brings San Francisco<br />
dates to the 3d in St.<br />
The ship Mattie Bants is also at hand, 22<br />
days from Yokohama, with some little cargo,<br />
being cnder a guano charter.<br />
The bark Legal Tender is at hand, with a<br />
cargo of redwood lumber, from Humboldt,<br />
which has been disposed of at fall prices.<br />
The Hawaiian bark Florence arrired y,<br />
10 days from San Francisco, with a. small<br />
cargo of flonr, etc. The F. fits for a fishing<br />
craite North.<br />
The D. C. Murray tails for San<br />
Francisco, with a full cargo of sugar, puln,<br />
molasses and hides, and a large list of pas-<br />
sengers.<br />
The Idaho will sail on Thursday, with a full<br />
cargo of sugar, pulu, etc., and about forty<br />
passengers, mostly cabin.<br />
PORT OF HOSOLULt.<br />
ARRIVED.<br />
April IS Schr Mary, tnm Kauai.<br />
1 Am h WV nercnlra, norland, with 1!5<br />
bbli wh oil, from Coast Cat.<br />
Am wh bark J. I). Thompson, Allen, with<br />
210 bull oil, 10 mm. from --New Bedford.<br />
chr Kamaile, from MauL<br />
Schr Ea ilni, from JJanL<br />
Schr Mannukawal. from Maul.<br />
1J Schr Odd Fellow, from MauL<br />
Schr Iillu. from Haialua.<br />
Am bark Ethan Allen, now, S4 days from<br />
Sydney.<br />
Am atmr Idaho, Floyd, 10 days and 19<br />
hours from San Francisco.<br />
Ene chin Mattie Banks, Ralph, 2 days<br />
from okobama.<br />
16 Schr 3Iry Ellen, from MauL<br />
Am n bare unlly Jlurfm, Dexter, wlti<br />
9a bbls rp oil, from Nrw Bedford-A-<br />
bark Lecal Tender, Weutwortn, 30<br />
Hats fmtn lfnmT.ililt- '<br />
IT Schr Nettie Merrill, from MauL<br />
Schr Mol Reiki, from MauL<br />
Schr Prince, frum MauL<br />
Schr Bub Bay, from Koolan.<br />
IS Schr Fairy Queen, from KauaL<br />
19 Schr Mary, from KauaL<br />
Schr Mannokawai, from KauaL<br />
SO Schr Active, from UawatL<br />
Ilaw. bark Florence, 51 'Jton, 19 days from<br />
San Francisco.<br />
CLEAHBD.<br />
April 14 Schr Annie, fir HawaiL<br />
Schr Mary, fur KauaL<br />
Schr Manuokawal, fjt MauL<br />
lb Am wh bark Camilla, Jones, for a cruise.<br />
16 Schr Ka JIoL for MauL<br />
IT Schr lsabellv for JfolotaL<br />
19 Schr Nettie JlerriU. f.T KauaL<br />
Schrilary Ellen, for MauL<br />
Schr Mol KeikL fur MauL<br />
Schr Ilob Roy, fur Koolan.<br />
SO Schr Ilattie, for KauaL<br />
Schr Mary, for KauaL<br />
Schr Fairy Queen, for KauaL<br />
PASSENGERS.<br />
FaoK Sax Taascisco, per Idaho, April IS B.<br />
Marks, V. Lomax, S. Roys.<br />
FoaGcaso bums, per Free Trade, April 1C TV.<br />
L. Johnson.<br />
FaoK TocoHaata. per Mattie Bint." April IS Mrs<br />
L. THIson Terry, B. Daris, John Wilson, David<br />
Foa Six Fai5O5C0, per D. C. Murray, as booked<br />
at 2 I'. XL, April 30 Mrs. John S. McOrew. Mrs.<br />
John 8. Walker. Mrs. J. S. Paiton. Mrs. 8. A. Loller,<br />
Q. W. Ltart, WUllam Berrer, C. C. Bennett, R. G.<br />
Stewart, A. L. Morrison, Mrs. 8. B. Holland. Thomas<br />
O. Malley, Win. Jlapler, John S. Walker, Mark Rob-<br />
inson, C P. Ward and servant. Mist A. Mclntyre,<br />
C II. Lewere, James Miller. Thos. Crooks, Geo. C<br />
Redfith, James Barton, F. W. Gardner, lia. Dunn.<br />
MEMO KAAIA.<br />
The steamship Idaho, Floyd, commander, sailed<br />
from Honolulu March 17th, at 40 T. JL, and arrired<br />
at San Francisco, March ISth, at 6: 20, P. M. Re-<br />
turning, left San Francisco, April 3d at 4:15 P. 3L,<br />
and arrired at Honolulu, April ISth at 12:40 P. M.<br />
IMPORTS.<br />
Faox ToinautA, Jipax, per Mattie Banks, April IS.<br />
Birds Pheasants TjSake tubs 12<br />
MaU 100 Soy tubs SD<br />
Plants pkgt 31 Tiles 40<br />
Ricebaiee 30jUnpec Mdsepkrs TO<br />
Fees Erou, VT. T. per Legal Tender, April IT.<br />
Lumber Redwoodft0,6T9Sid!ne ft 55,419<br />
LumberRough ft 47,792 Shingles 213<br />
Tacx Sis Faaxasoo, per Idaho, April 15.<br />
Books pkgs Ianeos cs<br />
Boots A Shoes pkgs Sans kegs<br />
Bran bacs Oats bags<br />
Bread pkgs 1 Opium Uxs<br />
Cider cs rerfuroery pkgs<br />
Crockery pkgs 1 Potatoes bags<br />
Drugs pkgs Saddlery pkgs<br />
Express matter pkgs 20! Salmon pkgs<br />
Flour pkgs<br />
1IS21 Sewing Machines<br />
Furniture pkgs 8 Shirts pkgs<br />
Groceries pkgs 94 Specie pkgs<br />
Hardware pkgs 17 Stationery pkgs<br />
Hops pkgs 1 Spirits Bitters pkgs<br />
Ink pkgs Whiskey pkgs<br />
Iron Sheets<br />
sol Wine cs<br />
Iron Pipes pkgs is; Cnipec Mdte pkgs<br />
EXPORTS.<br />
Foa Baxcas Islas, per Free Trade April 16.<br />
Hay ton IPtd pkgs<br />
Mule liroiaioes pags<br />
J<br />
Value Domestic Prodnce<br />
S20S<br />
Value Foreign Prodnce M0,55<br />
The Qcaraxtikie Grocsds. During one<br />
day this week, onr reporter Tislted the hous-- e<br />
recently completed by the Board of<br />
Health, at Kahololoa, denominated the<br />
' Quarantine ground," on the reef westward<br />
of Honolulu harbor. The particular spot<br />
Is known by the natives as MbkuakullknlL<br />
The location is certainly a very salubrious<br />
one, for, " whatever aire the winds may<br />
blow," to use the words of the immortal<br />
Burns the dwellers on the quarantine<br />
grounds will get the fall benefit of all the<br />
aire of heaven. The passage thither can be<br />
made by boat, but is preferable on horse-<br />
back, for the water, at the ordinary state of<br />
the tide, Is not over four Inches deep, any-<br />
where on the reef. There are three build-<br />
ings which have been erected by Mr. L. L.<br />
Torbert, under directions from the Board.<br />
Beginning with No. 2, the building Intended<br />
for confirmed cases of infectious diseases, we<br />
went along to No. 1, where those suspected<br />
of having disease are to be lodged, and<br />
thence to Nnmber nothing, which we des-<br />
ignate as the boarding-house- , o. 2 is pro-<br />
vided with eight roomy but at<br />
present there are do matrasses) nor any bed-<br />
ding on the spot, bnt tbey can be brought<br />
there at any moment. This house Is the lee-<br />
ward one, and somewhat makal of the others.<br />
It, as well as the other two, Is well ventilat-<br />
ed, and all necessary conveniences are at-<br />
tached. In the building which we have<br />
designated as No. 1, there are some<br />
twelve About fifty yards<br />
eastward hence, we find a long, large,<br />
roomy building, divided off Into compart-<br />
ments, Intended for the accomodation of<br />
those, male and female, who may be unfortu-<br />
nate enough to arrive here In an Infected ves-<br />
sel. The accomodations are all that could<br />
be asked, both regarding the comfort and<br />
convenience of those whom the board may<br />
feel It their duty to keep in quarantine for a<br />
period of time. Altogether, about ninety<br />
persons can be comfortably accommodated at<br />
the quarantine buildings.<br />
Beports from the towns along the Genes-se- e<br />
and Slohawk rivers, atate that those<br />
streams are very high, and have overflowed<br />
their banks in various places, submerging the<br />
bouses and farms. There are fear of an ex-<br />
traordinary flood.<br />
Phases of the Moon for April, 1869.<br />
rnxraaxs iv can. baxhx sxrra.<br />
a at<br />
3rd, Last Quarter<br />
10 17 ax<br />
11th, New Moon<br />
"3 18 r<br />
19th, First Quarter<br />
4 S5 a w<br />
lilh, Fun Moon - 7 SO m<br />
HOSOLrtU MEAN TIME.<br />
1st, Sun Rises.... S SB A x Snn Sets....<br />
11 T X<br />
Sth.SunIH.es.. . S SO Sun Sets. ... 6 13 "<br />
15tn,SunRiis... S 44 " Snn Sets.... o 1<br />
22J, SunRIe..-- S 40 " Snn Seta ... 6 IS "<br />
29th, Sun Rises... 5 35 ' Sun Sets... . 6 20 "<br />
The Mails for California and the East,<br />
per Idaho, will close at the Post-Offic- to-<br />
morrow at 3 o'clock, F. M., punctually.<br />
Oux thanks are dne to Purser McLennsn<br />
for full files of S. F. papers, memoranda,<br />
etc., and also to Bennett of the News Depot.<br />
Wisdt. The past two weeks of April we<br />
have had March weather. The trades have<br />
blown furiously in gusts, particularly of<br />
nights, with occasional showers of rain.<br />
CoDrisniNO. The bark Florence, formerly<br />
a whaler out of this port, arrived yesterday<br />
from San Francisco. She will take in salt<br />
and then proceed on a codfishing cruise to<br />
the Northward.<br />
Erratcm. In onr Issue of last week. In<br />
describing the execution of the two China-<br />
men on the Vth instant, the types, by some<br />
singular mistake, made ns say that the mur-<br />
derers hung fen minutes, when the attend-<br />
ant surgeons pronounced life extinct,<br />
whereas it should read thirty minutes.<br />
As Old Landmark Gone. The wooden<br />
store on the corner of King and Fort Streets,<br />
long occupied by E. O. Hall & Son, was sold<br />
at auction yesterday by Adams & Wilder,<br />
(to be removed) for the cum of ?10S, to L.<br />
L. Torbert. It is the intention of the Messrs.<br />
Hall to erect on the lot a substantial fire<br />
proof store.<br />
strong Mustard. c heard a man<br />
say the other day that California mustard<br />
was the ttrongest in the world. In proof of<br />
this, he stated that recently, while mixing<br />
some in a cup, he dropped some on his pants.<br />
In a few moments', a small blister arose, on<br />
puncturing v?hich, a spoonful of "shoddy<br />
exuded.<br />
A Cactiok to Bathers. One day last<br />
week, as some fishing canoes were unloading<br />
their freight at the fish market, an immense<br />
shark showed himself near the wharf. The<br />
fishermen were at once alive w ith excitement,<br />
and lu a short time had the monster last and<br />
hauled ashore. He measured about tnelve<br />
feet In length. An ugly customer to meet<br />
with, when one is enjoying a salt-wat- bath<br />
in the harbor.<br />
A bio squash. Yesterday, on the Post<br />
Office Verandah, there was exhibited an im-<br />
mense squash, raised by Mr. Crowell, the<br />
curator of the K. H. Agricultural Society's<br />
Garden. It weighed somewhere about SO<br />
pounds. It purported to be "White Pine<br />
Squash, No. 1., by an Inscription on its<br />
broadside. It is to be hoped that this<br />
squash, thns marked "White Pine Squash,"<br />
is not ominous of a financial "squash" to<br />
come in the new Eldorado.<br />
Axscal Meetixq or the St. George's<br />
SociErr. The annual meeting of the<br />
benevolent association will take<br />
place at the Public Hall, on Saturday evening<br />
next, at 7 o'clock. After the meeting, there<br />
will be a supper, as Ofnal. Friday is St.<br />
George's Say, bnt the meeting has been called<br />
for Saturday evening, to meet the views of<br />
many in the Society whose business confines<br />
them to early and late hours, and who feel<br />
the necessity of going to their morning's work<br />
having had a full night's rest. Per reouest<br />
Amoxq the recent Treasury Regulations is<br />
the following which is of interest to onr citi-<br />
zens and may give them a chance to sell their<br />
salt<br />
"If foreign salt Is used without the limits<br />
of the United States for curing fish of Amer-<br />
ican catch, the fish are not thereby rendered<br />
dutiable, nor is the salt so used liable to<br />
duty. If salt purchased aboard for ;the cur-<br />
ing of fish is not consumed in the curing,<br />
but Is brought into an Amerian port, the salt<br />
would then be liable to duty, but the fish of<br />
American catch, cured with such foreign salt<br />
before importation, are free of duty."<br />
Personal. Amour the nassenrers ner<br />
Idaho, which sails tomorrow, are CapL<br />
Worth, C. S. Consul at Hilo, Capt. J. M. Oat<br />
of this city, Mr. J. S. Low of Kauai, and Mr.<br />
J. L. Lewis, the cooper of King street, and<br />
others. Of the latter gentleman, It may be<br />
mentioned as on instance of close applica-<br />
tion to business, that duriuir the Dast eleven<br />
years, there have been but three working- -<br />
days in which he was absent from his coop-<br />
erage. We wish our friends a pleasant trip<br />
and hope that the White Pine fever, will not<br />
attack them so severely as to prevent their<br />
speedy return.<br />
Letter from" China. A letter has been<br />
received at this office from a Chinaman<br />
named W. S. Akaua, who formerly lived at<br />
Hilo, dated Hongkong, Feb. 6. He states<br />
that gold mines have been discovered In the<br />
northern part of China, but that they had<br />
been tabued by the Emperor. A coasting<br />
schooner within a few miles of Hongkong,<br />
had been taken by pirates, and the passen-<br />
gers despoiled of all their money and effects,<br />
the booty being estimated at 1 15,000.<br />
Among the passengers was one Akana (not<br />
the writer of this letter) but a brother of<br />
Achuck, one of the firm of Afong fc Achuck,<br />
of this city. He lost all his baggage and<br />
$500 In cash. There were over one hundred<br />
merchant vessels lying at Hongkong.<br />
Japakese Plaxts. Messrs Adams & Wil-<br />
der, are about to sell, at their Auction room,<br />
this morning, a superb collection of Japanese<br />
plants; every one that adds an ornamental<br />
plant to the repertoire of our community, Is do-In-<br />
service that will survive him and bless<br />
many. This is true, in a still greater degree,<br />
fruit of bearingplants. How many have rea-<br />
son to bless the forethought of Paymaster<br />
Horatio Bridge, who brought ns the Bose- -<br />
apple, Nisboro, and other trees.<br />
Mr. John Montgomery's efforts, in this<br />
line, are most appreciable. Capt. Adams of<br />
Kallbl, will be kindly remembered on this<br />
account. But among all, In future years,<br />
Doctor Hillebrand will be most cherished In<br />
the memory of all, who can appreciate good<br />
works. The plants, for sale this morning are<br />
both ornamental and fruit bearing, as we<br />
understand it<br />
Let all go and compete generously for the<br />
plants, that others may be tempted to bring<br />
more, and when they have gotten them, give<br />
their neighbors slips and cuttings, and pro-<br />
mote the feeling of sympathy and good will<br />
among us. TEN O'CLOCK IS THE HOUR.<br />
"""Narrow Escaj-- e or His Maiestt. On<br />
Saturday last, about the hour of noon, His<br />
Majesty the King, accompanied by the Hon.<br />
IV. P. Kamakau, Circuit Jndge of Oahu, was<br />
walking In the cocoanut grove at Waikiki,<br />
adjacent to his seaside cottage, when three<br />
paces past a cocoannt tree, which stood in<br />
the path of the pedestrians, suddenly fell,<br />
with a crash, right in the place that half a<br />
minute before had been occupied by the<br />
King.<br />
Funeral or the late Hon. Mrs. A. K.<br />
Kafaaeea. On Sunday last, p. m., the re-<br />
mains of this honored lady, more generally<br />
known as Keobokalole, were taken from the<br />
residence of Ma). Mocbonua, where they had<br />
been deposited since being received from<br />
Hilo. and were conveved to the vanlt in the<br />
Kawaiahao burring ground. A large con -<br />
course of natives and foreigners assembled at<br />
the house, and followed the hearse to the<br />
church of Kawalahao. Some thirty Kahili<br />
bearer, marched on each side of the hearse.<br />
A marked feature of the procession was four<br />
torch bearers Insignia of the family to<br />
which the deceased chicles belonged the<br />
torches were composed of knkni-nnt- s wrap-<br />
ped or enfolded In There were<br />
four of them, two alight, and the other two<br />
unligbted. At the church, the services were<br />
very solemn and Impressive. The choir sang<br />
several chants and anthems with admirable<br />
skill and precision, the words being original<br />
and composed for the occasion. The funeral<br />
sermon was preached by the Rev. H. H. Par-<br />
ker, pastor of the church, the text selected<br />
being Rev. c 22, v. 7: "Behold I come<br />
quickly; blessed is be that keepctb the say-<br />
ings of the prophecy of this book." The re-<br />
marks of the Reverend gentleman were very<br />
eloqnent, and his allusions to the many ami '<br />
able qualities of the deceased brought tears<br />
mm many eyer juc services in me ennren,<br />
being concluded, the body was taken to the<br />
w a . u.. .....<br />
,MU- - MU "w oe,nS ocposiiea wunin, a<br />
uymn was sung dv me cnoir, and prayer;<br />
offered by Rev. Mr. Parker.<br />
The Wild Man or tiie Woods. Some<br />
eight or ten years ago, Mr. Isaac Adams, liv-<br />
ing at Niu, beyond Dimond Head, having<br />
repeatedly lost fowls, bananas, etc., in a<br />
mysterious manner, at last discovered the<br />
thief in the person of a wild man, whose ex-<br />
istence in the mountains had frequently been<br />
asserted by the natives, bnt had generally<br />
been regarded as a myth. Setting a watch,<br />
Adams sncceeded in capturing the man, and<br />
brought him to town, where an enterprising<br />
publican made some money by exhibiting<br />
him as "The Wild man of Niu." For some<br />
months afterwards, Adams took care of the<br />
"wild man," fed, and clothed him, but he<br />
could not be prevailed upon to speak, and<br />
eventually ran away again to the mountains.<br />
Making his way along the mountain ridge of<br />
Konabuanul, he next appeared In the neigh-<br />
borhood ot Halawa, and recommenced bis de-<br />
predations. He was occasionally seen and<br />
chased, bnt eluded pursuit among the wilds<br />
and mountain fastnesses. Recently, however,<br />
he was captured on the land of Mr. Paiko, In<br />
the act of pulling up water-melo- vines and<br />
plucking corn. Brought before the Police<br />
Court on Wednesday last, on a charge of<br />
malicious Injury, and addressed In three or<br />
four different languages, he still kept silence.<br />
After hearing the testimony, the Magistrate<br />
sentenced him to six months imprisonment<br />
at bard labor. The following day, he was at<br />
work on the esplanade, managing a wheel-<br />
barrow as skillfully as a "navvy," and hav-<br />
ing found his tongue, spoke tolerable English<br />
and Hawaiian. There Is a mystery as to<br />
what conntryman he is, and bow he came<br />
here.<br />
Sctbexe Cocbt. In the case of The King<br />
vs. John Brown, tried for the burning of the<br />
ship Kig Plillip, the jury rendered a verdict<br />
of guilty. Counsel for the prisoner subse-<br />
quently filed a motion for a new trial, which<br />
was argued, but the decision of the Court has<br />
not been rendered np to the time of going to<br />
press.<br />
Asee, convicted of burglary on the premises<br />
of a Chinese restaurant, was sentenced to two<br />
years' imprisonment.<br />
The Court was occupied yesterday on a mo-<br />
tion to disbar a native Counsel, Mr. Kailiau-te-a.<br />
The allegation was that one Moku, had<br />
in his lifetime, made a deed of some laud on<br />
the other side of this Island, (Oahu,) to his<br />
grandson. Moku subsequently died, not hav-<br />
ing " acknowledged " the deed, and it was<br />
brought to town to cure that defect, which can<br />
be done, legally, by proving the signatures of<br />
the witnesses. It was brought to one Koine-aloh- a,<br />
who, in company with one of the wit-<br />
nesses, Nakapalu, called on the Counsel above<br />
alluded to, and asked him to make a copy of<br />
thedeed, signing Moku's name to it, Nakapalu<br />
personated the dead man, (Moku), to the<br />
Notary, John 11. Paty, Esq., and thus having<br />
the acknowledgment, got the deed recorded.<br />
The whole thing depended on the testimony of<br />
Kamealoha and Nakapalu, who were, of<br />
course, guilty of the wrong.<br />
Per contra, the accused man set up that the<br />
original deed was a perfectly good one ; that<br />
they asked him to make a copy of it, and<br />
paid him a dollar for his work ; and that he<br />
never asked any one to personify the deceased,<br />
but that Kamealoha did, as he himself testified,<br />
and if there were any wrong, it was his.<br />
The Court said that if tbey were to disbar<br />
a man on such testimony, that is to say, the<br />
testimony of people who, if any wrong was<br />
done, were principal to it such proceedings<br />
might be taken against the most honorable<br />
member of the Bar, and the motion was, con-<br />
sequently, refused.<br />
Admiral Hastings has been expected here,<br />
and was to take a house, and spend some<br />
considerable time.<br />
Victoria, March SL Admiral Hastings<br />
has received orders from England to proceed<br />
at once with IL JL ship Zealout to Valparaiso.<br />
The Sparrow JZaKk has also been ordered<br />
away. The departure of these vessels will<br />
leave but one sbip-of-w- and agnnboat on<br />
this station. An entertainment tendered by<br />
the citizens of this place to Admiral Hastings<br />
and the o Ulcers o( the nary, to take place<br />
this week, was declined for want of time.<br />
New Tore, March 29. James<br />
Harper, who was Injured on Thursday by be-<br />
ing thrown from a carriage, died on Saturday<br />
night, at the age of 74,<br />
New Tore, March 30. The funeral of<br />
James Harper was y attended by nn im-<br />
mense concourse. Including the Mayor and<br />
members of the city government, leading<br />
merchants, bankers, and authors of the city,<br />
and publishers from all parts of the country.<br />
Nashville, March 28. Dispatches from<br />
Greenville state.that<br />
Johnson,<br />
after suffering intensely for twenty-fou- r hours<br />
with gravel, la again up and in his usual<br />
health. v<br />
Dispatches to the Union, American and<br />
Banner, also announce that he will speak, at<br />
Knoxville on the Sd or April, atNashjille on<br />
the 6th, and afterwards at Memphis. "<br />
General Sickles declines the mission to<br />
Mexico.<br />
LATE FOREIGIn NEWS.<br />
American News.<br />
Havana, March 25. A Commissioner has<br />
arrived from Trinidad, and had an Interview<br />
with the Ca Maln-G- i ucml. Coianlalnt is made<br />
that Patriot. Governor of Triuidad, is dis<br />
loyal, ana Ilia I tic purposely sent troops<br />
where there was no enemy. The belief Is<br />
expressed that he has snld himself to the<br />
insurgents. Similar accusations arc lodged<br />
against Mardusa, Goteruor of Vlllaclara.<br />
CapL Mardinh-a- , commanding the Govern-<br />
ment forces in the field near Rcmcdlos, is<br />
charged with open complicity with the in-<br />
surgents.<br />
Four companies of the fourth battalion,<br />
composed principally of volunteers, ho<br />
were sent to the field for active service, have<br />
deecrted to the enemy. The advance guard,<br />
under Gen. Lclona, were recently defeated<br />
near Cicnfugos.<br />
ork, March JO. A Uribunt Havana<br />
special savs that fcpanianli are secretly urg- -<br />
in(. tue Home Government to arm the blacks,<br />
Three men were killed in a disturbance, last<br />
Sunday, for replying t o Insults by Spaniards,<br />
A great crowd of Spaniards cheered the exc--<br />
cution 0f tbc Cuban, Romero. ne was shot<br />
' on the w barf, in sight of the prisoners who<br />
were leaving for Africa. The impression<br />
still prevails that Santiago Is taken by the<br />
reoeis. it is reportea mat mere is a Iresn<br />
outbreak near Matsnzas.<br />
Chicago, March 26. A New York special<br />
says, the Cnbans there claim to have private<br />
advices from London, that the English Gov<br />
ernment nas consented to acEnun ledge the<br />
insurgents as belligerents, and allow the<br />
'<br />
Thev confidently expect France to follow the<br />
.nciisn example.<br />
Boston. March U6. A fire In Commerce<br />
street, last night, destroyed property worth<br />
over tisuu.uuu.<br />
Chicago, March 2d Hon. Edward Bates,<br />
Attorney-Gener- under Lincoln, died at St.<br />
Louis. esterdav.<br />
No nomination of President Grant's has<br />
yet been rejected. Longstreet's was passed<br />
over yesterday, because it was known that it<br />
w ould icaa to a loni; alscuseion.<br />
A negro, confined in a cell in the County<br />
Jail, yesterday, deliberately set fire to his<br />
bed. Four other negroes were confined in<br />
the wnicn was snJalL Before reU<br />
could reach them, ail live were badly burned,<br />
inilt 1 feared three may die.<br />
NewIork, March 27. The.Pacific steamer<br />
BeraMm w totally lo5t 70 miles north of<br />
loEonama, wnn Japanese troops on ooard.<br />
Washington, March 2S. At an Interview<br />
betw een the President and a delega-<br />
tion of Mksissippians. reDresentlmr the Con<br />
servative and Republican parties, the Presi<br />
dent said he tbongut the best plan to quiet<br />
opnosinr parties in Mississippi, wonld be for<br />
Congress to authorize the of<br />
the Constitution to the people; a separate<br />
vote to be taken on the features objected to,<br />
bv the Conservatives; meantime the present<br />
Military Commander to control the State.<br />
The mull service is extended on the Central<br />
Pacific to 597 miles. The track is laid 612<br />
miles, and the grading finished to Ogden.<br />
Yesterday, the Honse Committee on Com<br />
merce voted to report with amendments, the<br />
Senate bill to protect Fur Seals, after a<br />
stormy debate. There Is small chance of the<br />
bill passing both Houses during the present<br />
session.<br />
The accredited agents of the Cuban In-<br />
surgents are earnestly laboring w ith Congress<br />
to secure some recognition, it is announced<br />
that an office will be opened here this week<br />
for the sale of Cnban insurrectionary bonds.<br />
Senor Lelnns is perfecting arrangements to<br />
that end.<br />
Chicago, March 29. A Tribune 'Washing-<br />
ton special says: Political circles are greatly<br />
excited over the editorial article accompany-<br />
ing the testimony published in the New York<br />
Evening Fast of Saturday, pointedlv charging<br />
that Senator Fenton received 20,000 for sign-<br />
ing the Erie Railroad bill. It is thought the<br />
Senate can not avoid investigating the matter.<br />
The declare that Ifhe is found<br />
guilty they will have him expelled.<br />
Gen. Ramsoff, the Danish Minister of War,<br />
who has been here looking alter the St.<br />
Thomas Treaty, has left for Europe. It is not<br />
likely the Senate will take action on the treaty<br />
this session.<br />
Chicago, March SO. The SepvUictnCt<br />
Washington special says that Alexander H.<br />
Stephens is lying at the point of death In Au-<br />
gusta, Ga.<br />
President Grant is still suffering from neu-<br />
ralgia in the face, and receives no visitors.<br />
The Tiinei special says President Grant Is<br />
determined to recognize the Cnban insur-<br />
gents as belligerents, although several prom-<br />
inent Radicals fear that this course will not<br />
only involve the Dnited States in war with<br />
Spain, but will seriously complicate our rela-<br />
tions with the Great Powers of Europe.<br />
A Washington dispatch says the Senate<br />
Committee on Foreign Affairs, has postponed<br />
the Danish and Alabama treaties till the next<br />
session.<br />
New Yore, March 31. Sargent Nye, Wil-<br />
liams and Corbett are urging General Me<br />
Cook for the San Francisco Mint, vice Swain.<br />
The President has not yet consented to<br />
see the Envoy for the Cnban Insurgents.<br />
Secretary Fish advises extreme caution in<br />
respect to Cuban affairs.<br />
J. Lothrop Motley oirktd y In obedi-<br />
ence to a summons. It is believed that he<br />
will soon be appointed Minister to England,<br />
New York, March 3L A Matanzas letter<br />
says that a body of Cuban patriots near there<br />
have raised the American flag.<br />
A large expedition, with arms, amunition,<br />
etc, had safely landed near Cochinas.<br />
Several expeditions from the United States,<br />
well armed, are known to have landed in<br />
Cuba within the last few days and julned the<br />
rebels.<br />
Albant, March 3L The freshet continues.<br />
The trains on the Hudson River and New<br />
York Central Railroads are all delayed, only<br />
one track of the former road being in use,<br />
and that is under water in many places. Ac-<br />
counts from various points report great dam-<br />
age to property.<br />
New York, March 31. Advices from Cuba<br />
from patriot sources, state that Cespedes re-<br />
plied to Dulce'e declaration of war to the<br />
knife, by a decree that all volunteers taken<br />
hereafter shall be Immediately put to death.<br />
The schooner Alert arrived lrom the west<br />
coast yesterday afternoon. She visited the<br />
scene of the wrecked bark John Bright. The<br />
Indians have a quantity of articles belonging<br />
to the wreck. The captain went on board of<br />
the wreck, the hull of which is entire, and<br />
fall of lumber. It lies broadside on the bold<br />
shore, where there Is considerable surf. The<br />
Indians were greatly excited, fearing a visit<br />
from a r. The Alert brought down<br />
a quantity of whale olL<br />
Chicago, March SL Bids for the great<br />
spring mail lettincs, will be opened<br />
About 2,500 routes are to be let. About<br />
15,000 bids will be received.<br />
New York, Morch 3L The lima says the<br />
revelations before the Court of Justice, de-<br />
velop the most monstrous frauds in Pacific<br />
Railroad matters. The of the<br />
Union Pacific, when forced to testify, admit-<br />
ted that construction contracts had been<br />
made at rates varying from ff2,000 to 96,000<br />
per mile. The prices are notoriously three<br />
times the actual cost of construction to the<br />
company. Comparing these prices with the<br />
receipts, It appears that they are calculated<br />
with great exactness to strip the company,<br />
as such, of every penny of Its funds, so that<br />
Its property will soon be sold under foreclo-<br />
sure of the first mortgage bonds, leaving tbe<br />
United States In the lurch for its paltry loans<br />
of 30,000,000to J50.000.000.<br />
Havana, March 81. The British Consul<br />
has sent the gunboat Serron to tbe Caribbean<br />
Sea, where the British ship Jeff Davit was<br />
captured by a Spanish cruiser. The volun-<br />
teers took two Cuban passengers from tbe<br />
Davit and Immediately shot them. The cap-<br />
tain and crew were thrown into jail. The<br />
consuls expect soon to have a British fleet<br />
cruising among the Bahamas.<br />
Two schooners aud two steamers loaded<br />
with men and arms were captured at Maxi,<br />
the extreme eastern point of tbe island.<br />
Advices from Santiazo, of March 22d, re-<br />
port that the steamer CVfcief and two schoon-<br />
ers landed an expedition on tbe northern shore<br />
ofNewNeuvlta, on the 2Cth Instant. The<br />
insurgents are very active In that vicinity<br />
and tbe Government troops were constantly<br />
occupied. Manonl expectc to restore com-<br />
munication with Tunis.<br />
Washisgtos, April 1. It Is stated that<br />
there Is no doubt ol the adoption by both<br />
Houses, of Cnban sympathy resolutions.<br />
The friends of Cuba say this will exercise an<br />
Important Influence on the war, seenring<br />
the revolutionists physical, as well aa moral<br />
support. It Is expected, that the Spanish<br />
Minister will present a remonstrance to the<br />
State Department, against the recognition<br />
or uuDan independence, ano wm leave me<br />
country In case of the adoption of the resolu-<br />
tion.<br />
New York, April L The Union Pacific<br />
commenced suit In the United Statea<br />
Circuit Court against James Fitk, Jr., for<br />
trespass, in laKing possession oi toe oince<br />
and property of the company, and otherwise<br />
prejudicing its affairs. Damages are claimed<br />
at a million ol dollars. It Is rumored that<br />
other suits against FIsk and his agents will<br />
be Instituted.<br />
New York, April L The Committee on<br />
Foreign Relations of the Colombian Senate,<br />
have reported against the Cushing treaty for<br />
me at. l nomas canaL<br />
New York. AdHI 1. A fire In Valparaiso<br />
has destroyed property to the value of quar<br />
ter oi a minion dollars.<br />
New York, April L The yellow fever is<br />
raging on the south coast of Peru. It broke<br />
out on tne lutearora, ana raymaster ensu-<br />
ing died from It.<br />
New York. April 2. A Washington dls-<br />
patch says, correspondence has been in pro<br />
gress ior some time oetwecn prominent men<br />
in the British Provinces and leading men<br />
here relative to prospective annexation.<br />
Many members of Congress believe that If<br />
me matter could be readied in an oillcia!<br />
way, proposals looking to annexation would<br />
eventually oe maae.<br />
An attcmnt was made vestcrdav to Induce<br />
the Committee on Foreign Affairs tc inquire<br />
Into the expediency of investigating our<br />
relations, present and prospective, witli A ova<br />
Scotia. An objection was made to the reso<br />
lution, and it could, therefore, not oere<br />
eclved.<br />
A Lima letter savs the Peruvian Minister<br />
at Washington is instrneted to settle the<br />
question at Issue with Spain. The points<br />
lhat cannot be settled by tbe Ministers of<br />
mc two countries, win be submitted to me<br />
President of tbe United States, whose deci<br />
sion snau ue nnaL<br />
Chicago, April 2. A special says the<br />
Senate In Executive session considered Long- -<br />
street's nomination. Kellogg and Spencer<br />
isvorea connrmation, and uameron strongly<br />
opposed it. The debate Is likely to be pro-<br />
tracted, and tbe result uncertain.<br />
Two hundred clerks were dismissed from<br />
the Treasury Department, yesterday, and<br />
more dismissals, will probably follow.<br />
New York, April 2. A meeting of the<br />
VIgillancc Committee of this city was held<br />
last nigh, when a proposition was made to<br />
caii out me nam organizations, marcn to<br />
the Tombs, and demand the surrender of the<br />
murderer Real Into their bands. After a<br />
stormy debate. It was resolved to await the<br />
action oi tne court, and keep close watch<br />
on tbe movements of the politicians in this<br />
case.<br />
The IXmet says there is no doubt that tbe<br />
House has been overreached by the Senate<br />
in tbe Tennre-o- f Office business. Judge Da-<br />
vis and Attomev-Genera- l Hoar, construe the<br />
new bill as leaving in the hands of the Sen<br />
ate, a continued check upon all removals by<br />
the President.<br />
Washinton, April 2. Sherman introduced<br />
a bill relative to the coinage of gold and sli-<br />
ver, with the view to promote a uniform<br />
currency among nations. Referred to com-<br />
mittee on Finance.<br />
New York, April 2. The HeralSt Havana<br />
special or the 80th, via Key West, April 2d,<br />
says the steamer Mount Teniou, In poscsslon<br />
ot Dominican rebels, was at Kingston on<br />
Sunday. Holllster, the representative of the<br />
United State in Uayti, denounced her as a<br />
pirate because she carried munitions of war<br />
to San Marco. She intends to go to Uayti<br />
and hoist tbe revolutionary flag, and attack<br />
the naval forces of Salnavc<br />
Gregg, the American Consul at Jamaica.<br />
was carefully watching the movements of<br />
me Mount lemon.<br />
The British Minister at has<br />
made a report to his Government, complain-<br />
ing that the agents of Salnave had examined<br />
tbe letters of the malls, aud tbe information<br />
thns obtained had occasioned many arrests<br />
and two executions. Two British<br />
have gone to e to demand repa-<br />
ration, and it Is probable that serious results<br />
will ensue.<br />
Richmond, April 2. General A. S. Webb<br />
assumed command y and Issued an<br />
order reinstating Governor Wells.<br />
Havana, April 3 Havana advices from<br />
Mexico to March 27th, report that Colonel<br />
Meyer, who was arrested on a charge of con-<br />
spiracy against the Mexican Government,<br />
will be banished from the country.<br />
An accident recently occurred on a railroad,<br />
by which eight soldiers were killed, and thir-<br />
teen Injured.<br />
Executions without trial continues In Yuca<br />
tan.<br />
The orders of Governor Cedollos for the<br />
sale of Mexican territory to the United<br />
States, were agitated at the capital aud found<br />
manv supporters.<br />
Private letters from Mexico accuse Headero<br />
DeTegada of hostility to Americans, and of<br />
defrauding tbe Mexican Government.<br />
European News.<br />
Paris, March 2C Several large public<br />
meetings were held here yesterday.<br />
Three persons were arrested for making<br />
seditions speeches.<br />
Paris, March 27. The Gaulolt states that<br />
the Emperor Napoleon has demanded an ex-<br />
planation of the King of Prussia, in regard to<br />
the recent mobilisation of troops in the<br />
Western Provinces.<br />
Athens, March 17. Partodas Bey, the<br />
T" - . U If" , .1 Aflt..T)lt . !..- -<br />
has arrived from Constinople, and resumed<br />
amicable relations in beealf of Turkey with<br />
tbe Grecian Government.<br />
New York, March 23. The Herald? t Lon-<br />
don special savs that advices from Spain ren<br />
der It certain that Montepensier will be pro<br />
moted King, lie wui arrive in Spain within<br />
a fortnight<br />
London, March 29. A grand review of<br />
votunleers came off at Dover There<br />
were over 30,000 men in tbe ranks. An im-<br />
mense multitude witnessed the spectacle.<br />
There was some snow. Several persons<br />
were hurt, but not seriously. A portion of<br />
the Channel fleet went through naval move-<br />
ments off the shore, and exchanged salutes<br />
with tbe batteries on land.<br />
Paris. March 29. Officers and privates on<br />
leave of abscence are ordered to join their<br />
regiments April 1st,<br />
London, March 30. In tbe draft of the<br />
new Spanish Constitution, the reign of the<br />
King irnot limited to eighteen Tears, as re<br />
ported. The possession of tbe crown re--<br />
... , . .<br />
ri ' - i;i"- - i i<br />
mains in mc iviug lur mc, auu uesceuua lu<br />
his beir, tbe period of whose majority is fix-<br />
ed at eighteen years.<br />
New York. March 31. The Spanish Cor<br />
tes authorize a new loan.<br />
The hostility to the conscription law con<br />
tinues in the provinces. Fresh outbreaks<br />
are leared.<br />
Munich, March 31. Orders are issued to<br />
grant unlimited leave of absence to thirty<br />
men lrom eacn company, in an me lmantry<br />
regiments of tbe army of Bavaria.<br />
London, April L The Chamber of Com-<br />
merce of Liverpool have petitioned the<br />
Honse of Commons, Gladstone, and the Postmas-<br />
ter-General, to support the present con-<br />
tracts with steam-shi- lines, for carrying the<br />
mails to America.<br />
Madrid. March 2. Troops are going to<br />
the Prrenees to nrevent Dart tea of Carllsta<br />
from crossing the frontier into Spain.<br />
The new Constitution proposes a heredi<br />
tary monarchy.<br />
Serrano told tbe Cortes that orders for the<br />
Cuban elections bad been sent, and depnties<br />
tbence are expected shortly.<br />
London, April 2. By an explosion in Or-le- y<br />
Colliery. Lancashire, twenty-eig- per-<br />
sons were killed.<br />
Constantinople. April 2. The difficul<br />
ties on tbe Persian border are in a fair way<br />
to be settled. Tbe Porte has agreed with<br />
tbe Persian Government to refer the rectifi-<br />
cation of the frontier to a mixed commission<br />
of Turkish and Persian subjects.<br />
NEW ADVERTISEMENTS.<br />
TOR SALE.<br />
,fy A TOUXG STALLIOH, 5 years<br />
ralold. from the best stock of Mr. Mof- -<br />
fatt's breed. The horse is gentle, and broken<br />
to saddle and harness. Terms moderate. In-<br />
quire at the Milk Raseh of the Nuuanu Dairy,<br />
or of<br />
14-3- WM. HILLEBRAND.<br />
NOTICE.<br />
3IY ABSENCE from this<br />
DURING my brother TUAMPOI will<br />
act for me, and all receipts for money paid to<br />
him, or to my wife Kapehe, on my account,<br />
will be neld valia by me.<br />
14-l- m JiOKA.<br />
TO LET.<br />
PREMISES situated on the<br />
THE of Punehbowl Street and Palace<br />
Walk, recently oecunied by tbe late Captain<br />
Molteno, which are now being put in thorough<br />
repair. Apply to<br />
lZ-- w. u. rAztius.<br />
AUCTION SALES.<br />
Br ADAMS & WILDER.<br />
AT SALES-ROO- M.<br />
THIS-DA- Y,<br />
Wednesday, April 21st<br />
AT 10 O'CLOCK, A. M.,<br />
WK Witt SKLL<br />
A large Assortment or McrcbaHdise,<br />
consisting or<br />
Brown Cottons, Bleached Cottons,<br />
Prints, Blue Cottons, Ulaliis,<br />
Wool Shirts, Undershirt.. Blaaksts,<br />
Wool Pants, Cotton Pants,<br />
Shoes, Hats, etc.,<br />
DOWSER'S KEKOSESE OIL,<br />
BOSTON CARD MATCHES.<br />
ENQLISII FRUITS..<br />
AND PICKLES,<br />
Vermocilli, Choice Teas, Common Teas,<br />
An Assortment of Crockery,<br />
Glassware and Lamps. Blackine,<br />
A few very sup'r Silk Umbrellas,<br />
new Style of Matches.<br />
ALSO<br />
A Small Inroiee of Rubber Goods,<br />
Such as Coats, Talmas,<br />
Card Baskets, Pipes, Balls,<br />
Dolls, Dolls' Heads. Combs,<br />
j inch Hose, - k 3 ply, le.<br />
Also For Account of whom it may Concern,<br />
20 Kegs of No. 1 Sugar,<br />
IS Sacks of Uolden Gate Flour,<br />
ALSO<br />
EX HATTIE BANKS, FROM YOKOHAMA,<br />
An Invoice of Japanese Plants.<br />
Consisting of Bamboo Plants,<br />
A few Very Choice Tamiens,<br />
Dwarf Chesnuts, Persimmons,<br />
Grapes, Plums,<br />
Camelias, and<br />
Lillies.<br />
Also One Superior Wardrobe,<br />
One Bureau, One Office Desk,<br />
Kitchen Furniture,<br />
A Lot of Koa Lumber,<br />
Rice Mill, Sewing Machine,<br />
Two Oil Paintings,<br />
One Cottage PIn.no.<br />
By Order of GEORGE WILLIAMS, Admin- -<br />
trator of tbe hstate of James McShane,<br />
deceased.<br />
On Thursday, April 29<br />
AT 10 O'CLOCK A. M.,<br />
On the Premises formerly occupied by James<br />
juc&nane, on King street, we will sell<br />
THE ENTIRE STOCK AND FIXTURES<br />
OF A CARPENTER'S SHOP,<br />
Consisting of Work Benches,<br />
A Large Ass't of Carpenter's Tools,<br />
One Morticing Machine,<br />
A Lot of Blinds k Doors,<br />
Une iioring Machine,<br />
Crowbars, Rollers,<br />
Ropes,<br />
Une Counter scale and W eights, 1 Clock,<br />
1 Grindstone,<br />
Lot of Nails, Ladders,<br />
Lot of Old Bricks a Coral Stone,<br />
Koa and Ohia Lumber,<br />
Northwest and other<br />
Lumber, Handcart,<br />
Lot of Coffins,<br />
Shingles, ae.<br />
also<br />
THE UNEXPIRED LEASE OF PREMISES,<br />
To run four years from July 1st, 1869, at a<br />
monthly rent of $18.<br />
Wednesday, May 19th,<br />
At 12 o'clock M., at Salesroom,<br />
If not previously disposed of at Private Sale,<br />
One Very Sup'r Carriage Horse,<br />
Imported Stock, Seven Tears old.<br />
One Concord Wagon,<br />
ONE SET OF SINGLE HARNESS.<br />
For particulars, apply to<br />
ADAMS A WILDER, Auct'rs.<br />
Supreme Court In Probate.<br />
In the matter of the Estate of Robert Law<br />
rence of Honolulu, Island of Oahu, dee'd.<br />
PROPER application having been<br />
Honorable Elisha 11. Allen,<br />
Chief Justice of the Supreme Court, by the<br />
Hon. James W. Austin, Executor under the<br />
Will of Robert Lawrence, of Honolulu, Island<br />
of Oahu, deceased, for a settlement of the ac<br />
counts of the Estate of Robert Lawrence, afore-<br />
said, deceased, and a discharge from further<br />
responsibility in the premises. Notice is here-<br />
by given to all persons whom it may concern,<br />
that WEDNESDAY, the 5th day of May next,<br />
at 10 o'clock in the forenoon, is a day and<br />
hour appointed for the hearing of the applica-<br />
tion aforesaid, and all objections that may be<br />
offered thereto, at the chambers of the Chief<br />
Justice, in the Court House, Honolulu.<br />
WM. HUMPHREYS,<br />
Deputy Clerk Supreme Court.<br />
Honolulu, April 19, 1869. 14--<br />
Carriage Horse for Sale.<br />
THE well-kno- Stallion<br />
KOSSUTH, so long the property of<br />
the late Dr. S. P. Ford. The horse<br />
is sound and is gentle in harness, or under<br />
the saddle. Apply to<br />
J. L. RICHARDSON,<br />
13-- Pnunui Raneh.<br />
BAMS FOB SALE.<br />
THREE FINE MERINO RAMS, ex<br />
from Bremen, for sale by<br />
13-- H. UACKFELD A CO.<br />
Champagne.<br />
Louis Sngot Sc. Co's Champagne,<br />
and quarts, just received ex "Ka<br />
Moi," and for sale by<br />
13- - If. HACKFELD k CO.<br />
Ale and Porter.<br />
Jeffrey & Co's Edinburg Ale and<br />
and other favorite brands, just re-<br />
ceived per "Ka Moi," and for sale by<br />
13- - II. HACKFELD A CO.<br />
PUBLIC NOTICE.<br />
IT IS NOT TRUE, as has been<br />
that the undersigned has given up<br />
business. His friends, and all who wish to<br />
give him a call, at his Old Stand on Hotel<br />
Street, will find him just as ready to renew<br />
or repair their understandings, at at any time<br />
during his residence of eighteen years in this<br />
City.<br />
GEORGE CLARK.<br />
Honolulu, April 12th, 1869. lm<br />
Dissolution of Copartnership.<br />
milE firm of HITCHCOCK A CASTLE,<br />
L doing business at Hilo, Hawaii, is this<br />
day dissolved by mntual consent. All liabili-<br />
ties of the above mentioned firm will be- set-<br />
tled by, and all debts due them, collected by<br />
D. H. A E. G. Hiteheoek, who will continue<br />
the business as heretofore, under the name<br />
and style of HITCHCOCK A BROTHER.<br />
d. h. nncncocK,<br />
Signed E. G. mTCHCOCK,<br />
C. A. CASTLE.<br />
Hilo, April 9th, 1869. I3-- 4t<br />
Executor's Notice.<br />
In the matter of the Estate of Richard Henry<br />
Gillmore, deceased.<br />
PERSONS having onr claims<br />
ALL the Estate of the labs B. H. GUI-mo-<br />
are requested to present the same, and<br />
all persons indebted to said Estate, will make<br />
immediate payment to<br />
GEORGE WILLIAMS,<br />
Sole Executor.<br />
Honolulu, March 30, 1869-11-- 51.<br />
AUCTION SALES.<br />
Br e. S. BARTOW.<br />
REGULAR BOOM SALE.<br />
On Friday, April 30th,<br />
At 10 A. at SalesroeK,<br />
VIBL IK tots,<br />
A Variety of Merchandise.<br />
JST- - Particulars by Posters.<br />
lEHSL "R A MOI,<br />
FROM BREMEN.<br />
HEMP RIGGING,<br />
8 to 4 inch. For sale by<br />
iiUlUjlSB a COV<br />
"pUSSIA BOLT ROPE,<br />
XV assorted sixes, ex " Ka Moi."<br />
sot sale by B0LLES A CO.<br />
CRUSHED SUGAR,<br />
and for sale by<br />
I1UI.LES A CO.<br />
BEST PORTLAND CEMENT,<br />
' Ka Moi." Also, best Roeendal<br />
Cement. For sale by BOLLES A CO.<br />
ATANILA ROPE,<br />
Boston laid. For tale hi<br />
BOLLES A CO.<br />
SHINGLES<br />
A Superior lot of Bhaved<br />
cx "D. C. Murray."<br />
and for sale by<br />
IJ-t- WALKER A ALLEN.<br />
CASES OLIVE OIL,<br />
Cases French Mustard.<br />
Cases French Chocolate.<br />
For sale by<br />
I3-I- WALKER A ALLEN.<br />
BAKERS, EXTRA FLOUR,<br />
Bread, for sale by<br />
13-l- iVALKr.it A ALLEN.<br />
At Store No. to.<br />
Just Received per D. C. Murray.<br />
& GENTS' French Kid<br />
LADIES' an assortment of Fashionable- -<br />
Dress and other Trimmings, with a variety of<br />
Fancy Goods.<br />
J UiLN THOMAS WATEKUOUSE. .<br />
Honolulu, April 13, 1869. lm<br />
Belting.<br />
A superior lot of LEATHER BELTING.<br />
trom 1 to for sale by<br />
WALKER A ALLEN.<br />
Sole and Saddle Leather,<br />
Tanned Gout and Sheep Skins,<br />
ON HAND and for<br />
CONSTANTLY<br />
WAIMEA TANNEltV C. Notler,<br />
by A. 3. CLEG HORN,<br />
Agent.<br />
JUST RECEIVED<br />
Per American Ship "Syren,"<br />
Perkins, Master,<br />
From Boston Direct,<br />
AND FOR SALE BY<br />
BOIjIaES cfe CO.<br />
JUCK No. 1 to No. 10,<br />
OARS from 3 to 22 feet in length.<br />
Cotton Sail Twine,<br />
Trusses of Lampwiek,<br />
Boston Sugar Curtd Hamt,<br />
Pembroke, Salt,<br />
Ac., Ae., Ao.<br />
LMcMURRAY'S OYSTERS,<br />
This celebrated<br />
brand of Oysters, just reeeired per " Syren,"<br />
direct from the packers, and warranted fresh.<br />
for sale by DULLES & CO.<br />
H INGHAM BUCKETS,<br />
Per " Syren," and for sale by<br />
DULLES A CO.<br />
PAINTED PAILS,<br />
and for tale by<br />
UULLKB CO.<br />
CHALK, and for tale by<br />
JJULLKS A to.<br />
TDIRCn BROOMS,<br />
Xj i or sale ny<br />
BOLLES A CO.<br />
CHALK, in barrels,<br />
by BOLLES A CO.<br />
NiTirnnvrt T T t<br />
received by every packet, direct from tie<br />
agents in San Francisco.<br />
i or sale by BOLLES A CO.<br />
mABLE SALT,<br />
JL ex " Syren," and for sale by<br />
UULLES A UU.<br />
F. A. SCHAEFER & CO.<br />
Have Just Received<br />
PER<br />
<strong>HAWAIIAN</strong> BARK EA MOL,<br />
Prom Bremen,<br />
A SPLENDID ASSORTMENT OF<br />
Wines, Beers,, and Spirits.<br />
RHINE WTSTMX I et<br />
H0CHHELMER.<br />
J0HANNISBER0EB,<br />
GEI3ENHEIMER.<br />
BORDEAUX WINE 8 s<br />
CHATEAU CANTEMERLE,<br />
MARQEATJX DO TEIITRE,<br />
CLERK MIL0K,<br />
POET WINE, SHERRY,<br />
OLD COGNAC, HOLLAND QIN,<br />
GERMAN PALE ALE,<br />
GERMAN PORTER,<br />
All of which, will be told at Very Reason<br />
able Bates.<br />
Japan Tea!<br />
SMALL LOT OF THE BEST QTJAL- T-<br />
3. ties, in papers. For Sal by<br />
B0LLBS A CO.<br />
Columbia Eiver Salmon<br />
THE CATCH OF 1883.<br />
OF In barrels and half barrels.<br />
For Sals by B,QLLB A CQ,
v<br />
WOT.<br />
NEVER<br />
X rnelancholy chili of grief.<br />
With bright hopes dimmed forever.<br />
Thus sadly soopht, not found relief<br />
'.Trom!hIightliig, llightliiKi<br />
Thers Is no endless never litre,<br />
' Earth's nerer is not nerer;<br />
Each vanished joy will nappesr.<br />
And hliss in heaven fjrertr."<br />
Such hope though sweet is ssdlj false,<br />
There is an rthl DCTrr;<br />
Some Jots are only tutod here,<br />
AbJ last snd last IjfTTerC ;<br />
Some hideous sins are sinned on earth,<br />
. That cease to enrse us nrrerr<br />
5ome lifeendniing cruets hare Llrth<br />
That mnrdcr hope txt er.<br />
Along life's thorny, crooked way, .<br />
How many never grieve nsl<br />
Fate tales our Urine friends away.<br />
And death's fierce shafts bereave ns ;<br />
Each year we take our weeping leave<br />
Of precious hopes long cherished ;<br />
Each erening dips the gaping grare<br />
Of morning Meeting perished.<br />
Ah, sad the stricken. Borrowing heart.<br />
Though hopes of hearen may fill it.<br />
That daily feels the palsying smart<br />
Of griefs that dally kill It!<br />
Ah f weary is the longing soul.<br />
Though hearen at last niay bless it.<br />
That hungers still fur earthly Uiss,<br />
Vet neTer may possess it?<br />
To Borrows, too, we bid adieu.<br />
To pain and pleasure blending.<br />
Each lasting day brings evils new,<br />
And each makes evils ending.<br />
Tis "nerer wakes the sweetest thoughts.<br />
Or starts regrets the saddest ;<br />
Jt walls In bell's most doleful note.<br />
And rings in hearen's gladdest.<br />
Cliin.1 and Japan at the IJiiI-verna- l<br />
Exposition of 1807.<br />
However ignorant the Chinese may be,<br />
they have1 little confidence in the abilities<br />
or science of such doctors, and are fond of<br />
being their1 own physicians. They are<br />
wont to apply medicaments on the slightest<br />
pretext, and make a constant and injudi-<br />
cious nse of the drags they carry about<br />
with them in a medicine chest. If, in ex-<br />
traordinary cases, they call in a physician,<br />
their first inquiry is concerning the fe.es he<br />
will charge, and the nnfortnnate disciple of<br />
Escnlapins has to enter into a long con'<br />
troversy, and reduce his original charge<br />
before he is allowed to exercise his pro-<br />
fession. As this, under ordinary circum<br />
stances, is far from being lucrative, the<br />
physicians, who are, at the same time,<br />
apothecaries and druggists, and sell their<br />
own prescriptions, are too often prone to<br />
become active auxiliaries to vice, and even<br />
to crime. The streets of Pefcin are full of<br />
placards extolling the virtues of certain<br />
aphrodisiacs, compounded by certain phy-<br />
sicians, whose talents are also recom-<br />
mended for the manufacture of abortive<br />
medicines.<br />
There is, however, in the Emperor's<br />
household, a sort of organization of med.<br />
ical service ; and no less than a score of<br />
physicians, who have a lank in the Manda-<br />
rin order, from the second to the lowest<br />
class, are attached to the Palace. The<br />
two first in rank physicians entitled to<br />
the blue button, and belonging to the<br />
second class of Mandarins are the only<br />
ones allowed to visit the Emperor ; but<br />
while in hi3 presence they are forbidden to<br />
utter a siDgle word, and if information be<br />
required they ask it from the eunuchs on<br />
duty. As far as the Emperor 13 concerned,<br />
they are able to see hi3 serene face, and<br />
from the appearance or his august phys-<br />
iognomy, to draw some inferences and form<br />
some opinions, but such is not the case<br />
when they have to attend on the Empress,<br />
or one of the women of the harem. The<br />
arm of the invalid is the only thing visible<br />
to the profane gaze of the "health officers<br />
that sacred arm is stretched out from<br />
amidst the many folds of a thick curtain.<br />
and the physicians are not permitted to<br />
feel the pulse of their unknown patient<br />
except under the most pressing circum<br />
stances. There have been, nevertheless,<br />
some marvelous cures effected, for which<br />
the unconscious physicians were rewarded<br />
with titles and lucrative employments.<br />
Those Imperial doctors keep a medical<br />
college where students are admitted. What<br />
do they teach ? Neither anatomy, pathol<br />
ogy, nor experimental therapeutics. The<br />
student has to learn by heart an old book,<br />
such as we have seen at the Exposition,<br />
and when jie.can recite and transcribe it,<br />
he is prepared for his examination, after<br />
wuicn tie enjoys me lnvainaDie distinction<br />
of wearing the gold button, and becomes<br />
a Mandarin of the lowest order; but no.<br />
special privilege, as a physician, is attached<br />
to his .diploma. He might have exercised<br />
that profession just as well before as after<br />
his examination, and that without meeting<br />
any impediment, and with as much wis<br />
dom. The effect of the gold' button con<br />
sists in inspiring the public with a little<br />
more confidence in, the knowledge of the.<br />
wearer therof, who, in return, does not tail<br />
to increase his charges.<br />
"We'aave been somewhat prolix on this<br />
subject, because it seems to us that Eu<br />
ropeans and Americans, uniting their ef-<br />
forts to dispel the general ignorance of the<br />
people, can render them immense service,<br />
for which they will gain trust and sympa-<br />
thy. How many common diseases the<br />
Chinese doctors are nnable to deal with 1<br />
ophthalmy,cn tan eons diseases, small-po-<br />
and many others. All along the coast of<br />
China, and at Pekin, English and French<br />
physicians have established dispensaries,<br />
where they gratuitously administer to the<br />
sick; and they have lately introduced vac-<br />
cination at Shanghai. People begin to<br />
flock to, their ' doors ; the rich send for<br />
them ; and a large quantity of medicines,<br />
which can not' be prepared by the Chinese<br />
apothecaries, is imported from abroad. We<br />
would have liked to give some information<br />
concerning Chinese hospitals, or what are<br />
review do not permit. Poverty is almost<br />
general in China. In Pekin, there are<br />
more than 70,000 mendicants, organized<br />
as a corporation, in the same manner as<br />
the Truants of the Middle Ages. Camp<br />
ing at the very foot of the Imperial Palace,<br />
as in a sort of Oour des JJ'nrrfes, (so well<br />
described by Victor Hcgu,; they wander<br />
about in the daytime, through the city,<br />
and obtain by intimidation, and if neces-<br />
sary, by violence, the alms of the passers--<br />
by. All those beggars are, more or less,<br />
afflicted with horrid diseases ; and to meet<br />
sucb a call on public charity there are only<br />
a dozen asylums, greatly deficient in di<br />
mentions, where a few hundred vagabonds<br />
find a common shelter for the night, and at<br />
certain times, a small allowance of rics and<br />
coals. By a special provision, old people<br />
get a garment in the winter, and a tan in<br />
the summer. The public treasury, poor<br />
as it is, and badly administered, can not<br />
do more, while private charity is smotb<br />
ered by helfishness and avarice two na<br />
tional defects.<br />
Besides the medical volume, there was<br />
at the Exposition a book on the military<br />
art. The French troops at Palikao had<br />
an easy triumph over Chinese tactics, but<br />
although the Government have been able<br />
to ascertain the superiority of Europeans,<br />
not only when they had to fight against<br />
them, but also when the auxiliary corps<br />
commanded and organized by foreign offi<br />
cers English, Americans and French<br />
enabled them to subdue the insurrection<br />
of the Taipings, and to retake Nankin,<br />
despite all this, the Chinese Government,<br />
far from following the example of the<br />
Japanese, their neighbors, have shown<br />
little desire to imitate European discipline<br />
or armament.<br />
The Chinese have no military tendency;<br />
their institutions, no less than their cus<br />
toms and manners, are favorable to the<br />
occupations of peace. It may also be said<br />
that under the present form of government,<br />
the Council of Regency do not feel them<br />
selves strong enough, or sufficiently pre<br />
pared, to undertake any change in the<br />
army.<br />
We should bo left in complete ignorance<br />
of Chinese artistic genius, were it not for<br />
some very fine specimens of porcelain ware<br />
exhibited, which differ very little from<br />
those we are accustomed to see in the<br />
Parisian shop windows. We know that<br />
the manufacture of porcelain is an indige<br />
nous art in the Celestial Empire. The'<br />
Emperor Huang-ti- , who lived 2,700 years<br />
before our era, introduced, according to the<br />
accounts of Chinese historians, the manu-<br />
facture of earthenware and bricks; that<br />
of faience and porcelain was discovered,<br />
but it was iu the time of the Tsin dynasty<br />
(3d century A. C), that the ceramic art<br />
had attained its perfection in that part of<br />
the East, and it may be said of Chinese<br />
porcelain that it has almost a historical<br />
value. The different dynasties which suc<br />
ceeded each other on the throne, adopted<br />
and patronized certain colors, and we may<br />
trace out on the paintings of the old vases<br />
the insensible varieties of costumes and<br />
manners for a space of time extending<br />
over 15 centuries. Unhappily the archaic<br />
specimens are very scarce, although there<br />
are some complete collections said to exist<br />
in China, which have not yet been suff-<br />
iciently studied.<br />
The paintings on porcelain give an idea<br />
of nothing but the decorative art, as it i3<br />
understood in China ; the painted or em-<br />
broidered screens do not afford any more<br />
information on the tree state of the art of<br />
painting in that country, and yet, besides<br />
the artists whose rice-pap- er colored pic-<br />
tures are so well known in Europe, there<br />
are some painters who have successfully<br />
engaged in landscape or portrait painting,<br />
of these at the Sf5g,<br />
of their weeks<br />
or of the method in which they exercise<br />
their art<br />
The manufacture of glass must have<br />
been shown to the Chinese by the Mis-<br />
sionaries. Its is recent and they<br />
havo not developed it In Canton, they<br />
make some thin panes of glass, the main<br />
use of which is to replace the paper on<br />
the lanterns that are one of tbe chief or<br />
naments of their houses. "VVe saw some<br />
of these lanterns the Exposition that<br />
were very pretty to look at, with their<br />
square frames of indented wood, their<br />
carved open-wor- and the long silken<br />
tassels hanging from their sides. They<br />
also employ glass in the manufacture of<br />
the colored knobs that are screwed on the-<br />
cone-shape- d hats of the Mandarins, in<br />
order to indicate their rank, for the pea<br />
cock feather is but a kind of decoration<br />
granted by the sovereign, outside of the<br />
divisions and classes of<br />
In the houses, the windows are generally<br />
without glass-pane- s, instead of which<br />
mica, or a sort of transparent paper is<br />
nsed.<br />
"We should, before leaving the Chinese<br />
Exposition, speak of other products of<br />
the Empire, such as tea, silks, and fabrics<br />
of all kinds, which, In a commercial point<br />
of view, are worthy of our most earnest<br />
attention, but as we shall find the very<br />
same articles in the Japanese Department,<br />
we will, before entering into the details<br />
required by such an important subject.<br />
turn our attention to Japanese Em<br />
pire, and give, on the internal state of the<br />
country, its government and customs, all<br />
information we possess, as we have<br />
already done in regard to China.<br />
Death or as Old Cirrroitxrix. The<br />
Smta Cruz Timet of February lSth savs: On<br />
Wednesdar. the 10th inct thprxriioriin Rnf<br />
Cruz, Mr. William Ware, was bora lu Ireland<br />
In the year 1600, and came to this State thirty-si-r<br />
years ago. He had been for abont thirty<br />
TMva mnetlve rKMnt nrs.ni<br />
...<br />
- . w, Villi! I.UUUII1<br />
e was burtied by the side of hit children<br />
i fhA 7,rintii Pnnohn<br />
nnnn wt,ti. i.-<br />
termed 'saeh, "but th limits of this brief I had lived so many year. '<br />
Locomotion Is the main-sprin- g that pro-<br />
pells the Yankee nation. The chief end and<br />
aim of man in this country It to "go it.<br />
And we are going it on lour wheels, on<br />
three wheels, and two wheels. Some Tan- -<br />
lee, more inventive than his fellows, will<br />
yet devise a plan for going It on one wheel,<br />
and then all ;aditional wheels will be voted<br />
out ot Cishion and out of use as superfluous.<br />
We are just now la the midst of the<br />
mania, and an Individual that can-<br />
not afford to risk his neck in the effort to<br />
outstrip competition la the glorious pastime<br />
of running down elderly gentlemen and into<br />
the expansive folds of admiring crinolined<br />
femininity, don't pass for much. It requires<br />
hard labor, longoractlce. and an abundance<br />
of patience to become master of the art of<br />
propulsion astride of a wire,<br />
bnt then the reward Is to be considered.<br />
Success is promotive of science, the arts, and<br />
as we have just learned, of agriculture<br />
At the recent meeting of the Executive<br />
committee oi me state Agricultural society,<br />
the preliminary 6teps were taken to bring<br />
tnis vainanie invention to me ij v oraoie no<br />
tlce of acricultulsts, by the award of pre-<br />
miums fir the best velocipede. Precisely<br />
what relation the velocipede has to the cul-<br />
tivation of cereals, the breeding of stock, or<br />
the promotion of horticulture or Horticul<br />
ture, ire arc not lniormca, dui as inc wisaom<br />
ol such eminent farmers as Whltter J. Bax-<br />
ter, E. C Barker, and M. E. Crofoot, Is<br />
above question, we presume the information<br />
may be obtained at the ticket office on the<br />
fair ground during the exhibition. Last<br />
year the Society promoted Its Interests and<br />
replenished its treasury by adding to its at<br />
tractions a iooi-rac- e oetwecu several Indians<br />
and a white man, in which the white man<br />
not only came out second best, but with<br />
but little or the breath of lire lelt in him.<br />
lie was neither "by-circl- nor "tri-circl- e<br />
enough to beat the savages, but from the ac-<br />
tion of tbe Executive Committee, this year,<br />
in providing a velocipede show, the Inference<br />
is that the urming community gained great<br />
Information to aid them in the pursuit of ag-<br />
riculture in witnessing the race.<br />
The Committee ought not to have stopped<br />
with a simple premium for the best veloci<br />
pede, l ncy snouiu nave aonc sometning to<br />
encourage the use of IU It would have been<br />
a good thing to have provided the different<br />
viewing committees with them. A large<br />
number might be provided and rented out,<br />
for the benefit of the treasury, to visitors to<br />
the fair, and quite an improvement might be<br />
made iu the short-horn- s and the various<br />
breeds of horses, by awarding premiums for<br />
wheel-barro- races, jumping jacks, fit ba-<br />
bies, living skeletons, and double-heade- d<br />
calves.<br />
There Is no nse in trying to plod along In<br />
the old way. Walking is getting to be " ,"<br />
and he or she that cannot wriggle a<br />
is no body. Why, Henry Ward<br />
Beecher strides one daily, and "our noble<br />
Senator is foregoing his cups so as to be<br />
able to keep his balance on one. It is vul-<br />
garly stated that some fellow, somewhere<br />
"walked off on his ear," bnt it is certain<br />
that such a manner of locomotion can never<br />
become fashionable until a wheel or two is<br />
added to the accomplishment and a new<br />
coined word, ending in " cicle," given to it.<br />
And then the exercise is so graccluL. For a<br />
moment imagine the symmetrical form of<br />
our "noble Senator," doubled to the outline<br />
of a Grecian bend, of a morning, weaving<br />
and pawing his way to his scat in the Senate :<br />
or tbe graphic delineator of the malic beau<br />
ties of Grosse Isle, doing the agreeable for<br />
his imaginary summer visitants at that new<br />
ly discovered watering place, seated upon<br />
one of these rearing, plunging, fiery dyers.<br />
No enterprise can succeed without it starts<br />
on wheels, and tLc the less of them the more<br />
certain or success. The new temperance<br />
party is to be run on a " " a big<br />
woeci oeiore. a smauer one ocninu a ims- -<br />
e backwards. Great is velocipede,<br />
and we must have one.<br />
About a Dress What the Female<br />
World Said about it. An interestimr trial<br />
was commenced before Justice Cunningham,<br />
Saturday afternoon, being a suit by a dress-<br />
maker to recover the value of her labor in<br />
making a fashionable dress. The ladv of<br />
lasnion oeing anxious to eclipse aiiner up<br />
per-te- menus in tne styie anu elegance ot<br />
most artlstlcdress-makcr- s to cut, fit, trim and<br />
make, the aforesaid garment The material<br />
was black silk, trimmed with britteles, vel-<br />
vet, lace and forty yards of satin. The dress<br />
was finished to her entire satisfaction, and<br />
she felt as proud as the Queen of Sheba start-<br />
ing out to see King Solomon. Her delight<br />
was, however, greatly lessened when the bill<br />
of the dress-make- r came in. She was Indig-<br />
nant beyond measure<br />
merely making and fitting a dress ! Such ex-<br />
tortion was not to be borne, and she flatl v re<br />
fused to liquidate. The dres-mak- brought<br />
suit, and tbe fashionable lady employed<br />
two first class lawyers, determined to fight It<br />
out to the end.<br />
The lawyers advised her to compromise,<br />
and pay $50, and she finally agreed to do so,<br />
but the dressmaker now put on the buck-<br />
ram, and refused to take a cent less than ST3.<br />
The case was a very interesting one. 3Ir.<br />
Peacock appeared as a counsel for the dress-<br />
maker, and Messrs. Gareache and Meade for<br />
the lady of fashion. The court room v.us<br />
filled with a crowd of female witnesses.<br />
Some fourteen dressmakers were sworn, and<br />
their testimony was as a morning gown no<br />
two of themagreed. One saldsbe wasfamil-ia- r<br />
with such work, and made dresses for<br />
fashionables, and $15 was a fair price for such<br />
a dress; another thought $73 was cheap;<br />
another would make the same dress for S2S- -<br />
j the brittelles conld be made In three days.<br />
but we had nothing Expo-- ?&XJ&.3iE<br />
sition wherewith to judge talent, and two to bind them, and the whole<br />
origin<br />
at<br />
"Mandarinship."<br />
the<br />
the<br />
iAUM<br />
TelocipetUana.<br />
dress could not be made in less than ! mnnth<br />
It was stated that the dressmakers of the city<br />
had different prices for their work; some<br />
charging according to their expenses for rent,<br />
etc., and some according to their reputation<br />
In the fashionable word. The mode of mak-<br />
ing a dress was described with great minut-<br />
enesshow tbe cutting is done, the pletes<br />
turned down, the piping put on, the elegant<br />
contour given to the body, the flow of the<br />
skirt, and the tout ensetriUe to the bewitching<br />
garment<br />
The dress was shown in evidence, and was<br />
handed and criticised, and the lawyers<br />
wrangled over It until daylight faded, and<br />
the gas was lighted, and still no decision was<br />
arrived at The court was compelled to ad-<br />
journ, and the fashionablp lady gathered up<br />
her $75 dress, and declaring "she never ex-<br />
pected to wear It, jumped into her carriage<br />
and went away. if. LouU Democrat<br />
Protection to Wives. Tbe Timtt has,<br />
with much humanity, Invited public atten-<br />
tion to the case of Susannah Palmer, who has<br />
been convicted of wounding her husband<br />
with intent to do him grievous bodily barm.<br />
It was the old story a respectable woman,<br />
with a host of children, striving to earn an<br />
honcetlivclihood, and a husband, who visited<br />
her occasionally for the purpose of knocking<br />
ncr aown. selling ner goods and drinking tbe<br />
money. The woman. In a fit of passion stab-<br />
bed the man. With the nature of her act we<br />
(Law Journal) have nothing to do. But<br />
what deserves attention is the fact that this<br />
woman never seems to have known that she<br />
could obtain from the law any protection for<br />
her person or her savings. Here is pretty<br />
strong evidence that tbe law on this matter<br />
is not understood oy tne only classes or so-<br />
ciety forwhose benefltit conWpbssiblyhavE<br />
been intended, because the ignorance of it<br />
must have prevailed among tbe neighbors<br />
ot the woman. She indeed thought that her<br />
only resource was fern palique. Yet the<br />
statue protecting her was passed in the year<br />
1857. The truth Is that the law has not<br />
struck at the root of these gigantic evils.<br />
This cose is not on insolated one; on the<br />
contrary, it is only an example of thousands<br />
in Loudon alone. The remedy is to be found<br />
In that which we have again and again advo-<br />
cated, namely, the abolition of tbe control ot<br />
tbehusbandovertheproptrtyofthewlfe. If<br />
such a law was made, the most poor and sim-<br />
ple would appreciate their rights, as every-<br />
thing would be. reduced to a mere question<br />
of mtum and tuum, a matter Intelligible1 to<br />
the meanest Intellects. London Jbper.<br />
The Proper Command. If the Mayflower<br />
had landed at Plymouth Church, instead of<br />
Plymouth Rock, what would have been tbe<br />
proper command for the captain to give?<br />
Beach her, of course. '<br />
'Novel. The following novel intimation<br />
appears at the end of a receut invitation to a<br />
wedding "No cards! No cakel No wine!<br />
o kissing tlHride!"<br />
A Ftsht Circle. A seal ring.<br />
The Silver Ctttes or Cestbal America.<br />
c. ur. uiiuici, a n Tiber lu mwiw juyuvK,<br />
handles with much ability the. evidence of<br />
various impeneciiy expiorea mysteries in<br />
Central America, adding his own personal<br />
observations to those of travelers like<br />
Stephens, Mortlet, Count Woldeck. etc At<br />
the close of his article he thus disposes of<br />
the priestly tales of a bidden capital, lustrous<br />
with precious metals, which has been sup-<br />
posed to exist east of Chiapa, In tbe strong-<br />
hold of the never conquered Lacandones:<br />
It was in the region of tbe Lacandones<br />
that the cura of Quiche affirmed to Mr.<br />
Stephens be had seen, lrom the heights of<br />
luesaiienango, tbe wnitc wans oi great<br />
cities glistening like silver in the sun. Tbe<br />
notion of such living cities, rivaling Palen-qu- e<br />
and Nayapan, in the district referred to,<br />
Is not peculiar to one part of the country,<br />
but prevails also in Chiapa and Yucatan.<br />
On the 3d of August, 1S49, the Secretary of<br />
ttuuc ui isiuapa, aaarcsseu an uiuciai letter lu<br />
the prefect of the department of Chlllon,<br />
bordering on the district ol Locandon, stat-<br />
ing that he hod been Informed that In the vici-<br />
nity of San Carlos Nacarlon, beyond the Sicra<br />
dc la Pimienta, a great city had been dis-<br />
covered, in the distance with large edifices,<br />
and many cattle in its pastures: and that al-<br />
though there appeared no road to It, yet It<br />
was supposed that it could not be more than<br />
two days distant. He therefore ordered the<br />
prefect to make all possible efforts to reach<br />
the city and to report the result to his office<br />
In San Cristobal. But as nothing further<br />
was ever heard of the discovery, it is to be<br />
presumed that the city could not be found by<br />
tbe prefect.<br />
N"or, In fact, is there any good reason for<br />
supposing that such cities do exist. For<br />
although the Lacandones and Itzaes spoke the<br />
same language with the Mayas of Yucatan, and<br />
probably the same with tbe builders of Palen-qu- e<br />
and Copan, yet everything connected<br />
with their history and character proves them<br />
to have been considerably below the other<br />
families of the same stock in the degree of<br />
their civilization. Whether the Tzendals,<br />
the Mayas, Quiches, Zutuglls, and Kachl-quel- s<br />
were families of the same oririn. who<br />
had reached a higher stage of development ;<br />
or the Itzaes, Lacandones, Manches, and oth-<br />
ers, were the degenerate offshoots from these,<br />
may be a question; but the presumption<br />
strongly is, that, with tbe disruption of the<br />
ancient Toltccan empire, of which Palanguc<br />
was probably, at one time, the capital, vari<br />
ous fragments were thrown off, and driven<br />
by force of circumstances into remote dis<br />
tricts, wnere, in tne course oi time, they de-<br />
veloped peculiar characteristics of their own.<br />
jli any rate, tne earnest accounts ot tne La-<br />
canaones represent tnem as a relatively bar-<br />
barous if not a nomadic race, strongly con<br />
trasting with the more advanced and polished<br />
nations above enumerated, although, so far<br />
as language is concerned, betraying an inti-<br />
mate relationship with them. Iu Pcten, the<br />
iizacs uum temples anu otner eainces, close-<br />
ly resembling those of Yucatan, but less iu<br />
size, and somewhat ruder in construction.<br />
such as we might expect to find in the<br />
weaker enorts oi a colony, nut in Lacandon<br />
we have no account of such structures in the<br />
towns reduced by the Spaniards : nor docs<br />
appear that the temples of its people were<br />
more remaraaoic man tneir private nouses,<br />
or differed from them exceot in size.<br />
We are compelled, therefore, to rcslirn the<br />
traditions of great cities with white walls of<br />
stone, covered over with mvsterious svmbols.<br />
and with steps crowded with the worship<br />
pers uj a primitive religion, to toe poet aua<br />
romancer, or surrender them as the aDoro- -<br />
priate property of enterprising exploiters of<br />
suppositious Azetic cnnaren. xne lact or<br />
the existence of a frontier people, in the<br />
heart of Central America, of the same stock<br />
witn its most advanced and powerful nations,<br />
and with character, habits, religion, and irov<br />
ernment, little, if at all, changed from what<br />
they werc at the period of the Discovery, is<br />
uuu euuiiueuijv luieresiiog iu itscii. it re-<br />
quires none of the "pomp and circum<br />
stance" of gorgeous speculation to draw it<br />
to the attention of the student and adven-<br />
turer, who may find here a more interesting<br />
and Important field of research and investi-<br />
gation than among the desert-snow- s and ice- -<br />
uergs oi tne poies, or among tne sables sava<br />
ges oi .iniopia.<br />
The iollowing is the decision of the<br />
Supreme Conrt of the United States reversing<br />
the decision of the State Court of New York,<br />
adjudging that when a contract calls for coin,<br />
it is not satisfied by the payment of Legal<br />
Tender note:<br />
"treaencK uronson, executor, etc., vs.<br />
Peter Rodcs. This is an aDoeal from a indsr.<br />
mcnt of the Court of Appeals of the State of<br />
-- ew icrK noiaing tuat a tender or Treasury<br />
notes for the satisfaction of a mortgage made<br />
in 1S31, by its terms to be satisfied Iu gold<br />
and silver coin, was sufficient The tender<br />
was maae in Jannary,' 1S65, when 81 In coin<br />
was equal to i a in legal tender notes, and.<br />
the tender being refused, action was com<br />
menced to compel the cancellation of tbe<br />
mortgage. The Supreme Court of the State<br />
subsequently adjudged the mortgage Daid.<br />
and required it to be satisfied of record, hold-<br />
ing the tender to have been sufficient. The<br />
Court of Appeals affirm that iudgement<br />
and the affirmance is here for review. The<br />
Chief Justice delivered the opinion of the<br />
tonn, noiuing mat it is tne duty ot Uonrts<br />
of justice to enforce contracts according to<br />
the intent of the parties to them ; and iu this<br />
case it is held that it is clear that the intent<br />
of the parties was that pavment should be<br />
made in coin. There were two descriptions<br />
or money in use at the time the tender in this<br />
case was made, both authorized by law, and<br />
ootn maae legal tenner, rue general deno-<br />
mination of both descriptions was dollars,<br />
but thev were essentially unlike iu nature.<br />
The coined dollar was a niece of gold or sil<br />
ver of a certain degree ol purity and weight<br />
The note dollar was a promise to pay a<br />
coined dollar but not on demand, nor at<br />
any fixed time, nor was it convertible into a<br />
cornea aouar. it was impossible in the<br />
nature of things, that these two dollars<br />
should be equivalents of each other, nor did<br />
me currency act purport to make them so.<br />
There were then two descriptions of curren<br />
cy issued by the same Government and con<br />
tracts to pay eitner were equally sanctioned<br />
by law. No question can be made as to this<br />
fact; doubt concerning it can only spring<br />
iruui mab cooiusion oi laeas wmcu always<br />
attends tbe introduction of varying and un-<br />
certain measures of value into circulation as<br />
money. In the absence of any specific con-<br />
trol, for the payment or coin legal tender<br />
notes may be sufficient tender, but it is clear<br />
to the Court that express contracts for the<br />
payments of coined dollars can only be satis,<br />
tied by the payment of coined dollars. They<br />
are not debts which may be satisfied by the<br />
tender of treasury notes. As to the judge-<br />
ments to be entered on contracts for the pay-<br />
ment of coin, it is said, the difficulty arises<br />
in the supposition that damages can be as-<br />
sessed in only one description of money;<br />
but where there are tw okinds of currency pro-<br />
vided by law it is necessary. In order to avoid<br />
ambiguity and prevent a failure of Justice,<br />
to render judgement for coined money where<br />
the contract provides for payment In coined<br />
money. Where no specified description of<br />
money Is made, judgements may be<br />
generally without such specification.<br />
Judgement below reversed.<br />
Justice Miller dissented, holding that al-<br />
though It was the intention of the parties<br />
that gold should be paid, it was only so be-<br />
cause gold was then the currency of the Gov-<br />
ernment, tbe lawful mouey of the United<br />
States, mentioned in the contract There<br />
dollars. When treasury notes became law<br />
ful money of the United States, their tender<br />
was euincieni to tne contract, and<br />
within its terms and within the understand<br />
ing and Intention of the parties. This deci<br />
sion in no way eflects the legal tender cases<br />
argued by Potter and the Attorney General<br />
the present term or the Conrt, although<br />
reargued the time the argument of those<br />
cases.<br />
AFoeoetcx Mas. An oblivious gentle-<br />
man called upon the city clerk a few days<br />
since, for a license, but when questioned had<br />
forgotten the name his intended. sat<br />
down and scratched his head for a time, but<br />
vain ; he could not bring it tb mind. At<br />
last, be ciphered out that her last name was<br />
but any more<br />
the desired Information. The clerk gently<br />
suggested that he retire and make the neces-<br />
sary inquiries. Waking from his<br />
state, he thought might a good plan,<br />
and accordingly to Cud the lady and<br />
bliss, ir he did not forget the way what<br />
no was. alter. 'r"<br />
- i2fl"<br />
MoBMOsisir. Brigham wants all<br />
the people embrace Jdnrmonlsm- .- As the<br />
Cockney would that Is a Aug-i- propo-<br />
sition; - ?<br />
- - - -<br />
SUGAR & MOLASSES.<br />
I860<br />
18 6 9<br />
ieeo<br />
II1XO, II. I.<br />
Sugar and Slolnsscs.<br />
C0MIXG IX AND F0r. SALE IN<br />
CROP to snit pnrehasera, by<br />
WALKER A<br />
Agents.<br />
0N0MEA PLANTATION.<br />
Sugar and Molasses Crop 1809<br />
IN, FOR SALE IN<br />
COMING suit purchasers, by<br />
WALKER Jt ALLEN,<br />
Agents.<br />
PHDJCEVILLE PLANTATION.<br />
Sugar and Molasses Crop 1809<br />
IN, FOR SALE IN<br />
COMING suit purchasers, by<br />
WALKER A ALLEN,<br />
Agents.<br />
MAKEE PLANTATION.<br />
lYctr Crop or Sugar Jc Molasses<br />
VTOAV COMING IN, AND FOR SALE IN<br />
LN qnantities to suit purchasers by<br />
C. BREWER A CO.,<br />
m Agents.<br />
WAHTOU plantation.<br />
"VTEW CROP NOW COMING IN. FOR<br />
L Sale in quantities to snit purchasers.<br />
by BREWER 4 CO.,<br />
CHOICE SUGAR<br />
PiROM KAALAEA AND LAIE PLANTA-JT- J<br />
now coming in and for sale by<br />
THEO. II. DAVIES,<br />
Agent.<br />
AT THE PHOTOGRAPH GALLERY<br />
On Fort Street,<br />
MAT BK SEEK THE VIEWS taken<br />
tbe Lats<br />
Lava Flow at Kahuku,<br />
And the Effects of Iho Late<br />
Earthquake at IVniohinu, Kan.<br />
Views of Xilauea and other places. Also Cards<br />
of the Kings, uueens. Chiefs, etc, all for sale at low<br />
prices. Also, Oral and Square Frame of mil sizes,<br />
which will be sold cbesp.<br />
L. CHASE.<br />
njiN AMJir<br />
ntfcro. 1 and COOLIE RICE<br />
--t. mi uuiu &au iur oj<br />
WALKER t ALLES.Asents.<br />
BEST K.YGLISII Colled Paint<br />
sale by<br />
XJEST FAMILY FORK.<br />
TJOLLP.S CO.<br />
per in 14 and K barrels. For sale<br />
"J<br />
BOLLES t CO.<br />
HANDLED AXES<br />
L Best quality. For sale by the case or reta<br />
UULLES i CO.<br />
TJOSEXDALE CEMENT,<br />
MM the genuine article, per IOLANI. For sale<br />
oy BOLLES I CO.<br />
STEERING For sale br B0LLE3 4<br />
SPIRITS by OP TOTtPEXTIXE.<br />
BOLLES t CO<br />
Cotton Canvas,<br />
Agents.<br />
TIONS,<br />
IOLANI,<br />
rOXT'S<br />
OARS,<br />
A MERICAN MANUFACTURE. For Sale<br />
X3l by BOLLES 4 CO.<br />
Supreme Court In Probate.<br />
In the matterof the Estate of Mary Goldstone,<br />
liormcrly .Mary .Miller) Honolulu, late<br />
deceased.<br />
Proper Application been<br />
to the Elisha II. Allen,<br />
Chief Justice of the Supreme Court, by James<br />
Goldstone, the Administratorunon this Estate.<br />
for an examination of his accounts and dis- - I<br />
charge from responsibility as Administrator,<br />
and a decree of Court awarding the Real<br />
Estato to himself, in default of other heirs ap-- 1<br />
gearing iu cuum any pan. Ana tne uourc I<br />
harm" ordered that due public notice of this<br />
application be made in the Hawaiian (Jazette<br />
for the space of six months, therefore be it<br />
known to all parties concerned, such as credi- - I<br />
tors and next or Kin, that this matter, with all<br />
objections thereto, will be heard bv tho said<br />
Chief Justice at his in the Court I<br />
House, on the 13th day of April,<br />
s. looy, at iu o Clock-- , a. u.<br />
L. JIcCULLY, Clerk.<br />
Estate of FRANK JIOLTENO, lato of Hono<br />
lulu, .Master Mariner, deceased.<br />
ALL CREDITORS of tho above<br />
deeeased party are hereby notified to<br />
present tneir claims, duly authenticated and<br />
with the proper vouchers, if any exist, to the<br />
subscriber, at his office, in tho Court House,<br />
in the city of within months<br />
from the day of the publication hereof, or<br />
tney will De lorever barred.<br />
CO.<br />
for<br />
six<br />
STEPHEN H. PHILLIPS.<br />
Administrator.<br />
Honolulu, March 27th, 1869.<br />
11-- lt<br />
Adiriinistrator's Notice.<br />
LL PERSONS havins any claims<br />
AA. against tbe Estate of S. P. de--<br />
ceasea.are requested to present them to tbe<br />
honor<br />
P. JUDD,<br />
Administrator.<br />
Honolulu, April 6th, 1869.<br />
I2--<br />
Assignees' Notice.<br />
"VTOTICE is hereby given to the<br />
JLN Creditors of the Estate of<br />
ALLEN CO., that a final dividend will be<br />
paid to on and after Monday, the 21st<br />
vt jiihu met., at tne ianK oi uisnop x Co.<br />
v. it. JJISJ1UI",<br />
J. W. AUSTIN,<br />
jiunomin, .tpru li, 1807. I3--<br />
Executor's Notice.<br />
Oil.<br />
Assignees.<br />
milE UNDERSIGNED, Executor of<br />
A- the IV HI or the late HERMANN IIILLE- -<br />
lillAjfl, hereby notifies all Dirties indebted<br />
was nothing in the contract to make it differ i tn V r..- -<br />
f<br />
.l. said deeeased, to<br />
: make<br />
from any other ordinary contract payable in I Jmn;ed''tf payment to Mm, and all parties<br />
uiscnarge<br />
at<br />
at of<br />
of He<br />
In<br />
, could not remember of<br />
dreamy<br />
it be<br />
mizzled,<br />
on<br />
Young<br />
to<br />
say,<br />
-<br />
ALLEN,<br />
It.<br />
RICE. always<br />
smie<br />
or<br />
having<br />
Honorable<br />
Chambers<br />
Honolulu,<br />
Honolulu,<br />
A<br />
NOHEA,<br />
WAT.ITER.<br />
aeainst the said Eitit.<br />
hereby notified to present the tame, duly an-- 1<br />
thentieated and with the proper vouchers, ir<br />
any exist, witnin six months from this date.<br />
or tney win oe lorever barred.<br />
WM. HILLEBEAND.<br />
Honolulu, April 7th, IS69. 12--<br />
Lite Hon. L. Haalelea, that the undersigned<br />
request tucia to mxs an exuiDit or the same<br />
to my agent, W. P. Stevenson.<br />
CHARLES KANAEJa.<br />
Honolulu, Feb. 1869.<br />
Deedj, Leases, and Contracts, affecting<br />
Real and Personal Estate of Queen Dowager<br />
to collect ner Tenia ana dues, and<br />
transact all and every matter of business<br />
affecting her interests. CHARLES U. JUDD.<br />
LEGAL NOTICES. I BUSINESS IN OTICES.<br />
HAESHAL'S SALE.<br />
ofa writ of Execution,<br />
U issued bT the Honorable Elisha II. Allen,<br />
Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of the Ha<br />
waiian Islands, upon a judgment against J.<br />
W. Kaapn, Defendant in Execution, in faTor<br />
or J. Dowsett and Jl. u. --uonsarrat, riain-tif-<br />
in Execution, for $153.51, and second Ex-<br />
ecution against said J. W. Kaapu. Defend-<br />
ant in Execution, in favor of J. Kaona, Plain-<br />
tiff in Execution, for $177.40, I havo levied<br />
upon and thill expose for salt to th highest<br />
bidder, on Thursday, the 6th day of May next,<br />
at 12 o'clock Noon, in front of the Court<br />
House, in the town of Honolulu, island of<br />
Oahn, all right, title and interest of the said<br />
J. W. Kaapu, in and to the following discribed<br />
property situated in South Kona, Hawaii, via :<br />
Apana I E hoomaka ma ke kihi Kom. a e<br />
holo, Ak. 29 15' Hit. 3.10 kh. ma ka aina o<br />
ke knonohiki. Hem. CS 45' Kik. 3.00 kh. ma<br />
ka aina o ke konohiki. Hem. 53 35r Ilik. 1.60<br />
kh. ma ka aina o ke konohiki. Hem. 33 30'<br />
Kom. 2.00 kh. ma ka aina o ke aio, Ak. 77<br />
Kom 4.4S kh. ma ka aina o ke konohiki, a bt-- kt<br />
i kahi i hoomakai i loko o keia apana aina<br />
he H eka.<br />
Apana 2 E hoomaka ma ke kihi Hik. Hem.<br />
a e holo, Ak. 30s 35' Hik. 1.0S kh. ma ke ala-n- ui,<br />
Hem. S7 15' Kom. 1.74 kh. ma ke ala-nu- i,<br />
Hem. 7 30' Kom. 1.36 kh. ma ko alaaul,<br />
Ak. 79 Hik. 1SS kh. pahale o kamahine a hi--ki<br />
e kahi i hoomaka'i i loko o keia pahale he<br />
eka.<br />
Apana 3 E hoomaka ma ke kihi Kom. a e<br />
holo, Hem. 34 30' Hik. 2.S5 kh. ma ka aina<br />
ahpuni, Ak. 57 15' Ilik. 11.18 kh. ma ka aina<br />
aupuni, Ak. 33 IS' Kom. 4.00 kh. ma ka aina<br />
aupuni, Hem. 49 45' Kom. 11.20 kh. ma ka<br />
o kaaka a hikl i kahi i hoomakai i loko o keia<br />
aupuni aina 3 eka.<br />
Apana 4 E hoomaka ma ke kihi Ak. a e<br />
holo, Hem. 12 12' Hik. 1.33 kh. ma ke kai.<br />
Hem. S2 Kom. 1.50 kh. ma ka aina aupuni,<br />
Ak. .1 Kom 1.42 kh. ma ka aina aupuni, Ak.<br />
8S 30' Hik. 1.30 Uh. ma ko kai. a hiki i kahi<br />
i hoomakai i loko o keia pahalo he 2-- eka.<br />
Unless said judgmemts, interests, the- Liver, Bowels, and<br />
suit, and my fees and commissions previ<br />
ously satisned.<br />
W. PARKE,<br />
Marshal Hawaiian Islands,<br />
Honolulu, April 3d. 1869.<br />
12--<br />
Supreme Court.<br />
the matter the bankruptcy Walker,<br />
Allen i Co., of Honolulu, Island of Uahu,<br />
voluntary bankrupts.<br />
PROPER application having been<br />
the Honorable Alfred S. Hart- -<br />
well, Justico the Supreme Court, by Chas.<br />
llishop and James U Austin, Lsq As-<br />
signees of tho Estato Walker, Allen Co.,<br />
aforesaid, voluntary bankruDts. of Honolulu.<br />
The<br />
of<br />
be<br />
C.<br />
of<br />
In of of<br />
of<br />
It. rs,<br />
of<br />
Oahu, for the settlement of the accounts of StoIHUCll,<br />
said and further Bladder. Blood, &.C.,<br />
responsibility in the is four or six or ordinary<br />
oil it<br />
WEDNESDAY, tho of Aprd, under IlliniCX,<br />
;n. .i in : t.A i . I . .<br />
m.u,, or icn crains oi<br />
and hour appointed forhearint; the application<br />
aforesaid, and all objections that may be offer-<br />
ed thereto, at the Chambers of the said Jus<br />
tice, in the Court House, Honolulu.<br />
L. JIcCULLY,<br />
Clerk of Supreme Court.<br />
Honolulu, April 19th<br />
13-- 3t<br />
Supreme Court Probate.<br />
In the matter of tho proof of the Will of John<br />
f. iiugnes, or ltonolalu, island ofUahu,<br />
deceased.<br />
PPOPER application been<br />
the Honorable Elllha II. Allen,<br />
Chief Justice of tbe Supreme Court, bv the<br />
Honorable James W. Austin, Executor under<br />
the Will, for probate of the Will of John P,<br />
Huches. of Honolulu. Oahu. lato deceased.<br />
Notice is hereby to all persons whom it<br />
may concern, that SATURDAY, tho 21th day<br />
of inst, at 10 o'clock in the forenoon.<br />
is day and appointed for hearing proof<br />
ot saia n in, anu all objections that may be<br />
offered thereto, at tho Court House in the<br />
town of Honolulu. WJI. HUMPHREYS.<br />
Deputy Supreme Court.<br />
Honolulu, April 3d,<br />
NOTICE.<br />
In the matter of tho Estate of George E. Tuck<br />
er, of Kaupaltuea, ililo. Island of Hawaii,<br />
deeeased.<br />
TsROPEIl annlicntion hnvin? hnnn<br />
JL to the undersigned, one of the Cir-<br />
cuit Judges of the 3d Judicial Circuit, by<br />
Paalua Tucker, for letters of<br />
upon tho tstate orueorgo E. Tucker, of Kau-<br />
paltuea, Hilo, Hawaii, late deceased. Notice Is<br />
hereby riven to all persons whom it may con<br />
that TliUilSUAY, tbe 20th day or May<br />
at 10 o'clock in the forenoon, is dav<br />
and hour appointed for hearing the applica<br />
tion ior tetters ol administration aroresaid,<br />
and all objections that be offered thereto,<br />
at the Court House, in tno of Hilo.<br />
F. S.<br />
Circuit Judge 3d J. C.<br />
Hilo, Hawaii, Starch 30. 1860<br />
13--<br />
Administrator's Notice. Supreme CourtIn Probate.<br />
NOTICE.<br />
T)YVIUTUE<br />
In the matter of the proof of tbe Will of<br />
ivellett, or Uanalei, Island of Kauai,<br />
deceased.<br />
PROPER application bavin? been<br />
Honorablo James W. Anitin.<br />
or the Supreme by Duncan Mo--<br />
xiryae, .executor under the Will, ror probate<br />
or the Will or John Kellett. or Uanalei. Kni.<br />
late deceased. Notice is hereby to afi<br />
persons whom it may concern, that TUES-<br />
DAY, the 27th dsy or April. Inst., at 10<br />
in the forenoon, is a day and honr ap--<br />
1'uiutcu iur ucsrmg pruui ot saia nm, ana all<br />
objections that may be offered thereto, at the<br />
lourt House, In tne town or Honolulu.<br />
WM. HUMPHREYS.<br />
Deputy Clerk or Supremo Court.<br />
iionoinin. April 3ia, ww. iz--<br />
six from or<br />
they ajnot<br />
i.<br />
I.<br />
Islands.<br />
mo JAMES C.KING, A. S. DALZELL<br />
j. ana 11. uhwixu. Iatelv dnint.<br />
iu mi vuy ot can rrancisco, state orCaliror-ni- a,<br />
under the firm name and style or J. C.<br />
& Co., Grectino:<br />
You are herebr commanded hr nntr r.r<br />
Honorable Elisha II. Allen, Chicr Justice or<br />
the Supreme in ease vou shall fil writ.<br />
ten answer berore the FIFTH DAT OF JOLT<br />
.i, m ue ana appear berore too said<br />
at tbe July term thereof, to be holden<br />
at Honolulu, in the Island or Oahu, on Mon- -<br />
aay,tne mtn dayorjnly next, at nine o'clock<br />
A. to show why the claim or Charles<br />
Luling and William Toel, doing business iu<br />
tbe City and State or New York, under the<br />
naino ana styie ot Luling i Co.,<br />
Plaintiffs, should not be awarded them pur-<br />
suant to their complaint now on file in the<br />
or the Clerk of this l...i. ,i<br />
r u. i v ua wei<br />
?JHa f Jon. the Defendants, the sum or<br />
imi.j inouiana uoiiars, ror had and<br />
received to their nse. And the said Plaintiffs<br />
luniicr set. that H. Haekfeld A<br />
Co., of Honolulu, are in possession of<br />
BT IT KHOW, to all holders of iendanUare not now resident in this KIne- -<br />
(real and personal, not already summons is ordered, be<br />
disposed or.) belonging to the Estate th. as by statute such prt t<br />
JIcCULLY.<br />
Clerk Court.<br />
Honolulu, March 23d,.1869 12-3-<br />
Sa a aw . .<br />
NOTICE.<br />
assignee's JNotice.<br />
HEREBY<br />
4<br />
P T'<br />
;nd. L Power Att, dulyr.1 SS LSSfc??<br />
l aione am to execute I th. nth A. I r r i<br />
to<br />
a<br />
.1<br />
late<br />
"<br />
a<br />
a<br />
Ii.<br />
T<br />
'<br />
tlf it<br />
v. xcuruary, asw, a nereby no--<br />
l claims said JSs--<br />
fate-t- present the forthwith, and all<br />
jrwma inaeoiea, to make nar-me-<br />
McBRYDE,<br />
Wahlawa, Kauai, Feb. 25, 12--<br />
i'aiKtS''.'-- -<br />
FAMILY DBUG ST0EE.<br />
J. X. SMITH & CO.,<br />
RECEIVED PER LATE<br />
HAVE a New Assortment of Drugs<br />
Medicines.<br />
Sands' Sarsaparilla, Townsend'f do.,<br />
Avers do., Bristol'! Shakers' do.,<br />
Boot do., Avers' Cherry Pectoral,<br />
Balsam for the Lungs, Balsam of Wild<br />
Cherry, Hypophosphitea of Lime A Soda,<br />
Compound Extract of Buchn, Capsules,<br />
Thorn'a Extract, Crosimaa's Specific,<br />
Pills and Ointments, or various kinds,- - '<br />
Liniment. Plasters, Pectoral Fumlgaton,<br />
Sponges, Hamburg Tea, Lily White,<br />
Fumigating Pastils. Trusses,<br />
JR. Cook's Nipples, Nipple Shields,<br />
Labia's and Pinaud's Extracts,<br />
Toilet Articles, Lip Salve,<br />
Indelible Pencils, a New Inrea'tioM,<br />
nair Restorers and Dressings,<br />
Syringes, Leeches, etc., etc., ete.<br />
Drug's oC all fetalis.<br />
Corner of Fort and Hotel streets.<br />
PIANOS TUNED.<br />
PIAXOS and other Musical<br />
llnstrumenU Tuned and IUpAired,bj<br />
CHAKUa DEKBT, at the Hawaiian<br />
Theatre.<br />
Lessons given on the Piano etc Guitar.<br />
best of references ajvea. (il-lj-<br />
ill aHsM H<br />
PILLS.<br />
DR. RADWArS PILLS Dose For<br />
costs Regulating Stomach,<br />
Kidneys, One Pill at JVyAf. For Obstinate)<br />
Diseases Chronic complaints 4 to C<br />
every 24 hours. As a Dinner Till, one<br />
one hour before diuint; will ensure a good<br />
appetite, and healthy digestion.<br />
ADWAY'S 1'IL.L.S aro<br />
COMPOUNDED FItO.1I VEGE-<br />
TABLE EXTRACTS, Coated<br />
with Sweet Gum, and arc<br />
best, quickest, una lafcit Purga-<br />
tive, Aperient. Anti-Bilio- and<br />
Medicine known to<br />
Medical Science.<br />
One ofDr. Bndway'a PilU con-<br />
tains more or the active princi-<br />
ple of cure, and will quicker<br />
On tllO JLIVCr, Bowcll.<br />
Estate, discharge Itiillicys,<br />
premises. Notice here-- tlinn lllO<br />
by given to persons whom may concern, common I'urciltlVO Cathartic<br />
that 2Sth day ni oId various.<br />
n'.iui-- t.<br />
uiuii Aiiuu .rams<br />
1S69<br />
In<br />
having<br />
given<br />
April<br />
hour<br />
Clerk<br />
13b'J.<br />
made<br />
administration<br />
cern,<br />
next,<br />
may town<br />
LYMAN,<br />
John<br />
Justice Court,<br />
riven<br />
clock<br />
cause<br />
unarles<br />
office<br />
Property, dom, made<br />
NOTIFY<br />
J<br />
immediate<br />
.DUNCAN<br />
1S60,<br />
and<br />
do.,<br />
11-- tf<br />
and<br />
Pill<br />
Dr.<br />
tho<br />
Catliurllc<br />
act<br />
from<br />
TRUE COMFORT FOR THE AGED AND<br />
OTHERS AFFLICTED WITH<br />
AND PARALYSIS OF THE<br />
BOWELS.<br />
ONE TO THREE OF BADWAY'S PILLS<br />
once in 24 hours trill secure regular evacua-<br />
tions from bowels. Persons who for<br />
years have not enjoyed a natural stool, nod<br />
have been compelled to iniectiens, have<br />
been cured by a few doses of Radwty's Pills.<br />
READ THIS.<br />
New Albany, Ind., March 12, 1867.<br />
For forty years I have been afflicted with<br />
costiveness, and for tbe last twenty was com-<br />
pelled dally" to resort Injections<br />
an evacuation. In December last I com-<br />
menced the nse of Radway's Pills. After<br />
taking a few doses, my liver, stomach, and<br />
bowels were restored to tneir natural strenrrtli<br />
and duties. I have now a remilar movement<br />
once a day, and, although 80 years of age,<br />
feel as hearty and strong as I did 40 years<br />
ago.<br />
Dr. lladway, Nx. xnos. Hedpatii, j. r.<br />
MECHANICAL DISEASES.<br />
Persons encaged in Paints, Minerals,<br />
Plumbers. Typo Setters, Goldbeaters, Miners,<br />
as they advance in life, will be snbject to<br />
paralysis of bowels ; to guard against this,<br />
take a dose of Radway's Pills once or twice<br />
a week as a Preventive<br />
DR. RADWAY'S PILLS CURE ALL<br />
. DISEASES<br />
Of tho Stomach, Liver, Bow<br />
els, iuuncys, madder, ."icnnui<br />
Disease, Headache. Constipa-<br />
tion, Coitivcnesx, indlgcstloii.<br />
Dyspepsia, Biliousness, Bilious)<br />
Fever, Inflammation of tho<br />
Bowels, Piles, and all derange-<br />
ments of the Internal Viscera.<br />
One to six boxes warranted to<br />
effect a positive cure. Purely<br />
vegetable, containliis no Mer-<br />
cury, minerals, or- - deleterious)<br />
Drugs.<br />
lr. uatiuuv'i A-- soiu or<br />
nil Druggists and CouBtry<br />
Price, 25 Cents.<br />
HIGH ENDORSEMENT FEQM THE<br />
MEDICAL COLLEGE OF PRUSSIA.<br />
DR. RADWAY<br />
Is in receipt of an important official docu<br />
ment, signed try tne rroressors or the<br />
Medical College of Prussia,<br />
embodying the result of an<br />
analysis of<br />
RADWAY'S EEGULAHHQ PILLS.<br />
" Tbe Faculty of the College state In their<br />
report that after a cartful and m'tiuti exavxina<br />
undersigned within months date, rim, they have the state that "the<br />
will be rorcver barred. OUpreme IjOUTt Ot Hawaiian pm; only free 0Tery .nbaUnce<br />
them<br />
18,<br />
ll'--<br />
hntin...<br />
King<br />
Court,<br />
Court,<br />
Cnnri.<br />
money<br />
lortn, 3Iessrs.<br />
certain<br />
all<br />
cvrueu,<br />
the<br />
against<br />
the<br />
injurious health, but are composed wholly<br />
of substances and elements promotive of<br />
digestion, and certain at the same time<br />
act favorably upon the nervous system, &c,<br />
&c They state, further, that the injurious<br />
rumors set afloat by tbe Prussian apothe-<br />
caries originated "in a mean spirit of trada<br />
jealousy, excited by the great celebrityat--<br />
tarned by tbe I'lla within a very oriel<br />
pariod."<br />
Signed on behalf of the College, ,<br />
DB. PHIL. THEOBALD<br />
Director of tie Polytechnic Burton.<br />
DR. HESSE, Kr; Auiitant.<br />
INDIGESTION !<br />
In cases where natural evacuations ere<br />
difficult to secure, aad a quick discharre is<br />
essential, take six of Bad way 's Pills ana pul-<br />
verize them, take the pin powder in water<br />
preserves, In half an hour they will ope-<br />
rate. We hare known tbe most dlstressl-M- r<br />
pains of Gastritis, Bilious Coolie, Inrtaarna- -<br />
llrf1hl.K'Bdp,v n. Congestion, &c., stopped, aad tto r-e-<br />
the aforesaid fifth day of JnW. 2? "Lo 7 .tftme?t-An- d<br />
U b<br />
In caronlc<br />
proof bowever, cases, to take<br />
to tb. ...!.<br />
faction the .aid ChW Justice that theDe-- .S4<br />
to by<br />
of lieation, the la<br />
of<br />
WTufVr<br />
or<br />
""ig<br />
It<br />
tha 20<br />
us<br />
to<br />
to<br />
to<br />
to<br />
WERNER,<br />
or<br />
UASOUJ f 7 AA4 sure shviimmis' Krsr; BB pWW<br />
50 ihe lahei degree cathartic. aoeHeaL<br />
case<br />
vided. do not weaken or debilitate the system or<br />
Supreme<br />
autuoniea<br />
same<br />
Breslau,<br />
any of its organs, and will leave the bowels'<br />
regular and healthy. They purify aad equal-<br />
ize the drcuktion of the blood. No coseea.<br />
tion or inflammation wfil occur whUe tha<br />
system is under their influence. Price 26<br />
centa per box, or 6 boxes for ose dollar.<br />
For Sts-oX-e toy<br />
Redlngton 4fe Co., Saa Francisco,<br />
Crane & Brlfjham, San Franelseo<br />
R. II. XeDouald tcCo, Baa Francisco,<br />
Jas tin Gates ABro, Sacramento,<br />
And fay alt Druggists and Csxntry:<br />
"J Merchants. IU