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                    <text>A

SEMI-MONTHLY

Vol.

JOURNAL,

THE

The

FRIEND,

TEMPERANCE

AMD

and

edited

15th of every

SEAMEN,

Damon, Sea(usually) on the Ist and

each number

month,

containing

"

Five

"

Ten

-

-.

the Seamen's

the

Friend

Chaplain,

or

Which

by

the fol-

throughout

less,

ceeding

and

insertions, tjf'l,7s,
insertion.

one

For

A

87

not

toother

trembling »atn/,
lightfor

Farewell
In

It

stray,

The

dear

my

mother,

I leave you;

sorrow

my heart sore;

grieves

this

bright star.
shall

and heart

soul 'twill

trusting

grieve you,
Though tempests should rage

vale,

And the loud billows

safely guide

Farewell my dear
Our

But

terrific shines

light

the riinrr'i

And (hows the
That

And swift the

may

we

mother,

ready,

now

trump

of

So farewell dear mother

shun.

heaven-ward journey

I'll think

on

thee

only,

run.

far

Though far,

away

On the tempest tossed

FRIEND.

SEAMEN'S

Though

THE SAILOR'S MOTHER.
those

mother

Many hardy

place.
we

remembered

his

sailor,

met

whose

of the

sons

breasts

the

by

would

full tideof tender emotion

at

tempest
(he

occupies

ocean

heave

first
have

with

a

forever exiled.

himself

feels
never

light

unto

my

feet,

and

a

lamp

and
unto

my

path."

for the

simplest

straight

the

to heaven it

point*,

value

T his

my little friends,
gill your Saviour sends.

much,

precious

from

could
the

brought
And

I ere the youth his ways
May dense from overy stain;
The light of God's
word
pure

Tnis

sister,

more

process plain.
then give heed,—

star will show the fount

The

feather, too,

All be
may noed
Blest be the hand
This

lamp

you

need.

can learn
to

of
not

mother

teuch;

which placed

within his reach.

Ho fainting heart, no weary eye.
Rood droop with such a helper nigh.

mond

of

a

have been
of

caverns

up

a

living

in

for

rejoiced,

costly

as

a

queen,

if he
ever

or

had

as

ever

he

had

the miner been

discovered
in

sparkled

following

lines in the

Chaplain, Honolulu,
note.

a

sailor

study of
with

fur distant.

thee.

upon

Then adieu,

dearest moihe-,
sad (ears,

Though

a

dia-

the diadem

an

dropped

we

should

meet

never

On earth any more,
Yet

look

unto

Jesus

In humble devotion,
That

we

shall

soon meet

On Canaan's blest shore.

Peruse these few lines
And remember who

Remember 'tij

penned iliem,

one

Let where'er be his

grave,

Still trusts'in the Saviour
The friend of the sinner
Who's strong in his
And

mighty

Oct. 26,

since,

though

Dispel those

graced

king.

A few weeks

Stillthinks

mother,

relieve you,

thought

Your son,

of waters

should lie,

us

Yet cheer up dearest
Let this

pleased, if

ocean,

pearl precious

a

A diver

more

the

since

letter which he

Pennsylvania.

tho necklace of

Dotn make the
My brother,

a

received from his

interior

pearls

That babes the way may find.

O,

us

but

thoughts

Not many months

heart

In thai blest book doth shine;
So

just

society,

from his mother's

run-away sailor showed
had

Light

an outcast

affections.

The sailor often

from

outcast

an

sever,

waste

the mention of a

mother's name,while every other tender feel-

ing seemed

me

the wide

Between

tossed

sea.

Though twice this world's circuit
Should thee and

Among

duly

for me,

It doth call

gleams.
way to death.

O

fearful rond,

is

ship

And the loud

path;

Across his track it

POETRY.

roar.

fail.

O'erJordan's stream to Canaan's side.

Upon

"A

MOTHER.

MY

But oh, dearest mother,

way.

ex-

BIBLE.

leaving

To leave my dear parent,

who seeks

death's dark

gaze on
When flesh

column, 850.

THE

on

worn.

heartt,

guidoto lead the

a

May

1-2 cents for every

yearly advertising,

for troubled

his

to

Don't let this

square, 2 insertions, $2,25, and 50
One half
additional insertion.
square

every

2

farewell

FAREWELL TO

crown,

is

brow

the

Terms.—One

additional

page,

honored

the

righteous

hope

With such

ADVERTISEMENTS.

or

them you

home.

Poor stricken ones!

The

for

A sailor's

And strive his love to win.
they need not

L.

islands.

cents

oc-

A Friend.

age,

Which weep and mourn for sin;
That fain to Christ would turn,

Boardman, Honolulu;
Andrews,
Chaplain, l.ahaina; Mr. Hum!,am, Kolon,

and the American M issionaries

Kauai;

the

by

Here's

received

agents—
Rev.

the

they will

Friend, by inserting

oblige

10,00

and donations for

Mr. E. II
Seamen's

the

IT.

Sir. —If you consider

worth the space

languid eye

Where is revealed

5,00
7,00

"

Subscriptions
at the study of

lowing

•

-

the

To that instructive

4,00

-

r¥o.

Damo.v,

in

cupy
will

roll.

bows

the frosts of

May raise

•••••••.

-

Mr.

never

hoary head, that

The

$2,60

•

1840.

following lines

guidethe soul,

INTELLIGENCE.

GENERAL

8 pages.

"

"

will

light

Beneath

Three

toil.

grief,

Where troubled waters

.--..--.-

copy; per annum,
"
Two copies,

am.

AND

1.1,

find relief.

hope may

This beacon

TERMS.

One

care

The mother in her

C.

Samuel.

be issued

Chaplain, will

men's

by

of

man

FEBRUARY

I.

Howover dark the scene.
In

Published

8.

O \ Ell.

MARINE

SEAMEN,

TEMPERANCE,

TO

lIOMMIM

111.

OF

DEVOTED

25

FRIEND.

THE

aim

to save.

1844.

the

the Seamen's

accompanying

Words
mora

hurt

more

than balsams.

than blows,

and

heal

�the

26

For
EXTRACTS FROM

Visit

collected that about

Perm, of

Wm.

.

ten

it will be

do

r

labor

not

is

Christianity

too

had

re-

boats

two

Apia

chief

nt

riors

belonging

and

in

wns

The

TE TRAFFIC

off

cut

crews

that

culty

Javaii,

at

Islands,

the

killed,

of

slate

their intercourse

Muskets

gether

powder

with

exchanged
those

muskets

demand,

to-

they

yams, and

be

now

for

purchased

of blue cloth.

yards

three

and

may

a

unim-

for which

lend,

and

in

were

and

with while peo-

gteat

hogs

their

same

or

in

were

settled

were

natives

heathenism,

barbarous

proved by
ple.

and the

So

cape.

far

tataga

from

this

at

whom

men,

in

wars

hands

being

he is

dny,

By

Some six

11

ship

dine

to

before

eating,

votion

as

of the
of

judge

believe
convert

lie

sup,

they

styled,

are

labor, and their efforts
cided
the

and the

success,

attendant

instruction
these

advance for

enism

the

to

At

easy

which

and

life in

and

access

and

safety

continuing

of

are

ahumlance
has

Apia,

ships.

is

Upolu,

the other

although

is

Eastward

harbor,

approved by

where the American
and

resides,

the

the

flogs

in abundance

fair

is cheap and pretty

harbor for

on

the North

by

some,
to

the

Apia

innny.

is

Consul, Mr. Williams,

there,
ways stop
at a

may

no

nine miles

from

canoes

Islands which bring

ships

of recruits

approved

most

quite

to

are

the

other

for sale, al-

yams

valuation,

of

had

forming

institution

an

and

natives in the
similar

to

added,

Williams,

(who

Missionary
are

the

as

is
"

the

and

poultry
laro

Missionaries nnd Mr

the

the time

striving all

of the

Son

Martyr

of

to

famous

Ecromanga,")

introduce seeds,

and get the natives in the way of cultivating
a

of

variety

and

gutting

to

suppose,
are

are

be

are

quite

very

present
most

a

covered with

pleasing
snow

and

a

be

and

to

ing chosen

that

their

seminary

dense

a

of the

Ihty

to

Islands

where

there

able

the

to

of

reception
could

they

interesting

are

plastered,

will

ever

arrive

ces,

which

ed-

most

have

enter

of

to

group

the

into

brought

labor and

is

try,

hardly

population,

whose
the

soil, for they

I doubt

being

al-

of wood,

present's very

stance

in

bold

few

our

was

wants

and

indus-

they

do

years

visit

felt

liquor

to

from
is

occupation

of the

One

to

having

which is

intoxicating

time,

and

happy
Apia,

circum-

was,

that

licensed grogbe found there

frequently

drink is

sold.

the

can

happy

true an-

I

say,

follow it,
not

this

must

to

gath-

and all

its author,

ut

for their

1

support

begin

indignation

must

brought

was

I could

nil faces

add,

have

money, and

not

be

devil in-

a

approaching ruin,

consolation,

destruction

will."

What

upon
would

think of him?"

traffic

in

drinks

intoxicating

Gentlemen,—I commend
and

from the Permanent

paragraph

Documents.
the

traffic;

You have
some

in it;

gaged

of

still it is

longer

cease

to

that the traffic

of God;

tpteaily,

that

as

to

conflicts
it

arsenic,

our

with the

we

they,

en-

of

re-

your

immoral traf-

an

as

I have

la-

do

in like

to

with the rerealed

or

potash,
I

opposed

golden
others

or

have
to

neighbor;

not

the

that

any

we

well, and that

other

great law

it

does

rule which
what

as
ev-

shown also

would

numerous

not

requires

circumstances, should do

that

wear

if

certainly,

that

to us.

and strik-

conflicts with

(he traffic
ing facts,
economy—that property thus
not

long

pause,

tendency

conduct it.

substances.

poisonous

that

to

the death of multitudes

causes

ery year,

square

late

show, and I think I have succeed-

to

of love

commenced

may have

not too

above

Temperance

already

you

examine the chnracter and

fic,

your careful

to

consideration, the

deep

day after I have alsn shewn from

disturbance

to

on

want

or

else

will find them that the traffic is

any
so

stop-

sign this

accumulated

business, I

bring

not

many

the Sandwith Islands.

mostly ed,

pleasant

whose

most

1

ns

the

he should

To those who
at

such

go

inn

somebody

nutive bored

a

arc

may go ashore

ever

natives,

where

the

more

crews

without

with the

those

But little

ships

among

become

improved.

no annoyance

case

it" I

ut

he will

comparatively

a

and

boil with

to

suppose

*'

much like

so

bringing

And

family.

com-

poison

you may ask,

business,

my

many

his

by

of the

bottom

upon

is

blackness

you,

so

of

sore

been

many cases
and in so

and if I should

it,

hearts

have

will

so

support;

this

change

er

and, in

time, skill, business, and if you find it

persevering

physical

sea

attending

shops
and

out

not a

very much

aspect, and the
chnrches, all day

to

have it;

my

niuny oth-

so

reason,

acting

money;

to

of

commission

and under it should put the

family

spontaneous productions of will

for
at

resour-

vast

require

of

expected

They may

nature.

them

Islands

bo

supplied by

pluces

are

will

amount

to

of im-

uncertain.

completely developed

action,

an

Islands

degree

great

any

in

the

where

upon

of

he

the

at

and

people ?

up

sake

sudden death; and suppose

cause

object

carnate,

proved

Missionaries

Samoan

be

to

ping

The

stand

to

other

to

facilitated

to

will

swer,

the

that
the

diseases;

question, viz:—what,

a

lor

will,

to

harmless,

be should put

my

to

he will

will visit with
many he

so

persons of

deprive

perusal

Whether the

white walls of the native

of which

r i

successful prac-

greatly

procured,

was

Missionaries,

no

the

white

be

hav-

They design

are

of

deed obtain-

a

questioned

South, who

and

pioneer*),

about

learning,

native teachers upon

placing

the Islands

of

teachers

as

go

and indeed it has been
tice of

be

possession.

natives

an-

location, which

never

ucating

their
set

he

excite

that

paratively

cases

what

inhabitants of
innny of the

so

alms-house;

will

wretchedness

education

natives and

may

of

right

keeps

growth

trees

seeming

Lnhainalunn,

at

site for its

Ranminns, I

appearance,

couoanut

plentiful;

melons

the

excellent.

beautiful

and the native

so,

to

common.

indigenous

Abundant and

Limes

vegetables.

beginning

Hire

oranges

pine-apples

and

plants

providence

had

the

branches

higher

the

for

the

will be

a

dai-

were

just held

principal vegetables to be obtained, portance in a commercial view
others The Islands no doubt possess
although If is probable in a few years
are

it

thinking

com-

should

sign-board,

men,

diseases which would

cases,

to

spirit,

his

on

of all

city,

distressing

and

about

ntdent

capitals

in
his render fntul; that

for

be obtained field.

Yams and

plenty.

to

professor.

them, and

meeting. (March)

nual

ed,

place

famed

blessings

The Missionaries

good harbors, purchased

where

taken

careless about the sttl ject.

two

largest

one

must

the

to

he

course no

nominal christians

us

litem

in

their money, make paupers, and send

getting

crimes,

yet I

7.

when

man,

read

or

town

the

help

not

this

to

christian

acknowledging

without

of the

recess,

an

and

civilised

a

of the

ly partaking

|

ers

the board with him and

sat nt

one

Savaii
obtained.
may be
The harbor of
side of

to

of heath-

pollution

Upolu

Islands of the group,
of

and

themselves among

enjoyment

christion life.

religion

of years, will raise them

term

a

of who

civilization anil

of

diffusing

degradation

from the

of

lijrlit

benighted people,

field

marked with de-

arc

blessings

are

this

of

has

n

soven

entered upon

a

de-

As

and

seen

do, viz:—that

mem-

much

heart,

warrior,

into

some
Missioeiries At all events, I could
years since,
from England, Scotch Independents, I think Ipretty close rebuke to

or

he

Meaning

a

as

professor.

change

heathen

a

asked

any persons

bloody exploits,

a

appearance

apparently

profession

great

u

write in great

When invited on board

any christian

sincerity
can

or

with

with;

all

a

traffic

the

mence

es-

of the kindest

met

to

Suppose

bad

party

Amicus.-No.

a

blood-thirsty

a

one

ever

christian.

consistent

his

all chance of

prevented

ber of the church, and

missionaries

no

Islands,

the

rounded and

bouts, disposed old chiefs I

the

to

sin

the

and

were

belonging

men

At thai time

two

officers

diffi-

some

afierwrnds liberated.

were

on

to

between (he officers

arose

natives, and that the

although

weathermost of great number of

Hie

owing

DRINKS

INTOXICATING

IMMORAL?

&lt;;

this group of

IN

on one

former
own

IS

war-

greatest

his

with

For t he Friend

principal

Islands, and

of their

one

killed

days,

bygone

of the

the

TEMPERANCE.

shotting

that the Missiona-

vain.

one

to

ship occasion dining

since the

years

Falmouth,

here

benign inlluence,

NANTUCKET.

,

Samoa,—Perhaps

to

its

ries

C

I.—BVCarr.

NO.

shows thnt

Friend.

the

A WHALEMAN'S JOURNAL.

(February,

tuiexd.

true

acquired does

he who

consents

for

�Ttt£

1845.)
sake

the

of money,

muke

to

others, often rinds himself
his

own

and

miserable

order,

good

uine friends of

all who

the beat'interests of their fellow
word who

a

must

love

their

oppose

the

shall

neighbor
traffic

in

lawful way, to put down the traffic;
the

petition

government
intoxicating drinks;

sell

to

whom

ell with

truffic,

with
This

we

do

ftur

injure

to

a

disease.

of vain

boasting;

way

your families;

or

desire

temperance, I
and

mane

bosoms,

und

cense

is

will

ask,

and which is opposed
who

will

soon

cull

in

y&lt;

stand

cle which

'.he

the

guardian,

peaceful subject,
"which

himself;
swallows

The

its

hope,
of

reason—ot

heaven!
I be-

injured community,

practical

with the best interests of society,

war

arid

reason,

and

happiness

an

and

at

at

war

and

highest

interests.

You may

to

warn

bnt

Irivul matter,

laugh
in

we,

responsibility

Yon

weight.

warfare?

ourselves

trouble

and
your business,

the
you thai

a

as

a

cannot

the idea

at

faithfulness
is of

sustain

moun-

it

while

business.
As God is true,
you continue the
His
in this traffic.
cannof
prosper
yo\l
will consume your
is noon it, nud
curse

"Who hath hardened himself against

fains.
lim, and
gage

in

Cease tlrun

prospered?"

So

nnequul

tfattic., though

a

demand,

it

gret

having

secure

science,

the

done

so;

or

you.

Are

to

en-

up

the

to

you

| Mills

titicalcs in

own

on

must

be

'justify

■ that

of

toes* not

not

the

aay."

in

to

wor-

of

the

slight,
the

opinion

was

that

it

seaman

it

of

present

the

new

It

is
at

on

to

As

did

to

the

to

it did

fracas

not

for

blame;

appear

ought

Mills

offence—a

to arrest

ihould have

we

to

the

show that

in

appear

if it

desertion

was

all

Mills

the evi-

was

the vessel

to

have

Mills and take
done if he

willing

but

exerted

him

had

im-

even

fault,

The

out.

be

to

punishment

that

seen

away,

whey

is

himas

deserted.

he
It

to

letter from

a

with

pleased

for

tried

those

it.

who

is

have

the

but a'small

the

curd

it

as

and

separated
be

can

then

and

pot,

of

this

tity

qtiat

with

hands.

into the bottom

covered

dry linen,

from the

the

cloth.

the

its

it is

removed

stead.

In the

night this

oughly
next

and

process

as

can

iiioftjiag

same manner,

is ab-

the

arating

repeated
cheese.

till

done

the

milk

same

you

thug

method where the

is

an

inot

one

or two

is

method

a

packed closely
the

seen

to he

pot

a

woman

cows.

way ef

day

pursued

pre-

in septo

be

full ef

convenient

has the milk

If it work well, it
If it fail, it need

very disastrous failut c.

ry successful

The
in the

This process

duiry

in

and
thor-

as

prepared

a cream

important discovery.

be

whey

prepared

have

day

by pressing.

and the curd ia

moisture.

It is

of the
tire

removes

be

satur-

dry 'one placed

course

upon the top of that
vious, and (ho

a

with

over

cotton

or

By
remaining whey
process
sorbed, and when the cloth becomes
ated

of

tried.

easily

ordinary way every

pressed compactly

folds

making cheese,

being tested by experiof the year,
especially

simple,
in

set

and

I'm

several

of

cur.r.sp.—We

making

method of

very

well

as

of
a

season

who

It

The of bat

le.ft him behind voluntarily.
not

at

in
re-

they liked it.

successfully

convenient

worthy

those

of the

a

forfei-

a

punished

the contrary,

do duty and sail
mastei

out

how

much

was

last,

cheese

making

published

we

who

very

this

It is then

fully

of disobedi-

were

requested

appeared

correspondents

know

us

method

morning,

time of

made

of

our

mode, having

lately

which

by

irked, that

decreeing

they

let

may be

ment

much

was

mode

new

them,

New

sufficient of themselves
in

a

requested

and

one

have

an exer-

the

acts

have

have small dairies.

in

latitudes,

Havre

at

caused

this

made

rem

cheese—A

making

the l8tb»of June

on

Some months ago

punish-

have- been the aggressor

adequate

dence tended

&lt;elf

Havre

in

to

We then

try

master,

was

to

up

The

not

mute

for

proved;

n aster

trial thai

such

respondent

Court

might

Besides, the

the

lating

libellant, Judge Tl*e milk

the

duty

moreover

know Smith

to

a

authority

of
his

giving

that Mills alone

fully

the

must

respondent.

article which

an

Ploughman

the

discharg-

and that the

between Mills and Smith,

not

voyage home,

subscribers

our

republish

to

us

consent.

warmer

time of commission.

were

the

method or

uutuber of

severest

to warrant

claim

Had

warrant

the

the

of forfeiture /

ture; and

the time

to

up

nnh

offence which would

Wyk's arrival

ence were

for

tho

to

Boston, deducting

on

Ra.ntoul for the

milk.

proved.
case

voyage.

according

wages

in

to

was

the

awate

observed

of tho

This

performance

tho Oltif

of

end

ctr-

the

imprisoning

seem

power.

than

and costly sacrifices to
thy of staking great
"
I speak as unto wise rjnen.judgi
secure?
of what I
ye

the

Full

he earned

the sub-

to

Aspi.nwall for the libellant.

have been eommit-

to

could be indicted;

cise

As

England

give compensation

to

arriving

the

to

bark from Havre

agreement,

circumstances.
of Mills

months'

pretended

that

to

was

of

Judge

in

especially

did

the

to

of

he

Full wages up

of the

sailing

that

was

and in order

three

be decreed therefore.

Scotch
was

imprisoned

very serious
in

him

of the

course

be

to

The

a master

case

the

ut

had the
pow-

ruled that

own

approval

Ia foreign jail—one
ments,

a seaman

alleged

Smith.
a

of the

discharge,

take'

master

board,

on

sequent wages, the role in

the

to

evidence

with his

iv the

with the

the assault

jted

of

case

the breech

give
desertion, although they

of

cases

had caused Mills

'for

Court

was

authorizing consuls

appeared

more

con-

The

foreign port

mute,

Mills

mus-

sailing

the quay

on

the

frequently

so

wages
give
Here the rule was

beating

Consul,

before

swore

had that power when

It

time

was

not

that he hud deserted.

the desertion,

prove

stutute, and he

by

so

no stutute

a

in

wages

the

The natural inference

not want

lull

s-

voyage;

in

when he

did

avoid the payment

to

(.'}) deseitiou wages

crew;

certificate

when made
of

to

hud deserted.

de-

of all the wise

Is&lt;

Mills

Why

do so?

must

to

respondent

Havre,

of the

one

master

Consular

a

prisoned

will

to

the

during

at

certificate of the

I fact that the

the

never re-

doing,

of your

approbation

good around

seem

You will
thus

approbation

and J.he

Give

contest.

mand, great sacrifices.

and

|offered

dure , Spiaguc

how

you,

unholy

should

wo

responsibility;

tain

can

so

nil this

regard

wonder that
about

How

wage

to

he did

repeatedly

was

hour before the

an

Wyk,

hail.

man

Mills

be decreed.

own

you continue

back

the

by

up

respondent,

abused.
the interests of God's moral govenneiit, I
Upon
as
diametrically opposed to your

with

set

misconduct

Smith,

The

ed iv

nnd

the libul-

allow him

ti&gt;

| ut Havre.

arms

ahyss,

vast

seech each of you, abandon this

of

and

January I'J.

leaving

voyage

disobedience

gross

the

parent

of his

)

1

an

the wife of

;.nd

Mobile,

to

commenced

of the

rest

defeaco

(I)

was,

arti-

an

industrious

an

a

His

rendering

health, affection,

In the

men,

receive the

to

fiends,

of

man

opens

pence,

i.c

of

the

knowledge,
nu

child

king

and

before

which robs

society;

husband,

her

into

men

changes

them iiirai'ist

your

once,

for sale,

offering

cease

in

the will of the God

tv

honest gains of others without

equivalent;

hu-

article which

an

Cease, I pray you,

tribunal?

is

your fellow

to

to
u

ut

But

you

injurious

that

generous

traffic

to

obviously

so

appeal

honoruble, und

forever,

ail

to

Boston

Wvk,

tou.

in behalf of my fellow laborers in the work
nt

the

of seaman's

recovery

Havre, and refusing

perform

Deshon.—

board the bark Olof

Havre,

to

do it from I Philip

we

the

lor

on

from

voyage

Daniel

v.

1-1, and for damages for

It)

(

promote your happiness

to

a

lant in

places

contagious

earned

thence

both

libel

wus a

ges,

on

entreat

oppose yo'ir traffic from any

you

a sincere

in

not

say,

we

w.

houses tilled

avoid

of

subjects

This
we

shall

contact,

avoid your

to

would

they

as

the

in

the

STATES.

er

every

we

shall

we

come

and landsmen,

seamen

of

may

we

UNITED

THE

01'

Mills

Alanson

withhold licenses

In

COUKT

and that half

within

thetn-

as

in which you

We shall seek, such

do sj

DISTRICT

CALENDER.

that

and in conversation with

tho Olof

of

all in

men,

board

ter,

Daily Advertiser.]

the Boston

COURT

regard

We honestly tell you thut

engaged.

are

[From

in evidence

waa
on

Now it is certain, that ull gen-

drunkards.

eelvs,

MISCELLANY.

drunkards of
his children in

or

continued

snare,

27

T?UI£XT&gt;.

'It ia

a

ve-

preserving cheese from

.

�28

THE

Ed and

have
and

from

kept

but

aeen

thia

the

and

as

labor ia much

wards

is

be

to

appeared

solid

and

experiment

one

promiaes

The cheese
as

air

We

of this

kind,

successful

a

fiee from

as

that made
and

less,

light.

moisture,
The

of it after-

care

nothing.— Botlon

comparatively

for

heard

the

certainly

Ploughman.

ravages of the

intemperance, compared
that in

dragon,

in the air

THE FRIEND.

by the

blood

family. The

blood

appeased except
of the noble

intemperance

well be

might

nal of

TETOTAL

1845.

15,

I

Ith,

It

evening

gather

an

assembly

hearer

A few months since it

en."

For

a

cool
the

to

opposition
the world.

The

reform

and antarctic

regions

float where the

play

torrid

upon

of the
"

the

must

falls
"

singing

were

we

chills
an

of

wha hae."

the

them

never

waa

in Honolulu

"

was

Scots

we are

language

so

and the

Next

the air of

secret

con-

of

the

band of tetotaliers present;
"

(ile

as

vet'rans let

as

bark is

to

one

The

original,

atyle

and

abiding impression

and

by

prayer

of the United

illustration

calculated
upon

the

The wide field of

figurative

imagery,

delighted

not

a

been

we were

fully explored,

as

to

the

to

treated
the

fellow

made the

not

A

of the

copy

advanced,

Cascade,

in

was

where he

Adam
he did

social

address,

The

careful, he would

not want

that

if published

that

Adam

ten

where

the

hearers

unfortunate

he

ought

down that
that

not

to

where

if

they

they

classed,

not

would

now

"

progress

and

would be

careful,

shrink

brandy

from

being

confirmed drunkards."

among

was

of

learn, has been
the

Hawaiian
shall

we

the

taken

our

of the

Ith,

society.

of which

is

the

writ-

are

Union, which

village lyceum

much

ca.

From the scarcity of
public speukers,
limited community,
originated

sued

with

pleasure

has

society

to

the

a

Hall, who

Cascade,

now

the

was

profit

The

loss

great

was

pur-

advantage.

and while

and

amusement

received

and

sustained

death of Mr.

is

necessity,

in

the Cas-

and the result has been that
what

first undertaken from

of

in Ameri-

our

cade,

a

in the

upon the welfare of

of

a

of

specimens

as

meetings partake very

the charncter of

part

a

the 1

Most of the articles

members

by

of

Cascade which have been

the influence

society.

tuke

same.

in

the
ed-

original

contributing

of the

Union,

encouragement in his good resolu-

tions.

It

Before
closing this sketch of the tetotal
happily and impressively remarked that
gathering, We would thankfully acknowledge
tetotalism waa the
only position of safety, our indebtedness to the band of the
waa

Bran-

and

that

genuine

Washingtonianism

becauae the law of kind-

eventually triumph,
ness

glows in

was

the

bosoms

peculiarly pleasing
did

speaker

his office in the
to

be

Among

neaa

sign

upon

the

not

of its advocates.
learn that

to

fancy

church

classed

and

it

degrading

standing

know, there is

ay and squeam ah

thia

subject.

They

because

pledge,

the

in

Washingtoni-

among

some, we

per-refined deli

must

se

a

si ive-

would

forsooth,

su-

not

dywine,

to

look

upon

Query,

do

them

not

as

such

In

and those

who exerted themselves

to

As

the

casion,

his

the

address,

had

for their kind

hospitality

Brnndywine,

and

community

very

to

the
in

ion

was

able

on

Messrs.

up

as

the

purpose

the

subject

their

of

of

listening

of

to

temperance.

adding

oc-

Marshall
the

to

mu-

H. T. A. Un-

an

for the citizens of Honolulu

ears

former

a

very essential

hold

to

Honolulu

to

inducement

assemble for

addresses
For

upon

the pur-

additional interest

to

the

reformed

meeting, and bringing another
persons

speaker

Honolulu,

the officers ofthe

felicitously

were

of

in

gratify the

sical entertainment which the

to

aid in

promoting

suspended
concluding

services

and Johnson

be reformed ?

complimented

gentlemen

of the lovers of music.

pose

neighbors will

an

sup-

the

may be

furtheimore itor of the

wine-bibbers
were

be

He

class.

be—'' in

hill!" and

sloping

fashionable

to

was

earnest

were

then showed that the moderate drinker
where

of

nos,

if make

ddly,

be

if

were

articles

evening

highest degree salutary
the

graphically

expressed

of his

The

that

the poor inebriate

he

and

none

Most

be."

to

rhetorical

have

that

as

intercourse of

in

weekly meeting

every

periodical,

implies

bottle

reading of the Cascade formed

selected for

and

be;

not to

of

as

we

pleasure in circulating

great

published

where; Sdly,

did Mr. J. show that

hope

question

brandy

for publication
and

parson's di-

"Adam where

Genesis,

ought

not

was

is," forci-

would

politeness,

conspicuous

the

which Mr. Jones of the exercises of the

where it

Navy

life.

victims

hearers,

we

viz:

citizens,

without

an.l

most

in

which,

exhibited in

consider themselves

and

decanter

entertainment

of

having

the American

wtgtnlrelly

wine

in

our

of

take offence and

not

requested

of you,
my

see

some

was

drunkards.

perceive

some

us

Adam

need

hearer's mind.
and

tribu-

of

hearing

that officers

temperance reform.

of the eccentric

verse

were

make

let
us

Ist, This

ans.

Frigate Brandy wine, occupied nearly

hour.

quite

text

society,

The address of the

George Jones, Chaplain

Statea

his

to

the tree;

followed with

waa

speaker

one

artthour"

be,

Spreading victory."
song

ihe

the dread

at

visions of his sermon, when he

It

On the land and o'er the sen,

Rev. Lowell Smhh.
Rev.

us

demands

secret

and

phraseology

somewhere,

bly reminded

reverend

Firm

True

'his

is

given the drinkers,

well,

The second stanza,

fident, spoke

upon

drunkenness."
to

the

"every

they found
among

Watchmen tell

intemperance,

original hymn,

one

demon

thirsty

the

to

to the

regard

somewhere!

tetotalism

could have

o'clock.and all is

some

himselfmarshalled "some-

saw

Tho mode of

teto-

if

away

of

zephers

free from the mists of

damp

that

so

head of

melt

temperance atmosphere

sung

blessing

clear

their sides,or the fervid heat of

night,"

7

secret

bergs of the arctic

Washingtonianism

As the choir

reply,

mild

the

and

was

now

to

The ice

navigation.

that

is

stream

the

icy fetters of

indifference

sailing ia tolerably safe

may

subject of

the ice is brok-

long and dreary winter had

intemperance,

an

tetotal

was announc-

been bound fast with the

stream

tal

"

Honolulu,

in

to

to

that upon the

columns,

our

temperance

where" in

employed,

listen

to

be

not

summoned its

society,

As

of

and

sentiment

highly gratified

that could

and

temperance

upon

songs.
ed in

varied

ao

address

were

the

point,

a

upon

of

hap-

a most

was

combination of circumstances

py

us

the

on

crowded.

waa

that

ever

Intemperance too,

compared

Venice,

hour of night.

GATHERING.

The Seamen's Chapel,

red

great

insatiable,

more

from all ranks in

every
the

wi

monstei

and would

its thousandsof victims!

February

the

to

Egyptian legendry,

appeared

anon

of

Honolulu,

had

befoie

never

terrible

(February,

one.

by the press.

the

posed,

¥RIENB.

inscribed
them

larly

we

the

with

expressive

senses

cause, banners

in different
parte

appropriate

observed the

of the

of

the

were

chapel,

mottoes; among

following

as

and appropriate,

particuaround

a

touched cluster of grapes, sheaf of wheat and bunch

�THE

1845.)
of

gatherings

will

effects of Aberdeen

tell upon the

pledged

while

ism,

all active

of

spirit

those who

among

in

exertion

excited

that will

drunkenness and its evils from
the

ing

the

temperance,
to

in

and

great

a

moral

noble

Communication
leav-

tic

higher

aspect, second

only

effecting

the

it

most

or

ilie

to

ning of

tetotal

the

11th,

the

gathering

but

was

was

on

the

se-

eve-

omit-

necessarily

looked—namely,
in

pec,
moir

the

now

Gaetan

ted.

in every

response

originally

ought
The

heart.

at a

sung

sentiments and

which

stiiing appeals

soul

in

many fine

It contains

to

find

lines

temperance

a

were

convention

ded

wherein

ed,

to the cause, which

in

triumph

See how tho world stands amazed at the

Brightest
Push

and noblest of earth's

on

the

Behold,

how

let

thy

bound,

rises,
found!

And

liberty's children

Brightest,

rully

Isthmus

all

Who

there.

and

degraded—
plead for the lost
God, and who publish his laws,

who

ye

stand up

for

the

your weight
Brightest, ice.

By giving

gre itly be aided

to the

Temperancecause.

And

ye
The guilty

Come take

of

the

nation,

condemn, and the innocent clearthe Temperance Army your station:

in

To all who love

justice

traversed

this

cause must

be dear.

ed
As

by
To
This

all are invited
ye
counsel nnd medical skill;

Physicians,

aid by

your

cause is

your
Your business is

Brightest,
Ye

merchants,

Or. hard
The

by

and it must not be

curing,

and

why

will

slighted—

you

kill?

who traverse the land and the ocean.
counters,

he'ip treasures untold;
noble devotion,
your

cause needs

a treasure

fir richer than

gold.

the

Be nailed
And pail
Till

tight

Temperance Banner

and fa«t to the top of the mast;
in the most noble manner,

right ahead,

life's stormy

Brightest,
And

tars, let the

now. let

ocean in

safety

be

paaa'd.

Ice.

the ladies be present to cheer

To aid by their smiles and influence sweat;
Alcohol fnarus.
And then snail the armies of
his seat.
And down shall the tyrant be hurled from

Brightest,

etc.

the

of

for the

slraiglU

width

the

with

each

had for the

ring

his

careful

Emperor

Fifth,

so

pointed

to

procure

to

access

and gems

the

nearest

50th

1551, also,
of

him

the

Isthmus

approach

of Cortes

the

a

to

be

stcret

when

mighty

of

the

our

corpse

all

funeral;

while I

then carried

out

the

interred with

much

to

we

and

present.

tho church and

to

them,

and

grove, where it

was

to

Mr. lahan,

solemnity.

mate, und Mr. Jones, boatsteerer of the

Ist

ship,

sick

all

are

of the

same

com-

plaint.
The former is

stopping in

Mr.

convalescent,

now

at

Edwards,

the

house.

ships.

left,

just

They

are

botn

lsham rides out, and Mr.

about

anchor 5

and

family,

my

the latter with brother Ives.

There

are

(The Maine, Cap.

but

ia

be

to

in

again

soon,) Thames,
whale,
B. "200

Sag Hatbor, Bishop, 1460
Courier, Merchant, N.
sperm.

50

whale,

Harbor,

100

Bremen,

500

Slokum, N.

700

130 sperm..
100

whale,

B.

Leek,

Ann,

sperm,

whale,

S.

Bremen, of

Newton,

sperm.

1500 whale.

Yours truly,
C. FORBES.

"T.

that

H."—Another

opened

guests

temperance

lulu,

and

in

Temperance

Honolulu.

We

eating

housea

would

we

seafaiing'friends

our

heartily

on

rejoice

multiply

earnestly
to

House

Report says

will be well entertained

onable terms.

the desired
the

Charles

to

In

the

the

across

A

As

WORD

printing

TO

reas-

to'see

in Hono-

recommend

patronize the

JOUKNKVMEN

in the

same.

the Isthmus

idly increasing
more
to

printers

at

the

will find

the Seamen's

PRINTERS.

English language

veer

proposed

Gomara

Pacific,

yard;

three of the

Captains

preached

the

to

all

men were

carried

was

seat

on a

church

from

river

communication between

Atlantic and the

the

at

hap-

the rich

the

dc

days

7

of Tehuante-

October, 15i0.)

Lopez

laid

in

of the officers and

most

Amer-

were

him upon the

to

the

ships

buried

was

full attendance

a

them for

to

anxiously coveted,

(Letters

opening

to

gold

interrogated

He
had

has been

easier

22d,

other in

dugathering, Hernan Cortes,
with the Emperor Mon-

Coatrawalus, in
as

was

He died of inthe

on

excited

friendship

straight

pec,

known

already

where

be

develop-

Portuguese,

Had

aay, several

alter they anchored here.

advantages.

natural

rivalry, vied

an

pre-

to

favorite

of that

He be-

Nov.

laat

in.

came

of the conquest, when

period

which

es-

Oceans.

other

the

worthy

and

and

the

on

transferred

was

they

as

over

north, and

the

greater

and

Lahaina

at

of diarrhea,

ill

Jones walks

which alone could have

discoverer

object.
as—

which

possesses

Pacific

County, N. Y.

Citizen,

days before they

which

communication be-

to

any

continent

Spice-land,

the
Ye stout, gallant

national

tezuma,

Brightest, Ice.

and

matter

upon

Nicaragua

a

deemed

Spaniards

ican

py

your

The

very favorable idea

and

map

resources
as

subject

the

to

llaniation of the bowels

can-

favorable

the
searching throughout that part of

see.

Temperance

And offers

o ami,

was

early

the

Brightest, Ice.

Ye noble

its

the

hand

Isaac Jones, from Livonia

Livingston

the Thames

been

The
a

geological

a

advantages

higher

than

exploration

a

fluvial

a

the

on

spots, it

who would honor the laws

and

for

under-

numerous

authority

give

Atlantic

Situated much

senting

at

Tehuantepec

of

longed

foremast

a

Thames, Capl. Bishop.

name was

centre,

same

and the

—

will

with

rapid glance

tablishment of

&amp;c.

Heavenly culling

Your

taken

here in

justifies

those of Panama and

tween

Come,

a

o'f the many natural

waving

should all

is

manner.

geographical

the facts rest, will

in
beauty,
tilling the air;
the patriot's duty—

the front is

Even

of the report,

And sweetest of music is
To stand in

met

forward

altogether

report

a

opinion.

b.ilsam of mercy be

the banner is

is

neither

are

but

me-

by Signor

actually perform-

anything

is illustrated

and

maps,

enterprises,

to earth's farthest

conquests
And wherever sorrow from nlcohnl

O.tlie.e

well

sight!

delight.

His

was

mv

died and

over-

superinten-

Isthmus,

operations

executed

through

he

buried;

J

writing

has

here

seamen

)

B.AV,

1845.

Damon, —Since

the

one ol

ex-

The

who

engineer

straight

purpose

have been

to

Mr.

board the

prejudice

me, edited

of the

concealed,

and

pamphlet

mlvanccs!

All that is noble and good it enhances,
Anil mansions of sorrow it fills with

nor

for the

Republic.

scarculv

last,

to

giante.d, and difficulties
did

Hail

the

survey

of well directed

rated

Charleston, South Carolina.

Moro,

the

Rev.

been

altogether

not

CORRESPONDENCE.

January 24,

out

Isthmus of Tehuante-

before

lying

lias

pointing

seems

if

Mexican

EDITOR'S

Kr.AI.AKEKUA

for transit

general

the

and

project

new

ope-

the aaid Isthmus of

across

Atlan-

the

Spanish

decreed the

subject,"

canal

a

the

that had been

view all

Tehuantepec.

be of interest

public,

Nicaragua,

written upon the

1814

in

in

"having

of

General dc loa

(Hisloria

again

water

a

communication

a

And

following:

locality

in the

in favor of

isting

effusion,

following poetical

to

oceans.—A

greatly underrated,
The

the

As every

Atlantic

between

favorable

which,

spot,

Panama

lected for

the
must

long-wished

this

been offered

just
as

Pacific

»nd

for

of'

cause

spread of Christianity.

the

referiing

copy

Tehuantepec.

Indies.)

ning

Isthmus,
we

of

19, Cortes,

Sept.

banish

society,

healthier and

mind

public

toned upon

to

via the

readers,

to our

conversa-

aid

for

via Lahaina."

Mail,

La-

at

number of the

a

observed the words

we

intelligence

Pacific,

general

a

of

margin

communication between

aloof from

keep

cause,

discussion and

inquiry,

tion will be

the

item

us

(Scotland) Journal,

and upon the

tetotal-

to

gentleman

haina recently forwarded

poi-

reformation of landsmen and seamen, and the "Overland
encouragement of those

Mail.—A

Overland

cat us,

we're

us,

beneficial

and

must

If you

drink

The moral and

son."
such

"If you

food,"

we're

"

inscrihed,

were

apples,

29

I?B.IIS,ND.

Sandwich

employment.

Chaplain.

is

rap-

Islands,

Apply

�30

Tttfc
when

COMMUNICATED.

the wind

the mountains

ISLANDS.

MARQUESAS

PART III.
OBSERVATIONS,

By Rev. R. Thompson, formerly
Missionary

cool

for

of

15.]

page

occasioned

probably
Islands,
the

"

might

neither

tion,

nave

rainy

as

far

wind.

rain

guage

has beeu

are

rare

at

half miles

un

its

Bor

of

10

drag

fell.

or

blows

from

from

part

of

course

immediate

Dtw,

the

two

South;

mountains

ships

their

in

poll

three

or

times

month, probably only

a

of

then

have

in

lands;

of these

had

commonly

the

frequent

to

Ihit last six

register kept for

a

months,

taken

are

or,

those of

M. L
Lowest,

7 A.

"

13

«P.
7
"

ia

November,

6
7
"

11

December,

6

»

it

M.

"

i«

••

»i

"

•»

"

I.

"

(i

"

it

"

i.

To-

12
•

devilfish
some

7

March,

'11

"

*i

■

it

at

82

ft

88

ii

83

11

80

N

83

71
83
76

80..2
H

er

78.74,

f«

i

at

very

sional obaervations,

is

about

does

not

o'clock,

shine
the

over

degrees

huata).

warmer

Islands,

Nutihiva

than

is

gives just -7
principally in light

months;

1-37 inches in

out

14

or

Island, (Ta-

this

upon

an

of the

The

of three feet.

elevation

8

con-

one

leeward side

the

upon

at an

decimal carried
six

may be

raiug uage is situated

The

open space

at 7

inches for
showers,

the greatest

hours, being

the

animal.

dogs,
the

HISTORY.

Quadrupeds .—The
which the natives
were

visited

rats;

perhaps

by shipping,

übu
tar

but

himself

male;

Spaniards,

as

dance when these
Cook.

Cant.

it

they

if these

must

Islands

ship

carrying

they

ago cattle

have been

were

found

were

Porter thinks

ate

with

were

in

visited

(hat

the

brought

cats

two
to

are

a

were

cotton

nnd

iron

sheep,

which the

dipt
added
Nuuwere

breed of cattle, but

away

by (I

pennant!)

upon

Upon,

bluali

to

Sevcial

they

say

a

years

but the natives

the breed.

very

early; they

are

Ducks have

English
&lt;writing

small, and

been

above).

not

introduced
are

numer-

by

the

oil

pluut,

kava

reva,

sweet

useful

am

or

a

are

en-

Islands

The

the

Flora of the

candle

tree,

mulberry,
plantain,

apple,

papau

pine,

screw

rose

few

nut,

I cocoanut

south

sea

herv

ginger,

Syrian mellons,
temanu,

apple, pine apple.
with

more

unacqnamti d,

interesting

paper

soup

in

the

are

the

names

all that

custard

dates,

apple,

plumb,

oranges,

(two kinds)

and

a

now

in

and

lemons,

cof-

limes,

walnuts,

Brazil-

pumpkins, water-melons,

mush-

a

few

number -of
our

of

are

marquesas.—

English Missionaries have introduced
fee, indigo,

is

princi-

mountain

potatoe,

pomeo

These and
which I

to

gaiden.

taro, tobacco, turmeric, yam, miro,

liutu,

the oth-

tree, indian

root,

chestnut,

sea

cane,

sugßr

lizards,

seems

of these

dry taro,

or

which

of hous-

ugly;

calabash,

dragon

tree,

thatch

2 coral tree,

mulbury, sandnl wood,

ian

a

sand

arrowroot, bamboo, bunarte,

ore,

wood,

dead since berries

In the group there

are

about 3

of

species

and very

melons, beans, pease,

Missionaries, (all
the

two

interesting.

nor

Bird*. —Fowls have been introduced here tuce, these und

ous.

are,

roaches,

with

reptiles

which constitute

tree, south

nu-

several gouts, and there

taken

and

French

The
female

Ship Satnarang, kindly
Upon
doing well.
a

castor

not

Islands

Nuuhiva

upon

the house, but

breadfruit,

banian,

the

introduced

are

short time ago,

destroyed

have

increasing.

they

and if

has

ones

of which

catch ng flies in the

by

Marquesas

the Island of Tuhuata. mountain

are

of Her B. M.

so

is

pig,

numerous

goats; these

been

and

alike

a

forca,

them,

introduced

now

about twelve months ago,

a

word

and

Missionaries

for

name

Missionaries

cattle,

merous

from

Upon

have

hogs,

were

these;

not even

introduced by Europeans,
the

animals

only

familiar before

were

ate

English

black

Spanish

have

Ships

which

native

come

troublesome.

a

by

has

uame

biva there

fall.

NATURAL

the

beraka,

derived from the

sun

mountains before

the

temperature

sidered the minimum.
two

be-

the

as

word

occa-

degree

1

And

1..

low the temperature at

from

day

rare

tine centepede,

and

numerous

enters

pal plants
heat of the

are,

long,

neither varied

The greatest

and

Botany —The botany

SI..11

four.d

are

some

some

which resides iv the

nev.rr

joy

rain 3.12?.

86,96

,

inches

is

es,

rain 2 975.

84,39

few

a

concolo-

value,

any

several kinds of ants,

troubled

if

one

73.10,

M

78

•«

it

80

4

or

rain 3.48.

80,61'

and

ike.

we are

85,22

tt

and

eels,

few crabs

a

shells which

Reptiles. —The only

».-

at

88
83

74

8.375.

that

been obtained.

few musquetoes,

79.83'

ff

81

M

82

ruin

net:

pretty good

shrimps,

fly, butterfly, spider,
large,

or
so

porpoises

by dragging,

by

of which

by harpoon;

water

few

Very

occasionally

flies,

83,67

79

6.18 hnhcs.

killed

fresh

called

line

a

Insects.—The insects of these

the

77,67;
f f

82

&lt;«

77

rain

is

but

bonn-

ate

seasons,

blackball,

would consider of

very

83,96

SI

•«

77

ofruin 3 inches
■

80,9.5'

if

82

M

1

full

77,46
H

88

M

74

«&lt;

80,031

»
.&lt;

77

ii

83,96

82

rocks,

large, taken by line;

very

lobsters,

Islands',

otic

by

at sea

thcie

year

often

are

the

seem

and col-

quantities

dliferent

the

these

and

All

tropics,

of form

from

large

Sharks,

supply.

gists

77,32;

Average,

m

79

U

78

**

"

6

"

ii

"

It

February,

i«

"
"

7
-

..

*•

71

7

1841-January,

4
•
ia

78

S

m

Highest,

rn

•«

science.

the natives

to

taken

at

come

throughout

-

of

vatiety
line

by

sometimes

have

at

shores

value

most

here, although

IStf-Octobw,

natural his*

might possibly

of that

flying fish, guard fish,

tn;

and

hare the Thermometer for

we

the

small fish of every

snell fish.

By

not

find it

probably

kinds of fishes found within the

are

except 'trade outside.

and

do

they

of the

and

Islands,

to

the

pigeons,

but

would

we

catalogue

the natives puott,

ships

of

one

sufficiently acquainted

we

interesting part

moat

in

in

wild

are

English,

Ichthyology,

Wind these

anchors.

neighborhood

in,

coining

and

light

the

Fishes. —Were
with

tory

any

of

and

resembles that of

breed.

extend the

can

There

pnir

u

plumage,

of which

note

As I

The trade
is

of beautiful

bead

degrees.
I

have

we

of sea and forest birds; hut

species

one

thrush.

tne

the

as-

generally
varying occasionally,

Lust,

from the West about
the

hour,

from local influence it

from the

or

rate

its

only

two

the

observing,

rise

IB

seen

about

one,

westward

heavy gusts, causing

very

the

months;

occasionally

are

20

about

song, the

once,

in about

generally prevails,

sometimes it

generally

are

leeward

about

it

seen

direction, and

spiral

a

fog.

unaccompa-

oftcner towards the North than

has been
pari

8

u

when

dense

a

twice

observed

and

in

only

only

opportunity

no

blows

Less

erected.

tecently
Mists

to

be caHed

can

season

light,

very

in

inclining

my observa-

as

ticularly dry; streams which
full, have been dry for about

here, falls

I

one

refreshing;

and

us,

or

cending

from our situa-

which

thing
This

season.

tiade

supposed

we,

extend, any

tions

"

blowing
be

around

ocean

have

passing

wind, which

the smallness of the

by

of

extent

fresh

than

rain

a

the

I

(fEBRUARy,

westward,

here;

seen

TVulerspouls

nothing

but

position,

from the

concealed

thunder

group;

one

had

Observations.—The

geographical

our

with

in the

Knglish

climate in these Islands is salubrious; rather

by thunder,

months.

Marquesas.

[Continued from
Meteorological

an

nied
and

miles

at

is

are

is seldom

Liz /lining

METEOROLOGICAL

tHUKD.

garden

cabbage, onions,
more

not

let-

exotics,

introduced
and

flowers, are
doing well; straw-

Irish potatoes

ing here, but do

useful

bear.

were

both

grow-

�THE

1845.)
Arrowroot. —Although it grows upon these

Islands,

is neither cultivated

except

small

a

—Seem

Bananas,
from I

are

J

upon which breadfruit

for thatch.

strung

are

different kinds,

which

are

80

to

100 bananas, and

GO

pounds.

with

One

single, weighed
presented

cut

so sweet

two

Banian, —Does
tion;

large

not

superioi

natives preservo in
ed

by

a

it is

it is

scraped,
a

and

till it

covered

ferments,

pits, lined

with

form their

supply

Besides
smaller

large

a

ones

that except

in

the

between the crops,

it

and

the

have

small,

day

up,

gum

which exudes from
is

bark,

the

tight;

used

bears

of the
now

in

the inner

many grow

4

pounds
much

found

often

The

to a

breadfruit is

of

bark

made into cloth.

from 8

which I obtained

the

year,'so

and

then,

15 ounces,

and measured 26

ces,

ence;

is

root

conking,

and

inches

enough

It

a

and

laige

prized by

popoi, &amp;c;

shell

slung

in

the

make

natives

a net

cut

work

at

8

one
oun-

circumfer-

a

very sub-

as

are

dishes

to

made for it;

they

useful and look well; lids made of tim-

ber

are

the natives

reeds

are

—Are
in

used in

the

and

It is clutivntcd.

water.

much

plantain, —Not

separated

large,

only

eaten

in

abun-

great

with

by

sharp

a

with

it

shell;

in water, after which
stone

with

it

is

the

Ince;

texture

then

is beaten

by

wooden mallet,

a

proportioned

grooves

fineness of the cloth

care,

the inner bark

cloth;

be

to

of this

that

made;

for the head dress of females is made
as

thin

as

cloth resembles

Pine

apples. —Grow wild, and

but

to

by

any

cultivation

in

—Has

quantities

being
It

of
is

and put

may

are

be

obtained

slow
used

been

the

exported,

little

growth,
by

plentiful,

been

once

among their clothes

pine. —The ripe

now

re-

to scent

cones

to

what is

are

strong

beads.
is

grated

upon

a

mixed with turmeric, is

besmear their persons;

generally given

to

the

houses,
the

only

lights

(torches

open

air).

used

made of cle
The ker-

in the

trees

of food

when

roasted;

grated down, and mixed

which

worm

remains

gets

generally

are

for

of the

one

its

Island;
and

rafters,

is used for
its

trunk

its

valua-

most

bark

make nets, &amp;.C.;

to

strings,

shoots

young

for

tim-

ber, &amp;c.
much raised, the land

Taro.—Not

dry

Tobacco. —Was
he

Cook,

being

for its cultivation.

introduced

probably
introduced

having

it

by

Tahiti.

to

Turmeric.—Is cultivated and used
their persons
the natives

sions;

the

probably

at

of the soap

of the

trees

are,

—

tree, heart is

use-

1,010.
color,

Faa. —Light

in water,

steeping
Moto.

—

in

splits

be

may

yellow color,

by

997.

Resembles beech, finer

grain, but

950.

dying,

Mete.—White, appears like

does

bone-;

938.

large,

grow

stained

1,025.

Buahi.—Tawny

not

which

reared.

are

timber

Ehi.—Outside

latter is

bery

the dirt.

it, by removing

principal

be-

occa-

cutaneous

the

skin;

to

other

or

prevents

the

Yam. —Very few

less,

feasts,

say it

result

and

yellow, large

—Light

Tcmanu.

—

is

very

like

Red,

good,

mahogony,

grows

duruhlu, 748.

Tou.—Dark,
good size,

like

rosewood,

grows

like

pine,

very

to a

741.

TAt.—Light,

Miro. —Chestnut color,

wood,

not

good,

Fuu.

—Tawny

the

the timber is

shipping

used

as

an

olive

for

color, good

boat

very

large,

but

not

valu-

519.

Ama. —White,

large, and

not

rery

good.

for

arti-

sometimes it

with milk

strong i and val-

643.

Hutu.—White,

able,

a

684.

Met.—Red,

South Sea Chestnut —Is

destroyed by

are

of

but

eith-

by

*

building, large,

Soap berry. —The berry
used

what

Syrian mellon.—Is

uable

worn as

kind

raised

are

nativea,

very many

potatoes

good.
ble

not

and

a

the

by

natives, grated

them.

nnd

few

a

of the

them;

among

large,

having

fur

very in-

Polynesia.

Sandal wood
but great

down

rats,

Kahuu.

paper.

and

many

The

steeped

the

er;

the

is used with

for the manufacture of

to

shipping;

for the

smear

esteemed;

Paper mnlbery. —ls cultivated
is

by whom; they

not

know

we

disease and whitens

taro. —Grows

good

a

not

chewing it,

and the

hands,

fire wood.

carved.
nuts

Islands;

by mastication,

top and the stone, and the juice

are

Candle

quantities

other

Islands,

Marquesaa.

wild,

fond of

are

I be-

is,

potatoes

too

greater
any

between

little

black

nearly
'

apples. —Grow

Papau

ferior,

spontaneously:

hole is

a

is

of famine.

seasons

Screw

hold

stained

in

natives

kind;

rope,
nnd

abundance,

here in

out

a

Mountain

equal

are

stantial meal.
Calabashes —Grow

and serious

natives,

in

is

broken

Mountain

in the process of mains.

to

sea-

seldom reared.

they

pounds
in

is

of

deducted for skin

pound

one

and core, leaves

10

vegitn-

runaway

water.

use

wrung

although
and

pounds,

pounds

it lost three

boughs

weight

larger size;
9

The

water

canoes

average

to

the

is distilled up-

root

of the

doses than

larger

than the

east

have

emigrants

It

intervening

—Grows

chiefly by foreigners;

con-

shipping.

Btc.

mixed with

two

continued sup-

young

weighed

being cotton,

retaining

the

out

manufacture of instruments for

Kara. —ls

to

incision made in

an

render

to

turning

cane.

the

by

the

by

may

but

used by the natives, but

Ironwood,—Grows

and

further

Sug'ir

or

Polynesia.

the
lieve, found in all
not

carried

seas,

thence

who have colonized

Amboyna,

make

at

dance.

from the small crop.

preserved

which

that its

injury

in

from

brought

been

been

of these

Polyne-

to

at

sny it

to

natives

seaman

not

say

detriment of the

clubs,

have

may

peculiar

here and

which purpose it is sometimes planted.
—Hiive been introduced,
■Sweet

found

only

was

it

when

Islands;

by unprincipled

in February should prove females, upon a
crop
individuals have few trees, some slightly grooved

or

is

more

by

men, to the

thrown into in

tree

a

to

sorry

Nuuhiva

If the

ply.

'

am

few

a

a

bed,

Dragon free.—ls

cores

for

covered

two,

or

the.

by

few seeds still

I

whither it

but

pipes;

tained

juice

season.

course

we

is

a

together

leaves

when

crop,

week

a

with

has-

to

and

although

the natives

by

of his

fruit

small

a

here it

contents
a

and fowls;

pigs

of tho

their

introduced

was

The chestnut is

.

is used

light

to

of scar-

seasons

fatten

indiginous,

not

came

it

Nnitahu;
tinder

hoop by sleeping

the

fruit

thrown

for the

Missionaries

in

eaten
to

many parts

war,

collected,

when

little,

leaves,

as

gather-

is left for

it

in

grows

is

save

it is all

to

occasions.

public

used in the

small

a

turned

baked;

it resembles brown

state,

being found only

sia,

weed;

a

when used in this

bread.

put.

besmear their persons

they

Cotton —Is

which the

completely ripe,

not

till it softens

heap,

days

to

after

taken out, it is then

are
a

after

two

or

the fruit

prong

be

Here,

used

chiefly

clothes for

on

men.

to

as

from the kernel of the cocoanut, and

curly navigators

Cocoanuls. —Are

the staff of life.

of wood is drove into the

it;

ten

if

scraped,

piece

the

February,

pits;

being bruised;

from

thick

coaisc

by

large forked stick, with

fixed under the

net

is

it

crop in

large

a

a

other.

any

throughout Polynesia,
It bears

into

worn

be

may

ting principle.

perfec-

to

these Islands is said
of

that

to

not

one

a

account.

cely;

the inner bark

seen;

generally

Breadfruit. —In

being

but when

large

here

grow

of young shoots is beat
kind of cloth,

to

bananas.

seldom

ones

of

ounces,

the

cones;

small

the

as

7

30

shaped

regularly

appearance

pound

I

from

weighs

banana

external

every

bears from

A bunch

Urge.

very

they

Castor Oil. —Grows
no

of

some

and uaed as

leaf, lighted

totally ignorant offtuyoili-

ure

which

with the oil

thrive well here; there

to

18

to

contain-

to

use

of bamboo,

splinter

a

upon

cocoanut

candle; they

val-

are

for

strung

are

rib of a

or

houses, and the small

lath,

as

vessels

as

rafters for

used

ones are

(eaves

spontaneously,

the natives

ing water,

prepare

nets

er

Bamboos.—Grows
to

we

use.

tor our own

uable

which

quantity

prepared,

nor

31

ERIEXD.

is

expressed

wood,

3J3.

a

very

.

.

TO

BE

valuable

CONTINUED.

and

durable

�THE

32

AUCTION.

DIED.
In
the

Honolulu, Fob. 11,

Polyrtosi

Nil.

where he his

th

a

He

in one

was

a

Hall,

Printer in

native

Concord,

ol

brothor and other trends

His last residence

hiding.
whale

Mr. Nelson O.

Office

in

now

re-

MONDAY, March

ONER

the 11. T. A

tive member nnd

Union, be

officer, hiving

die-tor of the Hawaiian

has been
the

been

Cascade

will be

One

and

an

principal

do Cotton Bandana

I to

con-

Miscellany.

Do

MARINE INTELLIGENCE.
visiting

I&gt;o

crjte

do

Do

forward for publication in the Friend

items of Marine

intelligence
and

the commercial

as

are

Cups

paiis

One
6

IN

Honolulu.

PORT,

FEBRUARY

14.

siiip Inez, F.ng. brig Euphemia,
H. B.

Majesty's

Ketch Basilisk.

Brandy wine,

ate

Tell,French

French bark

States

ship, Angelina, Bremen

whale

ship

80,

Am. whale

ship Bruganza, Waterman,

2200 while.
sperm,
Jan 31, Gustave, Norton.22

600

months,

200

sperm,

14

bor,

Feb.

mw, 2000 whale

6,

French

whalo, ff-oui

the

1700

captured by

60

sperm.

ship Angelina. 18
Islands; while

whale

//ar-

Mulgrave

1400

mos,

the

boats

2d officer and 10 men were
surgeon,
natives, but whether massacreed or not is

ashore,

were

ship Fanny, Edwards, Sag

uncertain.
leb.

10, Canada. Topham, N. B
12, Java, Allen, St. Johns, 800
14, //ouqua. Brown, N. B.

Feb.
Feb.

one

the line Franklin

N.

lead

pipe for

2

Refrigerators,

1

piece

//arbor, 500

ship Adeline, Colo, 17mos,

whale;

1700

Jelliev, full; Columbus, Crocker,
10M; New England. N. L. 2900; China,

on

or nurse

Anchor,

lldkfs,

Hnrlaem

Oil.

1

of

Rose

Soaps,

Fluid

Witter,

for

hone,sav-

gal-

&amp;

Extract

viz.—Java

Adhesive

do,

Extract Buchu and

Sarsaparilla, Fan-

ike.

Feb

PATY,

12,1845.

P

CARD.

The Seamen's

lly acknowledge

a

donation

the Hon. Cant. Louis

appropriated for
ry,

and the

Sandwich Islands,

Auctioneer

miioni

Se i

for

Seamen'sChaplnin-

the

do

drills—2

do

heads—3

requested to

■'■HE

undersigned

have

"W

H.

sail

Jtm&gt;9/Sidw
TltmrnrnT

mike

Locks, 40 do Iron Butts, (assorted) 40
do, 40 tie German Harps, 20 dozen

groe

copartnership,

Knive«,

20

Buckets,
Pans,

Spoke

Curtain

gross
40 do en Pocket

Pins. 6 do

Slew

60 do

Bras*

Spades,
1

Sad

Ring",
2

Knives,

20 do Chest
dozen

Irons,
50
Shaves,6 do Knives and

10

do

do Sauce

purpo

public

? e

of

House, Sign,

and

All orders
paiionage.
attended to.

Couch

12,

Forks,

(he

INSe

2 do

4do Plane

Irons,

ntlobpi

uncus

and

4 do Bake

Knives

Spoons, (assorted) 2 do Carvers and Forks, 400
I'eb.lJ'f
6 do-en Hat Pins, 40,000 needle*.

"OARSaT

AND

FEET

Whalemen's

BREWER,

fc

CO.

H.

84

For

sals

Feb

China

by

I.

H. FIELD.
tf

E.

ol

building,adjoining

the

11.

ft

GRIMES.

NOTICE
that

ISby

editors to his last

debted

will and

the estate of the

to

upon

persons

the subscribers

Peter Anderson,

the late

to

make

naving

claims,

to

were

of this
All

testnmfnt.

said

payment

Peter
without

present

LEVI

MAKER,

SHOE

premise*

of the

Honolulu, Feb. 1,

appointed
place, ex-.
persons

in-

Anderson, are
delay, and all

them for

payment
MAINUNU,

CHAMBERLAIN, or
JOHN G. MUNI*.

1845.

Chapel, Honolulu.
SHOES

REPAIRED AT

SHORT

For

NOTICE.

tf

apply.

A

need

febl

T the

r *-

■

Mr.

neatly

MILITARY

GOODS,—Pen
consisting

of

For sale

by

C.

BREWER

fc CO.

study
E.

H.

bound.

of the

3tFl.

Sale,

Seamen's

Chaplain,
of the

Boardman, Vol. 11,

Price

Inez.
Swords,

Belts, Sashes, Epaulettes, Capo, Buttons, Spurs

'audLac*.

25th

Sale,

1845.

15,

hereby given

WRimiT,

1845.

FIIIIREE Cases of the above,
Oars.

about

receiv-

WantsJd,—Two journeymen—ietotallerfonl&gt;

X

C.

port

ond
will

Sugar, 70 bbls Salmon, 30 do Tobacco, 30
Sperm Candles, 150 hoxes family Soap, No. 1,10

boxes

nnd

by

Friend,

£2.
ALSO

At the

Aftftft

above

do

Diggers,

4UOU

the

coal, 4000 feet Oars, 6000 Lathes. M
Matting, 20 kegs Nails, 300lbsColfee,

sea

Painting,

thankfully

punctually
V

Eeb.

for

Loaf

cases

AITD FIELD,

BOOT AND

BOOTS

Locks,

Drawing

1.

BEDFORD.

to

Bridle

Feb

Ton Sugar, 80 Cords F. Wood.

~j7~m7 stone,

Sheath

h-irea-s

Hour—6

Ship "'lnez," (coppered
co PPer
fistened) dipt. Knox,

For

SIX
Rolls

Jan.

Honolulu,

dozen Iron lions. 20 do Trunk

do

platen—3

varnish—3o do

bright

and

men

bunting-—4

crates

For freight or passage, apFebruary.
Fl.
2t
ply toC. BREWER 3c CO.

Agent.

under the firm &lt;»f

M

GP.IM2S,

Nail.-,, 29

cases

colr'd

hoops—2

blue

do brown

tickings—3

dn

iron

and hollow

brown cotton—

4t

■"•

JJrWh.

called

cut

ware

cotton—4 do

rXIIIE

O.

2
a

SAMI'EL

&amp;

tons

NEW

_C&gt;n»

Notice.

entered into

ISRAEL

3.

hard

boxe3 loaf rugir.

of Nelson

U.S.Com

Copartnership
•

ed und

dii\ Kegs

Inez.

8-4—3

carpeting
thread—l

barrels

FOR

estate

Acting

WRIGHT

for Sale,

do

Fcbl.

C. BREWER &lt;V CO.

do—l 3do blue

cotton

—7

billet

and those
having claims upon
pnvnient;
said estate lo forward them for settlement at this office
WM. HOOPER,

solicit

Good*

by

gumbroons—3 bales

cane

I.

Anchor*.

assorted rrinis—s bales

cases

drills—2

immediate

for the

I%'cw

and for sale

blouched

cases

hoys

BREW-

&amp; CO.

JUST
the following:—l9packages
10

C.

by

Feb

and

C. BREWER

by

sale

5t

ware—30

gratuitous distribu-

men.

for

GOODS,—Per

Feb. 15, 1815. J

to the

irate-

($4B) from
England; #32 to be

the benoSt of the

ronviiniig jjjilA

tion of Bibles

Chaplain would

adjusted.

U. S. Commercial Agekcy, )

of 8 ounces
nf

Hoiie,

repairing.—

and

8t

Cables

Tons

—

Pumps,

boots aud shoes—12

'

3t
A

watch

silvered

1845.

co.

sale

FOR

NOTICE.

18 it.os,

Tahiti.

Sydnia.vii

TWO
ER

Pumps

Plaster,

persons
ALL
Hall,deceased, intestate,are

caigo oil and
ed from wreck of //older Borden.

10

Anchor,

small

case

tic

Jan.

Wooden

Chain

Stoughten's Elixer, Nerve and Bone
Spts. Lavender, Castor Oil, Lancet... Spice
1

Honolulu,

N. B. 2*oo.

9, brig Delaware, Poll,

Powder—2

Medicines, Inc.

Oliver's

indebted

Feb.7,B.sch Will Watch,

15,

—

4 dozen wooden

Also,—A large variety

New

SAILED.

kegs

chairs.

on

Bremen, Gerker, Bremen,

Honolulu, Ouhu,

~PUMFS.

boxes Codfish—4o

and

to fine

paid

Glasses

timber,
Boots,

wb; Friends,

N. L.

attention

ACCURATE

GIVEN.

Sextant and Quadrant

Oak

Printed Silk

Balsam,

MAKER,

Jewelry, Watchei

AND

REPAIRED

RATES

Particular

of

assortment

CHRONOMETERS

wood saws with frame*,
pairs Silver plaited candlesticks,
superior snufl,

liniment.

Spoke

CHRONOMETER

HASforsnlc
Clocks, ttc.

scuppers,

Pump,
do, (lead pipe)

received

cy

Sept.

AND
an

W'M.

Zealand 21st of

of Bag

WATCH

pounds Ising-glass,

Bitters,

L.

Feb.

gee

-

Broadcloth,

artiCopal Varnish, 8 Counter Scales, (a superior
clo) 1 bale, 60 gro Corks, I Horse Cart, 1 Harness, 3
Ponpairs Humes, 20 barrels Carolina Rico, 20 pieces

Toll,Sag //arbor.Glover,
m05,1200 whale,
inside for repairs, copper and sheathing oif on
Left N-w

MP;o»J Pro Prie,ora

lons

16

aide.

Znland

large

Cubcbs,
sp.

14, F.lizn, Havre,
Wm. C. Nye, New London.

coniit

T

FW.THO

Pulminary Balsam,VegetablePills,

Feb.

Wm.

do

One chain Ciible

the

houseV

January, 15,1845.

Saxony,

—ALSO

whale.
Feb. 2, Am. whale

Black

1

Rocking

la-

Punts,

Chalk,

2Ox Yokes—lo

ARRIVED.

most

Jackets,

do

3 dozen

Bremen.

Jan.

Jackets,

S Jars

Frigships, Canada, William

Am. whale

whale

United

Shirrs,
Pants,

do

5

5

tho

on

Jan. 1,1845.

~ldAWsTos

2dozen

Adolphc,

States, England,

advanced

If

Mousline dc Lame,

do

8

the I'ni'ed

be

HONOLULU.

do

do

1 Iron

ships Israel, Braganzs, Gold Hunter,
J/anOvamn,Crown Princess. Bremen, GusFrench while
American merchant
ships.

6

tave.

)

on

vor-ible terms.

Kihei's,

do

Printed

do

1 wooden

Am. whale

Fanny,

or

Wanted, Hills

Saucers,

Cotton

piece Super

5

VESSELS

&gt;

Johnson.

Sic. for which
money will

do,

do

do

3r&gt;

to

N. B.

Chambets,
lias ins.

and

100 Brown Linen

sea-faring community ]

Port or

Marshall,

Francis

Hats,

covered

177

such

be of interest

may

1.

Brewer,!

Ewers and

do

438

this port

MERCHANTS,

HONOLULU, OAIiU, H.
Charles

ildkfs, (large)

Bodspreads,

do Dlue

480 stout Blue

requested to

close

to

reserve

viz:

Quills. 9-4 to 13-4,
Curtain Slut)',

Marseilles Bed

c-ise

l&gt;o do 100 dozen Cotton

ac-

One

and officers of vessels

without

&amp; CO.

COMMISSION

110 do BufTand White (iround

Two do Beaver

[Masters

sold

BREWER

GENERAL

J. F. It.

hiving been discharged from Americ in
F.ver since the or
ll.inntb.il, in Vlay 1844

g.iniuuion ol

CO

C.

store of C CREW-

consignment, the following articles,

year,

ship

at

3d. at the

Isl inda has been less

i lie

on

(February,'

rUIEXH.

same

places,

"Notes

nn the

of the Sandwich
sions, ate. Sec,

lie.Esq
per

Single

dozen.

copy

$1,00;S

Commerce,

Islands, by

R* C.

Mis-

Wylcopies,#2,9o,and £7,09

�</text>
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                    <text>FRIEND.

THE
SEMIMONTHLY JOURNAL,

A

111.

Vol.

DEVOTED

O VIH

HOYOMJLtT,

I.

s.

.

MARINE

SEAMEN,

TEMPERANCE,

TO

INTELLIGENCE.

GENERAL

1. IB4S.

%XV

FEBRI

AND

111.

\c.

17

FRIEND,

THE

Published
men's

and

(usually)

will be issued

month,

C. Damon, Sea-

Samuel

edited by

Chaplain,

15th of every

SEAMEN,

AND

TEMPERANCE

OF

each number

on

the let and

containing8

pages.

TERMS.

P-S"

One copy per annum,
Two

"

copies,
"

«.""

"

'•""

«•

7,U0
'«.«&gt;

Three
Fi.

•&lt;

B
"

"

Ten

study

lowing

for

and donations

Subscriptions
at the

-

•

of the Seamen's

the Friend

received

Chaplain, or by

the fol-

agents-

Mr. E. H. Boardman,

Honolulu;

fleimen's Chaplain, Lnhaina;

and the American Missionaries

Kauai;

L.

Rev.

Andrews,

Mr. Burnham.

Koloa,

throughout

the

Islands.

ADVERTISEMENT?.
Terms.—One

2

less,

2 insertions.

square,

insertion.

additional

cents for every
or

and

insertions, #1,76,

additional

insertion

37

$2,25,

yearly advertising,

For

and

50

half square

One

1-2 cents for every
not

ex-

ceedingone column, $50.

POETRY.
AMERICAN

i»UN'G

AT

TUB

DEDICATION

ERECTED

And here

We've

Thy

homage

our

seen

thy

raise,

pay.

sweep.

rose

We've
That

on

hung

mountain

depths,

waves,

brinks of dread

on

ties in the
ceeded

We've sunk in ocean's fearful

abyss,

ed
Then from the

deep

raging

winds

raging

winds

At his

Almighty

we

call'd

on

God,

were

hushed

a

to

sleep,

perils o'er,

With joy
Here let

we

us

ship

at

rest,

tread these oourts;

raise

our

Were God himself

And when again

songs

of

praise,"

resorts.

we

spread

hope

success

seen

the

to

of

our

tails,

gospel's joyful light,

from pole

to

pole.

many

city

the

was

to

suc-

Chap-

continued

Port,

until

1837,

"

"we have

of

Marseilles,

also in that

at

of

discouragements,
sown, and

weeping,

it has

to

hope

not

city

seamen.

Havre,

This

is

the

supported

a

much expense, and

has been

his

N. Saw-

was

the friends and patrons

cause.

at

to

Ely proceed-

benefit

of Mr. Sawtell

Havre,

reason

Sea-

Chap-

reads the report of the A. S. F.

for

at

that

establishing

for

the seamen's

year,"

He

Rev. Mr.

The

Chaplaincy

ciety

first

the Rev. E.

supplied by

immediately

lain

And o'er the billows roll;

We'll bear the

ol

the

who

Ely,

sway.

our

American

August.

seamen at

truly encouraging

Till

of

summer

but much

though
been

that it is

now

So-

Chap-

through

good

perhaps

lost, fbr

fifth

we

seed
sown

havei

and

vicinity

|which

afforded

|passed
were

and

more

the

apparent

£170 7s 9d,

of

labors of

appreciated by

Havre,

at

a

ing

accommodations

much

larger

congregation

a

hearers.

A

ry it into

plan

Their

execution

would

not less than $10,000.
amount

be raised?

pose the

To

and

single-minded
on

of

an

During

that

$13,055,55,

an

pres-

on

period

400

to car-

amount
this

this pur-

visited the
1840

years

zeal and

He left Ha-

IP4O,

the

which

seat-

or

shall

untiring

February,

sumed his labors there

sum

the

perseverance.

the 25th of

1841.

how

accomplish

duriug

and 1841, labored with

3
but

require

But

Chaplain, Mr. Sawtell,

United States,

vre

than

more

projected,

was

more

houso

conveniently

not

of

and resi-

became

for worship should be erected.
ent

As years

Chaplain

a

seamen

necessity

that

of the

in London

collecting

timely relief.

the

Sawtell

obtaining

much embarrass-

amount

most

and

on,

more

dents

the

of

the affairs

which became

to

Mr

1837,

purpose

He succeeded in

established ed.

1834, by the second
Mr.

in 1836.

The

was

S. Mines entered upon his du-

Rev.

was

with/ the

stay;

to

the
and

month of

labor among

place

by

Society,

in Oct.

the

lain,

tell,

yawned like watery graves.

in 1832,

Rev. F.

lain,

deep;

to

waves

Hrtvre,

men's Friend

Chaplaincy,

GRACE, FRANCE.
for Seamen

chaplaincy

A

IAt

works upon (lie sea,

wonders in Ihe

O'er raging

I

the

HAVRE funds for earring forward

CHAPLAINCY AT

DE
we

When thou did'st loose the stormy winds,

Then

SEAMEN'S

ami air obey;

sea

This humble house of prayer

Our

GR/CE, FRANCE.

IS-W.

D.

visited London for the

Earth,

The

HAVRE DE

During

FRIEND.

SEAMEN'S

To thee, O God! whose awful voice

The

A.

SEAMEN'S

OF THE

HAVRE.

CHAPEL,

CHAPEL,

SEAMEN'S

HYMN.

and

13th of

re-

May,

he raised the

suppoited

springing up." Chaplaincy during his absence, paid

tho

hisown

�18

THE
and

salary

tion of such
short
upon

in

was

the

to

the

of

worship

Holy Spirit.

nor

God,

and

It

is

gladness

a

that

are

Since

Chaplain,

Mr. Sawtell, has

one

of the

Society

that

time

Secretaries

in the

United

of

eign Evangelical Society,"
erting

a

to

revive

ot

joy

upon the
in

the

Reverend

appointed

a most

important

the

and

spirit

relating

interestiag

Restoration,

A. D

18-20,

21,000

1834, including Foreign,

30,000

"

"

vis-

many

of

SUGGESTIONS
APPROVED

now ex-

lending

pears that

shipping

notwithstanding

uation of the port

this year

of

224

only

ton-

particularly

with the United States, whence

ceived,

port

the favorable sit-

decreased,

have

re-

of the

to-

we

vessels,

In

Ist.

the

of Havre, the total

has

engaged

nage

at

annexed statement, it
ap-

damage

the

French

ship

nexion with
that

thirteen

not

been

interesting
the

ports of necessity,

three thousand

in

ican christian's

In

2d.

N.

the

annually

seamen

to

every

vis-

How
Amer-

value of
vessel,*
estimated

or

TONS.

3d.

SHIPS

1844.

must

repairs
be put

the

there

80

3

N. Orleans,

76

35,20° Havana,

31

15,800

Mobile,

1

Savannah,

&gt;

32

11,000

II

4,900

sundry

U.

59

23,500

and

her

into

of

of

putting

on

this

States,

purcop-

West,

ports of

United

omit

re-

suit-

a

expense
In places

cases.

tor

re-

full

opportunities

not

all,

at

in order

the

the

at

in other

are

vessel,

getting

repairing
as

it

States,

when

is

recommended

until

arrival

ports of

Europe

expense

the considerable

S. ports,

a

of

temporary

per, without great expense, as at Key
and most of the southern

tho

Charleston, )

not

its end these

at

conveniences

or

New York,

sundry U. S. ports,

the

on

fully allowed,

for

port

made

expense,

voyage:

may be made after

48,500

Charleston,

ves-

if

beginning

be

cannot

pairs

32,200 For

10,800

of

place

will be

68

27

the

TONS.

,50

sugges-

without

practicable

pairs
able

NO.

these

of disaster, the vessel

extraordinary

complete

to

where
CLEARED.

to

the agei.ts for

valued in her insurance,

as

at

If full

without

or

111

1,600

su-

voyage from the United Slates.

heart!

evan-

4

and

exceeding three-fourths

aggregate, gross expenditure

York,

Mobile,

been drawn

annexed, many

if

repaired

average, say

Orleans,

Savannah,

re-

that

will be obviated.
case

every

be

must

port from the United States.
the field

difficulties,

chasing,

•

insurance,

have

to

list of whom is

a

conves-

by resorting

Underwriters,

'rom New

their

much dif-

so

time occurred in

to

By conforming

and

most

in

1841.

NO.

vessels and

to

occasioning

guidance of ship-masters

pal.cities.
tions,
sels,

here.

remark,
the

on

making

men,

this

to

two

two or

number of American

have,

they

during
than

more

vessels constructed

large

It may be

sels,

that

owners,

years, there have

1841.

ENTERED.

disasters

cargoes,

following suggestions

up for the

UNDERWRI-

YORK.

their averages and

to

OF SHIPS.

percargoes, and have met the approbation of
tonnage of about 100,000; and so generally dull and unpromising are affairs with the Merchants' Underwriters of the princi-

of the American Shipping of the port of Havre, for three
years preceding

SHIPS

NEW

has from time

ficulty
lation

OF

their

MASTERS

MERCHANTS'

of

case

to

into

putting

repairs
Review

TO

THE

tal

important therefore
a

BT

TERB

the

19,000

the

to

to

1730

7,000

to

At the

of Mr.

successor

of Havre in A. D.

population

Havre.

at

shipping annually

be

may

American

iting

of

Cronstadt, Russia,

statistics

of American

Havre.—By

nearly

"The For-

which fa

as

The

mounted

readers:—

three
that

been

influenco

powerful

fostering hand

spirit

States,

our

at

the

Chapel

following

iting that port,

the
report the

worshiping

Chapel.

day in

unfeigned
to

to

and

in that port

able

of God's

residents

and

of

source

new

a

The

in the

amount

"

saint,

Father, Son,

Chaplain

officiating

now

Adams, formerly

"on

devout idolater, but
the

in

report

dead

no

a new era

we

gracious outporing
seamen

of

a

solemnly

was

American

(February,

throughout Catholic

The Rev. E. E.

Sawtell,

entered

the

Protestantism

gelical

Europe.

is

erec-

completed
to

It was, indeed,

Havre, and marked
France."

last,

worship

devoted relic,

of Ha-

for 184.3,

Society

the 27th of November

a

Chapel,

city

was

according

o( the American S. F.

of

obtaioed after

the work

when

the fall of 1842, and

nor

the

earnest, and the house

dedicated

sum

erecting

suitable for the

building,

a

delay,

of

suitable Seamen's

worship of Qod, in

A lot of ground

vre.

left the

grand'object

convenient and
for the

and

expenses,

for the

$10,000

TftlfcND.

the

same

can

at some

the U.

or

be

to

of

done

more

cheaply.
Total,

260

114,000

Total,

242

4th.

108,000

If the

spars

rigging injured,
1842.

'rom New York,

1842.

54

27,200 For New York,

N. Orleans,

92

46,000

N.

Mobile,

33

14,500

Mobile,

12

5,000

53

19,500

Charleston,
L

1.

pedient

73

39,500

ready ought

40

16,000

S. ports

Total,

20

9,800

Charleston, )
sundry U.

264

122,000

at

55

23,000

Total,

243

116,000

pairs
all

York,

Orleans,

Mobile,

Savannah,
Charleston,
S.

ports,

1843.

50

25,400 For New York,

90

42,500

N.

34

13,600

Mobile,

i

12

4,800

Savannah,

&gt;

42

15,900

13

5,800

Orleans,

resorted

S.

841

108,000

Total,

may then

always

74

37,000

91

45,500

done

be

extent

more or

completely.

delay
of

is
to

until arrival

port whero

made with

without

ex-

seaman

to, in order

serve

the

The

re-

advantage

of the

voyage,

expenditure,

to
or

which

less to the discredit of
the

43

17,200

a

only

great

injury
33

13,300

241

113,000

In

sth

no case

ought the cargo

laden without the clearest
not

ports,

be

or
re-

ship-master.

Charleston, )
sundiy U.

can

sails

readily

practised

considerable

cxtravigant

*

Total,

a

injured articles

parties,

an

is

sundry U.

be

to

be

great expense, every

which

such

some

repairs

S. ports,

1843.

N.

with

make the

)

Savannah,

—

'rom New

without

or

37,500

or

sprung,

cannot

'

Savannah,

sundry

Orleans,

placed,
75

are

and

expensive,

very

delay,

to

This

third for

the

is

and is

cargo.

one

new.

but

always

apt to end
The

half

be

to

in

is

creates

serious

intelligent

after

un-

It

necessity.

ship- i

deducting nna

�is concluded

to

the

charge of commission
merely discharging, storing

on

as

substantial

no

in

curred, and

and

reloading,

charge of

a

Should
a

an

and

unreasonable

in

ford,

instances,

most

It is

remuneration.
suitable

under

ship

of the

fall into

an

without

vices, will be

commission

a

ges
will be obvious
It is

6th.

of

repaii

warrant

surers,

the

to

sale

any

and

ser-

peached,

title

purchaser's

but the

whenever the vessel

can

only

not

the

in-

be im-

can-

It

vessels

stranded

are

the

abandons

ter

In all

cases

the

in

do:

to

so

information,

can

procure

it is his duty
a

impression

this

he

to

and

furnish

senger

nearest

the

to

this

city;

on our coast
a

week,

con-

Wreck
advice
whom
and

required by

The Master's du-

Post

delay

in all

delay

or

New

near

of the

some

the mails

detained

Masters

should

York,

off

only

unworthy

from

lining
or

to

once

to

ascertain

serve

The

to
a

insure

motives,

interested

sometime*

a

friend

master

advices,

despatch,

messenger

to

he

the

by

should

that there will be

in the transmission of his

if necessary
send them by

in

In

obtain money for
where

cases

this should

it

completing

in

the

is

what

For,

prioes.

he

but

resorted to;

most

bring

sold

and be

profit,

of

matter

ed when

no

and

should

principal

will

frequently

tion, which

must

selling

be

must

and

proposed,

heavy

a

the voyage.

to

ruinous

be with

This

examin-

carefully

the

latest

prices

at

be

of-

fered for sale, should be first ascertained

be-

the

of destination of the cargo

place

a

decision

taken—and

is

is

as

cargo

likely

the
to

se-

occa-

In

foreign, and

hove

down,

pairs made,
be

borne

ought
He

or

in

ought

mind,
the

to

for which

he

which his character

He may, if he
advice

gent

measures

have his

faithful

he

own

when

may

to

sight

can,

on

and
rest.

and when

fit,

by him,

own

he may

as

to

the

of his

own

advice

any

named

having

of his

any

justify by

to

from
show

judgment.

above,

n;ust

not

authority,

their orders

Master

duty

to

may

must

er

see

that

disasters

by

misfortunes,

and

the prop-

carefully procure

must

and

protests

is saved,

of what

accounts

He

and of all his

expenditures

should

whethany ballance of money,

er

cause

on account.

he supposes the vessel and cargo to have
to be remitted in the

surest
or

his

to

way,

owners

consignees of vessel

mittance will

12th.

not

consignors
Such

cargo.

of the prop-

owners

loss the
part of their

soonest.

jettison

to

Should it be necessary

should be taken

care

throw overboard the least valuable and

weighty

of it, if time and

parts

permit you

will

cumstances

re-

all affect the insurance,

at

of your cargo,

part

the

or

or

reimburse the

some

to

a

to

most

other

cir-

make the

se-

lection.
13th.

In every disaster, the Master should

careful

be

the

the mode of the disaster and of

of

extent

near

easy

or

sent

should be

Neither the

insurers,

or

to

be

in

case

without them, and

communicating

the

to

they

as

be

the insurer,

nor

fiom

delay

intelligence

most

allow.

opportunities
act,

own-

Duplicates

to.

sent

can

owner

of

injury,

or

damage

consignees,

ers,

it, with all de-

communicate

to

tails, both of

the

want

of

often ruin-

is

ous.

14th.

Merchants in the various consider-

able ports

have

will

be
are

well

only of

not

but their

bility,

Masters

to

culties
out

aid in the

greatly
of

in

Their

advice

difficult course, and

as

most

a

of the wisdom of his

15th.

It

ought

be

to

to

some

Stales,

of the

and

makes the

that

protection

at

present

every

and

known

to

or

loss

all interested

tion of

or

ment

justice

and

of claims for

as

all

are

well

adopt-

of the U.

increasing,
insurers

for

interested in

measure

of the
is

fair-

ship-mas-

now

rapidly

proper

saving

as

measures,

mutually

They thus

from, damage
now

of the

of the

intentions,

principal ports

merchants

each other.

seeing

recom-

them, will of

proof

mode of insurance
ters, that the
ed in

arising

and

protection

resort

evident

ship-master's

of the

ness

home,

all diffi-

honorable ship-master in every

and

itself be the

at

men

smoothing of

mendation will be the safest

upright

respecta-

settlement of claims

the

disaster.

it

resort.

estimation

high

of merchants and commercial
will

to

known

in the

being

un-

advice

whose

to

port,

useful

most

recommended by

been

derwriters of this

or

give good

never

recom-

for

properly

They

adopted.

the

at sea
are

insurers in the promo-

moderation in the settle-

loss, and

the

ship-master

will rapidAs "who faithfully discharges his duty

they may recommend.

having experience, they
but

honest and

and being able

grounds

nre

certificates what
men

reputation

think

first his

the

as

sufficient

advice,

own

judgment confirmed by official
but nothing will dispense

required,

referred

being

and

judgment, getting

Such officers

vessel.

his

on

responsible,

is

determined

are

always

own

rely

they

the voyage should inevitably

case

up

Master

the

doubtful, take any intelli-

is

others which he

be

and

re-

Master is and

of his

Muster

exercise

should

It
the

that

be

to

certain

discharged,
like.

the

to

assume

the vessel

done,

do-

some

Port War-

as

like,

the

be

to

cargo

be

to

judgment,
on

that

or

in

even

persons,

and

In

11th.

They

sion the least loss.
10th.

without

persons

be served in what

to

lie broken

sale of

a

proper,

are

are

them,

that

carefully

see

must

mend,

sent

must

the voyage,

done except

be

be

can

unable otherwise

maybe

interest

an

vessel, erty

the

to

and where the cargo will

cases,

reasonable

be had

can

such vessel

repairs

not

those who advise

and will

(Jjat

so

being

of

case

a

be

that purpose,
re-imbursed by the in-

will be

freight

extra

relief

to

Masters

been abandoned or not,

and the

for

procured

or

vessel,

the

of disaster

vessel,

directly persons or others;
smaller places with hirexercising

senl

are

of intelligence.

cases

hired

are

cargo

ought always

or

can-

insurers.

or

case

any other

by

on

and

allow of com-

to

as

ndvice

if the cargo is saved,

communications

directly themselves,
the

Office,

and instances have occurred of let-

being

ters

at

owners

In any

9th,

ves-

But if this

home of

dens, Surveyors,

for

when

it,

Post

the vessel bo stranded

send him with his

from the

the

salvage charges;

of the sale

postponement
until
applied for,

always

may

relieve

to

rapidly,

munication with the

mestic ports, official

be to communicate with the owners
ty would
underwriters, by sending a special mesor
to

perishing

necessary.

vessel and

the

that he

through

one

in distress.

ship-muster

not

so

Wreck

needful assistance:

all

be done,

Mas-

the

the

necessary
as

freight,

from her

aiid

not

mistaken. order this

is

blaster should keep

Commissioner'when

he

the

to

property, employing

trol of the

and

coast, the

on our

Commissioner, under the
is bound

that when

occurs,

property

and

bottomry,

lection of such

fr-quently

too

deemed

generally expedient.

this is

as

be

alternative

the

be

may

cargo

cargo

be found fore such

can

in the United States.
7th.

sel and

their value

at

and the

advice, certificates

of

cases

like, the

In these and al&lt;

best course,

follows is the

bond the cargo and vessel,

to

as

then

ves-

brought

that

value

and

relieve

made,

either

pledged by

be

freely urgent

a cost to

or

her

vessel:

otherwise

and

vessel,

The

appraised

merchant part of the cargo

and

necessity,

of the

in:

subject

have the

to

always

to

it would have
whole cargo, be accounted for at the price
of destinaon its arrival at its
port

the

three-fourths

over

a

sale,

a

also

so

ship-master.
be borne in mind,

to

to

or

case

sell,

partial,

or

and

mail

large

the vessel shall be

cargo

adopted

to

on

absolute

and

and

every

always

but

nothing

to

sel

compensation

The difference between such char-

allowed.
and

take

of the

neaiest

it is proper

salvage,

surers.

chargeable

justly

have

to

responsibility

for his actual trouble,

In

will

compensation

reasonable

af-

adequate

proper
watch and

to

deduction:

Bth.

general
will

repair,

general

average,

any

the

always

employed

men

car-

storage,

fair and

of the cargo, whose

care

will

a

room

of the
for

proper charge
commission tor

A

or

can

you

store

the entire control

retaining

yourself.
and'a regular
go

business

domanded,

difficulty by hiring

obviate the

nev-

cent.

per

required,

be

sum

be

high commission

and

considered

quarter

a

in-

com-

When allowed it should

one

for

thereby

is

responsibility

most cases

unreasonable.
exceed

ship-

cargo

is
missions for such transactions

er

unload-

the

on

other

stipulate against [ brought

to

a

Post Office
routes.

gain

can

necessary, the

be

should be careful

master

who

When

unloading.

nothing by his
ing

find, and

he may

as

on

good opinion

a

skilful
and should consult such

this subject,
persons

form

generally

will

master

19

fHUND.

THE

1845.)

lose

what

ly

advance

his

and
reputation;
the univerit, will find

character

while he who fails in

he sal interests of commercial

men,

as

well

a*

�20

THE

their

of

Mate

justice,

in

active

exposing

leghorn,

and

Madeira.

John Howard March.

Win

Malta,

Marseilles,

Mslaga,
OF

AGENTS

in

places

Jose A. Binds.

Tuscany,

Winthrop

a

vessels

and

cargoes

commended by

the

in

distress

merchants'

There

Übes, Win. H. \e»ey.
Sweden, Kansoe, for (Jottenburg

re-

under-

W.

Majors.

Frederick Barker.

Smyrna, Turkey,
writers

or the

city

or

n.

vork.

Coast,

and West

Hsllistrron.

be

are

in

wanting

touch of

a

pledge

common

supported

Christianity,

who

however,

some

thought

sense,

Trieste, George Moore.
Venice, Holme k Co.

and is

to

by

Christianity.

to

Fox St Sons.

Plymouth. (Eng.)

agreeable

philosophy,

appeal

an

St.
for

and

sense

Slrachan.

Because the

pledge?

self-preservative,

Daniel C. Croxall.

Win.

the

sign

ntan

is

Andrews.

LouisTinelli.

Oporto,

LIST

(February,

THIfcND.

philosophy
will

they

yet

would

self-love,
and

not

common

regard

to

their

sign

not

—

mation and

advice,

writer* greatly

will

find

calling on them

their claims

on

for infor-

F.AST

Batavia, (Java,)

disembarrassed.

STATES OF

and

&lt;

'heraw,

,

David S.

of Good

WHY SHOULD A

Key West, F A Browne.
Lewes, Delaware, Henry F. Rodney,

James G.

Graham,

firm

Jr.

is

Robert

Crabtree,

Jr.

Mars.'*. Fa., Robert Lyon.
St. Joseph's, Fa., and vicinity. Henry Leslie.
Wilmington, N. C. Robert W. Brown.

Bermuda,
er, Daniel

Hamilton

R-

J.

Tucker.Henry

Bermuda,St. Goorgs, John
Halifax, F S., Croighton (c
Nassau, Bahamas,
Port
St.

N

Hood

End,

Thos.

R. Tuck-

D.

have
the

first

Tremain,

MAIN.

B.

W. Waldron,
Tyng
Porto Rico, Guayams, Brian O'Hnra.
Ponce, Baasanta. Mitchell, It Co.
Po.
Do.

Croix,
-inidtid,

I:.

jrks'

Charles

St.

Thomas,

John's,

S.

Mason,

and Windward

and

vicinity,

firm Mason fc Co.
William P. Fur-

Islands,

David

(Island,) Nicholas

Rogers.

was

and southern

side

i-rnambuco. Daniel

P. Austin,

ampico and ('oast,

James

Lewis Stanislaus

of the

River

dc la

tle Paul

flesh,

Bristol, (Eng.)

Cork,

vicinity, Francis Ogden.

Murphy.

not,

are

the

wine,

the

It

Apos-

good neither to

nor

thing

any

stumbleth,
Romans,

man

of others.

good

It is

14:21.

who refuse

is

or

assert

pledge

eat

or

There

is

sign

to

are

because

that the total abstinence
to

strict;

too

such

mend consideration of the

Paley,

more

ny

a

would

following
in

com-

remarks

his

Moral

the

of abstemiousness

to occur

stricter

tenacious

we

the

grow

will abstain rather

perpetually;

rile

or

John

it

Whitten.

�

cise
it Sons.

who would

rule,

the

tive:

same

not

the

is,

it; and

ma-

than break his

easily be brought

inorlificulion

Spregue.
Cuthbert.

R, &lt;i.

of

to

viper in

and

gives

S.

or

to

from higher

exer-

mo-

I.

Mis.

attacked

from

Brandywine,

the

of the

conduct

Missionaries is

India,

of

letter

a

dated

25, 1844, addressed
will show that

na,

ting

the

solved, however,
and

sleep;
with

as

not

them for

a

to

far

could

on

can

get

a

of

of

re-

to

having

secular

which
which

generally.
been

large-

one

interests,

who

was

was

his

ol

advanc-

were

Islands;

of his

asking

using their religious

by

the

of

and

of Missions

recollect,

copy

am

charges

trade ofAmerica,

once

I

as

opportunity

of the

book written

a

sionary

I

matter

Missionaries, I

promote

favoring the
ed in

trade,

set-

Island

charges

in

ly engaged
influence

"

brought against them,

I think these

to

eager

communication

an

cause

Chi-

in

refutation

the

endanger

in

upon

allow the

are

Sandwich

the

wish you wouldtake

following

are

correct.

to

you

some

resolved

are

mind

public

The

Serampore, May

gentleman

to a

while

others

misrepresent,

Island

grossly misrepresented

most

in that quarter of the world.
extract

learn

we

Sandwich

a

Mis.

name

as

Simpson; if I

book, I would

it

senc

you, &amp;c."

With the above extract before
us, the

igin of the misrepresentations
But

the

to

thentic
can

facts, gleaned

sources.

Baptist

It

Missionary

Chinese Mission

at

and

went

forts

to

to

from

appears

various

that

and

collect funds for

a

left

or-

apparent!

an

au-

Ameri-

connected with

Ningpo,

Calcutta,

is

the

his station

there

Medical

made ef-

Hospital

"

The

at

principle

here

Ireland generally, Cli . correct, and when

1 the

belong

the

warm

gets

ac-

there lies the

hug

not

be

even

mortal bite.

the

that

are

extraordinary occasions, and

to

until

bosom,

a

drunkenness:

on

or

India.—From letters and papers received

by

to

yield

man

we

found

chapter

resolutions

Indefinite
to

in tho

that you do

have been

where-

is offended

or

no

then the

Every

principle that

"

in

are

Horatio

Beasl»y.
tndonderry,and Coast

gnw.it.

they

argument

"

we

others,

they

not

may

themselves, yet

,_

W. Dabney.
Fsyal,
l'.lmonth, (Rat-) William Broad

I

think

whereas

Charles

Hav,e,

reasons

the minds ol

upon

they,

extraordinary occasions

Kroon.

Dodge.

Cowes. Isles of Wight. WiUiam
Dublin,George Mcßride.

Gibraltar,
11 .in,burn,

drink

brother

however,

some

apt

Barcelona, Spain, Joseph Bonus.
Constantinople, Nicholas RarTaety.
John

safety

own

Such

nature; this

this latter

Philosophy,

Jollie.

and

for

declared,

nor

by thy

"

lire men, Joanna

A

Self preservation

inflence

Grant that

of Archdeacon

Hepburn,
llargous.

EUROPE, ETC.
Antwerp, George
Amsterdam,Henry Ernest

no

sign

to

upon

they

Cruz,

ab-

with.'"

MEXICO.

Edward Dorr,
la,
lonte Video, Robert M. Hamilton,

Vera

effects.
of

law

made weak."

and Jno. Arthur.

SOUTH AMERICA AND

Ayres,

usually

Moraohi.

Island, Thomas Wynne

uenos

cer-

cannot

other argument shouldoperate.

ought

Eldridge.
Bridgetown, Barbadoea, Nicholas

St.

a

in numberless instances with

because, say

many,

danger."

Havana, Cuba,

if I

cannot

of others.

good

however, has

INDIA ISLANDS ANU SPANISH

Antigua, Richard

"

sign for his

should

salutary

most

I

signing,

operated

the

is

Fisher,

John, N. li., Thomas Leavitt.

WEST

by

who

community,
remark,

it to

they

to

that

Take care, reader, if you

Reputation

asked

daily

creature;

honest

our

is,

men

THE

Tucker.

T.

Grime.

John Storr.

S, John

the

hold,

we

man,

AMERICA, ETC.

and West

the

it

to

and for the
N.

MAN SIGN

question

in

stain without

St.

BRITISH PORTS IN

1845.

Soul-

append
Wm

a

tain class

ier, Jr. St Co.

Savannah, George

you

influence;
such

to

confess this

to

class,

your

in

This

good

the

secret.

PLEDGE?

Lubec, Maine, Andrew King.
Mobile.
Alabama, C. C. Hazard, D. Fowler,
Newport, R. Island, Nath. S. Kuggles.

regard

knowledge

February I,

HoNOLULcf

Darrow.

Georgetown, S. Carolina, Benjamin King.
Galena, Illinois, Thomas Melville.

in

willing

THE FRIEND.

John

KiK.i~ott.
Egg Harbour,
Jersey,
I'.dgartown, Maw. and vicinity, Charles L.

Norfolk, Va.,

Chase-

Hope, Isaac

love

that

&lt; iiutliaui. Cape Cod, Isaac Lewis.
Cleveland, Ohio, Joseph I. Weathorly.

N.

Darling, firm,

Singapore, Joseph Bulistier.

llarlet).
Msltherson.

Carolina, M. P.

C.

vicinity,

k Co.

Shorter, Traver

Carolina,

9.

&lt; 'liar lesion. S.

its

Canton, Russell, Sturgis St Co.
Manilla, Russell St Sturgis.

AMERICA.

Apalachnoola,Fa.. William G.Porter.
Columbus, Geo

opinion

Strieker St Co.

Pains,

Capetown, Cape
UNITED

ETC.

INDIES,

the Under-

their

give

names or

Mutenof vessels in distress

laid

down,

we

believe

Ningpo.

writer

carried out, will result ini in the

total absiike.nce fledge.

Why

shouldI

by
'*

the

While engaged
name

of

Englishman,"

Calcutta,

in this

work,

a

Alexander, appeared
a

paper published

and endeavored

to

in

frustrate the ef.

�The

from China.

the

from

famous

of his

weapons

Sandwich

drawn from the

were

Missionary

Baptist

American

of the

forts

book

warfare

Islands,

or

the Sandwich Island

Mission,

banks of the
upon the

siding

that it

now

foreign community

the

among

progress

21

i?ftl£Nli

THI.

1845.)

-

I*,

by Mr. Al-

written

Queen Pomare

Encampment

Ganges.

Consul

not

ed,
"

do

we

hesitate

not

of R. C.

Notes

Her B. Ms.

Let these

Simpson.

meet

have

An

Hong Kong, China,

tioned

"

subject.)

liberty of urging
up

and attested without

We

rejoice

editor and
has
"

to

could

en

upon

"

for

upon

opposition

to

Island

as

of

Friend

judicious

more

express

to

cause,

world.

the

in

India,

viewed in

ere

repub-

we

relates

toe

a

correct

cannot

so

much time

the
investigation of

of

perused
the sub-

"but

that
joy and satisfaction

to

produce, would

state

River,

this

and

Mission-

part

of the

the Missiona-

better

controversy

state,

sel

by

name

by the

er,
on

meet

shipped

and anoth-

Inez,

ship

According

now

harbor.

only

75 barrels of oil had been saved.

Panama

Our

Fall

to

Holder

River,

the

Borden

was

the

respecting

without

wise

men

and

king,

and

right

other

so:

and

word

place

even

no

listen

And
the

people

in

land;

appoint-

which you

officers,

to

that

you

evils of

to me

you may

those

things

you, that

to

flag, my land, and

my

rehoist

and

the command

the

of

proper flag,
king, 1

your

confidence in what you say,

to

now

true

to

restore

to

erecting

people's

my

make known

agreeably

me

still

are

you

upon you; and

property,

to

land.

the

my

that

thought,

quietly

restore

know I throw all

until you

my

do.

to

this

alto

barracks

building

judges

I write

restore

commands of your

the

and you interfere with my

no

wisdom, and

to

you

my land and

forts upon

Dv Pe-

being commanded

house and
my
my flag, my
But
have not done
you

board the Inez.

on

and

regard

master, the

can

belonged

where the

port

same

in

accounts

last

to

would

and hit

French

to me,

thought, and

I
you

my

personal

my

all said that

have

commanded

government

by the

one

this

Hamilton,

taken

Hamilton, shipped

board the merchant

informant is

ves-

board the Amer-

on

of John

name

New

becauae

of the

king

injustice,

have

they

have

ship Daniel Webster,

ican whale

Fall

government,

my

tit Thouars acted without
and with

of Dv Petit

proceedings

please him,

great

counsellors,

several of ing

war,

Tahiti;

to

wise

the

qI

counsellors have

wise

my land,

not

The

his

King

that the

informed

seizing

in

North obstinate in

a

crew were

of

man

whom found their way

of Blake,

attempt-

Smith,
Jack,

13 of the

French

a

in

did

flag

Three

McDaniel,

and

cut

were

Four days after the

wrecked,

was

of the

lost

were

seaman,

American Indian.

away

morning

boatsteerer,

a

York

heavy

struck.

she

soon as

viz—Daniel

land,

to

or

you,

may you

be

and

kept

saved by

God."
POMARE.

(Signed)

owned.

Hannah

The American Brig

~"

30th

The

pirates

a

The

to

are

Whampoa.

so

far

are

as

Hannah

are more

all

put

lost, probably

on

The

appears

worthy of mention.

her

daring than

fighting

have

can

no

Capt. Cheever

We learn that

will be recollected that

since.
look

place.

had

the

landed

a

before

voyage

eighteen

Nth

January

by the Cape of Good

by
It

the

run

days.

in 65 1-2

same route

twenty

two

shortest paastge

from Lima

days,

Her

ev-

accom-

previous voy-

occupied nine months
or

four

days longer.—

The wife of the Rev. J, L.
tist

Missionary

at

Shuck, Bap-

Hong Kong,

died about

the first of Dec.

Capt. Engle,
10.
as

master of the American bark

died in China about

He will be

having

November

remembered at the Islands

commanded the

American

ship

Hopewell, Philadelphia.

Mr. S. W. Williams,
few months the
American B. C. F.
the piracy

was

Hong Kong Register.

escap-

locker.

days,

The

Major Low left this

board the Hannah only

He

plished

the
age by

con-

be.

in 71

made.

in

usu-

amount

Capt. Cheever escaped
in the bread

on

proceeded

Valparaiso,

concealing himself

port

er

way and

ed unhurt."

on

paraiso

and

pirates

merchant vessels
to

days, having left this

arrived
a

she
Hope to New York, in 95 days, where
took in a new cargo and sailed
discharged,
outside the
■ 20th May, returning by Cape Horn to Valher chief

was

in

in nine months and

globe

She

completed

waa

arrived from Ma-

had

round the

last.

overboard

driven

brig

neighborhood

al, and vessels
The

miles

few days before, and

the river

dition

letter dated

nights since;

seamen

were

or

drowned.

up

four

few

a

three

Tigris,

jumped,

a

1844.

November,

brig Hannah, Capt. Cheever,

robbed by
Bocca

nilla

from

firates. —Extract

by

Macao,

hat

hereon Saturday,
attack-

which

Natches,

China.—The

officer and
and

number of

shall be

No document which

ries could

peculiar

extra

connection,

heartfelt

as

tak-

hope,

Notet have been

has devoted

Wyllie

attention

We

as

disapproved of
Thouars

was

very

a

Masts

foul.

ship's company

of the

this

In this
our

an ar-

Temperance

1844.

will be

almost

Mission

a

became

she

Both anchors drag-

1844.

August,

and

the

on

Domini-

La

or

Islands;

been

Wnile house and

sperm.

the wind and

by

taken

have

the French and

the

Mis-

Islands, mostly

When the

think,

we

lOth of

Hivaoa,

at

Cum-

having

the

speak

to

have observed

reading community

light.

ary

in

for December

the Friend

Mr.

we

January

lished in In lia.

ject,

of

all

o'clock,

sea, about 4

away

oil, nearly

Marquesan

of the

driven ashore

ged

out,

Raiatea, Oct.

To commodore Bruat, See, &amp;.C.

I

wreck-

Preston

Capt.

months

anchor,

at

The

into

the Sandwich

ttiis, Mr. Wyllie't

the

in

propriety

bearing

ready

fallen

1844,

the

from

Seamen,"

by

it

cause

properly signed

it

ca,

ed

have

August,

ticle

the

In the Calcutta Christian Observer

hands.
for

have

now

reputation

Their

not

of

brethren of the

to the Sandwich

regard

sionaries.

out

the Friend of India,

is

and

Englishman,"

truth in

in

that Mr. Marshman,

learn

columns

his

and

delay,"

proprietor of

opened

shamed

document,

some

date

men-

circulated

them the

subject, and sending

the

above

at

I would take the

good

upon

we

ours,

31

Panama

ship

Panama,

was

one

ing

of

do themselves and

to

of Missions great

drawing

much

Mission

Island

power

Sandwich

falsehoods

be

to

The

every other country.

their

the

to

These

continue

India, although pretty

Sandwich

present

writes, under

thus

(referring

1844,

imputation*

at

of old Scotia

sons

correspondent

esteemed

of Nov.

the

the result.

respecting

fears

no

concern-

field of controversy, and

the

upon

lying

fellow countryman of

a

mings,

}

the

at

ed.—The

whale

950 barrels of

anti-

an

of his book

Wyllie, Esq."

also

was

recommend

to

Consul

pro

who is

Islands,
Mr.

As

Mission is

the American

as

exhibition

or

misrepresentations

the

to

far

so

show that

to

not

Mr. A. Simpson

American Missionary!

an

dote

reasoning

much

surely require
of facts

It will

the Sandwich Islands.

at

American

from

Bruat, dated

the Island of

on

letter

a

Governor

to

1844.

"

H. B. M. pro

formerly

Simpson,

exander

of

Tahiti.—Translation

in

r«

printer

sailed for the United States
but expect*

to return.

and

agent of

Missions in

China,

November26th,

�22
The French Commissioner
concluded

treaty, similar,

a

China, ha&lt;

to

report

as

says

that between the TT, S. and China.

to

"Vavy

a

from Hong

Chronicle,

correspondent

Kong,

"Thit

part

and wine

and

ill health, caused

for the

wine-bibbing, and
are

exposed

Much of the

ailments.

can-

ol

account

part by their

if they do

and

ftvers

to

great

on

most

even

beer

samshoo and

take

beer,

Hundreds go home

brandy.

a

those who

drinking part, and

get wine

"

not

go,

yetr

which
the
ed

a

agues,

and
at

printed

the American Mission Press,
Thus another Richmond

annum.

$1 per

to

has entered the

let

field;

one

more

appear

"

I think, there

tix

be

Armstrong,

bearing

Commodore

Jones,

in

Richmonds

the

cade, Monitor

Its

contents

light

to

and

are

if it

active,

directed, and for ourselves,
forward with

pleasure

be
past that may

May

the

ment

in

editor
his

time we

spread

to

only

dewell

looking

are

we

18.

We

is

of

has been

in port 280

At

enrich

re-

on

the

12th of

ture

at

sea

and

will

thence,

The

with

cruise will

the

from

ly honorable to

the United States

future

columns

own

materials of tho

days.

she

491

in

logged,

and noble

ship

log
9th

spirited

was

gal-

every

distinction,

as

and

and

This

respect.

high-

one

the gen-

to

officers

of this

following synopsis

ber

Uuion

holds

Tuesday evenings,
Seamen's
7

o'clock.

The

forms

a

ing.

Foreign

weekly

a

at

Chapel.

Total

meeting

the vestry

Exercises

room

who

cruise

have

we

spectfully requested

to

be obtained

at

the

of the

of

Cape

Battno,

the

at

Cascade

seamen

meet-

are re-

Surgeon. Geo.
Lieut.

Master, R
Ast

study

of

Cascnde may
the

Seamen's

Chaplain.

arrived

and

During

suggestions

commend

to

the

readers among

to

Masters of

of

our

thorough

teami m.

at

Bogardus.

R. W. Jeffert.

Wm. L.
J.

ships,"

columns,

perusal

of

we

our

W.

on

the

station,

C.

«•

was

the first American

that entered the

inner warters,

ship

of

having

war

pass

Whampoa.

ored

at

22d,

1843, the

July
of

ship
7th,

Oahu

Monterey August
ed

in

Leaving
reached

and,
and
28th.

the

after

Gunner, J. W. Pennington.

Carpenter,

the

reached

for

anchor-

15th,

November 29tb,

Wm. Lee.

Master's Mate, C. B. Oliver.
John S. Davis.

The

arrival

and

which

such

intelligence,

dulgence

the

of

the

sailed

Valparaiso September 29th,

•

G. Bell,

May

Sandwich

ship

Murdaugh,

Sail Maker. George Parker.

anch-

vititing

Hawaii,
The

ana

China

Monteiey Bay September

sailed for

port

river,

Mitchell,

John Laurens.

Boatswain, Thomas

««

cd both bars of the Canton

M.

Wm. H.

"

ports

Young,

Wm. Dekoven,

1842.

following

Jo.ni.s,

Mcl.ane,

Thomas

Mcr,

visited, viz:—Macao, Hong Kong,
Manilla and Amoy.
The Con-

were

11. Weaver,

Allen

"

Powell,

Herron,

John P.

the time the Constellation remained
the

M'Laughlin,

Huqu.ni.n,

J. H. Somervili.e,

"

"

22d,

Webb.

Augustus

D. C.

"

leav-

dc

GiLi.Esric,

Clerk, R. L. Parker.

(-iunlluli

Ccicer

Macao March

at

China

islanda

"The

H.

Surgeons, A. F. Lawyer,

'•

Islands

found in another part

A.

Wyman.

H.

Midshipmen,

1842, beat up

February sth,

ing Singapore

Jo.ni.s.

Jones.

A. R.

Secretary,

Janeiro,

and

Boudinott,

R

Bi.acknai.l.

Geo.

"

Singapore;

Frigate

Case,

ap

Marines,

Chaplain,

copy

Whampoa,

attend
of the

and

dc

Ilio

States

Purser, D. M. F. Thornton.

Decem-

Johanna,

Hope,

Penang

pas-

Pkgram,

Wm. E.

"

Good

took

Marchand,

B.

C.

«

1840, and visited

9th,

stellation

Published numbers

B

A. L.

"

from Boston

the. China Sea, touched

part of the exercises of each
residents and

on

commence

of

reading

Abati

Dupont

cruise,
158,000

T. A. Hunt,

R.

Constellation, Commo-

sailed

Kearney,

months

her

sea,

VVm. T. Muse,

■

from the Baltimore American:

dore

at

"

"

nence

days

J

«

the

Constellation —The

the

Norfolk in

four

years,

During

"

420

"

of

at

Commodore, F. A Parker.
Lieutenants,

Cnmo

Cruise

circumnaviga-

Rio dc Janeiro."

at

themselves in it.

distinguished

depar-

been absent from

Commander S. F.

sage in the

the

on

The

ocean.

country,

"The U. S. ship

Hawaiian

three

and twenty-two

"

greatest

our

cruise

a

date of her

Rio, having

Purser's Clerk, P.

Monitor.

Notice.—The

the

her cruise uf

on

and useful

active

most

be remenbered

long

of
of

March, completing

from

Constellation arrived

duys

41

long

be

people

good

Commodore

spirited

20th

tion.

and has sailed

days,

received with marked

treated

a

the

15th December,

actually

visited that

ever

and

where

erous

From

encouragesome

our

caiefully ptepaied

the

being

ns

the

on

pleasant

a

passage
5*2 days, unaccompanied
by any incident of
serious nature, anchored in Rio dc Janeiro

"

that have
lant

show such

command,

the

by

she

pennant of

Commodore Jones,

under his

squadron

the

to

1842,

ship

and

days,

can

space of time.

January,

1843, the

nation

any

port

there January

the Pacific station, ia

on

in the Monitor.

out

abundant

find

num-

the intellectual

lo

undertaking.

hope

from the

first

January

appeared

mostly original.

mind

see

The

——.

Monitor

of the

States, Capt.

broad

after

spirit and activity, that
List of officers, U.
confidently asserted that no other Brandywine:—

remembered

Polynesian, Cas-

the

She left Cullao

and,

remarkable for its

it may be

coast,

ber

he

States.—The

United

Frigate

cruise of the

field."
The Nonanona, Friend,

since

Navy,

United

the

of

CO, 170 miles!

and

January,

his command,

to

tho

receiv-

not

and arrived

Callao,

1844.

9th,

in

remaining twenty-five days

miles.

Cruise

same

at

he had

as

of

Secretary

flag ship of
children, Rev. D. Dole, editor, in the

parents and

him it appears, in

by

teen

newspapers,

Aftrr

sailed for

1843, of three years

January,

in

left the United States, in December 1841."

so

devoted

monthly,

dated

single letter, relating

from the

home in obe-

orders of the Secre-

mortality

frightful

convivial habits of the sufferers."

The Monitor.—A

only

were

public

—

says:

returns

published

Navy,

Pacific, pas-

and other

population of Hong
caused, or aided by the

wat

the

to

the

Constellation,

Commodore Jones

tary of the

and
among the troops

Kong last

the

in

dience

of the world is

from

and

of Commodore

speaking

Jones, just returned

November "20, 1841.

(Febru\ry,

Intelligence.—The Army

Naval

senger

Writes

not

T?ttlfc.VD.

THE

that

of various

Brandywine
we must

ask

correspondents

brings
the inuntil

m

future number.

Seamen will find

1843. files

Inez,

of American

at

the

Reading

papers received

Room,
by the

�1846.)

23

TttlE&gt;f.D.

THE

Letters

SUMMARY: OF THE TREATYOF WANGHIA, SIGNED JULY 3d, 1844,
THEIR

BETWEEN

EXCELLENCIES

SPECTIVELY

Commodore

Art. Ist.

made

This

THE

Emperor

14th.

It

further

any
the entire Treaty.

CUSIII.NO

U.

S.

of China

was

soon

delay.

This

AND

in

after

AND

andthe

August,

published by

RE-

COMMISSIONERS

KEYING,

Of AMERICA

CHINA.

H. X

notified by

ratification

the

authorities,und

Chinese

from
summary is taken

memorial

Keying*

its

to the

part
All Ices

and universal

between the two nations.
peace
and exports, shall be rixed and settled in a Taiiff, which is
never exceed those
required of any other nationwhat-

abolished.

It

also, to
conceded by the

secures

that may at any time hereafter bo
Art. lid. Secures free access to the live

ports of

the United
Chinese to

and

States,

all

any
other government

any

and

privileges

Canton, Amoy, Fuchau, Ningpo,

or

advantages

nation.

and

Shanghai, for all

cit-

izens of the U. S. with their families and vessels.
and
Art. 4th. Provides for the

all these ports, for

their official intercourse and

in

injury.

case of

this the citizens

By

Art. 6th.

this

Uy

article,

of the

United States

are

permitted

the tonnage duties are fixed at 5
Measurement
160 tons.

only per ton on vessels under
sel naving occasion to go to a

to

import

from their

manner

own

or

insult

Art. 7. This exempts from

of merchandise not

duties,

per ton

mace

&amp;c,

second port to clear off her
cargo, shall

on

vessels

abolished.

are

It

160 tons, and I

over

also that

provides

not in that case pay

mace

a

duty

tonnage

tonnage duty

all small

craft, carrying only

ves-

a sec-

letters, provisions,

passengers,

Sic,

By this it is made law ful to hire passage and cargo boats, and to take into service pilots, compraand all manner of laborers,
writers,
seamen, arc.
Provides that the C'ninese may appoint custom house officers to guard vessels in port, which offi-

Art. 9th.

live on board, or in boats alongside, but are to receive no fees or provision from the ships.
may
Art. 10th This makes it incumbent on the parties concerned to report within 48 hours after comingto

cers

being made,

within 48 hours but not

be

cargo may

later, leave

the

ship, See , und imposes penalties for a neglect of the same.
discharged in whole or in part. Or if it be desired, the vessel may,
port without paying tonnage
duty, provided she has not broken bulk.

hours, tonnage duties shull b i held due.
Art. I lth. Provides for the examination,discharge and

same.
putes regarding the
Art. 12th. By this, sots of standard balances, ami
the custom house at Canton, are to be provided at all

also

lading of goods,
weights

and

and

for the settlement of

measurses, according

dis-

any

to the standard of

that tonnage dnes be paid on admission to entry; import duties on the discharge, and
Transit
duties on
the lading of goods, and cither in sycee or foreign money.
foreign mer-

export duties on
chandise shall not exceed those at
This articlo

Art. 16th. This
and

wherever such merchandise rcay pass fnto the interior.
present established,
the transhipment of goods from one vessel to another, while in port.

regulates for

provides

for free

commerce

with

all

subjects

of China at the live ports, and disallows all

injurious restrictions.

monopolies

Art. lt'th.

this article all responsibility for the debts of merchants is denied by both governments, while
all
to obtain payment of debts, and redress for frauds, &amp;c.
engages
proper means
17th. By this article, houses and places of residence and
of business, also churches, hospitals, and
Art.
and sites for building the same, are secured to citizens of the United States.
At the several ports

By

to

each

use

cemeteries,

and in their immediate

part

allowed

till citizensaro

vicinity,

the villages in the country.
among
Art. 18th. Uy this article it is made lawful
of any

of China, to teach any of the

to pass and
repass;

for citizens

languages

of the

of the

but

they

are

not

United States to employ

empire,

purchase

and to

all

permitted

scholars

manner

and

to go

Art. 20th,

This provides

and this without any

for the

reexportation

merchandise,

which

can

be done

only

to the

other

open

additional duties.

ofwhatever nature or

Criminals,

of

degree,

shall be

prosecuted

and

punished by

their

Art. 22d. This
othor country.
Art. 23d. This

provides for

requires

tiro

neutrality

to the Hoard of Revenue at

And

so

of the United States'

the Consuls at each of the five

Art. 24th. Communications

govern-

to tho

those from the

ports,

in

flag

case

of

war between

to make out annual

reports

China

of the

and

any

trade, tor

Peking.

Chinese, from

Chinese,

for the

Citizens

consuls,

of the United

shall

pass

State*,

through

the

shall be made

hands,

through

Art. 26th. All

of the United

questions between

States;

citizens

of the

United States,

between thorn
interference on their
or

and tho Chinese

be under the

government will not nold itself bound

and

subjects of

to the

do

and restore

Art. 27th. This

plundered property
provides for cases of shipwreck,

part.

jurisdiction of

requires

ships refitted, property restored,

ery possible protection,
Art. 28th. No embargo shall
Art. 29th.

Deserters from

other

officers.

citixens of the United

reparation
But the Chinese

on

be laid

on

the citizens

that all

persons

and

property

shall

have

ov-

Uc.

or

vessels

of the

board American shins shall be arrested

U, S, under any pretense whatever.
by the Chinese and dcliveied over to tho

And any Chinese criminals who may take refuge on board ship, or in the houses
be delivered up on due requisition being mode by Chinese officers.

Liang Kiting, Liang Kwang, sic.
received
Art. S2d. Ships of war are to be hospitably

purchase of provisions, making of repairs, ice.
Those who attempt to trade clandestinely at

Art. 83d.

Art. 84th.
al state of the

article into China,

shall be loft

the ports not

unprotected to

opened, or

the action

to introduce

of the Chinese

provides for modifications of the treaty after a period of twelve years,
Union shall send ministers plenipotentiaryto China.

This

opium, ortny

government.
and that no individu-

156

alms-

"22

550
24

theatres;

hu1-

10ck5.776,000 sheep, 250,000 lambs, 250,000
butter,

13,000
of

gallons
or

64

und

milk,

wine,

loaves;

quartern
million

two

of

blacksmiths,

house

hosiers,

1,005

whitesmiths,
fish

dealers,

13,208

carpencabinet

5,416

&amp;.c
,

2,180

1,393

stationers,

clock

makers, 4,227
5,655

men,

1,082

linen
coal

barbers,

1,586

mon-

coach

makers, 1,367

merchants, 2,133 coopers, 1,381 dyers,
907

pantry cooks, 869 sad-

803

tobacconists,

turners, 5.56 undertakers.
all males above

are

generally

boats

3,000

of

on

fashion,
about

the

1,470

above

[The

years of

twenty

private families

There
and

1,049

cheese

4,199. clothiers and

chemists,

2,319 plumbers,

000

and
milk-

1,430

grocers,

drapers, 2,167

700 press-

watch

2,633

2,091

bakers,

saw-

old clothesmen,

1,172

(chiefly Jews,) 3,628 compositors,
men,

tail-

14,552

wheel-wrights,

yers, 2,807 jewellers,

ale.

porter and

1,076

painters,
and

65,000

gallons of spirits,

2,013

bricklayers,

ters, 6,822

ol

million quarters of wheat,

16,502 shoemakers,

2,662 hatters

tont

10 million

cheese,

million barrels

two

Employs
5,330

a

11,000

pigs;
of

tons

millions of
of

pipes

are

age.]

10,

Bee.

vessels

5,500

river, employing

8,000 watermen, and 4,000 laborers.
London
dow

at any of the ports of China, and all facilities afforded

"2-2

1,500

annually. 110,000

calves, and 270,000

of

of

es-

institutions;

prisons;

are

chapels;

hotpitala;

other

Consumes

States, shall

and defines the terms of correspondence, which are in all respects those ofequalprescribes
No
shall ever be demanded of one government by the other.
ity and reciprocity.
presents
States are to
to the court of Chins, by
Art.Blst. Communications from the g-overnment of the United
pass
with the superintendence of foreign affairs, or through the governors-gencommissioner
charged
the imperial

other contraband

markett.

14

lers, 1,240 tinmen,

Art. 80th. This

for the

of

con-

public schools;

150

besides 205

houses,

gers,

the officer"
for any in-

to make

~,,,

and

private schools;

It

chapels of the

and

250

foreign chapels;

latter

two

Thames.

dissenters'

364

tablishment;

other

citizens of the United Slates, by any foreign
same or to
any
power.
governall it can, (o protect from robbers and pirates, to seize and punish all offenders of this sort, and to

jury done
ment will

or

mostly three,
It consists

The

of the

brokers, 4,322 butchers,

led without reference to the Chinese, or any
states, shall be sett
shall
Art. 26th. Merchant vessels and their crews, in the five ports,

Consuls

high.

tains 300 chuiches

the

and have the appro-

bation of the local authorities.

recover

houses,

the aouth side

makers,
own

respectively.

Consuls.

with

and Lambeth diatrictt.

ors, 2,39T

and enjoy, for themselves and
Art. 19th. This provides that tne citizens of the United States snail receive
appertaining to them, the special protection of the government, whose officers are to defend them from all
and
the
of
the
Chinese.
on
injury
insult
part

transmission

occu-

city, Westminster city, Finsbury,
Southward,
Marylebone, Tower Hamleta,

people

of books.

all

Art. 21st.

world;

thirly-two square miles,

stories

planted

four, and five

in the

city

of

public offices;

the ports.

Provides

Art. 14th.

surface

a

thickly

on

After 48

Art. 18th.

pies

an-

chor in either of the five ports, the name of the
Due reports

richest

largest and

London

dutyable.

Art. Bth.

Interesting Statistics.—London is the

prohib-

dors, linguists,

eral

Wal-

Timothy C.

Alker, Calvin G. Worth, James Uuddack,
fred W. Stephenson, William S. Cathcart,

other

any

lime.

ments

Huyden,

Dean, -2, Prince W. Ener,

or

by

ports,

Reuben Ruttell,

Charles C. Swain, Frederick Buel, William
John J.
C.
Alexander D. Coffin,

William Plaskett.

appointment
recognition of Consuls and othor officers, at
personal correspondence, on terms of equality, and for redress

and export to their own or
country, and to purchase
any other country, all
this treaty, paying only the duties specified in the Tariff.
ited

not

G. Coffin,

Leonard
Sylvanut H»rdy,

John Wilkinson,

,

Art. sth.

ond

G.

Peter

t,

Robert

Kelley,

James

Smith,

H«le,

S.

George

Hinckley,

Augustus

L.

viz:—James

peisons,
A.

Henry

Thompson,

Seamen's

Inez, letters

by the

Tyler, Henry W. Davit,

provides for a perfect, permanent,
provides that all duties an imports

are

received

following

for the

Fisher,

of thu treaty; and that those duties shall

a

ever.

CALEB

OF

the

by

Parker, Sept.

conluins

This

2d.

HON.

PART

go into efleot without

Emperor, which

Art.

THE

was ratified

Note.—This Treaty
Keying to
provisions

O.N

Inez.—The

the

by

hat

Chaplain

es

duty

one-third
pays about

in

assessed

upwards

of

England;
being
five

house rental is
lions.

—

about

120,000,

millions

probably

Am. paper.

of the win-

the number of housrated

sterling.

seven or

ut

The

eight mil-

�Tttfc

24

iTebruary

TUIEKft.

J

.

i

EXTRACTS.
SELECT

ARRIVED.

Boosts

our

comsamiohs.—ln

srsT

books, great men talk to us, give
cious thoughts,and pour their souls
thanked for books?

Tlioy

lbs

their

us

into

best

most pref Jod lie

ours,

the voices of ihe distant

are

until the

271h;

cargo

now

discharging.

ous of

dead,

and make

time will

own

my

us

Bark
1000

heirs of the

100

at

left

14

St. Francisco

not

the

writers will

enter

imagination,

heart: and Franklin enrich me with his practiintellectual
cal wisdom—l shall not pine for want of
companionship, and I may become a cultivated man,
excluded from what is called the best society in
t
human

hough

*

hard

*

I know how
it is to
place where I live.
those who
some men, especially to
spend much time in
fix attention on books,
Let them
manual labor, to
t lis

strive to overcome the

difficulty, by choosing

leave

in

ficulty
ships

two weeks for St. Francisco to settle

which had occurred

few

was

to leave the

after the

days

M.

dif-

of whale

about

watering;

the Don

also

of both conti-

in a

under bis

(a Prusisn
West

by birth,) was killed by a
Coast, on the Ist of July last.

January
modore

United States

26,

Parker,

whale

the N.

on

and

social

ly

to

be

sacrificed

some

obtain access

Almost

library.

himself

for

p| y

M.

Frigate

the

adobie

INSeamens

Chapel,

AND

BOOTS

SHOES

OARS.
FEET

I• kfafi

vent

nnd

complaint

of smart in

human

censure;

sutiering

than of

endurances

ing, and the present
thoughts. We cry out
not smile for

s

great

for

ISby

ship Uncos, for

Lahai-

the late
to his

ecutors

is

nature

we

pain,

take
when

COMMISSION

J. F. B.

MARSHAL!.,
Francis
Johnson.

we

do

N. B.

is of all

others the most

last will and testament.

a

maid

AGreek

2

The Moow.-How true anemblem ofthee
and slow m its wone;
•pinussl slow to increase

fleeting

row

of

course

their

as

of her

foil

hours of total

her

with

both,

changes

period

as (he

all their

splendor,
darkness;

mutability,

and

Ton

Jan.

F.

Carter,

?

W.Thompson,)

rnp-

and

sor-

and

in

na; he

was

married on the

A

the

P»Pnetois.

WATCH

AND

for sale

HAS
Clocks,

Particular
Sextant and
native

Islands

and has

of Chi-

for many

been engaged in mercantile pursuits.
years
fell from foretop
James Woaklin, American seaman,
'44.
onboard the Gold //unter, and was killed May 19,
Indian, belonging to the Gay Head
An American
tribe, died

suddenly

on

board the U. S.

Frigato

his remains were buried
dy wine, January, 25:
Cemetery, Sabbath afternoon, January

Nuuanu

Branin

Salmon,SO

150 boxes family

E. &amp;

11.

Heginbotham,

also

services

30

11. GRIMES.

of

engineer,

house-joinery

He has been forseveral

employment of the

They

Tobacco,

Soap, No. 1,10

practical

a

knowledge

some

employment.

oflers her

do

Wanted.

Employment

as a

East India

good

Company.

years

in

Mrs. H.

seamstress.

have taken the house last

occupied by Mr.

Col-

Main street.

of

assortment

an

"For

MAKER,

Jewelry, Watches,

AT

repaired

attention

accurate

S. Greeti.

S 1,50

to fine natch

paid

Quadrant Glasses

Honolulu,Oahu, Jan.

and

given.

blind

or

Single

Chaplain,Notices

of

Labors of the late Bsrtipreacher of Maui, by Rev J.
and

Life, Character,

Piiaaiki,

L.

Sale.

of the Seamen's

Study

the

the

tec.
mas

/rung, a

or

MUNN.

F. Wood.

16,1845.

desires

CHRONOMETER

rates

Honolulu, Jonuary 27,

Sugar,

Jan.

cord, in

Chronometers

In

G.

Sale,

70 bbls

Sugar,

80 Cords

W.

is in hers.

DIED

all

for payment

Honolulu,Jan. 15,1845.

the

constant

China

MR.
having

HOUSE,

HONOLULU.
J. O.

1,

Sperm Candles,

1,1845.

hap-

Our

are

coal, 4000 feet Oars, 6000 Lathes, 80
Matting, 20 kegs Nails,Boolbs Coffee.

sea

Louf

cases

boxes

)

January, 15,1845.

as the

Anderson,
delay, and

them

ex-

persons in-

1845.

For
Tons

SIX
Rolls

H. I.

tf

umpottrtland that virtm icilhout attain
all that descended to me from my rsrents."

turea brief

Peter
without

payment
present
naving
claims, to *
"

MERCHANTS,

Wanted, Bills on the United States, England,
which money will be advanced on the most fa-

kemrt

ure,
which eras

said

make

upon to

All

appointed

place,

MAINUNU,

&gt;

MANSION

being asked what
fortune
she would bring her hinbnnd, answered, "I
valuable
what
is
than any treasmore
will bring him
virtues.

were

of this

LEVI CHAMRERLAIN.

Brewer,)

Charles

our

deal of contentment.

Dowry.—Purity of heart
of

subscribers

Anderson,

to

more

up

by

Febl.

it

CO.

&amp;

HONOLULU, OAHU,

vorable terms.

elevated

the

Peter

debted to the estate of the

ADVERTISEMENTS.

pleasure in rejoic-

easily

little

a

For sale

Oars.

k CO.

-

fkc. for

A

Whalemen's

NOTICE

persons

should

when

need

febl

JOHN

wisely

NOTICE.

tf

apply.

called

GENERAL
act

SHORT

ItPAIBtD AT

hereby given that

C. BREWER
do not

of the

premises

Honolulu.

to this.—Dr. Ckanntng.

Complaining.-We

MAKAR,

the

Wanted,—Twojourneymen—tetotallers only

Honolulu, Feb.

sensible

SHOE

building, adjoining

Bft days from China.

American whale

STONE,

BOOT AND

41UUU C.BREWER,

na, and thence to cruise.

and fami-

luxury

any

above port about 25th ol
For freight or
passage, ap.
BREWER
2t
Fl.
fc CO.
10C.

Brandywine, Com-

BAILED.

January 23,

the

February.

spoke on the 2d instant, off the Maria Islands, whale
ship Warren, of Warren. 1709 whale; Henry Weber,

the good they impart.
not compensate for
man, if possible, gather some good books

roof,

for

sna

Quixote;

nents would

Let every

iil

s

(cnppeted

"Ines."

fastened) Capt. Knox, will

copper

J.

subjects

with those
deep interest, or by reading in company
whom thsy love.
Nothing can supply the place of
aro
or
cheering
door*.
soothing companions in
They
The wealth

some

these Islands

for

wnftv

De-

Ist

masters

port

coast

sailed,

of

solitude, illness,affliction.

between

and the authorities of that

the Pama

X

months,

obscure

enter my

and take up their
threshold
abode under my roof—if Milton will cross my
and Shakspeare
to
to
me of Paradise;
open to me
sing
and the workings of the
words
of
ir the sacred

ing;

BEDFORD.

rpilEShip

r-fv.

■ssXffl'BJ''
JBbaUmm

23, French whale ship (Sense.
Monmouth, Wedges, Cold Spring.

January

whale,
sperm;
spiritual life of
ship Goorgia, New London, IfJOO whale: ship
Bovkt art tkt true Uttlltrt.
They give cember,
past 040s.
Surah, New York, 13 months out, 1900; ship Benjato all who will faithfully use them, the society, the spirWilliam C.
No min Morgan, New London, 1900 whale;
itual presence of the best and greatest of ourrace.
Nye, New London, 1700 whale; left at Monterey, 9th
matter hew poor I nm; no matter though the prosperDecember, Frigate Savannah, Capt. Armstrong, to
dwelland the

NEW

FOR

January 19, American ship Inez, Knox, from Boston,
via Valparaiso and Tahiti, making
in
passage
Just 8
months; wind being off shore she did not come auide

25 cents, 3

copy

copies,

50 cents,

per dozen.

repairing.—

For

Sale,

adjusted.

silvered and

A

15, 1845.

T the

**■

MILITARY^GOODS,—Pivr

Inez.

K.

Mr.

11.

bound.

ncai ly

of tho

study

Seamen's

Boardman,

Price

Chaplain,

Vol.

11,

of the

and

by

Friend,

$2.
ALSO

Cases

of

the

and Lace.

For sale

by

of
Swords,
Buttons, Spurs

consisting

above,
THREE
Belts, Sashes, Epaulettes, Caps,
C. BREWER

tt CO.

3t Fl.

At

same

places,

"Notes

on

the

Commerce,

Mis-

sion,
o fee, sic, of the Sandwich
lie.

the

per

28.

the

Esq.

Islands, by Bk C. VV'vlSingle copy (1,00; 8 copies, #2,00, and $7,00

dozen.

PUMFS.
BIBLES.

MARINEINTELLIGENCE.

Wooden

TWO
ER

k

and officers

of

vessels

visiting

this

port

are

the Friend

items of Marine

be of interest to

the

as

may

Cables

received

and for sale

cases

assorted

by

Inez.

C. BREWER fc CO

bleached

Ketch

Basilisk,

American

merchant

Monmouth, 4 French whale shirs,

Majesty's

ship Inex,

and
Delaware, English brig Euphemia,
whale ships Israel,
Watch; American

10 cases
drills—2 do

30.

H. B.

schooner
Gold

French bk

drills—2

brie

boys

Will

boots

Hunter,

Adolphe.

billet

do

prints—s

do—13

cotton

caps—7

do

carpeting
thread—l

—

cotton—4

tickings—3

8-4—3
do

and hollow

bales brown cotton

do blue

gambroons—B bales

ware

cases

colr'd

do

blue

do brown
men

bunting—4

Feb

Society

of Bibles

ly bound,
Chaplain,

which

Committee

of the Hawaiian

who

are

is

50 cents.
N.B. The Seamen's

for

has

and

sale

Chairman

Inez,

received, per

Testaments,
by
of

the
the

neat-

Seamen's

Executive

Bible

among

the

Eng-

seamen.

ALSO—

do

1.

Chaplain has Bibles in

lish, French, German, Spanish, Portuguese and Sweand
dish languages, for sale
gratuitous distribution

"

4t

assortment

and

aud shoes—l2tons iron hoops—2 crates plates— »
heads—s barrels bright varnish—9o do flour—6

boxes loaf sugar.

an

Bible

Society.
Quarto
Bibles $'5,00; Octavo do, $8,00; do, (small edition)
New
Minion, do, 81,00; Pocket do, 76
$1,75;
cents;
Testament and Psalms, 75 cents; Pocket Testament,

Fcbl.

6t

GOODS,—Per

ware —80

IN PORT, JANUARY

Hawaiian

and Anchor*.

JUST
the following:—10packages hard
VESSELS

BREW

such

Honolulu.

United States Frigate Brandywine,

C.

C. BREWER At CO.

l?OR sole by

commercial and sea-faring community.]

Port of

by

Feb I.

JT

requested to forward for publication in
intelligence

salo

3t

Jx.

Chain
[Masters

for

Pumps,

CO.

The

Book of Common

Published by the
er Book Society.

New York

Bible

Prayer,"

and

Common PrayFsh I

�</text>
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                    <text>,

A SEMIMONTHLY JOURNAL, DEVOTED TO TEMPERANCE, BBAMEN, MARINE AND
__——_—__^—.—. —■■« ■ ■
■ ■-*■
■
'"

__.

__*__

.

—

■■

-

"■'

HttVOLILI, OAHII, S. I. JAWCARIT

Vol. HI.

9

THE FRIEND.

GENERAL INTELLIGENCE.

'
13. 1845.

7' ~.i?

No.II.

'

*—*

Like the dove as you go frona the place of John S. Thrasher, and the other gentlemen
who aided and encouraged me by many
your rest,
OP TEMPERANCE AND -EAMEN,
attentions and much valuable inforPublished and edited hfySASiCEL O. Damon', Sea- May your heart turn with joy to the land of friendly
mation arid advice.
men's Chaplain, will be issued (usually) on the (stand
birth,
your
16th of every month, aach number containing 8 page*.
The home where so often your souls have It will be remembered that before my departure it was thought best, from advice re'terms.
been blest.
ceived in New York, to proceed in an unof
kc.
$2,80
Him,
One copy parannum,
the
May
blessing
--..----. 4,U0
Two copies,
disguised manner, laying before the Cap*
"'
Three
5,00
our whole plans, and requesting
"
tain-general
"
when
the
toils
the
ocean
are
then,
of
7,00
Five
And
"
to prosecute them peaceably. It
permission
Tan
10,00
o'er,
"
"
was my own desire, for very obviSubscriptions and donations for the Friend received
And homeward your tempest-tost bark you certainly
at the study of the Seamen's Chaplain, or by tbe folreasons, to take that course, if it could
ous
shall
steer,
lowing agents
done with the shadow of a chance of sue •
Mr. E. H. 80-irdman, Honolulu; Rev. 1.. Andrews, This signal of welcome shall wave on the he
cess. But my friends and acquaintances in
Seamen's Chaplain, Lahaina; Mr. Burnham, Kolon,
shore,
Kauai; and tbe American Missionaries throughout the
The promise- of all that to memory is dear. Havana, one and all, after consulting with
Inlands.
each other, assured me that it was their,
ADVERTISEMENTS
May the blessing of Hint, &amp;tc.
opinion that to apply to the governor for
Terms.—One square, i insertions, #2,25. and 50
liberty to preach to seamen, either on shipcents for every additional insertion. One half square
or less, 2 insertions, #1,76, and 87 1-2cents for every
SEAMEN'S FRIEND. board or" shore, would be very much worse
additional insertion For yearly advertising, not exthan useless. This opinion was grounded
ceeding one column, #50.
SEAMEN'S CHAPLAINCY AT HAVANA, on the known policy and laws of Spain and.
Cuba, on the result of former applications,
CUBA.
POETRY.
on the character of those at present in powIt is the design of the American Seamen's er, and on the present state of political afTHE BETHEL FLAG.
Friend Society to establish Chaplaincies in fairs.
BY MRS. ANNA L. SNELLING.
foreign Ports, (or the benefit of Seamen of Polict or Srlro.—lt has always been
As the rainbow, of promise- that smiling ap- all nations, similar to that established at Ha- contrary to the policy and laws of Spain to
peared,
vre, France, or the one in Honolulu Hav- suffer the existence of any root of" heresy"
When the waters were stayed o'er a ing this object in view, the Executive Com- in her aoil, of any name or species. His
perishing world;
of said Society, sent to Havana, Rev. holiness has no devotees more bigoted than
So the heart of the tempest-tost sailor is mittee
the ruling powers of spam. In no country
L. Grosvenor, a gentleman, we believe, from at this
cheered,
day is the atmosphere so loaded with
When the flag of the Bethel to him is i our personal acquaintance, to have been the fogs of the dark ages. In Rome her&lt;
unfurl'd.
the eye of St. Peter's successor,
eminently fitted for tbe duties of a Seamen's
May the blessing of Him who is mighty Chaplain.' He was originally educated for 1 learn that Jhe British have erected a chapto save,
el and are suffered to worship God as they
Ever rest on the flag of the sons of the the legal profession, and commenced the please. In Brazil, Protestant worship is
practice of law, but subsequently turned his
openly tolerated. In Venezuela, (at Catalents to the proclamation of the gospel, af- raccas) the Romish bishops not only made
.y this banner long wave as a beacon ofF ter having pursued a course of theological no objections to the erection of a I rotestant
studies. We extract the following interest- fihurch, but themselves assisted at its conseAs abroad on the waters you .fearlessly, ing account of his visit to the above men- cration, rffarohing in procession with great
■
roam;
parade. But in Spain or her dependencies,
May it rise on your thought in the silence ofr tioned port, from the Sailor's Magazine for it is believed we snail search in vain for any
Aug., 1844, received by the overland mail: sanctuary where the mass is not performed,
night,
And mingle with joy in the visions ofhome. "To the Executive Committee of the and where sacred relics, the confessional
May,the blessing of Him, &amp;c.
American Seamen's Friend Society, the un- and the 'graved image have not usurped the
dersigned, who was commissioned to go to place of Christ, and the tithes of mint, anise
May it tell you of Him whom the Father has Havana, to inquire what may be done to and rumin, frankincense and myrrh are not
1
raised,
promote the moral and social inrprovemenf substituted for the weightier matters of the
to
Ensign'
gather bis chosen ones1 of American seamen visiting that port," re- law.
home,
spectfully reports:
Former i»pbioatioh.—Mr. Tolmey, of
he Isles ofthe sea; ' where his name
On the 23d of March, 1844,1 sailed from Havana, informed fne that in 1838, he being
1
shall be praised,
New York for Havana, in the brig Leopoldo then British Consul, applied to the governor
To whom from all nations the Gentiles 1 ()*Donnell, (the owner, Capt. Shaler, and for liberty to have worship at his house after
shall come.
the master, Capt. Spinney, having kindly the English form, and requested protection
May the blessing of Him, &amp;c.
given me a free passage out,)and arrived in for those who should attend. He was anHavana April sth. As soon as possible, I swered that any individual undertaking such
While your ship ploughs the wave to eachi netered on the business off say mission, and I a thing, would be subject to a jaunt through
region of earth,
feel bound here to express my thanks to Mr. I the street of the cfty, at public expense,

THE FRIEND,

"

----------

—

*

.

•

Kwave.

"

M« '

mums.

�TH£ tIIIEXD.

10

(January,

I

mounted on a jackass, with his face toward On the whole it seemed clear to me that proceedings And as there was no privacy
the tail thereof. Soon .after, a petition and nothing could be done by asking leave. It of admission, nor any injunction of secrecy
subscription ware got up by the British audi was thought, bowe-ver, by all with whom 1 on those who were present, and aa AmeriAmerican residents to erect a church, and conversed, with few exceptions, thst if can sailors sre not proverbial for forbearinj
were sent to Lord Palmerston. then Secre- preaching were confined on shipboard, and to speak openly and loud of what they set
tary of State, who forwarded the petition to I carried on without 'ostentation, and without and think, whether in New York or Hsva.
the British Minister at Madrid, who present- " meddling with matters that engender na, a supposition that the Government reed it to the authorities at that Court, by strife," no interference from the authorities mained ignorant, is out of the question. But
need be fesred. This opinion was ground- moreover, the authorities certainly knew ol
whom it was instantly rejected.
ed
the fact that' some shipmasters had my being in tbe city, and were fully informCArTAIN-GEKBRaL O'DONNBLL. It IS heldonservice
heretofore without interruption, ed ol" my object, for it was stated in my pasthat
there
were
or
if
Before,
thought also,
and
that
there
had been preaching occasion- port; and 1 have every reason to believe if
shall be hereafter, " a hook to hang a hope
ministers
on shipboard, and' also on was again madeknown by (lie Spanish Conby
ally
on," it does net exist now on account of the the fact that I myself preached there on two sul, residing at the port of New York, it
tbe
present Governor,
despotic character of
and 21st of April) without letters written to the Governor. If Gov*
and his great seal for the Catholic church. Sundays (14th
disturbance than the whistling of eminent was led to consider me a suspicion!
other
Valdez,
as
the
last
governor,
a
Such mil
i-boat men, and the sports on board person, 1 was doubtless watched; and ha&lt;
(one who is said to have hated the priesthood
vessels and boats. All Ibis was they intended to arrest either me or m
[bboring
and their nunneries, monasteries nnd other
sufficient to create any confusion, and it preaching, it seems probable it would hay
it
would
have
felt
thought
is
appurtenances,)
cry doubtful whether there was any de- been done at once. But I must, in justice,
rather favorably inclined to tbe establishl to disturb v«, though it is quite certain say, that it is quite possible that the sail'
ment of anything calculates] to displease the
Cor.sul, Don Francisco Stoughton, who is t
re was much curiosity excited.
of
eclesiastics.
HowDoubtless,
great body
and liberal minded gentleman, and t
kind
ever, a man like O'Donaell, one who can Worship on shipboard uninterrupt- personal friend
of O'Donnell, wrote favorathe trident of power with energy is ed.—The services were held on the deck of
me
andj my mission, and that
regarding
bly
the
ded in
present emergencies.
Bsrque Brighton, of Boston, Capt Cum- this induced the authorities to let me alone.
Political condition of Cuba.—The mings, aiid were fully attended by shipmas- I ought not to doubt, that, so far as the perpresent was thought to be an unfavorable ters, officers, seamen, ladies, etc., the boats sonal feelings of the- Consul himself are con■season for our designs, on account of the in which they came being ranged alongside. cerned, he would be very willing to promote
You are There was no attempt at concealment, nor your wishes—for he gaye me a substantia
immense excitement existing.
most
that
a
and
terrific
con- any bravado pr display. A large awning proof of his friendly feelings towards me begeneral
aware
spiracy has been detected te re-enact in this sheltered the deck aliaf't the mainmast, an- fore I sailed.
Islsnd the trsgedy of San Domingo. I need other was spread athwart ship, which, howBut whatever may be the feelings of an
was partly hoisted during the exercises or all the official personages concerned,
not disgust yoa by detailing the horrors that ever,
have followed the discovery of this intended to admit the breeze, thus giving the curious was permitted, for several days to pursue my
insurrection. Whites, free colored persons an opportunity to get some notion of what own path unmolested, and, so far as I know,
and slaves are implicated and immolated. was going on, which several improved by unthought of. I was permitted to reside in
The government is said to be very jealous rowing acroas our bows several times. The the chy, and go In and out at any hour; and
of English and Americans. I was inform- ship lay in the stream about fifty yards from when 1 applied at the Governor's House for
ed that two individuals, being or pretending the Casa Blanca shore, near what sailors my return pasport, no inquiries were mn&lt;l&lt;
to be Catholio priests, were discovered af- call the "Green Shears." Worship was aliout what I had done or intended to do;
terwards to have been emissaries from tbe conducted as usual, with prayers, reading though 1 passed through the usual roiitin*
British West Indies. If report be true, scriptures, a sermon, and such singing as ef formalities, and the Governor signed tiie
without pasporL
servile insurrection is not tbe only evil which could be got up extetniwiraneously
™
the government baa to fear and guard note or comment.
Flack for worship.—Being convince
'I considered these meetings, thus held, a
against.
Tbe slaughter of the American siilor by fair lest of the willingness ot the authorities that the Chaplain's labors must be perform,
a sentinel, which occurred soon after my ar- to suffer them. Governments sometimes ed on shipboard, I proceeded to inquire about
rival in Havana, and of which I wrote an wink at what they will not openly license; a particular and permanent place for woraccount ia a letter to one ofyour A&gt;mmittee, and the very circumstances which rendered ship. There is in the harbor the hulk oft
as a store?
caused, as you know, much excitement, it impossible to obtain permission by appli- British man-of-war, lying there
whicb is doubtless now nearly abated, but cation, made the present a very favorable ship for recaptured slaves, and hearing from
a possibility of
wbicb increased at the time the impossibili- opportunity to try the experiment of doing Mr. .Tolmey that there was
obtaining that, 1 enquired ofCapt. M'Cleaty of effecting an/ good by application te without it.
now commanding
the government. Gen. Campbell (Amerir Tbe coffin and corpse of the deceased ry, of if. B.to M. Navy,
whether
board
the
vessel
said
learn
I could be per*
hulk,
American
were
on
informed
sit
that
he
sailor
Consul)
anticipate*]
can
no serious consequence*, tbe Governor where I preached, and the first time 1 milled to preach there. Capt. MC, ah
promising him that justice should be done, preached was previous to any abatement of though he expressed himself very politelj
had no authority to permit any
and the U. S. Government, moreover, being ihe excitement on the subject. Here, then, said that he on
board his vessel other thai
somewhat proverbial for forbearance. 1 may was an illegal assemblage (all popular as- assemblage
as well add what I have, not seen elated in semblages are illegal in Cuba,) held under his own crew—he had no objection to m;
the service and preaching to them
any account of the affair—that the Spaniards inauspicious circumstances, aflording nn ex- reading
read the service himself ever
give and swear to an entirely different story cellent pretence to interrupt the meeting as he said he
that
concern.
Sunday,
being required by his govern
the
a
molittcal
Americana,
of
and
the
from that
one.of
The fact thai there was no interruption, ment. Mr. Tolmey informed me that mis*
Spanish journals gave a Munchausen verChurch of'England sometimes
sion of it that must have astonished tbe cor- increased my faith For the Government inters of the
on
board that vessel, and that M;
of
They
preached
meeting*.
have
known
these
if
themselves,
it
did
not
must
and sentinel
id them to douht their nw.identity.

«ld

.
I

.

Stral

�11

THE fUIEKB

1845.)

quite as well as by the seaman's minister. verses] with men of intelligence in Havana,
tell me
There is no law to prohibit the importation Spaniards as well as ethers, and they
of Bibles, or any except licentious books. A that the large majority of what tain world
merchant in H. told me he Would be glad to calls the better class ol society, are either
receive
a consignment of BiMea, nod attend infidels, or entirely neglectful of Church
he
whether
would
be
justified in
certainty
distribution himself. Another, an worship—that the really devout pay tbeir
to
their
permitting the Chaplain to use his vessel.
orisons in their own houses, not visiting the
Mr. Tolmey thought there would be anoth- English mechanic, desired me tohesend some temples
at all, having no confidence in tbe
which
promised
er commander next fall. There seems to Bibles snd Testaments,
or
piety of the Priesthood. 1 have
he
was
morals
families
in
to
distribute
with
which
be no alternative for the chaplain at present,
the
naves and at the altars of their
in
me
stood
told
hut to follow the example of Christ, whs acquainted. A Spanish gentleman
their holidays, half-holidays,
on
churches,
for
his
some
Bibles
he
intended
to
purchase
vent abort doing good.
sacrifice, and have obat
their
daily
and
and
an
orhim
nieces,
and
gsvs
I
nephews
the-number
quality of their worserved
and
to
me
Importance,or this mild.—Of the im- der fotfo*r which were presented
by
t
and among these spare congregaportance of .such a chaplaincy, I suppose Mr. L. P. Hubbard, of the Marine Bible shippers,black
and aged whites, I could hardnone can doubt. Four thousand, and some- Society. I was astonished when I discov- tions of
times more, American seamen visit this port ered that, with all (his liberty of light, there ly ses one young, or apparently intelligwa*
annually, between the months of October were very few book stores in Havana, and persbn of any color or sex. The poor and
worship—and tbe
And June. 1 was told there were more than no Bibles for sate in these, it being a book ignorant alone come to aa
they enter the
100 American vessels in port at the.time of entirely uncalled for. Yet, I was myself citizen and stranger alike,
shrine and image
the
idly
by
cathedral,
pass
not
English
incidents,
Arrival.
Of
vessels
and
witness
which
need
seamen,
to
several
my
there are about one fourth as many aft Amer- here be detailed, which proved to me that it of St. Peter, to witness the tomb, and bias
ican. Your committee have always shown would cost little trouble to aroise the cari- the marble that covers the ashes of Colon.
thai they sppreciete ths importance of the osity of the Spaniards, and engage them in On Good Friday and Easier, I inquired in
for the
mission; and it is the Christian public alone, [reading the Word of Life. The priests the open shops, of tbeir keepers, and
was
upon whom any motives for action in this themselves are said to be as ignorant of the cause of the expected processions,
matter need be urged.
Bible as of the writings of Tycho Brahe, answered by shrugs and protestations of igThe temptations to which seamen are ex- and being themselves content, like Jack nornnce. 1 saw the processions themselves.
in Havana, I was surprised and de- Cade, " with the score and tally, and no Here was none of that gorgeous display and
ightsd to find, are less than ia most other other books," it is, perhaps, to be expected, profusion of wealth, which many ot you,
countries,
large ports, in consequence of the excellent that they would consider the Bible as tend- gentlemen, have seen in Catholic
ot
Police regulations; and if these 5000 sea- ing '.'traitorously to corrupt the youth." aud of whicb I hud often read in books
savored
travels;
which,
and
though
they
be
men remained always in Havana, perhaps But Bibles, Testaments and Tracts might
there would not be so much need .of moral and ought to be scattered there like the much of superstition and idolatry, had in
I and my
instruction as inBoston or Portland. These snow flakes- of a Russian winter. None them also much sof the sublime.
ton, as
me,
friends
who
were
with
fancied
it
almost impossible for can doubt that the Bible will be spread and
regulations render
the hive' of bearded friars,
Seamen to desert, or be decoyed from one the Gospel preached in Cuba, and that the we looked at
vessel to another; and the fact that'the car- dwellers in this Island of palm trees—a land monks and prieats, as they " eyed us askance
leer malign," that we cotrld
rying of pointed knives, or any concealed beautiful as God made it, shall join in the with jealous acrid
faces the bitter feelings
arms, is prohibited under pain of six years universal millenial '•horns. The proper read in their
hearts
in
of
their
reflecting
upon what once
vessels
and
that
masters
of
is
imprisonment,
time to do good always now,—the present
of
days
was.
The
other
had departglory
•are bound to see thai their men observe this ia never too early. The responsibility, in this ed, and hero was hut tbe shadow
oflheir
law, ensures almost entire freedom from matter, at. all events, should be shifted from
those, disgraceful riots which curse our own our shoulders to theirs. It is the duty of shade." There was the Virgin, overloaded
of the free," and into which riots sai- the Christian to kuock at every door, and if with mummeries, like the religion slio repre-of
"lorsland
are most apt to be .drawn.
no one answers, Marry the latch; and Chris- sented—blistered with shallow plasters
The laws also forbid tbe owners of eating tian etiquette requires us to stay, hot as lope tinsel, and tricked"out with finery, but apparently much less costly than thatof the slsve
and liquor shops, and boarding houses, from as we are asked, but as long as we are
negresses who had collected it) the streets to
houses,
sailors
into
their
or
giving
to
ft
minister
of
the
Gosadmitting
remain. If
fered
without
written
conthem anything on trust,
pel were suffered to preach on shipboard in view her. And there were Msgdaleas, and
sent of the masters of their respective ves- Havana, it would not be long before he Josephs, and images of Christ—once the
sels, under pain of forfeiture of what they would gain a footnold on shore, and then the work of world-known sculptors—once of
may supply them with, and all damages that result is in the hands of the Almighty; and solid gold and silver—once arrayed in costmay arise from the concealment of mari- the idolshe will utterly demolish, or his word liest robes and sparkling with precious
gems; now stunted, daubed and distorted
ners.
This law,has been amended," adds ! shall fail.
waxen or wooden effigies, that disgraced the
Mir Thrasher, "by the imposition of a fine
Religion is Cuba.—Notwithstanding .workmen.
I saw the Host, (with tha guard
of $i4 on any boarding house keeper that
shall keep a sailor one night without per- the efforts ot the Government and Priest- soldiers, which, according to one of the
mission, over and above tbe forfeiture above hood to bolster up the mortifying body of daily papers, protected the Divine MajesRomanism in Cuba, the observer cannot ty") borne along—not as of yore, between
named."
It is not needful to say innch of the prob- help seeing and believing that it is already lines of prostrate devotees, but through
able influence of such a chaplaincy on the death-stricken. Its pulse already flutters— straggling gorges of idle and laaghing men,
religion of Cuba. The direct influence up- stimulants cannot arouse it. The only med- not half of whom deigned to uncover their
on the people would be probably small; for icines administered by its anxious nurses are heads, not one of whom deigned to bend the
if the preacher were to engage much in any opiates, serving but to deepen its lethargy knee. But a few yeara ago, much of tbe
work aside from his special mission, he and hasten its dying gasp. The Spaniards Church property was confiscated and the
would be liable to be looked on with suspi- have been drenched in lies, till all religious monasteries broken up; and even in the
cion. The work of distributing Bibles and life nnd feeling are gone—and truth, and cbiefest of their temples, one may see, by

Had held worship there, using tbe Episcopal
forma. Capt MC. doubtless felt willing to
to all that he thought himself justifiable in
doing. I have no means of judging with

fiosed

"

suf-

"

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�12

THE Tftiia&gt;ri&gt;.

(January,i

upon them bow. I visited the former (he difference between Old Hundred" and Time passes on. The habit for strong
Church sod Convent of San Francisco, "Auld Lang Syne," yet" it shows how pow- drink increases. Listen now to the brandy
now a warehouse for bonded goods', Governx&gt;( drinker's musing,
ment stores, fkc. The skeleton of an em- erful, in his judgment, were the charms
music.
It
would
admit
of
no
small
degree
boweled orgsn towered in the gallery, above
"But now only look! I'm alight to behold,
a mass of barrels and tobacco bales, like a of debate to show whether Waahingtonian
'I he lieanty I boasted
fled.
single column among the ruins of Babylon; songs or Washingtonian speeches had been You would think I washasnearly
a hundred
and pilea of .bags and boxes occupied the
productive of the greatest amount of good
years old,
places of the images and altars, and filled in promoting tbe cause the United States. When I'm
raising my hand to my head;
in
the cells of the routed monks, and friars,
For
it
trembles
and shakes like tbe earth
What
has
been
done
other
of
tbe
in
parts
and nuns.
when it quakes,
Would that this visible decay of the Ro- world, we desire to witness on these shores. And
I'm always a spilling my tea,
mish Church in Cuba signified a better state If we cannot convince men by argument,
And
whenever 1 speak 1 make awful misof religious feeling—a more spiritual per- overwhelm them, with stubborn facts,
ception of truth! But i4 tells of nothing shame them by ridicule, let us charut Tilltakes,
every one's laughing at me.
better than rankest infidelity, generated in
intelligent minds by the corruptions of-the them with music, and sing them into an
He then endeavors to account for the
priesthood; it tells of reckless indifference adoption of cold water principles. Who
in the more sensual and debased, arising can estimate the good accomplished by that reason tvhy the ladies "don't love" him,
from the reckloss example of their superiors. song,
and thinks he discovers it to be from the
And in many of those who play parts in this
loss of his beautiful aquiline nose," which
insipid farce, it tells of Atheism, " clothed " Tbe drink (hat's in the drunkard's bowl now resembles "an "overgrown 'strawberry
in the livery.of God to servy the devil in " Is not not the drink for me,
stuck on his face." Such figures ofspeech
But it also bids us hope that the " rock " of It kills his body and his soul,
their foundation in the reality! At
St. Peter,, whicb has climbed, and climbed How sad a eight is he, he."
till its crags pierce even the temple of God,
igth, however, the old brandy drinker
exalting itself above all that is called God, Let a company of young people become comes to himself, when he breaks forth;.in
"showing
itself that it t* God," is already be- fond of such temperance songs as the folimpassioned burst of poetical
ginning to topple and to fall. It binds us lowing, and you hnve a powerful barrier to the following
believe, that when Protestantism shall be
them from the paths of intemperance.
planted here, it will, with its regenerating keep
M old brandy bottle, I'll love you no
powers, restore to lift* the dying and the Sparkling and bright in its liquid light,
more,
dead.
L. GROSVENOR.
Is the water in our glasses;
on ye ruined me, body and soul,
New York, May 10, 1844.
'Twill give you health, 'twill give you wealth, I'll dash
you to pieces, and swear from this
Ye lads, and rosy lasses.
,
hour,
O then resign youi ruby wine,
To give up both you and the bowl.
Each smiling son and daughter,
And 111 now go and sign;—(l could surely
There's nothing so good for the youthdo worse)
kolulu, January 15, 1845.
ful blood,
On thut pledge all my hopes I repose,
sweet as the sparkling water.
Or
And I'll get back my money in pocket antT
MUSIC AND TEMPERANCE.
purse,
For once, we rejoice that the power of It has been with almost perfect delight
song has been brought to the aid of the tem- that we have heard the young Chiefs and And I'll get back my beautiful nose!
perance reform among the people of Hono- other young people sing the above song.
lulu. It has been what we have long de- As the chorus is sung by a full choir of voisired, but have hot been gratified to see ac- ces, what wine-bibber is not resolved for ca,Power of Song.—Mr. Bushnell, of UtiYork, a zealous Washingtonian, havcomplished until the meeting of the Hawai- once to dash his wine cup to the earth? On ing N.
business in. a neighboring town was
ian Total Abstinence Union, held on the the evening of the 31st ult. we thought the obliged in consequence to see
the landlord
31st of December, 1844. Vocal and in- song,
of the village inn—he popped at his bouse.
When he entered Me bat room, he ssw
struments! music are made 'aids to sentiYou old brandy bottle, I've lov'd you too about twenty
"
men in it, most of whom were
social
and
ment,
feeling
religious devotion,
long,"
in a stnte
of them
but hitherto the advocates of total abstinence
was sung with great and good effect. NV&gt;w quite drunk. After a little time, one of the
have been obliged to pass their hours' of
company said .something to Mr. Bushnell,
meeting in musical, although not moody si-' reader, yon may be a lover of good old. who replied in a courteous manner,
and
lence. That old dramatist Shakspeare, has Cognac, yet you cannot deny hut that song spoke on the subject of temperance.' Imof sober, home- mediately, the attention of the
contains
a
amount
good
aaid, " The man that hath not music in himassembly was
and the cause was denounced as
self, nor is not moved by concord of sweet spun truth. Many a brandy drinker at the arrested,
the
work
of
the priests and politicians.
sounds, is fit for treasons, stratagems and commencement of his career could say to Mr. Bushnell,
finding it impossible to
his
bottle,
brandy
spoils; his spirits move as dull as tiight, and
stem the current of abuse by an
appeal to
his affections dark as Erebus. Let no sturh " I had plenty, of cash in my pocket and their reason, proposed singing a temperance
purse,
song, to which they all agreed, and
man be trusted." This judgment falls rathbe acAnd my cheeks were as red as a rose,
cordingly commenced the Staunch Tefoer heavy upon some of the sons of Adam
"
And the day when I took you for better or
0n glanciug around the room
and daughters of Eve, who cannot bum
worse,
h &lt;l conc u&lt;'*«. he observed the tear
*,
*
J,
the scale, " do, re, mi, Btc." or distinguish I'd a beautiful aquiline nose.
trickling down the cheek of almost every
ty is

.

'

Kuence,

ETHE

FRIEND.

_.

.

&lt;

'

I

• •"

uJler

'

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�T H fc. V ft I fc X

1846.)

«.

13

resident,
until a few days Honing his thoughts to a gentleman
man. The sentiment of the song and the They kept the matter secret
said to hitn he thought be
that
gentleman
who
from
some
one
which
it
was
when
it
leaked
out
sgo,
manner
in
rnelsdious'touching
but might get up a society here, and persuaded
sung, had awakened their purest sensibili- whs not quite so guarded as he might"be,
him to try to gather the residents, snd talk
ties—had carried their thoughts back to their it was -said that the establishment could not over
the matter. He went out among them,
it
would
be
defendwas,
be
and
it
if
they
found,
as
families and firesides, surrounded
they
and
all promised to sttend the meeting,
But
innothing
swords
points.
once were with plenty, happiness and* affec- ed even at
which
was
held last Monday evening. The
a
tion; and then the contrast of a drunkard's timidated by threats, Dr., White -rallied
was
addressed by persons present,
meeting
jumped
veterßnsv,
of
temperance
home, its dark wretchedness and misery, Company
drawn up, which 9 out of 14
and
a
pledge
river,
the
in quest
were widely presented to their minds—and into a boat, and put down
the
evening they met again,
next
They
signed;
those hardened men could not resist the ap- of the bead quartets of Bachus.
and
meeting, obtajilad
had
an
interesting
the
into
put
miles,
its
truth
tears!
went
down
about
ten
and
by
peal, but acknowledged
and
voted to commusome
more
signatures,,
and
soon coming
The song was unanimously called for again, mouth of a small stream,
nicate with the society at Honolulu. You
commenclanded,
its
to
a
and
rock,.they
repetition.
their'wishes'gratified,
by
large
and
will get the official and particular account
Soon after the landlord came in, and he was ed a thorough search" in a dense thicket of from them. B. Pitmua, Jr. has been the
requested to repeat it for* his special benefit; oak and fir. To cut. the story short, they means, in a great measure, of bringing
it produced the same effect oh him, and after soon found the object of their search, which about this
good work. All those that have
Mr. Bushnell had concluded, he grasped consisted of eight barrels and two hogsheads signed, exceptingtiim and his father, ware
him by the hand and exclaimed —" I. will of stuff prepared for, distillation, the large hard-drinkers/ They bid fair, and may they
never sell arfother glass of liquor as long as kettle was set in an a/eh, and every thing
receive strength sufficient for their temptaI live!" He acted immediately upon the else necessary to proceed in tbe work of tions.
resolution, cut down his sigu-post, and clos- death. They did not hesitate what to do,
but By an arrival from the Volcano this morned bis liar—the others promising to go to but immediately destroyed epory thing
ing, 1 learn that the lake is now full and the
boat,
the
the temperance meeting that evening, and the ketile, wriich they rolled into
action
consequently increased; persons
I have
sign the pledge, and they all did except one. and brought it back into the town. are
the standing on the edge can dip up the liquid
not time to make comments, these
'_
lava-with a stick three feet long.
1 !
■principal facts."
With much respect,
,
I'remain,
ThengOtreqiouvnaesr
King Alcohol, or his abettors and
Temperance Irruption, or Hilo has
.agents.—A friend has kindly-furnished the
come to the rescue.—By the last arrival
following, extract of ja- letter, dated Walla- from Byron's Bay, Hawaii, letters have been
there occurmerte Falls, Aug. I, 1*844.
received giving the most cheering accounts care of the Rev. Abbe Maigret,
The
number
68
births.
to
62
deaths
and
it will be pleasing to you
of a temperance irruption, which, according red
" Perhaps
number
of
deaths
up
learn
how things, are done in Oregon, in re- to present
births
the
of
exceeded
appearance, is destined to lay
the rainy seagard to the subject of tomperance&gt; The
«f
A»
to
the
Btb
December.
contrast between ou,f method* of doing the waste the entire dominions of old King Alson commenced, mortality increased, as
business, and the policy pursued by the good cohol. • At the meeting of the H. T. A. Unpeople of Oahu, is very striking indeed. I ion, held on the Vth'of the current month, a might be naturally expected.
will leave it with temperance people to most interesting communication appeared in
�judge which of the two methods is best cal- the (as yet) unpublished columns of the Casculated to promote the objects of temperance
We have learned that in two or three incade. The following extract, taken from a
movements.
As the grand license system of Oahu is letter addressed to the editor of the Friend, stances, the carrier neglected to leave panow known and read of all men, it is not ne- confirms the statements in the Cascade. pers with Honolulu subscribers on the Ist
cessary for me to exhibitjt here. } would The two communications were written by of January. If the case should agaia ocsimply refer to two circumstances which are different gentlemen.
cur, the neglect will be immediately atteudcalculated to show what is the public opinion
of Oregon, with respect to the making yen
Hilo, Dec. 13, 1844.'
ding, and use of alcoholic drinks. These

.

Duringthyupnedar 184, astoral

.

Rev. and Dear-Sia.—■* * *The,best news
two things are exhibited in a' few words
First the legislative committee, which forms I have to communicate is, that Hilo has
a part of our " Provisional Government," come to the rescue. Temperance has here
passed an act in their session this-surptner, unfurled her banner and the residents are
which imposes a fine of one hundred dollars enlisting.-. Coming forward i obly to the
upon any persons who shall either bring to work, and bid fair to drive King Alcohol
the country, make, sell, or give away spirit- from Hie Bay But to facts.. A person who
had long and faithfully served the ruin King,
uous liquors.
The second circumstance is this. A few who had descended low in the sea of intemlawless fellows, who were willing to do al- perance, who could take the disgusting, filmost any thing to obtain a little of the thy preperation of "Jlied," in his own words,
" creature," undertook secretly to establish a pale, nasty-faced half brother of old Ala distillery. They succeeded in purchasing cohol," came to the determination to cast
or eight barrels of molasses, a Urge, off the yoke of servitude, and enlist under
fix
potash kettle, under the pretence of wanting the tetotal banner, and see if his situation
it to boil awill for hogs, a quantity of tin to could*be any worse He thought of sendmake a worm, professing to want it for tbe ing his name to the society «t Honolulu, and
purpose of making a baker to bake bread in. beg admission among its members. Men-

.

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was

Temperance House.—It
with much
pleasure that we saw the sign with the
above inscription. For a long time a good
temperance eating htfhse has been greatly
wanted in Honolulu. Seamen have again
and again applied to us to direct them to
such an establishment. From present appearance*, Messrs. Rogers and Grant will
find good encouragement in their undertaking. We hope temperance landsmen aad
seamen will not fail to patronise the boons,
and that the keepers will be abundantly rewarded for th'cir exertions to serve tbe pub-

lic, after a temperance style.

�14

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Fa- 4m) Frwod.

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(January,

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than one-third the whole number become
COMMUNICATEU.
drunkards themselves.
ISLANDS.
MARQUESAN
TISHERINATOFXCDRIGNMKS MORAL?
Take Hie fqllowing also from the temPART 11.
BAmicyus.—6
No .
perance lecture by Shinuel Chipmrtn.
and
Their.discovery
"Is
the
vender
What
do
early histonl, by Ret. Jl
One point more. Allowing that the
benefitted?
Thompson, formerly an English Missionaman who traffics in intoxicating drinks facts show on'th'nvfflint? Let the reader
does secure golden gartfa, admit, if yon look around liim anda nswer this question. ry at Marquesas.
[Continued from page 4.]
please, that he lays up abundantly, does, Where has tb*J man lived who bus a titawGeographical 'and general drscriphis buffineHS render his friends and con- ed a fortune by the sale of liquor—•-has
the principle Islaad of tbe
nexions respectable and happy? Is the died sober, end hasteft a fortune to sober tion.—Nuuhivrt,
contains
a
population of about 6000,
group,
children?
this
need
not
point,!
Facts on
influence of his business upon his family
and
is nearly 50. mile* in circumference.
salutary? or is it in ten thousand "instan- multiply;' tbey are in. reach of every one. Tbe harbor, which is upon the south side, h
ces hurtful, ruinous* 1 Does he cater •to In Connecticut state prison, two years in lat. 8° ho' south, long. 199° 63' west.
the lusts of tm neighbors in the presence ago, there were lrJ9 convicts; a great Uspoa an Island which lies 31 miles due
of his children, perhaps admit them to share intemperate, and of that class, 78 south, has a population ot 1000, and is abont
SO mires in circumference. Uahuga lies 30
a share of his business, and do tiiey es- laid been Jiquor sellers!
At Lebanon, Ohio, after I had closed mires east of Nuuhiva, contains a populacape contamination? On this point, and
Oh the unprofitable nature of the baffle my lectorfe, A. H. Dunlavy, Esq. a dis- tion estimated at 1000', and is about '24 milet
Islands are small sni
in circuit.
even in- a pecuniary light, I beg to call tinguished attorney, remarked to the au- uninhabited,Roberts
lio» about 40 milea N. N. W.
rhat*he
there
the attention of the reader to the follow- dience,
had resided
From of Nuuhiva. In the windward ate' Ilivaoa,
ing facts, collected by the author of the the elrliest settlement of tljat town, had or La Dominica, stretching about 30 miles
known every man who had kept a tavern from east to west, broad at one end and tenTemperance Documents.
there, and he "said the number was 31» ding to a point at the other, contains 6,60(
The
traffic
ht
ardent
seems
to
spirit
"
be marked, eve* in this life, with decisive of whom twenty-five had gone to drunk- inhabitants; near.'the western end, divider,
a'channel, about 5 aiires south lies T.iindications of divine abhorrence; and ards' graves. Of the other six, no one by
huate,
or Santa Christina, an oblong Island,
prepflir.ty."
with premonitions of sure and awful re- made
JO miles round. The harbor, which
tribution in the life to -come. In a great
With much propriety and force then about
is on the western side, is isrlat. 9° 5-1' south,
proportion of all the families that' have does the lecturer ask, in conckisiqn;
long. 138° 53' west '(The position of.the
Why then should the traffic.be con- group is from observations ttiken by officers
been accustomed to deal out this poison
"
to others, one or more of the members. tinued? Who is benefitted? The drunk- in Her Majesty's Navy, and is about 16
often the head, awl in many cases a ma- ard is not; the man who abstains is not; miles eastward of that assigned to it upon
jority of the members, have died drunk- the tax payer is not; the poor man is not; Arrowsmilh's chart) Tahuate contains'
the rich man is not. ' The poor man by 1000 inhabitants. Fptima, or La Magdaleards.
na, 35 miles S S. Eof, the latter, is about
In Stcphentown, N. York, there have purchasing the liquor, "takes the shingles '24 miles
in circuit,'and contains a popala
from
on
been fifty-four tavern-keepers who sold
his own roof and puts them
to tion of 3000.
Pedro and Hoods islands
ardent spirit; thirty-seveu did not succeed his neighbor's." The use of it is at war are small and uninhabited.
in business; sixteen are living io'tempe- with the laws of life and health, destroys The face of the country is every where
the peace of families and communities." very'rugged, there is nothing like level
rate; and four have died drunkards.
Is it not then clear as noon day, I sub- land; and large masses of rock thrown by
In Petersonrgh there have been fiftyfour inn-keepers; five succeeded t ia their mit, that a traffic at war with every princi- some tremendous convulsion of nauire, lie
business, and of the forty-nine who did ple of self-Jove, a traffic on which no man scattered in every direction. TbfjF whole
country displays evident marks of volcsnio
not, eleven died drunkards.
can ask the blessing of God; a traffic re- formation
In Sand lake there have been, in twen- pudiated by every man's conscsence; a Those Islands differ from most others in
ty years, twenty-nine inn-keepers; seven, traffic. which destroys all self respect, Polynesia by having no coral reef around
made money, and five became drunk- brings poverty and disgrace, and ruin, in them; the sea rolls to the base of the mounso many instances, upon the trafficcr and tains, and pi events the formation of that levards.
In Brunswick there have been forty his family, is an immorality? Should ft el belt of land so valuable to the natives ol
tavern-keepers, twenty-two of them be- not, at- once and foraaver be abandoned other, groups; it also occasions a bold rugged
with heavy surf breaking all around,
came intemperate, and four died drunk- by each and every man, who -claims to coast,
that here a good landing place is seldom
so
blessed
love, I do not here say the ever
ards.
found, and 'in many places it is utterly imIn Wynants Kill and Albfa there hive God, or even his neighbor, but himself?
practicable for a boat to reach the shore.
been twenty-two; and nine of them vailThe sea is very deep in the immediate neigh
ed by intemperance.
borhood, and soundings are only found within few fathoms of the const. Tbe islands
In Lansinglnrrgh, ol eighteen tavernA bachelor editor in Baltimore was re- area every
where intersected by lofty ridges
keepers, twelve are intemperate, or have
on board the French of mountains varying from 3000 to tiOOO
died drunkards. Ten deaths have been fused admission
by deep and fertile vallies,
occasioned in the town by ardent spirit, steam ship because -he had not a lady feet, separated
mountains are so steep, yet in many
The
shall
gat one
during the past year. Here then, in a with him. He thinks he
parts so covered by trees and brushwood, as
single county, of 207 tavern-keeper* who and carry her about on his arm as a kind in present an interesting and romantic a*sold ardent spirit, seventy-nine, more of passport or ticket of admission!
jiearunce. Some of them are so very rug-*

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Tilfc'Y*l£Xl&gt;.

IBib.)

EDUCATION.
ged and barren, thai when viewed from the tbe mineral water, ajilywgh disagrtearble,
seem
but
as
Tkb'Oaiht Chj**itt School. —The
Hogs,
very
inviting,
you
do
not
wholesome.
sea,
is, I believe, perfectly
approach the coast, and see the rich foliage fowls, sweet potatoes, oocoa*nuts and ba- anuual meeiing of the friends and subwhich clothes.the vallies, they appear -lo nanas may be
this useful iustitution was
ohtamfd, though not in
much greater advantage. The Islands are abundance. No Jiar*bru- rjues, but tr pres- sciibers of
«vory where we", supplied with good whaler; ent to the chief is customary. Resolu- held at the Mansion House on the evethere are no large rivers, but many brooks
the wind ning of.the 4th "instant. Dr. T. C. B.
and springs. Upon tbV large Islands-there" tion Bay is open to the. w,aatt but dire«io\i,
Rook whs appointed moderator. The
•re mineral springs, which the natives ca(l never' blows strong ffbta/llmt
Some
writers.art-'
perfect
in
water).
at
seaaans
of the Treasurer having been read,
(hitler
and
te.
ships
report
viit hava,
sjU
on these Islands mention "beautiful cas- safety. Ships makings long stay 'would was approved. The business of tbe last
cades," but as I have never seen jiny, I am do wejl to secure good anchorage, as we •year "was cfosed", au4&gt; she following geninclined to believe that they being only tran- are fiere subject* to iieav*y gusts'from the
sient visiters, happened to be here in a sea- mountain's, and shios occasionally., drag. tlemen Were chosen 'mffitjters and Trustees
son of rain, when there are temporary falls
this port bad bet- for the ensuing year,a-ia:—¥*. W. ThompThe vallies generally stretch almost frotn the Ships inlendrrWto enterof the Island, and son, Secrejart; S. Reynolds, Treasurer ;
centre of the Island to the-sca. aad in every ter wo/k to windward
J. O. Carter,
valley where breadfruit is to be found, na- come* through tbe channel which divides T C. B Rooke, H. Grimes,
soil
taken
their
abode.
The
the
and
passage
A. AlJams, -Tiustees.
up
this Island from Dominica;
Holt ¥
tives have
clear of. all Among tfte votes passed at the Annual
in the vallies is ajmost all that is capable of though narrow, is'deep
cultivation, but it is good, and here all the obstructions, with a current generally-setvarieties of tropical prodace maybe reared. ting to the westward sufficient to bring a meeting, ate the following,—.
In all the islands there, are harbors, but fr.d*fn
which is Voted, iW the dwelling house be
the sav,ige*eHaiacter"of \Ui ' people, two of ship through, 'even'if becajmed,
often offeuel for tent,'and that Mr, F. W.
them afotie are ••visited, tyont. Aan \ Maria, a rare occurrence. Whales,are
A Thompson fshall be the proper person to
of
the
channel.
Nuuhiva, aad Resolutioa•-. Bay, Taliuata. taken .at the entrance
mouth
of
the
of
at
the
(be,
.war,
the
two
boards
the.
ships
pilot
ship
latter,
At
French
whom application may be made. It was
brig Pylade, visiting trie Islands, and H. M hnrbor,~but none* is necessary, as there also'voted that
Stetson be paid for
S. S/marang. (wtiich calre'd .for water upon are no obstructions.} deep water to the
herVoul for China) two Missiona/y vessels, very shore. Between the centre anfl his services as teacher, during the year
both English*,, bat one freighted by the
north side of the" bay, good anchorage 1845.
French JVli.sflioßarics. Three British and will
source ofemuch pleas.To us, it is
be found.. Wood' is here in abuntwelve" American whalers having touched
School opens the year
Charity
that,the
-easily
ure,
and
obtaingood
;
water
during the last year. At Nuuhiva, the Py- dance
Potatoes, coeoe-nuta and bana- under so- fayorable prospects of usefullade, Her Ma S "Sulphur and Sterling, sur- ed.
veying vessels,, ane Missionary vessel and nas, at times plentiful, often scarce, some- ness fo the' t%\tug generation in this ylabout lea or, twelve whalers have anchored time*! a few pumpkins, fowls, and a few
We hoj&gt;e .the Trustees will be
dining the same period. A few more touch- hogs obtained by sending the boats with lage.
sustained in maintaining this
abundantly
ing at ether Islands without.owning into an interpreter 'trading round the large
this
the teacher** salary, and
port, make the total fthijipiog
paying,
of Dominica ; go in the morning, school,
group about 40 aantully. At all the Islands Islandreturn
in repair. How
the
buildings
in the, evenipg, generally Willi keeping
boats are serit ashore trading, while the and
virtue,
the
of
education and
lovers
ships are lying off, bat not without danger. a good supply. Tlie ba/bor i/su.fficient- can
an
to
allow
whale
Niiujiiva,
ly
ships
cooper
tjO
At
secure
unfrequented bay upon
intelligence 'in*.Honolulu, better dispose
C*pt. Brown, of the U. S. whaler" Cathe- their oil. A hea'v*y surf sometimes" ren- of five,-ten, or fifty dollars each, than by
rine, Was seiyd and bound for .five* nights ders landing diffienkfhere ; iir other re*patronizing the Charity rfchool? Let it
The first mate of the Alexander, -U. S. whasimilar to .Nuuniva. A spring never be said, that the descendants of an
s|&gt;ects,
ler, was killed upon Uapof, and. twa mus- tide rises'here onljtbbout four feet. High
Ameripan or Englishman on tbe Sandket* were atolqg from a boat belonging to
full,
.at
and
Bay,
WtUer
at
Resolution
Islands,' grew up to manhood with•virh
the Swift, U. States, off the .Island of Hominies., during the last year. For ihe"in- change of the moon, 2 h. fi4 mm. • In-. out enjoying tltf advantages of a good
formation of your. sea-fatitfg'renders, we tending to make a'series of observations eduction! We* desire to see* the young
■may mention that the tfhrboe of Nuhbrva fs upon the tide, \ hi*) erected a tidejgtiage, aftiong foreigners and natives, well trainsafe and comtm dious, easily entered and of" bat after 'obscrviqg* one title, a gaje&gt; of ed a| ■ common schools. There is no part
equally easy egress It opens to the'soufh* wind caineon.lnd' destroyed thei guSge. of the world where mind, educated mind,
is ahout two miles deep, arid forms a fine basin,■He at CONTINUED. '
,is destined to exert a mere powerful inwhere ships may undergo any repair. JDarC
ag*a*ss**ssaassas*a=ac
r ■
fluence ; hence*, the young should enjoy
is necessary to be exercised here in selectnature
best
feature
the
best possible advantages. It is the
Good
is the
in the
ing a person to conduct tbe trade, as some
of those who put off to ships, 'are men of finest face; «r'rt. majr raise "admiration, remark, we think, of the political -econoabandoned character, unacquainted with the judgment may command* respect, "and mist Say, that tbe person who plants a
language and consequently insy involve the knowledge attention. Beauty may in shade- tree, or causes it to grow, is a pubparties in difficulties from misundcr--landing.
the heart with lore, but good nature lic benefactor; if that be true, is not the
Runaways, if not Islanders, may bo recov- flame more powerful effect: it adds a patron, of schools a. public bepefactor ?
has
a
i
ered by ransom Wood here is become
our streets and yards,
rather scarce. Water is plentiful and good, thousand attractions to the charm ofF Shade-trees adorn
youth embellish socieiv and
but
cduc-nted
and
an
air
benevolence
gives
rain,
after
of
beauty,
when the stream
except
heavy
mixes with a mineral spring upon its bank,

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�THE VJLIT,NB.

16

MARINE INTELLIGENCE.

SELECT EXTRACTS.

(January,
PASSENGJ.BS.

Rt.

The
Rev. Mr. Blancbet, Bishop of Philadelphia,
arrived onboard the Columbia, and has sailed fbrl-oi*
don.
On
board
the same vessel, arrived and sailed,
UicAiirirui. iitiact-When 1 look upon the
Mr. Geyer, a German Botanist: also ftrnved Dr. Babtomb* of the great. every emotion of envy die* within
lady,
BjidUwo
cock,
childian. fjevts.Mr I erldns, lad),
me; whan I read toe epitaphs of the beautiful, every
PBEDOFVRLTOIASGW'IRTESLAND.
inordinate denot roes out; when I meet with-the gmf The vvmeriean brig- Mil ware, Pell master, sailed and three children They rfav* been connected witl
tit* Methodist Missions in Oregon, and aranow returnof pursuit upon tbe tomb-stone, my heart melts with from, this pott
ontflVJOt of last Octdber, for the pui% iiiK tsvthe United Slates. *Airitod on board the Will
i-ompuwion: when 1 see tombs of parents themselves,
1 consider tlie vanity of (nevina; for those wlioavvte pose of bruiginsj-oIT. the cargo of od saved from tbe Watch, Mr. Heginbothntn- wife, and two children;!
must soon follow: when Isee kings lying with these wreck of the IloyeVßorden. See Friend of Nov. 1. Tin. Wbittaker and daughter, and Mr. Popple* ell.
who deposed tham—when I consider mm Is laid side be On the 29th of October, a shoal was discovered in N.
side, or the holy men that divided tbe world witMntir
diipbtes, I reflect with sortua and astonishment on flva lat. £6 60, *nd Mt. long, J*74 26, extending N. W. and
little competition.*, fact lonfrfAiid debate* of mankind; S, E. shoot 30 miles, with the appVuranc* of very shoal
when I read the several dates on the tombs of some v/atar. T5eV came to anchor one night in 16fajljonis
that died yesterday, sjia-aome sixteen hundrexL yearej water. Nov 1, came to anchor at the Island where
BKEWER &amp; CO.
ago, I consider that rreYspay when wajsbaU all of usI the Holder Bfcrdfcu wis lost; on (he
following day went GENERAL
COMMISSION MERCHANTS',
inside
the
left
on
the
were
Island,
reef.. All persons
.—.
HONOLULU,
OAHU, H. I.
found
health.
Mac
end
month
in*good
By
they
0%l he
DomekstnicolAfww,tns.—eThy ho
' Charles Brcvves, 1
talk of a poor man'rberduveiiieuts coldly-, as a happy had succeededtin taking on board the oil and whatever
#1. Y. ll.Uaiwkill, &gt;
release from pain to the departed, aad a foereiful relief was thought advisable1 to bring off A'severe gal*
' Kkanci* Johnson. )
from expense to the survivor—thefliale know what
days,
f
rom
the
westward
detained
them
about
ten
but
N. B. Wanted, Bill* on.the United States, England
the agony of those hejtmvements is. A silenulook of
affection aad regard/swhcn all other eye* are turned on tbe 14th' of December, they sailed for Oahu. In- fee. for which money will be advanced-on the most fa.
coldly away—toe consciousness that we possess the stead of finding, the Whole -quantity of oil that was vorubl* teinis.
Jaw. I, 1846,
tf
sympathy and affection of one being wHen all other*
savedVrom the Holder Borden, Capt: Pell
have deserted us—ha bold,a st.iya-comfort in the originally
deepest affliction, which no wealth couid'purcnase. no 'discovered that about 400 barn-Is had leaked out, nence
honor bestow.
be brought off only 906 barrels, or thereabouts. She
HONOLULU&lt;
■
left on the beech, beside the'old hulk of the wrecked
a
F.W.ThoMPSON,) 1™ 0 "!'0 '"ESducilateons.—fuMnchein vessel, about 160 Sarntls of old casba, a small wood
reality dependent'Upon accident, orwhat is calledluck, house, and sufficient timber to buHd a small vessel; and January, 16,11*49. «
than ■ commonly supposed. Far moreMepeuds Upon other thing*,of no value.
Cfc£t Pell planted about 80
the object* which a man proposes toshimself; w*a»t attainments he aspires to; what is the circle- which cocoanuts 00 tbe 91 E. point of the Island, the future
hounds hi* visions and thoughts; what he chooses? not fruit of which may yet be catch by some shipwrecked
eCHRtNOMETER MAKQB,
to be edncstedJor, bat to educatWiintself for? wheth- mariner!
oAi?for«s'e0 Ai?for«s'e an
Jewelry, WaJches,
er he look* to the end and aim oTme whole of Jife, of •The day after leaving the&gt; Island, a reef was discovonly to the present day or hour; whether he listens to ered
•&gt; *V •
*
lat.
aad
M,
vi N
27
W. long. 174 26, with very
CHRONOMETERS REPAIRED. AJVD. ACC\j«ATE
the voice of indolence or vulgar pleasure, or to the
stirring voice in hjs own soul, urfing his ambition on to heavy brekker*. Capt Pell found by observations that
bIVBN.
RykTES
laudable objects^
hi* former observations were-qinte accurate, which Particular attention •pafd to fine vfatoh
give the position ofFell.'s Island, N.-lat. 2101, and W. bectant andQuiidraatOlesses silvered andreawrmg.adjusted.
Honolulu, Ou.hu, Jan. 16,- 1845.
Tong. 174 51.

.

StOTERTISEMENTS.

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•Ma*nsioiv house,

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TSWSj -^C^JRDIfCA-tT..-

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At Lahaina, by Rev. L. Andrawsfan' the Bth If Nov.
MrjfcAaa A. Dimack, to Keakahma, all ofLahaina.

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MARRIED.

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Port of Honolulu.

VESSELS IN PORT, JAN. 13.

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Reward.'

TRAYED stoltn from the
of the
S.
scnber, young hdrse marked XX. The abov*
a

or

hjemipes

sub-,

•

reward will be paid to any peiaon who v«ill restore tin
H. B. M. Ketch Basilisk, English brigs Euphema and said animal to
C. BREWER, fc CO.
Honolulu,*)** Jjf, 1846t
ships Cocas and Israel three French whalers, Ameriprinting the Friend),-C
can brig Delaware, Belgian brig Indefatigable, HanoFor Sale,
verian whale ship Crown Princess. *
sea aoaj 4000 *&gt;ci blrs, 6000 Lathes, 8»
Tons
K 7 Rolls
imbia,
China
20 kegs Nails, 300 lb* Coffee,
Dec. 81, Eng. bark Columbia, from Columbia River, 2-cssejsl.o.if Svgas, 70 bbls Salmon, 30 do Tobacco, 36
.'
Sperm
boxes
saifedfbrEng Jan. 12.
P
Candles, 150 boxes family Soap, No. V
1.II
80 Cords F. Wood.
Jan 1, whaling bark Naw ton, Slocum, (late Sawyer)
�
E.«k H. GRIMES.
of New Jjedford, 1506 wpale. Capt. Sawyer died of Jan. B, tttlmmf '
Liver complaint, at San Diego, California, on the 30th
of*Nov,. The crew refused to cruise -for vj hales under
hi Wanted.
the mate without first Heertjg an American Consul.
A CARD. The Rev, Lorrin Andrews, Seamen's Capt.
Slocum
was therefore obliged to come to this IVjR. VV. H. Heginbothanj, a .practical engineer,
f'haplaan at Lahaina, desire* to acknowledge* the re- port-. The Newton left at San Diego,
having a lso_ some-knowledge of house-joinery
ships Admitceipt of the following amount, for his services duajhg tance and Barnstable, of Boston, the hitter
to sail for desires employment.' He hss been for several year* is
th* year 1844.
Boston in three week*. ''Jibe Newton sailed on a' the employment 0/the East India Company. Mrs. 11.
cruise the lOtb.
oljpis Iter services as a good seamstress.
as follewa,
Tliey have taken.the House lust occupied by Mr. ColJam 4. Belgian brig Iridefafsjable, from Columbia.
schr. Will WJch, from Sydney, via T*&gt; cord, in Mam street.
•hiti. _.
Honolulu, Jan. 16, 1845.
Passengers on board the Will Watch report that when
titles at Ha&lt;
they wete sailing from Ny Zealand so Tahiti, on board ia
For Sale.
the schr.'Frtzroy, spoke Am. wb ship Cabinet, on 7th
the Btudy of the Seamen's Chaplain, Notion of
is.
Ocf!about 360 miles from I lervey Island. The Fitzroy AT(fie
Life. Character, and Labors of the late Berth
had lost ber reckoning, and all on. board Were suffering
L, Puasiki, or blind preacher of Maui, by Rev. J. ■
extremely for food and water. 3'he Master of the Cab- mas
S.
Green. Single copy 26 cent*, 8 copie*, 60 cent*, 1
I
inet furnished necessaries in abundance.
per dozen.
In giving place to the above Card, we cannot but exHanoverian whalk alipCrow Princess, 1775whale, $1,50
press our joy that the Seamen V Chaplain has been thus ItS saerm.
-. %
i-stained by the voluntary contributions of the friends American whale ship. Israel, Finch, 1600 whale, 100
of morality and religion. During the coming year, we
,he, Sosmen'* Chaplain, and by
A_ T ,ne,?1 "SW!
trust that they will be equally liberal.—Eg. Friend.
Jan. 7, Am. brig Delaware,"from Pell's Island. See ■'*■ Mr. E.
H. Boardman, VoL If, of tbe Friend,
above.
neatly bound. Price $2.
A CARD. As Chairman of the Executive ComJan. 18, ahip GoWHiinter, Wood, of Fall River,
al*o
invitee of the H. T. A. Union, the Seamen's Chaplain I 14 1-2 months 0ut,900 whale, 86 sperm; last from the
waald acknowledge the reception of 918,00 from the I port of Hilo, Hawaii{ left at thai port Bremen ship At the **me places, "Notes on the Commerce. Mir i
ompeny of the Uncas, for the purpose of pub-1 Patriot, 3400 wbale. Capt. Wood spoke the ship skins, fee, fee, of the Sandwich Islands, by R. C. WvlEsq. Single copy 81,00; 3 oopiee, $2,00, and ff7,H
HBaag WiTitT of the Cascade, and for defray ing the Hts of F. H. on the 9th, had taken 80 barrels of lie,
I ipsra *jdo* tsavrag thisport.
per dozen.

DONATIONS.

'

Julia, Schrs. falcon-end Will Watch, American whale

•

*

.

*

ARRIVED.

-

SJIX

•

.

'

*"**

•

..

•

.

,i

�</text>
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                    <text>FRIEND.
1

THE
SRMI-MOItTHI.Y /OUR-fALs

A

Publishe#WT«ditt;d

Samuel C.

I&gt;y

will

Chaplain,

Stamen's'

mo.y,

1843.

l

Jl

jEAMRS,

AND

TEJMJBAIH'-

(usually)

1,

IXTELLIGCXCE.

FRIEND,

THB
OF

JANUARY

I.
lIO\OMLI, OAIIU, 9.

IU.

Vol.

GENERAL

AXD

SBAMEIt, MARME

T&amp;MPSRAItCE,

TO

»£VOTSD

Da

issued

be

the Wand loth of every month,

on

8

containing

Itach namber

pages.

t bums.

One

j,'ive

&lt;t

"

I

---

"

&lt;«

"

".

lain,

or

Mr.

at

by
E.

study

the

6,00

-

-

...

-

-

-

7,00
10,00

-

for the Friend

of the Seamen's

the

following agents

H.

Boardrnan,

Chap-

—

L. Andrews, Seamen's
Mr.

4,00

#

Subscriptions and donations
received

#2,50

•

•

'

Three

T«n

\

-

annum,

per

copy

Two copies

Honolula; Rev.
Lahaina;

Chaplain,

Burnha-n, Koloa, Kauai;

and

the Am.

the Islands.

Missionaries throughout

ADVERTISEMENT?.
m

Terms.—One square, a insertions, $2,25,
and 50 cents for every additional insertion
One half square
and

374

for

cents

For yearly

tion.
one

or

column,

less,

FLOATING

nuiiimT

2 insertions,

every

THE

CHUROn

QiJR

OK

Moudit tb* reor «r

$1,75,

$iO.

not

exceeding

PRAYER AT

I painted
THE EPISCOPAL FLOATING

Prayer

LYDIA

SJGOUKNBT.

may be sweet, in cottage

WiM-a

aire

an

While through
.

H.

SEA.

I child

the

devoutly kneel,

open

nigli

casement

This novel and
the

homes,

The vernal blossoms fragrant steal.

way be sweet, in

stately

"halls
is

Where heart with kindred heart
And

upward

The

to

York,

hymns

praise melodious

sent.

las?.

The soul's

appeal

to

how

warm

God may be,

From friends and native land should turn,
A wanderer

on

the faithless

sea:—

to

sanded

edifice,

built

20th of

the

Brooklyn,

and

gy and

seamen

citizens

solemn and

being

first

huge

with

to

sermon

by

service of

two

withi

and

in

when

dark

open

of a

tion of
The\
on

all

enclosed

are

front of which is
a

In

a

and
naat

beai

a

ship's
for

n

object

which

strikes

the

•

large gilt anchor, re
immediately over the coeflH

The design, execution and «f}Di

building

the

parties

reflects great cred

concerned.

attracted much

wereli supposed,
jited

and

appropriateness.

this

servedly

interested J

color,

this beautiful edifice is the it

bible

table.

cler-

stone

reading desk, peripit,

much athnired

been

The fir*

entering
tation

about

hours,, when the ben-

The
table

roanshi;&gt; and

consecra-

Bishop

from the

attentive

an

audience for about

which has

Feb.

The la-

seated, the

then admitted.

were

interesting

and the

listened

a

as

plastering.

painted

over.

chancel rail,

number of

in attendance.

were

seamen,

dies and

with

gentlemen, together

together

put

like

marble font in the form of

New(

of the

apper

[communion

of N.

The Rt. Rev. Bishop Onderdonk,

York and

by

closely

so

to

matched and

the service of Al-

Tuesday

between 30 and 40

tion,
But he who fain would know

beautiful

consecrated

was

mighty God, on

250

blent,

the Eternal Throne

ol

SEAMEN,

The outside is covered with cedar board*

CHAPEL

Young Men's Missionary Society

ladies

Prayer

and

led,

FRIEND.

SEAMEN'S

.

FOR SEAMEN.

MM

FOR

anor nwiiu.

eadditional i"«r-

advertising,

POETRY.

BY

SAVTOI/R,

nu mnr,

that from 10

it the three

days

May

examination.

to

it

it

It

attention,
12,000

e/as

erer

ha* de-

and

it

persons

14

vw

thrown open for

be attractive and

pronounced and they dismissed. filled with anxious hearers,
hungering and
of this
Floating I
description
the
thirsting after righteousness, and may
to
distant
our
Church would be interesting
faithful servant of the Most High who has
state
that it is of
readers, we will briefly
of his master's vinecharge of this portion
wide deck
ediction

was

Thinking

a

■

ShooM hear its

deep, imploring

tone

Rise heavenward o'er the
When billows

toss

the

foaming surge
fragile bark,

And fearful blasts the conflict urge.

Gothic archttecttwe, baitt

By

«f 36

96

No

refuge

waves

where the foot may

and skies,

flee,

How will he cast, O Rock Divine!
The Anchor of hit

hope k Thee.

j walls

at

sufficient

the

eaves

to seat

are

28
11

feet

boats of 70

that of

a

timbers.

high.

feet with

600 persons.

tire interior roof is
Which

two

strongly by large

is
The apex of the roof

Naught, naught around, bat

pn

feet/covering

*set long, attached

a

The

yard

lie

found

long

neglected

Sailor',

an area

together with the side walls

are

at

bis

to

post,

the

breakm

perishing

April

mariner.—

a.

number

of

Magazine.

II

The form of

crushed

ever

bread of eternal lfe

arcn,
ceil*

.

Sailers
tow

of New York,
visiting the city

aro

furnished with the fourth chapel for the

�2

THE

Chapel

t* be

ues

in Rosevelt

The old Mari-

*ant

subject

still contin-

ally

drawn

street

The friends of

thronged.

in the

Baptist and Methodist denominations

tions for the thousands of
resort

to

view and

zine will show
Men's

Episcopal

in

their

church,

Let

God

efforts which
with abundant

sudden

be

mous

crowning

hitherto

uttering
were

at

confirm

is

The follow-

statement, ad-

this

in

columns

the

like the

I believe

ship

and

satan
too

in

God's
as

These

Sir,—

Dbar

communicating

have

the facts

spring;

bonrd

are

the

are

had on board

we

•sailed

these

at

s

eft port,

•

of

To

presented
of

to

on

his

that

mind,

he

was

the Rev.

also

he

that

me

convicted
reading of

sight

impression

constrained

Temperance

completely

evening by

previous

tract, and

a

throne of grace and
that he bad

giveness, adding

to

God's assistance,
other bad habits
been
on

guilty.

the

of which

of

having

religion

Mr. Coan,

Finding

that

swearing

at

our

forwith

and

had hitherto

he

own

were

been aroused

few weeks
I had beard n

Rev

resolved,

At this time my

subject

attention

imploring

leave off

to

his sins

quiet his mind by humbly confessing
before

the

endeavored

had

thoughts

serious, my

by

previously

a

sermon

from the

to,

feelings

25

medical

treat*

discharged and shipped
87

....

Consul

the

by

as

passen-

5
at

present

in the

13

Hospital,

••

am

Mr.

There died in

'-

IConsul's hands,

honor

facts connected with

Almighty

iC.

Wm.

rest on

H.

Dear

Sir,

the

on

belonging

two

Obt

Wm. Wells,

J.

to

J.

R.

Massy, Dropsy.
hard

Sherman,

tumors.

be,

your

humble servant,

&amp;.c.

W. J.

j

5

Hydrocephalus'.

Wolley,

1 have the honor

Sir,

Andrrws,

of

course

were

| htbtsis.

Danforth,

Dart, Dysentery.

Hoping &lt;di inking.

may

remaining

Aneurisms.

Smith,

faring brethren,

sea

the

in

Hospital

in the harbor, viz:

Erasmus Glover,

arresting iC.

destruction.

the

all 7, whereof

in

year,

trusting |to ships

HELLRUNG.

Rer.SL C. Damon.

5

Dec. 26,

board a Hamburg

on

Honolu-

Hospital,

Stales

Re-

Brig

1844.

this

iropor-

1844.

Lj«aina, Maui, Sept. 21,

1844.

Dear Sir,—l received

,ago,

,a

from the Rev.'R.

missionary

forming
interested

the

to

that he

me

two

years

Thompson, formerly

Marquesan
sent

the

at

"

containing

manuscript

letter

a

Islands,

in-

time

same

a

of Mar-

A Sketch

Reterbnd Sir, —As you are
&amp;c." written fbr the Hain the welfare of seamen and the progress of 'quesan History,
The
said
waiian Spectator.
manuscript,
allow me to relate to you the
temperance,
I had supposed was lost, has to day
which
which will
show you that
following facts,
I have
to
hand.
come
hastily glanced
not
there may be found true temperance if
through it. and think it would be read with
whose
home
is
on
sailors,
teetotalism among
the readers of the Friend.
All interest by
Baltic or North sea.
coast of the

on

spirit

oard

the

seen

rations

intoxicated,

should

shore,

were

coffee twice and
weather the

prepared
As the

crew

lose

the

given
tea

his

received at

night ginger tea

for every watch twice
this
ame into

Brig

to

have

the foremast hands,

something

they should

before the

call

to
on

offer

ter, but

we

draw

clude his

and

give

that

they

so

to

board.

One hour
was

for Mr.

Commerce,

Sandwich Islands.

strangers

I
brig sailed from this place,

"

we now

give

place

in

manu-

have

we

Wyllie

to con-

valuable

sur-

Btc".

Missions,
Most

our

contents of the Rer. Mr.

the

foregoing let-

him 'that

assure

waiting

to

the

comprehensive and

the

of
vey
of the

would

been

mate to

gin

may have thought

regard

script which accompanied

simply

the

in

quite negligent

Cap

port,

i

cold

ALEXANDER.

Our friend Mr Alexander

instead,
In

yours,

W. P.

S. C. Damon.

Rev.

us

day.

once a

No

wages.
but

out,

gallons

same

might

•

whether on board

the second
tain gave orders to
of brandy and
off
two

Very truly

Brig Julia,

Hamburg

under the condition that whosoever

should be
or

I

on

shipped

when

Hilo, Hawaii.
on

60

—

'Died,

the

in

to

in

of

of the

United

port of-

told hands

who

man

been

had

the

on

a

another

by

me

profess

Honolulu,

must

to

of

i do.

simple

path

blessing

"
at
what
Phillippi,
exclaim with the jailor
This was made the
I do to be saved."

known

.

-

under

all,

the U. S

bring .Remain

officers

our

the

was

-

EDITOR'S CORRESPONDENCE.

few

a

lilt and sinfulness in the

to

still

Seamen's Chaplain, Lahaina.

us

"
Abbott's Young
in
passage
Idenly became awakened to a

powerful

-

year,

been

have

For the Friend.

i

so

-

in

January

1844, from

unani-

this

number of

Islands, and

one

of

-1.

wages,

1Sent to

so

have prov-

who

God's

the

on

fr«&gt;m Oahu, about the

sand V*)ks

few,

a

follows:

as

on

but the wiles this
i

Yours, &amp;.c.
in

vessel

circum-

following
on

and

man

every

convicted,

assistance,

1

pleasure

great

the

you
occurred

which

last

I

to

for

Heaven-

son to our

their Lord.

&gt;

)

praise'

us to

worldly temptations

display of

that the

November 18, 1844.

the lan- I
Of this

of

influences

with

stronger

a
a

profane

were

we

been

not
re*

the United States Hos-

ol

place,

December

]Have

drank

the end of the year, I furnish

report

-

em-

seen,

board of

on

of
.Admitted,
lips |Remained from last

often

and

utter

the

almost

was

strong for all but

ed

Christ

that

your labors among my

Bhip Peruvian, St. John, N. B,

that

to

prodigal

that time

at

the sinners

of

it

to

16,

reading

had

never

crew

near
a

this

|pital of

steer-

those

too

to

with

the

as

Father.

forwarded by him this

Friend.

made

but

heard

change

ascribing

he

worship

that

blasphemy

holy spiritual striving

usback

hearts of of

in the

sea.

Lahaina, and

publication

stances

in the

was

been

now

the

was

in

God's

the Rev. L. Andrews, seamen's

to

chaplain

ship

Then it

of

purpose

and uniting

id

in the

meetings

you
J

cabin

gallons of spirits

Captain Penhailow

crew.

and
healthier
&lt;

opportunity

great

relax in their

land, God himself

on

living temples

will

letter

to

erecting temples ly
of seamen during

far off upon the
seamen,

for

and when

us,

in

'marked that

joined

the

two

that there had been

the

Iher size.
others of the ship's
' As it is

of prayer, and sing hymns
God and to the Lamb.
So

charities is

sojourn

consecrating

dressed

h

language,

good

While the christian

accommodation

their brief

ing

scriptures
Creator.

to

public

seems

success.

by her

the

and

10,24.)

the christian

not

church

the
our

drop by

&lt;
a

prayer.

held social

we

ployed

ohristians

see

joined

he

in

been

previously

Christ,

and forecastle for the

behalf of which

love

in

had
of

guage

(Hebrews

works.

to
to

done

out

in

efforts

another

one

be

love

short time several

a

offered,

Young

who

man

the

to

being

in

down with

c»me

conversing 'and reported

of

and there

Wilken

Captain

Mate

opportuni-

an

purpose

eternity,

with

«

natur-

we were

whenever

the

of

frequently

us

In

connected with

not to

are

for

one

company

age

pleasant

is

It

seamen.

with

annu-

Maga-

"

that the

conclusively

praiseworthy

provoking

for

from the

ship

converted

foregoing

the

Sailor's

Missionary Society,"

the

that

seamen

that port, while

extract

the

providing accommoda-

in

have been active

together

things

the

congenial,

were

ty occurred

seamen

on

al*/

(Janoahy,
A

worship of Almighty God.
ner's

¥UIEND.

gladly

columns

to

Thompson's

dot
the

man-

�THfc

which will

uscript,

be

followed

sketches of other portions of

from Peru

by original

Polynesia.

MARQUESAN

that

cific,

PART I.

"

discovery

Their

early history. by

Thompson, formerly

discovered,

was

has excited Considerable interest

extended the

and

fame

country;

opened

over

a

navigators have

intrepid

many

it

world;

the civilized

&lt;came

it

field where

braving

olence,

perils

home, long labored

savage

joy.
Many of the groups and

i

stud the bosom of the Pacific, have

of the earth.

trod,

foot of

little besides

and

country is known
blush

warm

the

early

of

nearly

three

still in that sav»ge
at

were

the

are

covered
him

by Mendoza,

"

Las

honor of

his

The latter

clear

when

was

was

Boston.

Its

ery of

Revolution

have

is

the

upon the shores

and

of Lieut.

All

dc

become

Marquesas.

Dios," they
his

seeing

of
f maize
shore

to

ritory,
"

them

Spain.

completed

was
"

of his Catholic
••

by

protect their

in
in

names,,

books
a

great

group

is

HergesUion

although

and

upon

measure
now

withdraw the troops,

honor of
f of them) and

Hergest, in
them

i

as

occa-

as

From the

iards

the! these

from the

August,

the

Islands

i nothing

is

the

manners

customs

and

personal I

te

language

include them ini

Fatima,

at

of ter-

natives,

discovered
seen

of

upon the

the

Pacific

were

we

21st

of

July,

for

At first the

name
"

Capt. Wilson,

the

then

vessel,

stay, they

who

natives,

matched

violate;

individuals

rates,

seems

what

here;

soon

they did

from the

else,

but

know

we

that

such

little

so

to

his

rout

to

may

Span-

presume'

the previous i

till

name

came to

Tahuata,

formerly given

natives

pi-

of the

not;

it

can

RflSJuL*

am

L

bej

first few and far bt

at

hits

(&gt;•

t

importance

to

!

increasing

of considerable

nually

re-

individuals

period, ships

gradually

place

again

it

whalers, several

recruit here.

The leeward

ly discovered,

been
group having

its

history

perhaps

affords

the

greatest interest is the visit
S.

Port Anna
his stay

ship Essex,

Maria,

there,

are

well

the

so recent-

nothing

of

circumstance

of

«&gt;l

with

Capt. Porter,
his

and hostilities with

known,

prizes,

t&lt;&gt;

harbor of Nntlhivn.
the

and reflect hnt

Taipi
little

However pol-

may approve, yet humanity must weep
know that in so many of the early visits
of Hood'si of civilized men to these savage shores, the

he added a small
I

Resolution

crew

nothing satisfactory

visit the group,

to

came
not

they

stragglers

that

upon
over-

yet living who
Whether
were

pretty certain

been

hbve

fired

themselves

are

member their visit.

to

during their

arid

enemies,

terms, which

men came

away;

with,

finding

such

by

in

tradition

a

considerable time,

a

went

quarrelled

to

of

party

a

remained

be-

to

11th, Cook

time between the

of them till visited by honor upon the commander.

the harbor of

the

built

visited, although i tribes,

again

gave the
On the 6th, Cook

Marquesas i Spaniards,

natives,

Marquesas importance;

intercourse of the

recorded

Vaitahu,

changed

group.

The first
was

naturally

the

reason

the

according

1797,

and hunted and American

pursue

Island to which he
Island.

among

in

in the U.

great

across

be well for the interests

Itmay

appearance of their inhabitants, and similar-

one

the

on

mention iamade

no

On

Some

Shortly

left

■ the Solomons.

charts, ,

obsolete,

known

(as

sail

set

the sth of

the Duff,

Majesty. learned,

being

homes,

his son!"

Tahiti.

or

Islands

hysteric-

about fourteen

afterwards

had

we

was

Barreto, Bounty,
prayer

kind of

a

visit of Cook and that of

sowing

wjth

their

from

drove them

tenance;

few

"

in

youth

a

fifteen years of age, looked on the deand dejected couna sorrowful

a

acquisition

new

quarrelled

came

sately

as

Three

had been in the

certained about them.
ceremony
after this
some

A

A troop of soldiers

soon

a

canoe

ceased with

they peaceable

accompa-

of the

possession

geography and history, if they never ' Cook, in April 1774, when
again should be divided, as their relative po- discovery of the Spaniards,

in

fleet

ashore,

of

ity

which

the Donna Ysabel

of

Span-

Finding

Hoods).

uponTahuata,

name

11,

Phillip

a

disput-

the British

by

called

these

found

and the whole

sition,

the

remaining Islands

celebrated

and .formal

taken in the

the discov-

named

to massacre

as

Islands;

Vancouver

Islands.

sionally

who

Ingraham,

as

Islands:

discovery

whom,

America,

was

or

in sailed for

sol-

This
the dis- . them with slaughter into the woods!!"
by France,
Capt. Marchand, who named themi affair probably induced the commander to

Washington

the

by

group,

Spanish

westward

Madre

wife,

mass

said,"

distant,

Jngraliam

discovery, however,

Capt.

covery of

few miles

by Capt.

the

the

was

the

affecting.

seem

canoe

other,

the

a

the

After

his

by

when

of Peru

Viceroy

a

in

discovered before 1791, which

not

seen

and claimed

ed,

and named nied

Mendoza,"

grow-

of the

out

laugh

favorable lieve he

a

moored, the commander landed,

dis-

from the windward upon

seen

day,
it

dc

the

patron

iH

water

gentle and innocent being*."

(except

"

port

anchor

to

a

Island,

to

group,

named

twflsWpupa,

1595,

although only

and may be
a

in

"

by

Although

Europeans

leaving

days

at

un-

punishment

killed, another, says Cook,
the blood and
full grown man, sat baling

embrued their hands in the their

convenient harbor

the former

Marquesas

few

discovered

soon

of the

Marquesas Islands,

windward and leeward:

by

iards

in which

state

number, divided int

in

Proceeding

first discovered ?

these

Among
nine

with

unoffending aboriginies

blood of those

of the
many

they

be lost

and made such

before

a

&lt;of Peru, cruelly

to

that

centuries,

of

course

to

barbarians.

interview

impression, yet
'the

the Ithe

cheek,

are most

lapse

the

felt

was

was

one

canoe,

he

in

scene

dis-

not

was

a severe

is very

individuals it would

littleboy, who al

of their i diers, who had been accustomed

Polynesia;

the

after

are,

groups

in

first

never

The

by Cook,

the

on

making

was

poor savage

dead;

shot

fortunately
described

expedition,

which

looking

attention,

Ithus satisfactory,

are

never

bring

not to

christian

the latter
know, that among
discoveries

has

name

it

Ought
each

upon

up

of the

pilot

was

his

certainly

have

plunderer

and the

stancheon
fire

to

hdhav-

Capt.

iron

an

in the tumult the command

tinctly heard,

of for his crime!

they speak

innocent appear-

deep iegret

among

delicate

present offspring.

intelligent

an

caught

ing

will,

at

roams

Missionary

a

had

emerg-

christian

Still-there

the fierce savage

where

many

where the

the

which leaving

recognized among 'their

claim to be

now

kingdoms

the

embraced

barbarity,

faith, and

the

expresses
Islands

and

off;

manly bearing
and

in which the

canoes

the

by

informed that

been

took

soon

of which

The

a tear.

state

duration,

circumstance

had been stolen, gave orders

succed-

struck

aud

drop

must

natives

this

ship;

the remembrance

over

they munity

pushed ing

every

beauty

which

their

to

Quiros, who

now

reaps in

ed from

descended

as

females;

the

As

of almost infinite

of short

was

arti-

sic.

little intercourse, the

a

unfortunate

an

nails,

and entered the

fear,

place,

by swimming

were

the

manners

iance, qualities

of her

misery

in tears, and

been,

males, and

Itheir gentle

unwearied wing, and where christian benevand

has

&lt;
of
|proportions

of their

commerce

They,

the

for

them

to

things, however,

of

home, for

by

sung

canoes

many

individuals

Ihandsome appearance,

immortal of the

won

future

were

After

lost all

they

Islands,

expedition.

the

ship.

throughout iing voyager

which science has soared with

the

the

Solomon

that time

at

cles

barter

near to

sufficiently

came

little commodities

of the value.

their view,

their

as

land

the

several

to

the

laudamus,"
to

summits

met

they

denee
their

early

of the Pa-

extent

lofty

be

to

stlached

priests

off, and

Polynesia

since

Ever

the

them

Te Deutns

Kngtish Missiona- '
approached

an

Marquesas.

ry at

them

Solo-

the

colony upon

mountains

,
and regarding
Rev. R.

a

little idea had those

when

Marquesnn

ISLANDS.

imagined

and

So

of the immense

nnvigators
COMMUNICATED.

form

to

islands

mon

TUIfcND.

3

inc.)

Bay."

anchor-

icy

to

paiuful anticipations

of Cook have been

when hei often realized, and thousands have

by

the1 that

ever

s&lt;

regrettr&lt;

their Islands have been discovered.

Upon the early history of

the

Islands

from

approached the ship i native tradition, I shall say nothing; it
with great timidity, but soon
gaining conn- • subject with which I am not sufficiently

is

a

ac-

�4

THE

the little which I have heard I

quainted;
not

inclined

believe,

to

anything satisfactory
from such

a

can

to

are

of time traditions unmutilated.
may retain
which

they

traditions of the

back

few genera-

tions, but of their national history, nothing
the last

extending beyond
received, and
actions

The

tion.
foul

clearest

BE

with

to

stream

by running through
TO

generation

live the

so to

sea,

existence

on

prepared

to

this

remainder of your
that

earth,

live

in

again

may be

you

the

kingdom

We would

But

bottom.

o'er

And

us

we

morning, awaken

of last

the shadow

cunnot its traces

that

you

a

record,

it

thrown,

most

Then

THE FRIEND.

truly, kind friends,

And

wish

"

With the
us

round,

remnant of life to

The

On the desolate waste

Mope's flowers

fbloopis

we are

we

has

year

which

through

the

we

Such
have

is

passed

inconsiderable

no

earth,

on

thou

as

A

art,

to ev-

year,

a

rea-

of thine

period

A record of the past

eternity.

gone forward

pilgrim

"

side of

are

that

bourne

whence

on

the other

no

traveller

future.
at

have you

have

you

sins?

Have you lived

good

errors

havo

to

It becomes you
-account

He has

God?

as

you

about

cisitudes and
beseech you

entering

K,eemplate
a

an

"

days

a

inspired

swifter than

your

What

its

of

proposi-

a

you

the

funds

usefulness

from its extensive

new

little

of the

and

columns

as

of

the

to

offers

the adver-

tising community.
By devoting,
Friend

"

to

say

the

last

this purpose,

would be enabled

we

carefully

the noble

we

to

by

aid in

the funds
a

arising

still greater de-

cause to

friends.

numerous

your

the

useful

terms

will be

to

accede

to

Our

our

CO.

&amp;

will be

seen

by

of

our

of the

last nun.!

er,

open

our

columns,

Those

time, and page.

said, sing,

will

weaver's

shut-1 tions

to

persons

please

the

of certain

and

it avail themselves of the

has

receiving

obviated;

now

study

We have hith-

the date.

tisements-on account
are

nations;

do

we

fold

ten

fur

terms,
may

privilege

adver-

objections

hence,

who

this

at

sup-

is

con-

statement

Low

ought

be the order of the

repairs.

should be rendered

nffcierous ships

the different

that have

ships

recruits

facility

property
had

But little less, if any,

and

to

we

that of all other

been left

$150,000 bas

ports by the 353

the

surprised

fishery

make

not

ample proof.

without

than

larger

fishery

during

somewhat

for

made
for

for

stopped

charges

port

day,

and

the

to

every

masters

their

obtaining

Peck,

good

in

Had

ports.

temperance

the

and

sense

purchasing

at

Lahaina,

the

result
we

it

of

sup-

of Mr.

retail

to

for sale last

would

in-

spring

have been far

happy

now most

are

been

not

foresight

the license

toxicating liquors, offered

Suppose that license,

publish.
last

port would have

that

at

11'arther short,

we

now

see

wish

Ist

to

of adverti-

forward their communicaof the Seamen's Chaplain.

ists

among

regard
of

to

than what

der

among

fruits

in

sobriety

of

to

the

the

bas,

of the

that

feeling

may

masters'

in

he

pro-

number of the

Reports of the quiet,
that

ex-

ships,

making the port

ship

April

of

much

or-

have been witnessec

at

Lahaina

during the past

season,

proclaim

aloud the

seamen

shipping

come

of whale
of

hands of

number

temperance ports,

for 1844.

and

now

The

masters

referring

published

Friend,

it

importance

Islands

the

learned by
test,

the

the

the

vender,

Lahai-

at

had fallen into the

spring,

round number of 200.

declined

repeatedly

Islands

the whalo

as

it exceeds

cerned,

arrivals

have received the above communication,

erto

So far

friend with

a

total of American

some'unprincipled

"Friend," Honolulu.

as

sum

by

American whale

here is much

posed.

na,

To the Rev. S. C. Damon, Editor

we

widely

as

paper

possi.de.

as

have

They

and the

risk

to

easily arranged.

publication

Simple and

this request

We remain yours truly,
C. BREWER

Since the

of the

different from what

With sentiments of respect,

your life, 'which

does

make

to

appro-

pnge of the pliefV Above all, we do strenuously mainthink the cirtain that the ports of these Islands should be

which you have devoted your valuable Journal, and also oblige
gree,

at

these

culation of the paper, and consequently its
usefulness would be much increased, and

As
vi-

way

be

arising from

thai

as

subscriptions.

is

Friend,"

circulation,

medium

a

"

us,

confer than

have

year,

rapidly
writer

the

great advantages

soul

duties,

past,

a

to

to

in

enquire

penman has defined "even

away."

that another

my

many

your life and

Consider

So

materially

increase

If you conclude

gratitude?

this

appeareth for

are

to

upon the

of the

the future.

then vanisheth

pass

light

inspired

vapor that

What

pause upon its threshold snd

reflected

which

of

changes of

to

to

ought?

?

How

between

expressions

your
are

you

seriously

preserved

making

which,

catalogue of your

wered blessings upon you.

been

regard

accomplished

the

add

to

may from this branch,

past

in

committed?

you

added

stands the

•i

of the

gather important hints

not

you

review

a

increase

an

the additional expenses, and

ments

you
From

returns."

We

a

to

sealed up

is

thee,

to meet

meet

desirous of

paper,

"

and

to

receive

may

that what-

realized from

will

department

same

extensively

pleasure past year.

tion, which will, if accepted by you, enable

transition

may be

connected with these

as

benefit
the mercantile commugreat
upon
ft is that you will receive advertisenity,
that it should

the

A year has gone!

existence

we

Slew

the

closed, and

or

the statistics

1844.

semi-monthly.

year,

the

of the

columns

Godspeed,

you

CORRESPONDENCE.

coming

that you

funds

-,

important reflections

most

ery mind.

der, forms

o'er,

before—

gieennoss the vista

new

the

trust
travelled

just

eager to tread."

commenced.

suggest

hive

for

you

old

c

pursue

lie withered and dead.—

with

path

way,

in the

donations

that it is your intention to issue the "Friend"
on our

with

yeah.'*

Dear Sir,—We learn with much

to-day,

haste

ere we

of funds

amount

advertising

and

Honolulu, Dec. 20,

and the future in view.

post

pause and look

bid

of the

parts

conflicting

We have been furnished

YEAR.

the mountain of vision

We stand on

will

in other

remark, in addition,

We would

j

184-3.

EDITOR'S

A NEW

we

a happy hewt

you

as

of temperance

Frierrtt

only desire

to read

wisely,

re-

advertisements,

publishers

none

in

principle

same

principles advocated ia the

destroy.

As the ohart of your future career,

the

admitting

priated
year

the

insertion of

religious journals

world,

ton*

luusicof joy;

To »uldeii the

We ask

Januart I,

and

ever

not, this

the

to

practiced by

the
"

cau-

CONTINUED.

Honolulu,

grad

of

God in Heaven.

becomes

soon

the

then,

beseech you

trans-

great

muddy

a

be

can

the relation of such

even

he listened

must

We

whether your home is upon the land

reader,
or

evening

We shall observe

death cuts the web from is

morning,until

to

"morning

and

evening

on to

length

Individuals

a

Jeremy Taylor,

saya

the beam of life."-

families from

descended, for

are

yos,

fond

too

for any

transmit

itie,"

am

that ,sends the shuttle

gained

be

ever

Natives

source.

the marvelous

ol

do 1 think

nor

(Janiurv,

YfclEiVD.

the

Temperance

watchword is, onward.

reform.

happy
Our

�"

EDUCATION.
Oahu

has often been

vented until the

it

difficult

with

rarely

and

of

worthy

the

there

was

the

upon

to

We

show that

school in America

that

rance

deem
all

atten-

as

a

we

good

the

in

school

I mon

much
of

In

to

the

as

every

over

estimate

services
do

we

been

once

of

a

regard

a

his

com-

place

the

May

his

absolutely invaluable

the

teacher of

present

in timeto

fidelity

the

school,

We

come.

following

furnished

Sib,—At

ing notes

relating

the

from the past

minutes

at our

to

whole number of
number

for

class,

bovsand
"

"

"

"

"

Charity

Sept.2d, and

are

"

M

"

"

"

"

"

M

**

"

Primary class,
Noah

Webster's

Fales, Jr.

5
tern-

do.

or

lying

was

'

]He at

that are able to spell in words of3 syllables.
The oldest aisle scholar, W, female, 13
yean.
Yours most resr*,ctfii||y

length

Astor,

He

came

ship

and

returned

subsequently shipped

of the

up

the

Islands,

to

John

Horn, and

around. Cape

Bay, Hawaii.

at Kealakekua

blowing

to

Mayor of N. York.

released

was

|to his friends.

forwarded

authority of Dc Witt

at

Tonquin

the

destroy the Indians,

to

Since

first

his

landing

he has continued to reside

here, with the exception

Cooper.

to

Finigan,

China,

U. States.

do.

aries
came

in

was

do.

in

often

do.
do.

services

Michael

do.

lands.

Murty,

do.

John

do.

Simm,

,dicted
ter

do.

Murphy,

hope

he

to

accompanying

bis vessels.

to the

profanity

and

I,

In view of bis
received
much ad-

was

drinking, but af-

impressed

subject of religion.

He

vessel.

practices

those

favorably

he

Oahu,

subsequently

has

abandoning

■became

voyages

by Kamehameha

In former years he
to

two

getting

Hawaii

from

employed

repairing

William Green,

George Morgan,

an

I

do.

of
of

At the time the firs! Mission-

came

do.

Boyle,

with the

do.

He

first

his mind

upon

the

connected

himself with the native church under the
The

weather.—How

the last month have

we

often

during

"

how cold

to-day,"

day this winter."

"

Itev. Mr.

heard the remark Ijchutch

this

The

is

the

lowest

we

seen

the thermometer has

Farinhcit, in the shade.

been

66

Bingham,

was

coldest *founder.

•lasses,

EDW*»D L.yrETSON. Teacher.

and

that time

at

Arithmetic.

Reading.

informed

Steward.

August 27, 1844.

Re-der.

Peter Parly,s Spelling Bonk.
Spelling Book ■ used by all tbc

his friends'

to

the

under the

iColombia River,

Reading.

Geography.

2d Book

board

on

and

situation,

obtained,

were

Halifax,

on

Vradenburgh,

James

M

American Arithmetic.

Worcester's

cates

Duncan Cameron,

63

Am.

frigate

he wrote

is well known.

66

Blake's

his

'respecting

The

Master.

James Thomson,

Dec,26th,

Pierpont's National

While the

Sandy Hook,

&lt;off

left the

do.

Olney's Geography.
roVe Grammar.
North

off the Bermuda

impressed

frigate Cambrian, Captain

Majesty's

Beresford.

let. Officer.

Johnston Freeborn,

Henry

to

school.

Book

summer

board the American

ship Manhattan, sailing

and, 'Clinton,

26,1844.

ended

on

a sea-

of 1805,

unfortunately ad- (on board
the Tonquin, belonging

arc

Richard Mills,

Oct. and Nor.

North
"

to

restore

do.

Edward

happy

relating

scholars,

Sept.

"

M

will

their utmost

use

John Shiels,

John

O. C.

to renew

Dec.

girls, Worcester's 3d

•*

those who

Samuel Green,

the

Average number for Dec.
The books used are as follows:
Ist

they

Timothy Royer,

yournquest I send you the follow-

to the Oahu

The term commenced

Average

will

George A. Smith, Boatsteerer.

the

making in all (school days) 84, equal to 12 weeks,
6 days in the week, equal to 16 3-sth weeks.
The

community;

the

Otty Cudlip, Flag

request.

Oahu,
Dsab

in

they

George W. Robertson, Seaman.

encouraged

publish

to

them

for per-

or

discountenance the

suitable ways

of

friends

George Jackson, Jr. 2d.

may

really,

the

During

boatswain

was

commenced

he

Islands, when he was

J.

school teacher

common

society.

agree, that

employ, and that

in their

Nathaniel

as

perpetuated.

but

16

dieted todrunkenness.

ruing generation.

school be

them for their

perance

Honolulu, long

services,

TRIUMPH.

society

endeavors to reclaim and

school teacher, wWmay

faithful
at

just

and in

school takes the

i's usefulness be continued and

Having

good

signa-

faring
lie

of

life.

proper

provide

words

no

community,

in

school,

a

sec-

that by
proper
procuring
never again drink any iatoxica- Ithem
of being shipting liquors, except when prescribed by &lt;certificates of baptism and
he eotrld
attendant, or in case of wine .
a medical
ped on board the Manhattan,
and that they will
not
at communion,
certifi(obtain hit release. The

the

have

the

on

1777, by the minister of

their

above all, that
we

aad

abstinence

of its examination

importance of

Charity

a .common

day

estimation,

our

express the

can

the

respects which

several

mentioned.

I

on

not

At the age

His

SHIP'S

total

a

seen

surpass

native of N.

a

baptised

was

March,

they will

use

school

were

style it,

The members of this

in all

would

tempe-

Yankees, they fur-

following Pledge

ENG. WHALE

sons

have

English ships,

behind the

We shall

tures.

of

advocates

the

board

on

nished the

an-

that reflected

teacher,

city, and

74

unpleasant and unfair the Reformed Dutch church in said city.

some

"

Anderson,

Honolulu,

26, aged

Dec.

in

during

that

York

We

have

not

quietness,

a

and seldom

disciplinarian,

Charity

cast

and
reflection upon English whale ships,

whalemen's

special remark,

credit

great

cannot

highly commendable.

becoming deportment

and

tion

we

Died in

notice.

The deceased was

years.

intimated
ond of
ships Cabin Ornament,"

altogether

say

scholars

greater accuracy!

exercises,

to

gentlemen
of the

older persons would

swered with
it

proficiency

was

some

schol-

the

obliged

the teacher

"louder the

The

geography
think

of

pride

promptness and distinctness,

was

"louder,"
hear."

one

the

houses,

In recitation

England.

spoke

ars

in

that

Peter

of St. Johns,

English whale ship Peruvian,

"

those neat (Country school
of New

the

dispel

to

again

not

were

and

spectators,

Obituary

do

the Mr.

of Dec. 2, the Am.
seeing in the Friend

When first

Christmas.

was

thatwe

impression

pre-

of

creW

of the

to

man

evert

expects

duty.'.'—Some

his

whale

oh

looking around,,

been

England

last examination

among Xhe

-eat

a

desire

our

have

we

af the

day

which occurred

taking

tat

school,

visit this

the

School. —During

Charitt

Inst few months it
to

FUUNu.

THE

1646.)

but when

organized

Since

in

leaves

a

was a

that time he has lived

hsve iand adorned hi* christian

deg. j

the Bethel

1837, he

widow and

two

profession.
sons

to

He

mourn

�6

THfc

LIST OF

tffclfcNU.

WHALE SHIPS THAT HAVE TOUCHED AT THE PORTS OF

AMERICAN

THE HAWAIIAN ISLANDS, FROM

IN

Archer,

Champion,a

lien.

Alert,

Clement,

Georgia,

Gibbs.o

Ansell

(January,

1st

31st

JAN. TO

iMary Mitchel.u

Pike,

HONOLULU AND

DEC.

Rosalie,

,

_

Rowena,

Mentor,*
Milo,

Russell,

Mary Ann,

Richard Mitchel,

Chili,a

George

Autumn,

Crescent,

Heroine,

Adeline,*

Concordia,

Hercules,a

Manhattan,/;

Richmond,

Alexander,•

Citizen,*

Harrison,a

Menkar,

St.

Caroline,ai

Henry,

Metacomb,

Swift,
South

Mary Ann,«©

Ann

Ann,a
Adeline

Gibbs,

and Martha.'

*

6

a

Chelsea,«6

Herald, (N. B.)

Mount Vernon,

Clematis,*

Herald,* (S.)

Minerva

Smith,

a

Geprg«,
•

Boston,

'

Superior^*-

.

Addison,

Courier,

Amazon,

Charles W.

American,

Calumet,-

Hamilton.a (S.

Massachusetts,'

Smynia,o

Aeushnet,

Corvo.isc

Hamilton,* (B.)

Maine,c

Sarah,

Harvest,

Martha,c

Sloriington,

Hydaspe,

Moss,c

South America.*

Huron, a

Monticello,

Susan,a

Hero,

Nimrod,&lt;./&lt;

Susan.o (N.)

Ann

Alexander,**

Augusta,*

California*.

Arab,*

Charles

Benj. Tucker,*-

Congdon.e

Black Warri

Frederick,*

Daniel Webster

Rush,a

Hector,

Maria Theresa,u6

ShHron,

Houqua,

Magnolia,

S|»lendid,a6

H.)

Helen, ab

Damon,6

&gt;r,

Blackstuie,

Benj

Morgan,

New
IN

Hape,„6 (P.)

a

c

(N. B.)

Statira,

England,

Samuel

Tallmadge,

P.

Robertson,**

Thames.o

Electra.o

Howard,

Bowditdv

Kdward,

Hannibal,*

Newton.o

Tuscarora,

Bramin,*

Kuphrates,*

Holder Korden, e

Navy,o6

Thomas

Barclay.a

Emerald,

Henry Lee,«

Noble,

Tuscany.o

Bayard,

Trident,*

Neptune,*

6

Elisabeth Star
buck, a

Hope, (V B.)

Narragansett,

Braganza,

Eagle,

Isaac

Nassau. ab

Triad,a

Benj

Edward

Illinois, a

Nantasket,

Three

United

a

Morgatr,

Carey

o

Howland.o

Williams,*

Brothers, b

Baltc.

Friends,*

India,

Nantucket,

Cambria,

Florida,

Israel.

Obed

Copia.o

Falcort,

Johh

Oregon,

Vermont,*c

Cabinet,a

Fanny,*

Jeanette,*

Orozimbo.at

Wm.

Rotch,

Franklin,*

Japan,a

Ontario,*

Wm.

Thompson,**.

Columbus,* (N. L.)

Foster,

Java,o(N. B.)

Pleiades,

Wm.

Cora

France,„ 6 Java, (F.

Parachute,*

Wm.

Co umbus,

(F )

Preble,*

'

Jay.o

H.)

Mitchel,

States,

Uncas,o»

Baker,*
Perm.a

fortes,

Francis Henrietta,

John

Jtt

Wm.

Cores,

Janus,*6

"•

Frances.ac

Palladium,*

Wm. C.

Caledonia,*

Flora.c

Josephine/

Persia,*

Wm. and

Colombia, (S. H.)

George, (N. B.)

Kutusoff,*

Pantheon,* (N. B.)

Waverly,

Columbia,* (N.J

Oeor

Pagoda,

Pantheon,

Washington,*

Canada,6

George

Levi Starbuck.oi

Peruvian,a6

Warren,6

Charles

Henrys
Catharine,

George and Mary,*

Le nidas,

Philetus,*

Wilmington

Galen,

Lowell,

Philip Tabb,

(B.) Canton,

Garland,a

Levant,:

Gratitude,*

Mary

Gem,*

Magnet.a

Gen. Williams,*

Mary Frazi*

I.

) Canton,*

Cherokee,*
Connecticut,

(S )

K e,o

and

Susan,

—.

.
*

and

Martha,6

(F. R.)

Hamilton,
Nye,
Henry,

and

Roman,*

Young Eagle,a

Rousseau,*

Young Hero,

Robert

Liverpool

Packet,

Bourne,

.ephyr,*

Rodman,*

,«

,

Those marked with

an

nolulu and

Lahaina; and

Honolulu

referred

are

Pacific,

Howland,*

LAHAINA,

1844.

a,

have been

at

those marked with

Those with

to.

no

ac,

nave

been

Honolulu alone.

at

mark, have touched

at

J

Those marked with ab, have

the Islands both spring and fall seasons.

those which

Only

have

entered

been

the

at

both Ho-

inner harbor of

Lahaina alone.
s

the

above list includes nil

lers

that

have

stopped

the American!!have been 353
at

lololu and Lahaina thepast

ex

•&lt;

ption

vessel did

of the.

the ports of

With

year.

Congdon,

ship

which

iing 154,340

ships snd barques,

tons,

navigated by 7,lf&gt;;t Amer-

iican, and 2,448 foreign
Ito

these ports

seamen,

been

registered

been

deposited

at

late.

enter either

one

or

Some few of them

it
ports, but

is

unnecessary

Counting those
both in

the

the other Consu-

stopped

twice which

spring

to

at

the

out

distinguish

have

stopped

and fail seasons,

bringing

in-

133,366 barrels of sperm oil,

have i873,672 barrels whale
oil,
port, none
but those whose papers have ilbs. of what* bone, viz:

not

register-

Spring ships at Lahaina,

and

3,460,000

Value

at

of

bbl.

Value of

$10,60 per

per

s.rne.og*

SOJ920 barrel*

of whale oil at

Honolulu,

bbl

at

Mo,**

728fiOO lbs

at

of bone at

Lahama,

at

Houolutos at'

40 c«S

49 eta

aWJaajj

lb.

49.

~SM ships

at

25,009 dollars
»8,W6.000

each.

therej'(Value of 10»,IX

910,50 per

'"vahie-of

127.

do

$27

Value of
2,732,000 lbs of bone

do
1«8.
Fall ships at
Sprinc ships at Ho.,.'lulu, 18.

Fall slaps

bbl.
zJMft,T«K
per
Value of
27.9E0 barrels of sperm oil at Honolulu, at
bbl.
754,1 Hi
per
.Value of 293,152 barrels whale
oft at L.bama.at

$27

barrels,

sperm

oil

at

Lahama,

at

touching stj
counting then but o»«, sat]

The actual number of vessels
all

the

port*,

�by

navigated
foreign

Ameiican, and

4,riiHJ
is

seamen

224,

I.«

$.5,600,000
board,

Cargoes

rels sperm oil,

per bbl.

$-7

at

catch, 97,298

actual

whale oil,

300,122, b&gt;rs

$10,50

at

per

3,151,281
40

at

lbs bone

rectified

1,131,7

ccts.

40

sentiment and

public

There

bar-

are

faith.

is

the

things

quite

a

$12,510,067
The prices
oil and bone
last

some

are

dates' from

the value of

as

the U. S

than

less

cents

the

the

give.

dist

and
ry.

Merchant

American

of

the

Honolulu,

vessels

Metho-

the

Ship Mariposa,

no

both

has

masters.

at

for the American

were

squadron.

for

to turn

cording

"

.wrote

now

other sheet.

I know

and

men

As

ously.

into

cut

fragments,

will be elected

tow.

y

a

and

that

and

of

and

States.

pnrty is
It is

Kentucky,

of this
Vice

city,

Presi-

was

prosperity

its

buildings

this
than

merited remard,

going

villages growing larger—rail

iplying—commercial
ations

good—and

state

of the

I think

avoid

latters,

so

lade in

1836 and 1837.

There

as

have

to

beeq

np—cities
roads mul-

intercourse with other

public

a

sober

mind in
wrecks

fewer

it

gain

is

only

strength
tole-

religious

that

thing

any

seyite
next
se

and sub-

uncourtcous

so

is

neither

off

and Romish

In

protuberances.

"

Nothing

but the

generally agitated the public

to

be

stare,

dying, yet

the
can

you

else will

as

appear

to

make the
and

credulous believe,

is

evidently loosing

conscience

now

cause

in

I

Zion.
and

newer

liberty.

stop,

in the

nothing

to

imperance

Blended

generally

prosperous.

the grand celebration in Boston,

a

in

the vessel herself

In

of

case

port

is

From the Sailor's
to

Magazine,

whalemen.

Provost,

for the

otherwise.

or

in any oth-

criminal

illegal-

person, effects
the vessel shall be conany

of

independently

demned,

paid

informers;

besides, that

prosecuting

a

against the'eaptain.

case

•iii

Naval.—Turkish navy.

According

detailed statement in the

Army and Na-

vy Chronicle,
15

prises

from'64

5

to

of

128

to

44

mounting

the lurkish

ships

to

14

carrying

one

brigs,

vessels

89,239

guns,

is

66;

tons; men,

of men is

One of

ment.

to

"

by

possible

1.

De-

U. S. Consul

tonnage,

The

number

be much overrated

steamers

Foster

to

guns each,
whole number

Rhodes,

large

as

it

an

others

Ameri-

is," says the

the Chronicle,

the

former-

was

Three

Boston.

The fleet,

use

four 2

defrauding the govern-

the

correspondent of

guns;

steamers,

guns, 2832;

ly the Bangor, of
built

24

to

11

26,500.

supposed

frigates,

16

12

The

none.

com-

each; 8 covettes,

sloops, 4to 8 guns; and

and the" rest

now

to

line, mounting

guns each;

64 guns
11

24 guns;

Navy

the

Sultan."

one

"

of

Since

vessel, and

Mr,.

Reeves,

Pacha's
present Capuden
in

no

the

by his

merit

is

a

The

consists

being the Sultan's brother-in-law. The

only professional Capuden
'
have had for

at

that

which

very fast.

runs

June

—The

important official information:

Stanhope

of the

owner

disembarked

correspondence,

or

be

to

being responsible

proving,

brother-in-law,

Mr.

is

nation-

where he may have touched

he has

ly,

favor

whether he

same,

has built but

subjoined

—lt

departure of Mr. Rhodes, the government

J. S.

yours,

the
social and moral partment of State at
Washington have issuprogress of
The ed a Circular, dated 20th March, giving the
nprovement is evidently advancing.
I

Art.

12,

under the

Republic

thousand dollars,

Captain,

the

by

one

one.

ing, yet

cause

of

penalty

the

entry) of

ports of

can.

Ameriaway from our
Nevertheless, much affection to

Important

seizure and

to

Peru. —Section

of

beautiful boat, and
revivals

and

ports, with-

foreign, arriving from foreign porta, to
or crews,
minor
(not
ports, *ays

oi

fear-

those

the past year than within the
ountry
prece-

entry now
Aries,

are,

of the Commercial Regulations.
all vessels,
prohibited, absolutely, to

were

must

before, that I have written

purpose for

vessels

liable

are

for the purpose of

on.

its

land of

the

is onward.

brother,

my

a

stu-

business

like

Rr.rußi.ic

something strange and different of
of the
gospel, probably

The seamen's

ing

mind

man—so

moonstruck multitude follow

the

And

foolish is

so

simplicity

Romanism

of

ports

foreign

special license,

22
less

more or

or

over

the

liturgy

locally

morbid,

1842,

the decree of tSth

130

a

together

the

October 30,

by

confiscation.

down,

top

appear

something

dated

Vessels entering other

Payta.

collec-

nor

limbs, —cannot

The various isms' which have

from the

for

peru

was

Islay, Cal|ao,Huanchavo, Lambayeque

Episcopacy

to

tree

the

on

General Convention I expect "Rli inter

will hold them

pid

us
ac-

Onderdonk with all his Pu-

braMa loltunl

in

which

Peru,

decree of the Peru-

Ilvaine, Chace

singly

hemlock

a

kick

the hair stands

Mc

Bishops

can

but

not

as

then
square there,

Downing

Bishop

from mad after

All kinds of lawful business,
proper,

Honey plenty;

tied

serve

sketch

wind

Never
of

an-

miscellane-

Buren

great

Clay

state

can

them away.

President

higher

I

days

you

running

Frelinghuysen

conducted, meeting

md

a

blowing

U.

the

sountry in

a

the Van

sten,

certain

of

that

not

hastily

few

a

blotting

things, briefly

to

and Theodore

Jent

Boston

by giving

the wilderness is

morally

you somewhat

of

great danger

trimming:

swallow

commence

you better than
of

foot

Jack

swallow

without

—

from

Inez,"

since, and

a

But the

tively

New York, June 14, 1844.

the

to

Hopkins

YORK CORRESPONDENCE.

Dea&amp;Sir^—I

to

land

into the streets,

us

occupying

and

by

wind

When any become

only

in
a

The only

1843.

Sept.
open

er

is from within.

Rev. S. C. Damon

a

ar-

Episcopal

but

little,

a

tolerate

can

we

trend.
■

OUR NEW

In

of the

civil.

different

two

Mariposa

of the

tornado.

Puseyism—the

&amp;c.

subsided

sleeping

ration

Cor.garce, Delaware,

Lausanne and

ships

store

199,000,

oo

of their several

and Ontario have been here
The

church

a

other action tak-

no

by

touch in

assumptions,

for

eclesias-

our

it.

rogant

the
the value of $226,000

•The Chenamus,

times.

to

of

Chap-

whalers

to

Government,

vian

Episcopale-

are

some

The excitement about

Brig Lafayette,

into

church

concern:

has been since closed

the attention of the christian al

turning

community

Ship Lausanne,

per reports

navy and army

our

than

en

Hannah,

Cargoes outward

the

of

do-

for the informationof those

may
port ,of Pisco,

opened

out

tical bodies of late, but

Brig Globe,

as

division

has been before

ana,

Brig Delaware,

Brig Ontario,
Cargoes inward to

and

deliberations

anti-slavery!

lains in

Ship Congaree,

Schr.

agitating

item before it has been slave-

The fact that about 3-4ths of the

*Brig Chenamus,

its

and northern—slaveportions, southern

ry and

year.

past

city.

most

it

The

closed

just

has
The

Results of their

ings, lO*
List

this

important

two

in the port of

Church

Episcopal

sessions in

ing

sei-

follow-

the

foreign vessels,

to

published

is

whom

sensation.

The General Conferrence of the

assumed

torhidden

sre

choice of

States
to

republic which

in the

by entering ports

zure

its ancient

to

orthodox members of their board

have created

lately

back

coming

other

Among
two

one or

that Cam-

depart-

United

of the

themselves
exposing

constantly

are

informed this

having

whaleships

that

ment

practice.

indications

some

College

2,627046 bridge

barrel,

3,829,350

Lima, Peru,

days since, (your papers will tell you
it was a
grand expression of a

25,000 dollars about it)

at

each,
on

lew

7

Tfcll&amp;XD.

TEE

1845.)

her

Pacha,

more

now

in

than

12

disgrace.

Pacha*
years,

they
is

Ty«

�8

jjtV

a

Ei

IV

jv

MARRIED.

l

Ei

Jw

(January,

•

fALoM1
NArC 845.

MARINEINTELLIGENCE.
-

Majesty's Consulate General, for

At Her

the Islands of the

Pacific

November,

13th

Steam

son

of

Hamond,

8..V Norton, Isle of Wight, to
Mary Ann Miller, Second daughter of Rd-

Bart. X; C.

of

Miller, Esq.

ward

and niece

County
General Miller,

to

U.S.

Julia,
Eupheinia, English
Manhattan, ]J»na
sdk. Kalooa, Am. whale slur) Uncus, and
"*»
and 3 Fieuch wh.shjps.

her Britannic

1, Ena, whare ship

wh.

2300

Am. wh

Harrison,
June

1814, of

6th,

two

He

in the protestant

Rowland

He

He

buried at

Macao,

at

Seth

at

on

.'remains

taken

Thefemalne of

taken from the

to

The following is

Capt.
and

Pinkham

conveyed

residence of hie fnmily, ant)
grave,
men

The

and others.

'.hence,

displayed at half mast in token
spect to his memory,**
Ftis Excellency Governor John
died

at

to

the

to

the

Kailua, Hawaii,

On Sabbath afternoon, the

sermon

at

Armstrong
the

stone

letter from David

Am.

wh

lan.
new

8,

U. S.

Died
July SI,

on

of

re-

700

Ku-

preached

chapel,

Malo,

15th instant, the

funeral

read also

and

who

a

was

present

»

31

22

28

24

a

28

29

30

81

,

,

9

10

-_

,

She is bow

undergoingrepairs

88 mos,
*

**

Dec. 13.
450 sp,

•

■

in this harbor.

4
11

',

,

T

J

12

13

14

16
22

16

17

18

19

20

21

24

86

28

17

28

3

8

4

6

6

7

9

10

11

12

14

15,

18

»

20

21

23'

26

27

28

2tf

I.

if .5

17

23

24

80

81

25

ship Howard, Bunker, Nantucket,

Am. wh

8
16

18

.

.

•

-

20

21

22

27

28

29

80

N. 8.42

mos,

11

12

18

19
26

18
20

9

27

10

880

7

8

• • I August,
,o_
with Cargo of Provisions,
'Eng. ecb Falcon. Chape,
Paints, Brandy and Gin from Sydney.
coal,
from
cargo
Syimey,
Dec. 20, Eng. brig Julia,
j
this port, (16 days) lor
Mexican sch Julia, last from
;

17

22

23

24

28

29

30(

:ji

11

16

16

17

18

23

24

25

29

30

12

18

14

19

20

2|

27

23

26

8

vessel, carried
in

damage

away

mainmast

in

three pieces,

7

8

9

10

11

18

14

15

16

17

18

19

26

26

20

21

22

23

2*

27

28

29

30

31

*n

11

Am.

*

16, Am.

Dec.

17,

39

21

22

23

24

25

26

27

28

29

30

12

8

8

•

•

28,

inotasses,
Any

wh

brig

•

~

|

oil,

December.

-

•

0/

the

II

16
22

28

39

8
16.

18

31

6

7

6

10

11

12

18

U

U

16

17

-18

19

3%

21

21

33

24

25

26

27

28

29

2

8

4

§

»

9

10

II

12

14

16

16

17

18

19

S,

24

89

»

7

'

Chaptainrj—Capt.

17

23
3*

9

14

DONATION.

txptmrt

4

M&gt;

8

21

1

ship

fnttot

14

13

27

•

a

For

8

30

goat skius* kc.
Charles Frederick, to cruise.

at

1842, Stephen C. Vanhorn, of Ber-

3f

12

30

18

2346
via

I

Ontario, tor V alparaiao,cargo

20

29

11

'

Bremen

A».

IS

28

12

| November,

12)
19

17
24

7

6*

38

16
28

6

4

26

10

16
22

26

...

Dee.

9

14
11

19 20

■onterny.

Dec,
Tahiti.
Dec. 20, Am. wh ship Maine.
'Am. wh ship Nassau.

»

19

7

,

M

Parsons, for I lima.

1«

18

■

part;

ship Maripesa,
biig Julia, *&gt;r Manilla.
H.B. M. ship Modoste, for Valparaiso,
18,

Dec

8
16

31
-

whship Martha,

ship Neptune.

13

T
14

17

6

Dec. 6,

12

October,
'

SAILED.

13

11
8466
10

modi oth-

places, and received
fcc- My**.
noli, riging, sails,
in two

4s

'«

_

Put back dismasted.
I
Moptei-HV, California.
from
severe gale
a
»
,September,
dee, long 158 deg, experienced
snd with the aand all
jib-boom,
N„ VV.; pitched
'
sway
sprung foremast

9!0

21

HOD wh.
»

of the

19

16

13

I

sp.

18

25 26

14.16

22

ilJuly,

17 rnos,

mos

9

128466)7

«

M mos,

A

I

IS .17
24
23

8

16 mpa, 1200 wh.

ship Thomas, Sag Harbor,

Dec. le\Ara. wh ship Addison,

7
14

25

,
June,
'

.

1050 wh.

14,

6
12

456

A

26

'

1600

„

.

•

-**

from Masat

required, ate.
•
Am. whship Caroline, McKenxie,

171 Vi

28

16

17th

Sailed for China, the

ship Columbia, Joy,

Mexican sch Jutia Ann, for

the 9th in-

16

j

,_.,-..

sailed

-Jt
16

..••

sp.

foremast

Ikims wh

bo»rd ship Charles Frederick,

on

arch,

1

•iwii

T
14

13

on.

brigFerry, Fame, 23 days

the time of the Governor's decease.
j

16

_^

mos.

sea-

For many
he has, been Gover*
years
nor of Hawaii, the largest Island of ihe'group.

Mr.

Dec. 7,

er

stant

Rev.

••

40 days from Callao,

with Guano.

flags of"the shipping

were

foimi,

were

brother
many of his

by

26

Callaot

off and

Denia, Ssnitu,

laden

5

"|3's

-

In lat.

Inquirer:

steamer

followed

schr

,

His

Bedford,

Frederick, Allen,N.B.Somos,

Ann. Hag Harbor,

where

Nantucket,

1844.

Nantucket

Payta,

Dec.

Pernam-

at

Francis,

Stan*

Master of the Am.

New

:

sliipNarragansett,

Eng.

Am. wh

his passage from the Paeifit.

they arrived May 8,
"

via

Charles

wbahip

lie.

sea.

Pinkham,

were

from the

sea,

illness

from New Bedford.

died
afnale ship Henry Astor,
iuco,

Am.

sp.
Dec

an

S

sf «'
26

300 sp.

_~...,

Uncas,

ship

h, SO

Sailed 9th.

Hoapital, Lahaiaa, Willet
Bridgeport, Con.

Capt.

|

'

1200 whale.

15 mos,

from
Brig Julia,87 days

1800 sp.
Am. wh

2
S

&lt;

for ('lvii a.

a

shipmates.

his

was

and

w

Bremen

was

greatly

In U. S.
ford, of

•

Sailed Pin to

sp.

•

sperm.
Dec. 5, Eng. wh ship Eliza
Sailed Bih to cruise.

shipmates.

disease, after

same

days.

was

his

Gunner, died

Taber,

June 2d, of the
of seven

by

and

customary honors,

cemetery

monument erected

He

weeks.

promise,

buried with the

was

fe-

malignant

a

lamented by

and

died -at

Midshipman,

officer of Unusual

respected

Brig Perry, Mr.

U. States

of
ver, after an,illness
an

Johns,

IFsbruary,
100

Sag Harbor,

whale

Am.

■SOS, 14W

Ou board the

Ann,

ship

cruise.

Dec.-2,

DIED.

Macao,

Peruvitn, St.

6th, home.
bark Emma, 22 mos,

Sailed, to

W.

'

cruise.

trancttitt.

G.

*

19

Sailed

wh

Eng.

&gt;=

and

ARRIVED.
Dec.

|
5

12

Cambridge,

5 S 2
lis

j

5

French bark

H. B. M. sch. Basilisk,

brig Perry.

Adolphe, English brigs

General.—JL'oi«ame

Consul

Majesty's

j
t

.

89.

VESSELS IN PORT, DEC;.

Majesty's

Graham Eden

Vice Admiral Sir

Honolulu.

Ham-

S.

Her

Salamander," eldest

"

Frigate

Past of

Ocean, Otaheiti,

Andrew

1844,

commnnder of

Esq.

ond,

(

■■■

■

■

21

23

23

**

*

*

&gt;Ul

I1

21,

J

A»mi.:MNTsr|

4^.00
Parsons, Manpow,
FOR SALE, at the study ofthe Seamen's
4,60
Lent CaptrCoftw, Narrugansett, (sovereign)
Char
New Jersey, nged 29 years.
gen,
3.00
Capt. Allen, Chaik-.n Frederick,
am, and by Mr. r'.. H. Boardinan, Vol. I, and 11, o'
overboard, January lOth, 184.J, Amos Cbam6,09
Mntano,
Vol.
11.
Friend, bound together, price 83.
bound-, &amp;
Capt. Kolley, Wig
19 years.
6,09 Notes on Sandwich Islands, by R. C. Wyllie, Esq. on
Dr. Gibson, 11. 11. M. shipModeste,
beriain, of Colchester, Conn, egea
CommanderPaine, U. S. brig Perry, (doubloon) 16,09 copy, *1, three copies ft 2, and $'7 per dozen.
1843,
Augustus
Killed by a whale, July 19,
Persons dasirous of procuring Vol. I of the Friend
Mr.
For Tewtpera.nct, (or printing tkt Friend),—
G. Smith, of Reading Peon, aged 20 y**rs.
bound with Vol. 11, must apply soon.
4}3,00
Parsons Mariposa,

In Honolulu,

of

Dec. 9, Edward.

Jackson,

54.
Brighton, Mass, aged
Bensley, of Troy, New York,

trboard from

IWm.

»«ned,Nov.

William

longing
ad and

ship India, in

a

fit, and

ship Wm. Rotoh,

was

hilled, Oct

11,

20 years,

fell from mast
1844.

Chamkurs.Master Modeste,
O'DonoeH, Sergeant U S brig Perry,

Mr.

Cathcart,

Riekardstiibs
was

1», 1854.

HoetJ, of Albany, aged

to

fell

Mr.

Mr.

wh

ship Columbia,

Peruvian,

£

Cap*. Alloa,Chaikss r redereck,
Capt Coffin, Narraganselt,

san,

c7¥rewer

'.°»
1

,*9

GENERAL

1.00

8,08
V

frltewing gentlemen, belongingto
Dr. Mi ler, l*«rser
the Ward Room, U. 8. »rif Perry,
and Croelllton. Mr. Brown, Lis. Harrison, Howell,
•».»
©8 each from the

_

2,09

COMMISSION

&amp;

HONOLULU, OAHU,
Charles

J.

F. B.

Faifcu
N. B.

H. I.

Butwii,)

Mabshall, &gt;
Johnso.v.

Wanted,

Torsble t«rms.

co.

MERCHANTS,

Bills

M

)
on

the United

tf

States, Englasi
Jan.1,1846,

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