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THF
E
RIEND.
Httt £ftws, 001.
'.
ii. Ho. ll.j
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iioNOMU. \on;Mnn,
n. 1857.
81
{©ft Serifs, t»al. U.
Third Anniversary of Honolulu SailWhales
Plenty.—In conversing with
Society.—Tin Secietywill hold shipmasters and seamen, we hear no com.1 It.-.ii-,
HI Wh.it I..'
\ .-.1. Of Hai
.
Anniversary on Friday evening plaint that whales were scarce. The comS-i. jits
Kin- rial-,
s'J next,
inst., at half-past 7 o'clock, at the mon remark is, We saw plenty." In some
13th
;
...
s;
New Hunk--" Tin- Arctic Uliaknc.i,,"
localities they were very ahundant. Capt.
.... S3 Bethel.
KdMurlale,
si
tppeel ami Etuipoue,.,
Reports of the Treasurer .'mil Executive Walker reports that in tho Arctic Ocean he
K4-S5
i lieu.' fea,
he presented.
saw at times hundreds of whales, hut the
|iFridayur/ntuckj Day!
U Committee will
....
Miidc.
not
from
s.'.
Grapea,
Vffne
bat
Agreeable in ihe Constitution, six new weather was rugged, anil although whnles
.SB
IV Hm Step, must In- chosen in lill vacancies were plenty, it was impossihle to lower a
.
nnu I IMiiriiii-.(..urn il.
vie rti.s*n
- S7 ss I1 Trustees
occasioned by those whose term of service boat. The weather in the Ochotsk Sea has
now expires. Tin' following persons were been pleasant and favorable for whaling.
nominated (from whom the six must l>e choNow is the time for Sailors to Write
sen) at the last meeting of the Board of TrusNOTE MBEB I I. IM.'iT.
Castle,
S.
J.
Home.—lt
is exceedingly pleasant to hear
N.
E. II. Allen, F. B.
tees:
Cromwell.—We deeply Marshall. J. Bartlett, E. O. Hall, Gen. Mil- | sailors call for "paper and envelopes." The
Death of Capt.
regret to ram that Capt. Peter Cromwell, of ler, 15. F. Snow, .1. Mott Smith, Dr. Guillou, more the better. If they wish to receive lettlio Gladiators died on Ira passage from New Capt. Luc, C. If. Lewers and (*'. II. C. m- j ters next spring or next fall, they should inBod fori I lo Honolulu. 1 It- was an old ban graham,
form their friends as to the name of the vesquaintaiice, whom'we had frequently met on
sel, and her master, in which they go out.
A full attendance is requested.
his former voyages. His death occurred at
Be particular, too, about the ship's name, as
sin, September Kith, oH Cape Horn. We
Religious Notice. There wil be religious you will then bo most likely not to have your
learn that his vessel was experiencing a se- services, at the Bethel, every evening this \ letters niis-seni.
vere gale of wind, during which the Captain week, except Friday evening; when the an-!
fell from tho main tigging, striking his head, niversary of the Sailor's Home Society will
Good Health and Few Accidents.—Conwhich occasioned his death in ahout forty take place, agreeable to notice in this col- sidering the number of ships and men emhours. He was in possession of his reason umn.
ployed, there have been but few accidents
It is hoped many of the seafaring com- and a general prevalence of health. The
up to the last, and gave directions that his
l>ody should lie brought to Honolulu, and we munity will feel inclined to visit, the Bethel fact is quite remarkable, and deserving of
lean that it will lio taken to his native coun- while the meetings are in proo-rcss. The | special thanksgiving. Some years from the
try. He belonged to Martha's Vineyard. time that seamen are in port is but short, whaling fleet have been landed literally
The vessel was brought into port by Mr. hence they should avail themselves of every i scores of sick and disabled men. It is also
Williams, Ist officer. On the 4th inst., the opportunity afforded, for meeting with those j quite remarkable that so few accidents have
flags of the shipping were displayed at half- frequenting the house of God.
I happened to the vessels.
Services commence at 7 o'clock, P, M.
mast in testimony of respect to the deceased.
i
The following brief dialogue is reputed
Card.—The Chaplain would acknowledge,
Whales in Puget's Sound.—A person to have occurred during the cruise of certain
from the officers ami crew of the U. S. ship
recently from Puget's Sound, has expressed ships in the Ochotsk. As the vessels apSt. Mary's, for the support of the " Bethel " to us much surprise that whale ships did not proach, the Captain of one
ship calls out to
and Friend, the simi of $7u. Also, from H. visit that region, as whales were frequently the mate of the
other.
"Is
your Captain a
B. M. Consul-CJeiieral, for the support of the seen in that locality. The old story, that the Buchanan-man ?"
No,"
is the reply, "he
"
Chaplaincy, $20, lor the quarter ending Sep- whales were all killed off, il not true. For is a Sag Harbor-man."
tember DO.
years to come, the whaling business may be
Feejee Books.—Mrs. Binney, wife of a
The pressing duties crowding upon the prosecuted with success.
school teacher connected with the Methodist
Chaplain, have prevented him from visiting
the numerous ships which have recently arWe would bespeak for two short Missions in the Feejee Islands, has written a
rived in port. This is his apology for not articles, from the pen of the Rev. J. C. Ryle, book for the Feejees, in their native tongue,
visiting from shi|i to ship, as has been his now published in our columns, a thoughtful and is now translating the Pilgrim's Progress
and serious perusal.
into Feejeesn.
COM'KMS
for VoK'iulM-r 11. IS.">7.
..
.....
....
...
THE
I'.vi.r
si
Homk
: ous' Third
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FRIEND,
,
,
�TH X KRI 11 N D». NOVEM B B X R. ISS 1
82
.
OfwuhsaWar!
atVerolsf
ward a warm newspaper battle with tha Cam- lekeakua Bay. .More than three-fourths ol
question sometimes asked. The bridge Professors, respecting the influence ol a century have already passed away, and
answer will, ofcour.se, depend upon the view the sun upon the earth. It appears that Pro- nothing done. • Must heartily should we retaken of their eruises ami the manner in fessor Pierce, of Cambridirc, has recently joice t) witness a beginning. A little wise
which they an- employed. In times of war come out with a theory, regarding the sun as planning and judicious management would
they are employed in fighting—whether that the cause of tstrthquakes and the upheaval "I effect tin- undertaking. If sailors were inis good business, we shall leave it for others islands and continents. The Doctor is not vited to contribute, it might he done by Miin determine. In times ol peace, they unwilling that tin- Professor shall appear before lling contribution*! Who'll fake the lead in
about
ami
after
looking
employed in cruising
the world as the discoverer, but claims that the undertaking ' Lei some Briton start,
the interests of commerce, discovery anil sci- In- published the theory three fir four years and rest assured many a Yankee ami Euro*
ence. These, we maintain, are good ami ago, in certain publications, \l/ "Cos
- psan and Hawaiian would follow Are nauseful purposes. Would that those directing jgraphy" and '.'Preparation ol the Faith for tions ungrateful
our national vessels kept them more actively I the Intellectual Races." One thing is imite
Hawaiian Beef.—It is highly gratifying
employed in these matters, In ihe matter of certain, that, il Prof. Fierce has only now put to hear shipmasters ami seamen speak well
1
surveying Hands ami reefs, there is work forth his theory. Dr. Winslow has the start! of beef salted upon the Islands.
If pock
enough for all the vessels of war belonging to-'' Moth the publications now refi rred to, were
one or twd years more as they have
red
England, France ami ihe United Si;nes. bul circulated years ago even at the Sandwich
succeeded, Hawaiian salted beef, <:,■■! even
"scarcely a ; ingle vessel is actively and eon- Islands; and we recollect I. muni' in long [pork, will become established iii the market.
lantly engaged in that object. Must of them explanations ol the theory from the lips of Everything depcttdi upon the can fulm
i
cruise along the coasts til Central and South i Dr. Winslow, during hi last visit to the [si* fidelity oftlioie engaged
in the business. It
America, run over to Tahiti, the Sandwich ; anils In 1855 or '56. Ie- that as it may, this is hardly possible to l»- ton
j
careful. Th<
Islands, and look in at San Francisco, to- is tpiite certain, that if n Cambridge Profes- importance of the subject calls'for est
getherwith an occasional trip elsewhere,and [ sorattempts to (airy nl! '/ pulm belonging to caution, A single barrel should not
be alloy.
these comprise their erui tin
Dr. \V., !:•■ will pay dear for the attempt. ml to
(jo on l'na nl a ship, if there is the i
We have been led to make the above re- j Tin- Proft stsor would find it miicli ensii r to
est suspicion that it is not in a good st,\te.
marks from having observed the stereotyped iI cap » volcano, ihan wrongfully pull ft feat/ter If at .aptain finds
any barrel unfit for use let
passages of these vessels lor many years. nut nl the Doctor'? rap!
il be returned to the pack i or merchhnt.
There are portions of the Pacific never yet
Those paying the most attention to tht matRepablicn Gratitude.
visited by vessels' ol war, certainly not bv
ter, will soon iind til. ir / ■nulih will go, *yhile
American war-vessels. Take, iiu- example,
\\ ill lie unsold.
others
We have I 1.. i m
Patrick Honry lies buried in the county of
the Island ol \ cension, visited by so.many Charlotte,
npl nnlj withoiu n tombstone to make these r- marks, because the ultimati
American' whale-ships, and where there are mark his grave, hill even without an eiiclo- success of the whalinc
business oat of Honothree Missionary stat s. English ami surearound it. li can scarcely be found by lulu
si essentially depend upon the capaFrench war-vessels have been there, but the those who, in passing, would pay ins remains bilities of the Islands to furnish
supplies for
lefill >.
■'Stars ami Stripes" were never displayed a tri'.iile, :t rospe t. Is \
the
not only vegetables, but the more
sliips.
■Hi
Ex.
p.
there by a national vessel.
The prospects now are
\ is, tm. 1 lit ii >ti Steuben lies buried in the substantial articles.
Dr. Guild, thus wrote from Ascension in
necessary I'm- fitting
that
everything
nearly
inn ii iii St' u-'ii. ill :'.- county, in a piei c o!
1862:
the
mid-i
aw ild wood OUt sliips, in the way of provisions, can he
in
yes,
woodland
nf
vessels of war have touched ;n \ in the land in
whi -h li ■ sjient hi? fortune in furnished from the products of the Islands, viz
" Four Island
within twenty yenrs.
cension
1.
I- New York ungrateful? [lieef, pork, bread, Ih.ur.
potatoes, beans, Sec.
1838, the English vessel of war Tx>.rnf, Capt. trying to free.
c i.V. V.) Sentinel.
183!),
Danaide,
the
Blake. 2. In
CommanA Friendly Word to Sailors a bout De\ e-. and I 'resilient Vlonroe lies in an under I'u Rosamel, a French vessel, :!. In
1845, the English vessel ol war Hazard. I. distinguished 'rue in this ..iv. without a serting. -Perliaps it will do no good, but
stone m tell his came.
Ar i thi United still We cannot refrain from entreating sailors
In 1861,the French corvette Capricieuse."
ungrateful
Ind.
.Y.
Y.
States
en no account to run away from their ships.
with
and
-f 11 Commanders
The fault is not
"Republican gratitude" appears rather Having once shipped for a cruise or a voyumler-oiiieefs of these vessels, but with tlic
d ■, fulfill youi
I I md
n -Nt-. Ad the part
Admiral.- and Comniodon and '■'■"<■ nlmn below par!
'.ni that a pithem. The American Government ia n
ten. Keep your word, and especially do
faulty than either England, Franc
Rti - n;-i\.-.I and ii'iilod :-' the .-Ilimp ola i oeoa- what you have agreed to do over your signasin. American whale-ships and merchant imt nee, i- all thai ma ii u here fell ture. Deserters rarely ever advance. Alvessels are flying everywhere throughout tin the great next perhaps to Columbus, the most daily am we becoming acquainted with
vast ocean, hut at present there is not an greatest of navigators, Captain Cook.
But cases wherein sailor., have made their condiAmerican surveying vessel anywhere tn he has not the time com" for sum, thm" more tion far worse by deserting. A deserter is
seen, from the Arctic to Antarctic circles, or durable and becoming to be done? At first almost certain to be arretted, and if not refrom the American to the Asiatic shores, thought il might seem most fitting that
manded back to the ship from which he .].
yet. with our limited knowledge, we could land should take the had in this matter. If sertetl, must pay prison tees and go on board
point to vast, portions of the Pacific scarcely England do so. all honor to her for honoring some other ship, anil even then is liable to be
furrowed by the keel of nn American man of the memory of him whose life ~m | services retaken by the master from which he originwar or surveying vessel. This subject de- I have reflected so much honor and fame upon ! ally deserted. The deserter lives in constant
mands attention.
his country: but it England decline tho jfear of arrest, and such a feeling is humiliahonor of taking the lead in this undertaking, I ting and degrading. Better endure, if necesNot Moonshine, but Sunshine.—By late then let others commence the undertaking, sary, than desert. We make these remarks
papers from the States, we learn that Dr. and not abandon it until a monument, in I because we are knowing to the evils which
Win.low, formerly of Lahaina, and well every respect worthy the fame and becuraihg young men hring upon themselves l, i|...
v
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known uoou the Idamls .s .- ly-vinr* IVirth»> -renins of Cook, shall be erected in Kea-
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�iii E titi\: .\ i). \•l.;mit
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83
It is becoming quite common to hear,
The following communicationhas
and overhear, shipmasters and seamen gen-[ been passed into our bands for insertion in
Tin; f\i nc Wh.u.i-.man ; or. Winter in the \
Arctic Ocean; being a Narrative of the orally talk about making this part of the our columns. Perhaps the less writtenand
Wreck of the Whaleship Citizen, of New world their home. Why should they not; said; the better lor all parties. The whole
Why may not the families of masters and evil in the matter is making a class or society
Bedford, in tic Arctic Ocean, lat. 88
Hi' N., long. 180° W., September 25, officers become settled at the Islands as well of men responsible for the sins, start-coming*
1852, commanded by Captain Howes Nor* as
New- Bedford, or in other pons from and errors of individuals. " Even one black
ton, of Edgartown, and the subsequent
which
Ihe whaling business i- conducted sheep ruins the flock,' 1 is the old proverb.
sufferings of her Officers and Crew during
will much more frequently visit Good, moral and respectable shipmasters do
nine month: among the Natives; together They
with it Brief History ofWhaling, py K- r. "home." At present, most of those among not wish iii In- denounced for fhe sins of one
Lewis Holmes. Boston: Wentworth tx
m wile lave families, du not see thent or more of tln-ii- uiuuher. \ieillu-r do good
Co., 86 Washington street. 1857.
oli.-ii. r than once m two, three and four and respectable "Odd Fellows," ''Masons,''
The contents of the title-page fully make
in the whuliug "Missionaries," '• Vfmisters," and other classknown the contents of the book. The work !le*'i wini have nol visited home during the es, wish in in- condeniut 'I I'U' the sins of uu«
abounds with much useful ami interesting in- last >ix or seven years. The e-,i|s and sad worthy ami delinquent members. We hope
formation respecting the Asiatic-Arctic re- ell! ct- of s'ldi a cm:'- are liiuny till great, the hints and remarks upon this subject
■
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gions. There is no book which we have W
'.■ very confident thai those having
which have appeared in fhe Advertiser and
ever read, containing so much information fnmilv
nre in duty bound to bring hither elsewfiere, will evert a salillurv. check upon
respecting the inhabitants of those cold re- their families, il they
template winding in injudicious letteri-writers, We think the evil
gions, Mti-i of the books (including Parry, the Pacific lor the comiuij :- years.
referred to, is in a fair way of being corrected,
Kane, and other voyagers) relating to the ! The number of masters accompanied by There is a world of meaning in the precept,
Arctic regions are confined lo the shores ol
lie w use as serpents and harmless as .loves."
their wive-, who are new or have been in
Greenland and the adjacent countries, This pnri. is quite numerous, us the following list ;i
Mb. Editor:- Ii would Bccm, from the,
hook, embodying the results of Captain Nor- will show Captains Skinner, Drew, Palmer, severe
strictures ofthe < ommercial Advertiser,
ton's and his officers' observations and expe- Phillips, Slocmn. Grant, Edwards, ( ox, Scol thai one or more letters from Micronesia
rience, introduces the reader to a region of field. Fisher, Chase, Green, Homer Devoll hate found their way into print, which are
the gfobc hitherto unknown except to whale- Diman, L j, Brown, Babcock, Lawrence, obnoxious to some of our worthv shipmasters. This i* to be regretted. No class <>l
men We distinctly remember listening to
shall and Stranburg, are accompanied I men have-il so much in their power to aid or
Citizen,
the narrative of those wrecked in the
with their wives.
i hinder ihe self-exiled .Missionary in his phi<ni their first arrival at Honolulu, in
1853. The list embraces by no men its all those ship lanthropic work- as shipmasters. They have
Ii is exceeding pleasanl to find the same masters accompanied by their wives now
heart of the
in often cheered or saddened theoften
come ol
Missionary.
lonely
Reports
now embodied in this hook. The writer, the Pacific. Captains Henry,
Tabor, Sisson,
with the materials at his command, 'has pro- Willis, Fish, and otht is. might !«• added, pleasant intercourse wiih shipmasters, and
aid rendered by them.
duced a book deserving of being read 'with who have nut come inside at Honolulu. Late substantial
It is well known thai Missionaries are
thai of Dr. Kane's latest book.
news from New Bedford reports thai many given 10 letter-wriung, and il is not strange il
We cannol refrain from alluding to the I others are on their way out. We hope the i some things are put on paper which should
fad that the world is largely indebted to the time may come when every married man in never see llle light. It slllilllll lie relllfmliefetl, however, thai the situation of Missionliardy whalemen for valuable information re- this part ot the world will be accompanied aries
mi
distant and lonely islands is
specting distant parls of the world. Ii is a h\ Ins wile. "What, therefore, God hath peculiar. those
They are away from civilized sogreat pity thai the fuels and resnlts of their joined together, let not man put asunder."
ciety, and are brought into close contact with
observations are not more frequently pubthe degraded people whom they are striving
Settled Yet.— Several years ago to raise fn i siaie of barbarism. EveryNot
lished to the world. We feel guilty, in (his
there, was o good old mnn .bj the name of thing, therefore, which hinders their work,
matter, for much time have we spent in lisVery, residing in a certain town in Massa- deeply affects their hearts; and ifthehindertening to the whaleman's story of distant re- chusetts, lie I"dug an observer of God's ance
comes from their own native land, they
gions, which might profitably have found a commands, was much annoyed by some of are liable to speak of it in strong terms to
Ins neighbors, who persisted in working on then- patrons. They may sometimes lie too
place in our columns.
We congratulate Captain Norton and his Sundays. One day, as the good man was indiscriminate and sweeping in their state*
ing, his Sabbath-breaking neighnt.- Inn they often speak of the good conofficers in having met with a writer like the going to meetout
lo hiin from the hay-field: duct and kiml offices of men from civilized
Inns
railed
Holmes,
of
who
hai
Edgartown,
Rev. Mr.
"Well, Father Very, we have cheated the lands. Many instances of this, if. necessary
math- such judicious use of the information Lord
in11 o: two Sundays, anyway." --I don't might be mentioned, from the |«'iis of the
furnished by their journals ami conversation, know that," replied the old gentleman—•• I good men in
Islands nl Micronesia. This
While we thus commend the book and the don'i know—the account is-not settled yet." apparently gives them much more pleasun
Ah, tho Sabbath-breaker has a long ac- than tn -peak in an opposite strain. It is to
style of the narrative, wp cannot add the
more of good to reare
engravings.
They
same for the
rueful!' count to settle, Every misspent, broken and he hoped they will haveiisit
the field of their
They arc" absolutely ridiculous—lit only to violated Sabbath, add- t,, the account. The porl of those who may
E. W. C.
labors.
self-denying
make the intelligent reader laugh ! I>ut we man of twenty-* yeai ol age, has enjoyed
November 6th, 1857*
know that neither Cadtain Norton or the three years of Sabbaths the man of fortyLetters for Seamen with the Chapwriter can he held responsible for then!. If two, six year.-, and the man of seventy, no
another edition should be published, we less than ti a years! Think of it, reader, fJUM. —Thomas S. Bain, Edward Sendler,
should hope engravings worthy of the work that the man fieventy years old has enjoyed John \V. Marstoo, Mr. Edward Penniman,
might appear, or none at all. But we sup- ten years of Sabbaths! Suppose those Sab- William Douglass Buel, Joseph Collins, Jno.
pose the publishers thought such engravings baths have been misspent and missimproved, Waterman Pierce. Thomas Sigison Conor.
would make the hook sill and the natives what an account remains unsettled ! The Charles F. Kane, 15cuj. D. Whitney, Thus.
s/nri —nol the natives of the Sandwich Isl- command is, Remember the Sabbath day, j H. Gardner, Joseph Pray, E Win clock
Church, Charles II. Walter. Ueofgo Henderand- hi Kamschatks but" of Massachusetts I and keep ii holy."
New Book.
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�THE Fit I KM). .NOYEMBBER, 18 57.
84
son Lawson, Mark Comstock, David King,
Harvey R. Phillips, James Amiraux, Robert
Coffin, Henry S. Hart, Samuel E. Craft,
A. 0. Taylor, ".lolm (lowland,"
Samuel Lawrence, Addison,"
"
Cod.ling P. Fish, " Florida,"
Qood Ilcturn,"
Baal F.
William James Cheat, Hiiutaville,"
"
Captain (Iiffi.nl, "Caroline,"
Thos. H. Miirslt.'ill, a resident,
Frederick Slociini, Siriitugn,"
Horace Sherman, 1st officci-, M .Japan,"
A friend to seaman,
11. Condy. a resident,
J,I,. daavveland, "Julian."
).. B. Ilri.wii-.iii, •• Baltlo,"
fleo. A. Lathrop, a l-addaul,
K. I.. Carry, " .liinn's Matn-y,"
I'npt. Homer, •- Messenger Bint,"
(i. L. fox, " Magnolia,"
Win. .1. Parsons, "Charles Carroll,"
T. K. Straabarg, "Congraw,"
\. 1'. Iilav. '• I ll:l!ll|ii..tl,"
j Stephen Swift, " Sarah,"
W, 'I'll.inn.si.ii. "China,"
I J,,Ianie>
A. Law, a re.-iiient,
Roman,"
■ J. A. Dwveil,Williams,
Thomas W.
" Florida,"
J. 11. Allen, "Josephine,"
H. C. Grraham, :i resident,
John P. Eldridge, .i..lm s Elixabeth,"
Martin Palmer, "Kingfisher,"
N. C, Fisher, "Barnstable,"
A. Ii. Baiter, " Bsnj. Tueker,"
Tooker, "Ontario,"
I Capt.
T. N. RnssclJ, "Corinthian,"
GeorgeG.Penny, "Alice,"
I J. Skinner, " M.-iringo,"
William McLean, Jonathan Kclley, Sylvester West Joseph, John B. Holmes, Thomas
Banks, Charles S. Clark, Hiram P. Richardson, Charles W. Grehore, Win. F. McKneol, Win. M. Waterbury, Addison Pow.
ell, Wm. Melldrum, Lewis L. Bright, Roht. i
Shepherd, William Mores. John A. Cooley.
Response.
anAdpeal
11l the Septemlx-r nuniher of the Friend
ihc followiiii,r statement was mode:
-
- - - - - -
Debt oa the Friend to 1866,
KI61 03
tor 1866,
l.VJ 04
Required for glMultuiu dlatrlbutioa,rhiriug
'JOO 00
the current year,
|608
B6
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§107 88
Debt upon the Ilethel, January I, 1868,
Repairs and altenilioiis of Bethel, in spring
of this year—see F.icntl tin- .March, 890 6fi
Sexton's serviced, nine months, to Oct 1, B0 no
- --
Donations for Bethel, from January to present time, October I,
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§807 41
til" 50
* #679 91
The reasons why these debts had been incurred were fully stated. In view of these
facts, an appeal for $1000 was made.
The following letter, which has been received, will show the impression which has
been made upon some minds, and if others
are similarly impressed, we shall be enabled
to carry forward these enterprises unembarrassed.
Honolulu, October, 1857.
Rev. S. C. Damon— Dear Sir: In the
last number of the Friend, (of September
26th,) we have seen an appeal in behalf of
the Friend and Bethel, in which we notice
Present debt on Bethel,
the sum of $1000 is required to pay debts
which have been incurred for these objects.
We are confident that the expenditures which
have been made, have all been made judiciously, and with no other design than that
of benefiting seamen, that class of men to
■whom not only Honolulu, but also many
other cities, are indebted for their prosperity.
We have long been acquainted with you,
and have seen your unwearied endeavors to
promote their welfare, both spiritually and
temporally—laboring with them both night
and day, visiting them in their afflictions,
comforting the sorrowing, and endeavoring
to lead them in those ways wnich are full of
peace. We would desire, however, in some
more substantial way than that of words, to
express our gratitude to you, and our appreciation of your labors, and we therefore beg
of you to accept from us, in behalf of the
Friend and Bethel, the following subscrip-
tions, and with our best wishes for your happiness, and trusting that you may be long
spared to labor in the field where Providence
has placed you, we remain your devoted
friends,
- - - - -"
-' - -
Thomas Spenoer,
W. T. Walker, South America,"
Francia L. Diman, Japan,"
"
William C. Hayden, "Mercury,"
V.
i
it. Hanks, a resident,
A
Macomber.
.
*
826
720
20
720
20
'*
---
....
-
- -
-
-
-
■■
-
-
- -
-
--
Japan.—We would call the attention of shipmas10 tcrs to tlio advertisement ol Messrs. Kastra & Co. at
10 I Hakodadi, Japan. We are tis-iii-ed that they are
10
10 prepared to serve the interests of whalemen promptly.
6 We have been shown a letter from X, K. Rice, Esq.,
5 U. S. Commercial Agent at that port to Capt. looker
5 of the Ontario, in which he communicates gome facts
5
He writes under date of Sept. 101 "The
in ofInterest
10 Japanese are llTf'"r"l -*g less exclusive. They now
10 | fitrnisli in aliiuiilance for ships nog beg*, BOtStOM,
vegetables of all kinds ami i iciv Itv a Be* treaty,
in' made since you-were here, Americans
can reside here
m
10 permanently alter the -Itli of July. IKB, | have lw
10 doubt that importations from the United Stales will
10■ he iiitnle seen, as at certain seasons of the year .such
■I
merclciinlise would pay Rett. Americans naidinf;
7
here are subject only to American laws. The treat]
I
."» i-in love.-, so far M Ihe .laj.anc. c are concci'iicd
'I'hey sty. 'Come, tin- in.'t'c ihi- bettor. 1 Mch'mi
10 dollars only should be brought here. All other kindi
an-neail.v wi.tihlcss."—P. ('. Advertiser.
•JO
■2
,;;
Donations. — From Mrs. Phillips, $5
for
the •'Home." itnti '.<> Cur the "Bethel."
From
Mr. Chirk, Steward of the John Ham.
■i
10 land, ■?2 for the Friend.
■
"I like to turn
an
honest Penny," said
Most truly we appreciate the kindly 11 certain facetious pommage, of our town.)
feeling manifested in the above communica- he recently placed his hand upon the should*'
tion, and would assure tie signers ami con- ol the master of the "Alice."
tributorsthat hereaftei our endeavor will still
I Invite Yon.
l>o to do all in our power for the temporal and
spiritual hem-lit of seamen. When asking
Kkadeh, —If you really ivanl to be saved,
seamen to make contributions, il is in order I give you an invitation tin- day. If yon
to sustain those objects which tend to tln-ir want to have peace with (rod now, and glory
in heaven hereafter, I invite you to come to
good.
Christ at once, and both shall he your own.
1 invite you boldly because of the word:
"The Sea
Bird."—is the name of a
which
Himself has spoken. He says,
small monthly newspaper (about the size of ji "ComeChrist
unto me, all ye that labour and ele
our own sheet) just started by the Mariners'
heavy laden, and I "ill L i\" you rest."
Family Industrial Society of New York, and "Him that Cometh unto me 1 will in no wise
devoted to the best interests of seamen and cast out." (Matt.xi.l2B. John vi. 37.) Reatheir families. Success to this enterprise. der, tire you tired of your sins) Are you
I invite you
We shall be M-ry glad to exchange with this labouring and heavy laden
day to Come to Christ, and you shall he
this
fellow-laborer in a good cause. We have saved .'
already received the first number.
I know not who you are, or what, you have
been in time past, hut 1 say boldly, Come to
DISASTER,—The American whaling bark Christ by faith, and you shall have a pardon.
Isabella, Capt Lyon, which sailed from La- High or low, rich or poor, young man or
haina, for New Zealand, Oct. 19th, returned maiden, old man or child,—you cannot he.
worse than Manasseh and Paul before conon the 10th hist., having lost foremast
version,—than David and Peter i.fter converand main-top-gallant-mast, in a whirlwind, sion ; —come to Christ, and you shall be freenear the line. Three men were aloft at the ly forgiven.
time, two of Whom were saved, but the third
Think not lor a moment that you have
went overboard with the wreck and was lost. some great thing to do before you come to
Christ. Such a notion is of the earth, earthcome just as you arc.
If reports are true, the officers of ly ; the Gospel bids you his
idea
is
to
make
peace with God
Man's
Government should keep watch of a certain by repentance, and then come to Christ al
shipping office, at Lahaina. A sailor is now last: the Gospel way is to receive peace
in our office, who says that all his advance from Christ first of nil, and begin with Him.
money, $60, was kept back, but that through Man's idea is to amend, and turn over a new
his wn\ up to reconciliation
Judge Bond's influence the money has been leaf, and so work
friendship with God : the Gospel way is
and
recovered. Other persons also loudly com- first to be friends with God through Christ,
plain of similar treatment.
and then to work. Man's idea is to toil uji
hill, and find life at the top; the Gospel
Seamen not boarding at the "Home," the
way is first to live by faith in Christ, and
but at the other boarding houses, in Honolulu, then to do His will.
are earnestly requested to call at the DepositAnd judge ye, every one, judge ye, which
is true Christianity? Which is the
ory, for books and papers, before leaving.
'
:
::
r
'
.
.
�1857
.
85
THE FK 11 N I). WiflllH,
news? Which is the glad tidings? First Arise and come to Christ just as you are. He jxiwer and influence in inducing France to
the fruits of the Spirit and then peace, or waits for you, and is as willing to save as declare for our cause.
first jioace and then the fruits of the Spirit ? He is mighty. He is the appointed PhysiOn Friday, September 22, 1780, the treaFirst samtilication and then pardon, or first cian for sin-sick souls. Deal with Him as son of Arnold was laid bare, which saved us
pardon and then sanctiticationI First ser- you would with your doctor about the cure from destruction.
vice and then life, or first life and then ser- of a disease nf your bod%. Make a direct On Friday, October 19, 1781, the surrenvice '. Reader, your own heart can well application to Him and tell him all your ker tit Yorktown, the crowning glory of the
supply the answer.
; wants. Tell Him you want to be saved, and ii American arms, occurred.
On Friday, July 7, 1706, the motion in
Come then, willing to receive, and not ask Him to save you. Rest not till you have
was math' by John Adams, secondlasted
for
that
the
Lord
it
actuall)
yourself
Congress
Come
thinking how much you can bring.
willing to take what Christ offers, and not gracious. Cast yourself wholly and unre- ed by Richard Henry Lee, that the IJnitod
fancying you can give anything in return. servedly oil Christ, and your soul shall be Colonies were, and of right ought to be, free
Come with your sins, and no other qualifies* saved. Boeder,once more / incite you. The Btld independent.
numerous examples, we see that
lion but a hearty desire for pardon, and so Lord grant the invitation may not he given ! Thus, bymay
be with other nations, Amein vain!—-Rev. J. C. Rule li. .1.. Rector of i however ii
-up' as the Bible is true you shall he saved.
need
never
dread lo begin on Friday
ricans
You may tell me you are not worthy, you Helmingham, Suffolk.
any undertaking, however momentous it may
are not good enough, you are not elect. I
Fridayan Unlucky Day
Is
!>o. Norfolk Beacon,
answer, you are <i sinner, and you want to lie
Friday has been
From
immemorial,
time
Above all, let it beremembered that it was
saved, and what more do you want ? You
frowned
upon as a day of ill omen. And on 'Friday that the great sacrifice was offered
to
of
those
whom
Jesus
came
save.
are one
though this prejudice is less prevalent now i for the salvation of the World. Well may
Come to Him, and you shall have life.
than it has I it of yore, when superstition we call ii Good Friday
Western Pilot.
Take with you words, and He will bear you had
are many even
there
general
sway,
yet
graciously. Tell Him all your soul's necess- | this matter-of-fact age ol tens, who would
Wine Made, but not from Grapes.—Mr.
ities, and I know He will give Iteetl. Tell in
hesitate on a day so inauspicious to begin an Musgrave, in his account of a visit to Chamheard
He
receivcth
sinners,
Him you have
And pagne, says of a wine manufacturer, Mons.
momentous import.
and thai you are such. Tell Him you have undertaking of
whose hearts uu-lj L
mariners,
how
brave
of Rhetrns
many
heard He has the keys of life in His hand, quailed could meet the wildest fury nf their He here
pointed out nine .casks lying in
am) entreat Him to let you in. Tell Him
ocean home, would blanch in even bond their the court-yard, containing h ton of white
yon come in dependence on His own promsugar from the We *>f Bourbon, every pound
! sails on Friday. But to show with' how
ises, and ask Him to fulfil His word, and do
us of which cost ninepence.
Hereupon I rereason
the
is
indulged,
hi
fooling
much
as Me has said. Do this in simplicity and
of the genuine
following
fads
to
show
me
some
him
examine
the
con*
important
quested
in
sincerity, and. my soul for vino's, you shall I nection with our new settlement and great-1j liquor—in Ihe state, that is, in which it leaves
shall
not ask in vain. Do this, and you
find |
as a nut ion, and we will see how great the pressoir niter the regular fermentation
faithful mid pist to forgive your sins, aness
.Him
cause we Americans have to dread the lii- j process, ami before sweetening syrup is added.
ami to cleans.- you from all unrighteousness.
He presently selected a bottle from some bins
i tal day.
Reader, 1 am deeply anxious to bring yott
On Friday, August 31, 1492, Christopher jat hand,opened it and poured out a glassful.
to the point of actual application to Christ, Columbus sailed (ill his great voyage, of dis- A more ■unpalatable drink, under tin- denomination of wine, 1 never tasted. It was like
I see many who are conscious of sin, and covery.
want to be -saved, but never get beyond this.
i Sauterue mixed with wormwood.
On Friday, October 12, 1492, he first
, "I have taken
"Now," said Mons. 1<
They hear of Christ with the ear, and believe covered land.
all they are told about Him. They allowOn Friday, January 1. 14!).'5, he sailed on j! out two glasses from this bottle. Here is S
that there is no salvation except in Christ, his return to Spain, which if he had not !; bottle of sweetened syrup, from which I will
Tlvy acknowledge that Jesus alone can de- reached in safety, the happy result would jj fill up the deficiency you have just seen creliver them from hell, and present them fault- never have been known, which led to the set- ated."
less before God.
I witnessed this filling up ; and he then
tlement of this vast continent.
March
he
arrived
119:},
15,
at
handed
the bottle lo a cellarmtin, who corked
Friday,
this
On
get
nenr
to
beyond
But they seem
and
it in my presence.
strung
PaloS
safety.
in
general nacnowUdgemcitt. They never fairf)n Friday, November 22, 1493, ho arrived
he, "will, at no distant date,
"That,"
said
on
own
souls.
hold
Christ
for
their
ly lay
his
second
to
Amebottle
at
become
a
of the primest quality. It is
in
voyage
Hispaiiiola
They -stick fast in S state of wishing, ami
j the Verzenay growth."
wanting, and feeling, antl intending, and rica.
On Friday, June 13. 1494, he. though un- j At dinner, at the house of Monsieur
never get any further. They see what we
of
on the same day, the following scene
mean. They know it is all true. They known to himself, discovered the continent I! L
occurred
America.
the
benefit
of
it.
But
one
to
full
hope
day get
"And now," -aid mine host, "let me offer
On Friday, March a, I l!)(i. Henry VII. of
at present they get no benefit at all.
to John Cabot his commisyou some of the liest wine we have to boast
England,
cave
Reader, if you are a man of this kind, 1 sion, which led lo the discovery of North j of at Rheims."
warn you plainly, you are in a bad state of America. This is the first. American state
The string and wire were instantly cut,
soul. You are as truly in the way to hell in paper in England.
away went the cork on its *rial travels.
and
your present condition, as Judas Iscariot, or
On Friday. September 7, HJBS, Melendes Our glasses overflowed with the creamy
Ahab, or Cain. Believe me, there must he founded St. Augustine, the oldest settlement stream, ami my lips with compliments on its
actual faith in Christ, or else Christ died in in the United States by more than -10 years. unsurpassed excellence immediately aftervain, so fur as you arc concerned. It is not
On Friday, November 10, 1880, the May- wards. It was, indeed, beautiful wine.
looking at the bread that feeds the hungry flower, with the Pilgrims, made the harbor of When all the culogium which such a creditman, but the actual eating of it. It is not Provincotown, and on the same day they able sample elicited had been exhausted, and
•razing on the life-boat that saves the ship- signed that august compact, the forerunnerof the sober certainty alone remained of having
wrecked sailor, but actual getting into il. It our glorious Constitution.
lived
is not knowing and believing that Christ is a
•'Thin* to clasp perfection,"
On Friday, December 22, 1620, the PilSaviour, that, will save your soul, unless grims made their final landing at Plymouth the announcement was quietly made, of the.
there arc actual transactions between you and Rock.
bottle just emptied being the identical one
Christ.
On Friday, February 22, 1732, George from which I. had endeavoured in vain, to
Take the advice I give you this day, and Washington, the Father of American Free- drink a quarter of a glassful two hours previous.
act upon it at once. Stand still no longer, dom, was born.
On Friday, June 13, 1775, Bunker Hill
waiting for some imaginary frames and feelThe True Course.—So live with men as
ings which will never come. Hesitate no was seized and fortified.
God
saw you bo «qieak to God as if men
the
1777,
if
Friday.
fifs
surrender!
7.
under
the
musi
On
October
M
idea thm jrou
longer,
yon.
made,
which
hud
such
heard
•-ill obtain the Spirit, md then com to Christ. of Saratoga was
,
;
:
,
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i
!
I
'
,
—
!—
,
,
:
'
I
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i;
I
dis-1
•
,
:
!
—
i
l
;
�86
Tlf E VRI E N I). NO V
The First Stop.
111ER
.
1857.
from the devil. Jut as yon are, I
! log tocomes
Christ The worse yon are, the more
AisVKittim:.mi:.\ts.
go
Reader,—I believe there are many per- need you have to apply to Kirn. \ oil will
sons who have real desires for salvation, but never mend yourself by staying away.
know not what steps to take, or where to
begin. Their consciences arc awakened.
Their feelings are cxtited. Their understandings an; enlightened. They would like
to alter and become true Christians. But
they do not know what should be their first
hear not,
because your prayer
is
stammer*
iag, your words feelpe, end your language
poor. Jesus can understand yon. .Just si ■
mother understands the lirst Babblings of her
infant, so does the blessed Saviour understand sinners, lie can read a sigh, and see
step.
a meaning in a groan.
Readier, if this lie the state of your soul,
Despair not, because you do not get an anlet me offer you some advice. I will show' swer
immediately. While you are-speaking
you where.to begin. 1 will tell you what
is listening. If he delays an answer,
Jesus
step you ought to take, antl may take this it i- only for wise reasons, and to try il you
very day.
in earnest. Pray on. ami the amwer
In every journey there must be a first ansurely com". Though it tarry, wait fur
will
step. There must he a change from sitting
it. It will surely come at last.
still to moving forward. The journeying*
Oh redder, ii you have
desire to he
of Israel from Egypt lo Canaan were long :m d,!remember the advice any
havegiven you
1
and wearisome. Forty years passed away this day. '-ft
ti|ion it honest!} ami heartily,
before they crossed Jordan. Yet there was .j
you shall be saved.
and
some one who moved first when they marchDo not -;i\ you know not how to print.
ed from Barneses to Succoth. When does
is the simplest act in all religion. It
Prayer
a man really take his lirst step in coming out
is simply Bpeaking to God. It needs neither
from sin and the world I lie does it in tinlearning, nor wisdom, nor book-knowledge to
day when he lirst prays with his heart.
it. It. needs nothing but heart and
begin
In every building the first stone must be will. The weakest infant can cry when litThe
laid, and the lirst blow must l«- struck.
is hungry. The poorest beggar can hold out
ark was 120 years in building. Yet there his haiid
for an 'alms, and does not wail to
was a day when Noah laid his axe to the' find line words. The most ignorant man
lirst tree he cut down to form it. The tem- will
find something to say to God, if he has
ple of Solomon was a glorious building. only a mind.
Blit there was a.day when the lirst huge
Do not say \ou have no convenient pkwt
stone was laid at the foot of Mount Moriah. io
in. Any man can find a place priWhen does the building of tin- Spirit really vatepray
enough,
if he is disposed. Our Lord
a
begin to appear in man's heart 1 It begins, prayed on a mountain; Peter on the houseso far as we can judge, when he first pours
top ;, Isaac in the field ; Nathaniel under tho
out his /wart to Gotl in prayer.
fig-tree,;
in the whale's belly. Any ;
Reader, if you desire salvation, and want place mayJonah
become
a closet, an oratory, and a!
to know what to do, I advise you to go this Bethel,
to us the presence of God,
and
be
very day to the Lord Jesus Christ, in the
Do not say you have no time. There is
first private place you can find, and entreat
of time, if 'men will only employ it,
plenty
Him in prayer to save your soul.
Time may he short, hut time is always long
Tell him that you have heard that He refor prayer. Daniel had all the afceives .ftnncrs, and has said, "Him that enough
a kingdom on his hands, and yet he
fairs
of
out."
coineth unto me I will in nowise cast
prayed three times a day. David was ruler
Tell Him that you are a poor vile sinner, and over
a mighty nation, and yet he says:
that you come to Him on the faith of .His
Evening
and morning and at noon will I
"
own invitation. Tell Him you put yourself
lv. 17.)
time is really
pray."
(Psalm
wholly and entirely in His hands—that you .wanted, time can always When
be found.
and
and
feel vile
helpless,
hopeless in yourReader, salvation is very near you. Do
self—and that except He saves you, vim have not lose heaven
for want of asking. Go this
no hope to be saved at all. Beseech Him to day, and take the first step. Rev. J. C. Ryle.
—
deliver you from the guilt, the power, and
■
•
4
MB
>l«s
.
:
v the
!
w
furnished (in the most
terms. The
will
Managers, having for several years kepi ■ private
boarding-house In Honolulu, aad during that period
ticoomtuotuted many seamen, hope to receive the p il
rouage of the tteaforiug community. Seamen
rest assured that ao efforts will be spared tofnrni ;t
tliem a comfortable ho
hiring their stay in perl
Boarders acoonttuoI ited by the week or single nteal ■
Seamen patronising theoailors' Home will littil that
the improvements, recently made will afford more
oomraotlatlon aud greater comfort, having several additional sleeping roomi—the whole enlarged and thoroughly ventilated.
!n c'liini'i'iiiiii with the Sailors 1 II mo is a Shipping
Office, where applications fi i Captain n
Seamen will be punctually attended to.
-■"■
Board and Lodging for.Seamen, per woek,
Private Table, for <Iflicers, per week,
.-'n 00
jy Apply for Board nt the uliicc, in the duiing-
;
- -
'"'
i-i<"iii.
Honolulu, 8ept 11337.
10-tf
post oiTin.
- .,.
. '
voTiii;.
lis OF POSTAGE ON LETTERS MUM!
HAT
SANDWICH ISLAM'S
single letters the Tinted St
i>ii
Till',
-
In
I''■'■■
t.i Great Britain,
in Frufi e.
'. -•
tn Germany an 1 PrS
in llussi i and tVinlan '.
It
to Canadaand British*. A.,'-- "
- ::
-
t.i
"
•■
"
Asores or Western Isl )
and.', via Southarop-> "'I
"
1
South >
American Republics,
to Mexican Ports,
- 2717 "
Panama,
ton
and Lisbon,
to Valparaiso and
tn
- -- -- -
"
The nlovc rate" are tor letters weighing half sa
..'iit.-i' in- less, and double the above rates for each ad
ditional half ounce.
Letters dropped into the Post Office without the
postage being ]«:'!, will not be forwarded. lu-tf
THE RKAUING-ROOM
Till: SAILOR'S HOME is OPEN, AND
_f\_ IVee tn the public; and,all seamen visiting
this port, are especially invited to make it ;t place of
result, whether they board at the Home, or other
boarding-housea in Honolulu, or aire oouneoted with
Why don't Husbands Write When the snipping. During the shipping season ii will be
away ikom Home ?-—A few days ago a man liglital even
Seamen visiting the Rcading-Room, and desiroua
returned to Lowell, after a four years absence of writing letters, will
!>e furnished with •'ptn, taA
Australia,
and
Ins
in
found
wife married tindpaper," irratit, by applying to tin* nation timRoom,
il'
again and with a child by her second hus- ing charge of the
consequences of sin. Beseech Him to
pardon and wash you in His own blood.
Beseech Him to give you a new heart, and
plant the Holy Spirit in your soul. Beseech
Him to give you grace, and faith, and will,
and power to be His disciple and servant from
day forever. Oh reader, go this very band. The wife justifies her second mary, and tell these things to the Lord Jesus riage on the ground of the supposed death
of
irist, if you really are in earnest about your her first husband, to whom, now that he has
made his appearance, she is ready to return.
Tell Him, in your own way, and your The second
husband has taken possession of
own words. If a doctor came to see you
habe, and the other parties will take
when sick, you could tell him where you felt the
for its recovery.
sick. If your soul feels its disease indeed, legal proceedings
can
find
surely
you
something to tell Christ.
Doubt not his willingness to save you, beA Seasonable Item.—If you want cool
cause you are a sinner. It is Christ's office water, and can't get ice, wrap your pitcher in
to save sinners. He says Himself: " I came two or three folds of coarse cloth, and keep
not to call the righteous, but sinners to re- it constantly wet. The philosophy of the
pentance." (Luke v. 32.)
thing is that the evaporation carries off the
Wait not, because you feel unworthy. heat, and leaves the water at very nearly
Wail for nothing. Waitfor nobody. Wait- freezing point.
»this
.i.\vY«.;r.iis
HOUSE is now open Km: nit:
rpm:i-omjnodation
of Seamen. Board and I'
I li*reasonable
'
>
THBtYX,
*}
I
A CAKD.
IMillKSKIMII), lately
wreeked iii
CA»«f, wan treatad rery kindly
by the natives of East Cape, in the Arctic Ocean, aad
he would rec mend that each master passing there
should nmkc the natives some present, (say a Ijht. of
ttil.iu-ci, which they prize highly,) in unler that their
friendship may be retained, to the benefit of say
men who in future should be so unfortunate as to be
PHILO HCNTLEY,
wrecked in that region.
LataMasterShip Indian Chut.
1867.
10-tf
Honolulu, Out. 28,
rpiIB
[ the ship Indian
,
.1. WORTH,
established hints, ir in buainesi at lliln,
Hawaii, is pntpareil to nirnish ships with
Kecrtiil en I irorable
I h, Goods or Bllia
on the Doited State
HAVING
�18 57.
AD1 BRTISEMENTS.
ADVERTISEMENTS,
PCBLIC NOTICE.
I
SHALL
rpHB GOVERNOR OP atOAHU
the Port of Honoa Bell to be rang
I cause
lulu, at nine and a halfo'clock of each evening, as a
signal to all Mariners at that time on shore without
his permission, to return on beard Utelr w.—cl'. ; nnd
it shall lie incumbent upon them to do M, upon ]iain
of two dollars fine, If apprehended at or after tea
o'clock of the evening, when said Governor shall
.hi n the Bell to be ag .in rung, as :t signal for their
,
87
TUX Htl GN D. NOV I. M REX,
A D VE RTISEME NTS.
INFORMATION W ANTED.
RESPECTING CHAKLEfl TWOKET
Y or TwAY,of Qaasva, New YmR. He tolled
\OII<
r.
TO WHALEMEX.
M A C Y «V LAW,
in 18(50 or Is.'il. from Callus, Mains, on laiurd the
—DEALERS IN—
T.-;i/,i-««r, bound to the Waal Indies. He was next
SUPPLIES AND GENERAL
WHALEMEN'S
heard fi
n board the whale sltip Niptunt, ('.apt.
MKiirii.v.Niiisi:,
after.
Honolulu,
about two or tares years
Green, ia
km* nilii**-. Ilnwnli.
It Is confidently suppoeed that, If alive, he is tn
ON HANI) a good supply
board I o whale ship in the Pacific. Should be
nf Hawaiian beef, potatoes, bogs, sheep and nuvisit the Islands, he is reqnssted Iii eitll itiHiii the
by whalemen. The
Seamen's Chaplain ; or, should this notiee meet his merous other urticls'required
articles can be furnished at the shortest
apprehension'.
eye, to write lo lite ('htijilii'ui, or eoinniunicate with above iiiulon
notice
the most reasonable terms in exchange
Whoever furiously, or heedlessly of the safety of jhis sister, Miss a. T. Ending, in Geneva, N. Y.
fur bills on the United States or orders on any merothers, rides any horse or other animal, or drives or
_ALS0—
:it the Islands. No charge made on interconducts any vehicle, though tie- personal safety of Respecting a sailer by the name of P IRTRIDGE, chant exchange.
island
any pen n be 11 endangered thereby, shall be pun- j whose friends reside in West Eaton, N, Y.
Beef packed 1" order sad warrantod to keep in any
i'lie 1 by a fins not less than five dollars nor etc
—ALSO—
o-tt.
one hundred.
Reapecting JOHN WHARRIE or M.-W'llAlU.ll-:, clilniite.
Whoever is found drunk in any street, road or who left someone of Ellas Perkins' whalingvi —la,
1,1),
B. VV. I'M.
other public place, from the use of intoxicating liquor,
loluln, in 1868 or 18*54.
O M MISSION M E R <- II A N T
mil, on the fit I 0 tivictiim for such offense,be pun—ALSO—
HONOLULU, OAHU, ft 1.
y a line not *•».*•*-.- ling sis dollars, and on any
Respecting VY, S. Haven, reported to have jumped
It, IVrmiMsiuii. he Refer,* to
conviction ofany like offense committed alter the first overboard from the .whale s-!i ij Good Return, Capt,
ding twelve*dollars, or Wing, on the 2Utli of March, 180C, while thevessel C. W. Cortwright, President of Manufacturers' Intion, bj fine not
by Imprisonment not more than three months.
raranoe Company, Boston;
w.-'.s lying nt anchor in, or lying off and on the port
taboo. Whoever, after of Honolulu. Any inl'orn: .1
ill load noise by nigh.1 issinging
lug to tLis ft A. Pierce, Boston;
in the streets or I young man will be most gladly n ived by the 'I leiyi't-, Woe S ( a.-, Huston;
■inset, shall, by hallooing,'
r disor- editor of tlie E. ,■
11 any other way, make any disturbai
u-tf
Edward Motl Robinson, New B*sdford;
*l«rly noise, in any village, >wn or part of thiskini
John VY, Barrett & Sons, Nantucket;
dotn, witlioul jitsiiiiaole eti'-e for so doing, stroll be.
••TIIK FRIENO" SENT ABROAD.
Perkins & Smith, Ne« Lcsndon.
Ii 1 ,;.- to summary arrest and imprisonment b;
/ id! LIST OF FOREIGN SUBSCRIBERS has been 15. I'. Snow, Honolulu.
lie
V) increasing for several years, and is now larger
apon conviction
constable or poll
AMOS S. <0*»KK.
nunVthed by a fini I excee ling ten dollars.
than over before. We should rejoice to have it be- SAM'l. N. (is Hi.
by
cany
shall
law,
who
so largo that theFriend might 1
me a selfAr.y person not authorized
CASTLE A OOOKB,
come
or t run 1 with any bowie-knife, sword-cane,
paper, untl the necessity removed of call- LMPOBTERfi IMi WHOLL'SALK AND RETAIL
air-gt ii, si 1111.'-shot, or other deadly weapon,shall be lug for donations. When that tune arrives, our
DEALRU IV
liable to a fine of no more than thirty and no loss
may be sure they will not find n< appealing <: E N E II A I, M i: It < II A N O I 8 E
than toy doll irs, ttr in default of payment 1 I
I- 1- i'ltll'ls.
At the old Stand, comer of King and School streets,
term not
line, ti imprisonment at hard labor for
The Friend will be sent to any pari of the United
Ihe huge Stone Church. Also, at the Store
exoeedin: t\>" months, an 1 1 less tit in fifteen daj -. States, :tn 1 the II iwaiian and United State* postage niiir
formerly occupied by C. II. Nicholson, in King street,
fore any district prepaid, or Included, for S"- B0.
upon conviction trl such
opposite the Seamen'e Chapol.
trate, unless good cause be shown tor having
Any sailor subscribing for the paper to forlangerotts weapons and any sueh person niay ward to his friends, will receive a bound volume for
C. II. WETMORE,
be immediately arrested without warrant, by the the 11 -f year %ratu.
PHYSICIAN A N I) SURGEON,
Marshal, or any Sheriff, Constable, or other rjfficer
s."> For Three Yc.-.rs.
HILO, HAWAII, S. I.
or person, until he can brj taken before such magisFor s- '. the publisher will semi tho paper
trate.
(I'.isiA.ii: INCLUDED) for One year, and furnish a
N, 1!.—Medicine Chests carefully replenished, nnd
from
any
Every foreign seam tn, of whose dest rtion
volume for 1836, together with all the numbers on reasonable terms.
vessel due 11.nice sir.II have lnvn given, and every for the current year. This liberal offer Includes s
<;. P. JI'DI), M. I).,
of
the
seaman discharged contrary to the jwviskttut
subscription of the Friend for tubes teass.
article, shall be ap irehen led, and if not returned t"
Bound
volumes
sale
the
S
at
Chaplain's
for
t: I A N AND SlIKfiEON,
P
II
Y
I
'~if
Ins vessel, shall he put at the disposal of bii proper Study and Depository, at the Sailors' Home A deHONOLULU, OAHU, S. I.
Consul or t'i ii'.inri-i il Agent but if he refuse to duction will be made to those purchasing several
receive him Undercharge of his Consulate, said de- volumes, nnd always' furnished to seamen at oosl Office, corner of Fort nml Merchant, streets. Office
open from '.I A. M. to 4 P. M.
serter shiiH'lii: pot to hard labor until be quits the price.
country,
attention of all
special
We
desire
tn
call
the
%*
H. PITMAN,
Every Seaman who shall be found on shore after masters, officers and seamen to the importance of
in: U.Kit IN
fhe sixty days limited by his permit have expired, doing their part towards sustaining this paper. It
C.ENERAI, MERCHANDISE, AND
will be/arrested as a deserter, and confined in the was never intended to make the paper a inoney-miikfort uu/iii be shall leave the kingdom.
• HAWAIIAN PRODUCE,
i inf. concern. Tin' publisher prints 1,000 OOptel of
Whoever rescues any prisoner, or persons lawfully each number for gratuitous distribution among seaDAY, HILO, HAWAII, 8. I.
BYRON'S
of- men visiting Honolulu,Lahaina and Hilo. This rule
heWf in custody, on conviction or charge of anyaids
All Stores required by whale ships and others,
fense, or as a witness on a criminal charge, or
has been practiced for more than ten years, anil supplied on reasonable firms, and at tho shortest
or assists any such prisoner, witness or person so hence the paper has bseome no generally circulated notice.
tf
held in oastody, in his design or endeavor to escape, among seamen in all parts of the Pacific,
W A NT E D—Exchange on the Unite*! States and
whether Ins escape be or be not effected or attempted,
Oct. 2, 1854.
Europe.
or conveys into any fori or other prison any disguise, BIBLE,BOOK AND TRACT DEPOSITORY,
facilitate,
HOFFMANN,
and
E,
tool, weapon, or tber thing adapted to
SAILOR'S HOME, HONOLULU.
with intent to facilitate the escape therefrom of any
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON,
the
in
TRACTS,
looks
ami
English,
or
other
ease
shall,
ill
penes,
saich prisoner, witness
office in the New Drug Store, corner of KaahuFrench, Portuguese, German, Welsh, Swedthe aforesaid offense or criminal charge be capital, or
nre ottered iminu and Queen streets, Makes & Anthon's Block
These
books
languages.
Spanish
ish
nnd
for
nr
years
for
life
ten
punishable by Imprisonment
or more, be punished by imprisonment nt hard labor for sale, at eost prices, l>y the Hawaiian Bible sad Oiien day and night.
not more than three years, and by line not exceeding Tract Societies, but furnished
GIL1HAN & CO.,
GRATUITOUSLY TO SEAMEN.
live hundred dollars ; in any other case, he shall be
ship Chnndlers and General Agents,
not
more
hard
labor
bound
volumes
for
Friend,
Imprisonment
by
at
Office
of
The
punished
'Also,
LAIIAINA, MAUI, S. I.
titan one year, uutl tine not exceeding CAS hundred sale. Subscriptions received.
">-tr
dollars.
N. B.—Seamen belonging to vessels lying "off Ships supplied with Recruits, Storage and Money
and on," will be supplied with books and papers, by
NAVIGATION TAUGHT,
calling at the Depository, from 1-! to 3 o'clock P. M.
S. C. DAMON,
in nil its brunches, taught by the
Seamen's Chaplain.
Snl.-eriber. The writer likewise begs to iuA MONTHLY JOURNAL, DEVOTED TO TEM1 iiiale that ho will give instruction to a limited
PERANCE, SEAMEN, MARINE AND
NEW BOOKS.
Bomber of pupils In Knglish reading and grammar,
GENERAL INTELLIGENCE,
supHARRIET & JESSIE—A largeTract
geography, writing, aritlinmtic, *Xc. Kesidence, cotPUBLISHED AND EDITED BY
ply of books published by the American
tage at the back of Mr. Love's house, Nuuanu-street
DANIEL SMITH.
Society was received, including standard publications
SAliTL C. DAMON.
tf
and a few new works. For sale at Bible and Tract
Honolulu, March 2ii, 1057.
Houie.
au-tf
TERMS:
of
Sailors'
Depository
$2.0(1
IKON HliROI.KS
One copy, per annum,
MASTS OF ALL SIZES.
3.00
"...
Two copies,
BALI at the Hudson> Bay Company's
SAIiK KY
6,00
Eire oopies.
II HAt.KVKl.il i. CO
'•
:it,U
' More sight feet long— three dollnrs each tt
.
-
1
'
1
1
.
«
>
-
t
>
CONSTANTLY
I
I
•
-.
»
;
;
•
'
'
NAVIGATION,
-
..
-
111111u.I
,
;
.
BIBLES,
THE FRIEND;
BY
,
FOR
--
- --
�TII U KIM L N I). \0 Vl.>lß E 1. 15.7 7
88
MARINEJOURNAL.
Capt. Beat, ot the brl*- Fai/na. IWMTM ha>rtn| pissed a LtaftsmntraiiHistft ship suvrli.y initl.. In lat.
N., loaf, 160« 6fl
PORT
W. Tht: Fin ma was ck-wii ilays from H"ii'iluUi to Fniinliig'rt
days, und was ihiriy-thretT*days to
| Island, it-iiKiiiu-.l Umi
Tahiti, axpeffckodQf constant wesiorlv winds. Dlsctiargt'd 40
tuns cocuanut oil at Tahiti. nrul atur a stay th**rv of 12 ihiys,
sailed again for Fiuuiing's, Island imd from tlmua.- to Honolulu.
O" The Jenny Ford left at T.rkaht, ship Eli IVhitntu, to
ARRIVALS.
sail for Syduey in throe days', and would prubably touch at
Honolulu.
Oct. 22—Haw brig Victoria, Omm, fm Arctic.
Ship Harriet Hoxir. of Mystic, 660 torn, wi 11 found in sails,
'li—Fr Wh Ship
no i ■ |n>rt.
rigging, ke., and in oomptebi ardnr, baa b« m pcßhnaad by par22—Am wh ship Charles Carrol, Famous, fm Kodiack.
in R*3W Xork for I3IJOOO
lnr tin Antwerp trade.
22—Am wh bark Harvest. \\ inslow, fnt Japan,
•■ Hm\Vhak--hip
2:l—Haw schr I>olphin, Falkiier, IS days rrom Christmas
ph(rnix,<>f New l/mdoii, baa rtftntly 'yen purIsland.
rtmaad by Mr. Qworga ilnml-y. Cant. BenJ. Illiiipmwail nod
*2f\—Am wh ship Julian, ClrnUad, fm Bristol Bay.
*• ; otht-r-i, and will In'continut'd in tin-whaliiiL' buslnaM irtmi that
23-—Am wh ship .foaeph.ne, Allen, fm Ochotsk.
■ |Kirt unrl.-r I'ominaiid of t'ajit, lit inpst.jad.—A. li. Mercury.
23—Am wh ship KutusofT, Wing, fin Ochotsk.
Rflpoit <if wfaa-hwv heard wont in Oohotak t**a,by i*apt. Hoese,
_»*—Am wh ship Ontario, Tooker, fm Oohfrtffc.
iof liark Ilhtriny, from Petiupaniaakl, Oct. .'».—Bark i'ha-nix,
24—Am wh ship Bragati*:., Jackxau, fin Kodiack.
lliu.kk-y.
j Ad«tlne,aoodo ] Louis*,
1100 "hiils j ahwmb, 1000 doHercurj
24—Haw brig Emma, Bent, fm F.umihg's bland.
do, V\*M in
B"> doing nothing.
24—ihtps Navigator,Kulv-r, mid Cleone, Simmons, off and 700do i Courier, MO
as lata :.- pmsilde.
thtahtns
raanaln
All
iiii.'iui.'.i
to
on, bound on tcwitlwrn ctiilm.
fiiiju
We
Uuih
that
Capt
early pan of July
the
j'/
Cox,
in
iilno,
riUp
Newbury
off
bound
on,
'i4—Am wh
tn ci
port,
anil
'a'C-Ain wh Biiip Gay Head, Lowen, off and on, tailed ■ .me a boat belonglog to tha SonIk Bout on, wai capaUed .it tha
lu.-iitlt ofT.ivisk river, and the ehkf mai", Mr. Uutta, and the
tlay for New Rfaland.
1
with Ihe i>xeent4on "t the iaiolaeerer, were
27—Haw brig Ailvancf, Bobbins. 20 dayi im Port Ludlow, I! wholehunt ! craw,niiuiius
ilrownod. I'luir
were Mbavquently ree«j%*ered and in\\ MUnglna TrTrftory.'
u7—-Am wli ships Draper, tettfiSnl, and Konnan, Kay, off lerred nt Tavlak town.
and
tailed
on,
way
mill
again t<> crnh*.
of T.iliiii, we learn thai the brig" I'mno. Aram
j ■■ By
VW-Ain bnrkrniin; l -lenny Ford, Bargeut, 23 daji from Tat- Svin y a itfa n cargu "i DierohundJsc for llonolnlu, belonging to
.Mr. lienrj Kathan, (who was on beard), sprung aleak and
kiih't, Waahirtgton iVrrltorj.
1
'.K J-Ain wh ship Magnolia, Cox, An Oehntdt, via Kauai
'■ fwiliidfivd ;it sia.ori.- il.\y out from S.vdii.y. No !.\.s lurtt,
:il-—Am wli ships vineyard, Gaawgtt, imOrhotsk, l&OO wh-,
The C. tt'■ \iorattit. rommi-iK" s heaving out Ud- norn-*
j
12,000 lioni : tfea Br.-./..-, Jonea, ftn Uha4oa,laj ing. having ecanfl
into port laaaiUfg. The Faith, (late merchant'
oil' and on.and wilod tv erniee wi rtwa-rd.
ii-o bang hova dew n to repair,
baa
Not. I—Am wh shij-s Frances limi i< tt.i. Brow, tnm Ocfaotak ji
a
■ in
i.■■■■■■
Sharon, King, do do, off and oh, Bltefflchl, Grw-n, i
.1.1,1..; bark Warren, WUcox,dodo.
EXPORTS.
2—Am wh ships Janus. Winslow, I'm Ochotak ] Montank, ii 7. ■
i
French, from da dot Lanoaater, Carter, dodo;
Par Mrw iti-.nrn!;!'—p-r J..hii Land
harks IJariisi-ii.ii', l'i-h. iio .!•■ \ Bhering, Morse, 2d \
da*s fm Petropnulaaki | frehlp Goat-ay,Gillies, ftn !
rirKi.i
; ships Uoean Wave, and bnily Morgan, j Iperm. Whale, Rone,
;;il
Rx bark J. D. Thump-on.
offnod on.
SO
W
.".—Am whale ship-« Pyten Queen, Phlllipa, from Oe-boUk*a. 1 0
17
42
" lyhe*.
Florida, William-, dodo; Corinthian, Bu-o-.-ll.d-.
s..u:h Aaterbw.
17
1:1
316
do, Marengo,Skinner, dodo; Splendid, Ph*ra.»n, j ;1
ship Japan.
9dV
300
dodoj Champion, Gray, do do] llomats, Devol,
•• KrocraM.
ft.
US
101
rtodoj California, Manchi'ster, do do j narkr liar- i 3
81l
108
Kainbow.
ninny, Bmupiis, (in ilu ; hah, Babcock. da do.
hark Karah Micaf.
IM
4 —Am wti ships China, Tbonip-viti, from Uchoiah I'.nnPaekageabone: LS4,ex i>hips Good Retnrn) 91, ex Addisonf
hrin, Peaac, do do ; Boutb Se imaii, Norton, do do; ti.'» ex Floriila ; :;4. BS Caroline 7s, <'\ John llowland ; LU, i-x
Triton 3d, "if and on ; nt-arohant ship Gladiator, Saratoga; To. ex lluutavllle; 3fi, ox Jainea Uaoiy \ '.i7, ex ('.
Williams, 147 dayi (ron Kew Bedford. ■
\\". Morg:ni ; 'I'tl, ex Ontario | 30, et Sliver Cloud ; 03, px Renj.
Tucker \ t2, ex lUmbter; 283, ex .loaephina i 72, t*x Kntnsod't
4—Am wh hark Alien, rainy, from Ocbotak.
4—Kew Gran- brig Collhri, Keer,&3 days fm Hongkong; j 33, i'\ Bragaitia 10. c-\ Arotio : 200 >'\ Shi-tt'-ri.l
—, *% \ ine6.—Whaling brig llawali, Rahe. lobbta. ('apt K. reporta jj yard | 100, ex harks UiignatnTi M, i-x Baltic. :;i packugcf
having inatalnad a tunei of accidents, thelaat of j| dIiI r..pper. from 1). M. Weaton i (WW Iml. s, 1300 goal skin-. ■".
which is tli.tt tha brig sprunsr aleak 12 day* ago, '■! balaa wooL frani Kmil te. Moll ; 11 baiei w.i.i an i Itsj casks taland is now leaking 700 strokes per hour,
I low Inini K. I'. Ailiinis.
».-Aio wh bkKiiglo, McNoeJy, not reported yet.
Of
PORTFI
HNLU. .
In Honolulu, Nitv. l*t, by the Kev. Mr. Herman, Mr. Dstnii
Kl.U.Y, of Lowell, Mass., tn Miss ■*■*■. eldest daughter "I Mi'.1. O'Neill, oIlMiMin, Ireland.
October '-*,a' id"- residence of Mrs. Irwin, Honolulu, Is I
of pulmonary con-umpti'm, ALKXANin tv. M. /.AitHHkiK. of OfU
ritte, Butte iVunu, GeJtstaflss,eeeMid kwoJ QoL -'as. fabriskk,
Of S.nT.iitu iito. ai/'\l |sV
On board bark J t till ii /-'tinf, six days from Teefcalet, W T
19 yean.
Mi. a sew Buooa, ol roll XomrmaA,
iii Uonotulo, Hh iti-i., Cai-t. H. N. Crabh. and tl j
:, ,fi .'■■ >i Mi.liUetotfii, Dauphin County, i'< on.
He entered tu«*
.,,8, SlrUloa Corps in 1191..mil, after rising u> tbi i.mi.
he
w;iii appointed Sural
lain, ii.: resigned hi ls -'-7. in l~-lt
,
;
,
DKPARTI KKS.
Oct-23---11. 11. M.'s ship Plumper, Ricbju*ila, tor Vancouver's
Island.
2-I—Am wh ship Meivury, Iluydon, fiat NwW Guinea.
26—Fr wh ship Kspudini, Hotnont, forKi'iilakvkuu.
36—T\i>e», Frwnaa, tor ooaat of OtJJJbnriju
PASSENGERS.
—
S, Cash-
mm,---------.saasaaaaaaaaaaanaaaaaaaaa--------------ar-aa-*-------*------------.a-aaaa-as*---.--*
.^. H
u-t. ji—oiympia, ltvnri. 17,0 wh, Iran Briarol Hay.
'ii —Vigilant, M-< leave, 71> S|i, irmii .Inpiin.
man Kodlaek.
IB—.lniiiui, Cleveland, 1000 wh, 10.000 I.
2a—KUsabeth (Fr-ai.-l.). Ansuctll, 800 wh, 6000 bone, from
Kialiiick.
J2—.Ontario, Xooker, l.ooii nil. 28,000 1...11-, fm Ocbntek.
00 sp, Tin) nii.-TiMiu bona, fm Brta*
To MaaternoT Whalt-nhlpM it ml oihrr Vch-m'l*.
ti.l liny.
At the longitude of Christmas Island and Fanni tig's Inland art:
22—Timor, White, l'io pp. OnO wh, 700 bone.
incorrect on most charts, we rv-publit-h the correct location, h
ii—Klnfflahi r, Palmer, I.iOO wh, 10000 bene, fm OehflMk.
given in our ham of July 80.
2S—Anr.-lopi-, I'litl.-r, IM) .sp, froiii .laj.an B" n.
KurxiNo's Island.—Tho harbor of Fanning1! bland Uea in
Sl—John Cogf-«haH, Umb rt, ::iki ■ 11, Toon i-m.-.
N. lat.s° 40; If. long, ivj- 20. Approach the Wand from
23—('oliiniliia, r.ils-iT, 2MI sperm,
ihe cast, and Hall round tho south tide. Then is no inch kdand
23—11i-nrj-later, Kwor, UK) aperm.
Xl—la-umatte, I*-Ire-, 700 wli, IVXKI bout
in this vicinity as In laid down on the charts as "Aruericau
Inland."
i'.i—Kl.iri'ii.'. lliiiliiplin. J"HI -p.rin.
Chbjstmab Island.—The harl>or, which ih under (he leeoi
23—Cvsero, Courtney, ll'i wh, 2200 bon.
the N.W. point of the talaud, as in N, lat. 1° Mi \V. long.
U—Trillin 2d, Whits, o.i Wh. 8000 bone,
167° 30. The east point of the inland Hes about M t<> ;"-u mtlea
ill— UriliilH, Henry, 20110 wh, .'lO,OOO bone.
eastward of the anchorage, and vessels, in approaching, enunot
81 Iraa-nh Helm Ooffln. 260 wh. 1300 booe.
ba too careful of this point, as it fs here where nearly all the ;
U—Nil (Fr), Qraudaubrne, liio id, SH wh, lUOO bane.
wreckt occur. Theisland is not more than right feet iii height, j
2t
Camllaa, (iitr.ini, ho sp, i.",0 wh, nooo bone.
and cannot be teen from a ship's deck more than seven or eight i
27—Am wh hark Wain, Crowell, l.'vi wh, ,'iOOO bon*.
miles off.
Not. 2—Walter Scott, Collin,, «00 wh, 7000 bone.
(
Lhasa Shoax—This shoal has never, we believe,been laid
a—Tkraa Jirutlu-ra, fallillaial.If) up, MOO wh, 12,M0 hmie.
down on any chart. It lies in N. lat. 8 40; W. long. 157 ° 20. ■
It waa discovered by Capt. English, of Fanning* Island, ami
DEPARTIRKS.
una on it only six feet of water. The obaervatiou waa taken at j
midday, within a abort distance of the shoal, and may Is- relied |
21—Navigator, Fisher, for New Zealnnd.
Oct.
I
aa
correct.
ou
21—Onward, Norton, fur Honolulu.
Marine Telegraph Notice.
22—Julian, Cleveland, for Honolulu.
Master* and Officers of vesselsbound to or imatHonolulu, are
23—'fahmnroo, Babknao, for Chile.
notice that a Marine Telegraph lias been
reuueAted to take
23—Gay Head, Lowen, forNew Zeulnnd.
erected on the ridge connecting Diamond Head with the moun23—-Draper, Stanford, to cruise.
tainsinland, and all vessels passing within ten miles of thehead
23—Newhurport, Crandall, for Honolulu.
will be reported. Chinabound vessels can display tlietr signals
23—Ontario, Tooker, for Honolulu.
without calling out a pilot. The national ensign at the main I
24—Kingfisher, I*atmer, for Honolulu.
is a signal for having a United States mall on board for Hono24—Cleone, Simmons, to cruise and home.
lulu. A signal should be displayed at the fore only when a
2tt-—Norman, Ray, for Honolulu.
pilot Is wanted. Vessels can run along within two miles of the ;
28—Caroline, Oiffbrd, forNew Zealand.
shore with perfect safety, and without any risk of losing the !
28—Timor, White, to cruise.
tradewind. A nerfi-hoat will always be sent of! to i-Hppcr*
2*—Emily Morgan, to cruise.
ita<«ing th»* port without t-xprnne to th* rtswat.
\{o—fiei* Bivt-/e. Jones, fn ervta*,
MEMORANDA.
ii—Prudent, Hamilton,
,
°
;
'•
'
,
i
Hi*
PLACES OF WORSHIP.
-.
••
OwMnti mid Pe rnu.ua las—rentes! iu
-.
Whaleslsips in tin Pacilic Oceu.
limn:
1Lai\-K'»aI'20,('"MIaw,/
fM Panama VtiunX.liily
18*7. j
Nkw
in
*->r
ARRIVALS.
Oregon Territory.
umg,,^mmmm
To
Tout
PORT OP LAHAINA.
2—Saratoga. Slocuni, to eiuiv.
'A—Addison, LAWTtnoa, to oruiso.
,
;
Lodj-ow, \v.'i'.—per Advance, »>>.i 10—Mr*. I>.
Burns, Dr. L •'. Kinney,
Kroin'ickk \i ir. W. T.—per Jenny Ponl—Mr ff Brine,
From
.
<
HKASIKN'B HKTIIKI.—Rer. S. C Damon ( liai.l.iiu—kim
.tree-., u. ar the Bailor.' 11-iiii.. I-, a. lii.ii- nn ttaml
u k.M.anrt "| I'. M. Beats fm. Sabbsth School ah>r
i1... i -.iiiL' w n ii-.-*.
K.Hi m i:i:i r ciirf.i-ll—r..rn.ii.f v.n ami Dcretsnla
—K.
.1. I'. Mn.ir.;. 1 VK.r. Preaching 00 Suinliiv s.. I
A.M. in.] 7■ P. 11. rJabbnth School rneeta al 10 A. M.
METHODIST fillßCH—Nnuanu avenue, onrn-l of Tumi
siiv.-t—K.-v. Win. s. Turiter, Paator.
PwacKinu evet.i
fuiuliiv in 11 >. H.aad'il'. M. tarts fan. BaWMia
>.■! I meet, at in A. at.
Kl.Mi'S I'llAl'hl.—Km l' unset, nl.. v.. th.- hilatw—Rev. I i.
Clark Pa.tor. Service-*, in llawiiliiiii every .-.iu.la> ..i
81 A. M i S P. 11,
CATHOLIC i lIIHCII— Van atreet, naar Bejetanla nnd< -u.rbalye i.f St. Bar. aSahup Malsret, aaaiati .1 In. am..Me.li .'.■
s rvlcci every Aunday at In A. at. and -2 PK.
-.
From PmopAi uaaw—per Bhertne;, Nov .:—ti..-. •vyv
bnper, to entire,
iit-.i.
native <'onnectteut.
■•
I injr, P. M. Collin>.
36—Florida, Fish, for New /.-aland.
27—Am clipper ship Fort una. Bowlder, for Manila.
38—Am wh ship South America, Walker, to cruise,
ill—Br hrigt u.*fMvrt'\ ■, Mitchell, for Vanonnver's Inland,
Soy. I—Am barkanttne Jenny rail, Bargrni, for Ttvkalet,
Ml
'■
;
•
n ihv .i N.'w York.
Ai tea, iK-hihi r J-"', on boon) ship CAMo, Mai iiu sj Low /.
lie "i Cane de \ >:,■•!(■.
bj the upsetting of a boat, Hi sky Risessenv, «■>
I'l'.fA
im«4 10,1S67. Ue wao a LKSdnsui do board llie frVu i-i-t* e*d u
"t
:l
-
—
■ '. <
rjtorekeeper :tt Honolulu, whieh pom ho retahasd until the Ron
was removed from the Wands in IWO, il wm highly nteained
nml U DtUCh liiuii iitr.l l,\ nil Srbo knew him.
on
Northern t,ii//it. t'hap* I, March 2T. 18J
iiijuriv received by i.tltiiiir frosu the in..in yard. Lruts Shm.i,
>
,,
■
i
;
:
,
DIED
'
'
>■ ■% ship Reindeer, Athley, 1400 wh, 22000 bone.
'»
2-t—Am wli ship Arnolds, Parven t, 71*0 wh, 10.000 DOM.
•JJ—Aiu wh ship Northern LiKlit, Chapel, 1060 wh, 10,000
MARRIED
:
-
Or HILO, H. X.
bin if.
,
2—Barah sneaf,
.
1
Panama Hail-ltoadCoBmui takesthismethod
°f iritorniinif those liiirrcrttM in f4> Whaling buei**, " lni ftdvanUifoo offered Bja tho Railroad
aoroM the Isthmus of Panama, for thV shipment nf
Tho
"'
l
■"Kf
™" 1
OU from the Pacific to theUnited States, and for feuding outfits ami supplies fr-'i'i the Cnlted States to Panama.
The Railroad bos been la regular and tnceefliroJ operation for
] iti"I.- than two yean, and its oaj iscity tor tike ttronaprOltation of
everydescri 'tlon of nercbuidiM, Including nil, Provfsions,»S:c.,
of
has been (Ully tctted. The attention of several
arhaleshipo has recently been torn1 ■ lIhj subject of iihlpplnie
pr-'Sfiit
their mi ti'i'in I'iiiiaiiia I.. .N
1 .rk UuriiiL' tinMMOU,
and the Paimma Rail-Road Company has made arraztgt
to aff-inl every tai'ility which may Ix- ptjuir-il |br ihe accom *
plinhnient of this imporiant objoot. A J'ier, 4O0f>'ct lonjr, baa
MBA built in lie- hay of Panama, In the eml of which Fieiplfl
Oars ase ran to luoerre cargoes, froaa Ughters or veoasis tyng
alongside, and deliver the same alongside of Teasels at Mptoii<- ai the Pier with
rail. Vessels offrocn 200 t<»
■elbty. iTi.iimiii.- in the mod at leu v,ai< r.
votisels
and
IVosn
Ajptovallare
to
fasf
aalrlnc hrlgi, hr
TIw
longtngtotne Kaii-Koiul Ooaapaary, ami the Oompany is prepared i-< reoetre oil at PaaagM and dcMver ii in Naur York.
under tlioronu-i IUIU «1" Kmliiiit*. at the rate ofeight
(tilts
par ti'lK'ii, if i-i'i'i-ivt-fi as the Pier, and nine cents |»er (fallen if reoetred in the hssTbor from chip's tackles, charpnif for
tbe capaeity of the casks, without allotting Tor wantage. This
charge covers every expense from Paniiina to ifew York, in cant*
the oil in sent through the SuperiiiLenient or Commercial Aroiu
ofthe Panama Kail-Road Company, insurance excepted. The
freights may be made payable SSI ttia Isthmus or in New York
1> at the option of the shipper.
The vessels of the Company sal) regularly semi-monthly, and
the average passages to and from Aspinwall are almut twenty tu
twenty-ti\c dli\s. The time OMUplod in iira—llia the Ishmun is
fourhours. Oil, during its transit aorOBS tin- Isthmus, will Itcovered with canvas, «ir convcyeil in covered cars, ami owners
may Im; assured that every care will Ih- taken to prVTOat leakage.
e-mveyed to New York withSeveral cargoes have, already
out the slightest loss.
Oil or other (roods consigned for trans|tortatlon to the Superintendent of thePanama Rail-Road Company, or to \V allium
Xclaoss, Commercial Agent of the Company at Panama, will
be received and forwarded with the i-rcai.-st despatch.
XT Frederic L. Hanks ha* been appointed Agent nt Honolulu, Sandwich Islands, and !•> prepared to furnish every requisite
information to shipper*.
JOB. F. .TOY, .«fcrewrv
Fume*.*"* L. Havi.s,
A-eni Pan.una H R Co.. Honolulu B |,
M*lfta
'
'
'
�
Dublin Core
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Title
A name given to the resource
The Friend (1857)
Dublin Core
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Title
A name given to the resource
The Friend - 1857.11.11 - Newspaper
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1857.11.11
-
https://hmha.missionhouses.org/files/original/9ea64bcba04f49a57fa8f66a9aaca5bb.pdf
a7ffd6773e09d75d10343ed4a7109652
PDF Text
Text
THF
E
RIEND
»A» .Series, Ooi. if,
%s. vi.l
-.
CONTENT!
For DrcntilHr 1,
fcivl "I Totem \iv,
IflTi
Cupci*—Arilon' Rome,
Mutiny on board
/'.:•'•,
lepdfl d| r.\. OHUDJueeol Balloro* Home,
-
RecletiaMioal Council,
IV'trv Pi itfe -1 !'r. Rnoth,
Twioref1! Beport,
:
Frail-* of Kirn boat,
Marine joaraai, ftfarriag
-,
«v-.
HOWOLI U. !>i:ci: Tt!Ba:« I. 1857.
89
Cakteks. —Webster defines a carper as
that dors not furnish
. so
the class of persons
so
Turning to another
denominated
carpers.
oi,
Ml
M
o_\ N
column ni Webster's Dictionary, another defi09
DQ nition worthy of attention presents itself.
iv Carp literally means, "to snap or catch at
04 or
to pick." Hence, to censure, cavil, or liml
06
fault, particularly without reason or petulantly. We now know what the srreat lexicographer meant by a carper, viz: a person
censuring, caviling, finding fault, particularly without reason, or petulently. We won-
- .
THE FRIEND.
DECEMBER I, 1*67
I'a<;k
"one who carps;" but
a very definite idea of
?>ll'5. i'ol. !!.
TlilKD Anmvki:mi;v of THI H. S. H.
Society.—The Sailors' Home Society held
its third anniversary, at the Bethel, Friday
evening, Nov. \'.i. Judge Robertson in the
chair. Beports ofthe Treasurer and Executive Committee were road, and will be found
in another part of our columns. A collection
was taken op, amounting to §71 7"'. Six
new Trustees were chosen, agreeably to (he
Constitution. The following iist will show
who are the Trusters for the present, and
tin ir terms of service :
Pour CiASS, Trim Expißl s 1868.—llirnnniSi.fncer, .1. T. tTaterhnuse, 11. M. Whitney, fi.
der if any one is ready to acknowledge him- srtsoa, 11. .1. 11. Hohbnrorib, 11. llaeMfebt Ml Sob.
Cuss,Tbsji Kxnaai IB6o.—Kstfiebaawbii
Another year lias run its rapid round, and self a carper! No, certainly not. Many IV,Bacon
(i. I'.Jodd, & ('. Damon, Jobs li, C. I!. Hislwp,
rrc we seemed to be aware of it, another may read these lines who carp, but not one \V. U. Johnson.
Ttmtn Cuss, Term Expire* IBfio.— S. N. rustle,
volume of The Friend is brought to ;i close. would acknowledge himselfa carper. Carpr.. 11. Allen, .1. P. Marshall, I. Bartlett, E. 0
Il would be easy to indulge in the usual strain ing is bad business. The carper is gene- 11*11, li. Y. Snow. 11.
of moralizing, but the tide of life rushes rally sell-conceited and selfish, cross-grained
Anatiub Concekt.—Shakspearc says that
rather too nuick ior Such musings. Present and snarlish in his disposition. If there is a
mercy
droppeth as the gentle dew from heacheerful
side
to
fair,
crowd
and
bright,
"
sunny
calls to duty
cut reflections upon the good,
ven, blessing liitn that gives and him that
be
a
the
sure
to
look
at
carper
or
the
forethought
question,
will
past,
future.
respecting
With one brief remark to our readers upon it, with his eyes awry and askew. He can takes." This idea was suggested the other
while listening to the many sweet
sea and land, wo shall close : Settle up all see moles in other peoples' eyes, hut not bemns evening,
voices
and
many charming notes, at (he
your accounts ; not only pay the printer, but in his own eyes. The carper is ever ready
(lie grocer and every body else. It is your to find fault with all who may differ from Amateur Concert. The Sailors' Home takes
duty/ at least once every year, to know just him, in matters religious, political, literary the proceeds, but that is rcallv the smallest
how your accounts stand. Ascertain how or scientific. With no class, however, carp- portion of the " benefit." Not only is the
much you owe others and how much others ers find more fault than with Trusters, " Home" blessed, but all were blessed who
may owe you. Pay up your small bills, and Directors, Presidents, or Treasurers of be- listened to the music. The community Is
arrange affairs with your larger creditors. nevolent institutions. The carper regards benefitted far beyond what words can express.
If persons owe you who are really poor, refuse such personages as e.r officio, rogues, scamps, If our amateur singers could be persuaded
more frequently to appear, it would confer a
not to make a good deduction in order to and rascals, deceiving the public and embezeffect a settlement. When your accounts zling funds. Gentle reader, do not for a great blessing upon society. We have noi
the exact amount realized from the
are fairly and honorably settled up for the moment imagine that we mean you, or any- learned
tickets,
of
but have heard the rumor that
sale
year, and even a small balance remains, body living in these ends of the earth. Oh,
raised.
$300
over
was
remember the poor and unfortunate. Aid no! Webster's Dictionary was not published
those needing assistance. " The poor ye have at the Sandwich Islands, and of course, the
tTT" Believing that our readers (especially
always with you," is the saying of Him who cla--s of persons denominated enrpers is not the sea-faring community) are probably belspake as never man spake. "As ye would to l>c found here ! Carpers, if they exist any ter able to judge of the merits of the case
that men should do to you, do ye also to where, it must be in other and less civilized than ourselves, we publish the correspondence
them likewise," then, if spared to see a new communities.
relating to the unfortunate affair on board
the Alice Frazkr, without note or comment.
year, you will be able to look every man full
in the face, and manfully summon your
subscribers,
Honolulu
for
IC7"
the past
O* We congratulate the ladies of the
energies to fight the battle of life. A new year, please pay the carrier; Lahaina subMethodist
in view of the success of
of
volume Tin' friend, will be commenced, scribers, the Key. S. E Rtrh"p, and Mil" their Fair, Church,
as we learn the
amounted
January I 1888.
subscribers, th* ll<>\. T. Com.
to «l«on
EndVolumX
ef IV.
�TII i;
90
|From tlie Pncitlc
Cutamcrctul Advertinvr.)
on
MbtAchouatieunWF“rndyhfalmleicsipan razier.”
We have received from Capt. Ncwcll the following
interesting account of the mutiny on board tho Alice
Frazicr. Although a long story, it is very interesting, and we prefer to give tho captain's versionrather
than condense.
Bahk Alick Frazikr, )
Ochotsk Sea, Aug. 36, I*o7. j
Ma. Editor,—DsUB .Sir :—I take (lie lilicrty of
ranasstbsg the insertion of the following article in the
.Idvcrlixir, concerning the recent mutiny on board
my ship aad the occidental death of its rlnsjnsrtsr.
from the hoi of many wild mid SSWUSUUSstoriss respecting it having got current BSSOSUJ lb* Heel,—from
the general rapiest of many of my BSOSt respectable
brother masters, ami from the farther and greater
consideration of combating llmillllllliim censure ami
sneers upon my conduct which have emanated from
some few sympathizers with the villains, I had felt
myself called upon to imprison, tad subsequently to
abandon upon the BlSt available shore, both from
fears of murderous injury to my officers sad myself,
ami also from a general reqasst from many of the
unaffected part of my crew.
The circumstances of the case are these :—Among
the seamen I had occasion to ship to my vessel last
February, at the port of Valparaiso, were s gang of
live, past of which wer<' the most finished villains 1
have yet had dealings with. The ringleader of the
livehad him at the head of a gang ofburglars and highway robber* at the port of shipment, for sometime before, and by his own account of himself, confirmed
by his gang on board my ship, had lulledseveral persons by premeditation, and ere his death almost constantly carried a slung-shot of one pound weight, accompanied by a keenly sharpened knife which he
swore to use upun the first available occasion, particularly that it should drink my heart's blood in revenge for an offense 1 a in about to relate in connection with his being smuggled on board my ship. This
person was not shipped to my vessel, either upon the
" articles" or by any other method, but got on board
after this manner lieing told by a perfidious shipping master of the port, one I'elcher, that there was
a nice young man in the calaboose, imprisoned tinili-lil only," 1 requested to see the fellow at the Consul's office in the course of making up my complement
of seaiuen. lie was soon brought, when, immediately upon setting my eyes upon him, I informed the
shipping master I would not have such a persou on
board my ship lit any rate, us his entire physiognomy
wore the undeniable expression of a low-minded,
blood-thirsty villain. This I said in the man's presence and hearing, whereupon he was passed out of
the vestibule of the oliice and S young man brought
forward in his room, who was shipped ia his stead,
though merely as a decoy as it subsequently proved,
for the robber, Harry Sheppard, waseventually smuggled on board in his stead. I had ran off on my
course some thirty-six hours before the fellow made
his appearance, and it was not until several days
after that the great atrocity of the fellow's character
began to develop itself. By his own account, and that
learned of him in course of conversation with the
steward and others, 1 concluded to make the best of
it by retaining him on board and treating him according to the merits of his behavior. We soon learned
that, instead of his having been imprisoned for debt,
ho was under sentence to bo whipped to death except
he could depart out of the country within a limited
time, and that, as a short time previous he had
robbed o store of some $1,700, he had bribed the
said Pelchcr to procure his release after the übove
wise.
Having previously found by experience on a recent
occasion that three of my under 0810611, were but
more apologies for disoiplinarians, not having the
faculty of maintaining the common discipline of a
well-ordered ship with old seamen to deal with, with
not even energy sufficient to free themselves from the
grossest insults, I took early opportunity of requesting them to be very guarded in their dealings with
the new seamen, especially with the man Harry and
bis gang.
It is needless to state the many methods and the
rapid grades by which this gang ofscoundrels paved
the way to open mutiny; among which was the
throwing of an insulting letter into my room by tho
ringleader, keeping a pile of bricks at the forecastle
gangway to cast at out of the officers, when he inter-
:
"
I■ It
11; N
l>. I> X€ C ft! B X li,
185 7.
fered with their card-playing in calling out his dereil my mate anil fifth mate to arm carefully, take
watch, and repeatedly threatening to have my blood handcuffs in their pockets, ami call two of the gang
for non-complianco with their most casual demands. along to do an errand from the sail-room, through
Suffice to know that, having instigated others of the the steerage into the after lower cabin, where I procrew to refuse duty, in company with themselves, if posed to meet them from the upper cabin with the
1 did not comply with the demands of the man Harry second mate, and with the steerage door closed upon
and his gang, I complied with their demand for the them, we should have them to ourselves. The plan
time, as they had come upon us unawares, with succeeded admirably. Tho men seeing they were
slung-shots and sharpened knives, each of tluffivc taken at advantage, succumbed directly, and we conhaving his otlieor allotted out to kill if we come to fined them without trouble. Une, a nm-t hardmod
blows or tried to put the mill irons. Feeling, from my villain, merely remarked that it was not 1 he li Ist time
previous knowledge of their plans and my conviction ! lie had been in irons, and afterwards added that his
of the harlss* atrocity Of their character, that their j last term of Imprisonment was for two hundred and
intention was more murderous than the commonality i treaty days.
of these a Hairs, I let discretion take the place of valor,
The two confined, 1 requested the mate to order the
Hie btlin,
feeling myself In I"' I supported by llie OjOTS- I third one into the cabin, as 1 sent Mm fr
hearted energy around me to combat with these de- aad we took him by surprise something after the
praved fellows, when acting upon a fixed system of above manner ; though upon his giving me insolence
action as w* know they were.
ami delaying to go down stair;, into the after cabin.
It is enough to know that I bore during one month as I directed, 1 struck him a blow with the side oi
longer with the many petty disturbances of the ship's DM pistol, which 1 luel presented to nil Upon the W
discipline, originating with the five, during which casion of taking them into custody, indicating thai if
time myself and thoseof my officers who had small ! any ell'ort was made to resist us wilh weapons, 1
arms, went armed, in daily expectation of some mur- ; should not hesitate to use it.
derous affair arising with the five, for upon the most
The three secured, we now proposed to take the
trivia! diliicuir.es with the mate, (who, by-thc-vvay, loader, from whom we had no doubt there WouAd
was the only courageous person among my superior emanate much trouble. 1 scut the steward toq
officers) the watch on deck by private concert would call him into the main cabin, with word that I wh'Jeil
arouse those of the five below, who were ever alert to sec him, directing tho mate and fifth mile (my
with their slung-shots and sharpened knives, evi- only two energetic officers) to follow close upon his
dently seeking sum* occasion to use them. We slept footsteps as be entered the cabin, closing the door
with loaded arms by our side In nightly fear of a* i alter them, while 1 met the man from the opposite
si nation; for as our cabin is on deck, with windows side, when we would take him at any hazard, lie
in close contact with our Urths, il was easy of ac- came without his suspicion being i veiled, when I
complishment from the di-el,. And as my lite had presented my pistol and told him my object, firmly
been so rcpealodly threatened, and thai too by thus* telling him the certain ami instant re.-nil .•: h: n
I fully believed capable of the deed, my fears led me -italic, tieoootly told me,—embellished by much
to barricade the two windows connected with my low, sneering slang, pertaining to hi* class,- -to pull
berth and never to retire to repose without readjust- away on that d n thing, as lie had used those tools
before, ami ilnln't fear them, &C. Bat upon our
ing my small arms.
Things continued logo on from bo I in worse, BUtfl gathering energetically around him, hedivasted him
we all agreed in believing that a crisis was approach- self of his keenly-sharpened knife, throwing it upon
and held out
ing, tjuile happily for us, however, during the the table in company with his
month following the mutiny, the live villains at its his hands for the manaeh ■. n mark I itit lie was
head had BO overacted their part, that the rest of the use. I to those playthings. Hut when no had got him
crew had become aroused to a proper sense of duty; into lira lowor cabin, where we were u t to confine
and tear of the conseipiences of the piratical designs hi in with the other three, a it, when coming so unexabout to be consummated, had led them repeatedly pectedly into the preseneool three ol lai gang, he
to send messages to me through my otfioars to this wished to show himself the leader he had promised
purport: " For God's sake, captaiu, take there vil- them to be, he turned fiercely upon me as I came
lains out of the forecastle before they kill some ofus, down stairs at hi* back, and exclaimed in a loud rude
and the remainder of the orew viill pull double tv tone: ".Now, I'm going t" know what in u—l'm
make up for their loss."
put in irons for !" I simply told him to be quiet, a*
Several of my best men were so much in fear of lie had had the extent of Ins say on board my ship.
their lives from their non-compliance with the plans Whereupon he made a sudden step toward, me, as if
of the pirates, that from the repeated threats mad*of (after a kicking custom he had .among his mates)
cutting their throats their fears led them to steal with the intention of kicking me in the stomach, as
away among the casks in the fore hold tor repose, he exclaimed at the top of his voice "No! I'll be
rather than risk their lives by sleeping in the fore- d
d if I do ; my tonga* is my own, and I'll use
castle. This state of things could not continue long. it." When, seeing his foot draw n buck in the very
1 had now made my preparations to imprison theui actof kicking, under the mere instinct of self-defense,
by securing a stout chain to a stanchion in my lower I instantly struck him a blow across the bead with
after cabin, and only awaited a sufficient individual the flat of my pistol, as I hail done the last man concause to secure the persons of the five in question, at lined before aim, when to my surprise, and the conany hazard; by fair means If we could, but by any sternation of my officers, fouf charged of my pistol
other means if we could not. The crisis that I had exploded simultaneously, making but one report, and
been awaiting during the week since completing my ln-ing at the time of ignition in contact with the
preparation for them, at length arrived. It wasupou man's head, killed him instantly by its near concusthe occasion of a mutinous disturbance with several sion to bis brain, wrenching my arm in a painful
of the five, in CODSequeno* of my having refused to manner, and throwing the chambers from the pistol
comply with a demand of having rice or " dull" upon to the Boor, from the absence of the revolving rod.
the only two "banyan" days in the week, and giving This happened in tho presence of my mate, 2d and
them other extras after the manner served to the 6th officers, and the three prisoners. The mate disteerage people; and as the ringleader, Harry, had rectly exclaimed, " I bcliove you have shot him." I
sworn a day or two previous, in the presence of one said, No, certainly not."
of my officers and several of tho boatsteerers, to "have
The "man was instantly raised up, his head placed
my heart's blood ifI did net comply with the de- upon the bended knee of tho mate, to examine his
mands they were about to make," it seemed to me, hurt, when I ordered water brought to wash his
and was also the opinion of my officers, that the time wound, and brought restoratives from the medicine
of forbearance was past and the time for action had chest myself to reanimate him, under the supposition
that he was only stunned ; but we found him dead.
come, though we fully expecte 1 bloodshed in undertaking to confine them.
Upon the further examination of bis head and perI let the disturbance of tho forenoon quiet away son, which 1 directly ordered by two of my officers,
until after tea, to allay any supposition they might in the presence of the 3d officer, three prisoners, and
have of my being about to act, when I proposed to myself, we found his wound to consist simply of a
take them by stratagem, with hopes of finding them slight contusion on the left temple, caused by the
unarmed during the dog-watch, and unprepared to blow of the pistol, and blackened by the burningVf
meet us. Nor was I deceived in my hopes, for their the powder in proximity with his head, the skull not
slung-shots wore not upon their persons at the time beiug injured, nor any wound from the balls whatof imprisonment, but lying carelessly in their berths soever, either upon his head or person.
We then -examined the pistol, to account for the
where they had casually thrown them during the relaxation of the usual hours of amusement. There quadruple explosion. It is a Herman Imitation of
were three of tho gang belonging to the watch on Coifs revolver, containing five chambers. We found
deck, not including the ringleader 1 therefore or- that tour out of the live chargm had ignited, the fifth
I
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.
-
:
�.
iii k k\i 11: mi .
rsaaittia* in it- dsparUaeat uuexplojej that the
levoi'.nig rod, up..n v.to.n ihe saasabsrs travasasd,
had droppd out upon my striking the prisoner previously eoniiued, for it was there and then found
Upon the floor of the upper cabin, near where one of
the balls was afterwards picked up by the steward ;
that two of the balls had dropped out of the chamliers sometime previous to the explosion, for they
wire i,icked up on the floor where the accident occurred, uninjured, by one of tho prisoners, and
banded to the mate while searching for the place of
their deposit ; and that the fourth ball was in the
pistol at the lime of its discharge, for it was lodged in
the hole from whence the revolving rod had fallen ;
Which accounted hilly and cle lily fir all he balls.
■.I rauvsr, that
'or more of the cap* upon ths pistol niii-t have received tufiii ieatjar toignits it* psr.1..11 when ths blow wan givao, aad that, a* the
powder of the other three chambers was lying loose
at the mouths of their respective muzzles, after the
three ball* had fallen out, it look tire simultaneously
with the first charge that ignited. Furthermore,
had c. ball gone out of its legitimate passage —the
barrel—by design or Otherwise, il could not hue
banned the prison struck, for the length of the barrel would have projected tin; muzzle far beyond the
bond in the act of striking a blow.
After we had go) somewhat over our surprise at
tl c singular accident and sudden death of the man
and had laid his person out upon
my chests in ths lower cabin, we imprisoned
h scoundrel of the gang, and secured them all
,
.
t
IShep ard,
nigl t,
the joy of the remaining part of my seahearing the result of the past hour's ade, that they made the ihip shake with their
and shears from the forecastle, at thus being
pi.ii
ileutly freed from their burden of fears of those
us villains. And when I mustered all hands
I had done, and
had done it, they each and all Verbally ev-1 their conviction of the bad characters of the
nid their belief that they wars receiving their
Furtherics by being confined in doubts irons.
that if the prisoners were to be let out, they
wish to be confined in their stead, rather than
run the risk of their lives by living with them.
The following day, after the whole crew bad surreye I the wound of the man Harry, I read the funeral service usual upon such occasions, when he was
consigned to his last home In Ihe deep, and to the
judgment of the Father above us.
the four remaining prisoners in irons, hand
hnil, lor a month before being able to land them,
i the impediment of ksj ; confining their feet,
because they could divest themselves of hand inenacles, by the aid of a. Vooe yarn, with the same ease
and facility as with a key. During their confinement, 1 gave them their tiil of bread and water, and
of bread each for their sustenance upon landing them. I disposed of them" by landing them
singly, upon the shores of Mercury Bay, at my first
available opportunity. Up to the time of my landing them,,I took great pains to inform every master
in wbossj vicinage 1 came, of the atrocity of their
character and depredations on board my ship .and
almost invariably requested not to land them in
ly, as they might again get together on board
some one ship and make further trouble. Vet but n
little time had elapsed after my landing them before
they were taken off and shipped as the best of men
by the Harmony, of Honolulu, and the Mary, of
lidgartown—but not until after they had made many
applications to other vessels, commanded by masters
of too much principle to exalt villainy, and of too
well balanced faculties of benevolence to give their
sympathy to charactci-s SO depraved.
Lot me take this occasion to briefly and publicly
express my thanks to Capt. Palmer, in the name of
ihe community upon which these men are to be
thrown, for having declined to take passengers to
the islands" when one of these men applied to him.
My warmest approbation for the manly views of
< 'apt. Babcoek, when he indignantly expelled two of
these intruders from the 7f«/t/, and reprimanded the
Harmony's officers for their audacity in bringing
them there. And also my gratitude for the spirited
indignation expressed against the conduct of the upholders of these abandoned mutineers by most of the
masters in the adjacent fleet; among which 1 would
mention Captains t'ox, Wilcox, Morrison, Tober,
Skinner, and others, with whose honest judgment
and free s|wken views may I always be arraigned by
approved of. while I exult over the condemnation
ie waist to inform them what
tkepi
»
:
"
.
DE (
i;
mvi: k
of the minority of number, and the
among my
.
18 s;.
91
V,u were all ipiite ignorant si tin
letter, with the exception of Sheppard and the writu
and went aft in a body to inquire if we were to have
no better food. He said he wanted to find out the
author of the letter. Ho then sail, all of you who
are willing to work on such provisions, go on tho
other side of the deck. Out of twenty-eight men, but
four signified their satisfaction with the provisions.
The Captain then ordered the mate, Mr. Chose, to
put the others in irons, but when the irons come on
Mek rouutermonded the order, saying to the men
go forward and attend to your duty, and you shall
"have
the usual provisions." Front this time until
five weeks before getting into the Ochotsk we had no
incision to complain of the provisions.
In the meantime, the fifth mate, who was also cooper
of the ship, was in the habit, as we afterwards found
and listening
out. of creeping forward
at the forecastle bulkhead, aad then going aft to the
Captain and retailing us pure earnest whatever was
siid by the crew. Any one who is familiar with
sailors, is well nvvare that there is a great deal of
What is called "blowing" and "gassing" that goes
on in the forecastle, but which is very harmless in
reality. All these idle tales the fifth mate no doubt
greatly exaggerated while relating them to the
Captain, and the consci|uence was that he again got
very bitter against us. especially five of us who were
old sailors, and knowing more about seamanship than
flic fifth mats, came in for a double share of misrepresentation. The provisions were again cut short, and
nothing but beef and (Tread allowed. On the lOthof
June, one of the men named Carroll, went aft to the
Captain, with the kid or beef tub. and asked the
Captain if we were to have no different food than
that? Captain Newell replied "No, d- u you, you
will get no mure." Carroll made no reply, and went
forward. The crew talked the matter over among
tli selves and agreed together that they would
make no disturbance about it then, butth.it when we
got amongst whales we would not work if we had no
belter food. This was overheard and told the Captain,
with how much of exaggeration I cannot say.
On the afternoon of the same day, Capt. Newell
called two of the men to go down into the sail room,
and take two sacks of potatoes, (of which we still had
a good supply on board) from the steerage into the
lower cabin. When there, the door was shut liehind
them, and the Captain, with a revolver in one hand
and a cutlass in the other, said to the men—" I have
been waiting for you a long time—now, 1 hove
got you, go in irons. You did not have spunk
to say soy more. Either go in irons or take a bullet."
The men without attempting any resistance were then
ironed with their hands behind their backs and then
lashed to a chain cable. The ship at this time was
beating through tho ice. After putting the two men
in irons, the Captain went on deck and hove the ship
to, telling .lames Powers, who was at tho wheel, to
put the helm amidships, and go forward. As he
went by the cabin door, the mate called him in, and
the Captain followed, when they put him in irons
and fasti ned liiin with tho others. As they were
ironing him, Powers said " Captain, why am I put in
irons?" The Captain said,""never mind—go in
irons." On Powers repeating the question, the
Captain struck him with his revolver over the head
and knocked him from tho upper to the lower cabin,
where he was fastened with the others.
unprincipled cabin window
accuser.
One word more, and I have done, for I am aware
of having trespasses' too long upon your patience
already, having, perhaps, gone into greater detail in
this all'air than was needful ; but for this reason
Feeling from the first that there was more real clanger
connected with the premeditated acts and maturing
designs of the men, from their familiarity with deeds
of crime than need generally be attached to cases of
this kind, and knowing the puny-hearted help was
sure to have from my stalwart after-guards, whose
ideas at* so amicable, and dispositions of so amiable
a nature as to neutralise their manhood, sad stake
one d,,i11,t even of their MS J kaOWing tbSSe thing*
from the fust, 1 have striven to thow that I u-ed
greater forbear nice, and essrd "I mo re patience in
:
1
dels] lag ths moment of action than usual In easa of
this kiwi; and all for ths miisw that, in ease of s
oontsst, they might have tins to proassdto such
stage of revolt, as to make it legal UN proper for us
to deal with them, if needful, after the summary
manner in which they propOSl I to deal with us. For
with n few to oOUat on in a moment of peril, among
my people aft, I considered it became me fo forbear
to the last, and when the crisis should
c.
mo, .act
with :in energy of action and a legality of means that
should insure Miceess on the side to which it belongs.
The character of the men, ths result ol Ihe mutiny
ami the manner of the accident to its leader is now
before the public ; and it rem dm to be s, en if it will
join with the few
master* who, under the
guiss of their own pecuniary interest, have jointly
condemned my conduct us .a method of upholding
their own, and are at this moment harboring and
advocating the villains I abandoned.
appeal to thejudg Ul of the public, and I shall
l.ow with conviction to its verdict. Bui be thescream
of the kites who have assailed me as common prey
soever loud over hi rd lings of (heir father aad their
kind, their brooding over the depraved shall only
merit my future
Iteinpt, leaving me uncrushod by
their censure, and ontrammeled by their blame.
Respectfully yours, 0. M. Nkwii.i.,
Master of bark JlUct Frazitr.
I
lloxoui.c, Nov. 'JO, 18'j7.
Mr. Earroa: in your paper of yesterday's date,
I notice a long letter from Captain Newell of the bark
Alice Frazitr, in which he gives his version of the
circumstances attending the death of one of his men
in the Ochotsk Sea, .and the abandonment, of four
others on the desolate shores of Mercury Bay. ilaving been one of the terrible " mutineers" myself, I
will, with your, permission make a plain statement of
the hots as they occurred.
(In the 27th of March hist, the Alict Procter shipped almost an entire crew at Valparaiso, being the
third crew since leaving home in IS-Vl. V7s shipped
with the plain understanding that we were going on
;i sperm whale voyage,but the day after leaving port,
Capt Newell called all hands aft, and told them
that ho was going to the Ochotsk. On some of the
men remarking that they had not shipped to go
North, he said, " I am going where I please. Do
you do your duty, and I will treat you well and give
you plenty to sat and warm clothing." The latter,
we afterwards ascertained, he had not on board. The
crew however were satisfied with what the Captain
said, ami went cheerfully to work, fitting and overhauling the rigging which was in a bud condition
when we joined her. We were well treated and had
good victuals, until a circumstance occurred which
turned the Captain against us.
Some of the men had borrowed books from the
Captain, which, on being returned, were in a soiled
and damaged condition. The man Henry Sheppard
(whose right name was William Gosh, he having
taken the place on the articles of one Sheppard who
had left) was very fond of having books read to him,
though he could neither read nor write himself. On
this occasion he requested the loan of some books, but
was answered very surlily by ('apt. Newell, that there
were no books for him. lie went forward and got
one of the crew, who is still on board of the ship, to
write a letter to the Captain, which, though impudent,
was not at all threatening, and was more for a
"lark" than anything else. This was thrown into
the cabin window during the dog watch from six to
eight.
The next day at dinner, our usual supply of potatoes was stopped, and on inquiring of the mate for
the reason, we were told it was on account of a letter
abusing the Captain, which had been put into the
I'luv tlun sent the steward for Shcppunl, who was forward.
11. coining into (ha cabin waa put in iron* withoutauy (Amble
or resistance When lie. (pit into the lower culiln and saw how
the others were lashed, to the chain, he said, "Captain, we
can", stand thiscruelty, with our hands In-hind ourbacks." The
you." Sheppardreplied, I will
Cantata said, " Dry up, d—nmy
tongue is my own, and I'll use
nut; 1 am an American,and
"
it." The Captain thenstruck him over the left temple with the
revolver whichlie held cocked in his hand. 'There were
the Ist, 2d and 6th mates and the threetomenIn irons. Sheppard
tell instantly, and the hall is supposed have entered hi* brain.
As soon as he fell the Captain dashed the pistol on the cabin
door, breaking it and scattering the remaining charges. The
mate at once proceeded to take the irons from Sheppard ami
laid him on a chest, the blood running in a stream to theleewant
side of the ship. The mate remarked to theCaptain —" lie will
never siM-ak again." When the Captain said "there is one
that one, and
more, ami then we can manage thereat." I was
was sick at the time with rheumatism. Being sent for, I went
into thecabin and found Capt. Newell sluing at the table, apparently very calm and collected. He sai.l to me "what is the
matter with you I" I then pulled up my shirt-sleevesand showed
him my wrists which were much swollen, saying You can see,
sir." ne said to the mate, Mr. Chase, put him in Irons ;
which waa done, I at the time asking in vain thereason of such
treatment. I said to the Captain, nave I ever refused duty,
any insolence!" He said, never
or given you or your officers got
down In the lower cabin, where
mind go in irons." After I
the others were, together with the dead body of Sheppard, I
discovered the flannelcap which was worn by him, lying on the
floor. I managed to secure it, and have ever since retained It
in uiv noMessmn. just ill it fell off his hesd. with the hole in it
*******
"
"
"
"
�111 L II!I i: Ml, UtItMBLK.
92
i»l life. The next
OorpM wan taken up on
the
deck, and thii wni
last we *mw of our unfortunate HlHpm.it>>.
A« I *aid before, his right MM WM WBMua Oath, a native of
Baltimore, .M<l, wlitTc he haa an uncle, an extensive biscuit
made by the tali
which deprived Sheppard
inorniriK after tbe»e uocurren«x»e, tbe
baker,
.
wammt Hi—
tteferul days
alter this, shajklep, made of strong hoop iron,
put nn our unci-•. mt4 tins" hahnori to Ihe chain, thus
making usifpiiie immovahle. We Wert kept in that oomUttoo
for thirty days, until Wt got intu M.-miry Ihty, WMM WW Wee*,
put mi shore finely, and at bog tiswmamn apart, in order that
wo should not be able to Malit each other to gel away or otherwise. Piwrluui | patting iv on
the Capteta went to all
the "hips in the flay, mm] r-piw-rit, j~. r*j th wont of murdfferi and robbere, in order that we might »•■• 1- it to parish «nd
MOKMJpMsT M WtthMMO Ifplinri hmi. A- each man WM put
<,n aht'i-r, he WM |>,""vi.|'ii with live p-nnd-s of breed and hie
blanket*, The Captain Mid to v* uwe ireni MhoTc, "li ymi
'■vT.TnMiin path again, al teaoron Mmre, I will Mow your
•MMM out." Jomm Brown wan landed «o i land inH In
ttertvy Hay, Ui" Captainremarkiiv. " will put you where
yen can /<•! a ship but, m for the oUiera, in pui them win
the bean will get them." The men who pulled it*> aihon R re
Dot ptnrdtted to take their knives with ttittu, for fir tltol th >
woaid Mppl) us with in nrawnary uti arti tie.
wip'
siiort.
i
;
t
i
?n travelingalong tbe beach, I l«U Iv with .lam-"* power*,
•ad together we built a raft of drift limber a.*! paddled aero**,
the Bay to wVre tbo //armhay, Capt. Bumpu*, wai laying.
Capt, p. MktMl us it" we could turn to and do nur duty. Ha
tofWared tiiat we could, and turned to and worked on board
daring the remainder nf i. r orutae, We experienced notlung
bat ktndneM fruai Capt. Bumpua, and ahall always remember
him wHh gratitude for harluii roacued v* from a horrible fata In
eplttefti* repreeei itattone of Capt. Newellami tbe charitable
wishes of certain ship maater*. aby uiproiml the hope that wt
would lire the ihlp.
As kg fee Captaln'i story afoait riung«*ho| and kntvee,
I
knew ofbat one of the farmer in tbe ahlp*and thatWM In the
cheatof a man whola now on lwvwrd,aud wm not one of the
who kept the remaining thirty-nix of the -hip"-.
urribl.'./nr
company m feu- at their Uvea. Hie wily knlvea we had were
such as Mamen alwayi carry, and without which, tolerably
sharp, none I ml a lubber would ihink of going aloft.
His statements about our previou* hUtoryare niTt aaeertfooa, and aa their truth or falsity canuotbi proved now, we
will let than pass ftw what they are worth. They oannot in the
lenat affect the ifaaple fact that Capt. C. M. Newell, of the latrk
Alice Frazi'T, did, on the 10th nf June* l**s7, deprive one of
his men ol life, by tbe atrokeor ahot ofa pi-t..|, i!n- man at the
time being Ironed, with bUbandi behind lili back, and ofeoorw
comparatively helplcai.
Hail ('apt. Newell come directly to Honolulu, and courted an
invest!pit inn, we would wilUngly have tnwtod thu reeatt In the
handft of tbe American Conaal 1 but,haWug evaihtl this port,
he attempts, from u distance, t-i exptabtaway the circumatane< n
•ad to foreatall publk opinion. I leave the public and thoae
oaOMfued oftieially t" make their own commenti upon bia
Mom and the two stotemenM now laid before them, simply «y.
ing that there are wttneaaeo nf the whii affair now in Honolulu,
ami on hoard of tin- AHce b'rn-.irr, who can aubatantUtte the
truth of what I have related. Hay only JuatSoe he done,
John hasaan, of New Orleant.
The aoderetgned, Late eenroen on board the bark .l/i--r
Frazirr, hereby certify that the foregoing Btatemrqil of the cirmmum which occurred onboarilof thatveaael during the
gMteeaaoii hi th-; Ouhotak Boa, i.-, strictly true.
Jims Powaa-t, «.f Mi.ri.i.h-ad, Mat*.
.1 amis Baoa », of Kngland.
REPORT
COfEoxmecuiSotveaHiolnrfm'slS
ue ociety.
Just three years have elapsed since an
American sailor, the son of a Quaker,residing
in New York, deposited the nun of fifty
cents for the purpose of building a Sailors'
Home in Honolulu. This was the first donation for the object, which has since called
forth so many donations and enlisted so much
sympathy. In depositing the money, he remarked, with a tearful eye and much earnestness, do, for mercy's sake, build a. Sailors'
Home in Honolulu, and here is my donation.
He saw and felt the need of such an establishment in this city. Previously there had
been much discussion and fruitless efforts,
but the time had come for action and labor,
which should result in some definite plan of
operation.
Assembled upon the third anniversary of
the organization of the Honolulu Sailors'
"
Home Society," the Executive Committee
would offer the following report relating to
the Society's proceedings during the past
twelve months.
pu thp second
anniversary
of the Society,
IS.)
7
.
the Home had been opened for a few weeks, furnished bedding and money tor furnishm;'
and the somewhat hazardous experiment was each a room in the Home, and tiie names of
being made whether success would crown the those towns were duly placed over the doors of
efforts of the friends of the enterprise or fail- certain rooms. It is hoped that the ladies of
ure would result, as had been so confidently other towns or cities may be disposed to folpredicted by not a few, even among those low their example. Reports havereached us
a hnp" that it might succeed. that the ladies of New London have provided
who
The Home was opened September I, 1860, for famishing another room. By this means
for boarders, one year from that dale the the Trustees are enabled to fit up the rooms
books of tlic manager show that three hun- with more comforts and conveniences.
During'the past year a library of over one
dred and seventy-four boarders bad been accommodated in the seamen's departnu nt. thousand volumes has been furnished for the
aside from theonVers 1 or private table. This Home through the agencyand efforts of Cn.pt
result is quite satisfactory, under all tho ad- T. Y. Sullivan. .Marine Missionary of Boston.
verse circuinstanci a attending the commence.Most of these hooks were collected in Boston
ment of such an enterprise.
The Home, and neighboring towns, Salem, Newburyport,
jduring the year past, was fitted to accommo- Chtries town, Lawrence, and other places.
date only fifty lodgers at a time, although The Ladies of Dorchester contributed SIOO
during the busy part of the shipping season in money for the purchase of books. Most of
more than that number found sleeping these books are exactly suited to a library
places" in the building. The reading room adapted lor the Home ; and those instrumental
was temporarily fitted up for lodgers. In in gathering and sending out these books
order to meet th.' exigences of the cose and merit great praise and the warmest thanks of
render the usefulness of the Home greater, seamen.
The Manager of the Home during the curtwenty-live Dew beds have been added and
the building Otherwise much better adapted to rent year, has taken out a license for a shipthe purpose for which it was erected.
ping ollice. It is earnestly hoped that capOne year ago, at the time of the anniver- tains will patronize this office, in shipping
sary, the Trustees found the establishment their crews, as it is believed they will find it
laboring under a debt of Sl7ll IfS, which to their advantage, l\lo>t certainly the class
had been incurred ill order to open the estab- of seamen gathering around and boarding at
lishment. 'Hie Executive Committee imme- the Home is superior, in point of sobriety
diately set about devising ways and employ- and respectability to most of those discharged
ing means fur paying oil'the debt and carry- from vessels and boarding on shore. A shiping forward the Home, without incurring ad- master about to leave, his ship already outditional debt. The account just rendered by side, said to us only yesterday, 1 never got
our Treasurer. .Mr. Bishop, shows how far we away from Honolulu with so little trouble.
havr- been successful. The deb! has been re- The men all went on board without any trouduced more than one-half, besides the ex- ble.'' A majority of his crew were shipped
penditure of over &400 of the Society's funds from the Home. We honestly believe that
for repairs and other purposes. In addition captains would find it for their interest, pecuto this sum the Manager, Mr. Thrum, has niarily and mennuly, to patronize the shipexpended over SfiOOMor making the building ing ollice of the Sailors' Home.
more convenient and complete. It is confiIf any shipmaster will visit the dining room
dently hoped when this debt shall be liquid- of the Home and look at the scores of young
ated, theestablishment will prove self-support- men—well dressed and quietly behaved, sealing ; although the price of board and accom- ed at the tables, he will perceive that there
modations afforded will allow but a bare sup- are some sailors in port worthy of a good lay,
port to those who manage the establishment. and from whom a good season's work may be
Boarding at the terms fixed upon by the expected. It is not pretended every sailor
Trustees is far from being a money making boarding at the Home is worthy of being
affair; and if the managers make a living, it considered as a steady, industrious, healthy
is a matter of rejoicing ; inasmuch as it will and active man, ready and willing to ship as
be found a difficult matter to sustain the an able bodied seaman—but this is however
Home if appeals are to be annually made to true of most. When such men are disthe public for funds. It is thought,.however, charged and wish to board for a few days on
that our success thus, far will favorably com- shore, it is surely of the highest importance
pare with the management of similar institu- that a good and comfortable lodging place be
tions in England and America.
furnished for them. Suppose some, or even
The Trustees have been cheered forward a majority of seamen give the Home a " wide
in their efforts by the kind and sympathetic berth," and keep aloof from all the kindly,
words of encouragement which have come wholesome, homelike and moral influences
from abroad. The ladies of Falmouth, New- entering there, it is pleasing, gratifying and
buryport, Dorchester, Hopkinton and West- hopeful that many are otherwise disposed.
borough, Mass.. «nd Woodstock, Ct.. have' Already have numbers shown that they prefer
"
"
�111 X I X
tins establishment nuhei than
places as are furnished for
them elsewhere. The effect however of the
Home in Honolulu, is similar to the effect of
Homes in other cities and ports. The effect
is gradually to elevate the character and rei.pectability ofother hoarding houses. In this
way seamen are benefitted who never visit the
establishment. We could mention houses in
Honolulu quite comfortably fitted up for seamen, but such places did nor exist previous to
the establishment and opening of the Home.
As years roll away we expert to witness a
gradual improvement in all the other houses.
If the keepers of sailor boarding houses had
always done riq-ht and treated seamen as they
should, there would have been no necessity
for calling upon the benevolent public to build
and support " Homes." but as that necessity
does exist.it is gratifying to witness a willingDen on the part of a generousand benevolent
public to come forward and build for the acof seamen "Homes" vicing
th the better class of hotels.
The Trustees of tie Honolulu Sailors'
>me would not in a boastful spirit point to
•it has been don" upon th'- land generously
mteil by the Hawaiian government, but
uld merely say that with the amount of
ids contributed, everything has been done
lich could be in order to carry out the nrigdesign of the proprietors of the establishint. Among the Trustees at the meetings
the Board, there has always been great
inimity and cordiality in planning and
SCUting the various schemes deemed neeesy for raising funds and expending the
same. It is confidently believed that the
plans and efforts of the Trustees have met
withthecordial approval of both landsmen and
seamen, it now remains for the Trustees to
appeal for a sufficient amount of funds to pay
off' the debt upon the Home. Our Treasurer
has informed us that tho debt at present, is a
rising $800—an amount which may
try be easily paid off, with a little of the
rt which has already been put forth in this
good cause. It is hoped something may be
done this evening, and more before the shipping season closes.
The Executive Committee feel that they
would be doing injustice to Mr. and Mrs.
Thrum, Managers ol the Home, unless the
most honorable testimony was borne to their
conscientious and honorable fidelity to the
best interests of the institution. To them
belongs the honor of commanding and navigating the " craft," when she was once ready
for sea, and the success of the institution thus
far has essentially depended upon their careful and watchful management.
Before closing this report it is becoming that
the officers and friends of the Home should
call U> mind that the distinguished individual
who presided at our last Annivesarv Meetpatronizing
resorting to such
Im odation
I
Ke
11] N I).
I)
li (E>lll X X
.
93
18 57.
ing, is not with us upon this occasion. The
117* The following statement, we have
audience well knows to whom we now refer. been requested to publish by the Rev. J. L).
The Sailors' Home has never had a warmer Strong :—
friend, or more generous contributor than the
During the two and half years of Mr.
Hon. Wm. L. Lee, Chief Justice of this Strong's connection with the Fort-streetKingdom. When his health permitted, he church, twenty-six members have been added
always attended the meetings of the Trustees, to its fellowship, averaging ten a year.
Fifteen of these additions were on profession
and usually acted as lb presiding officer of of failh. During the year ending with last
the Board. His efforts, ns a wise counselor June, (the anniversary of the formation of
ami active member, were many, The the church) :i greater numtier were added on
•' Home" was
much indebted to his labors in profession of faith, than during any other
its behalf, and i; was always B source of year since that in which the church was
During Mr. Strong's ministry
much pleasure to him that he had been thus organized.
here, eight members have been dismissed or
efficient in behalf of a class of people whose died, leaving a gain of eighteen in the whole
services are so necessary and important to number of tin church. During this period a
church edifice, costing about $15,000, has
the welfare of this kingdom.
also been erected, and the average congregaS. C. Damo.\,
tion, as found from careful and frequent
x Ex. Com.
(i. P. J ODD,
enumerations has been nearly doubled. After
11. J. li. HoLDSWi RTH, \
accepting his resignation at one of the largest
meetings of the "church and congregation"
Eclesiat Council.
ever held, the following resolution was passed
la ace inlincr with letters-Dilative from the Port by a vote, which, with two exceptions, was
Street Church, in Honolulu, Sandwich Islands, and unanimous.
"Bill i ml. 'lieu w* appreciate and greatly value
their pastor. Rev. .1. J*. Strong, an EcclcViastioal
the jmlpit abilities of oar Pastor, the Rev. J. D.
Counoil was ciinvened at their aoase ofworship, No- Strong,
th it «c have entire confidence in his characvenitier 24th, 1 S~»7, for the purpose of oonsideriag ter, liiith ;is a minuter aii'l B man. ami deeply regret
the expediency of dissolving ih" pastoral relationship thai any train of eircomstenoes, over which we have
no control should lead to his separation from us."
of .Mr. Strom; to mid Church.
The Cooacil was coraposed of the following mem.
Christmas Island.—Capt.-,of the
bors, viz. from the First Native Church, llev. K.
W. Clark, pastor, and John li, delegate ; from the in renewing his annual subscription for The
Second Native Churoh, Rev. Lowell Smith, pastor; Friend, remarked that he had good reasons
from the Bethel Union Church, Rev. Samuel ('. for supporting the paper, inasmuch as it once
Damon, pastor, and Oeo. M. Robertson delegate- saved him from shipwreck. Some years ago,
also, Rev. A. Bishop. Mr. Bishop was chosen Mod- when
sailing near Christmas Island, his vessel
erator and Mr. Damon Scribe.
The Council was opened with prayer by Rev. S. C. would surely have lieen wrecked, had he not
learned, from The Friend, that the island
Damon.
Mr. Strong's letter to the church, of the Ith of was laid down 45 miles to the eastward of
July last, tendering his resignation, and a resolution its true position. The same Captain remarkpassed at a meeting uf the Church on the 19th Octoed, " Beware of the current, setting one and
ber, accepting said resignation, and requesting the
half
to two miles to the westward." See reCommittee, appointed for that purpose, to unite with
Mr. Strong in calling a Council to dissolve the pas- marks upon Christmas Island in the March
toral relationship, were severally read and submitted. number of the Friend, and also in the Friend
Mr. Strong, on his own behalf, and JadgS Andrews, for May and June, 1848.
as Committee of the Church, also Mated briefly, and
-
1
,
:
in general terms, the reasons which lead the respective parties to desire a separation.
Whereupon, the Council unanimously resolved,
that the documents and verbal statements laid before
them were of such a character as to show satisfactorily to their minds that the further continuance of
the relationship now subsisting lietween the parties
could not be productive of good to either pastor or
people, nor tend to the up-building of the cause and
Kingdom of our Lord and Savior ; and that, therefore, the pastoral relation of Mr. Strong to the Fort
Street Church, is, in acconlancc with their mutual
desire, declared to be dissolved.
In coming to this determination, the Council, deeply
sympathizing with both pastor and people, cannot forbear to express their heartfelt regret at being
called upon to put an end to so important a connection, after the lapse of so brief a period from the time
of its formation, and under circumstances of a nature
to call forth feelings of Christian sorrow.
The Council take pleasure in recommending Mr.
Strong to their Christian brethren, wherever he may
be led to sojourn, as an able and evangelical minister of the flospel.
A. BISHOP, Moderator.
F C. DAMON, Scribe.
on
LINES.
Tin;
nr.ATii or nn. rootii,
UK) TEARS.
op
Scotland, aokt>
Blow softly thou breeze o'er the tomb-paved ground.
O'er that lono grave, now and griicn.
For there licth 'neath that spreading yew
A relic of what hath been.
Not the form nf the mighty lies mouldering there.
Not the sceptcred hand ofpower.
Not Youth, with bright hope around hi* brow.
Not Manhood in its flower.
'
No he that is laid 'neath that old yew.
Hal seen his hundredth year,
And, weary of this deceitful world.
He came to rest him here.
He had seen the friends of hi* youthful year*
Drop, one by one, away ;
There was nothing now to bind him here.
Then why should he delay.
He hod seen proud nations rise from dust,
And stately powers decay,
He had seen enough of this fleeting world
And he longed to be away.
That once Herculean frame wo* bowed,
And he prayed, '* Lord Jesus, come
The messenger ofpeace arrived.
And led the wanderer borne.
lows Hosr Stfwkbt C
'
.
�V 111: ND.
94
. . ........
.
Dr.
Toaniount F-l'"I an isbti
,. .
follow,
l„ II HaOkMd .'. To
To li. HarkfeM .'. i
T.i.l. T. Hut. iIn.uw
To I'ohm IUUI ml..
■I'., li. M. Weston,
j.ioiinl in
... Mslcban
>v I',,..
full
ur»|i r,
...- - -
ia*Hpeaoor, on arcouot,
--
Tu IfeooM tpenecr, In- ston*.
To B. w. Held, ir. tghl
twin m M«***n p Bird,
To a*MB*** tot I'oiiriTt,
*
n tickets, te.
To II. \1. Whitney, printing i'. in-.
To .1. T. Wiilorliou... fu-'iiM-kirv, ,Vi-.,
- - - ...
.
Heaven is sol far fi thus* who
With tho pan s|ihii"-
-'
■
Isoii, four
■
months, taking car* of Hooding Room,
ToThorn**Thrum, Sir services from Jan. 1* toSept,
■
1, 1NS7, takillK COW Of Rending Itnoiil,
To Tliniiiim Thrinii, forbookcases, fcc,
11. OilMlntiil, for lettering signs,
ro I).
1 -. *■'.,
(). Hull, fm' ll.lup COllll
to
I'ii Hurfeor Master, water Mil,
-- -- -- - - -
II
in
in wi
Bui
in-ir,
riinl in tin-
>.
net
t.V hen
til' tin,so that ;.«' aright,
Inn
jt
oo
M
lion
29 N
Sfl
nn;
ii 05
M
:;:;
"0 00
10* 08
Sim)
t SI
SS 00
FrKindness.
uitos f
Some people aw curious in ascertaining
the product sf a seed, and I am very fond of
tracing the effect of a. land action.
"An English merchant resided many years
at Canton and Macao, where a sudden reverse of fortune reduced him from a state ol
affluence to Ihe greatest necessity. A Chinese merchant, named Chinqua, to whom he
had formerly rendered service, gratefully offered
him an immediate loan of ten thousand
Vr.
rl.iin. Hi-' farmiT TrPSsnrer, $20 ::'.! dollars, which the gentleman accepted, rind
By. cash from J. E. Chn
It v cash, iiinoiiiil of ..oolri'.ill ions ;it It,.. II. 1 hi, ovoBr
20242 gave his bond for the amount; this the Chiink-, Nnviiiihr 17, 18S0,
By sash, iimouiii ni contributions al the Bethel, evenlire, savin:;, When you,
106 10 nese threw into the
ing, Nov. lulu -riM.
friend, first came to China, 1 was a poor
By e**h,iiiiiount ('run It. liu-kri.i ,v t'o., premium nti
my
40 .VI
ani.nnit |i;ii.t 011 tli-lr :n unt,
hand, and assist- By oaakfcr ticket*to C «rt,
380 00 man ; you took me by the
I8
By rush fr,.in ladle* in Woodstock, Conn,, 60
made
me rich. Our
hones!
endeavors
- 22 03 ing my
By ouh
" iti M',-ii...i-.ii -h. Mo, ., - •
see you poor,
1
reversed;
now
30
is
in llopklnton,
destiny
B) OBMk "
00
"
3000
Byosoh ""
" in liori-li'-ti r, ....
"1 am blessed with affluence.' The byBy cash fri.irt Boston nii.M'Itiirlisioivu,
- 022:;.', 03nil while
other
laud
ami
By eaflh Son an
standers had snatched the bond from the
source*,
«ea,
flames, Tin' gentleman, sensibly affected by
S. anil 0 Eg.
MM
such generosity, pressed his Chinese friend to
ilIAS. It. BISHOP, Treason*.
! take tho security, which ho did, and tlnn
Honolulu, Niv. IT. is:,:
effectually destroyed it. Tho disciple of
Confucius, beholding the increased distress il
occasioned, said, he would accept his watch,
or any little valuable, as a memorial of their
•a-S'
"
friendship. The gentleman immediately
presented his watch, and Chinqua, in return,
igave him an old iron seal, aaying, -Take
this
seal—it is one I have long used, and
,tt.
-• i
rj
if
no intrinsic value ; but as you are
possesses
*•"
;v I
rS r£l>*
:
going to India, to look out after your oat'-t
standing concerns, should fortune further
Sj S,' "
? o -_' ~
yon, draw upon me for any further
persecute
ft
J
8 V.
S
sum of money you may stand in need of,
a3 si<m it with your own hand, and seal it with
g
S '.-I;
SMl1=8
1
p;
f
■
a>
o,
4ti*
< H • tliis signet, and 1 will pay the money.' "
9
c I o
B 33
'*
How little did the English merchant ima?
that the seed of kindness, sown in the
gine
a
5
g ffr?"
c
3 E,S-ft
a
heart of his Chinese friend, would spring up
g a e 9PI 3 J ■
and yield such an abundant increase. I
relate this anecdote to my younger friends,
that they may see how a kind action done to■
MS- ? S«
day, may lie gratefully acknowledged and
liberally recom|)ensed, on some distant morP
FI!b
fr
row. Say what we will, one to-day is worth
flM H
....
.•.
-
---
n*
'
.
.
•
. '
•
I
'
:
* ,£?Iri"s£*
i?
ili;• "
* *
h-
m
—
m
iija**
•ran
•Z -*
i
I
•' •- '
let/PP
5r tai1?■
I Ff P •
—
r
*'
more than a dozen to-morrows.
*»
The Universe. —Suppose the earth to be
ball of one foot in diameter. On that
scale of proportion the sun would be one hunI > roRMATION WANTED.—FRIEDRICH dred feet in diameter, and the moon three
miles from
1 WILHELM HINDSDOERFFER, born in Koen- inches. The sun would befeettwo
igsberg, Prussia, who was in 1868 a Lieutenant in
—Jupiter ten
thirty
tiie Hawaiian lnfautry, and whose whereabout at us, and the moon
forty. The
press-lit is unknown, is desired to report himself at miles from the sun, and Heischel
ihe Royal Prussian Consulate, Honolulu, to receive highest mountains on the face of the earth
important intelligence fitim his family. Any person would be one-eighteenth of an inch in
11., will oonknowing anything about the said F. W. to
height. Man would lie an imperceptible
such news
»TJ*>
i.r
]
li
a favor by communicating
i—
o
3
V
w t>
-» *lfc
•«.
EBTISEHENT*.
\^
Ann] as th"-.' Uutda *lir dearw grow.
When Mend* *r* bag away,
Su Iloiiven itself, through kwed "in- dead,
lir,,\\s ilener day hy day.
u oj
;.. tiiiiiinnti paid for improvement*,repairs tmd
tiqhtintj. mul lul. iny run nj i in Htadiiiy Hovoi
darin.1 tin run i ht ijinr
ToC. II. [*■*■*, for IiiiiiImt, lie.,
To D. M.W****n, far waterworks,
To K. I'. IVUrson, for si'ivir.. to I 31,
,
ii 60
iu nn
lv> «>:",
:;•. hi
in ,,i
•
Al)\
:
Jhl'l M]
901 M
10* 7'.i
■
Ixwrs
'II
m in lull.
as
N n" 1',
....
••
....
...
.... ...
........
.... ...
mi
m-i
To 0. II. Butler.
To Ik-nry DUdomI,
1,. Wm. N. I.iul.l.
To II. M. WMuwy.
loll
in' uit.,1 prevfotn to
Ihs 7.
iVromtlu -N. Y. Udacr.]
Lines.
\ iliolint I unls lieynnil the sea.
When friomls go theme, draw nigli,
So lli.riven, when friemls havo thither gone,
Draws nearer from the sly
TreaR
su r' eport.
HONOLULU BAltSssS' MM SOCIETY,
In Arrmtnl ("iirrrnt irilh Ihe Trntsurrr, from Aor.
17, IK-Vi, to Mtm. \:,, 1867.
u X (i: MB X I!.
a
atom.
lilt
A
MRS
I'll It I .11.
MANAGERS
rl'Hi: HOUSE [8 NOW OPEN POR THE AC
cuiiiuiudntiou nl' Seaman, Hoard tin.l Lod
"■
will be I'urnisln'il on the tnosl reasonable terms. The
Managers, having for several yens kept t private
boarding-houaa in Honolulu, ami during tint period
:iri-.,niium!ate'l many seamen, hn|ie to receive the patronage nl' the seafaring community. Beainan may
rest Hamfed tliit mi .•Hurts win be spared t" fßrnlah
them a comfortable home during their stay in port.
Boarden accommodated by the week or single meats.
Seamen patronising theBailors' Homewill Bnd that
the improvement* recently mads wiil afford more accommodation and greater oomfort, having several additional deeping rootus—tbe whole enlarged and thoroughly ventilated.
m>
In connection with the Sailor*' Home it a Shipping
Office, where application* from Captain* requiring
Seamen will i.c punctually attended t".
s>.', UO
Board and Lodging tor Seamen, per week,
Si; on
Private Table, fur Officers, per week,
\|i],ly for lintii,l tit ihe office, In the JinUßf
vniitn.
- -
'
Honolulu, Sept 1867.
10 tf
POST OFFICE NOTICE.
of POSTAGE ON LETTERS FROM THE
RiTEB
SANDWICH ISLANDS:
United States (Kast,) 17 eta
On single letters
Great Britain, - - ..
Prance,
----- 88 ""
.<
"
■•
t.. the
tv
t,i
tv Germany
'■'■*'■
and IVusia, ".' "
II"
:m.I Finland,
to CanadaandBritish N. A., 22 "
tv Boas**
to Azures
.
-
or Western Isl-1
"
~
" "
American RepubUe.. s
Mexican Ports, - - - 17 "
to
" " to Panama, - - '-"! "
The" above" rates are fur letters weighing half
and*, \ia Soathsmp- '• 70
n mi-1 Lisbon,
1
I,
tv Valparaiso ami Smith ),,
-
tin
ounoe or less, anil double the aimve rate* for each additional half ounce.
Letters dropped into the Post Office without the
postage being paid, will nut lie forwarded. lti-tt'
THE READINCROOM
A T THE BAILOR'S HOME IS OPEN, AND
£\_ free to the public; and all seamen visiting
this port, are especially invited to make it a place of
resort, whether they board at the Home, or other
boarding-house* in Honolulu, or are connected with
the shipping. Daring the shipping season it will be
lighted evenings.
floiSlWl visiting the Ketnling-Uooni, and desirous
of writing letters, will lie furnished with "asm, /«'.
iiml paper," giviti's, hy applying tv the panon havIf
ing charge nf the Room.
A CAIID.
lately wrecked in
INDKHMGNED,
'I'lIK
the ship Indian Chief, waa treated very kindly
hy the natives ofEast Cape, in the Arctic Ocean, and
he would recommend that each master passing there
should make the natives some present, (say a bast of
tobacco, which they prize highly,) in order that their
friendship may be retained, to the benefit of any seamen who in future should he so unfortunate as to lie
PHI 1,0 HUNTLKI
wrecked in that region.
Late Master Ship Indian Chief.
10-tf
Bonottfln.Pet 88.1887.
1
,
J. WORTH,
established himself in business atllilo,
Hawaii, is prepared to furnish ships with
Recruits, on favorable terms for Cash, Goods or Bills
on the United State-
HAVING
�TII X rilEMi,
OF OAHU SHAM,
a Uell to lie rung at the Port of Honolulu, at nine and a halfo'clock of each evening, as a
aamaltoall Mariners at that time on shore without
tu* iMfnission, to return on board their vessels ; and
il sbaf Im; assWUabsnt upon them to do so, upon pain
of two iloii.irs tii,.., it' s*i*ajeh*ndajd nt or after ten
rpilE GOVERNOR
cause
o'clock of the e\eo'.i.g, w>i«n said (Jovernor shall
the Hell to ho again run,', m» a visual for their
e.uise
apprehension-
-
Whoever furiotuly, or headlaaaly of the *»Ojty of
Others, rules any hers.: nr Other animal, or drive* ,|-conduot* any vehicle, though the personal sai'e'y of
any person be BOt endangered thereby, shall be punished hy a line not less than live dollars nor exceeding
hundred.
Whoever is found tlrunl; in any street, road or
cither public place, from the use of intoxicating liquor,
hall, on the first conviction for such offense, he punished hy a tine not exceeding six dollars, and on any
conviction of any like olfense committed after the first
conviction, by a fine not exceeding twelve dollars, or
by imprisonment not more than three months.
'All loud noise by night is taboo. Whoever, after
sunset, shall, by hallooing, singing in the streets, or
or disoriv any other way, make any disturbance
derly iioisc, in any village, town or part of this kingdom, without justifiable cause far BO doing, shall lie
by any
liable to summary arrest and imprisonment
and upon conviction be
onstabl* or police ollicer,
punished by a fin. not exceeding ten dollars.
person not authorised by law, who shall carry
be armed with any bowie-knife, sword-cane, pistol,
-gun, »lung-*hot, or other deadly weapon, shall lie
line of no more than thirty and no less
liable in adollars,
or in default of paymentof such
than ten
line, to imprisonment at hard labor for a term not
exceeding two months, and no less than fifteen days,
upon conviction ol such offense before any district
magistrate, unless good cause be-shown fin- having
such dangerous weapons ; and any such person may
he immediately arrested without warrant, by tbe
Marshal, or any Sheriff, Coistablo, or other offioer
or person, until he can be taken before such magistrate.
,
livery foreign seaman, oi whose desertion from any
aud
every
shall
have
bsSB
given,
due
notice
vessel
t.eaiutiii discharged contrary to the provisions of the
article, shall be apprehended, and if not returned to
bis vessel, shall be put at the disposal of his proper
Consul or I i.iiimereial Agent ; but if he refuse to
receive him uoKer charge of his Consulate, said deserter shall lsWut to haul lalnir until he quits the
W
country.
i.very flearain who shall be found on shore alter
the sixty days limited by hi* permit have expired,
will be arrested as a deserter, and confined in the
fort until hn shall leave the kingdom.
Whoever rescues any prisoner, or persons lawfully
behl in custody, on convict ion or charge of any offense, or as a witness on a criminal charge, or aids
so
or assists any such prisoner, witness or person
held in custody, in his design or endeavor to escape,
whether his escape be or be not effected or attempted,
or convey* into any fort or other prison any disguise,
tool, weapon, or other thing adapted to facilitate, ami
with intent to facilitate the escape therefrom of any
such prisoner, witness or other person, shall, in case
the aforesaid offense or criminal charge be capital, or
ten yean
punishable by imprisonment for life or atforhard
labor
or more, be punished by imprisonment
not more than three years, and by fine not exceeding
shall
be
five hundred dollars ; in any other case, be
not more
punished by imprisonment at hard labor
than one year, and fine not exceeding one hundred
tf
dollars.
J\ny
.
*
NAVIGATION TAUGHT.
J°-
all its branches, taught by the
Subscriber. The writer likewise begs to ininstruction to a limited
that he
number of pupils in English reading and grammar.
geography, writing, aritbmatic, &«. Residence, cotLove's house, Nuuanu-street
tare
S at tbe back of Mr.
in
NAVIGATION,
will give
nate
Honolulu, March 'Jti, 1057.
[RON
For
Store,
DANIEL SMITH.
tf
HURDLES
Hudson's Bay Cesjfaay'i
eight feet long-three dollars each, tf
BALI
;it
the
ADVERTISEMENTS.
'
PUBLIC NOTICE.
one
95
Is 5 •
advertisements.
ADVERTISEMENTS.
[
IKCKMBKti
information wanted.
NOTICE TO WHALEMEN.
charles twokey
.11 A V Y & L A W
or TWAY.of Geneva, New York. He sailed
—diui.kiis in—
in 1860 or 1861,from ('alias, Maine, on board the
Tbnaaaaat, bound to the West Indies. He was next
SUPPLIES AND GENERAL
WHALEMEN'S
heard from on board the whale ship .Ve/ilnne, Capt.
MERCHANDISE,
Green, in Honolulu, about two or three years after.
lv Hivnihue. lluwitii.
It is confidently supposed that, if alive, he is on
(INSTANTLY ON HAND a good supply
boartl sonic whale ship in the I'acific. Should he
of Hawaiian baaf, potatoes, hoge, sheep and nuvisit tbi. [eland*, he is requested to call upon thu
merous
other nrticls required by whaleincu. The
meet
his
Seamen's Chaplain or, should this nol'n-e
articles can lie furnished at the thortesi
eye, In write In the Chaplain, Of eoiniiiunicate with above
notice and on Ihe most reasonable terms in exchange
Ins lister, Miss A. T. Ending, in Geneva, N. I',
|..r bills on the I nitcd Slates or orders on any mci—ALSO—
,'hint at the Islands.
No oAsWg* made on intcrof
PARTRIDGE,
a
sailor
the
name
s Reapeoting
by
ialand exchange.
friends reside in West Eaton, N. Y.
Reef packed to order and warranted to keep inany
•'-!'
ReepeXNaVvOHN WHARRIE or MoWHARWF., climate.
wholeft aomc(*s£wrif Kbas Perkins' whaling vessels,
i.i),
ii. vi. in:
at Honolulu, in IBtXxjPT is.",l
Ct) M MISSION
MEU<'II A N T
LSO—
HONOLULU, OAHU, 11. I.
Respecting W. S. Haven, .-noKtoil to have Jumped
Hy IVrmimion. he Uel'ir- lo
overboard from the whale ship Uood Jlrlnrn, Capt.
Wing, on the 20th of March, 1866, rSsila. the vessel C. W. Cartwright. President of Manufacturers' InWas lying at anchor in, Of lying off and on Mas. port
surance Company, Boston;
of Honolulu. Any informal in relating to 'Avis 11. A. Pierce, Huston;
man
he
most
received
the
will
by
young
gladly
Thayer, Rice ,\ Co., Boston;
editor of the Friend.
o-tf
Edward Mott Robinson, New Bedford;
.l.JiiiW. Harroti \ Son-, Nantucket;
-TIIF. FRIEND" SENT ABROAD.
Perkins ,V Smith, New London,
/ VUB LIST OF FOREIGN SUBSCRIBERS haa been R. F. Stn.w, Honolulu.
>m"s s, i'ii«Kt.
/ increasing for several years, .and is now larger sam'i, S. i'asti.i:.
than ever before. We should rejoice to have it beCOOKE,
CASTLE .V
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BIBLES,
-
THE
tIOR
"FRIEND:
- -...
- - -
�96
THE IK I
KM).
DECEMBER.
I S .'i 1
.
POHIRLTFX
H, . .
Kiir.a Adam*. Ibunugg, Scirt :W | JohnWeAt, \Vo> nl bridge, <K-t •*>;
nihartda, Booker,Ool 10) Ifcidearor, WTtaoo i Favartoew, Smith j
l:..ta. Mwards, \\ ■ -i.iL.-t V ; ReheccaManas,bni DhH
IKKIVAI.S.
WnhaW, BetWari i Btnttm, R.O. Luce
Whfdrvhip Wat. Bndger, which sailed, froanHair BedftaM
7
i.. Muniiiiiit, Mm wh, MM bona
PORTFI.
HONLU.,
Hot.
s—Hon.
Sept
Ocean,
15,
pot lota Newport*,
kmxa-t M, lor North Paetfla
:i—l.vilia, 1. iiai l.t..'iii wh, .'sio bono.
Isaling
4—Mawuwhnsetts, Cbstfleld, DOO wh, I.l,oooLane.
O* Battad from Ban Harbor, Sep, Id, ■hint i/'//-r«nn, HuntARRIVALS.
6—CslUn, Bowland, Too wh, TON bom.
ing, aud Wiltiotm T* n Austin, lor North Pantile Ooean,
•. Russell, NO wh, HObs—,
a—Bmplr
Balled fruii Bdgartoa. n. Bept !T,shlp Canaan, Manter, for
I
;,
Covington, Newman, ttoti wh, loooivjnr.
>or. A—Am wh r>:irk Jofafl II Kli/aMh, BdiUfO, fin K<«liark. PsdOe Ooaan*
'•
IS— Am wh bark Oh npfa, «if and on.
WBS
A new ihtp, 576 teosbiirthen.aUlsd the WWUtttk ITiffSow.
ft—Am wh (thip Barnh. Bvtft, An OoM*.
Unmchod al M am-r, \\. L, Sept 4. Bhe la Intendad for tlm
was
MARRIED
fi—Am whih Bowditete, Hnrtln, fm Oehoaik.
laiPliMSi, wndi r the
of Cap;. Tahar, mX% o|
�A—Am wh ih H;irtli'>l'iniew Qoaoold,WsbMns.fmOehotsk. whaJlnw
hurk Prams.
l„ it,.i In, Batordai e»«uto«,Nnv.aB,hjr R*T. *.«'. Damon.
10—Am wh hark (> ilrUji, laVon, fni tan, with losa of ipnrs.
TT Tito i'./i-nhi th Barter was 63dnya to Cape Horn \ Araa Mr. Jo*. C. I'.i'.r- I*l -tiil '' i"I ship lii'lui. to Has* U*a**.t*
10—Am wh thin Brooklyn, ELo c, from Kaatekskua.
thi- 1latitude «>r Xi" exj»erlencpd mtifih aenthari Rnt awnthsr *>(T
10—Am wh sii Ban), Morgnn, Blsson, oir nmi on.
Cape, and from thence to i 1"- l*hw m dayi hnd cimnn
the
111 w rdsei oflbs
In 'ii,,
■•: s*chosett»,al lis) clot
11—Am wh Kliip Sawerra, Wnrner, fm lahalna.
la daring thapHMgs ~,,.,,,■ ti '•',i' i'-' iiv Concert, by 11,-v. Professortalth, assisted
12.—Am wh ih c:.n;i Phaipa, Allen, fm Ochotsk, 2300 brla. fanesea from N.W. to s.i;. B|
limit,
tin. Braum P. Roams, Miv
13— \m wh Alp [ndla, U ojr, than Oohntsk.
|. Rev.Richard w
..i ihe A. is. ('. F. M.. to Mi* Mr*. It-, itaoghttn*
BefPT, fnmi Ochotsk.
i
i r in irfa sh Republic,
.■ ,|, ~, ..1 11..1 1.-n.
n„i:i. i r.:.
Mr. and Mm Rohertawltl
M-*-IfSnoda, Wiirini. "U aiMiun.
sail foe ths Mlcr nests* Übusls aboa* lb* Ist of OaMbar.
Oldononrf wli brkt Knutd, Hamtnen, from Ochotsk*
Am wh ihlp HodsoD, Mar-inn, from Lahalna.
•!—(..'
V"V.
.I'ii.fi',
Fanny
Ottah"
KnrSvs Xi: \ni-i>co—v-T
16—Am wh ihlp Parachute, Oorey, from Ochouk,
l>
"''"".
i int. t';"H N DOstes, ChaaK Bobbin*,
I-" „■■ ANtchoAm wh hark Pnttone, Andi raon, from «•*■--]!
DIED
•'"■'>.
M■■
orCollinm Antonio Martin, I rank .'■- ,CI daa.*,
Mih<>u,
ihlp
'I'l-oup,
OoTwnar
tshnina.
Am wh
from
BTenrkeV"
,n.-ui,>lr
11
Plillli
Marshall
Am wh ihlp RkUllp ! -i. Blsson, from
Iratsk.
0
Hlce,
Chaae,
«.
J
Mr
Chapman,
during Ihe prcrelKnct epldamir,
On
Has
last,
lMi nf Annual
I bury, Aim w J L Mnson, *>vl Tygffr, ManuelBrink Frank our Master
**'
:i!-.-, ('luimpliii, anil ltci:j,i<iiui Ku.-!i, Wyatt, *-\X ; WTCUytoo,
frum ni our Mend Ukkusls Kami. Bhs
i Inan.i
i ■■:.wdnesd
iii.
C
Itohert
o'Sullivni..
been
Walker,
"■■
by i Mvere attack "f eryai|»elas, and
bad
much
Whit*.J Marshall, ItavlWrtl
16—Am wh lUp Phoenix, u cklejr, from Lnhtlnn.
Pran OrnoTitit >. i -«•■■ Bplendld, Bfov •—Hlchohu llouk.i- v.a- aba to bear up lut a little while again*! theepidemic,
Am wh ihlp Callap, Howl LBd.froto Oehotsk.
v,
died
Maul
nt Wailuiai. K-st
In shoot the 67th year of liarage.
-toflli :'• .1
K< ■■■ trie*.
Am wh ihlp Vernon, Qardner, from Oeliotsk.
Shaefrr, and la the hope of the tforpel. Bhe belooßed to the htnlly of
From BniMu ~'" r AntHltvKarl*—Lßnumnnch, A Mrs
17—Am wli shin \V;i\. ily. Wit. froir Oehotsk.
in:!,
chief*
ofthe
Biircemeistcr,
ABwocht,
lil fli him—l|ihiiiil|l.
Al- the
onnntry and like them iras diatlulenl
Bcholx,
Am wh ihip Condor, W ; fro I k;l
gntidicd forher huepitallty t<i uranprsrs. Bhe was » woronnol
hi m I li
I breiFnon
,li vi loJph, from Ochotsk,
jv
IH—Am wh sh louth Bo
wife
—|ier
Yankee,Not.
Si\ FSAXrt!*cn
20—11 \r..nw.
aufierinrmind and nuv-li I*l»' ■■■! bj the |M**pta who heartily
10—Am wh $U Coral,
from Ochotal,
ourtnng
ftnil ■'I'lii'lrt-Ti ;n.l-"i*\:i; i. Mn Chas Johnson ami I children, j'.in bar bet* n\ .I in:-' ad. Km
■
Am bark \ ink-■<-. >nih, l. days fm Ban branch
■'
<■■
V
-i dm.
C
Imnri,
Smith,
BnoU,
their
Mm F Bennett. Mrs ami Miff
i
11:1...
i,
Am wfa h R
In ihi- n:v. mi Mi i Any innrninp 11 <t, "I chronic prrlrnr<
Hopktn*,.! V, Chaptian, J G Mitchell, l\ 8. N\. X 8 Walker,
X
Am wli Hob >ra ■.-, Mar
■ id on.
iiasli
Judge.' Marvin, M Rn Murft,J Com tanUi>s,und & in the st.-.T
dills, or diaeajte of th In ■
vi ■■<•%, a rarislir nn'•
Am wh »h linplre, Knawll, uffand to.
tivi' nt Mew York Btut<. ■ iboul ;> years.
HL't'.
Atn wn -I' Daiil tV«M I, Mi '-i ..n, I'm
-Cynw
Olney,
lady
Nov
T>
San BrancUcn, Nov. I,
il< I daurhti rof 1 ■ eline
prom
Orwws—per MetmHK
In
I
\ni \\ It bark
nice,
■ <-, nn orlt-.i-k.
and 2lcWMiwi, J C Carets**, Mr* J C Caraono, Nathan Olncy,
and Mllo Calkin; bora at the Sandwich Islands, May tS,
m Columbia lady ami 2 rhltdrrn, Bymo Oil ■.. X P Wtlber, Pmf. X Ki-i y, ■ Ji 16,
SB—Am hark Mcl
Bin r.
Wli
Tompkins,
Dan
Honolulu, "n the 33d nU., lIAw llanst, a leapM bstnnj;,i peranl, Ph
tttstey,
t
I
Am wh lefa K. Is. Frust, iu»iin, fl m Coast of Central I Learta.
i-i ii Herman whali ship RrpubHc,
i
\l> " I'i'M.
ftipm*
R
Taia^ahtawo—per
Mawncmi«*i*tt«—lohn
Van
i>uhoard
hark Bfttck Emgfc, In Ihs China Ben, March *.
34—An wh sh Mast aelm I-. Or
r»D anrj on, and >ail- i Par
K,irNn> rtntiFOKn—per John (Hlpin, V>\ 'js_Mr h-k! Mr* i is.;, ait ■■• .i ihort niM' ■•- with brain fcrcr, Mb. ioai mi Ban tt,
.-.i KUne 'lav for THlcahuann.
children, Mi-- Marj Pitman, Mr* John M Wood of N< ■■' i i-ialon, Ct., aged S3 years, I rsi nfflcer oftbe en *».
Btcpheiu
and
3
.\m -li Lonlta, Rathaway, ofl ami on,sailed ■ ims day i :imi :i
cuiisumptlou, Ai ii'.i.r Ktcnoi.L,of Haf Harbor,
children, Mn Rlvttl and 3 children, Mr \V Sherwood, Mr
I .],;, datf, olyears.
1
lor Talcabuano.
■'•<
i ageil al»nul
lir brlgnntlue BWxaheih Darter, Pcntreath, |2ftdays j| Ford.
In Medford. Mass., Oct 3, a"--! M j w i, Mai. M tat, wldo, ■
laoodsn.
ior William IIoWC, and i i-t'i'T of Mr. '■', ~. C, Howe, r>f till* City.
Massnchussm. Ctetfiehl* offand un.
U«l itverbonnl fmra tlie whaVithip OoaiW sTowf, Dec. 22*
PORTF
LAHAINA.
!BW,J(.hxC! Kior.s, a seaman, aiful nhoul 21 years, Mounhtej
tn
Avon, .V w \ "rk 81 tl
IIES
DHIV.KTI
All lIIV II.S.
Not. I —Oan Williams, Miller, lor Inane.
Ko», S—ll.i.t-in. Marstan, T.i sp. Tit.i wh. m'ik) bow.
6—tUvnipia, Ryan, for Manpaiiui.
S—Oamhrla, IVaso, 1200 wh, 14.0HUhnna.
fi—Pruilrnt. UamilLon, forthij Booth.
.". -li.■-' hi.in Rash, Wjrstt, 300 wh, MOO bone.
fcr
New
Xeslsnd.
ft—Bharon, King,
H—Jtlncrrs, Wtirii.-r. i.nn wh, 0000 baa*.
K—CaulaiiK'niirt, LclMMl ,i 'Til
|_(',„, l„r. 11,-iin, M0wh, 7000 Ix.il>-.
h—tl.'-i. O'llsutpo(»l, Darmnn ! irlta, for Ta**Hl
I''.,?,
il
>,,'>
4—Milton. Ilalwy, 85 sp, 800 wh. 10.000 i,nn„.
ft—Am ollpperuhlp John Utnd, Bearx-, for New !■■■ if-.nl. i
t_i-h,iiii|.i„ii.
Coffln, mi sp, R25 wh, 10,1.10 heme.
ra
Harvtfit,
Winalow, to
H—Am wh"Shlp
-'.-",
bone.
Milton,
.-,—.<;,,v Troop,
sp, 1250 wh. 14,000
»—Am bark Kannv Mai-T, I'm, fi.r Ban Francimo,
;,_N :I,,-.
,,.>,r, I l,,v ,1,,' Iliulroii'l
|, 50sp, 1000wh. l&.OOObone.
||>-s, ,,,,!,,.
11—Baltic, Bronaon, for New % aland.
:,—lirtiiiiii-ii. Cornell, -j:," wh, 1000 hoas.
13—Janet, West, for New / idau I.
i-n-.
Pish.
760
V.'.noo
s—Ton-a,
wh,
nland.
ClerelHnd,
lor Ni w >'
12—Julian,
r.—i;<n. >i-.tt, rimwh, SM sp, tin" ■ h, 1 1.000 h,mr.
12—Silver Cloud, oj i liall, to crulae.
r> —(pphln ii rin. Chase, 280 sihtih.
14—Benjamin Tuck* ;■, Barber, tn cmlao.
A—Ocean lt"v,-r, VeeihT, 600 speru,
Qlmb. th. Pamblanc, P "Tahiti.
il_l,-i-.-.ili., Willtir,!. Ml sp, 700 wh, 7000 hor,r
la—Am ihlp llaiTirt .V Jessie,.l.un rin, for New Bedford. |
:—Triii.-m. Tml,.t, .,.,0 wh, Tun" hone.
in—Benjamin Morran, Hlason, ti> cruise.
D—Massarhnsotts.
Oreen, I".ihi wh, IT.OOO bone.
17—Lagoda, WUlanl, to crulae.
o—Pliii-iil\, lliin-l.li-v. 1000 WB, 14.01K1 hone.
Japan, Dhnan, to cruise.
14—Tnrnelliu
llowtaml,
Luce, Tim wh, 0000 hon.-.
is—Qrennritau brig Colibri, Kter, for Macassar, Baal
1 i_t,-ii.-1.,--. Kin--, 600 wh, 0000 hone.
Indies.
;:.o
wh,oooohone.
11-1,.,ni-.i.
Ilatliaivri'..
19—Brooklyn, lUtse, tooruJi
23—MassachnseUa, ciiattii 1.1. 100 sp, 000 wh, l.'i.oiS) bn.
KlngflMtnr, Palmer, fcr New Stleniand.
t.",0 wb, lo.ono Im.u,-.
AmoUa,
s.-irvi-nt.
£A —HuntsrHte, to crulae and home.
300 wh, :t,. iOii hone.
-.i',—t !o\ iu-.-i--:i. N.-WMI
GuStav, tl'illii'S, fur II ivic.
«i!ll, Vcssils ot ||,„|, o|»1 (,, 300 tons .'a,I lie at tliu 1'icr »i(!i
Janus, Winalow, br New Zealand.
■J4—DainsHlilii. Fisher, i" crubc,
DEPARTURES.
2U—Laneaster, Carver, to cruise and bouir
nj—BUp Marengo, Bkmner, ;<• cruise.
j,-,,v it—Cambria, P -see, for llonolaht.
3—Triton, White, lor Sew /. tland and New Bedford.
;i_(Uvinpia, Ryan, t-< cruise.
MEMORANDA.
3—Oeneral Teate, Lemeroier, Ibf Hew '/.inland.
4—CoulaJncourt, Labaate, for Tahiti.
13" Bark Phillip Wat. Blsson, 4(1 days (root Mercury Hay,
I—Gob. H'll:ml;i«>..l, Uannandarts, fir Tahiti
experienced heavy weather, and atremendonsgsleof wind from
4— Prudent, Hamilton, for Honolulu.
the 24th to 27th Oetol>er, in hit.-11 36, longs MB* \\. Lost
4—lohn Coßpeshall, Lambert, to cruise.
main yard, topsailyard, topgallant maat and yard, bowsprit cap,
4—Nil, OrandsaAfrne, f"r New Zealand.
nobatay, jib and Bytngßbsboom, loot with sail, alsofour boats.
:,—Henry raber, Ewer, to craws moth.
The gale eeeasssneed from the B. X., blew eight hours, then
111., Morten, f-T Mew Zealand
a—
'I'll,. v,», Is ,,(,1,,. !',,.,,|,„iiv sni! i,
sinii-montlily. a,„l
shifted suddenly to the W.S.W., and lasted W> hours.
7—Kluabellr, Ani'tn'til, fur New Zealand.
\XT Bark Piemen reports having been in the same pale, am)
Wlllard, Tor llinmlulu.
n—Minerva,
lost fore am) main topgallant mast, bulwarks, boats, fee.
11—Antelope, Potter, to cruiae Booth.
Report of hark Van far .--heft San Kranciseo November 6, at
Crowelt, to cruise Booth.
11—
9 o'clock A.!.. with wind from W.B.W. Had Ught breeaa un12 —Columbia, Poller, to cruise nn tin- Urn
til the l,Uh, when it hanled to southward. Sighted Hawaii
McCleare, far Coast of CaUfornia
13—Vigilant,
bearing&Mr. at f> o'clock A. M. on the iHth. At 12 H.OO
13—[*anoda, Wiilard. to cruise South.
the lfttli ea»t end of Oahu ban south, Dimond Head distant 19
)*—Hudson, Murslon, for Honolulu.
miles.
i:i— Florence, C'h.'tinplin, to cruis i to<' lain-.
i!,t,i„le,!to(tl,,' |.|.ii„ii,a llio|.|!,,ii,l('oiii|,ai..,,"I' to XV >!!>«>»
<XT Tho following whales!.ips have sailed from New Bud ford
14—Phoenix, Hinckley, for Honolulu.
»!«»». I',„,,,,„,', ial A,.',ol osili,' Coin,,any i.l I'mlaloa. »ill
for theNorth Parilie 0.-canI—Sept.1 —Sept. 15, ship Pocahontas, Dannie;
Li—Governor Troup, Milton, for Honolulu.
18th, Nfaarod. Howes} tHaL Clnoas, W. 11. Luce-, 22<1, St.
14—('lianipioii, Collin, for Mar pari ta Bay.
Oaofgo. J. C. Pease 1 Oroalmbo, t. Pease; 2od, Kosseau, Ureen.
14—TVnjainin Kush, Wyatt, to emise.
lulu, isi„i,l«i, I, I ,|„,i,ls. ai„l is ,,i>|,i>n',l tolun.isli nvocyrc«,ui»it«
XT Whale.ships at New Bedford and I'airliawn bOOOH to
IS—Joseph MeiKgs, Coffin, for Rtw Bedford,
Nofth Paciiic:—America, Bryant I Chandler Price, Uolcomb,
Dean, to ornJsa on tin* Line.
Cowptr.
F. 3UV,
Oct. 1; Euphrao s. Heath, do| Geo. 1 lowland, I'oincroy, do;
10_Walter Boott, Collins, to erui<e.
Levi Starbuck, \\ ..h rnegan 3d,dot L.O. Rtehnwod, llathaway,
(Iratiuide, OorneD, for Tiilcahuano.
8,1,
Co..
Ilunolulll
04.>2ln
«.
!l.
l>a,iiM!i>
do; Maria Tnersaa, OuOC, do; Montreal, Soul**, do, Muctef Jen. Scott, Cloogfa, to cruise on t ho Line.
auma, Tinker, dv ■, Ohio, Carnit, do i Thomas Nye, Holly, do •,
'21—Bark Massachusetts, Oreen, for Taicahuaii"
Wm. C. Nye, Soule, do-, UellenSnow, Nye, do | Manuel Orter,,
I»It.
5!>l!^»I.
Trident, Tabcr, to cruisw Souih.
Arab,f,riiimll, do,
Hasard,d-»;
-J—Mary L. Putton, Sisson. for >'c*' BudBail
«"Jen Wa-'hint'tou, Bright m»n. do ■ Java, R-*.vtv>r, do Oregon.
Arnolds, Barren', to crnis* 1Bontb>
Tobey. do; J, A Ribh, taker, do. L. t. Mason. Bang 30 |
ajassaohnanns, ChatOeld, f*>r H-nMul-i an'l rrujsa.
MARINE JOURNAL.
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Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
The Friend (1857)
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
The Friend - 1857.12.01 - Newspaper
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1857.12.01