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                  <text>THF
E
RIEND.

187*.

Jim*.

*\
«

Editor. T.bla

• •*•

Intelligence

*}

Tot Divint Tragedy

«•

i.illle

a

at

Yanlwt Etomeni In Turkey

*J
«J

U. •. Treaty with Samoa

*J

Pottry—Starlight

*•

Marine Journal

it

appears

a

JUNK

aided

during the past year,

tionalities, viz

Austrian,

otic

:

of

In

28th, he

our

we

Hawaiian

death,

the Hawaiian Par-

dates back

acquaintance

to

the associate of the Rev. Mr. Doane.
he has been

During the past twelve years
most

devoted

Society

sionary

Honolulu in

1868,

sail

departure

place
Rev.

his

of the-

missionary

to

labor

memory by
attend his funeral, which

taking part

in the services.

ad-

took
the

May 29th,

Pogue, Parker and

on

The

an

Kawaiahao Church

Messrs.

1872

to

Bingham

He leaves

a

fam-

children, but we are happy to
ily of young
learn that they are provided for among friends.
Mills' Seminary.—The annual catalogue
There

flourishing condition.
with the

Seminary

246

pupil*, taught by

able corps of thirteen teacher*.
the

ily

we

congratulate

the Rev.

principals,

which has crowned their

to

the State of

most

the

The

success

praiseworthy

Seminary

is

an

and

honor

California, and decidedly

flourishing Female Seminary

Rocky Mountains.

an

Most heart-

Dr. and Mrs. Mills, in view of the

energetic plans.

a most

connected

are

Long may

it

j

that

dur-

8,321.22
12,504 15
has been

yearly expenditure

their wisdom in
intact.

The interest

with the

amount

ships and
the

other

the same,

on

ordinary

occupies

This Association

sphere of usefulness

tant

munity,

and

lends

a

in

island

helping hand

Law

among

more

than

west

the
of

prosper.

thirty

these islands have

making
their

people.

It ha* worked well.

cellent law.
that

joy
as

a

few

the

the

of

privilege

so a

imagine

petition

We

Legislature.
that

getting

Honolulu,

in

circulating

It appears

to

cannot

honorable

drunk the
to

this

be

for

was

reached.

one

to

petition

law.

Not

sustained,

ruin

law,
do

has

So

been

to
an

inap-

the native*

foreigners.

Englishmen and
such

a

are
trying to pass just
the law will be
only Ao we hope
but
more
stringently enforced.

The natives

rapid

enter-

long as
they stand on far higher

peal for equal rights!

Americans

to

and
repealing this wholesome

tbe

ground than

is

moment

duce

this

en-

presented

body would

are

passing

away

sufficiently

without adding force tp the agents of
and

Hutchison

death.

Read

the report

There
and

spectators,

of

Dr.

Health.
ih behalf of the Board of

$100

to

were

large attendance

was a

amount

of

retired,

We

?"

German

our

frequent remark

the

chanced

was

sales

opium

consumers,

man.

per

But

amount, for

cigars
is

spirits,

to

not

aye

after all,

dwelling
think

greater

not

over

this
cast

one

want

or

for

good people of
in-

$16 for each inhabitant!

opium smoking
sinners

than

Chinamen

some

in Jerusalem aodelsewhere.

without sin

about

if any

spend $600,000,000 for

the United State*

no

Verity

The

of

five times that

moralise, he will
to

toxicating liquors,
Perhaps

a tax

many for-

nothing

say

materials for reflection.

are

Our Chi-

Supposing they

have we

and other luxuries?

disposed

license for

it would be

eigners who spend twice,

that
year

the group would

probably 2,500.

only

last

Bold for $13300.

population throughout

our

overbear

to

merchant* remark

$50,000, while the

to

exceed

$20

of

sum

period

nese

are

of

heard, "$21,000 !" and "who pays this

large

not

most

maintained.

was

As the crowd

one

silence

profound

same

effect

The great argument

sustain

to

a most ex-

salutary law.
signers

law

think that native* should

now

foreigners;

a

intoxicating liquors

This has been

varying from $5

was

promptly

the natives of

resolutely sustained

it taboo to sell

own

year*

and

;

offered, until the final bid of $21,000

that
For

the fourth bid

as

an-

$5,000

Bids

amounted

Hawaiians.

were

complied.

offered.

com-

when all

compliance

bidders

two

thus

having

as

the gross

Liquor

Only

terras.

deposit the

of

guarantee

then followed $500 bids, until $13,000

was

impor-

most

a

a

as

promptly offered

was

to meet

others fail.
Maine

with the

the time

Treasury.

our

the

specified

of $2,000

together

is sufficient

demands upon the

to

the sale, and among them it

stated that each bidder must

of

from life member-

accruing

sources,

was

of sell-

privilege

He

year.

fund

original

their

keeping

one

sum

nounced

$10,825.37

period,

highest

was

of receipts from

....

he

tho Interior

one

one na-

existence, it ap-

hand,

on

tain the idea of

of this Seminary indicates that it is in

amount

were

to

conditions of

her

preparations
vessel.

Russian,

Scotchman,

period of its

The average

board the Morning

on

making

was

to

on ac-

on

honored his

Legislature
at

again
retire

for his former field of

again

journment

to

illness, who died

Honolulu

passage
Mr. Aea
Star.

tho

but returned

his

of his wife's
to

to

He visited

finally being compelled

work,
count

Micronesia.

in

German,

one

sell

bidder the

—

12 o'clock.

at

the Minister of

ing opium for

seven

Expenditures during

a

Hawaiian Mis-

of the

servant

one

na-

the

thirty minutes

May 31st,

opened by stating that

by

authorized

$416.06. The membersappear to have shown

for then we found him a
year 1861,
aTdent and devoted missionary on the
young,
island cf Ebon, one of the Marshall Group.
was

1852

May

the

He

entire

the

Amount

time of his

and

total
pears that the
the

record

estimable

chaplain of

was

liament, but

sorrow

most

the

At

preacher.

H. Aea.

Rev.

unfeigned

this

of

the

Manila,

one

following

English.
reviewing the Society's operations

tive of

187a.

1,

Irish,

two

to

the

They comprise

salesroom,

his

The speaker

of

amount

about

lecture—speaking

at

that fifteen beneficiaries have been

$395.45.

ing

death

There

From the

the

Esq., Auctioneer, delivered

E. P. Adams,

the Treasurer, Mrs. M. E. Carter,

report of

Chinese,

FRIEND.

THE

It is with

Society held its

the residence of His

but naturalized American,

Death

OpiumLecture.

Society.

the

full attendance of members.

was a

\m Series, 001. 36

41

•

**.«

Youo« Men. Christian Association

litre t Ultlt, There

anniversary

1872.

I,

Ex. J. Mott Smith in Nuuanu Valley.

••«

eoaalblt Future of Japan

MLaionary

twentieth

««

Islands

Hamoa, or Navigator

24th,

Friday, May

On

Pant

__

'.

Editorials

Friend

Stranger’s

CONTENTS
Par

JUNE

HONOLULU,

gt0.1.!

$eto Series, M. 21.

matter, and
the first

others

Reader,

let him that is

itone.

N. B.—Since the above

was

written,

we

that a tobacco license
have heard it suggested

would have
a rum

brought

an

equal

amount,

license would sell for $100,000!

the Hawaiian Islands

fully civitixed.

may be

while

Verily

regarded

as

�1' 11 X

42

N 0,

XXIX

United t*»«te*

The

SamoaIslands.
N,aovigator

J I

M:,

18.

Exrrloriag Expedition

under Wilkes visited (be group in
the last

By
cisco

there

Stewart,

with

rival

It

translated

by

It

the British

hy

remains

be

to

the

"

accept

Protectorate

a

pending, let

is

inquire

whether
for

possessions
ment

th&lt;;

the

the

mean-

States Govern-

United

to

they

'

■ three-ship expedition

Turner in his
The

sia."

French

in

followed

Nineteen Years

"

1787, and

Tutnila, there occurred
M. dc

tenant
ten

Langle

sailors, but
known.

not

how

while

the

and

bloody

as

Turner remarks in
The

to

could be

regard

proportionate
and shoot

principle

a man

for

a

of

not

pecting

the

oo

prising

the

and

South

:

was,

sense

life for

tooth,

a

abide

must

to be

on

avenged,

some

following

next

the

unsus-

Seas,

1836 six mission

their
no

went

more

men

to

They

were

of similar

and prosperous

South Seas.

the

native teach-

people.

In

under the patron-

this

faithful and

preach

Samoan Mission has been
successful

missions in

Missionary Society,
on

Pacific

would

They

fruits and

most

of

are

volcanic

and

They

formation,

all

and

high.

Breadfruit,

productive.

cotton

The

4,000 feet

are over

did

they

reefs.

coral

by

the

attention of

and business

speculators

cial and
art

"

islands of

the

on

occupied

area

about

equal

purchased

Tutuila,

on

com-

and

group,
earnest

men

the gospel among

subsequently
spirit;
one

fol-

hence the

of the

most

minions in

the

is

organized

the isl-

or

protection of

the

these

one-fourth

principal

after

supplying

and

guano

This is

the

islands,

ships (whale ships

to

by German

United

Government

States

the protectorate of these islands?

Oh, friends, if there is

and

The
would

of

whole

part

it

in

origin, great
in

thing

in

of God; great

in

one

is the Bible

great

thought, great
in

beauty, great

acres

230,000

the

world,

this

power, great in

purchases

now centres

and

upon

the island

island,

and

extinct

crater.

it, she is
A

from

but

it

has

view.

harbor is

recently

more

by the officers of the United
commanded

Narragansett,

ship

a sea

description of this

been surveyed

Captain

out

an

has entered

vessel

a

entirely shut

of

the south side of the

land-locked, being

. When

given by Wilkes,

States

on

perfectly

good

very

harbor

commodious

It is

Pango-Pango.

Meade.

During

the visit

vessel, Captain Meade negotiated
cial treaty with

Tutuila,

Pango.

or

the chiefs

rather

of

This treaty

March, 1872, and

of

by
this

a

commer-

in

heaven's

and all
ness

It

hangs

there like

a

tune

the

for

into it

celestial harp

it, and

the

;

awake

a

It

us.

of the

the harbor of

was

signed

on

promulgated

was

Pango-

the 2d of

by

required, this harbor will be made
station of the Australian

group

would

the

not

at

If

coaling

population

63,000, but Turner, in 1883,

population

probably

to

36,000,

exceed 30,000.

isl«nd of Tutuila there

diviner

a

to

note

it, and

of

it discourses

and salvation.

it, and it talks
immortal
his

The
to

strain of

bends

an

The
on

alway,

you

world."

"

dying

it, and

through tbe fires
Be of
"

not

an

ear

to

and

lays

man

there steals
"

Lo,

1

am

through the

overflow

thou shah

good cheer, I

comes

the end of the

When thou passest

they shall

waters

feels

Intercessor,

unto

even

of

conso-

him of
repentance

thence into his soul the promise,
with

hangs

daughters

The sinner

saint

kingdom.

trembling

to

him of

hand

sweet-

joy strikes it, and

gladness.

by

not

have

thee,

and

be burned."

overcome

the

The last enemy that shall be de"
This mortal shall
is death."
stroyed
put
immortality, and this corruptible shall
on

put

on

"

incorruption.and death shall be swal.

lowed up in victory."
Where is

promise,

where

where is song like this!

is
philosophy,
Magnify the word

of God '.—Rev. E. E. Adams.

steamers.

Wilkes in 1839 estimated the

reduces

a

sa-

The hand of

lation.

as

Highest,

light, life, love and

down

come

promise,

purpose, great in

its results !

golden cord from the throne of

a

world !

island of

lutes and other accessory demonstrations.

of the

as-

This

question.

great

of Tutuila, because upon this island is found
beautiful

and

merchants resident upon the islands.

Will the

is the

co-

but is

largely produced,

forward

principally carried
English

of

commerce

recruits

group.

the

for-

some

vessels), consists of traffic in

oil.

coanut

sorrow

Much interest

be

to

strong

a

power.

The

three

Upolu and Savaii.

by

eign

It is

until

re-

unfor-

been

Mr. Stew-

thirty thousand (330,000)

of land—loo,ooo

any

affairs,

of

their agent, and

as

report, he has

hundred and

out at

bloody and

not cease

central government

The Samoan Commer-

Agricultural Company."

to

break

to

these

to

will

they

ands pass under

sume

men

has

company

a

has visited the islands

according

ready

TheBible.

San Francisco, where

organized, entitled

feared that

tropical

grow in abundance.

vegetables

are

slumbering embers of

battles among the natives.

tunate

instances these

the islands if

sight

surrounded

are

be-

longitude,

west

We

England.

or

like

was

All writers upon Samoan

visitors, refer

cent

"

some

families,

enter-

John Williams,

among

labors

forth

heathen.

by

part unvis-

In 1830 the

the Rev.

of the London

probably

century the

most

resolute apostle of

missionaries

menced

half

°

It

Turner, Williams, Wilkes, Prichard, and

24

Australian
upon the track of the

bananas, coffee,

of

that vengeance

but

visited the islands, and left

lowed

a

case

ited and much dreaded.

the

Dr.

visitor who may
subsequently follow."

Daring

ever

as

massacre

keen

trifle, they

guilty,

Samoans remained for

age

about

occurrence

It is certain

and alas, it is often the

or

was

treach-

will go
upon the dis-

men

consequences.

ers

at

of Lieu-

a

South

the

learn that' the

to

1857,'

to

years.

of the Roses in

war

of

the islands of

on

of nine

period

a

moment.

These beautiful islands have attracted the

Parouse

imagined.

a

in

and 173

168 °

call.

art account

raged
bloody war
Upolu and Msnua from 1849

warfare still exist,

islands form Ihe group, and

situated

directly

gives

which

chiefs

warfare

perpetual petty

Turner

for supremacy.
a

sorry

10

line of steamers, and in

Polyne-

natives is

as

this

to

nations have

justice, and that if

the

Dr.

only inference, probably, which ought

that heathen

falls

the

group

be drawn from this tragic

the

in

massacre

which

race,

far from the truth

"

Wev.

This unfortunate circumstance

branded the natives of the
erous

lie

government
rival

organized, but

have carried forward

during

100

......

The soil is rich and

recruiting

of

7

mountains of Savaii

and another officer and

many

9

Apoliiini,

are

stable central

no

been

ever

the

Manono,

just

La

navigator

240

the Dutch

the

asserts

—so

"

under the command

"

Rogenwein

of

Tutuila

13° 30'and 14° 30' south latitude.

annex to

discovered

were

560

These eight

they

Unfortunately
has

•

Ofoo,

not

hundred years ago (1772) by

:

Oloosinga,

and

It appears that
one

the follow-

on

Upolu,

steamers

their dominions.

authority, the group

miles,

700

tween

While

be desirable

they would

any other government

or

in

this

Savaii,

these

over

in

us

or

to

Manna, ........

United

gift,

gems of the South Seas."

question

time

language

whether the

seen

extend

manner

beautiful

hundred and

German Consuls.

and

States Government will
any

islands

English missionaries,and duly

of the

one-

certified

ing

represented

Samoan

According

group.

contains 2,650 square

These documents

into the

183$, and

thoroughly explored and surveyed the whole

signed by the

one

twenty-one petty chiefs.
were

was

was

chief* and

high

docu-

Navigator Isl-

or

of cession

petition

messenger, i. B.

a

properly signed

the United States.

to

that the
two

forward

went

Esq.,

ceding the Samoa

ments,

and*

sailing Jor San Fran*

steamer

1.

were,

in

and

it

On the

1866,3,948.

17 There

sight than

is

not

in the world

a

nobler

aged and experienced Christian, who, having been sifted in the sieve of
an

temptation, stands forth as
assaulted,

a

comforter of the

testifying from his

own

trial* tbe

�THE

j Hebraistic stylo.

EditorsT
’
able.

"Ka

the

gratulate

Hawaiians
book.

Himbni Hawaii."—We

Buke

the

on

publication

The Rev. L.

work

for this

Homer,

one

educate school

we

ministers.
ians

teachers,

The writers of
have

to

appear

'

few.

: Lyric poets

.

....

Ellis and

95

.

i

9
.

Bingham and Lyons,

HArmstrong
O. Forbes,
A.

Anonymous,

.

.

It is

undeserved

no

written

this

been

Lyons has

Watts of Hawaii nei.

the

styled

Some of

his

doubt not, will be

we

the

Lyric

of

reputation

being

and laborious of

Aside from

of

the

has

his

pursued
has

he

preaching,

or

be

headings

calling.

invoked

His

waiian nation.

hymns

rites among the people,for he writes
aided

inspired, being greatly

the

of the

matic and

peculiar style, speaking

it like

ing

Union
ical

Salvation !

From Greenland's

If

where

Mass.,

some

praise,

his

asserted
he
man

he

he

Village
was to all

aocnote from

towns

:

to

My days

the

has

supervision
The

native

born in

employ

The

ran

nor

wishM

Society

I shall

I

to

to

not

years,

prise.

I

t» rite."

in

a

native

that

not

Hawaiian.

to a want

of

a

This

poetical

they

arc

hymn

for like

gifted

with

style

arc

It is

not

of

(he

fond of writing snugs,

is

owing

Hebrews

poetical
a

cle-

peculiar

Lyric
or

by

the abo-

the

a

in their natures, but it is of
or

be

cannot

talent among

of the islands,

of old,

single

style.

nicies, in

gion

at

the

.

subjects,,
of

the

state

in

the

hostility

which is

iv

a

very

controls

to

be

the

undertake the

already,

Buddhism,—and
to

be

should
the reli-

the nation.

of the

fast

April

of the souls and

religion
past
ebbing,

If

the

to

selves

the Christian

among

world, they would
decree.

If

linppiness

glory
be

is

to

likely

at

to

nations of the
to

and

make such

a

Europe and Amer-

school

day

done

right;

it.

our

miles from here,

also the church

got

the

timbers
lam

parsonage.

The

improvements take

done without

the

help

is

of the
1...1n

two

are

,1,,.

a

new

ap

little

as

more

become of

from Boston

Morning Star,

1V,,,,,

be

work

I

than
mc

me

?

can

never
em-

if Mr.
If

by

tho

next

will you

not

send

sa.las.jtaV"

a

these works

All

my time,

to

to

sooli

some

putting

churches tall upon

to conic

grotlml

here also have

missionary.

knew before what it is
but what is

the

go down

the frame for

We

fen-

a

building will

people

out

Ona.

at

Some

The people

on

to

at
re-

my

The boards and

good school-house.

Doane's

most

boy pupils.

have been added, and

commenced getting

;

giving

The

held communion services.

new one.

parsonage

ployed

his

mncli

so

Onn,

at
to

by

ten
as

of the materials of tho old

pretty

in

nicely
sick

them all since

frame the house.

into the

came

One is

The natives of this church

I have visited

a new

be

them-

ihey

;

Star.

on

our

their

on.

a

Japalap,

do

to

Kiti have

for

and

number

Mohil

excommunicated ones restored.

towards Chris-

the. wealth, ihe prowess and the

nf the nations of

turn,

get

us.

one at

trying

are

should all pass

and if the rulers should conclude that

away,
the short road

!

the

with

been

they

among

interested in the school and every-

about

eighty-six in all

surprised if,

and of

1 and

has

teaching I get

are

i thing

Herald :

should

of the

not

opened

interest

two men

getting

the

It is very

them.

Morning

hours of each

two

Kiti.

published

regulator

\

•We

letter of the

government, which

and

some

rrom

the otfier

1 have

,

I have

in the

well.

doing

their work, and

awakening

are

well,

very

that he does

the

under

me

Wellington inl-

and

with

:

the first mail

how much

sec

school

our

studies;

of Japan.

a

to

their letters

wives in

with

the pro-

Ascension

or

us

Mobil,

to

the

island called

little

well

plensed

seem

referring

his associate,

Ponape

on

all

arc

pleased

are

back wilh

W. Clark.

of Shintooism—as it has

mistaken

tianity,

They

| doing

und which feels itself

measure,

of

teachers

our

and

night,"

copy from

Missionary

the

of its

| abolition

.

we

be much

guardian

| bodies

change, his place.

tbe varying hour

sole

Future

H. Gulick,

! everything,

seek Tor power

or

to

from

the

on

and upon

church members.

in New York

perfect

under date

After

Saturday brought

encouraging

neatly printed by

been

Possible

number of the

parson of the

bis godly race.

skili'd to raise the wretched Uian

&gt;Ye notice

They

of the

us

of the Rev. E.

following

Rev. O.

that

year ;

a

i

days."

my

be

can

separated.

lie thus describes

the work

"Last

;

'tis of thee."

My country,

Watchman, tell

decree tbe Christian

ment

nil

thus

the wife of

Mr. Doane,

J Wellington,

delight."

through

"

few

Tar other aims lilt heart had learn'ri
More

a

' Rev.

gliding swiftly by."

are

righi

some cor-

there exist, and alsn
which

Rev. Mr. Sturges writes

people

expense of the Hawaiian Board, and

"

lawn,

By dor.lriues faahion'd

rigines

familiar

icy mountains."

land of pure

"

the

which

two are

the sickness of

"

of

the country dear,

he

Nor s'cr had chang'd,

Ilnpractle'd he

was

might

And patting rich with forty pounds

type

a

American Tract

future Goldsmith should arise

poet's language describing

t

There is

The book

idio-

and writ-

but

jof

sound."

joyful

depart-

embassy

into the

gain

so

November 28th, 1871.

and.

Oh the

the

Mis onaryMicronesia.
fInrteoligemnce

which may

College, 1827, and Auburn Theolog-

sing

A

perfect

most

graduate

a

Seminary, New York, 1831,

1807.

I

in its

He is

.

native

a

of Colrsin,

to

language

where the

i They

"

fall

In

Wouhi

course.

complete separation between

state

religious liberty

The

as-

in Mada-

the

a

and

country,

our

ex-

complotc

who accompany the

:

"God of my life,

poetically

his

by

knowledge

under

in his-

regretted

in the

Ta-

translations from

hymns,

recognized

"

"

great favo-

are

are

bo

to

officers connected with

idea of the

only

Let every mortal ear attend."

the great benefit of the Ha-

to

hymns

English

our

readily

"

Muse,

of these

strange
Ihe mi&gt;-

repeated

course

going abroad, might

of thot

the

"

has

missionary work

often

so

a

be

not

repent

church and state, will tend

religion

gress of

Many

Over mountains and

men.

honorably

most

of

church and

gascar.

patient

most

is

should

Japan

the

rect

In

the last quarter

during

name

union of church and

every

that

hands iv

more

at

consequence t'f

in

character of Chris-

this nation from such

now

He is

labored

lie

true

save

hither and assisted the Amer-

his

century

a

to

1832,

He

he

Ihe

of the United States,

separation

sn

one

He has been

years.

one

he

through valleys

is

Waimea and

Hawaii since

on

forty

last

life

early missionary

tho best of

Hainakua districts

during the

four years.

the

maintained by

friend of missions, and the

true

every

ample

Isaac

interested

the natives of

laboring among

or

on&lt;-e

of

But it would

It would be

that

It is

indeed

us

ment of

hold

hymns

at

in

Hoddesdon, England.

readers

Poet of Hawaii

of the American missionaries.

Lyric

in

came

by

The

sec

the

to

as

lias been.

tory.

since he left the islands, and

here three

residing

to

been

take which has hepn

or

hymns

have

if the rulers of

Bingham,

in this collection.

years

sociated with the

learn that

gratifying

of the Rev. Mr. Ellis'

tianity,
state

delight

by Mr. Lyons

hundred

one

ican missionaries, and
our

of the

the Rev. Mr.

is

It

only resided

of

abroad,

discussed

nearly

volume.

hiti, then
Rev. Mr.

style

familiar with the subject.

: than forty

the

for Ihe

We should

hymns.

missionary,

| honored plnce

that

compliment

the

as

shall

of the former
religions

action would

ignorance

to com-

one

612

.

in

compose

a

English

some

now

Total

Hawaiians,

it

leader, and

people, why

slate.

Such

our

bo the

must

decree that

not

place

land, which

the

have

they

difficult

as

they

take the

Ton-

for

topic,

2

5

but

should

prove

or

this

; some

.

.

to

3

I

.

not

-

decide what is good for the

must

themselves

as

the eovernment

ss

poetical,

Perhaps

of

stylo

to Christianity, why should not
they have tho steam
adopt it,
And
boat, the railroad'and the telegraph?

owing

are

this nstiou

Poly-

or

to see

' has

10

■ Bishop

the

pioneer

29

Bingham, .

Kllis,

fact,

own.

authors of these

hymns

and

would find it

native poets

458

Bingham,

in

pose

yet issued for Hawaiians :

Lyons

known

a

of their

style

the honor of furnishof

is

' opposite

The

shape

not

This fact does

musical

not

are

ica

even

Watts,

of

that Hawaiians, Tahitians, Samoans

! gans

as

hymns for Hawai-

do

thoughts

style

An Hawaiian

j after that fashion.

and

engineers

complete compilation

most

one

order

to

been very

following authors have
ing the

nesian's

in the

Cowper.

or

doubt whether

singer of Israel," could

hymns

43

18.1.

JINK,

We

"sweet

have written

; Wesley

is but

Watts,

one

be educated

cannot

i

noble and

a

There

people.

Horace,

one

Lyons; poets

hymn

a new

the

! David,

song among

of

perform

to

con-

of Waimea, Ha-

Lyons,

waii, has been spared
useful

sacred

lovers of

FRIEND,

no

trip
on

�THE

44

tRIKND,

JUNE,

1872.

CYhoMriusetnagH
A’cof onolulu.
Edited by

member of the Y. M. C. A.

a

Christ

are

belongs
Creeds.

noble

Rev. Walter Freer preached
sermon

he

this

on

Church

the

gave

subject

the Fort

at

the 19th of

on

interesting

an

Street

last month, in which
the

history of

and showed how from the

apostolic

confession of

simple and

faith; in

reverent

Christ, tbey

length platforms

at

losophy

Christian

of elaborate

pious
In

thought

and learned

in

creeds

the

the

which demands

iifessiou of iaith of

I)

insisting that a

methods of
have

rich

given
as

ictrinal
sary, but

the

the

a

this

and

pulpit and

to

the

the confession of

not to

that faith in Christ which is the admission

to

ail

bodies of his

followers who bear his

the

church,

We

it

regard

which

practice

tioned, and

taken, that

which

church

on

them, the acceptance of
unsettled

tation of

points,

vine

of

or

of love

to

of

or

of God, and

to

with

interpre-

Hodge

For any church

to

new

following unmistakable,

on

quiry,

The

that what He requires

condition for admission
is

Heaven,

admission

are

ceives.

sion

to

nn

bovond

as a

kingdom

nothing less

degree

beyond

salvation,

required

on

is

can

that

of

definite

is

be demanded.

communion which
the

credible

in

Noth-

be demanded.

necessary

nf

to

terms

have been

profession

re-

confes-

All those

insist

of

its

on

who

judgment,

personal
In

faith

set
in

his

both

do

are

poem

favors

"

a

in the

autocracy of
It

despotisms.

of the Church and of his

subject, expressed

in the

pression

his

similar

or

As the

Christ's

give

but

;

it

is

a

confession much less

these

to

the

test

is the

new

that opens

password

to

prepared for

them.

with other

men

to

;

too

But will

has

not

stand

all

disapprove

the

there

are

jority of

the

ing

of

is

to

them

a

hit wheat.

of the drama follow each other
order of the

chronological

New Test-

In the temptation in the wilderness,

recognizes

the

crafty

and

politic Lucifer

Legend, whose diabolic

marked with absolute genius

are

I

"

cannot thus

delude him

onetemptation

still

to

efforts

:

perdition !

rtmsias untried.

The trial of hla pride,

distracted

Surelj by these

a

crisis of life
to

the

be al-

of

as a

of

variously

Oth-

poet.

of

these
to

a

whom

comes

illumined

his

as

the

by

the

Solomon.

Life

are

are

reverent

of

the circumstances

beautifully drawn
in

Here

words

hour with this

And

the

se-

valley

of the

brightness

of the

announcement
"

j

from the

Manahem,

Dead Sea, overshadows the

to

Christ:

thou, the Anointed !

1 see as ia a vision
Why art thou here F
A figure clothed in
purple, crowned with thorn. ■
I ate a cross uplifted in the darkness.
And hear

a

cry of agony, that shall echo

Forever and forever through th. world !

read-

poetic

" In

the synagogue

ended

the

at

'*

man.

It

Christ, rich with

Nazareth, Christ

discourse which

so

fellow-townsmen :
■No man

tender and

new

songs

Cana,

ton

"

ma-

rendering

a new

peasant's

Essenian prophet from the

vere

But

drama.

perhaps

in

miracle

wedding

Song

has been

a humble

latt may be undone !

marriage

tbe first

lo hit
la hit

a

hand :

tht ntrtrmost

"

At

renown

Tragedy

Gospels,
of

hit

to

garner

burn the chaff in tht brand

scenes

a

Tragedy.

matter

his readers,

of the

unloose,

Ghost !

heat '

the idea of the work, and

those, and

inspiration

to

worthy

of the Golden

In

poem

bis

subject

of the Divine

water

Repent! repent! repentl

ament.

the sacred
think that he has erred in making

story

"

Aod fire of unquenchable

But

too

solemn

Divine

to

in the

one

It

Some reviewers say that in it he

added

The

the

last

Longfellow's
criticised.

antnot

Whose lan is In

as

intrude.
The

ya tht way of tht Lord j

He will purge

that God

for human differences and opinions
lowed

the sea,

He shall baptise you wilh Or.

Apos-

solemn

and

hampered

things

hand,

The thirst ofpower, the fever ofambition!

be

to

at

hit paths straight

Hit floor, and

above.

grand and incomparable possibilities
It is

Baptist

:

tht voice of one

And with the Hoi,

ex-

1 believe!

Credo!

I am

I

prin-

creed of

hardly

given by Dr. Hodge quoted

We believe in creeds.

the

on

of the Lord shall be

I indeed baptise
you wilh
Unto repentance
; but tie
That cometh after me,

practice,

than the

the Fort Street Church would

as

narrative

John the

coming says

"

this

on

that followed,

simple

original

In tht land that it desolate!

and

he modified such

We learn that the

words

doubtless in

la migbtltr than I and
higher i
The latcbet ofwhose shots

understood him, and favored, in

tles' Creed.

own

has

surprising,

of the

style

waters cover

Prepare

so

of theFounder

preaching

explanation

he

Crying In the wilderness alone ,

inconsistent

sympathy

ones,

he has

by transposition.

And encircle Ihe continent!"

apostles.

Mr. Frear, in

of Christ,

save

Gospels,

Christ's

Make

religious

is

teachings and practice

Though

the

became

Master,
and his

And all the land

worthy alone of those

liberty

ad-

man.

For the kingdom ol God Is

aod

investigation

renown

moment

Repent! repent ! repent!

"

is

a

reputation

metrical form.

a

preaching

the

have

not

may

of

its

places sacrificed the metrical symmetry

the

in-

to

his

to

for

mission of the

own

them,
to

in the

added

not

words

the

and

delight,

doubt in this sincere of-

influence as

giving

In this anxiety

some

re-

not

we

the life and

hardly changed

sup-

doctrine, the

acceptance

when Christian

ages

with the

ability

or

intellectual

to

a

to

enlarged

they

partisan

a

fering

make

association of churches

or

by applicants

opportunity

ers

no

to

nar-

which

poet,

a

mit, he has without

thousand

a

with venerable associa-

articles,

as

among

influences of

sweet

Full of the knowledge

condition of

earth.

to

as

kingdom

knowledge,

which

sympathy with

no

be, of honest and thorough

to

rule

receive all those whom Christ

ISo

of church

be

His

and

more

We

to

to

into His

and

confession

the

which Christ has laid down for admission

his church is,

a

part of the Church

may be

statement

a

and learn-

"

terms:

full

a

it may

sult

con-

such

607th page enforces this Christian law in the

ing

adopt

has

Religion,

and

the Di-

religious

belong

in his

Theology

on

as

on

whole, how the

doubtful doctrinal

that

naturally

Dr.

confession.

right

pf joining

uninspired

be

can

a

pages.

ques-

anything beyond the confession

which

ed work

earth has

Christ and faith in him

Son

viction

exception

no

carry

scenes

belong to'this class.

book with

the

us

gious philosophy.

we

intelligently

those desirous

of

require

be

cannot

to

no

absolute law of church

as an

with

of

only

not

as

and would aim

its

by

the

have read

of

We

moved.

of

ciples

name.

We

he

unsettled points of belief and reliporter of

his Universal Church, and which should be
to

a

it

hoary

privilege,

nearly lost

neces-

principles

tions, that would lower this standard or
row

unbiblical.

valuable and

and

years old

dark

and

the

itself

have

we

opinion, though

doors,

the world such formid-

to

truest

regard

to

earth, and

on

any

letter

church

the

not

Universal,of theKingdom which is in Heaven

yet,

doctrinal

has

churchman,

insight and portrayal of the
which

If the author has

but also

representative,

to

and

Apostles,

the

are

broad

and

polity.

earth is entitled

simple

the Athanasian creed and

they belong
room,

to

plead again for'the

to

to

statements

conference

increasing religious

artificial

similarly

lers

showed

preacher

a return

opening

le documents

of

necessity of

creed should be

tement, he seemed

I

by

investigation

and

use

the church,

sympathy with
ding

I

an

who

one

a

which

grand

a

We believe that each Christian church

men.

of the

treating

professions

conclusions reached

religious

the combined

authority

an

This is

theologic phi-

of

sects, and

contending

of

of

the soundest and

of

one

and

became

recognition, by

reputation of being

devel-

origin and

opment of the creeds of the Christian church,

usurpations

Him alone."

to

I

MY

it a Prophet

country, and among his kin.
house no Prophet it
accepted.

own
own

to

you. in Ih? land of Israel

enraged

thus
his

�FRIEND,

THE

CMeYhoriusnta’gsnAssociation.

Wtra BRsriy wMowt In Elijah', day,
Whtn rbr;ibree ytart and
And

,But

a

groat famine

was

unto no oat was

lava lo Sartpta,

And
Ol

I

the

wai a

of them

none

wat

After

cleansed,

the

so

scenes

full of interest pass

so

succession

pictured

Sea of

the

the Corn Field;

:

exciting finale ; Talitha

and

grief and

And then the First

Passover

triumph.

closes with

the story of

its

profound

of

Magdala:

Mary Magdalene in

—Mary

contrasts,

of circumstances

which his

I tit hero In

this

forlorn,

Upon tht lake below me, and the hills
swoon

with heat, and

Merchant, of Tynt .ml

Prince,

And past, and disappear, and

have the essay

arono

of Simon the Pharisee

the house

Thou

Hall

With htr
This
To

me no

hair

own

!

woman hath not

kiss

Anoint not; bat

and also
be free

voted

was

that the

make

to

se-

for

the

Men's

Young

Christian

for

subject

next

Sunday question, Mr. W. W.

is the

the committee

being

the

at

on

the

Thou

them

this woman

My feet with ointment.

Shark's

There

a Little,

Here

klat;

gavttt me no
I came
ceaaed, since
In,

teeth

bored

through

tliee.
tay
Her sins, which have been
many, are forgiven,
For the loved much.

by artificial

them

to

of

purpose

for

evidently

means,

them

lashing

to

wood

for

the

some

it

Though

opium

to

difficult

be

might

weak

100

tho

it

kingdom,

is

absurd

to

cope

into

that with

say

right law, aided by the zealous sympathy

the

traffic and

of the authorities, the present

sumption
ened.
for

our

to en-

tirely prevent the importation of opium

might

It is

an

annual

numbers

large numbers of

rapidly

benefited

paid

at

fifty

the

or

twenty

The

this

license

price

year

diabolical

make

to

drinks liable

for

those

by

retailers

of

intoxicating

committed

have

they

and

drug.

damages

caused

or re-

become

to

Legisla-

offered in the

intoxicated, has been

is

paid last year,

than-was

truly

is

revenue

larger
traffic
rapid extension of the

of this

law

our

filthy lucre.

in

cent,

a

in-

population,

our

of fifteen

amount

dollars

auction for

per

ceived

increasing,

the

to

fifty

wholly

and for the moral and phys-

jurious product,
ical ruin of

and

return

of

people

our

foreign

a

In

matter.

paid by

tax

con-

less-

materially

be very

not

important

an

thousand dollars for

A
holes

with

hath anointed

Hence 1

with.

yesrly

the .sale of the

rulers feel

high principled

of

importation

doubt but that the odd

convincing argument which

license is the

Little.

a

no

fifteen thousand dollar* that is realized

showing

same.

the

prevent

by the governmentfrom

thousand

discussion

to

but there is

opium,

use

My head with oil didtt thou

my feet!

It

water for

my feet.
But tht hath washed them with her tears, and wiped

gavttt

The

meeting

:

Christus.
"

question

the

Association's part of the Friend

;"

mora

at

by

members, in

treating

printed,

an

followed

was

without dissent.

supported

sociation,

of Damatcut,

with tbe alabaster box

Mary

and

me.

come to me.

Tht princes and tht merchants

influence

opened by

was

lections from the papers read before the As-

In a vition

Bee at

All my past lifo nnroll itself before

the

on

from other

editing committee should

lonely tower, and look

Other

and then

transpired,

evening

in

position

the Tower

at

taken for

early day.

subject, which

remarks

interesting

to
Cotnpanionlrss. unsatisfied,

the

on

essay

large.

very

was

Dole, the committee, who read

Mr. S. B.

was

That

at an

character

on

at

was

public entertainments,

lectures and readings,

the discussion for the

Cumi, with its wonderful faith, its

"

series of

a

not

read, action

miscellaneous business

satisfactory

its

reports

providing

attendance

were

held

was

The evening

the Demoniac of Gadara,

Galilee ;

with its wierd horrors, its sharp changes, and
its

the

'Jaaman tht Syrian !"

And

the 10th ult.

on

and

rainy

many ltpers wtrt
trael In the Urns of Elissua

Have

regular meeting for May

rooms

widow.

there In tht land

Tht Prophet, and yet

in

The

nst

that

impossible

it is

shut,!

city of BJidon,

to a woman there

And

were

tht land ;

throughout

Elijah

to a

the heaven,

more

45

18.2.

JUNE,

The Guests.
-

O, who, then, it tblt

That pardontth tint alto without

useful

man

"

Woman, thy faith bath tared thee!

Go In peace!"

been

The Second Passover
terriopens with the
of Herod's

tragedy

ble

with the

them for

use

in

as

purpose,

atonementI

Ckristu*.

the

making

Pleiocene

Kingsmill

spears and knives, have

lately discovered

the

islanders

in

the Pleiocene

during

day

just law, and

It

two.

or

as

us

impresses

it will
pass.

hope

we

Narcotics.

This exceed-

would seem to
ingly interesting fact
burning maledictions of Manahem the existence of the human race on

the Essenian:

a

a

England imbedded

formation.

haunted

banquet-hall,

within

ture

Age, forty

or

establish
the earth

fifty

thou-

I

to

may express

habitual alcoholic
the brain

is

conviction that

you my

stimulation of

narcotic

or

compatible with

not

the fullest

"

May the lightning, ofheaven fall
On palace and prison
And their

sand

wall,

desolationbo

consecration of the

years ago.

The Methodists have

At tht day of fear and affliction.
As

States,

With tht burning and fuel of fire.
In the valley of the Sea J "

and

giving

with wonderful skill and

evidence of

the life of the

a

wide

Holy Land

the

lived there,

eighteen hundred

The
tbe

Third

meaning of

is

Passover

drama, and

commences

Divine life

the

of

comes

the

last

with

the

of

tho

light up

the

those

earthly life
agony

and

of

death.

perfect triumph

over

There is
"

entry

the

last

of the world's

whose

Belgium

in

object

! O Ihe pain and darkness !

—whatever that

George Pauncefort

will read Dickens' Christmas Carol and Boots
at.

the

Holly

the 6th inst.,
Street

Tree Inn,
at

Church,

on

Thursday evening,

the vestry
under

Vonn.r Men's Christian

rooms

the

as

other

of the Fort

auspices

Association.

of

the

believe it

report

can

—

be

this

progress

Union of New York have at last
of

practice

reading
"

rooms on

The

New

Sundays.

York

opposing

Maine is

of

cannot

such

a

great cities

imagine

on

to enact

and

pub-

the Sab-

good

any

takes

the

self-

searching

more

earnestness,

greater

light, would reveal its incom-

scrutiny,

fuller

patibility

wilh full consecration, and sweep it
The present

entirely away.
point

largely of

the Christian
of the

obstructive

spread

the

in

tbe

of

prohibitive

narcotics

the

ever.

seem

dis-

regard

to

revenue

of

laws in

where

some

degree

is

going

the

called

are

a

great

of alcoholic

product

be

clerical, and

as

gious

services with

breath that

"

smells

or

but incense, is

cropping

an

out

Let

"

about their

to ente*

Heaven

incongruity

of the

old

are

stimula-

by strange fire;"

scrupulous
yet

sermons,

which

narcotic

narcotized
to

that

sermons,

service of God
men to

graves,

now.

those of you who expect

to

attire

a

on

be ministers, that I believe
those

con-

upon'reli-

bodies,
"

of

and

and

n

anything

ah

offense,

Phariseeism thai

" the
and the
outside of tbe
cup
Not that abstinence has merit, or

made clean

the government would bedimiiiisheJ thereby.
It may be said with

have, in this

in fetters of
have (bund

say, therefere,

tion,

than

popular

more

men

as

and that this process

to

ot

spiritual religion.

high places, and
and premature
premature prostration

even

as

manhood, and

down from

cast

this

on

whole, and

as a

ministry, I regard

highest

nection, been bound

and that for

State of

position

of the Christian Church

reason

practice.

legislation

becoming

Post

opening

The Hawaiian Legislature do not

spirits

offend their consciences, but I believe that

me

Evening

in favor of

readjng-rooms
We

tbe

adopted

Association, and open their

our

ground strongly

posed

times have been done, and

I know that strong

Temperance
Public Reading.—Mr.

means,

The Christian Association and Christian

for

tht darkness and shall conquer
palu

not

year.

bath."

■
By the triumphant memory of this hour I

the

These self-sacrificing and disinterested

O tht uplifted cross, that shall forever
Shine through

in

from mod-

religion

not

apostles of skepticism

lic

Oolgotha! Golgotha

meet

to

at

"

We do

'

"

is

society called

a

is-to uproot

society.

done.

glory of

self, sin and

Associations

Libree Pensee

incidents

great crisis with the transcendent
Christ's

of

Master and

the

gloom

act

Temple:

interest which crowd

surpassing

days

portrayal of

temple of God.

a

Good men may do tbis in ignorance,

things prevalent

Lowell, Mass., this month.

ern

years ago.

the

Men's Christian

of

a true rec-

into Jerusalem and the scene in the

then

pathos,

knowledge

and of

ognition of

the United

National Holiness Association.

a

The International Convention of the Young

And then follow other incidents and mira-

portrayed

m

as

j

the day of anguish aod irr.

cles

got up

body

of truth that

platter."
secures

consecration.

It is

dition.—President Hopkins'

only its beet

con-

Ba&lt;xataitrent&lt;

�46

THE

zealous

Starlight.

could
lovt the quiet
starlight hour,
Whta pttrtng Irom Mm cloudlets
Tbt Mttlt glancing beamlttt
A

long

!&lt;

was s sur

To

in
great deal
tion.

shepherds trod.

I feel that

And still
Now

ttar

a tout

many

a

Waits but reflection

tht

aa

to be

light.

ican

night,

be

sweet

From

soul can

to earth

heaven

abate,

padocia,

Bithynia.

his

The tplrit whispers
may In Ihinc.

Yankee

Kurdistan,

Element In Turkey.

question

him

certainly

find,

more

his
In bis letter
written

English, Hagop

in

somewhat

it

playfully

American,

country,

I

amount

of

was

the results of mis-

surprised

this

there is

no

is

country
need of

evangelizaknown that

it.

repeating

large

introduced.

well

so

this

in

find the

to

element

How much has been done for the
tion of

summing

missionary labors

American

the

to

which ap-

He writes: "In

results of

refers,

seem,

element,

prominent among

so

Effendi

would

"Yankee"

sionary influence.
the

Secretary of the Board,

the

to

I

not

am

tell you now of the
religious influence which these American rjjissionaries have

going

to

been exerting upon
in

the

East, in

Protestant
blow

they

favor

principles
have

;

churches

antiquated

of

been

which has almost
in the

tbe

the introduction of
of the tremendous

or

giving

Catholicism,

to

entirely stopped its progress

East; and that,

too,

such

by creating

sentiment among the
people, through the
preaching of the Word, and the publication
a

of

evangelical works, that no doubt His Holi-

ness

the first
among

was

possessed,
his

and

light

schemes fall

the

people

preaching

of the

cross

ening

the

East.

Ail this is what

spiritual

expect from a
"

nature

the

ground

had been

getting.

to

me

what different
objects.
over

has done in awakof

the

would

most was

When 1

the countries 1 have been

the American

missionary

ical

Seminary

pean

and schools

diplomatists

Having

all

seen

astonished

be

turn

organization*

I

have

social

some-

my eyes
and

ion, pass

before

thinking, Verily
true an

my

the

American

as

things,

religious
tbe

seen,

gatherings

tended, all having tbe American
them,—when all these

perhaps

of

his

Theolog-

books, all

tables,

American

organs;

Yankee rider

a

mountains of Asia

his
Be

tune.
a

native
not

you hear the

dred,

surprised

at

you have
have

if

be invited

you

to

have

you

will

certainly

Hunit

then, if

own

before, that the American peo-

not

ple
Missionary Herald.

sacted interest in this

as

eyes,—l
missionary
Christian.

Richard W. Meadt,

(Signed)

Thoa. Meredith,

(Signed)

Lclato,

(Signed)

raumulns,

the

country."—

port

an

conspiracy

gents
the

at

the

in

Spanish

the

extensive

rilied

by

at-

type upon
if in

a

vis-

help

has been as
The

most

garrison and carried

place, killing

aix Spanish

of 2,000

them

repulsed,

in

all

sixty

per-

officers and two ladies.
sent

then

men was

tho citadel

no

Ist.

tbe

was

against

retaken, and tho

in

all

made

in

Its

It is
other

Among theexecuted
first

lic.

440

rsrwiidant of

tbe

Three priests

the

killed and

discoveries sinoe

executed.

citadel, bat

insurrection ended,

tbe

in Manilaand

were

Pango-Pango,

Allloreign

ltuau.

I.ATI.INS

Island

of

Tutuila," Samoa,

consuls

rate):

duly

appointed

shall Ist

and respected both In their person, and properly,
ciirnera atttlinf an tho Island
of the Chief, and

conforming

far

as
to

aa under

protected

and all

for

the Jurisdiction

the law., shallreceive the
pro-

tection of tht Oovrmment.
2d. The fullest
vessels

shall

be

be

shall

protection

which may

be

given

aaved.

the

belong., who will allow salvage

No

embeselement

will be

vessel

foreign .hips

entering

on

to

to

country

saved

which

tht property

so

The effect,

permitted.

all foreigners deceased will be
given up
of tho person to deceased.
Sd. Every

to all

wrecked and any property

taken In charge by the consul of

of

conaul of tht nation

Pango-Pango

shall

pay

port

»

charge lo the Chief, to be regulated by agreement between the
Chief, the tgent of tht California and Australian
Steamship
Co., and the foreign consuls.
Pilots thallbe appointed by the
of tbe Steatn.hip Co.

Tht
same
persona.
aged
the Pilot Commissioner, tx-tfitio.

to be

anil tht charge for pilotage for men-of-war and
sels

be

to

one dollarper

for detention

onboard.

foot of draft, aod
Each

of

one

merchant
dollar

to show

the

soma

to

the

each vessel which lie may bring inlj
port.
No work shall be done
on shore, nor shall any
employed on board vesaels on Sunday, under a
dollar.,

such

as

of tht

day

a

copy

master

4th.

be

ves-

per

pilot will bo furnished with

of tot Port Regulations, and

natives

penally of
except under circumstances of absolute necessity

aid in the case of a wreck of
a
to

steam.hip

on time

proceed

vessel,

on

her

or

tat

coaling

north

voyage

or

south.
Bth. All
trading in distilled or spirituous liquors,
of intoxicating drins it
absolutely

or

any kind

prohibited.
Any poraon ac,
shall bo fined
$100 on conviction before a mixed
competed of the U. 8. Consul, 11. B. M.'t
Consul
aud
Chief of the Bay.
All such liquors found on shore and

offending
court

kept

for

sale

barter

or

in

any

way, thall be seised and de-

stroyed.
If

aatlvt be found
intoxicated, the individual
any
furnished the drink which hat
caused the

who hs.

Intoxication

a

to

nay
*^'

tine of ten dollar.,
if any

pay

a line

native

of

foreigner
of

ten

be

found

and riotons

ht shall

found

guilty of offering

Inducement,

to

a

forilgnor to pay a one
nativt female found
guilty of prtsti

prostitute herself lo a

dollars,

ten

7th.

Intoxicated

dollars.

Any person
female to

and

any

to a foreigner, lo
pay a flu. of twtrrfy dollars
shall be
apprehended by the Chief, on applithrough tbe conaul, to whom they must bt
de-

Deserters

cation to

him

livered.

The usual

by men-of-war, and
third

Bth

to

go

All line,
at

rewards
ten

to Ihe
to

the

any

required by

dollars thall be

regulation lo bt said
paid by Rsavchantrorn

Chief.

bt

paid in specie or iv
equivalent, or l«
rate of one mouth's labor
on roads for len
of any
vessel refute
compliance
the case to he referred lo
the consul
the veatei belongs, aod
redress s uxht

matter

wilh the local regulations,
to which

thence.

Witness

(Signed)

Richard W. Meade,

the

Oau

(Signed)

o

Maunga.

lam the

(Trantlaled)

Mannga or High Chief.
The forogolng rule, having been
signed by tht Chief* f„ mv
I
shall forward a copy of ihe asms
presence.
wilh mv an
United Statea
proval to the
Government, lor the information ol
all masters of vesaels
visiting

Pango-Pango

(Signed)

Richard W. Meade,

in-

t'oasßViadsr, u. S. Ifmvy.

O" Mr.

Boston
of the

insurgents resulted in

men

of

Joseph Emerson,

a

Five hundred natives then

mercy.

and

losing

Spanish

were

cannot

the

surgents literally annihilated, the Spaniards showing

Manngs,
Maangama

Commander, Y. S. Nariu

including

insurgents,

aa o

Narragansett, (fourth

steamer

About three hundred insur-

Cavite attacked

citadel of the

ilous,

to overthrow

Philippine Islands

rule.

O aao
O

Ayeni.

promulgated Die 2d of March, 1872, and recog
Richard W.
the U. S.
Meade, Esq., commanding

Uth. Should

of

recognised

and

dollars.

an account

to

Pango-Pango,

187*.

(Signed)

COMMERCIAL Reoi
For

adopted

commuted

Manila advice* give

of

ioourtev-

W. Meade 11. a

(■signed)

—one

a

Regulations

day of March. A. D.1872, and

luting hertelf

heard

ever

oatthis

out

Navy, commanding
Itarrayansttt, (fourth rate).
whereof, we have hereunto tet oar hands and

wltne..

«th

these mountains, where

on

as

You

wild

familiar

some

congregation singing Old

heartily

as

home.

the

Minor, perhaps singing,

companion,

prayer-meeting

Yankee

on

Commercial

carry

Commander U. S. If.

the

heart of Kurdistan ;

very

saddles, and

with

American flow-

sewing-machines;

in the

ers

tht

to

carry
Jurisdiction extends, and

snd lo

if. S. Vict Consular

Euro-

agricultural implements; Yankeecotton-gins,

A force

traveling,

have heard, the

meetings and

you

this, you will certainly not
Yankee clocks;
see
you

if

American chairs,

saw-mills,

In

bind ourselves

aa oar

seals this Bth day of March.

ten

iard*

social

will

united cannot overbalance.

tionsand
and

may

College, and

with

lar

aloop-of-war

the vessel

Question him about

with his Robert

attempted tbe recapture

business

find

that he knows

•ilently doing

pass iv review, the companies and social circles I took occasion to enter, the conversa-

disputes I

in

social order, he will tell you all men are created equal.
Indeed, what Dr. Hamlin is

religion in the

every Christian
Christian mission.

But what struck

native country.

You

than

States

will

and

at

wilh each other,

tho '2d

U.S. S.

district!
sevtr.l
under tht Flag
tht 91 day of March, 1872.

on

solemnly

Eromnlgated
y Commander Richard

of tht nation

You need not be told what the foolishness of
the

to

feel the power it

when be found his dreams vanish

splendid

before the

to

of the United

own

districts

and

you.

your surprise,

to

faithfully

maintain peace

the school-

you

'geography,

on

your curi-

Turkomans,

home;

at

do

hereby

wt

covenant

tral

unfit oar

to

at Pango-Pango

And

, (Signed)

Mesopotamia, Cap-

quite familar to

answers

prouctioo, and
ralstd

make

by the missionaries,

Question

we, Mating.

THAT

Fagalva ; Ltlato, Chief of Lo Alat.uai £autrm
Chief of Le Saolt
\ Solktl, Chief of Le ltuau \ of lat Eatttrn
Division of the Islaod of Tutuila, Samoa,
having mtt In
Council this Dili day of March, A. D.
187J, da hertby agree to
form a league and confcdtralion lor our mutqal wtlflue and

own to

your visit

pay

rBRSR.TS,

loa.

reason

can

but

satisfy

to

of

plains

you would

as

can

TMBaC

Chief of Le

no

support his argu-

to

more, you may

or

ALL SIS BY

with Yankee idioms

want

the

boy

re-echoing

Home story of that love divine

up

Yankee,

ran-,

Wake, wake ! your alien! harps, and ring

certainly

country

cannot

you

in the wild mountains of the

Home anthem that my

pears

his

who

one

the schools established

Bright loktnt'of our Father's

tbe

on

X.VOW

Even in wild Kurdis-

some

and if you

the

to

that the Amer-

quite in Yankee style,

still

osity

I might flee

To wake In their
reality.

will

you

declaring

has served

substantially

ments ;

longing breast.

my

And that thus drttnilng,

in

speech which

a

Caour

any

and American examples

real,

That I could wish Ihe mortal vtil
Wtrt raised from o'er

on

Euxine;

me

missionary

you

pale.

to

dreamt of such

mt

the

with you

Vtt mirrored thtrt
trlumphanlly.

a

you may take Antioch
line to the black

or

;

you will find

tan

doing

arc

you

less than his Master.

And; Jesus will, that it shall be

Oft brings

of

agree with

teen ;

Ihe light of
tttrt, so cold,

has done.

may go across
mountain of Bhotan,

brow.

brighter thoen

dark

Cilicia,
wild

please, and go

you

shores
on my

know itt&gt;ondrous

we

graaming&gt;ith

O'er

if

lo me now

beam

for his

wild mountains of

borders of Persia

to tht 800 of God ;

pointed

in

less

no

the

TU.reSaty.Islanders.
wamitohan

civilization

much

as

introducing American civiliza-

From

Dagh,

that led iht way

And oft it aeemeth

American

various institutions introduced,

:

where the Chrltt In
manger lay,

And

of

done half

It.

18

organizations, the

A thowttnd old-tirae memories
throng

Those old Judean

have

country abroad as the missionary
The religious and social

thy.

Aod In tht cadence of their
toag,

It

advocate

not

Boar

voictlttt mtlody

twttl

J UN*,,

FRIEND,

the

wounded.

a

vicinity, seventy
believed

centres

was

Span-

vanquislimMt of

tbe arrest of

hundred

of whom

extensive

of

tho

arrests

conspiracy.

Favera, intended aa the

projected Philippine repub-

were

shot

at one

time.

Technological

member of the

School, writes

as

wore

lows, under date of

coming

summer,

uel Knceland,

Zoology
ands.

and

April 21:

one

A.

M.,

to

fol-

During

the

our

Professors, Sam-

M.

D.,

Physiology,

He proposes

six weeks, in

of

"

make

which time

Haleokala and Kilauea.

Professor

will visit
a

stay

of

the islof about

he wishes

to

He is quite

visit

a nat-

uralist, and
very much to obtain volcanic and other specimens for the institufr
want*

"

�1

11 X

47

.2.

I 8

JUNE,

MMKMI.

ADVERTISEMENTS.

DESIRIN« TRADE

MASTERS W SHIPS

BARTOW,

CS.

Auctioneer.
Salet Roobb

on

tiattn Strwß, on*

door from KaalmitaaStrati.

fIL

.-.av&lt;*ja*W*dw»fl
"«--■■■■

Ek

I&gt;

.

~

t

and

Physician
; CorncrlMereliant

\

M

HOFFMANN,

X

a

BREWER

M-*

Surgeon,
tvrar

tml KaahurotnaJStrettt.

Commission and

tht Post OSlct

CO..

Shipping Merchants,

Honolulu, Oahu.'Jl. I.
I

,

■n*

—-

.

P.

ADAMS.

Auction and Commission Merchant,
lire-Proof Stors, In Eoblnton't Building, Quttn Btrttt.

mm

BENFIELD,

a'JI

.

Wagon

SHOILI) CALL, at the hardware store,

and Carriage Builder,

74 and 76 King Btrttt, Honolulu.

No.

|-|OI

SINGLE BARREL. SHOT

UI.R AND

PARLOR

&lt;CARTRIDGES

for

Henry's Rifles,

Cheap Files,

Rifles and

Cap*, Eley's
all size*

they

GUNS, HENRY'S

RIFLES.

the Parlor

Flasks. Percussion

Powder

where

liintr Street,

d&lt;s

and

CARBINF.S AND

Island ordtrt

17

get

can

Kawaihae, Hawaii,

POWDER,
SHOT of all

Revolvers,

Shot

size*,

the
tbt above port, where they art prepared to furnish
celebrated Kawaihae Potatoes, aod tuoh othtr rtcraltt ts

ntttat

kinds,

Butcher

8 to

Knives,

got out expressly

for

justly
art nquirtd by whalethlpt,

trade,

16 inch.

most

a.

Sail

Steel

Copper Taoks, Ship's Thick

Beit

Twine,

Topsail Chains, Coopers'

Hammers and

on

the

PlrrwMd

llaissd

•■

A3

ntact.

w.

BE

WILL

WHICH

Paints, Oils,

PILLINCHAM

CASTLE

COOKE,

&amp;

i Ship

ft

CO.,

NOUN

NO. 96

he

consulted

!

M.

at his

D.,

Psalsa

Agest*

J.

FORWARDING

BEWING

WETMORE,

H.

tp

MACHINES,

Ii

M

COMMISSION

,

Laitr..

AND

N. B.—Medicint Cbtttt oartfully repltoiabtd

Hlla

HAVING
butlnttt
sent

at the

Iwtatsai la a

art

for

upwards

i tapis.,

STATIONERY AND
Tht HIGHEST PREMIUM GOLD MEDAL

sev.o

aad

ytari,

btlag

w« at

Sugar, Slot,By rapt, P«lu,

itttnttonwill bt paid
raarktt, to which ptrtonal
advanoet wiU bt&gt; mad* when rtowtrtd
and npon which cash

for th. Oregon

Saa Taaaouoo Bsra*aowsi

NEWS DEPOT,

Jat. Patrlwk ACo

Badger k Uodtnbtrger,

W. T. Oolaaian k

Frwd. Ikan,

CIRCULATING LIBRARY,

AND

tasb

as

toUtlttd
Contlgnmeutt ttpttlally

Cofftt, kt., to advantage

THRUM'S

G.

of

atwtl brUt balldlag.

and ditpottof Island

Drtg Stare.

IMPROVEMENTS!

THOS.

Oregon.

BEEN ENGAGED IN OUR PRE-

Hilo, Hawaii, 8.1.

all—

MERCHANTS,

Portland,

Physician and Surgeon,

.

I tr

LATEST

Bomb

Klllar.

WILSON'S

&amp;

—wrrn

Davis' Paris,

3£eCsral&lt;eii -St Co.,

Alakta and Fort ttrttts.

WHEELER

W*rkt, Braaa'a

Salt

Army,
Hotel ttrtet, between

retidence,on

0. h. Rtohardt * Co.)

chants,

AavA Parry

Late Surgeon Y. S.
Can

(Sncottortto

Hawaiian Itland..
Honolulu, Oahu,

FOR

AGENTS

rarssaoß.

CO..

Chandlers and General Commission Mer

MNQ STREET.

MeGREW.

S.

It

PIERCE

AW.
!

Varnishes, Brushes of Every Description

SOLD at PRICES THAT WILL GIVE SATISFACTION

January, 1872.

*■

t.

Scraper*, Connecting Links,

and other Tool*,

Drivers,

*

A Full Assortment of

THE

shortest notlot, aod

Variety of Pocket Cutlery, Sail Needles ft Hooks, Sewing ft Roping Palms,

Martin Spikes,

FAMILY

at tbt

terms.

reasonable
\XT

ALL OF

and Shipping bati -

Will continue ths Otntral Merchandise

Poucheg,

Best.

Butchers' Steels,
An Endless

rate.

CHILLING WORTH.

fc

ALLEN

RIFLES,

omptly ■executed at lowtat

pi

Ot.,

A Ot.
St.vtns, Baker

all

IB

Nov.

Other*:

Merchant

Street,

-

-

llewelulu

as

PORTLIRB
Allen

OF

iffAIDED AT THE

GREAT WORLDS

EXPOSITION

PACRAGES
Papers and Magsslnes, back
reduced

PARIS,

A.T

rates

for parties going

numbers—pot

to sea.

al

TREADLE!

labor-saving'

their

Ing
AND

Shipping
or

no

at hit

indirect,

with

dtbte to bt

Offioe.

Having

no

oonntctlon,

204

hat In tht
good satisfaction In the fnture at he
put.
A Co.'t Wharf, sear tbt C
IT OAVm on J at. Bobinton

Han

nrtooi other improvements, I

RECOMMENDED BT THE LADIES

i

main,

twin

I llUlSßlillll

ot tht toot that
"*

with which It
stta

it la

moat

and Honolulu PackstA
Ban Franoisoo

motion.

Its

tlraplloity

..aa.

Of

Deaf

f*rf*t

t*

Call

s«4

RxaaYia*

VearwrrMl

a new

hope

now

ORDER

OF

Beads
Sky-light, and
to bt ableto rait tbt

"i^Vn'fright arriving
ooUlaLin.of

any

Site, from

a

Crystal

the best

lo

myU of

tans*.

a

Art,

"

of the
ALSO, tor eats View,

'-'—Ir. r—T-Tfi iiTIAI Blase. IpMtß- r-""

—

■*-*•"«-

*■

whaltaalpa, sigialiaws

Saa Praneltoo, by

or

to tbt Ho-

on

Hoaoralß boaght aa*

AOt

t«M. XI

..........Btwjaawla

Oo

in
«

the

at

Packttt,willb.forwardtd rsaaorOMsJOßwaoa.

■lettrs 0. L. «a*»wa»

Mammoth, taken

tolht tala tad para**** at aa*

BUUMsai.iappiylas

t7 ■xebanft

Fhotoirravpli,

RJBioaß.wttiw.Bw.Rßll
tar

PaitltalaratßiwAaMfivsa

faattdlout with

tht vary
optratta,

action, IU practical durability.

THE

Franclico.

8

.banal.., thipt'

laT

Auctioneer*

CfcUteaia Strait,

IHI
AIM, AQSKTS Ot

e*S|RB

IMPROVEMENT
tbt day.'
Raving constructed

and 208

tithei

estabUshmeoi. and allow
any ontttttlag
at kit office, bt hope, to give ai

colleoted

Marklaet!

MERRILL ft Co.,

Commission. Merchant* and

01

I*hotogTa.pli.y.
la all Utwlag

tut

" •*•**■

ON HIS OLI

CONTINUES
Plan of tattling with Officer, and Stamen Immediately

Cnotolait.

On ttotoat of tbt perfect

•/_
'*■"

J. C.

HEALTH-PRESERVING INVENTION!

atttaehetl

Orwta

Walr.tr k Allta.

*

WILLIAMS,

LICENSED SHIPPING AGENT.

direct

Crr fee

Utaard *

1/

THE BUSINESS

A

np

to ordtr

ArVRRRRCRB:

Ladd A Tllton.

HoBOLCLO BarSBBBOBBI

18(17!

AdSNTO, ALSO, FOB

HALL

Uwls.

J. o. aaaaiLt.,

GEORGE

THE

k

READING MATTER-OI

B.BMMafc
o. WavarkOo
MSwaaAO*

Dr.». W.

"

vrooa

Bm.BB. Alaa
d

2 ay

�48

TIIK
Rev

MARINE

JOURNAL

FRIEND,

• Kanwaaloha

DalTa

at

at these

up

POOFHRNTOLUS
,
.I.
ARRIVALS.
28—Am S-mawtrd

A P Jordan, Perry, IT
days from

tear

TtM

29—Haw

corvetteScout,

steam

J»-Am wh bk

days
B

Trident, Uowland,
Home, with 160 bbls sp.

from

months

ars

about 8,000-

out

from

from

InhsMled.

a*—Am ship Sunrlte, Clark, It daya from B Francisco,
to—Am wh bk Jlreh Ptrry, Owen, from Lahalna, laying

oft"and

better cltHssd

triules

SE

rain -quail..
4

»

In lat 2°

40' N

wind

,

April 25th, first part, wind baffling, aud

took strong breeze from NE, lat

h

20' W.

and battling, with

light

o°

E

April 28th, wind frssh, NE trade, and cloudy, lat 9°
April 27th, wind fresh from NE by

weather fine with passing

;

30th.

30th

April

wind

clouds, continuing
from

light

very

E

brig Robert Cowan, Itcvely, 22 days from VicV I.
18

anil

hours

Man

days

from

Francisco.

Nevada, J II Slelhen, 17 days from Auck-

stmr

or

December
which

13

Humphreys,

land.

lonia, McLean, 20 days from Tahiti.

novfland'a Island.

WiuLßsmr

14th, 1871

1

south-east trades
a

the

29th, in latitude 0° north.

school of black flan, February
dead

a

take

which

»perro whale,

board

on

another, which

was

later In

,

taken

3d. and

the

was

on

far decoin-

too

turned

out

IB—Am bgtn North star, Morehouse, 20 days fm Tahiti.

which

Francisco,
28—Am

Palmer, Jacobson, 16 days from San

Helen

Snow, Mtcombcr, 8 months

out

from home, via Kawaihae.
'id—Am wh hk James Allen, Kelly, 6 months

out

from

home, clean.
B

19

Bums,

days from

San Francisco.

20 miles.

from Ban Francisco.

the lot h

in

aback

Mrtvensie,

Europa,

6—H

B

M's

sieam

corvette

Fraocitco.

3d,

y—Am

«tmr

Bcout, Cator, for Victo-

in

same

westward,

shore

rapidly

too

sent a

and

beat

60° 24

to

Took

thick

they

as

sperm whales again

, ssw

Crossed

the

lost south-east
squalls, having
trades

ths

tbe

loth,

trades the day previous.

22d la latitude 7°

number of vessels

a

bark

on

Took

north, and sighted

Ros«oe of New

the passage,

Bedford,

but spoke

the 2d

on

of

April,

In

north, longitude 107° 60 west, which reported 600
barrels of sperm, and after cruising until the 10th, would leave
for these Islaoda to refit for the Arctic.

11—Haw schr Kamaile, Dority, lor Jarvla Island.
18—Am 8-maated schr

A P Jordan, Perry, for Ban Fran-

Report

lo

I.

jacobson,for

Francis Palmer,

lo

and cruised

,

cruise.

Worth, for Petropanlekl.

26—Am wh bk Roscoe, Lewi.,

the Arctic.

Scboorrr

Rbtort or
A. P. Jorbam.—Left Humboldt
with soulhwest
Then wind
April 9th,
aqualla blowing strong.
from west and northwest to April 18thlat 88* 06'N,134°
winds light from wait to April 22d lat 22' 18'
VV, thence
144° 48' W, thence moderate
826

trade,

to

mile..

Arrived April
Came Is Sunday

-[do during tht night.

Kep.rt

the

27th, anchored

of

lite Mwrwiag
at

to

by N

in the afternoon
sir

Sf

sad calm.

ENE, with

aBJBJjBd up
SAntlng from

N,

IKE

same

m, wind light from

weather, aad ctatisutd

trade from E

and

tht doldrums, and

In

In

Ist 4

gentle

from

so

up

to

tht 30th.

from

baffling

con-

26'N, long 147° 81'
line settled
E
by 8;

ENE

On the *otiiand
to

E9E and

calm,

Monday, April I*, "»a isms | tacked ship hesd to
N in lat 14 ° 03' S, long 148° 11' W.
April 6th, at 6,*0 r m.

sighted Nusßhtva, bearing ENE, distance about 40 miles.
ApM Ith, came to anchor In DbbTs Bay. Itlaad of Uapou. 2«
day. from Honolulu.

April lib, landed miaslooarlet'

auppilst,

HSO a m, wilh Rev S asuwttlobu aad tsar of
lor Puamau, Island of Bhrsta.
pupnt,
April loth, si • a
backed the fore-topsail off
; landed
i
at

hit

Puamau

took

oaboard

Rtv Z

station, where

April llih, at 9 a a,
aUßtlon station t
*■*» Wth, *l »
Rev J W

*

Kalwl't

".

7

.

a

M,

r

lan*.

lo Aiuona Bay,

near

the

laqdtd pataengtrt and supplies.
for Omoa fiay.Xslaud of Faiubiva,

ttstlon.

Bt snd taaiuv taAts ptatage In tht
At 2 r u
on account of ill health.

In Omoa Bay

;

took

mUUnt,

for Puamau Bay

to

on board

alto

sjev J W Kalwl,

luggage, Ac,

land Rev

H, hovt to near Puamau Bay.

1

nutting.

an

•»"•»

whs, four chlWrtn sad
al

supplies

hold central

they

oatat to aachor

at 10

Mosalng Star lor Honolulu
casta to aachor

si A* &gt;

Bay

Rev James Kekela and prootdod Or Atuoos Bay,

napuku*!

March

41

°

°

W, long 166

68' 16" W,

squally and hsavy

until reaching the Island.

days out, moderate

fbgty weather.
wilh

brettet from

WNW

NNW

to

Since then, moderate trades from NE

pasting rain squalls.

Monday, 4

a. M.

to

sail

ENl'

Maul—dis-

sighted

tance, 20 miles.

PASSENGERS.

Fob Endebbuby's Island—Per Sunriie, May

1st—26

na-

tive laborers.
Foe San Fbancibco—Per D. C. Murray, May

2d—Geo F

M Enderleln. A W Tripp, Mrs McLean and 3 chil-

dren, A E Williams, J McCarthy, Mrs

4

Morrison,

children

axd

Mr Bliss, Mr and Mrs J A Brewster, Miss Kenservants,
nedy, Joe HalBlead. D McCorriater, 8 H Foster, Cept Walters.
8 Knox, H C Knox, Mrs Loulsson,

C

J D Brewer and wife, Mrs

E E

2

Peck,

children and servant,

Miss Emma Peck, Chas

Jones, Mrs Wood.
From Marquesas

Islands—Per Morning Star, May 3d—

Rev W P Alexander, Delegate; Rev J W Kalwl win, 4 children and assistant, from Fatuhiva ■, Mlas Racbael Kekela, from
flivaoa.
From

Robert

Victosia—Per

Cowan,

4th—Maatei

May

1 C Colman.

Rhodes,

From Ban Fbancibco—Per Nebraska, May 6th—A F Judd
and wife, Miss Nellie Bacon,
and Mrs

Mrs

A

Lambert, Miss T

McDade. Capt

Brlfgs, Capt

Jackson, Mr and

and 2 children, Capt and Mrs Hepplngstone

Mm

Msgnin

and daughter, and

9 others,and 42 In transitu for New Zealand and Australia.
Fob Auckland—Per Nebraska, May 6th—W

Utnshaw, and

42 In transitu from San Francisco.
From

Auckland—Per

May 8th—John CarBVor,

Nevada,

Dr Trosaeau, M Wltsmoncer, Mrs Poole and 2 daughters, Mrs
Collett and 2 children, and 148 in transitu lor Ssn Francisco
Fob San
toon

Fbancibco—Per

and wife. Capt

send and

Mohongo,

May 9th— CS Mai

B A Humphrey. Antone Brown, Mr Town-

Robert

wife,

Craine,

Thoa Cummins, and

148 in

transitu from Auckland.
Fob Btabbuck Island—Per Lonalllo,
Tahiti—Per

From

May

Ionia,

May 9th—Mr Tarn.

11th—I

Fisher, Mrs Ber-

tram!.
From

San

Fbancibco—Per

Comet,

13th—Alfred

May

Wight, H K Archer, Wm Gedge.
Fob Ban Fbancibco—Per

A.

P. Jordan, May 16th—Geo II

Brown.
Fob Victobia. V

I—Per Robert Cowan,

18th—J

May

8

Dickson, wife and child, 3 A Wood, E S Coffin, Alex McGulrc.
Fob

Bar

Comet. May
20th—Capt Mat-

Fbancibco—Per

thews and wife, Wm Smith. Mrs Johnston and child, Mrs Collet! and

a children,

Mr

Beaman, 9 children and

II

R Rowland, Martla Alvord, Mrs

servant.

Geo White, M

BenfleU, Mrs

Thos Brown, Capt J A Howland, Mr Holllster, Mrs

McKenile,

Mrs Lloyd, J Waterman, Geo Schrei, Geo Miller.

mate's

up under her, which had

Cape Horn

;

was

In

the vicinity

MARRIED.

sad

tailed

J^ttaOa.. April 17th,
April lath, al 1:80 a

lev J *&gt;***&gt;, Ac, snd proceeded

lor

of the

ITapnu (o Und

Jvdd—Boyd—At

Geneva.

N.

Y.April 4th,
Jvdd, or

the Cape, February

tolatitude

experienced unfavorable weather in the Pacific

.16°

south.

met

with

at

Touched

moderate

Juan

trades ;

In longitude
rain.

Had

121° west, with

28th, arriving, the next day

18th,
ground,

the off shore

to

Crowed tbe

strong north-east

and

March

Fernandea,

thence

cruising there several days

18th,

equator April

1214..

favorable winds and plenty of
and sighted Hswsil the

trades,

at

17th, off

February

this port.

ship the

same

day. bound

eastward.

to the

March lflih, apoke

of New Bedford, 40 months oat, with 2,100 barWater Reef, and saw two other
on Yellow

hark Clton*t

y

oil, cruising

Rsroavr
Left

Brio

or

Rsyal

Robkrt

Road, Vieioria,

Master

Cowan, Kkvely,

Friday,

April

winds

lat 44° N, long

from northeast,

131

°

Haiku, Maui.
O'Neil—Kahooiiuli—
At the

Report

April 27th

W, and

thence

at

3

r.

m.,

and arrived

18 hours

bags mall for

bags of mall

Honolulu,and

matter

In Honolulu,

from
We

for New

port.

bring

two

May

6th

had

tons of

long

148 ° 30'

trades

lonia, 174 Tova,

,

pleasant

freight

Crossed

W.

lat

7°

had light easterly winds for

took

two

benefactor of the Hawaiian race.

and

moderate

strong northeast
to theeastward

days

HawaU and
May 9th sighted the east end of
Vessela left lo
thence had strong trades and squally weather.
North Star, bound for this
harbor: American

brig

leave about 23d April \ American brigantine Nautilus,
port,
Tunandra
American krigantme
loading lor Baa Fraß*isoo T
and American schoousr Sovereign, for Ban Francisco with
to

oranges

,

French bark

■sail psAOksc, for San

St. Mark, for
so

Valparaiso

■,

Orayhound,

sail about the Ist of May

,

rasasmd.

Retort

or

r

Mr. Pat-

No cards.)

Kitchbn—Makee —At the Church

York, April

18th, by

,

of the

Holy

Trinity
H.Tyng, Jr..
to Julia
A, daughter

the Rev. Stephen

W. Kitchen, of New York,

of Captain James Makee, of Maul.

Obey—Jacebob—At
T.

Grove

Ranch, the residence of Capt.
May 14th, by the Rev. J. B.
Honolulu, to Miss Julia'

Hobron, Makawao, East Maui,
W.

Green, Mr. Charles

Gbey, of

don papers pleaae copy.
Macb—Hoab.—In

Parker,
Fannii

(ny* Norwich and New LonT

this city,

May 2a, by lite

Mr. J. C. Mack, of the
steamship
Hoab, of Honolulu.

Rev. B. I.

Nevada,

to

Miss

DIED.

Lohelohe—In this city, on the

of Hawaii.

Papeete

F. Leonore,

Kahoohuli.
(Mr. O'Nsil'a
wish him
many friends
every success In life, and that be may
and virtuous life, as a
enjoy a long, happy
paternal friend and

Lame, Parser.

Jaw. McLean, Mas-

the equator ninth dag out In
30' N

A.

Biddy

and 222

winds

winds.
In

at 11

freight and

Slit; had light northerly
then took
days In sight of the island,

soaiheasi trade

Miss

Zealand and Australia, in charge

R. W.

Bare

or

Francisco

ter—Left Tahiti April
calms for

light

Ban

Huve

140

146 packages

of Mr. R. Kaye.
Report

to

A. Jackson, of Norwich, Conn.

Nebraska—Left

weather all the way down.
12

port

arriving May 4th.

Steamship

days and

m., 7

a.

or

O'Neil

Catholic Mission, Walluku

Rev. Father

Maul, May 4th, by the
rick

Ma acts L

northwest

to

to

clergyman

Walluku, Maui,

Rev. Father A. F. Leonora, Mr.
May 4th, by the
Frank BayMrs Louisa
Kimo, widow of the Isle Mr. Kimo, of
ebb to

Passed Cape

to

Catholic Mission,

Rev.

Honolulu,

—

12th, with a light

north wind, which soon
round to northwest.
got
Flattery oo the 14th'. had light northeast and

the

Bayebb—Kimo—At

New

whalers in that vicinity, bat did not speak them.

Hon. A. F.

by lb*

Mlas Aones H. Boyd, daughter of the officiating

Passed

sperm whale.

one

1)

, the

James R. Boyd, D.

and took

s

with rain.

Bailed

tht Island.

on

Cape about a week in sight of the land, with very fine weather,

On the 13th and

Nothing of Importance

Weather.

s
40' W, fairly
long 160

light

passenger-

16th took fresh

toward

coast

rels of

to

tinued In them sp to ihe 14th
W.
On tbt 24th. wind

Oltt, wind.

aa

day, calm.

On ike

fine

Star.

NE trade left us; wind
19th, when the
USE, with freqawt rain squalle In Ist

tht

to.

two

hark Htnry J. Lichfield, 77 days
Cape Horn, spoke American
New York, bound to Callao, and also passed a large American

and back. Rev. W. P.

12th,

;

14th, light

out-

with tht
following report

Islands

Marquesaa

Alexander, Delegate from Hawaiian Board,
at 9 a
BBsStd from Honolulu March
SB by E

First

Island..

morning.

Captain Matthew, has furnished
the

took

of them, the third

whale coming

madt last to
moerings

wa

All will

tho Island.

the effect of demoralizing the occupants for a ahort time and
Had favorable weather
along the Pata-

and

lo

to one

tod

group

demolishing tbe boat.

MEMORANDA.

of kit trip

and found whales plentiful,

ground

unfavorable weather for whaling,

was stoveby a

boat

cruise.

McLean, for Tahiti, via Kauaa-

on that

whales there, and while fast

gonia

days' run,

month

one

but experienced

kakai.

m,

ground,

touched

cruised

Victoria,V

Wood, Whitoey,

»—Tshltlan bk lonia,

Oil

Western

20—Haw wh bk R W

23—Am bk

s

to the

at
a short time, taking one sperm whale,
from thence proceeded to River Platte
Cape dc Verde's and

20—Am schr Cygnet,

7

Trident—lxft New Bedford,

Bark

September f)th, 1871 ; proceeded thence

cisco.

lour

Whaling

of

JO—Am bk Comet, Fuller, for Ban Francitco.

18—Brit brig Robert Cowan, Bevely, for

tour

none

latitude 6°

Weeks, for Starbuck Island.

I'hranix

RsrosT Bask Court.—Left San Francisco May Ist. First

in

the ship leaking at lbs rate of 2,000 strokes In twelve
ing day,
hours, which is the average since the leak was dlscoverd.
Passed

tb.

Phcenlx, Island and Endtr-

whto

evening

same

■itilßßßti until next dty.

May Bth lat SI

this port the follow-

at

Island lha

rains

whales

ground, but did not take any
windward

two.

fur

; allwell on
dtyt paaaage from Howlsnd
°
Island, had good tradet carrying them to 38
N, long 169° 30'
E, had southerly and eaaterly
winds until striking tbt trade.

recruits,

fresh trades
Baw

west.

14th

March 27th madt

hours

Pacific.

with

ashore for

there by desertion.

north, longitude

and took

except

Manila,

M.bongn, Wakeenan, for San Francisco.

ketch Lnnklllo,

day

crew

the off

on

going

the

Australia.

V—Haw

the

the

°

Maui the afternoon of the 28th, arriving

Nebraaka, Harding, for New Zealandand

7—Am ship Camilla, Humphreys, for

next

ths

north-east

cruise.

ria, V 1.
6 -Am ttmr

to

12 days

was

6th,
equator
180°20 west, with fresh north**east winds and rain
longitude
on

cruise.

lo

to

11th, from

latitude 40

three of the

April
were

4—Am wb bk Trident, Howlsnd,

; In

latitude 81°

18—Am

2—Am bk D C Murray, Shepherd, tor San

March

light, and

north, took fresh southerly
winds,
and sighted the Island ofJuan Fernandez, the evening of
16th}

losing
DEPARTURES.

Ist,

distance of

at a

weather, which hauled around Into north-cast, and moderated

laid

for Hongkong.
ship Sumatra, Mullen,
I—Am clipper sit Sunrise, Clarke, for Guano Is.

March

through

Apait.

this
brought feur native, to
pert as passengers. April M made
Island ; made fast to bouy and remained
Howlands's
several

be

and paused

ol* thai

Visited

Itlaod.
bread, and

Was several days In ihe vicinity of Cape Horn, with

gale

a

18th, in

to
leaking seriously.
Patagonia the 27th, and thence had fresh

battling weather, part of the time very
from ihe latitude of 60° in Atlantic

on

alokongo, Wakemau, 8 days end IS hour,

4—Am wh .hip

north, discovered the ship
coastof

Straits le Mai re,

to

Took

2—Haw bk Queen Emma, II

stmr

winds

February

Ramirez rocks the next
sighting the Diego
day

for Petropaaltkl.

en route

wh bk

3—Am

latitude89°

Sighted the

•perm.
22—Am bk Francis

March

Pango

Brlghtman

18 barrel*;

toe

continued about twenty-four hours.

a turvty

Tutuila.

29th pttttd Mary i.land.
April lat called at Baker's
found fntwi abort of provMoas—supplied them with

the

day, fell in with

same

board, and

on

Fell In

,

two

got

of

equator,

IB—Am schr Cygnet, Worth, lb daya An Ban Francisco.

IB—Am wb bk Roacoa, Lewis, from X awaihae, with 360

saw

Pango, mad.

Island

brig.

Pango

Guano Itltodt.

bury

to Pango

B»y

Bedford,

ths

to

at

greater part having been lost before the whale wax
Had moderate weather
discovered.
to latitude 36 °
north,
then took a severe blow from the southward with heavy
rain,

13—Am hk Comet; Fuller, 12 days from San Francisco.

nothing

January 22d,
days previous, and

with

to

May 3d,

New

had moderate wcaiher

\

look

ol oil,

up

Leone

Arretted Capl. Hayes and seised his
vttttl', could And
against him, were obliged to release him and his

Upnlo.

the

by N, wilh fine

Europa—Left

bad light

l&gt;osed

21th, 18 dtyt pauage
harbor and

crossed in longitude 27°4f1"
west,
baffling weather several

was

having

14th passed

11—Tshltlan bk

13—U 8 sloop-of-war Nai ragauselt, Mead,-, 41 days from

to

at

Report

from Ben Prancleco.

ao

8 a m, lighted east end Inland of
May Ist,
Maul,
W by X, distance about 36 utiles
; at 0-.80 r m east end

4—Brit

8— Am

calms ■,

lo'N, lons 141 °

of Molokal bore south, distancs about 10 miles.
eastward of Diamond
a M, hove to to
Head.

6—Am ship Camilla, B A

than

islands.

Monday, April 23d, at 8 r at, crossed tht: rqaator lo lon*
17' W
i wind light. E by N j fine wenther. April SBd

weather.

on.

I—Am stmr Nebraska, Harding, 7 days

May

civil, and

quite

the Microneelan

bearing

toria,

April

but
at

2-Am

missionary brig
Morning Star, Matthews, 12
daya frorn, Marquesas Islands.

June

Independent,

67' N, loiif 142° 49' W.

Home, wilh SO bblt sp.

May

with wind

voyin

(roup ronsl»ts of sleven islands, of which
The whole number of
population It said to
What I have aeenof
the people, they sw*m

of the natives

most

at

'JS—Aio wh &gt;h Curopa, McKenite, 4) months

return

on

havlnr. finished

t.

Left

Marquesas

six

lost

tea.

out

filled away Tor Honolulu,

141*

Cttor, from 1111.,

Italiella, Wood, 33

soar

April 19th, at 8
backed lb* topa&amp;ll
am,
landed Rev 8 Kauwealoha and lour

p h

islands, sod proceed

be

Humboldt.
28—11 B M's

1

from EN6.

rather

April

at

;

.

tUpoo.;

Bay,

Ac

pupfU,

1 8

JUNE,

I. 8. NARRAOA*EETT.-Left Honotal** Jaa

17th

Instant, David

Lohe-

about 26 years, a native of theae islands.
He was
mate of the schooner
Nettit Merrill
and
himself
a good seaman, And a careful and
proved
lohe, aged

for

some

yeara

tratwtwtny

man, much

esteemed

knew him.
by all who

Aba—In this city. May
formerly

a

27th, of consumption. Rev. R. Ala

missionary of the Hawaiian Board

nesia, aged 36

at

Ebsu, Micro-

years.

Bennett—In this city. Sabbath morning, June
2d, Cantata
Nehemi ah T.

Bennett,

steamship Afoaevtoo,
Many
bo

will mourn the

well-known In the

leaves

a

late

commander of the

HajariIan

and formerly of the bark D. C.
Msrrrsy.
death of this
Pacific.

wife and child

popular

Be

to mourn his

and able
eaipBaaatsr.

died of
death

an

aneurism

II,

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