-
https://hmha.missionhouses.org/files/original/c60538e7ecdb60739df4c0d5f3034fa8.pdf
3cb9799b71ea1b712382bcf4cfb3bd74
PDF Text
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<;
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
>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>-
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<-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<xataitrent<
�46
THE
zealous
Starlight.
could
lovt the quiet
starlight hour,
Whta pttrtng Irom Mm cloudlets
Tbt Mttlt glancing beamlttt
A
long
!<
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>ondrous
we
graaming>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<*ja*W*dw»fl
"«--■■■■
Ek
I>
.
~
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
<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<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,
&
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> 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
&
—wrrn
Davis' Paris,
3£eCsral<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* >
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 *>***>, 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>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 >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&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,
�
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 (1872)
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 - 1872.06.01 - Newspaper
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1872.06.01