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                  <text>FRIEND.
THE

}jm Serifs, Vol.

HONOLULU, APKIL

$-f.4.}

22.

1813.

April,

P.
■

'•

;•

BB«

2&lt;*

Home, Sweet Home"

InOod

Who.re

'*

Tru.l

we

Orator

**

the Mormons?

'&amp;

•VOimnell an

•»

Marin. News
Jonah's Oourd

mitted

to

jJO

.«,

30

Information WaiiteiflK

The parsonage

and

FRIEND.

APRIL. 1.

sonage

Church.

1873.

the

for

above

The

these Islands.

The

sum

of

trust as a

of

clergyman

worth from twelve

Summary of Census of

in

held

the

par-

Waimea

is

probably

fifteen hundred dollars.

to

ed, and

it is

"

half-castes

in

1,938

Americans in 1872
■•

••

und

Hawaiian horn of foreign parents, 1872

849

Britons In 1872

619
395

Oermsns

w

other foreigners in 1872

In 1872

Total population in

*S

"

56,897
half-castes

«

in 1866.. 58,765
1872.. 51,631

'•

',««

1,172

Increase since 1896

nually

The Gazette

Total decrease of

population since 18GC

"

»

leased

2.487

Total number of half-castes In 1872
«

we

6,062

The
lation

haa been

as

the

whole popu-

13.10

7

to

jreara
I860,
186a, 6 years

1806

to

1872, • rears

his

on

own

Government has

the

ceived

per

4 70

"

»«7

"

0.02

"

cent.
"

Islands,

of
grape-growing counties
view

of

making

after the
deaux.

style

During

know of

in

have been

said

that

the

ment

is taken

to

purpose."

re-

the

nual
ment

four

past

months

the

to one

as

is

be

such

glad

purchased

of

this

Mr.

a

Jarves.

printing

paper

We

much

better

at

think

an

Stanley, that

For

arrange-

TesP nation and

public.

magazines and

of

acknowledge

papers for

seamen

Lahainn..

packages

of

gratuitous distribu-

from W. O.

It

do

"

for

style

not

as

over

however,

are,

would direct

we

of

should

full,

in
a

news-

pointed,

direct,

is

such in-

Just

desires

We

enjoy

glancing

There
which

we

learn be-

to

already been published

we

narrative.

the

done, in

propose

much

the

republishreaders,

our

hope

as

re-

mission

we

have

pages.

one

or

two

points

the attention of

Some foolish and evil-minded

paper scribblers

Smith., Esq.,

that

the story
the

(E7* We would

model

press

establish-

the heart

to

our

news-

enermous an-

tlujttttw

for both

a

and

of his be-

this famous and successful

specting
of

manly

manner

information.

has

much

a

to

a

sent

the volume.

perusing

So

is

at-

simply

find Living-

to

Introductory

"

the reader

as

does

great literary

mission

copy the

full of

formation
fore

the

correspondent.

and yet

think

we

He

limits would allow,

our

for it is written in

readers.

supported

outlay.

tion among

to

of

this

upon

If

however, will

has been under Government control,

thousand

supposed, for

Hawaiian

printing press

sent

have started

and

propagated

Livingstone, since retiring

to

wildssadeserts, and interior of Africa, had

learned

we

to

a

of

man

Introductory"

statement

Africa.

ing
well remember that

can

Polynesian

and has been

a

brandy,

this Sandwich Island molasses

purchased,

has

and edit the

and the

longer

Government

1844, the

a

quality of French Bor-

the

the

at

that paper

Whitney

publish

moves,

We

providafjfor.

and

"

the interior, with

from five hundred

barrels of

a

and

is

into California

it

is

printing establish-

"

Hawaiian molasses,

here from the

M.

stone.

personal responsibility.

no

nearly thirty years
"California Brandy.—lt

of
large portion

H.

ment, and will hereafter

to
to

hand

"

The

off-hand

ing

yesterday

a new

Government

the

of

issue of

follows:

185010 1863, J rears

1860

"

last

Hon.

Verily the world

ainoe 1850,

1853

that

"

a

simple and direct errand

an-

847

1804

of decrease of

percentage

to

1,640

I860

since

By the»

learn

Gazette
Total increase

of $200

style, and

to

hon-

an

of the New York Herald,

correspondent
on a

be distributed

to

Extra

"

indicative that there is

1,172

since I860

sum

be

to

merely

tainments nnd finished culture, but

the

to

for the benefit of the poor of Waimea.

7,234

Total ilecrease of natives since 1866

and the

;

be invested, the interest

bellows."
Total increase of foreigners

each;

Society, $300 for the edu-

cation of freedmen

4,104

1866

-

$300; tothe Hawaiian

Bible and Tract Societies $300

5,366

Total number of lorelgnera in 1872
.•

sum of

American Tract

Ilecrease since 1866

..

Association the

Evangelical

364

1872

Total number of natives, including
..

To the Board of the Hawaiian

2&gt;4

"

French in 1872
»»

pretend

net

Livingstone,

aims

remarkably well.

it

by Mr.

a narra-

his adventures in

forward

straight

he has done

sions.

889

.•

Portuguese in 1872

•'

M. for the support of mis-

find

to

The writer

relate the story of

thousand dollars is also given

one

the A. B. C. F.

2,487

1872

Chinese in 1872

•■

to

a

As

steamer.

Stanley's journey
success.

publish-

received

were

copies

York:

.

book has been

the last

Whitney, by

est
49.044

Total number ol natives in 1872

expected

few

a

Author.

the

drawings by
New
subscription.

by

Scribner, Armstrong &amp; Co., 1872.

tive of

property

Corre-

Stanley, Traveling
Herald ;" with Mapa

after

only

This long

Commissioners for For-

lie

to

M.

aa

Dr. Liv-

with

New York

Illustrations

the

to

"

of the

a

about eleven

bequeathed

Months' Residence

ingstone, by Henry

Adventures,

Afrioa, including

Central

in

account of Four

and

: Travels,

Livingstone

Discoveries

Published

of land, is

acres

eign Missions,

comprising

dwelling with

stone

half

a

Waimea,

at

American Board of

THE

following

I FocJiD

aod

spondent

32

V.M.C.A

for the

bequests :

two-story

Editor’s Table.

Mercy

late

Samuel WhitHow

probate, providos

\m Series, M3O

25

of Waimea, Kauai, which has been ad-

ney,

*'

received

Pamphlets
"

-*J

■

How I found Livingstone"

widow of Rev.

Whitney,

I'Ana
Islmids
Casta, of Hi* Hawaiian
Kditor'. Table

will of the

Bequests.—The

&lt; oxTKvrs
for

18.3.

1,

in other

to

do

as

the "Africans do in

Africa,"

words, had partially fallen from that

high standard of
character

early part

so

of

missionary and Christian

conspicuously displayed
his

life

in

in South Africa,

the

and.

�anley

Inuiiful y

sinuations, aud

simple,

mt'a

as

explorer.

"

By

We copy

own to

Livingstone

1

me.

j

be

the surface is

on

apparent

I hope

is in him.

that

in

the

at

I

one.

ion of the

write down my

simply

I have

man as

represents himself;
heard of
us I have

seen

I know him

as

him.-

1 lived with

from -the 10th November,

March, 1872;
camp, and

him

of

if

i weak side.

I think it
with

Livingstone,

tveaknes es,
feo

very

bility

if

readily,

of that oblique

whose company I

thraldom,

f-resped

which it

ringstone's

was

1 have

duty

to

!

with

j

yen-

my enthusiasm,
admira-

though
peared

is about

Livingstone
after he

more

restored

was

like

a man

sixty
to

years

health he

who had

not

old, i

ap-1

passed

His hair has a brownish
his fiftieth year.
color yet, but is here and there streaked with
grey

lines

moustache

hazel,

are

sight

are

as

a

he

has

a

His teeth alone in-

hawk's.

the hard fare of

;

Lunda has made havoc in
soon

which

eyes,

bright;

dicate the weakness of
age

form, which

his beard and

;

His

very grey.

remarkably

are

keen

temples

the

over

their

assumed

His

lines.

stoutish appear-

a

is a little over the ordinary height, with
slightest possible bow in the shoulders.

ance,

the

When

walking

he has

a

firm but

that of an over-worked
c

is accustomed

Ice

•t

id

I

him, exhibited

saw

repairing, but

"

reful
with

him

light

great

and

his African
more

of

was

industry.

marriage,

with him,

making

maps
As

field

dare

a

gentleman

to

in connection

also

evince

with

to

hint

the

at

name

to

and 1 would

challenge •any

it

man

utterly
a

it,

towards

only

in

come

;

his

with

Livingstone,

has tamed

and

him,

crude

of

masters—a

pleasurable
our

respective

my

servants

you,

From

his

pleasant temper,

without
to

he

the

by

kana

in

arrival

nnd

and
I

all hearts.

won

was

respect

paid

to

of

has,

mild,

him, and

from the

unaffected, and sincere
short

his

the

which is listened

to

tone

house

There

is

;

in

in

the

students

and

of

his

dreadful climate of
consistent
his

to

them,

fine

to

him and

example

Livingstone's

spirit;

consistent

his

ability

only

to

which he

never

a

the

he

man

has

up

a

very

Anglo-

the

consti-

haapy

to

the

led.

A

out

ever

vicious habits could

of

find

a

and

the

Apostle

self,

have withstood the climate of

Central

Africa."

allow

us

to

This

additional

will

and discoveries.
for

reflection

copy

but

relates

It is

Livingstone's

There is

this

Only

"

we

probable future

true

I felt curious

to

one

the

It

matter

is
to

bold

ex-

Mr.

;

the

nnd, though

behold it him-

not

nor

chil-

our

yet
it, and

posterity

of its civil-

daring pioneer

a

rebel

reader, and this

more,

oldest

Livingstone's

to

Robert,

son,

in North Caro-

hospital,

his

nobly exposing

life

before

In passing through the forest of Ukimba,

to

the bleached skull

saw

through

emn

stillness

be

buried

an

unfortunate

an

Referring

and

In

England
were

graves

under the

be

there
often

sure

dead leaves,
undisturbed.

to rest

was

elbow-room,

no

and

desecrated;

he had

sighed

for

where

his

weary bones

eternal

rest

they

ful

by

related

the

the

career

Robert.
'

when

and the interior

down,

tor

would

light of
to me

and

Shu-

a

spot,

receive

the

coveted.

"The same evening,
was

such

just

the

since

ever

he had buried his wife in the woods of
panga

sol-

serenity, without wishing

quietly

where he would

never

African forest, with its

the

was

door

tent

made cheer-,

paraffin candle, the Doc-

a

some

incidents

the death

Readers of

of his

respecting
eldest

son,

Livingstone's first book,

South Africa,' without which

no

boy

should

be, will probably recollect the dying Sebituregard for the little boy

Livingstone

and

family

Cape.of Good Hope,
where Robert

was

tutor; but wearied of
about

was
came

to

'

Robert.'
taken

were

and thence

eighteen,

Mrs.

to

sent to

the

Eng-

in the
charge of
inactivity, when he

put

he

left

Natal, whence

he

Scotland and
endeavored

to

reach his father. Unsuccessful in his attempt,

enlisted

ship and sailed for New York, and
in

the Northern

Hampshire regiment
to* the result of

of

travel.

it, the Doctor remarked that he could

pass

to

privations of

the

to

he took
out-

:

as

the

Pagan,

fid

see

friends

both Chris-

come ;

may

paragraph

one

after

victim

a

flattering

that he should grasp such

on

men,

younger

recognise

relates

travels

abundant

parrgraph.

honorable and

lines of the
"

in

shines

will

Quixotic

my

ization."

land,
ot

so,

Civilized

lA deliri-

a

Not

dren, the Hereafter will

ane's

Our limits will

sun

of Africa

we

Livingstone

reward.

enterprise,

enlightenment

nor

and charitable

good

will say.

Infidel,

of

to-embody

still live in dark-

as

ample

an

the

as

day

doggedne-ss

withstand the

born,

was

strictly temperate life
drunkard and

to

the

to

energy is

He is

race.

perseverance,

but his
not

like

withstanoVthe

tenacity which characterise

Saxon

books,

Central Africa, and

to

of the

climate is due

his

with which he follows
His

explorations.

native

and

energy

to

tian

love—by actual

of them

Richmond :

Kisawahili

readers of

ability

sure

ns

were

prayers

travels, would

know, and that is his

for

some

the

to

he

bestir themselves for their

to

fatuous

scheme !'

natural,

a

read

in

point

and

If

and salvation—this,

lina,

with evident interest and

another

land

own

redemption

ous

the

to attract

as

so

ness,

charity

tropics.

and nations

peoples

he

sympathy

the Christian

and

description

and

God

attention.
"

such

bind

love

this chainof

complete

to

compliments,

and afterwards

subject

character about which

hereafter

fascinaresolves

ground

new

a

His in-

sternest

chain of

a

heathen of the African

who died in

rends

Bible,

address

about

should

nations in bonds of

Even

his

around

forged

he

a

mere

such

was

the

home,
the

With every foot of
over

had

the

he follow-

Never

him

ob-

settle

observed

him.

passed

never

he

Ujiji,

kindness

half-

Sunday morning he gathers

chapter

language,

!

on

flock

a

beat

not

rest

little

delivers

good

u

sana,

Arabs

calling to pay
'
The blessing

and

a

does

their

Each

is

■

mkali

—'

'

say,

you.'

master,' say

heart; but ours—oh

uniform

that universal

is

hated and thwarted in

way

which

than

be-

to

to

Livingstone

duty.

impelled

resist.

of his

discuss

servants

our

fire

as

first

castes, upon

society

Yet

desired

were

they

hoped

that abstract virtue.

to

would consider

man ;

being

possible

every

whose

' Your

kind

a

sharp—hot

moto.'

and in-

men

Livingstone's,

to

for he has

he is

of

man

merits.

very good

man—a

has made

religion

he

tions of which it required

discovery

degree.

to a

I have often heard

Stanley,

Living-

clinations

he

Jie would receive;

sum

than-

more

labors—to him

nobler ambition

slave

willing

for

publication

children.
and

pecuniary

able

Chris-

a

and wilful have

companionable

most

Reli-

master.

and made him

the

gentleman ;

hard

a

have become

must

courage,

uncompanionable,

Dr.

carefully,
to

and

spirit

ceedingly

character, and analyse

loveliest features

not

Without

say

such

of

In

impertinent.

his

higher

that fin

begun, I felt

His discoveries

tain his reward, which
on

ask

to

own

ed the dictates of

some-

will

the report of

You may take any point in Dr.

stone's

note-

it is unnecessary

even

most

say

him.

tution with

tin box that he has

which I
His

time.

patching

than that it is untrue, and It is

beneath

thing

I

numbers of

contains
contents

some

care

large

a

of

scrupulously clean.

evening

every

and

notes ;

books, the

"

was

has been

His dress, when

traces

During the four months

noticed him

see

which he

throughout Africa.

entified

man.

naval cap, with

to wear a

semi-circular'peak, by

heavy tread,

fatigued

or

its

always

which

his ardent temperament, his enthusiasm, his

and

Dr.

way, and is

not

conduct

the Mohammedans

■

lion.
"

exhibits

It is

practice.

aggressive,

not

it

confessed

he had

give.

to

their

longed—by

travelled

through

assimilate,

sincerest

but

my

possi-

soon as

never

crated, that called forth all

;

nothing j

character that I

a

nothing

felt

a

as

could

\

was an

incompatibility,

utter

mine

nature

was

off

to cast

of

feeling

that evoked

that it

since he

tho fruits of his

to

"

man's charac-

a

nature

It is

His

he could afford

contact

high

but,

completed what

not

bigoted

dulgent

I know I

had

Mohammedans, and all who

him the

how-

religious

loud, hut manifests

nor

been refined and subdued ;

unsuitable

an

sincere

a

or

his travels;

servants, but towards the natives, the

tian

hob-'

possible,

travel in his company.

to

in

en,

his

feel annoyance.

might

so

flighty

he is

not

the theoretical kind, but

earnest,

religion

gion

for

discover

develop

sure to

ion,

j

admiration.
to

leaded, he is

at

14th

feelings

my

place

where,

the

to

unqualified

the best

is

him ;

take the

not

quiet, practical

a

work.

with

not

conduct in the

the march, and

on

The camp

1871.

witnessed his

those

are

be,

to

of

it. governs his

he

not as

did

we

not

constant,

a

him,

of

opin-

own

him,

it

times is troublesome, if

that

thing

my summary

is

itself in

his character, and of his discoveries, 1 offend
no

so

generous

Livingstone would

neither demonstrative

nnd what

guile,

no

but

;

and

his character into consideration.

religion

becoming

was

of Dr.

study

complete

missionary, I side of

defy any one to be in his
thoroughly fathoming

him, for in him there is

I know

mind

high

a

considerably delicacy

The

"

without

long

He is sensitive,
of

man

any

111 i.

APRIL,

l&gt;.

nature.

follows :

as

is

is

this time

:iety

|

unblemished

and

dignified

fault in it.

Living-

to

(nan, Christian

a

d

all such base

testifies

nobly

Mr.

writings.

indignantly repels

moat

iracier

his

in

portrayed

is

rHI l: S

111 X

26

ing

his

own name

of

Army,

in

a

New

volunteers, discard-

of Robert Moffutt

Living-

.

�IH

and

stone,

of

rant

duties

his

find him.

In

mond, he

was

igno-

youth, might

the

to

have been

to

seems

the

not

to

a

"

ogy

Pamphlets Received.
Plea for the

the title of

with

sermon

We have read

opens

reinarkuble change,

a

and

vigorous

migrating

are

other parts

the

population

of

New

and

increasing, villages

dwindling, farms

who

results

pamphlet

to

see

and the

and

On
our

ick, Mass.,

my

long !

attention,

our

Presbyte-

Troy, N. V., Dec. 15, 1872, by
D.

of

D.,

Williams'

in

which

the

tHe

satisfactory
of

opinions
of

subject

Prayer,

Prof.
dis-

are

We have *read

answered.

Rev. Mr.

early

fluence of

is

and

this

\

"

Tii'himli-

of

with

would

the

terms,

that the New England
from

days.

During

of

the
a

Technology,"

of
and

ers

can

by

a

for

sending

Mr.

Jroin

learn
we

a

Institute

"

rary

who

but

now

a

merely add

of Professors and LecturFrom

this

may

not

that

we

no-

hearted

document, and other

who do

institution is

one

Architecture,

Engineering,
arc

carried forward

to a

advance of what is done iv

most

colleges

universities in the United States.
classes

are

large,

but

the

examinations
cating that

acting.
"

S. D.,"

he

If
or

occupies

scientific

a

young

upper
are

man

a

proud

and

The lower

small,

severe

indi-

nnd

ex*

finally graduates,

Doctor of Science,

attainments.

Among

position

infer

we

as

a

Among the

not

by

the

This appears

a

prisoners

Gnulding,

who

joice

the

man

of

be

not

women,

are

their

litters.

and subscribers'

Christian

parts of

women

the State of

must

paragraph

tells the story of the year's work :
"

A

sent to

;

to earn a

sixty-three

joughly

bad

of. dismissed

;

as

been

to

re-

have been

respectable livelihood ;

seem

hopeless,

four have been

sent to

of.

the

of

the

ical

founded

form

manuscripts

by

This So-

Thomas, Esq..
in Amer-

and

library
of

one

of

collections

histor-

the

most

documents

public

in America.

antiquarian r.'lics

and

prepared

leading printer
The

"

The

"

Antiquarian

Esq.

Isaiah

by

a

as

good

India.

or

mention ot

Havens,

S.
re-

Received

American

years ago.

important

our

teach

as to

Pamphlets

Worcester, Mass.,"

well known

fifty

in this

engaged

mere

the Librarian, S. F.
was

was

people of China

"

close with

of

"Go and

one,

ago it

missionary work

a

notice

Society

eye

lady, Miss A.
officiates as Matron. We

The Deluge Confessed.
h is

quite refreshing

find

to

tioned in the Bible, which

of

science

by

the

willing

are

of

progress

Smith, of

the

subjoined

most

fact

one

the

men-

modern

men

admit is confirmed

to

Mr.

discovery.

British

George

Museum, makes

interesting

the

the

of the

account

from the

Assyrian

and
thor-

have been

hospitals;

monuments

"The ctiniforin inscription
found

recently
mid full

the ver*sion
existed

and

re-

in

of Erech (one of

city

period,

the cities of

is

Deluge

wickedness
build

of

Deluge,

the

the

The

blince

to

the

filling

the ark

has

closer

a

of it,

on a moun-

transmitted

account

the

command to

the

of the birds, and

narrative

In

He relates the

world, the

building,

out

the

account

narrative into

a

Noah.

resting of

tain, the sending
matters.

or

the

ark, its

the

as

put

mouth of Xisuthrus

at

Nimrod),

ruins of Wnrka.

represented by the

newly-discovered inscription

of the

long

this event, which

Chaldean

early

have

a

It contains

Deluge.

tradition of

or

the

gives

de-

:

which I

translated

of the

account

lately

which he bus

Deluge,

other

resem-

the

by

Greeks from Berosus, the Chaldean historian,
than

to

the Biblical

history,

but

differ materially from either.

differences
uge, the

as

arc

ark rested, the

The ctiniforin

to

up many

sending

out

of

by

questions of
it

the

birds,

longer

Bible and

inscription

which
is

interesting

This is the first time any
found with

an account

ed in Genesis."

of

etc.

and

we

the

open.

knew noth-

connected with

number of other details of Chaldean
which will be both

Del-

and has several

the

This

not

which the

on

much

is

Berosu

both

ing previously, and

does

principal

the duration of the

account

details omitted

it

The

of the mountain

name

Chaldean historian.

twenty have

hundred and

places

truly

as

Proceedings

ica

erring
years

We

charity.
approving

the

fuller than that of

following

; fifteen, confident of their own strength
that'
i ability to take care of themselves, or so

nanas

to

of noble-

Christian

good

The

ceived into our Home

to an

learn that she is

to

work,

the

should

community

of officers

other

Massachusettts.

we

I'ri.t-

that the
and unfortupoor

names

Boston and

liud

the last mail.

Report »f the Tempo-

high-toned

lorget

find many of

we

in \ of
!
very much

point

and

female

nate

Mechanics, etc., '.

I inula,/

word

to utter a

tho

meets

know

to

now

we

distant part of

of this noble

Many

privilege

ciphered

and

always

table,

our

received

find except in

to

expect

in which Mathematics, the Natural Sciences,

.

over

eye

Dedham, Mass.

we

infer that this

what

glad

patrons

the

lawyer

pamphlets

of those institutions which

one

should be

their labor

cord of

Brighain, formerly

Asylum for DischargedFenutU

oners."

in-

are

an

pamphlets

Ninth

"

score

this

us

suppose that

we

to' receive
we

to

a

into

misery."

from

more."

no

(his

glancing

other

two

three hundred

embracing

corps

In

former

than

less

numbering thirty-six,.

sources,

of

England
of

period

under-gmduates,

fifty-six

structed

to-day essentially

of

New

there has grown up this

years,

sin

to

We

Mr. Corwin,

pamphlet relating

catalogues, although

If

rejoice

Sermon.

College

College,

glad

the

This document affords additional evidence !■ tice them.

differs

and
sure

does

Supernatural,

young

We would

always

are

He

the

left

influences,

the hearing of the offiencouragement in

cers

in the discussion,

we

from

to

Oahu

in Boston.

a

1872-73.

of Courses of Instruction," for

at

vigorous

under the in-

accuracy

Technology,"

indebted

are

the consid-

emotion.

permit,

For the

copy.

teacher

Catalogue,

much

especially thank

Institute of

we

heart

a

knotty points

member of Williams'

Hunt, formerly

1 nut itate

Annual

with

extracts

to

dis-

breaking

permission, and fled back

power

we

Dedhnm

love,

of

restraining

our

the world,
of

we

thorough

more

brings

Nature and the

make full

preached by

one

deep religious

limits would

our

the old

in

ciety

times, and

his clear and

subject

together

avoid the

"

least

Hopkins

the

Mirnrli,

take up another pamphlet, also

Vlllth

ut

but defines with

lie-

Church of Nat-

Congregational

we

('ration of

intellect,

good seed

plait

Dr.

perusal.

not

it

give

to

labor

and labor among the

interesting and

most

on

h'/iy-

Whatever

"

to

!!

old age,

two

and less."

intend

entitled :
by the last mail

or

they

rc-

were

Pray&lt; r-ijuage."

and the

Hopkins,

and

cussed

would

MateXtehuttttt

state

am not a

my

down this Sermon,

laying

received

cluims

re-read this discourse several

fields!

Pastor of the

"

Tyndall,

The

lived

between the

wherewith

old friend, the

yy,"

I

of

hope enough

we

produced

new

not

translation of Acts,

delivered in the First

a

I i discourse,

The

.\,ir

two

England of

day less

every

results follow,
will be

"

remarks,

England

New

and the resemblance

coming

America, he would

(Noyes'

If

twenty-

j

at

wearied and

only,

one

our

friends

home

peaceful

have been

seven

their

to

the wilderness of sin and

Our

This is

those

foreseen.

substantially

New

land*,—the
youth,

be

cannot

and yet I have
years,

in

patriarch

the

of

careful

as

through all

so

authorof this

enough

are

and

possession

should

with

Home, without

pub-

College.

are

towns

out,

for

even

Paul find his way

Apostle

I*rayer

"

' A discourse

building

born in Ireland and Canada.

were

ultimate

the

into

passing

land is

and

or

while

to-day;
gusted

Institute of Technol-

"

pamphlet

Mark

running

are

what-

to return

make up the

Waialua,

;

other institutions

to

induced

of Him who said

One other

Church,

parishes

the old rural
up, yet

belongs

three

six

of

it,I 17:22.)

I rian

are

observe

we

who

27

S.

are

parishes . entitled

however,

"

very devout

\\ Rev.

cities

the

the Athens of

the West, and

England,

this

15.

provision

no

We fear that
us

The wealth and

to

world.

of

"

pro-

multitudes ol the young

breaking up,and

are

now

The old

in New England.

gressing

]|

this

for

interest,

melancholy

a

view

to

native

a

notice that

prayers.

' to

yftir) class,

religious teaching,

observer

an

Rev.

for

I» HI L,

..

1872, ji port respecting the inhabitants that

the 13th of October,

on

Attleborough, Mass.

in

the

preached by

Sermon,

a

Samuel Hunt,

lic

Old Parieh."— This is

We

is made in

ever

his wounds."

third

islands, and

our

Oahu.

North Carolina

conveyed
hospital, where he died from

"

M&gt;.

Joseph S. Emerson,

of

name

i to

of the battles before Rich-

one

Rl I.

t-

the
junior (or
Rupert Vincent, I

that of

taking

thai his tutor, who

I.

and

a

history

important.

inscription has been
an event

mention-

�28

111

APRIL,

I, 18T3.

friends who
their

“Home, Sweet Home.”
Seldom do
other

or

seafaring

them refer

months since

reference

to

had

his son's

and

regard

"I
in

the proper

tikis

for the

com-

training

recorded

and

received
from

have

I
I

spoke

get hold of

to

same

it

and
the

from his

fully

very

about,

you

Apocrypha for

how

and

during

texts,

naval officer

a

profitably employ
long

a

His

cruise.

would become imbued with the

truths revealed in the

would associate

dearest

objects

of

truths

these

affections.

his

removed the diameter of the

globe

he could

daily

family, yet

schedule for

the

Then,

concert.

would teach

keep up

of the

reading

too, he

a

daily

surely

pass without

he would
for

praying

the

those

at

home."
"

a va.t trianc'e

On who*e broad ha.c
And whose
And join,

high top

us at

we

form,

all

may meet.

surmount,

tho .torin.

the Saviour*, reel."

and call down
or

ily

and

and

on

than the

rapidly

Think of this,

sea, or

ye who

pray

upon

Ptic

furnished

was

but

a

sent

ped

sea,

at

think

up

I

to

A few

me,

and

an

of

the

in the

held it

we

copy,

commu-

said I

men

shall be

was,

ago I

we

be-

associate.

forth I

myself

ex-

your remarks."

sailing

of

not

trust

in God.

resolve

with

of sand and

pumps

which

had

we

a

home before

running

reached there in

a

few

a

You would go
Mr. Sumner,
"

say,

mates

O'Connell.

knot

ten

we

were

and

breeze,

1

say:

between

that

would

made

think 1 should

not

since He made

God,

man

a

of

almost

as

naturally.

Roanoke,
much

to

exaggerate if I said

Demosthenes,

who
he

as

But

hated

did

a

John Ran-

when

Yankee,

London and heard O'Connell,

the

lips,

eloquent

that

And I think he

speak English
right.

was

Webster could address
Everett could charm
delude

no

college

thing.

one

judges

;

a

college better

Sen-

a

and

grand
are

the
to

majesty
have

of Calhoun

passed,
great

of

Webster;

melt underthe

;

and

seen

eloquence

no one

of them

he had —what

is

I

of

fifth

rib.

his

Hugh

Stowell

Salt Lake.

tour to

England

disgrace

share

must

of this

nineteenth
"The

people

art

to

to

returning

Eng-

statement in

it

would

a

appear

and

cxcrcscnce on

Christianity

of

the
the

:

humiliating thing

find that most

of

to an

Eng-

the Mormon

It is

hUfsllow-eowiUrymtst,

not

much the American

that has

ignorance

so

re-

with America the

monstrous

century

most

lishman is

On

following

from which

public address,

so

cele-

a

Liverpool,

visited the United States,and continued

land, he made the

that

Brown,

of

clergyman

Baptist

cently

Had

great

it

a

imposture as English
made Mofthonism what

been

not

success

for

ter-informed

myself

was

no

never

has

disgraceful
Brigham

have

proved

proved—and

progress with his bet-

countrymen

never

the

people,

it

as

has made

j Brigham

logic

never

sur-

from

more

the

first

half the
power with

a

Herefordshire,

Yorkshire—for

equaled, the from
In

His

any order of cir-

of

America.

ashamed of the

I

peo-

ple to whom I belong, than when, conversing
Henry. with those Mormons, I found that they came

in the iron

ever

wit,

he would

know what

together

(Applause.)

ora-

famed

I know what

magnetism

hut all three

Irishman.

majestic

singularly

he

But

the Mormons?

are

| neglect of the English
Clay j Young's cunning would

Senate.

a

"

that would pierce

by

delude

leave

magnetizing

of America, who

was

Who

he could lit is.

than Everett;

than Choate, and

the

;

argument

disconcerted

The Key.

Choate could

of them could do but

the world's circumference.

place

;

creature

He abounded in

retort

at

times

get
would
you

and

under the

modern civilization

The wonder of O Connell

himself fur behind in

it

bench of

a

that he could out-talk Corwin

jury better

on

day."

(Applause.)

jury; Clay could magnetize

a

one

charm

tors

my

Tom Corwin could hold the mob in his

;

was

a

in

Well,

cumstances.

brated

Irishman

an

three

only but try !

an

a

"

never

the
great work as He
You may think I am partial

my hero, very

of

rapier,

not

was

not;

try."

midst

a

fit for

so

did O'Connell.

dolph,

like

you
wit

1 do

"

not

would

you

You would

magnificent

he would

hearing

twenty times, and

than

did

a

disconcert you with

BYWENDP
EL
HILLIPS.

that

he

effort.

an

the word effort with

use

more

"Oh, what

and in the

O’Conel
anOrator.

ever

would

men

made

hall after

I heard him

would be if
he

days.

thousand

the full sweep of his power.

provoked

And the

his voice, like

and
any orator,

him

never saw

story that

magnificent effort!

a

would

a

laugh.

never

flavor

possible

in

of this

out

or

What

no man

done than the wind
few hours

very

And he

1

Boeky Mountains.

were

song, and five

tears.

dnwn

re-echoing

come

slightest

moment —tears

old

an

my

ship,

the

tell
arc

And

breaking."

lie would tell

brogue,

be in-

to

the

out

Irish

the

the

to

thunderbolts

answer

London from

to

of

be in

sooner

called the

pumped

no sooner

shifted, and in

it

short time cleared

a

hear the

to

Atlantic,

Negro that the
is

redemption

then, with

next

Hence-

no

seemed

1

hope.

new

God.

speak-

gamut.

like

careering,

the

that God's

And
an

voice

across

would make ail Exeter Hall

a

Ah,

of all

cause

I had

that I

on

trust."

we

trusted

work, and in

went to

found

one

at

greyhound.

few American

so

remind the

to

their

back

;

ample

my

of

seemed

came on

light and

the

have

this

to

spired
and

I

;

will

Clay; I

English captain step-

was

into

the

to

After

piece, and without

cent

this is

myself,

to

troubles

a

in

fools shall be de-

we

down

up

hot, and

desper-

the quarter deck

corner

three

South Carolina

I

was a

that sounded the

my

growling;

and commenced

on

on

found these words, "In God

that

The

text

forth

send

thunder storm,

miserable.

morning

I

icans,

provisions

looked

things

in the

hands

silver

thinking

of

were

delightful
spoken

not

I heard him once in Exeter Hall say: "Amer-

winds

leaking,

was

have—a voice

ers

of

thought

Then he had—what

the

been

was

equaled

never

him, if he had

at

and all you

all;

Liver-

to

and

water

pea-jftcket

my

ship

the sailors

night,

and

pockets

the

thoroughly

right hand ; but

incident

said "I have

the truth of
years

all

up

making

look

saw

boy : his

a

every gesture

;

Booth

or

grace that

When I
as

Why, it would have

him.

years,

nothing but head

state

was

thrust, my

was

from

preaching,

the

when

ago,

choked,

walk back and

ate

by the Chaplain,

like those with whom

perienced

and I

for

beauty

was

Macready

even to

and

his.

into

*

had, and

never

sixty-six—lithe

was

grace.

degrees,

remained

so

gales ;

was

deck with
to

imperceptible

million souls

a

he

or

*

Then he

that.

Webster

what

Jove
*

Appolo.

OConnell had all

off every attitude

came

Orleans home

getting short,

being

telegraphic

stroyed."

After

with

I have heard all

companion

My deduction

met

constant

were

melts

gradually,

most

Trust.”

Magazine.

year

New

the pump

ate

a

from

we

I

But

the brow of
of

stature

Clay had, the magnetism

him

at sea,

be

can

the

He that walketh with wise

come

pool,

that

majestic presence.
body as royal.

a

early youth

beside,

what

posi-

own

my

speed-

iinerican port:

wise:

until about

and

almost

atheist, and

passage

had

undermined, and 1 became like

was

an

got into

creeds, they

had

soul into a

royal

and the

Well,

a

old slaveholder held up his hands and said :
"This is the man, —those are the
the

home !

at

following interesting

:ion

more

message

“In God We

the Sailor's

heaven

ye who have friends

cruising

for friends

to

friends

our

globe,

returned along the

an answer

wire.

and

blessings

the other side of the

on

them

he got

The prayer of faith may ascend

•

myself

to
l'rsycr .hall

strong in

contest.

slow and

take

had in

Jupiter,

out

allow

not
"

to

respective

Bible in

pray for

to

seemed

flattered

by

He

social

atheism, and I the side of

I felt

;

very

conqueror in every

knew that the mother

the child

absent father, anil
to

ex-

copy of the Koran

communion with them, for he had made

day

we

finished my dear

to

a

imagine

he

and

tion,

our

God put that

I liked

were

frequently

very

the side of

taking

Christianity

they

they

we

argument upon

come

pleasantly

thereby

Although

a

a

purpose."

cannot
more

my time

occupy

ways.

purest sentiments and

a

in

and

me;

altogether

little

to

of

manner

gentleman,

his leisure hours

with

relating

we

the Bible and

hausting
and tried

Bible,

fresh

carefully through

promises

to

nickle

boy's book that

mind

peruse.

keeping

Recently

to

manage

We

to

follows :

various

could

Bible

passage

them.

from
as

copy

blank

a

before his mind, he had

the various

to

letter

method of

ihe

son,

voyage,

in

privilege

this

eveiy

children and

hearing

with his

same

our

image

noting

them,

the

was

reading

menced
and

to

at

son

and

orator —he

popular

circle of

a

avowed atheists.

were

friendly,

fancy

with

acquainted

company,

my faith

minute account of the

book, which it

an

He had written the

neatly copied

In addition

with

wife and little

a

years old.
a

Some

United States

his correspondence

fellow
young
and

of the

one

much interested in

were

to

hearing

became acquainted

we

quite five

not

without

persons

naval vessels who left

We

officers

their homes and friends.

to

officer attached

home.

and

with naval

we converse

became

bourne

IBf •.

.Mill,,

and Australia, and while in Mel-

England

FRIEND.

THE

Ml IJ£ N l),

h

the

while,

to

the

benighted

the credit

' ''try far of them

from

Berkshire,

from

they came
districts;
agricultural

most

of

part,

Use Irish and fkotcli,

couM

befeexnd."

�1111

111 X

Germany.—Prince Bismarck makes

in

Roman Catholic Ecclesiastical power

of

influence

shows

A

great Chancellor.

explore Africa from
is

news

suffered

against 287, upon

versity

who

Majesty,

by Her

probability

Tho

answer.

will

place Mr. Gladstone
lease
miership with a renowed
takes

2Ulh

of

power.—A'w

until

of

the

N

Report
Left

r

at

12

from

m

at

In Aid

the

•!

choice

A

selection

Ladies and

several

the

will lie

pieces

have

to

Bark
Jan Sin,

be

schools, half-price; may

tT.

It

Children

|K&gt;rls
previous

connected

.Ian

day.

JOURNAL.

heavy

sea

N.long

W

whalers

iu

■

at

out

ihc

o.i

...

hk Kale, Gccrken. 134 days from

March Ma,

from

all

board

as

on

the

of

loss

one

at

whales was

whales

„

\\ cs.l

lavs

Island
aince

West.

Island

Enderbury

Jan

,

llarlle-

west.

days from llow-

Ions

ships

loih. leaded

laid

supplies,

sailed
guano, and

of

10th ;

.May

Eraser, Ircm
29—Am wh bk Illinois,

Hilo,
a

guano,

Bark

June Iflth, landed

I, loaded

»upt

111 days

sulled July Bill ;

and

sailed September

Snip

acruise.

tons ol

day* from Asa

taking

A:

Olio

loaded 1,774

Francisco.

arrived

Grimaldo

guano,

in cargo.

iug

cruise.

lo

of guano, and

loaded 840

Hawaii.

30—Haw wh schr Giovanni Apiani, Uority, from
Sanborn, Worlh,

taking

M

12lllI

ol

in

suano,

days taking

in

24th,

Septenilsr

leaded

and sailed October 5th

,

supplies,

supplier,

Starhiick

*.ai tons &lt;&gt;r

IN /.

.tmr

Nebraska, I

slmr

Moses Taylor. Blelhcn, for San Francisco.

Respectfully yours.

llarding, for Auckland,

Wood,

All well

.a:

liuiinl |

M Ward, Rickman, for

touched

-, had

cmsseil on
was
line, which
where we remained
Dec

Ist,

to

two

Guano

we

lost our llr.t

faind

on

diving

iv

the 271h, and buried

at

lo

Items

on

the

miles, and

Ac.

leonorc
and

four days.

Capt Hayes, in port.

our

Deo

ing

have

had

I'ssscdnvrr

I lie

bail

weather, with

shoal

S3TSar»«.*

approaching

Biiimi

the

Cnrist

ofthe

I.

3

years

and

have

comniitsioti

al

sea

and

107 in

port,

Ncrker

tv

port.

Island; sounded

Neat day. after sighling,.,,!*^.

al sea(Sydney

Pango
but

to

two

longest interval
to

to Callao)

is 6o day'!, and

Leone) is 2) hours.

vessels

at

sea

during

at sea at one

Callao)

54

lire

entire

A

Cook aud

son,

and

16th—Thoa NcLcl-

March

Nebraska,

Foa Auckland—Per

Moses

FiikSan Francisco—Per

18th—Mrs
Taylor. March
W Smith, T»

Mr Ako.T h Howe,
II F Doanc, Martin While,

Mass
Tllos lluyseldni, Br, and wile.
Cook, James Uaysclden,
MrWilson, J Kavanagh.
X M Everclt.S Ames. Mrs John S
J
Pslsdini
Casbiuaii,
Andrew
Kueiiimel,
E W Hitching.,
John Lawrence, Joseph An

Fruiirisqiiiui

Bahista,

Daniel Dinl, John Frawer, Mr Abbess, Ml
Fisher, anil M iv nansilu

lone, Samuel Clark,

Sparrcr, Frank

See, Chaa

Chong

March 20th—Mr«
Francisco—Per D. C. Murrsj.

Fob San

Roberls and

4

Will tJiKxioess,
J T Chajler,
Mitchell and wife, B 1

chililrtn, .Mrs

Furlong,

Robinson, Oeo
tersonand

Mrs

wife,

Egcr, A II Couiwr,

C

8

wife

Msgnin,

aud

W

child,
C

Mr

Bales, Mr Ronnie,

Reed, J F Allen, C A Tutilc und

J

Pat-

T

Summer*. «
an

M. Ward. March 'Josh—
Faos. llowi.»xn'» Isi.inii—Per i;.
Bridges, Mr Wright,
wile and 2 children.

Capl

Capt Kibbling,

Mr Tresk, and 68 unlivelaborers.
March '-'lib.

Jane A. Falkiuburg,

—WilliamTurnhull.

DIED.

March Dili, of iineurisni,
I'eteb J.
Mki.i.ish—In this illy,
Maui.
Filer MeJUsb, ol Luhajna,
sou of Hie late

aged 32 years.
March 17th,ofhenrtdisease, Joseph
Vebnon—In this city,
aged 65 years, 1 uioiillimid I day. He

leaves

a

a

waa

HJ' Plan Framusrn slid

also Derbyshire, England, papers phase
Lee
(

Tam—In

this

city,

for twenty-one

iHiialliHii),

The deceased

mourn hie Ins..

widow anil 6 children to

native of Cheshire, England.

Fredericksburg, llrlUelt

of

He had sailed

copy.

March loth. Lee
years

out

of this

llie whnleship

tin

fTsvuu*.

Tav

servant of

faithful

27th. John

risllausa,
sinrc

|iort

Bailey,

Jidui

aged

1851,

about

and

was

b native

o2

year.

last

nt.i

'finrrua.

days, and

in a

Wanted.

nationalities
visited 21 places, of 16 different
consumed (includ61
under steam, and

days
8141
ing cooking and condensing purposes)

tons ol

and

1,304 round!

ammunition iu target practice.
from oOSHKJScw link)
Our barotnutr has ranged

of small

1

consumed 671

pounds ol powder

(at sea.)

the

to

brig

destination.

lo

29.01

when
an

last

hearil

up|x&gt;rmmi&gt;

Any inlorinaloiu

by J. M. Owen, Portcrs-

Honolulu on board
John Hash, who sailed from
arrived at
Porfer In
and

February,

Jssir

June.

18T0,

Since then his anxious mother

of him.
Any information respecting
received no tidings
of thia paper, or
will be thankfully received by lire Sditor
"The Thorns,"
Jane
Mr.
Le
Oror
Nash,
Clark,
sister,

has
lilm

hy his

Oaks," Kent, England.

win
Respecting A. Beriiford d'Kste, a youi g Frenchman,
Islands.
The Editor has re
last heard trom at the Fiji
waa
celved
we

a

copy

side.

on

which
lellcr from Paris, under date of June 23d. Irom
as

" There

bus been

out

a

very hard lime.

uninjured,

but

His side

the other

hia friends

srr

Uvuka

some ways from
communicate with the Editor.

lives

a

great deal ol ngtlliuj:

They

and he had
came

follows i

natives, anil he waa appointed leader of one
among the
went to war, hut the army was very
undisciplined,

this leader, and

arm

and

here, awaiting

their jsirl of

Miami hae the following

going

coal.

different reasons
We have had 27 changes in our ollicers lor
desertions
We have had 22 courls-marllal on board,and 123

'

the Sandwich Islands,

California.
ville, Tulare County,

Scvcu

track

ol

miles.

Wc have

be conveyed

to

via

(May, 187'.') were residing

from

"

time without see-

Wc have beco

11th,

winds

passage

our

Wc have

British brig
Honolulu Jan

contrary

W

transitu from Ban Francisco.
lan, and 13 in

Concerning

smallest 365.

a vessel, waa (Sydney

I 7,400

was

Norwegian ship Otto

for

(1 Manlcy,

Information

(seven

shortest (I'ango

cruise, and

Ixift also the

Sailed

Mra

will be gladly received
regarding them
404 days

Wc have spoken

From thence

strong wind..

our

Our longest

i

discharged

in

Oiw—S»»sa

greatest

in distress, leaking badly.
Had
Antonie hail arrived there
the
of cargo lo lighten
ship and
about 700 tons

sailed but returned

ami

A
Eagan. Mrs Grovesen,

O. Lufkins and «. Hiles, bolh
ReapcOtHaJ Jacob
They left Caliwell advanced In years and gray headed.
are

smallest 14J.
Our greatest day's run is 224 miles, and our
week's run
consecutive days) is 1,426
Our

—

drowning in Apia har-

by

or

and 78 days.
Wc have been

returned,

search of the body, which
shore.

March loth-

Moses

west.

All well | bound

8. 8. Nabbaoass«tt.—Wc have been iu

ManahHl

for oil,

were

wild us.

arrived Dec lath, had

offlcer.JJlr Bailey,

Had natives

trading

who

1

Taylor,
Faow San FnAKClaco—Per
Mrs rquilih, m,..
Mr ami Mr. J W Campbell,
Young Sbeong,
J Rilson. CAT utile, r lullle.
O
II
Williams,
A
Turges,
Iseu
J
C
Rocsch, Mr nod Mrs D Smith, A Murphy,

sailed 48,709 miles by log.

Arrived

weeks

Jan.

Callau

of whom

Islands.

variable wlnda

those

desirous ol returning

were

bor.

*

and

W...

"-I

March 13th—J C Mark.
FoaSan I'bancisuo—Per Ka Moi,

fornia for Tahiti

P Cater, for

11. English, Master

the SOth.

and
all well and contented,

Upolo, where

-sth

light

N. 8.

1»

26

Aug.

. ..Sept.

at

ofCruiseUt.Sh"NaregnsR.W.Mcade.
et,"Com ander

MEMORANDA.

Retch Lunai.ilo,

..Sydney,

1

PASSENGERS.

officer of

cruise off Hawaii.

Victoria, B C.

with others,

29

F.bon Island

Bailey—In this city. March

Inatnd west.

Whitney,

Capt. Ilenjaiiiiii

Baker's Island January 20lh.

A c
Clary, for San Fraucisco.
ft B 8 Benicia,
C
Murray, Shepherd, for San Francisco.
20—Am hk D

Found

38...Ebon

Oct.

1'.

II

Aug.

W
Sydney, N. 8.

Island

12

Thos. Waterhouse, Ksq.

19

Dili

Aug.

guano,

Amount

days taking in cargo.

7

tons

since leaving
R. W.
Bark

Island.

Am

Scout, Ralph

Mill! Island

31.. .Milll Island

„.

Novemberleu, loaded
;

days

*

,

cargo.

Honolulu.

Am

steam corvctie

18...Arhno Island

0

Aug.
Aug.

Surveying

17...Arhno Island

Aug.

1
"

Mki.i.isii,

llepplugstone, leached
P. 8.—The hark Triton, Capt. John
Tisik 160 barrels »|icrm oil
Baker's Island January 16lh.

16

Honolulu Nov

Arliuo Island

m

at

if}

RaroßT

Aug.

12 ..Apaiang Island

Aug.

28

Aug.
Aug.

Island

Apulang

Aug.

20

I

Aug.

Tarawa Island

12.. .Taraws Island

OJ days tak-

of guano, and sailed October IStli ; 9J

DEPARTI'RES.

to

Island

..Apa'ang

IS

Aug.

Island

4...Druminond's Island. Ansiang
'.2

1
2

Uruiniii"nd's Island. Aug.

Aug.

DBIftaea llEMl'sTKtn,SuiKiriulendent.

wh schr Giovanni Apiani, Dority, lo cruise.
March I—Haw
bk Ka Moi, Garrels, for San Francisco.
13—Haw

26—Am wh hk Camilla, Pulver,

Peru Island

1... Byron's Island
..Peru Island

Aug.
Aug.

12

Venabi.es Vebnon,

anil sailed November 25lh

shipped, 11,14s

lor

March

March 2.

From Portland, O—Per

arrived October Ml, landed

Antonie

loos

Bark Agaic arrived

from Ban Francisco.
30—Am schr Olsego, 16 days

Lunalilo, English,

March 11

2

Aug.

11

cargo.

days from

O.

24—Am wh hk Camilla, Pnlver, from

..&lt;

Pango

Panto Pango

August

Forlics. 25

23—Am hktn Jane A Falkinbnrg,

Pango
Leone

Mr
J O'Neil, C II Blsson, Win Sisaon,

20th, IS7:s.

Air.—The shipping season is
of
loaded In 1872.

report
arrived April
a

cargo.
Cultivator arrived
ol

Pango

13...

Aug.

Island

in

taking

l*

Feb.

Enderbury lslsnd...
Pango Pango
April
March 28... Enderbury Island...Baker's Island
1...Baker's Island
Ilowland's Inland.. .April
April
May
2 ..llowland's Island... Honolulu
April
Christmas Island.. .July
6... Honolulu
July
I sislid
July
20...Christmas Island.. .Baker's
July
Byron's Island
Aug.
2S...Baker's Island
July

tieo

Damon—Wear

I send you

Kearsargc

14

»«•••

Pang"

from Aucklnnd.
Kiidcrburv

from

seen

14th of February.

0.

22...Apia

March

of
arrived
lfllli, loaded 1,120 tons
Bark Favorilc
August
2»lh ; 7 days taking In cargo.
guano, and sailed August
Staffordshire look moorings August 2in.li, loaded 1,609

land's Island.

I ,cii

Feb.

Feb.

Apia

Pango

17...Panto Pango

I'lislcluulo,

since

leaving
off Washington Island,

no

itinn

bound
well, and

and bound

well,

ill

Saw

Honolulu.

as

at

Enilerlmry
ftBatllllII, with nothing

rinli

Iroln

the

board

,^'.„

.V'-,,

27...Honolulu

Feb.

Miip

20—Am .chr C M Ward, Rickman, 26

or

Jan.

Mr

touched

having

July 31st, loaded l,5i"&gt;5 loin
rlliip J I. lisle arrived
and Bailed
15th ; M days taking in cargo.

San Francisco.

C

Honolulu

attended with

guano

Mose* Taylor, JII Blelhcn, 10 day.from

31—Am schr

28. -Han Francisco

1872.

had

tlicnec le pori had

aa

McKcmne, arrived

days

Re|s&gt;rt«

l-hlp

N. Z.

29—11 B li's

17

Nov.

wind

island.
making the

to

2.00Ctoii3

|MJOl.

15

at

Island
arrived at Enderbury
Triton, llcpi&gt;ingslnnc.
Rcwith 160 bhls sperm.
one momh Iroin Honolulu,
loss of the cabiu boy, who died two or three days

now over.

22 hours Irom Hilo, Hawaii.
March 2-U 8 S Benicia. Clary,
16 days from Aurk7—Am stuir Nebraska, Harding,

Haw ketch

Sept.

13 in transitu for Auckland.

all

Ship

D

on

of March

Honolulu

reported

arc

Sen Francisco

Valparaiso

light

81 It

the

From

Arrived

winds.

light

31

July

26...l'allao

thence light wind from
wind from

thence

;

On

with much lightning,

mooring, loaded 1,400 tons

J

arriving

First 4 days

running)

169=

166° W.

thunder storm

A large school of
on

ARRIVALS.

30—Amschr

Island at

NE. arriving

from

searunning.

lat 21= N.long

Rev. S.

Portland,

that

morning, wind

eastward,

from

calm

Mgbtnl

Left llowland's for Honolulu

M, with heavy

21st. 3d days

PORTHON LFU S
,
.I.

16—Am atmr

then

Left Jarvis for Enderbury
breeic

—

eapsrietaced

moorings

the

Bakek's Im.ish, January

Haw

mantku

out

at 7:30 nr\t

on
Reports
port.
Hark Amolda, Ilauldry, arrived

and

s

ex-

Lett
o*t llic 19th, wind fresh rrotn F.NE.
at 10 a h on Ihe 20lh, arriving

m

a

same

21°

2lllll,

port.

land,

W

London, for

Iron

running,

sea

17th, wind fresh

the

on

leaving

with

&lt;1, WHILE, CMihorn «: Co'sßtore.

MARINE

40=

and

aMcaaaa,

toPmake

moorinss

fresh

8hip F.uropa, J II

or

obtained

heavy

laic

loo

•»

J«l»

6... Valparaiso

also the

WALTER HILL.

Mr.

Each t

the

11:30

a

tolat

by

the Choir, of

kindly volun-

Maniftste&amp;ioM* of lAaraoitr.'

'mil

TICKKTS—»I .OO

8th,

at

—The following

teered their services for the occasion.

Subject—" Signs

8

fresh breeze from eastward.

then

:J0

Callao

May
July

March 12...1.eonc

making the round trip in 47 days.

rendered

with

Bethel, wlm

The Lecture will be delivered by

W.

1S71.

J»a*

6...RloJanelro

March 11... Psngo

First twelve hours

USE with

Feb

from ENE, with

SH

(J. T.

I. 0.

17th iu 123°

Enderbury Island i

conuected

Gentlemen
and

Church

Fortßtreet

Lodßf

of Musical

i,

all

for llowland's Island

22d at II

Church.

Street

&gt;o.

Jan

them light

.„,.

Amll

RloJanelro

March 21...New York

W, and kept them

Nicoya,

violent squalls from Ihe northward.

Fort

adjoining
or

weather.

Dale (1875)

N.H..NcwYork

2t...l'oriamouih,

1871.

con-

hut
Feb 14th, too lateagain lo lake the moorings,
Left Enderbury for Baker's Islluok tlicro at 7 next morning.

calms and

Room

a

Enderbury

FRIDAY, APRIL 4th, 1873,

Ktrndx

ship

Oct.

To

From

Dato(lS70)

they left oft" altogether.

124°

N,

:&gt;utli had

port

1st.

Feb 9th, with

&gt;i

very heavy

School

days

out.

Passed through

Pacific Feb

16lh, 1872. in 30=

fresh from the eastward.

UIVEN ON

the

in the

W.

carried

Oahu,

Feb

Arrived

night.

E hy N

In

Dec

moderate

islands, when

with British

Honolulu

Baker's

WILL. HE

In

light

Off the cape had

auaeaaaa C. m. Wabw,

or

.larvis Island

6

=

Sand

in fresh in 9°

for twelve hours, and

For the Temperance Cause!
AMI LECTURE

W,

martingale.

Jan lilt. 1873.

Dec

signals

there itlra

CONCERT

in

44

dates) 4 times.

our

detaining

trades

icoya.

Baker's

A

30°

Maul on the evening of March lilh. A t daybreak
and came into
after the sun had

8lh.

the

changed

the

with generally

the

7th sighted

on

lost

the line

set

nearing

East

Sighted

an

BENEFIT

Nov 30th

trades iu 30=

Crossed

through.

so

and

A.

winds

the SE

took

The NE trades

on

hnu.

the line

of l.e Mairc

Straits

the

to the Pre-

return

weather
NE

the

from 8W in lat 50 =, long 62

heavy gale

election

an

Took

more.

Dec 24tll

strong breetc

abroad

Majesty

Her

Crossed

to

so wc were

Mastbb.—Left West

Hail lite HE Hades moderate and light, and after they left had

to

and

Cairus,

now

that if

is

desired

Ho

party,

giving

before

continent,

loader
Tories

Derby,

Lords

friendsof

other eminent
tho

at

the

House.

his

sent for

conservative
as

N.

a fortnight

stantsilvers.:

votes

audience

an

Cabinet,

a

the

with

communicate

20°

good,

were

chart.

accurately.

BlBK Ksi.B, Gbbbkbk,

the Channel the seal day, licuvy

outof

there for

set

Tho

in

minority

him

gave

hesitates about forming
in a

The

Parliament.

immediately

was

Palace.

Buckingham

of

bill respecting secular uniMr. Gladstone reIreland.

a

Mr. D'lsraeli

signed.

uro

in

8ca

AlUuilirO
U0°
(equator,
Our thermometer has ranged from
1871 )
1 ° (New Vork, February 6th,
limes
and Pacific)
We have croesed the equator (Atlautlc
i
of longitude (changing
laOih parallel
Wc have crossed the

aimost breaking,

was

laid down on the

net

theobservations

18th, 1872 i had rough
weather through the
Passed Start Island on the 28lh and
and Channel.

much calm.

284
alight defeat,

a

in

education

to

itcrn

interesting

most

tho Ministerial crisis

government

North

us

water

on whichahc

29

18.3.

1..

I

Oct

llartlC|M&gt;ol

Wost coast to the East.

Britain.—The

Great

expedition

Herman

HKFOBTOr

got

for

big warfare

A

ll' X

24° 33' N, long 185° 40' W,

The day was clear and
able to tiorc its position

to

determination

a

death.

to the

fight Jesuitism
the

Ho

Empire.

the

strong

some

undue political

the

and decideddeclaration against

lat

in

shoal

over a

passed

Foreign News.

I).

\

i:

won the

side vowed

afraid he
iu

the :sk

battle and be
vengeance

is

murdered,

al

Ovalu."

as

on

he

Fhaasi

.

�THE

30
Jonah’s Gourd.
D.DBYREOLVK
E., OLOA.

it the castor-oil

Was

Jonah when sitting
veh ?

Thia ia

the

on

the

general

the castor-nil

waa

tree,

Smith's Bible
confessed

be

believe that

us

"

Palma Christi

identification

evidently

and

growth
Much

decay,

deprives

the

tree-like
it

rendering

decisive of all

its

of

ground

is

this

plant,

purpose

But

most

the

Now

mate.

it

seems

booth

a

that

vine

n

this booth would afford

over

than

castor-oil

the

renders

the

word

to

pro-

as
"

renders it

Vulgate

The

tree.

well

ioz,"

Septuagint

(Kolokuittlu

of

sort

Dr.

gourd.
at

Lobdell,

and Jews all agree

"The

subject,

months
from

high

ns

the

whole
is

In

the

to

large,
rapidity
plant is astonishing."

America and

Germany

it should be

the castor-oil

trained

to

like

here, but

extent

some

the kera

of mud and brush,

in which

the

to

to

as-

This is

plant.

structures

run

over

form booths

gardeners may protect

them-

selves from the terrible beams of the Asiatic

I have

seen

booths—these

glance,

at a

lodges

in

dozens

of these

the fields of melons

nnd cucumbers around the old walls of Nineveh covered with
there

are

the vines of the kera, of

species,

numerous

weighs from

one

to

the fruit

fifty pounds."

Bib. Sacra," vol. ia,
Sec
(See
pp. 397-98.
also an article on the Prophet Jonah in vol"

ume

10, in which Prof. Stowe maintains that

the Hebrew word

means

Prof. Stowe closes

subject by
so

far

cerned, the
at

:

saying

view may be

tainly,

the
as

neither a

ing

the

one;

him."

gourd
a

nor

Dr. Lobdell's

though

scholars

Hebrew word

the learned

of

Perhaps

correct

that

con-

of authorities

According
kikazon

to

is

Dr.

means

the castor-oil
plant, but

men

of modern Nineveh in

to

understand the

the Hebrew word kikazon

plant

are

cer-

pumpkin-squash vine. Are

better circumstances

a

remarks of this

some

preponderance

what he calls
not

"

the castor-oil tree.)

Biblical

present against

Lobdell,

The

yenr.

pan, and

fall

to

end.

An unfortunate

Such

rendered useless."

Solid

painted

the

ivory

from end

crack

that had

piano

to one

beat

fastened

miniatures

of

out

and

tune

the fierceness

being

thing, my lady.
'Tis

that

1
"

once

grew, and

mean-

applied

probably

to

now

and

did

Hem

"

!

you

'tis

is it not?"
••

"

O

get
new

Pretty!

"

the

!

'tis

plants

two

proudly in her ladyship's
dear Charlotte ! where did

elegant flower?"

a

A guinea, thank

of

one

into

"Why, Mr.

where

Pretty,

ladyship,"

a

boudoir.
get

you

thing.

new

it at old Lee's.
saw
Pretty, is it not?"
A
Pretty ! 'Tis beautiful ! It's price ?"
"

There

guinea.
third

another left."

whs

itor's horse smoked

off

and

paid,

wns

adorned the

comers

and

saw

of old Lee's nursery

flower,

the

gladden
promised

faithful

wish

of

the

purse,

same

not

wife

by

flower

to

the

season

golden guineas clinked
of the

product

from the window

healthful

neglected

the

ere

beauty

the

on

sailor's

But

gill.

closed three hundred

la-

new

the gates

to

into

seen

He

repository.

the

by

bursting

constantly

were

as

Two fuchsias,

ground.

and

graceful,

young,

her second

attracted

were

fuchsia

repeated

New chariols flew

plant.

guinea

chosen

of

was

A

spot whence

The second

second

scene

The vis-

suburbs.

the

on

drawing-room

The

dyship.
of the

the

Ihe

to

stood

flowering plant

in his

die ?

the

was

removed

came.

It's price T"

lovely.

of the heat, is it strange that Jonnh, after the
loss of his protecting shade, should faint ami
to

dear Mr. Lee!

my

spot iv his

wan-

of the consulates,

wrenched

continually

was

articles

and forks

dered from England

stony

Mr. Lee

were

lady

the first had been taken.

sen-

extreme

shaving ; and

a

handles of knives

the

even

with furniture.

pieces;

to

summer.

if scorched

as

ytoch

split;

are

curl like

ivory,

the

just

seem

unmercifully

glue

with

atmosphere

Rain, dew and

through

the touch,

to

the

communicates the

Beds

warming

a

floor is hot

90 for

first

A

charming flower?"

"My

tem-

usually

is

July,

of the

dryness

July every object

with

night

as, the heat.

sation of heat.

Lee,

your

The average

of

commencement

season

opened

his show house.

stood

month of

unknown

are

which

two

117

to

months, and 67 for

summer

excessive

as

the

nnd

weeks

By the

plant.

flowering

delighted possessor of three hundred fuchsia
The
plants, all giving promise of blossom.

thermometer rnnges

and the

dny

in

95

as

three

For

"

mid-day.

at

perature of the

in

single shrub

Wapping,—the

reward

the tnste, decision, skill and perseverance

of old Mr. Lee.
in

The First Fuchsia

England.—A Sailor’s

Present to

Information

his Wife.

Want,,..

We have received the
Old Mr. Lee,

to

and the

much that

ns

to mean

of which

more

the

next

this

110, and sometimes rises

to

ac

plant

pumpkin peculiar

of

savanß

cultivated, indeed,

which

alto-

not

Which is the

the

together,

160

near

ago,

was

nursery

day

one

treasures
to

a

to

him and declared
your

collection

this morning

plant

the
in

es,

a

Mr. Lee

mired.

off

posted

perceived that

woman,

it for

no

money

the West
now

"

"

for it

;

to

the

and

But I

more

But

I

must

gold, silver, copper"
than
this

place,

hung

He

new

and ad-

saw,

said

keep

have it."

••

pockets
stock

eight guineas).

sell

not

from
has

for

his

No, sir!"
"

here

was
"

is

some-

Well

a

is

of

for

I rear,
young ones
A coach
husband's sake."

the

your
ed, in which
and his

was

safely deposited

seemingly

work was

to

florist

our

His first

purchase.

and blossom bud

cuttings,

which

bark beds and hot beds,

sub-divided.

call-

was

and
utterly destroy every
pull off

vestige of blossom
divided into

dear

keep

to

first

were

were

Every effort

;

it

was

forced

into

re-divided and

was

used

to

mul-

desired

Mitchell,
there

the

information,
Editor,

I

—

di-

or

with the British

or

:

Dear air

.-—

3,1873.

You will doubtle»s

remem-

Honolulu .luting ihe months of April, May

came to

this

town direct

from Honolulu.

and

Here

1 have been practicing medicine ever ■ince my arrival. 1 venaddress
ture lo
you upon thi-t ocean on in lurtherancc of Ihe
wishes ol Her Mij&lt;*t\'s Consul resident In Levuka. In ordr to
could fun.i«th me with
you
any particular! rela-

know whether
to the

Mideiros.

hlrth-place
He

iml. Columbia, and

at

time

iv

deceased sou man ntimed
the

schooner

Cambria,

for l.cvuku,
FIJI,
The Cambria waa a British

May of that year.

Messrs

a

hoard

Honoluluabout April, 1671, from Brit-

departed from your port

schooner of about lib
wire

friend* of

or

was a aeamun on

eh vessel arrived

burthen, nnd her apcni*

tons

Walker

Ac

Allen,

rived iv Levuka she proceeded

affray which took 11

M

In

Honolulu

after the Cnmbrii

Shortly
on a

cc at oneof the

labor cruise,"

ar-

and In

an

Islands

visited between

the crew and the natives, Mldeiros with others

ofhi* shipmate*

lost

Any Informalion

their lives.

on

to

must

I

hut

being

apolfully

evinced in the welfare of

ever

address you ia
preference
other acquaintance* I may have mid.- In your
city.
am

constrained

Ihe discovery of

mo.

valuable lime,

&gt;our

sensible of the interest you have
1

leading

would be gratefully received by

ogise lor trespassing

to

to

any

Ihe atrocities which have been committed tn c-iincctton with
the Fiji Labor Trade" have

"

and earnest attention.
number of Polynesian*

day !
a power of
money, sure
"
anil sure."
'Tis yours, and the plant is
mine; and, my good woman, you shall have
one

In

June, 1871.

seamen,

;

Damon

living

hiarelatives

who
it

Dr.

residing

Mr.

Itcv.
ber my

some

"My

:

broughtine

must

(his

where

was

sir, 1 could

his

forth.

plant, 1 should

nice

was

the

the

at

readers

our

I.kvi ka, Fiji, January

wh

plant

with

rectly

tive

the

furnish

to

communi-

residing

of

any

communicate with

please

Consul

so

my husband,

by

Here !" emptying

thing

a

"Ah!

Indies

again,

left

sake."

this is

it."

buy

and

be nble

And

demanded and

house, he

the

Entering

to

saw

in

crimson;

being

in this part of the world.

like

not

Should

Fiji Islands.

Why,

"

the flowers

deep purple,"

directions

at once

good

turned

"No?"

like?"

and

(he

following

Dr. W. C. Mitchell,

cation from

variegated

flower than I

the richest

fold of

Particular

he

years

Well, you have

Wapping.",

their colors

given,

sixty

or

his

suddenly

this Phcefiix

elegant,

gardener,

like tassels from the pendant brunch-

rows

centre

"

:

prettier

a

at

was

was

fifty

showing

friend, who

a

and

man

London, well known

pray what

sun.

it

vine that
grew

a

shade?

a

Memoir."

Lobdell's

Mosul wonder

never

is

tree,

was

them

seen

A few words about the heat of Mosul from
"

in

is

make

to

wonder that the Latin Vulgate rendeis
may
the word by hedera, but the Orientals of

sumed

that it

never

spent

well

us

the

referring

are

of the

growth

of the

in

kind of

a

The leaves

East.

who

is

the views of the

states

castor-oil

Jonah's booth '.'

over

up

but had

"The Mohammedans, Christians

own.

the kera,

Both

(Nineveh)

plant that sheltered Jonah

Mosul,
years
modern Ninevites on the
some

The

(hedera.)

the Jews and Christians of Mosul

believe that the

shade

gourd.)

as

the

by

the vine of

lodges covered with

or

gether probable

on

running

better

a

"gourd."

signifies pumpkin,

shaded

single glance

a

at

pumpkin-squash,

mahogany desks

himself from the terrible heat of the cli-

tect

the

deals most

Egyptian kiki."

We read that Jonah made

his

ob-

to

the derivation of

Hebrew word from the

a

it

have fulfilled.

to

seems

the

clouds

of

character

to

rapid

by Niebuhr.

suitable for the

more

which it is stated

claim

special

described

as

tiply

dozens

seen

in the shade

important, however,

more

serve

of any
the

on

must

miraculous

character of the narrative in Jonah

the

It

"

:

says

.1.

As Dr.

called also Rieimas

Dictionary

that the

i

scholars thousands of miles distant?

suitable

Rev. T. E. Brown in

and Palma Christ!.
»

The

opinion.

Bible dictionaries would have
it

side of Nine-

east

Is

APRIL,

Lobdell had
of booths
sheltered

that

tree

FRIEND.

notorious Carl

must

'

Kate,1

doubt aroused your indignation
that
by far tbt larger
l.cvuka in
April last In

to

have been kidnapped

Hawaiian missionaries
"

no

1 fully believe

brought

labor d

have

who upon her arrival in Fiji

waa

Die

from islands where

There's

girl

a

named

taken under the roof

of Mr. March, Her Majesty's Consul, 1
would draw especial
Attention to. It appear* that she had received ait oat valuable

religious

training

from

a

Key.

Mr. flnow

—

I

believe at
(Strong's

Island—and she spoke the English language
afforded Mr. March much
mode in which many
been forcibly

torn

March lustltuled

and

crew

the Polynesians

resulted in the

on

were

of New

Amid many

transmitted

to

the

difficulties
the

to

master

Sydney for

South Wal.-s, which hat

conviction of Ihe whole of them

nnd mate were sentenced

to

board the Cart had

criminal proceedings against

of the Carl% and they

the Supreme Court

Kate

fairly.

vary

Information relative

from their hoinjp.

Mr

trial at

or

valuable

The

master

death, which haa since, however,

been commuted to imprisonment for lliV, the flr*t three years of
which

are to

be in irons.

Yours,

P. B.—Any Information relative
mitted by person" navigating
be very
race, would

etc

to

,

W.C. Michsll

abuses

Hrltlnh ships

gratefullyreceived

by

or

atrocities

com-

against Polynesian
W.C. M

me.

�I8 7J.

FKIKND,

31

Till;

APVBRTISBPIBarTS.

DILLINGHAM &amp; CO.
TVOS.

til\«.

97

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GALVAXIZKD Hi OX,

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SEINE AND WKAPPING TWINE, FISH HOOKS AND LINES,

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AND

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KEROSENE

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AND

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Best

and

and New Zealand

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23

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sr

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tcla

o

terms.

reasonable

r'lrrwssil

Ii-

A

m

an

Hand

PIERCE

\V.

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(csMCcsors

to

and
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TIMES AND TERMS...«&amp;:

THE

iwJ.

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tar OUR GOODS WILL be sold to suit

and

lurnlsh the
port, where they are prepared to
Kawaihae Potatoes, and .uch other recruit, a.
Justly celebrated
tbe shortest notice, snd on the
are required hy whalesbipa, at
ness

OUm, PISTOLS, CARTRIDGES, CAPS AXD POWDER,

P.IFLES,

11.

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,

Will continue the General Merchandlss

Hubbuck's

lowest rates.

at

OIL,

JI

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General Commission Mer

chants,
Hawaiian Island..
Honolulu, Oahu,

Careful

Orders will Receive

Island

and

Attention.

Prompt

i.'fiits
ay

R

JOHN

M

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U

r.

consulted

at

his residence

Alskrs and Fort

THOH.

It Merchant

DACKAGE"
■

IMPORTERS

COOKE,

&amp;

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DEALERS

(Ml

streets.

.T.

•

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DEPOT,

REGULAR

11HE
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406

SAX
Particular attention paid

up

LINE

PORTLAND

San

HAVING
hu.ine..
sent

Coffee, Ac,
for
tr

I

now

On tbe Hawaiian

BISI XKS8 OX
HIS OLD
and Seamen
on

4*piONTINl'ER THE
\mJ Plan of settling with Officer*
at

hit

Indirect, with

debti to be

oo

no

connection,

hit

future ae

office,

to

he hopes

give

Jan. Eobloaon k Co.'i Wharf,

near

oar

beat

Heobanioa

elsewhere.
we

can

nolulu
will

aa east

also

be

;

and it ia

th* lowest

THE

good a

that

any
we

MTHB
In

for Bale,

aire**.

Photographic View*, etc.,
«

l

etc.

required.

Jas. Patrick * Co.
W. T. Colemsn

Allsn *. Lewi..

a

Co.,

Uonsrd

LsddATlllon.

Walker a

a

Orsen

Allen.

ly

'«■■

o. MsaaiLL.

i.

in

City

aaylng
work

of th*

J.

in

: Commission

that
Ho-

world.

MERRILL k

C.

or

Merchants and

204 and 206

a csiess

California

Co.,
Auctioneers

Strtat,

I

FranciscQ,

Him

inland to work at
WKBT.

ALSO,

AGENTS OF

THE

San Francisco and Honolulu Packets

HOTEL!

pains

etrerr

to make

IS NOW OPEN

!

FIRST CLASS
this Kisgaot Hotel
11. intend, to make ths ohsrges

particular.

bu.lnss., aupplring

ehandiw, ships'

The Proprietor will .pars

exchaoge,

XT All freight arriving

XT

� �

WILL FURNISH

of the FrsssMl

at

BOUND

per
ons dollar
price $1), for any number of yssrs from
XT Adding Ihe cost of Modlng

tlm».

annum

w

1161

to

VOLUbJM l
(subscription
ths

present

Francisco,

Exchangs

dh Honolulu boaght

hy

or

rasa or

and

to ths Ho-

oobsomiob.

sold.sCl

—s.r.a.acis—

Bsasssrs.

Prict#I

at Saa

nolulu Line of l&gt;soket..will beforwarJsd

reason.bie.

Volume* at Reduced

our

whalaships, nsgotlaUng

*c.

«

C. V Richsrd.
H. Backfsld
C

mm.

persons! attention will be paid,

Fbaboisoo Bsrsaaaoas:

Undenbergrr,

_

VsT*
o

f
of

ALLEN H*BB«BT, Proprietor,

Bound
Fert

solicited

Consignment, especially

to which

Postlibd RaraßHOHt

R. Whit-

York

0.

HOT Els

and board espeslslly

5M0P0UTAN PHOTOGRAPH GALLERY
88

b.ing

receive

Partisalarattsntlon given to ths sals and purshass si

no

nasi

part

HAWAIIAN
NEW

or rooms

Nee. 64

a

THAT

the line

Mr.

elaaa of

fully

for the
of gue.t..
reception

THK

ysars,
prepared to

well established

poeatble rates.

PHOTOGBAPH9T
GO TO

a

feel warranted

aa

found in

her*

state

advantage.

Belt

Qroup

I therefore

sad

ssrsn
wa ars

lloboldld RarsßßSoss:

Carriage Trimming, by

manufacture

ol

Steven.. Baker it Os.

the U 8.
MO gm

FOE THE BEST,

ia

eieeated a*
in New
any
man, la aa well

ai

he hat In the past.

nlate.

I

either

outflttinn establishment, and allow

collected at

satisfaction In the
Office

Havlug

Office.
any

immediately

tha

to

ths Oregon market,

rred. Ikeo,

and General Blarksmithing,
Carriage
Painting, Repairing, die.

Bthie

LICENSED SHIPPING AGENT.

r

employ

upwards

nd upon which cash advaooe. will be made whan
Bis

Trimming!

Carriage Making,

Consignment! of Island Produce.

WILLIAMS,

and

WOULD BESPECTFULLY INFORM YOU

fact that

no

(

Badger

Carriage Making

(or

and dl.pose of Islandstaple., .uch a.Sugar, Rice, Syrups. Pulu,

The WalaiuaSugar Plantation,

I

Oreton.

located in a ftre proof brick building,

The Wheeler * Wilson Sewing Machine Company,

Merchant

AND

BEEN ENOAOED IN OURPRK-

The llamskua Sugar Company,

ly

FRANCISCO.
to

Co.,

MERCHANTS,

Portland,

EVEEETT,

GEORGE

dtroct or

OF

Francisco,

The Haiku Sugar Company.
The Hawaiian Sugar Mill. W. 11. Bailey,

to order at

to ses.

028 ly

their Shipping

FORWARDING

The Kohala Sugar Company,

STREET, CORNER CLAY,

FRONT

!*••»,

Da.l.' Pals. Killer.

Knglsnd Mutual l.if: Insurance Company,

The Union Marine In.urance Company,

Honolulu.

-

k Commission

l.a

.triad's Bank

Works,

4-4MIHI**IO.\

Dr. Jayne A Son. Celebrated Family Medicines.

Forwarding

Salt

Parry

IVteCralceii *Sc

MERCHANDISE!

GENERAL

READING MATTER—OF

A. P.

An.l

Hotel street, between i

NEWS

Street.

OF

CASTLE

AQEHTS OF

for parties going

rates

j

&gt;

Army,

Papers and Magatlnea, back numbers—put

reduced

I

•

CIRCULATING LIBRARY.

AND

Set.

on

I'ualoa

.

M

.

THRUM'S

Gs

AND

STATIONERY

E \V

U. S.

Late Surgeon
Can be

R

"

A Co

BUhop
H.

a
a

aCo

Dr. B. W. Wood
Hon."

Hoaolalu

aCo

Brewer* Co

A11ra.......,...,...,
*

a
•

«

�ACYshoMriuceatngH
f’ onolulu.
and

widows

in

inulcfilcd before (toil, the Father,

their affliction,

in

and

keep

to

otisls

“Bazar of all Nations.”

Edited by a Committee of the T. M. C. A.

My a-tiiril

I)log

im

Sing.

TIM signs "I llraven sh"- reads \
My titif i- vii id.- llciven she ieee,

of

la all Vim Heaven she uenls.
And she

H' ll'-nv
Itehlnd ii

is in

n

is

and

building

the ideas of

to

well

her

mean

lift*

I alio am
Am

with

changing m00..*;

would go without

To tiring

upon

anil

and I

must not

For all behind the

starry aky,

Behind Hie world

Iter, though

to

cannotchoose

Thou, who
Art

11l

sjuls

doth tie

. Russia,

true

to

'size,

a

not

an

wiidom

My waywardness

to enwrap

some

unto

up

to

of

my (ace,

Thee.

Mar Donald

aa

to

the

array.

lie

Beneath my leet is smooth mosaic bright.

thrilling cadence

I

procured

ings

sweet.

and

some oonwc ruled

in

I

shape

j

be

a peace

eat

represented

podiehra

oUa

in

taurant, or chaff the garron in

divine

The

Because I know the Font

F'pon

1

is

liir

dolorous with the

Ills altar this petition small

the longings

It is,

all

I cannot say.

drawn

Thy Presence dear
Henceforth may
and

perhaps,

representations

I ask, dear Ford, that 'midst life's eager quest,

now

to

my sonl he manifest,

so

was

observed
heard.

committees
stated

that

the

(illustrated)

and Pur

ordered for

the

be received.
showed
fnilecL

us

on

be

er

French

whom

the

i

res-

usual.

Christian.

com-

civilzed

Weekly

report of

the

in debt.

of

the

of

to

the

officers,

the 11th of this month

'

tume,

to

enterprise.

We

can

at

the door of his

to

an-

be

centre

of

be

the

the curious glances of

and the aim of newspaper
eyes,

a

be

j

na-

j

kapas,

the

bed

and

It

is

of

charge

the

Francisco.

San

hopes

to

next

steam-

present

hoped

reach Boston
the

at

that the

in the Bazar

represented

or

Bazar

friends of
have Ha-

to

will

promptly
Hawaiian

any

S. C. Damon.

Here

lic

a

cos-

pictur-

constant

crowd of

j
!

Little,

a

The Boston
or

five

Library

of

and

may

philanthropic

ment

of their

We

Little.

a

four

have ordered their Pub-

Perhaps

agitation the majority

Associations

and

a

Reading-Room

Sundays.

on

There

city government, after

years'debate,

the

that

adopt

a

practice

be

to

in

five

Y. M. C.

of

similar
in

kept
more

sensible

the

manage-

reading-rooms.

acknowledge, with thanks,

of books for the

a

donation

reading-room, from the Rev.

D. Dole.

intenrfcwers,

while the furniture of his mansion, the
and

it from

curiosities.

Islanders

brown kanaka, in his ancestral

pounding poi

Esq., Honolulu,

take

send forward shells, taps,

compara-1

imagine

be

to

gathering.

years
would add much

I

box will be made

a

Honolulu, March 31st, 1873.

the novelty and interest

Treasure*
would
IMque thatched hut,
The essay

meeting adjourned
&lt;or election

to

Polynesian

Young

of Boston.

leave in the

to

East, and

season

of Arabians, East In-

dians, Circassians, and

forward

to

re-

these

illustrating

Scenes

customs

consented

and

open

Reports

Reading-room

and

islands,

Nations,"about

Association

notice that

give

to

has

waii

Hall

should

are

Esq.,

benevolence and those anxious

this

on

that

more

Americans

communi-

for the benefit of the

one.:

Music

life

for-

of Boston,

these

"The Bazar of all

for the

in

the other the

regretted

im-

to

accom-

of his ttsm turn."

national

of

famaliar.

manners

Paper (Toledo), lately stalwart

moderately

meeting

as

the

reading-room, had failed

The

The

melody

to

on

make

be

native

Italian

blast

that is

as

received

the office of S. B. Dole,

at

who

here.

tively

mittee

will

largely from

tions, with

Y. M. C. A.—The March meeting of
Association

bag-pipes, and

pig-tailed Celestial

In faith I lay;

As

a

will blow l\is

Highlander

side \vi' hi*

more near

see.

To Him 'twill comprehend

to

can

street scenes,

an

grass-residence,

but

resident of

a

be instituted

up

no fear

&lt; 'an trouble me.
Than aught

lating

desire

fifteen feet in the clear,
the

be

might

thing will

lias

undersigned

Men's Christian

Under the build-

waiters.

more

habited, within the

Hall;

best

create

we

of Hawaiian dress, utensils,

Mr. Dole expects
own

and

cations from G. D. Oilman,

to

peoples,

the hands of their

very

distant

can-

Merchan-

up in

not a
to

etc.

but formerly

me now.

Without, the shadows flicker, yet

held

and

humbly bow;

Surround*

nual

by

may

You may

shrioe,

My doubts have vanished, and

of

The

by

cases

the different

varied

cause.

Notice to the Public.

be for sale in

will

eaten, served

and

will be arcades,

wherein

And thought profound.
As if before

ornaments,

In all, there

to

Hawaiian

next

is

will

We wish

furnished

the

building

the

The

"

in the

sight."

life of

plished cooks and

:

retreat

Its organ-sound
a

put up

Irom

requested

aid in

to

enterprise,

a

specimens

ar-

and different kinds of

and houses;

shops

styles,

(.nld blent with brown.

Increases, with

ward

same,

dome, the light

-,

hear the wind, concealed in fur

some

peculiar

represented

food, the staffs of

Through fretted windows of high

1

present

nationalities

The aged pines, like hoary pillars, stand

down

to

peculiar

foreigners,

novel

a

curiosities

I pause to-day ;

Floats gently

able

possible,

built,

have

benevolence

less enthusiasm.

or

suitably

full

and their brilliant and varied attire

dise and

grand,

in

inhabited

appropriate

the

from the

Members of

the novel and instructive

world,

full hundred residents of the queer

a

fail

not

of a minster

be

by counterfeit presentments

will lie

Pine Cathedral.

'Mid long, dim aisles,

In vast

the

genuine costumed Yankees.

city,
a

in

furnished

the

to

|j

of

object

limits of the Music

and width, will be

the

to

even

month.

association

an

occa-

these nations of

etc., would

twenty-four days
this

Association

character of

The

di fTerej.it nationalities.

and

in Within ami Without.

(Repriut.)

In

China."

and

Though

parts of

of

Sweden, Scotland, Venice,

and

the

genuine

douhl '

no

My child upon my knee ;
Hhe looketh up

of

the lap

sit in Thy wide apace.

And I look

life

the

The countries thus

regards height

houses will

about,

on

Of love that Knows

—tiea.

Boston

inspiring

shops,

scenes,

of

of

Hawaiian curiosities

us,

lite.

. In doubting safety

1.0 ' Lord, I

;
the!

fidelity,

around the sides of the hall, all

iornamented

awful thing

style
Unfit Thou

street

possible

Turkey, Syria

as

ranged

More love where need ia rife ;

be

is

as

Habitations of

sion.

me.

low and ilnlut, bring

to

represent, i

to

Music Hall is subsidized tor the

|great

troubled sore,

but lie,

Thou kno went wU.n
It ia

the

financially

i&gt;eacc forcvermore.

art

very

am

costumes,

much

as

j France, England,

brood.

so

The luitnitcof (iod.

[

is

attainable

w)

adzes,

stone

lamps,

improving interest,

twenty-eighth

jbe illustratcdareUermany,Switzerland, Italy, |i

apeak .

Behind men's heart! and

If true

"The aim

extreme

of

sources

The linear lasts

j

ac-

ingenuous projec-

be ■uccetatul

, twelve nationalities.

the starry sky.

Aud then I

the

architecture,

ignorant and weak ;

I gaze

out

rattles,

inhabitants of the Hub.

sigti

a

lier something good.

a child,

be

if carried

its

;

novel

a

platters, necklaces, kapa

drums nnd

hula

payment

on

earnestly,

to

in

Lm'liiiig.-d
\| v

fair

a

new

world,

back-scratchers, primeval

grace.

and otherwise.
I

it is

debt,

will doubtless

tors,

their

to

funds for the

raising

interesting plan, and

cording

my face—•

alt InwrßM

Aiul Irutlklulnt'Hi.

their

and

well, yea, buttled in bliss.

is

for

enterprise

my knee* ;

on

by the Y. M. C. A., of Boston,

the

li.sli

hashes, umekes,
clubs,

This is the somewhat gorgeous title given
The Father's
Hymn for the Mother to

this:

self wnpoitidfruni

32

and

Pure religion

To'visit the fatherless

pillows,

the

mats

cala-

fCT

"

there is

Wherever God is feared and
a

church of

praised,

Christ."—Avgttstine.

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