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                  <text>THE FRIEND.
HONOLULU, 11. 1., APRIL. 1886.

Volume 44.
/10ULI)

VOLT SPARE THE TIME

\ LEXANDER J. CARTW RIGHT

PROFESSIONAL CARDS.

Ollice No. :l Kiiihiiinanu St., Honolulu,

Fonrtme Nonpareil PrttfasiOHOlOerSi inner!,,! it, this
Coilmi n for $-1 IK) /.. i- near. _ji.

-£*

Agent for the

Equitable Ijife awnr 11101 -sioi-tv of the U. St itos
Assets, .lan. I, ISBS, $58,161,W6 M.

Im|ieri il Fire

Insaranoe

Ciniiuiy, of London.
Capital, SI .488,000.

t'oMiiieiei il Union Yssurin m On., Ld.,of London.

IU.tWO.OOO.tiO.

Capital,

Our Bargains are astonishing
the shrewdest buyers,

Note Only a fewaf th3se ws Orfar:;

_

I'JanSHyl]

All Wool black

SHIP

Jersey Clot lis. l'/j yaffil wide.

Latli"-*"

mi.! Mii-n.'il

In

;iil &gt;li idea,

'

CITY.

anil

Davis' Pain Killer,
Brand.) in.!

I'i.it.'i iiin-i ml Bombs.

A new Cor't-scrcw Suit in steel gray for «,i:,.iitl.

1 r.O.

An eVtgant Silk mixed clievoit Suit, all wn.il. $ 8.

A splendid all wool OaMliaerS Suit for $18..V1.
Extra line French Worst-,1 Salts, specially imported
for this city; light, we'i/hl. in plain, chock, fancy
and stripes, for only $'23.00.

We offer our Goods at the Lowest
Prices in Honolulu.
BsT-i.'ountry orders whether Isrre or small, will re-

Onall sent O.

O. D. or P. O. Order, thereby iriving ladies in the country equal advantage, with residents in this city.

CHAS. J. FISH EL,
Millinery House.

ljanSo

rterrti nl

B. DOLE,

* LAWYER

,

—~—_^

.

-I

.

janHSyl

AT LAW &amp; NOTARY
Trust
-I
next lo I'oaloßUc
jauSiiyi

NOTARY PUBLIC,

&amp;

Honolulu, 11. I.

juliB«yl

THOMPSON.

AT LAW,

oilier. Cainpli 'll's Block.
-iv
\nd Soliciinr InO
second si rv. ltii.iiii- Hand '•'. Batranee Merchant St.
IjanSllyl

IITHITINr,,t AUSTIN,

ATTORNEYS AT LAW,
No. II Xi ili n

T

M

u s!n-..|. Honolnln, It, I.

111:111

WHITNEY.

'dental

M

BOOMS

T

.

janSßyl

D., U. D.

ON

PORT ST.,

Olllrc 111 Ulcer's lIIUCIC, eorllei llolel and
Eiiiriiiic 1, iioiei street,

I'ort

St,.,

fcbStiyl

A. MAOOON,

ATTORNEY

DOCKS! —BOOKS ! n

H M xehsnl

-1

AT LAW,

Honolulu, 11. I.

IjauKQyl.

K. MILLER,

General Business Agent,
Mr. Y. H. Revell. Publisher anil Rookto
call
seller of Chicago, IT. S. A., iltsires
Oflicc ■ Meicniul s-lreel, with ,1. A. Magoon.
tbe titteniiiin of tbe retders .if The Friend
Agt. for Klink tier's Red Rubber Stamps.
to the exceptional advantages at his command fir supplying bunks in all depnt[ljiinStiylj;
tneils of literature promptly and at tho
favorable rates.

-

O.VHU

COLLEGE,

HONOLI'I.U. HAWAIIAN ISLANDS.
fr .11 any publisher sent posi paid on re
cetpl of price, so-ciil 1.-nil given to Libraries,
Ten liers hisliliiie-, Ac.
President
RB\. W. C. MEltlllTl'
Mr. Revell desires especially to cill atThis 1 iis|it'itiini leeqslppod us nerer before f..r it,
work. Bleaop Hull el Mclonee. is completed and furtention to his awn publications of 'etifl'ioa*. nished
mill n linn. niL-'liiy (piaiifl-d Prufessor installed
\nv ii mil

The Leading

.

Merchants,

S.lil lial Is'Oo el- lelllllllilll"!-' I I 111it IV lll'll, EIC.
Ag.'iils for

most,

A pretty brown check Suit for only $111.1*1. This Suit
eu not be bought iii nnv other house for less
than ?r&gt;.no.

.
_.

Honey earefiil.'y invested.

illi.e

MILLINERY GOODS!

ceive prompt and carefull attention

prill, i'.

[lJanSfiyll

IVe keep the fined fine of

IN THIS

ATTORNEY

tf

Street, lliiiniliiiii.
Dealer, in Vfhsrlng Dear of ill kind-. Wljiob-nrts, lUaj
Stock, Anchor. Chains. Arle-i in Well Hop-, Wire
11,, .-. 11
isnd 11 mil (' .1 11: 1)."'.. Nivil stoics.
Paints and oil-. Brass and •! iivmiz.-.l Hsrine Hard-

|I*oO-,

tliu- Straw Rata, fiom Bfl eaaU up.

Ladies' trimmed Hats from $-!.0u to $)T..00.

R.

CASTLE,

11 KaahlllOniin

CHANDLERS

Commission

ware.

Cashmere, per van! i.'.criits,

-

11. I.

ATTORNEY

H (in

Hi Yd*, of the very h«!*it Prints, fast colors, for only
|t.OO.

*W" M

,

W. PEIRCE &amp; CO.,

.

A.SHFOHD,

ATTORXKYS AT LAW,
Honolnln,

O

New Ynrk Hoard of Underwriters.

A

.

4SHFOHD &lt;S

AND SEE THOSE ENORMOUS

BARGAINS?

NUMBER 4.

!

•vorksoornprinjaf Devotional Books, Hooks

live-

lllis

cpu illli'-nl.

The College Llhrsry has bees moved into pleasant
for llible si ndy, etc., etc., mil including quiirier-.
catalogues! sad snrlehed bribe sdditlos of
I).
!).
in-.nly
seven liiniili'i'.l c ii nfii llv selected v,,mines. The
the works of Mr
L Moody. M ij. VV. Academic
English Course of Ire ye.irs is realising all
Hi.ll was nulii ipmeil for it.
Whittle, and other eminent KvangeliNts.
The
have recently done away with the strictTrasleee
A eouiiiiele dialogue « 111he sent post free to any ly 'lassie.il I'o'iise, sinisiiiuiiug therefor n I'lejiura-

'

inlilre-.-i

-

011 -ippliciiliou.
College Coarse id live years w icli gives 1101 only
of Stand ird book, comprising the lu-si atory
thorough preparation in i.aiiuUree, and Mntliemstanil .id inllllors in.iv ■.:-.! lie li id L'lalis. Also
alics. hut inc. "lies cIso nil the 11 til iona I sciences in ugh t
full reduced price list ol Bibles Including the in Hi College, together with a roar's »tudj .f English
lu-si Teachers' Eililions."
l.uliL'iiiige sad Literature. They believe this will prove
nil exceedingly desirable and attractive course 10, Ihe
mail
affnrdH
such
n prompt, vouii pe-.ple' of lII.— Island- who plan for I nther
The regular
ahroiil. In addition 10 these courses the he-t of
safe and cheap means of transportation stil'lv
i.isiriielion i- pn.vnleil in Vocal and In si: uiiiculul
and I-ri eliniid Drawing. The
that it can he hearlily commended, lie- Music and 111 Mecininiciii
is in excellent end ilion
Boarding
niittance can be made by post il order or cumuli illli'iiartinenl
:i» a Christina Insulation, ii is the purpose
of its Trustees in niuk" iis moral atmosphere and life
'.iy U. S. Rank Rills to be hid at the bank- apure and lieullllttll Us is its physical.

Catalogue

'

'

ers.

.1.

A. Criiaan. and
Refers liv permission to R v
Rev E C.Oggel. Editors of i'iik Kaicvii

It will cost but
our Catalogues.

postal card to send for
t'orren/mn /•■*'•'■ invited.

a

Fleming H. Revell,
Evuiißelical Literature and Bible Warehonse,
IM uiid 150 Madisou St., CbiCHgo, U. S. A.

Punahou Preparatory School,
MISS K. Y. HALL Principal.

pupil, for
Is doing esenltenl work In preparing it« (leelrlne
to
Oshu College Those over ten ye Irs of aire
enter tills school, limy iie received as boarders to the
Cnlle.-c
.'.* Cataßgsea of both schools with full Informs.'
Hon. furnislied hy addressing the Proaldent. The
terms fm the yearbe.'in a, follow,:—January 11. April
IljaBtt&gt;
I&gt;, and September ID, 1886.

�Volume 44, No. 4.

THE FRIEND.

2
-I

8- H. CASTLE.

10LLISTEB vt CO.,

11. ATIiERToN

&amp; COOKE,

pASTLE

Importer of

IMPORTERS,

SMITING &amp; COMMISSION MERCHANTS,
Asgaßtl for
The hnhuiii Kaicar Co.,
The iliiiku Huaar Co.,
The Paia Piuntulfon,
The Pupaikou sagar Co.,
The \N aiiiluii I'hintal.oii, R. IlaJntead,
'I in ail. Muiiii a Co. Plantation.
The Nov
.Mutual Lite In* stance Co,,
The Union purine Inaarauc. Co.,
The Umhlmi Wro [naaranco Co.,
The
lift- I lIHUI :n.&lt; ■*■ Co.,

English and American
WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALERS IN

■1*

&amp; SON,

Has now a

} (tillable

und

At the No.
Muniifacliirers of

Can he seen a

IMPORTERS AND HEALERS IN

And at Queen Street,

fA II E

1)
And

109 FORT STREET,

GENERAL MERCHANDISE,

(ROCKERY* HARDWARE
and

Cor. Eon and King sis. Honolulu, U. I.
Bvfmsnsi
W.M. W. HALL, President and Manager.
IjnliSfily
L. C. Aill.Hs, Secretary nnd Treasurer.
W. Y. ALLEN, Auditor.
Tii.M MAYand E. O. WRITE, lllrectore.
lJanHlivlJ

II

n BEEWEB

\J •

&amp;

COMPANY,

(Limited)

COMMISSION AGT'S.,
ttasta Street, Honolulu. 11. I.

List ot OHicers

I$RO7~

.'..'Alien.

11 Wnlii house.

IjunHliyl

HARDWARE CO.,
IMwcetaori i*»

B. F. Dillingham tft Co., and Bamuei
Nott,

IMPORTERS,

[snorters nnd Dealer, in

Hardware, Agricultural Implements,
House Furnishing Goods,
Silver Plated Ware,

Cutlery, Chandeliers,

LANTERNS,

Paints, Paint Oil, Turpentine,

Varnishes,
Kerosene Oil of the Best Quality.
ljansbyl

No

(J.

East corner of Fort and Kini' Streets.

Fresh California Produce
!;y Even Steamer,

pHARLES

HI'STACE,

GROCERIES AND PROVISIONS,
N...
.1

11l

Kin-

HUat (#aj*i H;ock&gt;.
Honolulu.

NiiKflyl

ITENRY MAY ft

CO.,

TEA DEALERS,
toflfc Roaaiari and

Provision Merchants,
New (*oodf*received by evcrv raaaal frun the United
States and Europe. California Produce rooelvod l&gt;y
evcrv bleiinier.
ljanMi.l
9H fOMf STREET, HONOLULU.

MELLER

&amp; HALBE,

Manufacturers of Fine

CANDIES &amp; PASTRY
ljauBByl

Lincoln Block.Honolulu.

J. V'AM.KK,

:

Pkoprietoii.

M Lomit Prim.

Ijanstiin6

117 M. McCANDLESS,

Packet from the Eastern
States and Europe.

IJsnßflly

H Hotel St ,

Choicest Meats from Finest Herds

New Goods Received by Every

Eort street, Honolnln.

LAMPS,

]j IIuridyl

HOTEL ST. MEAT MARKET,
,
Groceries, Provisions and Feed. I

:

Directors :

pACIFIC

E. MeIXTYUE m

■S-n-n

liesideni and Manager
Treasurer ami Secretary
Auditor

Hon Clias RHishop.

PKINCIPAL STORE AND WAREHOUSES.

Honolulu. 11. I.

*-*■

General Mercantile and

P C Jones, Jr
Joseph ii Cartel
W f Alien

Store

10

Ginger Ale and Aerated Waters Great Variety of Dry Goods,

(Limited,)

II A R

Assortment of Goods
Ex late arrivals.

TOJLLT ARTICLES.

Wilcox &amp; Glbba1 Sew in- Machine Co.,
Ktii.inulon oawtMg Machine *'omp'y.

1? 0. HALL

M ERCIIANDISE

DRUGS, CHEMICALS,

The Georjra I''. Blake Manufacturing Co.,
1». M. VfaatOß*! Ceotrlfoirata,
Jayin; *fc Sou'- Medicines*,
ljanH6yl

T. WATEHHOHSE.

I

1I

I'"

.

Plaa Market,
ilar in

Ni). fi Oji.en St.,

Choice Moot, Veal, Mutton, Fish, &amp;c.
Liunilv iitd '■liipjiii'L' order* carefully attendfrt to.
Live k torIt fiirni*Wd la ve*ae,* at ifcort notice, and
ljanWiyl
fegrt ihit'H c&gt;r all kind* .-iipphi'il U) order.

L. SMITH.

4
•£*•

LAVA

hupiiil.T and Dealer in
SPECIMENS, PLATED

WARE,

K&lt;T«r**&lt; Combination Hpeclacla*, Ghwaware. sowing
Machines, I'jriiiH-1- iMinc-. Vaaea, Bracaeta,
Ktc., Ku.. Etc. 'IVnii.- Strictly Caa*.
s:( .'ort street.

jansiivi

I

OUIB ADLER,

s-i

Dealer in

ROOTS AND SHOES
No. 18 Nuuanu Street.

lJanHnyl

YI7 OODLAWJN DAIRY &amp; STOCK
COMI'ANY.

MILK,

|

CREAM. BUTTER

And Live
IJanB6yl

Stock..

�THE FRIEND.
Nl-MHKR 4.

HONOLULU, IL L APRIL. 1886.

Volume 44.

THE FBIEND

Is published the firtl duo of each month, or Honolulu,
11. 1., i"j Mksskh. I'huzan a,sji&gt; Oiuii'.'.. pmton ~(
tli. t'ort-St. and bethel Union Vhnrchen. Hubkii iiitiiu rule tttVSB nudtINVABiaBI.I INADVANOK.
All i. miiliiiiir itmri.i unit letters Connected nitli toe
literary department of the piper should be addr,K*e&lt;! Kkv. K. C. Ouokl, Box 847, UmiolnlU,
H. 1."
Buei less letters ulionhl be nitilresned J. A. I'IiUZA.N,
]i(,v.:|o';, Honolulu, ii. 1."
A limited number of ouobjectiomMe udeertroeHuute
mill l&gt;,' tiken from H',"&lt;,- mhom the temprietov* beHere !■■ be. houoti mot irlnil'le. AdttrUtiHg r-lte*
made kntncn i,n itppliinlion.
Mtt. Uosast Ijaino, Itiutauor t,( the Bailor* II'» ■
it A'leiiluf tut; tfetlMD in Honolulu, and i.otnthori-.d to receipt for eubecripliOH*.
Mb. Jam us A. AlAtiriN it Meat of Tin: liiit'ND in
Him, mud isniiili„ri:,,l t* receipt ft* mhecfiptonet.

"

"

it." It invites to-day the prejudiced
mind and the doubting Intellect to investigate its claims. It gladly presents
itself to the search of the Inquisitive and
tho inflection of reason, for it dares to
lie examined and understood. Numbers
of great persons, both men and women,
wlio approached the subject in the Nithanael mood have been convinced of its
truth after an honest, serious consideration of thequestion and tli in, N ith ma -Ilike, have honorably owned this thing
t,i lie of
Siys Dr. J &gt;!i noil:
ill.
"(irotiii- Was an acute mail, a I iwyer, it
see

i

lius yet appeared In human form whom
the suffrage of the race has pronounced
A
-in pure, 80 holy, us Jesus Christ.
beam of white radiance, purs «s the light
of God's throne, proceeds from His eye,
succeeding ages.**
falling along all
lln the evangelical narratives' lie stands
before us the perfect Man, the Sun of
God, who alone can save us from our
sins and bestow the gift of peace and

'

rest.

Christianity challenges attention to its
a worth and

15 ink. N itur.il religion has
hi'nity peuull.tr to Itself.

The royal
mi:,'.-- vivid appetls to tiie
evidence
I'silinisi
accustomed
to
ext.uiile
in in
and he wis convinced. Wrotius was not ib I grit and majesty isof Grind in nature.
defective as bearrecluse, but a man of the world, who IS.ul tiiiiiril religion
" acertainly
had iiw bi.n on the side of relig- ing mi 111 in' ini'ii iri tl needs. This deion. Sir Isaac Newton wi iit an Infidel ; fectiveness is created by the fact of his
changed condition from moral rectitude
and came to be a very linn believer."
as to
Christianity cliallouges attention to Its to sinfulness. lii|uire of nature
and you
of
principle,
ftirgivetiess
the
surveys
the
earth
md
Who mat
Extra copies of inn i'mnsu irill be found ov a tie ~' God.
Will receive no iiiswer; imt Christianity's
heavens does not and übundant eviJ. il. Oai, .iv., ct (!...'h "«(/"' the Huthr't liame. the
tiie Bible, *ends abroad Its invitoBook,
iutetllgeut,
superintending,
di
nee
of
an
For HI. aa ml buck numbert upptu i" i ■ ». I *l IM&lt;
'-('llllll'
tion:
and see," and Interprets
him
Daubts
here to
upholding Being?
satisfactorily to the intellect and the
see"
musl
vanish
"come
and
wan
will
.1. A. CMUZAN, u:i)1 (KS
one ni iy si ml acceptable belike mist before the sun. Th intelli- he in how
6. c. OGGEL, j
his
tker and Ihe soul m iy be full
,\I
fore
geiit phUQ.*iphor and the savage Ameriof gladness and song; and to all that
the
impression
alike
felt
Indian
have
can
J
CHRISTIANITY'S CH ALLENGE.
territory, of
and the emotion of a superior Power, j dwell on this sin-burdened
Philip bad found the Savior. That
every clime ami tongue, it extends the
reigning God.
living,
is
the
one,
This
Savior was to him a newly discovered
free offer of sinless and endless
Christianity invites all to "come aud grand,
treasure, His testimony was: "We
hereafter, througil faith in .Jesus
felicity
Christ.
have found Jesus of Nazareth." At see" its
Christ.
those
ones Nathanael asked, "Can there any
Cliristi mity invites attention to its
" Which of you," said Christ to
good I ling come oul of NaaarothT" It. Who opposed llim in .hide i, "convincetli history, its temples of worship, the greet
is easy to see the point in the question. me of sin?" They were dumb. Nine- army of children In it- Sunday schools,
Had Philip said: Jesus of Jerusalem, teen centuries have rolled on and the iI its Institutions and agencies fur benevothere would have been no objection; but question of Christ is still without are- lence and to the spheres of labor which
Nazareth; poor, small Nazareth I —surely sponse. Says Peter Bayne of the trans- it presents to nil woo desire to consethat would be the last place lo produce a cendent purity of Christ's character: crate themselves to useful and elevating
person of so exalted a character as lie ••Skeptic after skepiic has glared into it, employment. If you hive never done so
niu-t lie "of whom Moses ii! the law and searching fore, flaw; and skeptic after before, give the Christian religion atrial.
the prophets did writ"." [t U evident skeptic has recoiled witli the confession, ••Wherefore tlo ye sp md your in iney tor
that in the mind '»f the questioner there thai this JesussofNtuareth was hones) thai which is liol iread? and your labor
•was prejudice against Nazareth and a and pure. There is no character known,! for that whi ii sitisfieih irit?" Our repreiiis|.osition to ignore any claims to 'at- to history, excepl His, of which moral ligion had an hum'ale birthplace and
tention which might come from thai perfection loutd for a tnumenl be main- ■ origin, out lis benign induen ses and wonquarter. But Philip, who had found the tained. The proudest names In the an- drous results shall lill tbe whole earth
Christ and was satisfied, urged a personal ii.lis of philosophic morality are tarnished. and endure with &gt;u» end. To yoang men
investigation on the part of Natiianaol. Zeiio preached a stoical virtue; Diogenes and Women, hitherto indifferent or nowas cy.ii'ally tierce against shams; hut] de iil.'il, we say: Ruceive Jesus Christ
lie -lid to him: "Come and see."
The unhallowed disposition of preju- Zeno and Diogenes were personally i.n- and begin His service.
If you ask:
dice blinds the mind to truth and makes uioral. .So.raies is the loftiest and purest Will ih it bring satisfaction to my heart
one unqualified to receive it. Prejudice name of antiquity, but his morals were and life? we bid you "come and see."
condemns both perseus and principles, of a kind Which never, even in imagina- fry it.
it may be said to work tno-t powerfully tion, darkened the figure of Christ.
—On the last words of John B.
in those who have taken the least pains A "i-totle and Plato were high-minded;
to uscertain tiie truth. Tims, without bul woo does n •; know th n if Plato a.id &lt;io! t;n, "Young nun keep your record
any knowledge of toe Christian religion, Aristotle were our moral guide-, we ele in," a leading publiealiou, in one of
persons often speak of it in the spirit in Should recede at once to something like America's ureal cities, remarks:
Which N'athanael asked, "Can there any ,i Mormon standard? Mohammed was a A vounr- mill's no in) is not at Ins o.vu miking
sincere ref.inner; out tiie highest thai ; seil 1,8. Wttetber in' moors clear of breakers
good thing conic out of Nazareth?"
is KTrcki'l utioti tliem is a mutter of oil nice.
Now it Is characteristic of Christianity can Ih' said of him Is, that Itl certain or
11 ho li is ({it ill tbe wrung ourroit, or too olwo to
that it has never feared the light of day. points lie aimed at the Christian model, llie rooks (.bet) tbe te npast rages, n. jfies down;
by see deu! seta sbee piloted by fri■■ i 11v li mdl
From its rise tin algh every era of its wiille iii others he fell iufliuely beneatb if
out to
lii ci erbere it is i lisir siilin ! be will
progress 1it has sent forth, always and it. The veneration with which several osivel.c. Rat tb« pilots are Jew and the wreoke
regarded
Luther
and
have
challenge:
everywhere, the confident
generations
urn nuiu "ions; l.dtH) iloni keepers mil 'JO.OIKI men
or iinlirectlv in the m uiul icturj
"Come and see," on the theory of S rath, Calvin la profound; hut what Protestant oiiuiifn-1 (liroctly
•Hid sale of ml i-\i Hunt liquors are hard at work
city
that "there needs to lie no greater arma- would declare the charti'-ler of either to
men

„

..

-

• '

,

'

ii

•

.

tbe records of tue youug

upon
ment for men to love the light than to have been flawless? No human being |I to-day.

&lt;

of tbis

�Volume 44, No 4.

THE FRIEND.

4
JOHN B. GOUGH.
t" John l&gt;. Oort.it to
the
summons
In
pass over ad mqjoret the American country iias sustained the" loss of one of its
DOS! talented and useful citizens. lie
was item In Sandgate, Kent, England, in
]817,iind died at the age of U9 years.
His death occurred February IH, l»8d, at
Fruiikford, Pa., where he was sin, ken
wiib paralysis, while lecturing, in one
of our exchanges Mn.GouoH is reported
to have said, a few days befoi'e his death,
to a gentleman who inquired after his
health, that this would probably be his
la-i lecturing tour, as he felt hlsstrength
to be falling. It Is sad to have a life so
abundant in labors come to a close; ytt
we rejoice to thi'ik that he died in the
harness, for more than forty years he
has been conspicuous as an orator and a
philanthropist. As a temperance lecturer his power ovei an audience was

wonderful, swaying

Ins

bearers almost at

will. Saved in his young manhood from
Intemperance, which for seven years had
held him in its ii iii grasp, he signed the
ledge of alislineace and from Uiat time
II the end of his career the consuming
Bsire lo save all who were enslaved to
ie cup was thi• Inspiration to his eloueiii and effective rostrum efforts.
Mn. («ui tin's reliance in hi- temper.
nee work w.ts not upon legal enacticnisorpolitie.il measures, lie trusted
i moral suasion, lie held that the law
iiinot destroy the drunkard's appetite
r make him free. He demonstrated
ow moderation in thousands oi cases
leads on to intemperance and depicted
with graphic power the evils and woes
O intoxication.
In telling how a man could be rescued
only and completely from the grip of
drink, Mu. Gouuu laid special emphasis
on the grace of Cod and tne power of
For he held, witli tile Word of
id, that an outward reformation Is not
ough hut that there must lie an inward,
orough change. Purify the fountain
d you cleanse the stream. Renew the
ture and the life becomes new and

I

iayer.

One of Ma, iriii'iiit's great powers
over an audience Was to provoke laughter. Says a writer, "As he could inoidriest eye witli the tear Ol \Vinhy, so he could wreathe the most
forbidding and solemn countenance in
smiles. His genius could transform
the simplest story into a marvel of the
ludicrous." The writer vividly remembers bearing Mi;. GOOOH lecture in Newark, N. .1. to an audience of not less than
people and we recall this story :
young man stepped one day into hi-.
tier's oiliee, saying: "Father, may l
Ye-,
s|ieak to you for a moment ?"
my son, but apeak to the point, for Fin
Father, I am engaged."
very busy."

«lhe

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"That'sright my .-on, good-bye." "But,
father, I want to make the young lady a
present" •• Well, very well, do so.
Hut father, 1 don't
Now please go."
Well, give
know what to give her."
her anything; give her a ring; now

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Hat, fuller, I should foundest student of our volcanoes, beleave me alone."
like to have something written on the lieves thai the long continued and high
ring; whal shall it lie?" "o, any- activity of Kilanea, and the Increasingly
level of its lava has at last burst
thing. Siy, sVheii this yon see, remember me.' Now please &lt;lo go." "And the barriers which sealed the deep under
theyoung man," said Mk. Got'on "went chasms leading from its throat, and iho
—to the jewelry store, bough! a ring for lava has thus been drawn oft In comids girl and ordered to b engraved on it, mon with all our Kilanea experts, he is
When tiiis you sec remember father,'" j fully confident of the early return of (he
Whether it was the story or tiie manner | lavas and their gradual rise in the pits.
in which the lecturer told it we know .Most of thus;' familiar with the behnvi ir
not—perhaps both—but the v.:-t audi- of Kilanea, prognosticate an energetic
ence broke forth into peals of laughter eruption ;is near at hand. It seems quite
anil deafening applause, repeated again certain that Prof. C. 11. Hitchcock, who
and again beforti the speaker could pro- is alioiil to repeat his visit here, will find
ceed with his lecture.
s mi" very exceptional conditions invitHut generally Ma. Goitgii was terri- ing his study. The problems eonne tod
bly In earnest. We listened to his lec- with volcanic action thus far baffle tiie
ture to young men in the city of Albany researches of geologists. It Is tne exon"The power of ex uiijile." l» was a pectation of the writer tiiat Mr. Green's
masterpiece of eloquence. For two hours forthcoming book on the subject will „r o
ho drew pictures! from real life, acted, far towards their solution.
Later intelligence shows thai the new
argued and pleaded, himself swayed by
the commanding importance of his depression whore the fiery lakes lately
theme and holding the vast audience stood is now perhaps a mile in diameter
under the spell ol hi-splendid oratory. and of a size and depth suiliiieiit to
He was popular nnd successful in the engulf Punch Howl or Diamond Head
old world as he was in the New. Three entirely. Now is the time to peer into
times be crossed the Atlantic and great j the deep recesses of I'ele's lair. s. F. B.
crowds gathered wherever lie spoke. Of
EDITORIAL NOTES.
tiie mca -are and extent of his usefulness
it is impossible to conceive.
His death
—Ark thkkk not too many Christians
Ye! who act upuQ this principle:
i- a Ins, which seems irreparable.
Stole bread shoal I ueTer be wasted, It is just
WO know thai though men and women
full in the battle with the forces of evil is go nl to c isi tip in li.c * iiiets ai f.-i'-li bread.
the cause of righteousness lives and
■—Christians abb asked by The I'm-imoves onward, for God, die mighty -fle to make a note of this:
niiiiii,in nits iln- pist year was
Tub ai ii».(. in
leader, is immortal and wIU uphold His
nine (lines greater 111 foreign .Missions tb.in iv
cause till the end of lime.
t'linsn ii.kini!
Young men, remember that die last
—Mit. and .Mux. P, W. Damon have
unrds of mis great and splendid man for the last three weeks been visiting
Were an appeal directed to you. At his
the Chinese churches on the other
last public lecture lie was again telling ol islands. We trust the good work is proTnen
toe woe attendant on Intoxication.
gressing hopefully,
Stepping forward with an impressive
—lti:v. Smith Hakkk, of Lowell,
young
lie
gesture
added,
I'lieretore,
man, make your record clean" and was Mas., ,ays that "God's Church is a continual hot house." Some Christians seem
silenced by jiaralysis.
to mistake it for an ice-iiou.sc, Judging
EXTINCTION OF KILAUEA.
fio n their manner and lives.
Between lv p. lit, and 1 a. m. of the
—BEY. Mil. LoOHSBBfeRY arrived by
lilght of -March titii, the die suddenly the Muripota, .March 21st. He goes to
disappeared from the old and new lake, M ikaw.m, Maui, to supply the Foreign
of the volcano. Up to BstW p. in., the Church there for three months with a
lakes were unusually full and brilliant view to permanent settlement.
The change was attended with a series
illClti: is an item from '/'//,' Puri/ic of
01 earthquakes, forty-three in all, the
loth, Which will be of special inStarch
fourth one severe, in the morning of terest to our readers in llonoluiu:
the 7th, the entire group of high pyra.lit. (iKiiuoK ttssjoi and less. Uasmost, weiivv.-i'e leci ally u:ui rieii, Hmi .ire
knnwii v
midal cliffs surrounding the lakes had now
living in l,i,s AiiiifliK.
disappeared, and only a vast and dark
—U.NDKii Tin-: heading "For Future
abyss remained to show the scene represented by Tavernier's and Fuhi.'.uia s llisturi \i\r,,"Jl'lit: (N. V.) Voice, has tho
following:
effective paintings.
ml, s:-rvo us oorreol epitaphs:
.Siticf then the sides of tiiechasm have TaeweDI.MIJOIIN
Kl'.M
seemingly
the
botKntsen
continued to fall Into
Hi-six ivioi
IiEPUIII
K'IMBM.
Dl'MlK.'llACY.
tomlees void. One hold visitor lias ven—Otdt Aiivknt friends, never weary
tured to the crumbling brink and reported a bottom visible 694) feet below. in their endless Iteration and re-iteration
(treat chasms, 18 tect wide, are reported of the Importance of keeping sacred Satto have opened in tiie Puna district. urday as theSahbath, forgetting that days
that whether a
One of these crosses the new Wilder are variable things, and
road from Keauhoti. The natives report day is Saturday or Sunday depends no
which way you take in going around the
"a smell of lire " over theni.
Mr. W. L. Green, the ablest and pro- world.

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THE FRIEND.

April, IRB6.

Mr. Wki.i.s also estimates that one- at his fingers' end-. His exhortations to
third of Ibis amount Is now on the aver. Christians to forsake curd-playing, dancage used yearly in the urtts and sciences- ing and theater-going, and to be more in
—Till.; Aovkntists, who have been so earnest about the Master's business, were
persistent "in season and out of season" i! forcible, pointed, eloquent. Much critiin preaching their peculiar ideas, not cism was indulged In by professing
only in I heir tent, hut hand to hand and ; Christians because ol his plain speech In
house to house, have become discourag- regard to these doubtful amusements,
ed, and "like (he Arabs, folded their but after all the great body of believers
tent" on Monday, March 28d, and we could not help admitting that he was
understand that Ki.iiia: ili:.\i.v takes right."
his departure by Hie next steamer. They
—We notice in some of our local papers
are reported to have said that llono- advertisement of patent medicine Hitlulu is the hardest place in which to reach ters." We suppose thai these advertisemoii wiiii the truth" which they have ments pay; that these "Bitters" find
ever worked in.
Want of success may! sale here in Honolulu. It may be well
be due iii methods pursued. To iis honor that those who buy and use them should
be it said that Honolulu it a hard place I know what they are pouring down their
for proselyting, but for earnest soul-win- throats. Under the title The Humbug
putting it:
ners i; offers as attractive a field as any I Of faking Hitters," the Medical liitlli'tin
perinea
ties
natter
of
tarn
there
is
a
liti"
in
dr.iwn. On one side are tbe total abstainers, on in Which our lot was ever cast.
says :
tbe other o n Ii I In is ■ -Alio drink liquor —Hie modIn.' .I'itcr recently purclniM'il samples of four
received
from
the
;
—Wk
ii.vvi:
pubdrank
ilrink-is,
er ile ilriukir-s. .lie h irii
anil the
lof the must, widely advertised bitters in tile in irails. "'rime!" savs the moderate drink, r, " .mi UsherS, C. L. Siikkkill A- Co., l!7-l -Main |I Itet, and the siui|&gt;li' (-In inicul innI.lysis In which they
jiui in niiiiii ..■ the drunkards." N«,
cere sntijcri"- I oil. led ilist they eoutatiied about
i',u do, K. V., their unique jniiilica* foundureyos
tli -~■! It yon don't like the otxspsuyyoa
in. jIst.,
130 per at nl ne .mount tin- overtinieid allows)
tn
it is very c iy
oh inge it—just conic over on the tion, Queries, a monthly review of llter- of tiie must11 jmis-.ii.hu and adulterated alcohol,
Oilier Sill'
1 :e (I ,c
! arc, scientific and general educational and Hi c tm- le-uiuuni punsii ted of v n-i.uis foreign
—Tin-: FitiKXii extendscongralulations j; questions of the das. The question de- substances, winch were Kiinpiv added as
tl voritig cxii mis :n disguise she taste of the
to the Hi'-.v. s. E. Bishop of this ely, | partment, which c....,ins carefully pre-I original
oomponnd. The poorer the Brads of die
who ha- 'ecu awarded at Rochester, N, pared i]uestiu i ■ ou such subjects as Ro- a11".'...1 lie inure vicious is the oouijjosiid.
The
\
ilii" which .such ao-e 11 led bitters are hii;i| H.sell to
V., the third prize for an essay on "Red man history, biology, study of words,
hive is nl a |xin-l &gt; Soli liana c arider. In fact,
Skies." Thirty-six essays were sent in. |chemistry, gra-rrmar, Uitance, etc., for ill I till* iiie. tllill'.e anil Injure the delicate 111,011Pbof. K. I. Kisslim;, of Hamburg, correct answers i wiiicii, prises are olfer- In ".lie 111 the..tun let, OKI I." vii He the lasl.e Hilt
palate cannot soon distiognish between good
Germany, won the first prize; I'unr. ed, i-a capital I lea, and teachers would lbs
und n.'d. It is neither a da mm I nor a health) exof
England, find it a great nip. The editor thus citement which is produced by these so-oatled ...ids
Jambs Edmund Clark,
in digpsiiou, and the wonder
thai sensible peothe second; and [ivx. S. B. ilisnoi of -tales the object
ple, who know u little al lea-1'«nl tbe opefftttOß of
the Hawaiian Islands, the third.
The object of tbe p. ,u n.nesUous is t.. ttiiealate natural laws, sli.'tild allow
themselves to lie so Daisstud.-a... v
11 brace
til)it I Bat til. .sis: in 11- -il, le eds.
t xtetidsd and coinpre—Wk iiwk no sympathy whatever lieii.sivi- viii■ ■■•; !' the aan lots
jots treated, md I ruish ied
Tlif Congregntionaliat, Boston, is
with the doctrines so persistently and the instraoiur and bis t-taaa an tuts taiu.tig d»ll.eelll. Xv I'.'' I'eica I il IJtieiies is elltilled lo
publishing a series of ,ii tide, on "Some
dogmatically preaelved bj theAdventlsts -jemu
pete,
who have been laboring in Honolulu, but
—Till. DMA I'll Of .lit. AltTJll'lt Dor- (treat Working Churches." In the numthis must be said for them, they are dead man, eldest son of Mb, Kodkkhk Dob- l ber for February 25th, the Pint Church,
in earnest, and work tike heavers. YVe man, of Nashville, Tcnn., on .March; Lowell, Itcv. Smith Bakbb, pastor, is
wi -ii all Christian people were as eager to 18th, at the Hawaiian Hotel, was very i| written up. During the present remarkmake converts to their faith, and a- per- sad. He was a bright young man, only ably successful pastorate of fifteen years,
sistent in work as these same Adventlsts. twenty-six years of age. hast winter he Dili new members have been received,
What a work would be done by a bun- i| was attacked with typhoid fever, and an average of over sixty per year. Then
dretl such Christian workers here in Ho- jwhen it left him he did not regain follows tliis remarkable statement:
Ouiinv* tit ■ ivh'd til!,'en (en;//.,/ ii siu/te extra
nolulu!
strength. When able to do so he joined
,'./,,/ ha* iiii-ii In-111, inn- nii'i ,-r.,iii/r/,sl,r help em~
—Tutc wokk and life of many Christian his mother at iiii.s Angeles, (jal., where ployed. Tlu re Ii is been no r- vivai, unless we 0.11l
tin
nhote period aaoatlnftoas one. The number
(Munches are hindered by excess of digshe was spending the wilder with another
..f backsliders, son i qoentlj eery small.
nity and formalism. Cast them out even !i Invalid son. The physicians in bo* Anis not this the ideal, normal condition
if it requires fasting and prayer.
l)o geles pronounced Mr. Dukman's malady of true Christian
a
Church? Should not
you work miracles here.'" --aid an in- a disease of the stomach, and recom- every Church be content with nothing
truder who had come in to break uji the mended a sea-trip. With his mother, he l"-s
than a constant live, working, etlime. line. "No," said the leader, as he came to Honolulu, only to find to ..is ii id condition? Then the necessity of
collared the rascal, "but we cast out amusement that he was la the very last /•e-vivals would cease, and with these
devils!" Cast out formalism and get rid Stage of consumption, and that tie iad seasons of spasmodic activity would also
of your religious starch some how. You only a few days to live. He met his go
tiie many incidental evils which grow
will enjoy your religion all the more, death bravely and patiently, Upheld and "■.it of them, [in an address before the
and God will use you in His service as sustained by an unswerving trust in
Boston Minister-.' .Meeting on the theme,
never before.
Christ. The sympathies of our people "Some Methods that a Pastor may
use
—On: l'liiKMis of a pessimistic turn arc with the bereaved mother, who is to Develop Religious Interest among his
of mind in temperance matters will find still with us eagerly awaiting a steamer own People," Mr. Hakcu gave the seit tlificult to reconcile their jeremiads to take her back to the invalid son whom cret of the success of his Church in these
with the following figures; given by Hon. she left in Los Angeles.
words:
David A. Wiaa.s, in Nciuiin Kit's "Staof seed time and bar—Ell a private letter received by last Do away with tbe notion
except in tbe sense (lv.l now is u seed time,
tistical Adas," of the consumption of mail a prominent Christian worker of vest,
you lire to sow fur the future, and also a harwhen
spirits in gallons jn-r capita in the United Portland, Oregon, writing about Hit. vest when yon are In reap what was sown in the
Mi'MiALi/s month's campaign in that past. Do always sowing and always reaping.
Suites, from 187(1 lo 1880:
limits.
OalU.
city,
says: "About 900 have professed con- God's Cburob is i cnutinn tl hot house.
Oute.
per can.
per cap. version.
Date.
1 think his work will be a lasting
-The truths about alcohol are now
1870
2.0.1
1876
1.211
1871
one. One of the best results of Hit. Mln1.67
1877
1.26
so well known that you cannot get a life1872
1.63
1878
1.06
iiall'.s work will be the revival of in- insurance company anywhere to put you,
1.68
1-7:1
1879
1.08
terest iv Scripture study. He is a plain, if you are a moderationist, Into the
1874
1.46
1880
1.23
1875
1.47
II blunt, practical man, who has the Bible same class with a totalabstainer.—J. Oook.
—Rev. Ai.vin OsTito.M, of Murphy's,
Oil., is expected by the next steamer,
and will take charge of tho Foreign
Church in Kohala. Mrs. Mills, now in
the city sisiting her old |iupils of Oahu
College, speaks ill the highest terms of |
Mu. Ostkom's zeal and devotion to the'
Master's cause.
—Mb«. Dr. «'. T. Mil.!*, Principal of
stills Seminary, California, arrived by
the Mariposa on the 21st ult. for a season
of rest and to meet acquaintances and
friends of former years. These are numerous and tire all glad to see MRS.
Mills, who is the tfiicst of Mil and
Mils, S. M. Damon, once more in Honolulu.
—Tims is William Noblb'S way of |

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�Volume 44, No. 4.

THE FR TEND.

6

grnduated in this institution; also .diss
14th—Monthly &lt; oiieert. — i urkey.
21»t—The &lt; riiiitixii.il. Matt. 27:36-6(1. Mil iy Alexander; and Mrs. 8. E. Bishop
w.i- a pupil of Prof. Eaton when lie wits
28th — i'lejiaiaiory lecture.
On the evening of the 2Ht|i, at 7 o'clock, connected with tl.e State Normal school

THE BETHEL UNION CHURCH.

Mali ii— A i nil..
On the evening ol thi tlrd the pastor
gave a preparatory leytu u nil tiie words:
Behold the lamh of (sod."—John 1: 29.
On Sunday, the 7ih, the Sacrament ol
the Lord's Supper was celebrated. It
was preceded by an address on the
words: "Thanks be unlo God for 11 is
unspeakable gift." 2 Cor. 9: 15. Six
persons were received Into fellowship:

from which he

logo to Packnot only one of
unite wilb the Church, by letter or on the lliosl aid" men in leaching, bid a
gentleman and a true christian mall.
profession ol faith.
The writer has known him for many

Ho standing Committee will meet, in the
lecture room, any who may desire in

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called

er's Institiio. He is

i

| years.
Ja.v.i.sA. Maktix.
March 25th, 188(1.
llilo,
j
of
the
Church
meeting
two Baptists, two Methodists and two j was held March lib, with a very large
I
RECOLLECTIONS OF JOHN B.
enlisted
unall
now
Congiegatlonalists,
of the membership. The
attendance
GOUGH.
der a Union Banner. "That they all rap nts were lull, complete and InterestBYNOBLE.
WIL AM
nmy he one." John 17 : St. The pastor ing, m much so thai it was unanimously
that when death come- to mo,
I
pray
Forbes
of
the
Was assisted by Secretary
i ordered by vote that'they be published, he may come while Ihe harness is on,
Hawaiian Hoard.
| with ii Hal of the members. This pam- while I am I attling for the rigid against
On the ilth, the teachers' meeting was phlet is now iii the printers' Lands, and
a hard-black hearted iniquity."
These
held at the pastor's residence. Prayer Will he sent (o all the membersof the] wold, were nt iei ed by JOHN 1!. OlillGH in
was ottered for the children and the Church during next week.
I an oration on temperance delivered in Hxyoung people that all may be t hri.-t's,
The list ol members has been revised, etc: Hall. London, England, mora than
and interesting reptdts were given by and seventeen names stricken therefrom, j thirty years
ajro, and
j
I have often lleaid
the teat hers.
which makes Ihe clerk's ri port show an him express the .same wish both in pri!
On the evening of the 10th, the apparent loss of seven members; but
and public. On Friday, Feb. Utli,
Monthly Concert was held. The subject | there has been a real nam ol ten. The vate
in a iectme delivered in the Academy of
was Japan. There was a reading by Miss additions during the year were sixteen,
Philadelphia, Mr. Gough said
Alice Beckwith, of Ureal Harrington, I and the dismissions .-i.\. Tiie present Music,
| that lie fell Ids work was nearly done
Mass., and another by Mrs. T. U. Thrum. number of memliers is ami, of these I
land desired to die at the post of duty.
The-e were followed with an address by ninety are absent from Honolulu.
jThose wh i were present on that occasion
U. W. 11vv-iii, Kst|., Hawaiian Consul! The Treasurer's report shows a total ol will not soon
forget the peroration of his
General at Tokio. Mr. Irwin spoke jbenevolent contributions for the year of ji
1 nut him at the depowerful
address.
the
about the old Japan and the new ; of
SO.ibb.oo.
the following Monday
pot,
Philadelphia,
wonderful progress of Christianity there | There has been an average attendance
jafternoon, when we had a short lint
in the last twenty year.-, and of the
Largest pica .ml conversation, and arranged lo
ITS in the Sunday School.
lof
hopeful future for the &lt; hristlan religion! attendance duringthe year, 242; small-1! meet luill again the
following day in
j
in that land. The meeting was one ofi| est, sii.
New York t 'ity, but on the sain, veiling
unusual Interest.
The work of the Church during the j he was "stricken down" at Frankford,
In this connection We would refer to a past month ha- been somewhat InterPa., during the delivery of ail address
book presented to lis by J ,r tsowell rupted by the temperance woric.erii- ol uiiusiial power closing his life work
Smith :
Mission stories in many lands," ducted by Mr. W.\i. Nohlk, ol London.
which have been and will he
Issued by tin A. li. ('. P. M., beautifully ! Union services, with large audiences, with Words
in all parts of tho world, Young
quoted
ol
a|
infoi Illation;
illustrated and lull
were held on Sunday evenings, March ni.in make your record clean ''
lor young people," but which i
book
21st and 28th. Gospel and Musical serin a lis! of hi~ engagements for PebWill interest all, from young lo old, and vices will be resumed Sunday evening,
which he gave me in order that I
ruary,
for which we would ask u place in every
April lin, conducted by the pastor.
might be v, i h him on the days when
English speaking family hi Honolulu.
Prayer mi etlng topics:
not lit work, the following note is made:
The Children's sociable was held on
Concerts A paper "Pell. 18, iioine," and on that day he
Till
—Monthly
April
the evening ol the 26th, with music, on i'.ducatioii and Mission.-,, by President
his "departure."
recitations, readings and refreshments. M i.i: Kirr. Also, noli tidy review o, mis- look
It was my privilege to enjoy much of
i
It wa&gt; much enjoyed by all those present. sion news.
his society during the last few weeks of
On the 28th, Secretary Patter nave an
April llth—Obedience. Matt. 7:21— his sojourn
upon earth, and I felt
Sunday
address
to
the
School
Interesting
.John 14:16- -I.
29;
thai ids health had been
at
times
about the Y. M. &lt;'. A. work amoug tiie
so
April -1 si—The Soul's Cry and the
boys, A collection was taken up for that Saviour's answer. A Bible reading. renewed, but the prayer he had
was
heard
and
Cod
culled
often
offered
work.
April 28th—God's deliverance.
him ,o rest from those labors which Pave
On the 31st, new committees were apbeen
so abundantly iiies-ed to the World
Social
the
to
Union,
Bethel
pointed by
H
C
I
L
O
ORRESPONDENCE.
His life and work have had
large.
at
serve for the ensuing six mouths.
llilo its Weil as Honolulu has been aii influence for good upon me, which
The Church sociable wid be held in
l cannot explain In uds brief piper.
the lecture room on Thursday evening, honored by a visit from Mr. and Mrs. i&gt;.
My mother before her deatli gave me
(j. Raton of Brooklyn, .V Y.
ir
Profee
the Bth.
his life and orations which imThe officers and teachers of the Sun- I'.aton, a gentleman of marked ability, a copy ofn.c
p
many
years
ha.
for
connected
with
res-oil
mora titan any other hook 1
been
day School are requested U) meet at the
owe in a great
residence of Mr. .1. &lt;&gt;. Carter, NuUUUU Pa ker Collegiate Institute of llrooklyn. bad read, and to this
tiie President of the oiea .nre my position among the temperOn
death
of
the
the
Avenue, on Tuesday evening,
tilth.
of 10-d ty.
In IST", Mr.
We wisii to impress on all our mem- above named Institution, Professor I'.aton ancea.workers
Got ii invited me to bis home at Hid
bers the importance Of the weekly prayer was offered the Presidency, but had to Side,
decline on account ot ill health, and has
Worcester, -Mass., and from that
meeting, p iSays Thr Qoiden Oensari
to the day when he was taken
helpmeet
up
With
bis
lime
|
traveling
good
been
N.i nlle knows tin- I,iss lie sustains by lielliir all
sent from tbe prayer HsßSllllll Perhaps Qod whs ; for several years, seeking health, which from us, 1 enjoyed his personal friendtie Il 111 meet In.n Willi a pleCinUS 1111-llii SsillCj,
he seems to be gaining, and hopes to be ship. It was through his public life and
but In c one nut tn receive n unii be will bobble,
able to resume his labors in that institu- work thai 1 was first brought to know
all ilinai h life tor the want of il.
Subjects for the Wednesday evening tion in the Autumn. It is one of the John B. Ooi'mi, but it was in after
meetings :
eldest and best of its kind in America, years that I learned lo love him. Those
7th—The power of Christ.—Matt 8:1j and has from seven to eight hundred who only knew him as a platform speaker
18-34.
pupils. Misses llattie and Sarah Coan cannot understand his influence in pri-

i

FORT ST. CHURCH.

The annual

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THE

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FRIEND.

and mid-Pacific shore-, never before wit less- that tl |ia tineiit. This grand piano, unand etl the beauty and lovelinessoi thtsisl mil lurpissed by my instrument of its class
the gem, or experienced the balmy softness upon the Isliods it is Uelieved, is the
his of our semi-tropical clime, it would he a latest acquisition in the music deport.
fitting thing for us to extend this wel- men!, and remind i me that it was under
Unone come to you in recognition of what you your administration that Punahoa behave done as a.i educ.it &gt;ron the Pacific came possessed of iis tii i piano for the
of bis favorite authors.
in the United i-v.lies and the price- use of the school. The recent additions
Slope
was
invited
to
1
Feb.
21st,
On Sunday
by
di liver (lie address at the Memorial Ser- less ho in you and your husband havolie- to our College Library, provided for
of our friends, is another
vice in Ih" Presbyterian church, Frank- stowed upon the d lughters of I California; Cue generosity
establishment important factor made effective for se.
ford, which was crowded to overflowing, yes, of the world, in the Seminary
and
And aj'.iin, we I and to-night in the
and there Were present those Who heard and equipment of Mills'
of an enlarged campus, and one
ask
add
our
trioini'Ut
College.
occasion
We
to
Oota.n's
the
Mills'
on
Mr.
lecture
our
are
express
applanning to adorn and lieautify. It
of
and
to
We
gratitude
above referred to. I fell very much the lute
responsibility of standing on the spot jpreci.lti if the ibor, the devotion, the will is,' years hefoi.- it can rival the lovehintory liness of Seminary Park, but, with our
where one of the most eloquent of men wisdom, which have marked the
soil ami climate and
itKapunahou
had received the summons, calling him [ of the entire work. Isul no such liiitlta"home." The service was one long to I-1 lion Is upon us. We rejoice In your sell, wilh its overflowing stream ol wais
way we may not
be remembered. Cod was in our midst achievements, but we welcome you for tor, there no reason
Bat I am
hi have been to US, and done for aspire even to thai in time.
nnd the el ising word of the ad Iress de- wiiil
(' illege.
too
and
have not
I
speaking
long,
yel
Oahu
same
Church
on
the
15th,
livered in the
More than a quarter of a century has touched upon our revised—and revision
Young man make
seemed to echo,
passed since yon began your labors here, |Is the order of the day, you know—our
your record clean."
and
mote than twenty year- since yon revised courses of study, or our flourishHonolulu, March 2Mb., 1888.
ceased. But tlw Impress made by you ing Punahou Preparatory school, with its
upon this Institution, and upon the tOt) pupils. We feel sure lliere are
RECEPTION TO MRS. MILLS.
children
of those day-, -i ill renains. If i signs ol life and growth for you to see;
Oaliii College witnessed a "gathering
my study Ol the [ and still we have mt yet attained,
of the tribes" on Monday evening, | nave made no mi I.i
i those
of :-i.'
names
of
years, 111 hul we are pressing forward if that we
idenis
March.Stgth, when Mks. alii.ls, former
iiiat which we ought.
pupils, ai. . their ehlidre 11,join forced by* j were connect*' with th college during may attain Un
live are to1
stay.
boys,
Of
the
64
But
cannot
close without a Word of
your
resident
in Hawaii,
her California pupils
of Trustees; reference to those you cannot again
ami her many friend and disiinguisiied day members oi our Board
Leg- greet upon the shore of time. ALEXANguests, gathered hi pay their respects to I three will lie members of the next
have
at DER and IJai.owin, and Damon and
islamic,
'Vend
others
while
ibis successful educator and excellent
into the eternal life
Christian woman. The spacious parlors different times rx n chowt n to Coat duty. l,v\iA.\, have passed
and verandas were filled. After till had Fro a among theh ysof those years have j jand to the reward of the saints since my
successful pl.iui- coming. Allen and Coam and Hall
paid their respects to the beloved guest a come many of the i.KXSt
l-| ids,
had gone just before I came. FATHER
th; evening, and an hour of delightful -I'l'S and business in a of these
as
our
CASTLE
alone remains of the body of
h
well
known
lawyers
i
■ ;I 'Is of those days the Trustees
so'lal intercourse was had, Uou. W'.m. and
The
of your day, and he stands
n&lt;.
pliysi.a
K. Castle, of the Hoard of Trustees,
called the eoniji.di.v lo order, and Presi- are the mothers in Hie homes of to-day, upon the very threshold of that higher
and model homes they arc, while their and better life, bat a pillar of strength
dent Mi;ni:i'l"l' gave the follow injj;
children are lv our classes. Both parents still, though no longer a member of our
ADDRESS OF WELCOME:
and children, in large numbers, have ex- Hoard. Of the others of that day I know
I)i:au Mns. Mills: —In the last numtendi I their g eetings to you In person only their names. 15m, who can tell if,
ber of the Xi/rtlt American Review is an tills evening, assuring you ol the aloha with your honored husband, who has
article written by an illustrious in in of they have for yon. Of those associated also Joined that glorious company, they
deeds, entitled, "An unspoken Address." with you as teachers, think thai Pros*. may not even now rejoice with us. May
1 cannot bin feel there is an unspoken Alexander alone la here, a man whom we -o live and discharge our trusts, that
welcome extended to you here to-uigiit, the people oi .oi'sc islands love lo honor when the Lord shall call, we too may go
that is truer, and deeper, and more for his intrinsic Worth, and large ami to be with them.
beautiful than any wnich can be ex- accurate scholarship.
ilui he will be
.Vnd now, into the midst of our work;
pressed in words. I also feel we are the permitted to speak for himself.
and in the midst of this company of
losers to-nighf, because one ol Hawaii's
The standards of education which you friends WO welcome you; not witli formal
nia t illustrious men of deeds, our honhave always erected have been biga. welcome, but, In memory of the pa t, in
ored Yiec-i're.-ident, fc Is that he cannot Voiir desire has always Oeen lo give a
if the present, and in expectation
exi.'iid ti.e formal welcome which hesnd liberal education, one calculated lo ■ ; lip of the future, we welcome you with a
hi- Fellow-trustees of this luatltudon dc- \jthe individual for the full duties f aiau- geniiin
id beany aloha.
sire to have expressed to you OH thi
en- ! hood or womanhood, uniting mental
Mi:.--. Mills responded in a very hapsion. He could speak front a personal [tower with high character, li needs no py speech; Professor Alexabimu, who
knowledge of (he Work so well done by words of mine,, in ibis presence, to saxwas one ol the corps of instructors during
yourself and your honored husband when how well yen have succeeded.
tiie president", of Mis. Mills' husband,
you labored in Hawaii nei; he could welVnii came to Calm ('nllcgc at a time of spoke In very complimentary terms of
come you tack lo ihis field of former need. Under the wise and careful ad- the work of Mr and Mi's. Mills, here in
years, and mingle personal reminiscences ministration ol your husband, it was Hawaii; Mrs. H. I'. Hi li.inkii am read
of those days with his expressions of launched upon a career of financial Indeone of her brignt poems; Hoofs. S. B.
aloha.
pendence it had never before known. Doi.i: and \V. It. Castli: gave reminisHut while 1 cannot speak from the We have about us still many of the mi,- cences of school-life of ye olden time;"
vantage ground of personal knowledge provcinents introduced by him. And while excellent music was given by the
of or Identification with those experien- yet the I'linaliou of to-day is much I'linahoii (ilee Club and ny Miss Alice
ces, it is permitted me to speak to changed I can speak freely of these H k.n ton.
you as one who is himself within the recent changes, as they were largelyplanTn is reception was another of Punamystic circle to which you have belonged ned before I came. This beautiful main hou's "red-letter" occasions.
these many year.-, and as Jk/eUow edttetl- hall is a constant source of satisfaction.
tor 1 welcome you to our Island home. i The new Bishop Hall of Science provides
-A bit of advice from the blacksmith
And had you never before visited these us with the much needed equipment for Ito his apprentice: "Be slow, but shoer."
Iliad heard him speak
in America
E inland, but 1 never can forget
happy hours sjie-ii with him and
family circle, when he led us at
til.one of grace, or, read to us from
vale life.

thrill his audiences

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THE FR TEND.

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him is confined tin' simplicity of a child
wiili the decision nnd thinness of mature

Y. M. C. A.,
THE
HONOLULU,
11.

I.

The usualcollection was taken, amount

ing to $ 10.

The in.mber of strangers visiting the
room- had been in excess of previous
Young Men's ( lirisliini ss. ciiiiii ii. null die la.iii.:
to advocate, whether asmlle or a frown months. Among the visitors wi re repof liiiei i. is are responsible for 11, oi.n i.o.
rendiiiitivi
in m Australia, 1 ngland,
be his human rev ard.
Editor. Asa speaker, It is style is not so murli Ireland and Scotland; and in Ihe States,
@. Flitter,
liy the 1 c&gt;«•■ it• oi argument us the apt Use from S:.n Francisco, Oakland, Chicago
of IIlustration."! iIi-umii from real life, and and New York, all of whom, without
MR. WM. NOBLE.
especially along the lino of liis own per- exception, expressed surprise to find the
In Ihe last issue Of THE FRIEND we gonal experience.
Young Men's Christian Association so
gave a brief sketch of ihe above gentleas a hammer well estnbll -lied in this distant Island city.
These
he
uses
incidents
that
he
baa
been
man, and announced
to drive home, to the heart and conengaged to sto|i over one steamer on his science,
FOREIGN NOTES.
many precious and much needed
conduct
a
series
and
way to the Colonies,
—Mrs.
LeaVl
it, of the American W.
truth.-.
of tiospel Temperance Services it. our,
stay with us will &lt;'. T. 1."., is doing a very successful work
feel
confident
his
We
city.
of great good lo the cau.-e in the interest of Gospel Temperance in
Mr. Noble came tons by the good ship be productive
Australia, she is at present laboring In
we
love.
Jttuipom, arriving early Sunday mornMelbourne.
ing, March 21st.
THE Y. M. C. A. BOYS.
—The Fourth Inter-Colonial Conferlie was at once driven to the hospitainterest on the part of ence of the Young .Men's Christian AsAii
increasing
ble home of Mr. and Mr.-. Judge Met ully, the boys was manifested by the large at- so.: .lion was held In Hobart, Tasmania,
where he still remains as llieir guest.
tendance ai their regular monthly meet- Feb. Ist lo Oth, and was an exceedingly
On Sunday evening, Mr. Nolle ad- ing on Mar, ii 4th.
interesting and profitable occasion.
dressed a large union meeting in Port
I'. .1. Lowrey, prePresident,
The
Mrs.
Messrs. Moony and Sankf.y have
Street Church, ami on Tuesday evening, sided, Tiie subject was "Micronesia,"
March 28d, the canipalgn was started lv and most of the boys had something to received an earnest invitation to visit
the Y. M. C. A. Hall.
say. Several visitors were present, Mr. Australia.
—The Sydney Association has recently
The seating capacity had been inT. 11. Davies and Rev. 11. Bingham dedicated
creased so as to accomodate nearly 860. made brief remarks to the boys.
tllHir beautiful new building,
all c implete, including laud, cost
The hall was well tilled, a huge part of
Tiie latter exhibited D rude "Coat of Willi Ii
the audience were young men, and a Mail," IUCh a- i- worn by the nativ.'s, t-..s,.'.iiu. A debt of a little Ini re than
good degree of Interest was manifested. which he picked up aftei a..tile, when one-naif tbe cost rests upon the property,
.Met tings were conliiiu. (I each evening residing on one of the Micronesian Isl- but this they hope to liquidate in the
near future.
duiing the remainder of the week, but ands some years ago.
counter attractions interfered somewhat
At the annual meeting of the San
for
were
ted
an
Arrangements
perfet
with the attendance ol the special class elitenaioiii' in which .anie oil' on tiie Francisco Y. M. C. A.the Treasurer's
whose presence was most desired.
next evening, M mil 6th, and was a most report showed that the expenses of the
Aii open air meeting In FowlePsyard, enjoyable occasion, li wasa anion affair institution during the past year had I seen
early on Saturday evening, leached ii by the adult and juvenile associations.
$1:1,91)8.15, The receipts had so far exlarge • number of working men, women
it i tl this amount as to leave a balance
was
first
of
the
part
programme
The
and children, who live there, but seldom rendered by the Boj ' i.i'.i'icli In u most uf $317.11) in hand.
or never attend a church.
i)){. Miniiali. of Indiana is lieing
creditable manner. The »econd part by
Sunday was a "fluid day." .Mr. Nowonderfully blessed of Cod on the Pacific
the adult-, to the pleasure of all.
ble addressed the l-'orl Street Sunday
The third part was a •s^-; y Interesting Coast,
Between nine and ten hundred
School in the morning; also, a Inge and solo by one ol our generous ollicers, ul on verts are reported as a result of his
i
Interesting children's service In the Y. all present joined heartily in the chorus: recent work In Portland. He began a
M. C. A. Hall, al :! p. m. 'Hie damp- "Ice-cream and Cake." We shall trj in eric- of evangelistic services with the
ne.ss from frequent showers prevented furnish a duplicate In the course of a few San Francisco Y. M. ('. A.on March 11,
holding an open air meeting thai had months,
and is expected to remain there six or
.
been arranged for (i:d(l, anil so the usual
eight weel,-.
MONTHLY
NOTES.
Gospel Praise ."service was held in the
Ihe Young Men's Bible Class has been
Association Hall at thai hour, in which
The monthly business meeting was
held on the 18th, President Atherton hi Unusually interesting during the past
Mr. Noble to k a leading part.
has
la the evening another union service die chair. Reports of (,'ton mIttees indi- month. The average attendance
A cated abou I tbe -ame interest In the dii- bed 12. We should be glad to see Ihe
Was held in the Port Street Church.
luge audience was present whose undi- lereiii detriments of Work as during mi iiter doubled. Young men who feel
unacquainted with the "Word of Life"
v (led attention was held by an earnest, the previoii- month.
Mr. T. It. Walker, Hon. A. P. Judd are especially invited to come int.. the
sir,plural application of lessons drawn
from the parable of the Prodigal Son." and Mr. W, A. Kinney were appointed class. It Is conducted by the General
Mr. Noble's treatment of this old and a &lt; 'oiniiiittee to nominate officers for i he Secretary in ihe Y. M. ('. A. Parlor at
familial' subject was entirely out of the eii.-iiiiig year, their election to take place 9:46 every Sunday morning.
usual line; bis original and apt illustra- at the next monthly meeting, April loth,
Friends have contributed a large numtions gave to Ihe entire addles-an ex- that living the time of the annual elec- ber of magazine* and religion.-- papers
ceedingly practical force, thai we trtisi tion.
(ti
the A--ociation daring tin- [mat
It was voted to hold the Annual Mem- laonth, whit Si hsvebeen placed on
will incite many a"Prodigal hearer lo
board
"arise and go" to meet a wailing and bers Social on the Thursday evening, fol- flic ship* leaving |&gt;:&gt;rt for the Arctic
forgiving Father."
lowing tin' election, April 22(1, when Ihe region- ;in(l elsewhere.
At this writing we are in the midst of annual rejiorts of the officer! and com- i
the work which is being vigorously mittees will be read.
-The sale of Bibles, religious books
Two new members were elected.
ami magazine* through the colporteun
pushed.
As an Individual, Mr. Noble is posThe Secretary had attended twenty- of Mr. Spurgeoa's Church amounted
sessed of many attractive qualities. Ho seven religious meetings and made tifty- during the past year to newly 946,000,
Seventy-eight men were employed in
has a tine robust, manly figure, with an four call-.
open pleasant countenance, indicative of Several had signed the pledge during the work, and fifteen hundred towns and
the warm Christian heart within. In, the month.
JI villages were visited.
This im". is devotnl

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thesteterest. nf the llosoailn with conviction* which In is not ashamed

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April, 1886.

9

FRIEND.

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Sh tagh ii, wa i bis filled an important
Missions
niin the empire, says :
positi
!
the
derly and' successful oaeasi us of
failure—they are a
not
a
only
are
not
j
kind we have ever witnessed.
HONOLULU, 11. I.
success. Mi iy of oar countrymen
Hi- Mijesty wis present during the i grand
iii
are to Indifferent to Inquire or
!
China
FOR
in, and nude a short a I I Ms exOFFICERS OF THE BOARD
fori
for themselves the work that
examine
Interest
and
grevt
pleasure
his
rel!,'';.! pressing
(bine ; the character and conduct
h.in. ,\. i'.jiiiu
being
is
c,;.'-,.
1
•Cie-nl
111
words
to
all.
11.,v. 11. WaTSBHOUSI
V cer ian and giving encouraging
of others is such that they studiously
!!-c....111i:
Il&gt;, C M lIVBS l&gt; l&gt;
e.„-,..5|,„i.1,„.5,-,i,u,ia i Her tl iy il Highness, the Heiress ApRiv v.o. ...inns
missionaries. But those who will
avoid
throughout
the
also
present
W. W. KALI
VmlOnr
Vml.lor parent was
iake
tiie
trouble to go and see soon disP.C loss, -lit
whole day, His Mijesty being obliged to
j
that
a greal work is going on. I
Inter
Hie
llawaiisu
cover
»ls nf
~■■■ i- dm te! mi'
Ti,
Mr. Berger
ipp.iinte.l by the j leave at noon for iv uln i.
Bosrilof «lf«i iiis.su i Hi- Kdltnr,
myself in Shanghai, Tienthave
seen
It
aid
h.iciiis.
in
for
excellent
ii- i
and the Hind rendered
I, is ,;■■;, uislble
U
Hankow,
and Peking, and can speak
sin,
leiling three pieces of Sunday School
fro n personal knowledge and obserof
it
I
MUm
the
in
present
jolne
isle
while
all
m
A. 0.
f Chrisvation. Indo'l, the ignorant
singing. Mr. Berger also very kindly tian people here ,u homo about this great
HAWAII.
TOUR
ON
A
aided in other parts of the music by
amazes me. The influence
II iving just retured from a three p|lying iii (' lurch orgm. The Impres- work simplythe
in
insert
few
of
China
world is destined to be
a
Hawaii,
we
weeks trip to
sions of tiie day were all pleasant, and very potent, an.l it rests mainly irith
notes thereon.
calculated to do good. There are, it Is
iimi America \ Christians to say
Our work, confined us to the western true, some thing, connected with su.th British
what
so
that
Hawaii,
island
of
influence is /&lt;&gt;
or Koiia side of the
general v. inventions which are undesirathat we ditl u it re ten the scene of action, ble. Vet, if properly managed, and not tferald.
or rather non-action, at the crater ol suffered to degenerate into mere, show,
—Sixty six years ago yesterday,
Kilauei.. So far as we could learn howor ai iiiipul He I in tiie Interest of n'vil March 81, the first Misdonaries reached
capable of d Jog Hawaii, tie says the American Hoard
ever, from th&lt;&gt;-'' who hid been there, no iinl ica.-es, they
outbreak of Uva has yet appeared, al- much good. Ii is to he hoped that they Aim mac of .Missions for ISrtti, which
though the soddeu and mysterious dis- may not fie so u -cd.
ought to know.
appearance of the tires from the crater
every
one
on
ihe
C
H
I
N
E
W
S
ORK.
The Steam Barkentine Morming Star
of Ivilauea has kept
watch lor some outbreak, either in Puna
Whatever may be the social or pnlifi- in iy be looked for now any day.
or Ivau. Up to last Thursday, there bad •alasii'ci of the Chinese question, all
been no return of the tires in tiie crater, Christians should recognise the fact that
FROEHTCAWIPFSEOVNTAGRHLCIMEON, ONTHS
aim iga there was an apparent Increase they h ivo obligations to discharge before
&amp;FEBOFRUARY 1886.
For Foreign Missions.
Toe simjiios, and C id in regard to the spiritual welfare of
ol steam and smoke.
(k
Ij
.Santa..
$ ft) 00
W lien ;|'U i.i.. V
i'2.1 88
axo.n natural theory to account for tiie the Chinese on our shores. Toe lll- !•'.1,-t-Sl. a.. W. W. it ,||
100 SO
Oh., B. H 'il
late changes, in the crater is, that the waiian Board lias endeavored to do what Kohali
,:
|sl n.I its at '.',' aim an, Kauin,, i id'- '.nl mass of I tea ia the lakeit can in t,lis line; ami the enthusiastic
&gt;2»0
ai.
■a
■
subterragreat
found
vent
into
some
iis
meral
•.'olici.
57 L'5
I'll., 1). Sl.'.t'i'i"
g
Superintenlias
mil iile l lours oi
tsi
50
oliikuCh.
S.
Pnalrthi
in
Z.
it
tl
nean chamber, Where has had surfl
dent of Chinese Evangelical work, Mr. W .aim t, L. Lyons
.at) IK)
room to spread its -b and :&lt; now probably P \V. Dam.in, are well known to this Upshots, D. Puhi
I 50
cooling gradually. Meantime, thoo.igi■..Humility. The planting of Christian
.&lt;&amp; 40
nil sources of action, situated at some ia liiiui His among the Chinese in our
Home .itissiull.
Kiliuea,
are
(!
the
crater
ot
to
O.
$ 2165
bear upon H.-tii"! riiii.i i.. B. Damon...
midst, nod the bringing
depth beneath
Gene,of Fnti'l.
doubtless in their usual aetivlty.and will them of Co-pel light and truth, Is one of V lipii ('li..
$ 20 00
W. .1. iv.iiiwa,
00
gradually (ill up the void and appear the greatest safeguards tbe nation, the II in il iu l!u., a. O. I'' ali'M
now
all
is
*»12 00
where
It.
ii.iuui
C,l.,
government, an I tbe community can ivaala I.nun A.
again in lakes of Arc
(Hi., It. A. Lvui.m.
12 00
apparent desolation and black darkness, have. Phe Hawaiian Board of Missions 1'Maun,
iiuii in Ch., It. a. Lyiuui
11 00
Hawaii,
KufU
WO
u'tii
and
on
for
south
this
100 00
N
lias assumed the responsibility
tlillirrl Is. I'nbliintioil Fllll'l.
found suffering irom a protracted drought. work, and we lay it before all rightly Avails
$ 2 (!:")
id ('.viae -oil
For eight weeks t acre had been no ram, thinking persons, that its needs may be
books s ild lij' (i. M. Lu"
suffering
Was
a
88 76
in
and the whole country
known. It will require nearly if not quite
Icra. at Wannea
JST. 00
snl.I at ntii.-r plies
condition. Within the past week how- three thousand dollars to sustain this IJn,
4 m
1) i, sold liy J. II. .VI iliou
partial
give
a
couple
you
showers
before
of
work this year, and we lay
ever, a
$ 106 85
Society.
Bible
American
relief, and appearances Indicate that our appeal for funds to aid lo this work.
(!' in ns -old frmu i.ic GilAvails
more is to come.
All wiio may feel so disposed are Inbert islands
I 45 25
I'esl niients h.iI I by
The meeting of the Evangelical Asso- vited to send their contributions to .Mr. (idburt Islands
Luiur.i.
Waiinc
S'J 00
M.
ciation of the island of Hawaii, Which \V. W. Hall, our Treasurer, designat1'iistillll"ids sold livt'ljlt. Lovell
of
village
little
for
the
Chinese
17 70
was held at the pietty
ing their gifts as
in (iilb at .stands
3 50
Hookena, 111 South Kona, was well at- work, and they may be assured tnal I'ustnmeiits sold by J. II. .Vlalioa
$ 150 06
strictly
tended, and pa-sod off plea.s.iutly.
sueii
funds
be
used
all
will
I'nblifiitiiiils.
Thursday,
on
The Association met
for th it work. We hope shortly to have Avails of books sold at the Book
Depot for tbe oil liter ending
March nth, and continued its sessions a detailed statement of the present con$170 27
Dec. Ill, 1SS0
during Hut day and the next, finally dition and needs of the work prepared
W. W. HALL. Treasurer.
on
tile
Monday
finishing up It* work
by Mr. Damon for mis page.
pastors and
-Yes, "the former days were better
loth. Seven Hawaiian
Much has been said recently of the than these." In those good old days"
eleven delegates from the churches on
te liin ay of otli ads in foreign lands con- men were not left unprotected, as witness
that Island were present
(leveled
to
a
the
Was
cerning tiie progress of missionary work, the following unrepealed law of New
Sat tlrd iy
IStfa
general Sunday S.-hool Convention, In and it ba-s been affirmed that they nave .Jersey, passed while the State was a
which there \va- tpjite a tull representa- little faith in missions. This Is doubtless British colony:
line ill wnncii of whatever nge, rank, profestion of (superintendents, teachers and true of in any officials, and it is equally sinu
isr d"S/reM whether viryias, ruaids or widows,
scholars from various jutrls of the Maud. [ true that tliey have little faith in Chris- n-lia shall alter inn aci, impose uoou, seduce and
subThe exercises consisted of Sunday S'hool tianity or any other religion. Hut other betray into in ilniuon v any of His Majesty's
jects by virtue of m-eiils, oosiuetics, washes, paints,
digs and recitation.*, and la-ted from officials bear witaess of another sort. artificial
shups,
teeth, f ilse lisir or hfajh fssslsd
9 A. M. till 5 I'. M., witli au intermis- There has just appeared a witness in so all incur ihe iienalty of the law now. »u Joroe,
of
nyiiinst
of
at
noon.
where
J.
witobcrsft
and like uiisdeHieauors.
Mr.
P. Donovan,
China,
sion an hour

It was certainly one of the

HAWAIIAN BOALID

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�T,HE

10

Volume 44, No. 4.

FRT EN D.

moon which sways the tides, nothing of
the &gt;ea which traverses the whole globe,
-&gt;f teacher,, sml of ml
nothing of the &lt; luif Stream which warms
We Inviie tin co-operation
friend, ol cdocatlon. In ihe effort to malm ihl page
our coasts, not fling of the trade winds
stbniiUlli.*.
of 'I'll r. l-'itiKSii rciily valuable and
that steadily swell our sails ; if he knows
Clillllll'lllicilll'ili-Should I"' seal Hi Kcv. \\ iII i ill 11.
UrlasOß, llil'i. Hawaii.
nothing of rain and dew, snow or hourEnglish words and by accommodating j frost, or the lightning, or the vivacity
Editor. that
H'm. B. Oleson
language more to the idiom of his! and elasticity of the air."
—Intellectual progress Is of necessity
own
He will expunge Englanguage.
THE RESULTANT LANGUAGE.
lish words from his mental dictionary i from the concrete to the abstract. Hut
to
what and without compunction insert what regardless of this, highly abstract sub'It is an Interesting Inquiry as
is likely to be II c conquering language pleases his humor. This work of crystal- jects, such as grammar, which should
ultimately In these Islands. The signs ling a new language Is now g dug on. come quite late, are begun quite early.
I
now are that it will lie an emasculated Tiie colloquial English of Haw di nel is Political geography, dead and unlnterEnglish or English with variations. One even now sufficiently aui gen ris to be i esiing to a child, is commenced betimes;
cannot help thinking as he hear-- the noticeable to strangers. It is not a dia- I| while physical geography, c prehensl.street-talk of the rising generation that lect, but a new language with Iglish its lib- and comparatively attractive to a
i
"they have been at a great feast of langits basic element, wrought upon by the i child, is in great part passed over.—
The
uages, and stolon the scrap-."
subtle forces of other languages, not 10 Spender.
native hoy i-a rarity who has not several much In the matter of a changed voeabThe English-Hawaiian Dictionary
and
and
Portuguese
phrases in Chinese
as a changed diction.
ulary
Principal
j
Iby
11. It. Hitchcock of LaliaiWhen il comes to single words the .dock
There is hope !".' the Hawaiian In this naluii.i Si minary, now going through
not
ai
most
native
Is
all
boys
ii trade Of
acquisition ola noblo and sturdy tongue,; the press at Honolulu, will till a longsmall. It is natural and Inevitable that If that acquisition
be not compromised | fell want. Those who have had the opsuch should be the case. It i- true of by the gathering of the usele iltlblioleth
portunity of examining the manuscript
the Chinese, and Portuguese, and JapanUOW so reiplciiily on the lip., ol native speak in tiie highest terms of the quality
ese; for some of die latter, known to the children. 1( Is a sober duly for every and thoroughness of
tiie work. VVe shall
writer, who have been in th" country a instructor ol Hawaiian youth to check
speak
take
o
e-asion
to
of its merits when
up
brief
have
picked
very
time,
some the use of pigeon-English. Very much its
Is
an
accomplished
fact.
publication
Portuguese words and n few native ex can be done by
watchfulness In this par(!ornell UniverAdams,
President
of
of
a
word
English
-tray
and
pressions,
ticular. And as we look forward Into sity, in his inaugural address &gt; dd: "The
uncertain lineage, and count themselves the years, and think of the po Nihilities, I highest results of education have never
rich in their acquisition. The worst of there i- every incentive to make teachers
reached except under the largi st
it is that they think this oUapodritla i&lt; chary in their use of doubtful English,
j
of choice as to studies, and only
tilierty
"English uiidelilctl."
and alert to correct the language of play-1 under the elective system will America
There is a very serious as well as ground and sircet./,
furnish scholars such as have been prohumorous side to all this. The mental
duced
iii large numbers in the universiEDUCATIONAL NOTES.
aptitude of the native race would inure
ties
of tiie old world."
—The
of
teacher
ims
no
higher
the
the
work
English
acquisition
them
—Anything which ought to be can be.
language within a comparatively short th in that of creating true and noble senMajorities are uol requisite to move matime were there the constant stimulus timent aiuong Ids pupils. It is tbe
English
of
language surroundings/nduring part of hts work. Rules audi jorities. In mural reforms, especially, it
lis the few wiai sway the many, the
Intellectually, the native race is superior pro—es will be forgotten] but the
to the negro race and its superiority timent touching mutters of principle and world over. All that they need i a
WOUld be patent to every one were the practice, inculcated by the wise teacher, great principle for a fulcrum. Minoritwo races to exchange surroundings. that will itblde. It is the training of the ties create everything that comes to
The negro race would hardly have a heir- oat of which are the issues of life. 1 greatness and renown. Ijittle liaiidluls
name to live so far as mental growth It is character-building and mi tic most iol men do all the great Work. The elect
make au the UistOfj ihal lives.
goes were they tlUjeet to the adverse Important to which a teacher is called.
J'rtif.
language Influences to which the native —To teach a child at .cho il thai the Austin Phelps, n.l&gt;.
race is now exposed. The Indian race moderate u-e of alcohol i- good a, an InMONTHLY RECORD.
in the face of similar influences would be vigorating beverage, when the law makes
in even more ho; eless condition.
the selling of liquor to that child a crim«TTbe Hawaii in- are peculiarly the suf- inal offence) to prate about the moderate
MARRIAGES.
ferers from this strife of tongues. They u-e of liquor when tiie country spends MYERS—L .DUB.-i-lu this city, Uareh Hat, by J.
A ii ass. Pastor ol the fii.tsi. t;tiurcti .Mr. Zk.no K.
are the residents. The foreign popula- annually eight hundred
and fifty Ml
BBS, and Miss Waiiv \. I OOOBM.
of
for
ii',
is
doll
rum
and
about
tion a shifting quantity. Individuals million
come here from tic various nation-and eighty-Aye millions for education; to
BIRTHS.
returning lose all their questionable teach that the use of atcoh il can be if
At Ookßls, H.iwiii. I'ear.ury *Mh, to the wife of
or comparative good to William lias! i". .1 da ijrhter
language acquisitions or at least pass any real
Marcli ] li, is-ii. I 1 111.- wife uf William
again into surroundings which nurture brain, muscle, or nerve, when tiie great lieIn 11 II cmiillu.
11 sou
daily
of
So
reeks
and
teempress
the" Integrity
Iheir mother-tongue.
with the AtWarkikl, iiha. March, to the erlfs of Jus. Camp
They lose nothing by the limited resi- record of crime and abomination wrought Dell. Be*] a son.
dence either in the purity or power of under Ihe influence of alcohol, as to make
DEATHS.
their diction. Hut the Hawaiian loses the ordinary newspaper no longer iv to
i.'O'.vei.', \t Urn i'( iyn. Slew York. Pesrsarj -fith,
is.;. ii.KiiMi ii.r.-iiN ..-ell
yoursand S months] sou
his own language and gets what in come it to the family and household —all ,i!'
.1:- -ifu A. a,ill i/auute li rtoivoll.
return? The tide of foreign ; mgaes this is to stultify sib concerned. The School I.He
u Uaklsßd.Cs] I einuary ,'iiiii. IBM. David
|,„ sei ninl oil a! lie lie- IJ.ivid 1., anil X, .z.lllctll llcck'
leaves its debris all along ids shores. So Journal.
:■- .(ears mill .".I Inc.-.
far as its Influence on national growth Is
—('AVON l-'AKUAK in his recent notable aited
Jo i: -In llmciliilii. lelinnir.v '.'Htli. ISM, s-riaiiEN
is
debris,
concerned it is naught but
it
native uf Loudon, lac: uinl. aged Si) vests.
address at John Hopkins University .lonks. a'-nl
solved .1 tlie-e Islands in ism, anil I ml
a valueless acquisition, a profitless task said: "That an Immense sett Ice has been he ileee
bees a resides luf Bonoiula •lace, and was an old
to gather it.
wrought for modern education by the timeintimate friend of the Isle Oast. John Adams of
The Hawaiian is to shape very largely widening of its curriculum. A man may I this city.
CHAPMAN—Iii Beasts Is. March I4lh, Mr. Will.as
the colloquial language of the future. be a perfect! scholar In the old, narrow .CIIAI'SAN.
He has already done more in this direc- sense, and yet very imperfectly educated
lioltM AX- lv ll.amlulu March lStb.uf coiieuinptioii,
Mr. AIiTHL'H llollMAN.aired 1)6, eldest sou of Mr. Ktlol.iltion than he is wont to get credit for. in the new, if he knows nothing of the -ICK
IJoItMAN. of Nsshville. 'I'l'lUl.

EDUCATION.

lie. has enriched colloquial English with
several desirable words, words that will
live here whatever the re ail taut language
may be. But he is destined to affect tho
coining language iii a niu. ii more virile
way, vie., by limiting the vocabulary of

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THE FRIEND.

188(5.

April,

lIAWAIIAN MONEY ORDERS.

HAWAIIAN HOTEL

rpHEROYAL

MR. M. GRAHAM. MAN VGKR.
$75 per month.
terms, $3 per day.

- -

$H

This Unto! is on* of the leading architectural structarea of Honolulu. The rroundsopon which II stands comprise mi entire square uf sliout four acres, frontInu on lintel street 'I'nls Isrire area affords smplo room for a lawn
arc luU out most ■artistically
and beautiful walks, which
ilium- and IMptcal irooj, Ihereere
vc.in n.iwrin

an:

aa'cnder ulc\lnc''l'iM!li,a^enn'','''
tbu

11

,'-.

..

.
«»-a)»resV

v

_:

*-

j Sg^j^|TM^!^":f*v

city,
llotel"coninins the, llue'sl liillimd hall■.into lire
Ihe rliil.t
I'll" main -uti'iinc. is.in Hie .-round (1

■

j

A broad pi.-- :£_,.
.-•fjf'
of which are the elegantly furnished parlors
tin- slim

;

~a

~:

J/uS
-•«&amp;

DompMtic l'ostal Voney Orders will be fiirninlird on
application :it any of tho fotlnwini; Money Order
Oftcc*, payable at Ihie or any other Money Order Office

named I.flow ;

Vr'^B'

;?! JP:,- Sffl* :.'e!;.l ',: igte
Lull i&lt;»
im-rootn. #,{&amp;, ,-is» -w';** ■rW'tTiX
The-c apartiiieiit.- (.pea oi. to laoud ver.u.ilus. ..a.'
ssf»f
~j&gt; ,-,. V,'y^ .^fj(^ff
IT. fFf.
'". fl
in caiiliccin civ of the Nutnili Mountains in.-.y h■sien
L
I*V X ■**'
■_^f?
tin.in oi tun (•'••allh of tropical follairc lliul sun..nulls ll
Is
the
hest
Hie
iniirrH.i'The final dispensed
jfc-ft^-;S«J#3?
e,^-*
balconies.
..
—--™r,...1s .mil is llrst-c.ass -,n a teseects. I nCI 11 nl ci'latu'' ■
~',■. :, n,u lesial, «.'ll on .1'" premise-.. The I'l.-kV uttlcc is luoiishcl v. 111. Ihe Tele
ar. supplied «Oil. pur., wan
leadlsa buslnessarm, "f the city.
esUon is had wltbths
Dhone by which com
Every efl'.'it has been inane, and money lavishly .'Mien.led tinder the present able rauiiaceineni
TO MAKE Tills KsTAHI.IsiIMKNT
su-u-way

Iii fr.

mum

He

in

,

»

I

.

■

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I

t '--.If

J

Wtlobtua,
Papula.

(JaiiHOyO

zTEORUE

vs. saciis,

LUCAS,

.

ss.l •
'J
Successor to A. M. Mellls,
CONTRA! TOH AMI 111 ILIIER,
IMPOKI U AMI I'EAI.F.K
Honolulu Steam Planing Mills, Millinery and F:ancy Goods,
La-lies' and l.euta'

KsPI.ANAUi:. HONOLULI'. 11. I.
Manufactures all kinds of Mouldings, Urackucs.
Wiml.iiv I lames. I'.ltnds. Sashes. Hours, and till kinds
ruralag, Scroll and Hand
ol Wood uiru Finish.
and
sawing. All kinds of Planing, sawing., sortlclngwoo;
Tenanting, order*, promptly attended to, and
iriiniaiitee.l. Orders from ihe oilier Island, s..

Raited.

H^tiiy

D. LANE'S

T

'marble

works,

No. iio i'uri street,

near lloloi,

MONUMENTS!''HEAD
i.i.-, r.i

Islands
attended to.

V SI) COMMISSION AOlt.NTw,
Corner Niinauii I linen sin els, Honolulu.
AGISTS Ii ITBB r-cilnONElts
Waloli,
u'nielm,
Wiiiliiui.u.
Wallnle,
Brig lluzurd.
Khnkai,
Mana,
Mllolo,
Ij.inSiitl ■
('OA-srlNi;

OTENNEH

&lt;v

CO;,

Promptly

cold anrl Silver Wine.
Lan St.. opposite Odd leiluivs' Hall. Honolulu. 11. I.
Bntrsrlngsndail kinds or Jewelri made to order.
ljonStitf
Wni.a. s ciuci s md Jewelry repalroa.

I M. OAT. -Jr.. A CO.,

Stationers and News Dealers,

B Mi leliinii Street, Honolulu, 11. I.
Magsiiii*
Hawaiian Uaaetts Balldlag, is-ataln
gnbscrlptluns received for any Paper orlacks
published, special! ider* received fuiau;
i üblja.iSliyl
Book Binding, Hapa* Killing, and Blank Book n-licil.
m
Manufactnrinij in all its Branches.
ljanWiyl
Good Work an.l Moderate Charges.
/WAX BNGEUIARDT,

MOORE &amp; CO.,
;m King St. (Tclepl

SUIT'S

BLA('kSM!TIIING.

Repairing of all kinds neatly dune.

JOHN

sj

c Uf) llnnolulu, 11. 1.,

ljauHiiyl

NOTT.

Tin, Copper and Sheet Iron Worker,
Plumber, Ha&gt; Fitter, eic.
Stoves and Range* of all kinds. Plumbers' Stock and
Metals, House Famishing Goods,Chandelier*,
Lumps. [;;,
Kaahuiiismi hi.. Honolulu.
I.i insiiyl

pi
-L

A. SCHAEFEE &amp; CO.,
t

GENERAL

Commision Merchants and Importers,
ljanSfjyl

MERCHANT ST., HONOLULU, H. I.

In pi.iter

j

,

in

;

kerywaie. lonise -ni ,.-liIng Hardware, Agate, hen and Tlnwars,

Lamp*,

s

mil Dealer

CHANDELIERS,

STOVES,

MACHINISTS.

GENERAL

K.ipau.

Maknwiio.

ON OAHU.
Honolulu,
Waianae.
ON moi.okai.
Kannakakat.

UuuaM,

Kilanea.

FOREIGN MONEY ORDERS.
Applicalion fur Money Uldaie. paynlile in tin- rnited
any Money (inter dice in Hiis
States, niay be made
i
Kirn .loin; and the) will lie (i ami ill llu Ociicliil Cost
Office, lleiniliiln. .ai any ilileriiiil'nnal Money Older
Office in the United Bill. of which a list can he seen
liy inl|'iirili" ill SB) llav.aiimi I'nsl llllicc
Likewise Money O.d.as may bi'diuwii in the I'nited
State*, payable il any MonsjsOrder ( nice in this Klngduin.
(JKNKH.VI. l'dST OKI ICE.
I
Ijantitilyr
Honoi ii.i'. January I, iHivti. f

11

~

THOMAS LACK,

MRS.
Importer and Dealer in duns,
Ammunition wf all Kind-.

Sewing Machines and all Attachments.
Sbruica! 111si rum eats of all kinds cleinieil aii'l rs
paired aiiliqnicl. dispatch.

Vadium Demon si's Patterns. Material, for Embroidother
md all kind, oi hjocjwork Ordora from the
liimaiiyl
i-laiiils promptly attended Us.
er)

4 LVIN H. RASEMANN,
BOOK BINDER,
-"-

p
-II;*

.

ON KAUAI.

Vt'niiuku,
Kiiliiilui,
llmnaknapoko,
liana,

!'.■ Kmi M,eet, Hoaolals,

Inip.nti rs of

STONES, Diamonds, Fine Jewelry, Watches,

1-,

ihe other

CO.,
pATjIIICNAVTGATION
A

-

Monuments &amp;. Headstones Cleaned &amp;. Reset.
Orders from
llanSttf

Goods.

I'M 1 01. r ST.. IIoNOUH

M:ni':l'udurei ..mi

dart c Miotics,
1/ titii i.i: WoRK Of KVSRY iiks, itwriox
insde to order a. li i lowest possible r.c.--.
I'.,

.

JjlaaHyJ

Furnishing

I.uhaina,

I.ill in 1
Kolou.
•Value*,

DE L FA MIL Y II OT E L,"
TH E MO
v reputation it now enjoy, md most jsstl) merits.

"

ON MAUI.

ON HAWAII.
Mil.i,
Kohala.
ll.'iioLtiii,
\»\. iiiM-ii,
Kra.;ikekea,

11.-ay. r

t..as.-\v,ire. Inn

lll.ick.

....

OERTZr

HONOL

l oKT ST.,

.iluay.-llml mi your arrival

RagReady to Deliver
gage ot Every Description

Willi I'roii ptnes, null I'cspiitch.
oflico. Ml Hint: street; Telephone. 88; Residence
lJanßtiyrl
41 I'uiirhl'owl street.

E.nnJItGESS,

\

-i-'

•

No. HI Klag Street, Honolulu.

Carpenter and Builder.

GENERAL EXPRESS BUSINESS.
Carriage Painting dune iiya (ied-cliiss workman.
Jobbing in above lines ai landed to with prompinosi,
aid chai 'is according to the amount and qualiiv of
lJsnHCiyl
work. oiTlce telephone IH; It "silence, IH,

p

Boots nnd Mines mad*' to Order.
NO ll«

will

limyii&gt;j ami steamer rrelghl carefully handled.

BOOT AND SHOEMAKER.
IJautWy!

Yo'i

lo.rl SI reel,

ore formerly occupied by s. Mitt, opposite spr. ckel*
lJauSßyl
,"g ii,. k

PRANK

EXPRESB
OBDING'S BAGGA&amp;E
Freight arid

Honolulu.

VV

E. WILLIAMS,

•

Importer. M anufactnrer, Upholsterer nnd

ULU IKONW ORES CO., Dealer in all kinds of Furniture.
Mauulucturera of

Maceration Two-Roll

furniture Waicroonia In New Klre-pro'if Building,
X'ns. 11l Fort Street and Hfi Hotel Streets.

Agency Helroit safe Co Fcslher. Hair. Ilay and EuMills,'I-1rcka
Mattresses and Pillows, and Spring Mattresses on

_

With Patent Autiiinalic I ceil.
1hand and made teorder. Pianos and Sewing Machines
Hans and Cleaning always mi hand and forsale or rent. Ilesi Violin and
Double and Tripple Effects Vncu
all kinds of Musical Instruments
Pane. Steam and Water PlpsM, Brass and Iron Fittings Uuitar Strings and Ihe
cheapest,
for sal as cheap a,
all descriptions, Blc.
I ofIJan96yt
lJanSOyl
C. K. WILLIAMS.
HONOLULU IRON WORKS CO._

1

'

•

�co.,

nisHOP &amp;

B. KERR,

T

TREOLOAN,
nS.
•

Comer Fort and Hotel streets,

BANKERS,
MEKCHANT TAILOR,
Importer

of Fine

Gentle men

s

Goods'

_

for

and YouIIt's

Wear.

_

11 M Gr. [RWIK &amp; CO..

Sugar Factors' ft Commission Agts.
Agent*

ih.

(in

,li ii iioiti. Street.

tf

Vokoh*

Agent, fur

SPRECKELS &amp; CO..

pLAUS
BAKKEKS,

- -

ilniioluiu.

Hawaiian Ulind*

nAW
Importers and Dealers in Iron,
Cumberland

(

i,il.

•

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IMI'OKI'KItS.

-

ii.i. iii -1., adjoining

Unci,

leid

,'v

I

ii.

COOKE,

SUGAR FACTORSll.inolulii.il. I

si

. VEftCHAXf

Stationer, Book-Seller, Printer,
Book-Binder. Ktc.
Almanac and An mini
Aud Publisher of the Hawaiian1......;-.
Music. Toy-.
Dealer In Pin* Hall cry

Vy

St.,

Honolulu.

hammeu.

Manufacturer nnd llcalei in all kinds of

T E. WISEMAN,
tl • Campbell's ll,.in.lnln,
lire print Illork. Merchant Si

.

P. O. Box HID.
Telephone IT2.
Real Estate, Insurance, Railway and General

BUSINESS AGENT.
IvnlWyl

Unrivalled Perfumes,
Proprietors sad Mansfaelnrer*

"'

Pacific

Mnl tut I

Life

Ins. Co.,

Steamer Kinau,

Telephone 175.

Island orders solicited, mnl goods

I^Oi
r
'
S
ALET
FRESH

uiliieied

promptly,

INQUANTITIKSTOSUIT PI'KCH ASKKS,

MILLED BICE
HONOLULU

lJanSflyl

Commander

Steamer Mokolii,

Cnnnnander

MoOKBOOR

We.l.ly Trip- fur Circuit ol M.ilokai ami l.iilnnna

Steamer Kilauea, llou,
A N|i

Steamer Lclitta,

For i'nrls

u. WII.DKH.

STKAM KllK MILLS.
*. A. HOPPBR, Proprietor.

mi

,

llanuil.ua Cnasl.

President.

S. 11. ItllKK, Secretary.

[lJanSnyll

riIHE ELITE ICE CREAM I'ARI.nits.
No. H.i Hotel stree.. Honolnln.

Delicious Ice

Corner of Queen aad Edinburgh

Commander

for llilo anil Way Ports.

Weekly Trips fur Kiihului anil Iliiiia.

J-

"

00^

Vl.iinile.l.l

Steamer Like! ike,

s

Hie

Of California.

ljantvtiyl

Lei Aloha Boquet.

Weekly Trip-

Hay, Grain, md General Produce.
ljai.Wiyi

COLGO-NEJ

lITILDER'S STEAMSHIP

Importer* and dealer* in
lit- 111!

the

ljimsoir

YAltll -lII'HINSON'S WIIAHF.
ljai.Nlyl
Honolulu. 11. I

le.

ol

I.OHLNZE.N

TTNHMf FEED CO.

Ilcnollllu, H. I.
Orders from the other islands promptly attended to.

Ijai.si'.yl]

I

Lich-cckils

rUiII.DINi; MATERIALS AND

Feed.
SADDLERY AND HARNESS Hay. Grain and Chicken
streets

11. I.

Homceophatic Medicines,

KINO

Dealer, in

s,

I'.nt Street.

ILI

Agent* lor lliueicke A Schreck'a

Valeria I.

COALS.
LTJMBBB

y g g is t

And

BOBINSON,

ljunSdyl

.lohlun- mid Hi mil

tW ami

HONOLIst.U, H. 1.,

Impnrtiiie nnd Miinufacturing

TThas.

*'i) b

MAILH

LAINE
COM.)/LBBI'O.XMF.RC //.V.A "A.

riiHOS. Gr. THRUM.

nail Fancy Ids.
Furl Street, near i1..i"l

cv

Goods

BENSON, SMITH &amp; CO.,

Messrs.

k CO..

Corner (.{men ami Fori Streets,
llonolulu

ljanSfiyl

ALLEN

LUMBER,

Tl HACKFELD ft CO.,

A

Sg

OBci

of

Always on Hand.

of

st.
Fort St. Yard cor Kings) Mercb
[Qua*. M. Coosa,
IJaaHy
Itomni Lswaaa.]

CO.U.MISBIO,\ '.HERC

ljanStiyl

.

il all kinds

.ii

Dealers in

CO. )t. UISSIO. Y

A First-Class Stock

Carriage &amp; Wagon Materials,

11. i: Maotsb.ass.

H°) n
IjanWly

Furnishing Goods, Hats, Etc.

IjanSH)

EWERS &amp;
'
L
Co..
Lumber, and Building
GW.MACK.VKLANEiV
•
7/.V.V/-v

Fire-I'rool

(Ifiil lemon'l

Transact a General Banking Business,

British ami Foreign Marine insurance i o.
.111. •■ No. la
(Hire and Life),
Northern Assuranct Compiny
"!'n.tie.a i.in. Packets, Liverpool In Uoiiolulu. Ij.liiSiiyl
Liverpool Office. No, 18 and 18 Th' Übauy. Ijustai

w. Macimki.ank.

MERCHANT TAILOK,

md

Japan

COMPANY, il.iniileill

I l.in.ilulii.

Can mission Agents

Lloyd*,

.

Mill Iheir Agent* ill
Paris.
Boston,
N'eu V.ak.
Mcssr- N. M. Rothschild* Sons, London, Frankfortini-lhi'-M.iin.
Hanking Co. of Sydney. London.
The Commercial
The (one -n ail linn king I u. of Sydney. .Sydney.
The Bank of Ne« Zealand, \u 'kin d. mnl its
Hrancl.es In Chrlstchnrch. Dnnedln and V.'elllngton.
The Hank i.' I'rltlsh Columbia. Porllsnd Oregon
The .' /.or ami Madeira Islands.
Stockliolw, Sweden
The Chartered Dank of London. Australia mil CI inn.

AllAN CARRIAGE MTG.

mHEO. 11. DAVIES b CO.,
Kll
-*(leu era I

ilawaiian Inland*,

Rxchnnjf** an

Draw

Draw Exchange on tbe principal pert* of tbe world,
IjnnSiiU
mi.l transact a General Hanking Business.

Oceanic Steamship CoOjunHUyll

:

Hongkong.

PRICES REASONABLE!
[IJanSUnifl]

Honolnln.

The Bank of California, San Francisco

W Merchant Street.

0.

Volume 44, No. 4.

THE FRIEND.

12

('renins

and Cakes.

I'uiii'lies. lu.liiis. Hulls and Wedding* sappHed.
LMIoE STOCK of ISLAND ccmos.
Teleph
s: Hell IS.; M lit mil HB.
11..1 IIAKT.

Proprietor.

IJanHivl

SHOEING SHOP,

piTY
VV

l-'url-Sl.. opposllc llo.ld's Slullll s.

Horse-Shoeing in all its Branches,
Hone in the

n.osi

workmanlike manner.

Kales are
Raring and trotting shoes a specialty
Highest awsrrl and Dlplom* for hand

reasonable.

niadi Shoes at the Hawaii KlhlblllOll. IHH. Horse*
taken lo and from the shop when desired.
J. W. McllONALl&gt;, Proprietor.
lJauHdyl

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