Text
THF
E
RIEND
SetoSmts, MM, $k ll.}
HONOLULU, NOVEMBER I, 1867.
them because
fume. *
* 1 think I love
our loving
things
the
most
beautiful
are
they
Paok.
the
eye and
Creator
has
made
10
gladden
97
Tlip Hawaiian Islands and Ja]ian laefefeaglaf Plants,
97 cheer the heart of man. To me, there is
Irregularis of the 11. S. Mails,
97
Truth Told in Jest,
more loudly and clearly
97 nothing which speaks
Address of WO. Jones,E5i).,....,
*8 of the goodness of God than these delicate
:
Editor's Table,
9S
Hepburu's Japaneseand BtsJßsk Dictionary,
nnd lovely creations of his hand. When 1
Paris Exposition,
99
*9 see the beautiful lilies of this land, more
Remarkable Hymn,
100
Rev. Mr. Ellis,
beautiful than I ever saw elsewhere, I under100, 101
Letter from London
the
102 stand better the beautiful text, Consider
A Solemn Pra.ver-imvlini; at sfidotfht,
102
grow
Story,
Unake
with
a
lilies
Moral,
field,'
of
&c.
These
A
the
lilies
I^l
Marine Journal, &r.,
wild over the hills and fields of Japan."
p. S.—Since writing the above, we have
read in the Independent for September 12th,
■' a Special Plea for Lilies," or a Lecture, by
NOVEMBER 1. 1807.
Miss Isabella G. Oakley, for the study of
Japan
Exchangi
n
g
Islands
The Hawaiian
and
botany. She urges upon the young of AmerPlants.
ica the study of botany, as ennobling and
elevating. " Consider the lilies of the field,
Both the Advertiser and Gazette have re- how they grow; they toil not, neither do
cently published interesting statements re- they spin ; and I say unto you, that even
specting the efforts of Mr. Van Reed, the Solomon in all his glory was not arrayed like
Hawaiian Consul-General, to forward Japan- one of these."
ese seeds, plants and fowls to these Islands.
While Mr. Van Reed was there engaged in Irregularity of the U. S. Mails.-—We
making his preparations for a shipment, a exceedingly regret any irregularity of the
somewhat similar effort was made in Hono- mails with San Francisco at this season of
the year. It is the only opportunity for
lulu in behalf of Japan.
In the month of June last, through our so- American whalemen visiting Honolulu to oblicitation, Dr. Hillebrand sent off a fine col- tain their letters. But very few American
lection of seeds, bulbs, Sec., to Mrs. Hepburn, letters were received by the Idaho. Until the
wife of Dr. Hepburn, residing at Yokohama. affairs of the steam line can be definitely setThese packages were kindly forwarded by tled, we do think the San Francisco PostCapt. Lutke, of the Russian man-of-war master might exercise a little discretion, and
GorneUoy. They were safely delivered. In not shut down quite so summarily. From
a letter acknowledging their reception, Mrs. what we can learn, there must now be lying
Hepburn thus writes under date of August : in the San Francisco Post Office hundreds,
The box of bulbs, seeds, &c., sent by Capt. if not thousands, of letters, which ought to
Lutke, came in good order, r.nd were potted have been sent forward by the Idaho. We
as soon as opened. Will you give my sin- understand the master or agents of the Idaho
cere thanks to Dr. Hillebrand for the trouble went repeatedly to the Post Office, but the
he took in putting up these plants and seeds letter-bags were refused, because the letters
for me, and say to him that in the autumn, were not pre-paid. We hope the Hawaiian
1 will embrace the first opportunity to send Government will not fail to instruct their
him some plants, bulbs, seeds, &c. ? Two of Minister at Washington, Mr. Harris, to make
the lilies he sent me bloomed. They have a such postal arrangements that hereafter no
delicate white flower with a delicious per- such accident will occur. It is a most seri«'0 STENTS
For November, I sin.
**
'
THE FRIEND,
"
97
Ifltuo Scries, M.Jj.
ous drawback upon American commerce.
Masters of whaleships and shipping agents
are left in the dark in regard to the views of
their owners. Even in the matier of family
letters, it is rather trying and perplexing.
Truth Told in Jest.—Recently a man
called at our office at the Sailor's Home in a
state of intoxication. We urged him to reform his habits and sign the pledge. His
reply was, " Religion is needed for a man to
keep his pledge." Yes, that is the great
requisite. It is the one thing needful. It is
the pearl of great price. Another man with
whom we were conversing at the hospital,
admitted that his temper was bad and his
disposition not good, but, he added, " the
devil will never take away my bad disposition." No, the devil never helped a sinner
to give up his heart to God and reform his
life. An old divinfe once said, "It was the
devil's masterpiece to make a man think well
of himself." We should look to God for
new hearts. David prayed, " Create in me
a clean heart, O God, and renew a right
spirit within me." God, not the devil, will
create within us new hearts and right dispositions.
The Address of W. C. Jones, Esq.—At
the meeting of the Temperance Legion, Mr.
Jones favored the audience with a poetical
address. The subject was "Intemperance,
or the Perverted Will." He depicted in
glowing language the sad fate of one who
had entrusted her earthly happiness to a
young man of wealth, fashion and talent, but
who, alas, was addicted to strong drink. So
much is at stake, we wonder any young
woman dare think of marrying a man whose
character is not firmly established on the side
of total abstinence. Mr, Jones, at some future time, intimates that he will deliver" a
sequel" to this address. He also stated that
he would hereafter deliver seven addresses
upon the various branches of the subject of
intemperance.
THE t'RIKMi. NOVEMBER, 1867.
98
Editor's Table.
Eni'Mßation or Hawaiian Plants. By Horace
Maun. (From the proceedings ol the American
Academy of Arte and Sciences. Vol. VII.. September 11.186b.) Issued July, 1867. Cambridge:
Welch, Bigelow <fc Co. 18JI7.
The first noticeable and note-worthy fact
apparent on taking up this pamphlet is this,
that from the discovery of these Islands in
1778, botanists have been interested in the
Flora of Hawaii. The following paragraphs
relating to some of these botanical explorers
will be interesting to our readers :
During a visit to the Hawaiian Islands,
made for the purpose of studying especially
the Botany of the Group, and which extended
from the 4th of May, 1864, to the 18th of
May, 1865, 1 botanized over five of the largest
of these islands, and brought together a collection which tonns the basis of the following enumeration. In its preparation I have
been permitted to examine the other collections of Hawaiian plants in the Gray Herbarium ; namely, that by the United States
South Pacific Exploring Expedition under
Commodore Wilkes,—the fullest hitherto
made in these islands ; a set of the specimens
gathered by Jules Remy under the auspices
of the Paris Museum, given by that institution ; some of Macrae's plants, given by the
London Horticultural (now Royal Horticultural) Society; and a few of Gaudichaud's,
Chamisso's, Douglas's, and Nuttall's. These
materials, and all his own memoranda upon
them, were freely offered to my use by Professor Gray, without whose friendly encouragement this enumeration would never have
been undertaken, and could not have been accomplished.
The botanists who have collected at the
Hawaiian Islands, so far as known to me, are
as follows:
David Nelson, who accompanied Captain
Cook on his third voyage, and collected at
the Islands in 1778-1779. The plants collected by him are stored at the British Museum, and, excepting a few Labiata, have
scarcely been examined until recently.
Archibald Menzies, a most indefatigable
botanist and collector, visited the Islands
with Vancouver in 1792, 1793, or 1794, or
perhaps in each of these years, and made
large and valuable collections, mostly on Hawaii. Sets of his plants are in the Hookerian,
Smithian, and Banksian Herbaria.
Albert Chamisso accompanied Kotzebue in
the voyage of Romanzoff, and collected principally on Oahu, late in each of the years
1816 and 1817. He published notes and descriptions of new species in the Linncea, in
conjunction with Schlechtendal. Frederick
Eschscholtz was the physician of the expe-
dition.
Charles Gaudichaud, as botanist of the expedition under Freycinet, in the corvettes
Uranit and Physicienne, visited the Islands
in August, 1819. He returned to the Islands on the Bonite in 1836. The results of
his first expedition were published as the
Botanique dv Voyage dc V Uranie, in 1826
(a* on title-page, but really not appearing till
1830,) in 1 vol. 4to, with a folio atlas. Of
the collections of the second visit a few plates
of Hawaiian plants appeared in a folio atlas
(Bat. Voy. Bonite, bearing no date), without
descriptions, or any clew to localities. The
lower Cryptogams were elaborated and in
part figured by the late Dr. Montngne in the
same work.
James Macrae collected for the London
Horticultural Society, in Brazil, Chili, and
the Hawaiian Islands, which last he visited
in 1825. His specimens were mainly distributed to the herbaria of Bentham, Hooker,
Lindley, and Dc Candolle.
Messrs. Lay & Collie, who accompanied
Captain Beechey during the Voyage of the
Blossom, visited the Islands in 1826-1527,
and made the collections which formed the
basis of the botany of this voyage by Hooker
and Arnqjt.
Francis Julius Ferdinand Meyen accompanied Captain W. Wendt, on the Prussian
vessel Princess Louise,'aml visited these islands in 1831. After his death, descriptions
of species collected by him were published as
a volume of the Nov. Act. Acad. Cies. Leop.Carol. Nat. Cur., in 1843, here cited as the
W. T. Brigham, with whom I visited the
Islands, aided me constantly in collecting,
and remained five months after my return,
obtaining several species not in my own col-
out by the
■ David Douglas, as collectortosent
London
N.W. Amer-
There is no work connected in any way
with Japan or its language that has been
published since the opening of the country
that we have felt more pleasure in welcoming, than that, the title of which heads this
article. It has long been known to many of
our readers that Dr. J. C. Hepburn has been
engaged for years in collecting materials lor
a Japanese dictionary ; and the announcement that we are now able to make, that the
work is procurable at Mr. Carroll's, No. 38
Water Street, and that the price is fixed as
low as $12, will be received with great satisfaction. It is a very excellent specimen of
getting up, in all respects ; and the first part,
the Japanese-English portion, comprises 558
pages,—the Japanese words in small capitals.
Katakana and in Chinese characters; the
second part being " an index of Japanese
equivalents for the most common English
words." Of the general correctness of the
work, we must acknowledge ourselves incompetent to express an opinion ; but should
there be any inaccuracies, which is not improbable in a work comprising 20,000 Japanese words, we know they have not crept in
for want of, but in spite of the greatest possible care, industry and zealous study. Did
we presume to recommend the Dictionary to
our readers, we should perform a work of
supererogation. It is sufficient to announce
its appearance and the place of publication.
We most heartily congratulate Dr. Hepburn
on the completion of his work; and whilst
we feel pretty sure that the sale of it will be
such as to repay him for the labor of some
of the best years of his life, he will be far
more highly remunerated by the consciousness that he has placed within the reach of
all students the means of wonderfully facilitating their acquisition of the language, and
that his name will ever hereafter be associated in the minds of scholars, with such
men as Morrison, Gutzlaff and others who
lieliquia: Meyeniana.
Horticultural Society
ica, closed his most important explorations by
a visit to the Hawaiian Islands, which he
reached in the last week in the year 1833.
He immediately went to Hawaii, where he
collected until the 12th of May, when he met
a violent death on the flanks ofMauna Kea.
His collections are mainly in the herbaria of
the Royal Horticultural Society, and of
Hooker, Bentham, and Lindley.
Barclay was botanist on the Sulphur, commanded by Sir Edward Belcher, and visited
the Islands in 1837 or 1839.
Rev. John Diell was American Seamen's
Chaplain at Honolulu, and sent small collections to Prof. Asa Gray, which he communi-
cated to Sir W. J. Hooker.
W. D. Brackenridge and Charles Pickering made almost all the botanical collections
on the United States South Pacific Exploring Expedition, under command of Charles
Wilkes, at least those at the Hawaiian Islands, which were visited in 1840. The Polypetala? were published in full in the Botany
of the Expedition by Gray, who has also published new species of Monopetalas in Vols.
IV., Y. and VI. of the Proceedings of this
Academy. But few of the Apetals have yet
been noticed. The Ferns, by Brackenridge,
were published as a separate volume of the
Botany of the Expedition ; but nearly the
whole of the edition was destroyed by fire
Another partially published volume comprises
the Mosses by Sullivant, the Lichens by
Tuckerman, and the Alga 3by the late Professors Bailey and Harvey.
Nuttall visited the Islands in 1835, from
the Northwest Coast, and made a small collection. Most of his specimens are in the
Hookerian Herbarium; a few probably in
that of the Philadelphia Academy. He published notes and descriptions of some Hawaiian Composite, Lobeliacea and Vaccinieee in
the Transactions of the American Philosophical Society.
Jules Remy went to the Islands under the
auspices of the Paris Museum, and made a
fine collection in the years 1851-1855.
William Hillebrand, a physician resident
in Honolulu, has recently sent interesting
collections to Kew, among them a new genus
of Begoniacea, which Professor Oliver has
named after its discoverer.
lection.
Mr. Mann has enumerated in his catalogue
667 different species of plants, under the
various genera well known to botanists. A
portion of this document is occupied with
minute descriptions of Hawaiian Lichens, by
Edward Tuckerman. To all scientific persons this work of Mr. Mann will prove interesting. We suppose that very soon Mr.
Brigham will publish the results of explorations in another department of natural history. Geology, we believe, was Mr. Brigham's speciality.
Hepburn's Japanese and English Dictionary.
have labored similarly.
The object of Dr. Hepburn, however, is
but half obtained. He commenced this work,
not merely and solely to place a dictionary
in the hands of his countryman and others
who would study Japanese, but as a preliminary to his own thorough mastery of the
language that he might do his great Master's
work as a missionary, by lending his aid in
the translation of the Scriptures into Japan-
99
THE FRIEND, NOVEMBER, 1867.
In this great work he is engaging with
all his fellow laborers in the American mission field in Japan; and as we witness the
self-denial, the devotedness and unobtrusiveness with which they nre carrying on their
most laborious occupation, we cannot but bid
them God speed, and hope that their success
may be evident in the day when their Master
maketh up his jewels, when they may see
many of those for whose admission into the
fold they are laboring, and when they may
hear the sweetest voice that ever spoke welcome them in the sweetest words that shall
ever be spoken : " Well done good and faithful servants."— Japan Herald.
ese.
Paris Exposition.
Hliiiklduki., Germany, August, 1867,
Mr. Editor :—You ask me to describe the
great Paris Exposition but by this time
your readers have doubtless seen so many
descriptions of it, that another would be useless. I use the adjective great. It is truly
a great exhibition of the arts and industries
of the world. As to magnitude and eclat, it
is all, and even more than I expected. Little
Hawaii is very honorably represented. Two
nice rooms, near the American department,
are devoted to Hawaii. Here are found exhibited with excellent taste, specimens of
;
Hawaiian products.
The departments in the Exposition are so
arranged that one can study the products of
each nation separately, or he can run through
any line of product, comparing that of each
nation with the other. For instance in the
Art Galleries. If you wish to study British
or French or any other nation's art, you may
confine yourself to that particular nation ;
but if you wish to make a comparison of the
paintings of all the nations, you pass straight
on. After a very long time, having gone
around the entire building, you return to
your starting point. 1 found it very interesting to compare different nations in this
way. I could trace well-known national
characteristics, for instance in the single
matter of coloring. Going through again 1
would test national differences in the item of
Jinis/i ; and so on indefinitely. To visit the
Exposition is work. The display is overmost
whelming in its variety and extent.
One thing was made quite evident, viz :
that the different nations of the earth supplement each other. One cannot claim all excellence. Differences of climate, of habits,
Sec., make differences of product. The Exposition is fitted to teach impressively the
natural fraternity of nations.
From Paris I passed through Belgium to
Holland, stopping at Brussels and Antwerp.
Antwerp is surrounded with treasures of art,
particularly Flemish
art. From Brussels we
made au excursion to the battle-field of
Waterloo. Belgium is becoming moderately prosperous now under King Leopold.
Antwerp is rapidly growing to Tie a great
commercial city again, as she was in the
middle ages.
The condition of the peasantry in Belgium
is lamentable. The poor ore very poor.
Even the industrious peasants who have
health and hope to gird them for toil, are in
very poor condition. Hard labor with triand crushing,
fling results, —toil,
unrelieved by the joys of an active intellect
Remarkable Hymn.—The 878th hymn
nutriment, the peasant has none. As to re- of our Plymouth Collection is the wine made
ligious wants, the empty pomps of the Roman from a crushed heart. Ajoung woman of
Cutholic faith, without great ideas or great noble connection, and great wealth, and high
sentiments, are all that he has.
standing in English society, one evening
The condition of the poor in Holland, also, dropped into a Methodist church, and was
and a cultivated heart. As to intellectual
is sad. I have often seen women toiling in
the fields. I have even seen them harnessed
to canal-boats and doing a horse's work. Indeed, it is not uncommon. Women act as
sailors on the coasting vessels. Nearly always
a woman is at the helm. Women do most
of the peddling of vegetables, milk, &c, in
the Dutch cities. They push along great
heavily loaded carts, with only the assistance
of a couple of panting dogs.
Holland and Belgium are too small to keep
up separate establishments in Europe. The
expenses of government, the elaborate and
costly fortifications necessary, are more than
they can bear. Then, too, the soil in these
flat countries is not fertile. Much of Holland is sand. Most o( it is but swamp land,
threatened by overflow almost at any moment. One must admire the sturdy Hollander who works so bravely for such slender
results.
From Holland the journey up the Rhine is
Historical memories cluster thickly about the Rhine all the way from
Cologne up to Switzerland. Then the
scenery is attractive. One sees many feudal
castles—most of them in ruins—perching
upon the crags bordering the Rhine. Drachenfels, Stotzenfels, Marksburg, Gutenfels,
Sec., are very picturesque. In the old fortress of Marksburg I saw dungeons cut into
the living rock, into which prisoners used to
be lowered by a windlass. This is one of
the largest and best preserved of the feudal
fortresses on the Rhine. I visited it alone.
The solitariness and gloom were terrible.
Let those who admire the feudal age, and
wish its return, visit some of these old casvery interesting.
tles.
The other day I passed the spot where
Caesar built his celebrated bridge across the
Rhine. The river is very rapid, and it was
a difficult work. Still, 1 doubt whether it
cost Caesar's engineers as much trouble to
construct the bridge as it costs some young
Latin scholars to translate the account of it
in the Commentaries.
Heidelburg is a delightful place. Here is
one of the oldest Universities in Germany.
In the library of the University there is a
large and valuable collection of MS. Among
the rest I noticed MS. of Thucidides and
Plutarch. Here also may be seen several
works of Luther in his own rapid, intense
Sort of handwriting.
The old castle at Heidelburg is a magnificent and mighty ruin. No castle which 1
have yet seen gives such an impression of
might. I hope it will long remain to testify
to remote ages concerning the manners of
feudal limes.
In Heidelburg is the old church to the
doors of which Jerome of Prague affixed his
J- A. D.
celebrated theses.
•'
awakened and converted; and when she
avowed her determination to unite herself
with the people of God, she found that, if she
did, she must part from all her friends. She
parted from them, and united herself with the
people of God ; and that hymn fell out of the
griefand wounds of her heart. If she had
died and only written that hymn, she might
have taken her place among the honored
names of history ; and she will have done
more work by those few sweet verses than
she could have done if she had stood a queen
at the very top of government."—[Extract
from a sermon of Rev. Henry Ward Beecher,
published in the Independent of August 20th,
1867.]
1. .li'mus, I my OHM have taken,
All to li'iive ami follow Tliee ;
Nuked, ]kkii', despised, forsaken,
Thnu, from hence, my all shalt be.
Parish every fund ambition,
All I've sought, or Imped, or known ;
.
Vet how rich is my condition !
(iod and heaven arc still my own.
2. Let the world despise nnd leave me.
They have left my Saviour, too ;
Human hearts uud looks deceive me,
Thnu nil nut, like them, untrue
Ami whilst Thou shall smile upon me,
(M of wisdom, love, and might,
Fix's may hate, and friends may scorn uic ;
Show Thy face, and all is bright.
3. Man may trouble and distress me,
'Twill but drive me to Thy breast ;
Life with trials hard may press me,
Heaven will bring me sweeter rest.
Oh ! 'tis not in grief to harm me,
While Thy love is left to me ;
Oh ! 'twere not in joy to charm me,
Were that joy unmixed with Thee.
4. Soul, then know thy full salvation,
Rise o'er sin, and fear, and care ;
Joy to find in every station
Something still to do or bear.
Think what Spirit dwells within thee ;
Think what Father's smiles arc thine ;
Think that Jesus died to win thee ;
Child of heaven, canst thou repine ?
G. Haste thee on from grace to glory,
Armed by faith, and winged by prayer;
Heaven's eternal day 's before thee,
Cod's own hand shall guide thee there.
*
Soon shall close thy earthly mission,
Soon shall pass thy pilgrim days ;
Hope shall change to glad fruition,
Faith to sight, and prayer to praise.
for Food.—The Paris corres" Blubber
of the Courrier dcs Etats Unis says
pondent
that whale's flesh has come into fashion
again. Besides the whale, the shark and
dolphin come regularly enough to the markets, where a whale's tail of from 300 to 400
kilogrammes—say 700 orBoo pounds—found
buyers, a few days ago, at high prices."
We wonder New Bedford ship-owners, so
noted for their economy, do not ship French
cooks, and thus save so large an outlay for
beef and pork.
A Yankee captain was caught in the
No torch, no appareling, no glory of
jaws of a whale, but was finally rescued
badly wounded. On being asked what he art, ever so made the house beauteous, or so
thought while in that situation, he replied : made the household happy, as the simple
morning and evening, of the blessed
"Uhought he would make about forty bar-
[ing of Glory.
*resence,
T lIE FRIEND, NOVEMBER,
100
Religious Notices.—We would
THE FRJEND.
1867.
NOVEMBER 1,
Rev. Mr. Ellis —Interesting letters have
recently been received from this veteran in
the csuse of Foreign Missions, who now
resides at Hoddesdon, Herts, in England.
" I am," he writes under date of August 28.
1867, " now closely occupied in completing
the history of the London Missionary Society." Probably no man is better fitted to
write the history of that noble Society which
first sent missionaries into the Pacific, and
for seventy years has been vigorously prosecuting the foreign missionary work in various parts of the heathen world.
a
The "Advance."—This is the name of
new, spirited, first-class and eight-paged
weekly newspaper, published under the aus-
pices of the Congregationalists of Chicago.
May success attend the enterprise. We have
carefully read over the basis upon which the
enterprise has been started,but we fear there
is not quite enough "selfishness" incorporated to insure success. Time will decide.
The West can accomplish what other people
deem impossible. We shall be glad to exchange, if a sheet broad enough to spread
over a prairie is willing to receive in return
a small sheet, too narrow to cover even a little islet in Micronesia.
The Boston Congregationalist comes
out in a new form. In character and contents, it is the very best representative of
New England Orthodox divinity and Yankee
It is not afraid of finding fault
with anybody who comes not up to its standard of excellence. Its publishers and editors
are firm believers in Plymouth Rock, and
they have allowed their belief to embody itself in a new vignette, representing the landing of the Pilgrims in 1620. This paper has
recently taken into fellowship the old Boston
Recorder, which was 52 years old, and getting rather staid and losing its former vigor.
We are always glad to receive this paper by
way of exchange.
smartness.
U. S. Mail Steamer Idaho.—It appears
have become a fixed fact that the steamers
will now have a fair trial. The Idaho, Capt.
Connor, arrived on the morning of the 27th
ult., and will leave to-morrow, the 2d inst.
We learn that she will make two more trips,
and be ready to commence the new year on
her regular monthly trips.
to
Mount Erebus.—Capt. W. Thoms published in New York in 1859 a new treatise
on navigation. In this work he states that
Mount Erebus, situated in 77 33* S. lati° is 124,000
tude, and 166 ° 58' E. longitude,
leet high ! Rather of a high mountaintwenty miles and more!
1867.
notify seamen and strangers that weekly prayer-meetings are held at the Bethel Vestry and the
Session Room ot Fort Street Church every
Wednesday evening.
Sabbath afternoon at 4, P. M., a " Union"
young men's prayer-meeting is held at the
Session Room of Fort Street Church.
Every Tuesday evening a class meeting is
held nt the Sailor's Home.
Every Saturday evening a temperance
meeting is held at the Bethel Vestry.
Public services upon the Sabbath, accord-
Letter from London.
London, Piccadilly, Sept. 1, 1867.
Rev. Mr. Damon—Dear Sir:—l wrote
you last, I believe, from Stuttgart. Since
that time, we have spent a month amongst
the Alps, wandering over the most interesting mountain passes nnd glaciers of Switzerland. The Mer dc Glace, from Mont Blanc,
was the largest and most interesting we traversed. It was about a mile in width where
we orossed it, and, looking towards Mont
Blanc, was under view for a distance of threp
or more leagues,—and its vast chasms and
pinnacles of ice were grand beyond any conceptions 1 had formed from descriptions. I
shall have occasion to remember it, for 1
ing to notice in another column.
came about as near as was possible, with esIt is the opinion, of an old shipmaster cape, of slipping into one of its yawning
cruising in the Pacific, that every shipmaster chasms.
Leaving Switzerland, we reached
sailing over this ocean oughi. toßbtain a vol- on the Rhine, via Straslmrg. WeMayence
took a.
ume of the Friend for ten or more years. steamer down the Rhine as far as Cologne,
Such as have not this publication in their pos- and theme via Antwerp and Brussels to
session, we should be glad to furnish at $1 Paris by rail. We reached Paris on the 12th
of August, and chose this month to visit the
per annum, besides the expense for binding, Exhibition,
because we had been told that
$2 50 or $3 for a large volume.
the crowds of visitors would leave Paris—as
Letter Postage.—Every single, or half all Parisians leave the city—in August. But
it happened that Napoleon's fete day, which
ounce letter, should be stamped with 10 cents
occurred on the 15thof August, had attracted
United States stamps, and 5 cents Hawaiian, innumerable hosts from all parts of France,
addi- and many more from the German States. I
if sent to the United Slates.
tional half ounce, 5 cents Hawaiian, and 10 never saw so dense a throng in any city as
cents United States. Newspapers, 2 cents blocked the Boulevards and principal streets
Puns for several days after the lflth. All
United States,and 2cents Hawaiian. Always of
the galleries and public buildings were crowdpre-paid.
ed with visitors to suffocation. It was only
Now is the time for seamen to write in the Palais of the great Exposition that we
to their friends. If they will call upon Mr. could find breathing space. We spent six or
seven days there, and were never incommoded
Dunscombe at the Sailor's Home, they will for
want of space to walk and breathe in, and
be furnished with " pen, ink, paper and en- yet all the world was there. There is
scarcely
velopes " gratis. The Reading Room is a a product or manufacture which the world
good place for writing.
produces (in France, or out of it), the workshop or factory of which was not in operaShipmasters expecting to touch at tion at the Palais, and the production of
Wellington Island, Pleasant Island, Norfolk which could not be seen in v every process or
Island, Marshall Islands, Strong's Island, or stage of its manufacture. The United States
made the smallest show of articles—that is,
Ascension, will confer a favor by reporting
comparatively. A United States locomotive
to the Editor of the Friend.
took the firs', prize, and a larger number of
medals were awarded American machinery,
Pitcairn's Island.—Reports from this isl- compared with the number of models exhiband indicate that the people are greatly in ited, than were awarded to
any other State.
want of clothing. Ships cruising in the Napoleon purchased the best reaping maSouth Pacific can obtain supplies by touch- chine, and a mowing machine received the
first prize. The American school-house from
ing there.
Illinois, was surpassed in architectural taste,
Our thanks to Mrs. Bailey, of Wai- and equaled in convenience of
arrangements,
luku, Mrs. Armstrong, of Honolulu, and the by both a Russian and Swedish school-house.
Rev. Mr. Alexander, for papersand books for Modern paintings from the United Stntes
compared favorably with collections of Engseamen.
lish and French production. There were a
We hope our foreign subscribers among less number of poor paintings in the Amerwhalemen, will improve this season to renew ican collection than were to be found in any
their subscriptions. For $2 50 a year, the of the collections from other States.
You have heard, no doubt, of the Bed,
Friend can be sent to the United States, in- White
and Blue, a full-rigged ship, two tons
cluding postage.
burthen, twenty-six feet long, and six feet one
Many thanks to some unknown per- inch beam, which crossed the Atlantic in
son for sending us full files of the Alta, Bul- thirty-eight days. Two persons constituted
captain, officers and crew. It was on exhiletin and Times, of San Francisco, per Idaho. bition at the Exposition, for which a fee of
one-half
was demanded. The raft
Our readers this month are favored Nonpareil,a franc
which came over, I believe, in
with two European letters, one from London forty-two days, is at t!#
Crystal Palace, 1 am
and the other from the Continent.
told, in London. 1 have not yet seen it.
101
THE FRIEND, NOVEMBER, 1867.
back
1 made several visits to the rooms exhibit- of the faith, once delivered to the Saints, Land —through and aroundofit, and then
next,
to
believe
comthe
12th
October
they
;
hold
to
although
Liverpool
by
ing Hawaiian products. The rooms were which I
marked " Hawaii," which I was glad to see pared with our modern New Englnnd Ortho- embark on the China for Boston.
Very truly yours,
substituted for Sandwich Islands. One room dox churches, they might be called PuritanR. W. Wood.
situated between the United States, Brazil ical.
the
The
new
of
Ritualism
in
heresy
South
American
States'
"
departments,
and
"
P. S.—At Paris I met Mr. Hamlin, from
contained samples of sugar (amongst which English Church is producing much excite- Constantinople, who made many inquiries
I saw some Koloa), pulu, rice, coffee, lava, ment and discussion here. The Church has after his Island friends—yourself, I believe,
straw hats, kapa, arrow-root, ornamental taken the matter in hand in earnest, I should among the number. To Mr. Paris and Mr.
woods, calabashes, cotton, wool, shells, to- judge. A counsel has appointed a commit- Dole, as well as yourself, he desires me to
bacco, segars, photographs, engravings, two tee to investigate the abuse. Their first re- remember him. He was a class-mate of Mr.
R. W. W.
paintings by R. C. Janion, sulphur, Custom port has already appeared in the Times, which Pans.
House statistics, and the Hawaiian Gazette. condemns the new vestments. The chief
In another room, about fifteen by eighteen advocates of the High Church party, I am
Information
Wanted.—We copy the following
feet, 'situated between flic United States, told, are young ladies of high birth, but of from the San Francisco Jllta of Oct. 14th :
Great Britain and Canadian departments, doubtful morals, who set at naught the counmanicl woman, who arrived from Ohio
" A young
there were books, feather cloaks, the Polyne- sels of theirparents ; so that in high fashion- recently,
via the overland route, is detained at the
sian newspaper, kou poi dishes, baskets, ka- able circles, High Church, Ritualism, brandy, calaboose under peculiar circumstance.-. She was insome years since, and was an inmate of the Ohio
hilis, shell ornaments, stone adzes, fish-hooks, segaritas and accompanying vices have come siiie
Insane Asylum, where her husband was employed.
native mats, fish-nets, photographs, engra- to mean about the same thing.
drafted into the U. S. Army, and was killed
The moral sense of the community has inHe was
one of the engagements which look plaoo in the
vings, leis, and over the door was painted
resides at the
Kiunchameha's coat of arms and crown, and been severely shocked by recent disclosures vicinity of Memphis. Her mother
and sent her a ticket for her fare
under which was represented in gilt a gold of the confessional of the Reformed Catholics Sandwich Islands,
from this city to Honolulu, but she is subject to fits,
medal. Whether this was intended for the here known as "Ritualists." But what seems and in one of the attacks, which occur almost daily,
of
Oxedit of arms or something else, I did not more astounding than all, the Bishop
she lost it, ami is now without menus to continue her
learn. Mr. Martin, Secretary in Charge, ford has become alarmed, and has repudiated journey. She has three children, anil her father has
to support them and her, but she has no
promised me a catalogue, but I did not meet all of which he has been the most strenuous agreed
means of rejoining him. Such, at least, is the wodenies
this.)
advocate
he
now
(although
In
as
expected.
I
him again,
man's story, and her manner is sufficiently like that
I do not remember whether 1 wrote you a convocation not long since, he declared it of a sane person to warrant au investigation of the
that your namesakes, the Damons from Con- to be his conviction that they (the Ritualists) facts.
cord (forming a party at first of seven, now should be turned out of the Church, and
Temperance Address.—At the Bethel Vestry,
of five), were traveling in Europe. We were " thanked God that he had none of them in
rethem
his
diocese."
Not
a
of
layman
evening, at 7 o'clock, Mr. lngills, a hoatSaturday
Rome.
We
from
parted
single
at
with them
there, each going in opposite directions. We spectability and standing is to be found, I am Bteerer on board the whalcship Reindeer, is expectmet them again by accident at Strasburg— told, amongst the advocates of the late inno- ed to address the Temperance Legion. From the
specimen of the young man's sjieaking on Saturday
separated, and met again at Brussels, and vation. Only the young fashionable women
alterwards in Paris, and now we find our- and their beaux of not very sober habits, are last, the audience may expect n good address. Wo
selves in the same hotel with them at Flem- supporters of the new doctrines. With such hope there will be a good attendance of seamen.
inings, Half-moon Street, Piccadilly, opposite antecedents, it is not so strange that this new
Buckingham Palace, all withoutpre-arrange- Church party should have sought Hawaii as Meeting for Chinese.-Aheong, the Christina
a field of operations.
ment.
Chinaman from Maui, being in Honolulu, will hol'l,,
In a paper issued this morning, we notice a meeting for his countrymen, at the Bethel Vestry,
After six months on the Continent, where
we have seldom heard our own language, we an order forbidding the further use of banners on Sunday evening, at 7J o'clock. Persons in Honofeel ourselves quite at home now, and enjoy and vases for flowers, and certain vestments lulu, having Chinamen in their employment, are
it exceedingly. Everywhere we have found introduced into the church of some parish kindly requested to inform them in regard to this
our English cousins cordial and friendly. since last Easter.
meeting.
The Bishop of Oxford is distinguished for
We have seen nothing of the reserve and
Seamen in forwarding letters, should
gruffness of the John Bull we have read of his social qualities and conversational powers;
in books. In London we pass for English, but everybody understands him to be a man be sure and pre-pay the postage.
and have very frequently surprised our Eng- who trims his sail to the popular breeze, now
lish acquaintances here by assuring them that blowing quite a gale against Puseyism.
Sensible, by Fanny Fern.—" I don't eat
After wandering six months amongst the
we are Americans.
nor candy, nor ice cream. I don't
pastry,
To-day (Sunday) we have been to the different nationalities of the Continent—much drink tea
—bah ! I walk, not ride. I own
as
there
is
to
in'Tabernacle," and were disappointed in not as we have enjoyed—much
ones, too! I have a waterstout
boots—pretty
hearing Rev. Air. Spurgeon, who is absent. struct, to advise and to praise—to me Engand no diamonds. * *
I go to bed
proof,
There
Europe.
found,
nevertheless,
house,
a
crowded
land
seems
the
best
of
part
We
and
at
six.
dash
out in the
I
get
up
at
ten
and heard a most effective evangelical ser- we seldom witnessed any signs of political or
rain, because it feels good on my face. I
such
inside,
is
oval
and
We
saw
there
no
thing
The
Tabernacle
an
life.
religious
mon.
don't care for clothes ; but I will be well;
has two galleries, one above the other (like as " the people," in the sense in which we and after I am buried I warn you, don't let
the old South Boston), extending entirely understand that term in the United States. any fresh air or sunlight down on my coffin,
around the building. It will hold, I judge, But one cannot be long in England without if you don't want me to get up."
over a thousand (twelve hundred) below, and feeling the pulsations of the great English
one thousand in each gallery—three thou- heart beating against his own, and in unison
New Harpoon.—A trial was made on Satsand in all. Mr. Spurgeon has still crowded with it, upon most of the great questions of
houses ; not half who apply, it is said, can the day affecting the interests of the human urday afternoon at Rotch's wharf, by Mr.
obtain seats. I never saw so attentive an race. Contrasting the institutions of Conti- Robert Smith, of Provincetown, the inventor,
audience. It was composed mostly of the nental Europe with those of England, it is of a new harpoon to be fired from a whaling
middling classes. A good work must be impossible not to desire that the latter may gun. The harpoon fits the small size gun in
remain intact in all their essential points, and common use for bomb lances, and was fired
going on in this part of London.
On the Continent, the Church of England that England may maintain her paramount by Mr. Smith four times at s barrel ten fathand the Scotch have their chapels in almost influence, at least on this side of the Atlantic, oms off, twice striking very near the improvised target, and twice going completely
every city; the former, so far as I could to the end of time.
it. There appeared to be no diffiof
We
week
Engthrough
the
accommodation
the
about
a
in
for
shall
remain
city
judge, solely
lish Episcopalians abroad. Catholicism has longer,and then leave for York and Edinburg; culty in fastening to whales with it. A numnothing to fear from them. The Scotch Pres- and after seeing what there is to be seen of ber of shipmasters who witnessed its operabyterians are more aggressive, but thoroughly English and Scotch lakes and scenery and tion appeared to think favorably of it.—iV. B.
Christian-zealous, hard-working propagators intermediate towns, we shall over to Ire- Standard.
*
THE FRIKM), NOVEMBER,
102
For Uie FriMsl.
1867.
called, all assembled to see how David
He was drawing near to his end :
with the whole ship's company gathered around him, he passed away in peace,
believing in the Lord Jesus Christ as his
only and all-sufficient Saviour. We all
knelt around the dead body, the first officer
offering prayer. Without, it was a dark and
stormy night, the ship laboring heavy in the
sea, the wind howling through the rigging,
and every now and then the sea brraking on
deck—all helped to add to the awful solemnity of the occasion, and a solemn awe seemed to rest upon us all. I believe few that
were there can ever forget that praycr-
A Solemn Prayer-meeting, at Midnight, was.
there,
in Mid-Ocaan.
While sailing on the ocean from port to
port, and traveling on land from place to
place, it has been my privilege to attend
many religious meetings ; but of all, I never
found any of equal solemnity to the one an
account of which I will now relate.
In February, 1860, the good ship Mary
Ogden, Captain Loveland, sailed from Antwerp for New York. Among those on
board was a man who the year before had
been second officer of the ship, but now was
sent home an invalid by the American Consul. He was one who, by Capt. L„ had often been warned of his sinful course ol life,
and entreated to turn and live. All the
counsel was unheeded, and on he went in
rebellion against God; but God can make
the wrath of man to praise llim. On [he
first part of the passage he was indifferent
about his soul's salvation, and thought only
of the sinful enjoyment he would have on
his arrival ih port. But how true are the
words of the poet:
unbelief is sure to err,
" Blind
And scan His work in vain ;
God ia His own interpreter,
And he will make it plain."
How often are man's plans turned by the Di-
vine hand, and it was so in his case. As we
proceeded on our passage he became more
and more restless and uneasy in his mind,
fearing that death might overtake him before
his nrrival in port.
Truly it is said, " the prayers of a righteous man availeth much"—and if two agree
on one thing, and pray in faith for the same,
it shall be granted. Mrs. Loveland, wife of
the master, a truly pious lady, was with us
on the voyage, and, with her nusband, often
in secret called upon the Lord to bless their
labors in the conversion of this man ; and
although God did not immediately answer
their prayers yet they still continued to hold
fast to His promise.
We commenced to experience very rough
weather, and David (for that was his name)
apparently grew weaker from day to day.
Often, with others, I visited him, and endeavored to persuade him to seek the salvation
of his soul. Gradually he became convinced
that he was a great sinner, and soon it could
be said of him, " Behold he prayeth." He
sought, with all his heart, the mercy of God,
and as the answer to prayer did not come
immediately, he began to think he had sinned away his day of grace ; but while on the
borders of despair, he met with the blessed
words of the Lord Jesus, where He declared,
"All things are possible to him that believeth." I do not remember passing by him
from the day of his conviction of sin until he
was 100 feeble to speak, but he would ask
me to pray for him.
On the evening of his death, the Captain,
with several of the crew, held a prayer-meeting in his room. At the close, he was urged
to believe, and to trust wholly in an all-sufficient Savicur, and was left to reflect. His
faith grew stronger and stronger ; —at lIP.
M., he cried out, "I am ready—God has
forgiven me all my sins;" and for an hour,
as he lay on the brink of death, he kept
speaking of the goodness of God in receiving
sinner,.
At midnight, as the watch waa
uieeting.
On the following morning David was buried in liis watery grave, and on the naming
ol the resurrection we believe he will risr M
one whose robes have been washed and made
white in the blood of the Lamb—a sinner
saved by grace.
The blessed meetings we enjoyed in that
ship are ever frc:di in my mind, and during
our passage seven of ihe crew were hopeA. S. T.
fully converted.
A Snake
Story,
with a Moral.
A Terrible Bedfellow. —I looked at my
neighbor with considerable curiosity. His
lace indicated a man of not over thirty years—
a period at which men are still young —but
his hair was as white as fresh-fullen snow.
One seldom sees, even on the heads of the
oldest men, hair of such immaculate whiteness. He sat by my side in a car of the
Great Western Railroad, in Canada, and
was looking out of the window. Suddenly
turning his head, he caught me in the act of
staring at him —a rudeness of which 1 was
ashamed. I was about to say words of apology, when he quietly remarked :
sir. I'm used to it."
" Don't mentionofit,this
observation plensed
The frankness
me, and in a very little while we were conversing on terms of familiar acquaintanceship, and before long he told me the whole
story.
was a soldier in the army of India,"
" and, as is often the case with soldiers, 1 was a little too fond of liquor. One
day I got drunk, and was shut up in the
black hole for it. I slumped down upon the
floor of the dungeon, and 1 was just dropping
otT to sleep, when I felt a cold, slimy shape
crawling across my right hand as it lay
stretchofl out above my head on the floor. 1
knew at once what it was—a snake ! Of
course my first impulse was to draw away
my hand; but knowing that if I did so the
poisonous reptile would probably strike its
fangs into me, 1 lay still, with my heart beating in my breast like a trip hammer. Of
course, my fright sobered me instantly. 1
realized all my peril in its fullest extent. Oh,
how 1 lamented the hour that I had touched
the liquor
In every glass of liquor there is
a serpeut; but it does not come to everybody
in the shape it came to me. With a slow,
undulating motion the reptile dragged its
carcass across my face, inch by inch, and
crept down over my breast and thirust its head
inside my jacket. As I felt the hideous
scraping of the slimy body over my cheeks,
it was only by the most tremendous effort
that I succeeded in restraining myself from
yelling loudly with mingled terror and dis-
"I
said he,
!
gust. At last I felt the tail wriggling down
toward my chin ; but imagine what 1 felt at
my heari, if you can imagine it, as 1 realized
that the dreadful creature had coiled itself
up under my jacket as I lay, and haa seemingly gone to sleep, for it was still as death.
Evidently it had no idea that I was a human
; if it had it would not have acted
in that way. All snakes are cowardly, and
they will not approach a man unless to strike
him in self-defense. Three hours I lay with
that dreadful weight in my bosom, and each
minute was like an hour to me—like a year.
1 seemed to have lived a life-lime in that
brief space.
of my life passed
through my memory in rapid succession, as
they say is the case with a drowning man.
I thought of uvy mother, away in old England ;my happy home by the Avon ; my
Mary, the girl I loved, and never expected to
see them more. For no matter how long J
bore this, I felt that it would end in death at
last. I lay as rigid as a corpse, scarcely
daring even to breathe, and all the while my
breast was growing colder and colder wh#re
the snake was lying against it, with nothing
but a thin cotton shirt between my skin and
its. I knew that if I stirred it would strike,
but 1 could not bear this much longer. Even
if I succeeded in lying still until the guard
came, I expected his opening the door and
coming in would be my death warrant all
the same; for no doubt the reptile would seethat I was it man as soon as the light was let
in at the door. At last I heard footsteps approaching. There was a rattling at the lock.
It was the guard. He opened the door. The
snake—a cobra di capello I now saw—darted
up its huge hooded head, with the hideous
rings around its eyes, as if about to strike.
I shut my eyes and murmured a prayer.
Then it glided away with a swift motion and
disappeared in the darkness. I staggered to
my feet and fell swooning in the arms of the
guard. For weeks after 1 was very sick, and
when I was able to be about I found my hair
was white as you now see it. I have not
touched a drop of liquor since."
creature
Great Voyare.—Ship Nortern Light,
Capt. Clough, arrived home at this port Monday afternoon, -ifter an absence of thirty-two
months in the Pacific and Arctic oceans, having taken during the voyage 1,350 bnrrrls
sperm oil, 850 barrels whale oil, and 13,500
pounds whalebone. The ship also brought
home every man of the crew who left home
in her, a fact ot rare occurrence in the whaling business.— Easttrn paper.
Tax, $17 50 on a Thousand.—" The valuation of Worcester, Mass., this year is $23,-856,300, an increase of about $1,250,000
over that ot last year. The rate of taxation
is $17 50 nn u thousand, which is $1 50
more than it was in 1866, owing to the large
Staje tax."
Tax on Hawaiian Islands, $2.50 per $1000.
Twenty-three different societies are
laboring to give the Gospel to India, eight of
them located in the United States. The following results are given : Population, 182,-760,764; native Christians, 163,816; communicants, 31,249 ; native catechists and
preachers, 1,364; number of native Christians to each missionary, 296 ; children under
Christian instruction, 90,706.
103
THE FRIEND, NOVEMBER, 1867..
ADVERTISEMENTS.
ADVERTISEMENTS.
PLACES OF WORSHIP.
SEAMEN'S BETHEL—Rev. S. C. Damon Chaplain—King
E. P, ADAMS,
Preaching at 11 A. M.
Seats Free. Sabbath School after the inorniiig service.
Anrtlonrer and Commission Mrrrlisnt,
Prayer meeting on Wednesday evenings at 71 o'clock.
fire proof STORK,
N. It Sabbath School or Bible Class lor Seamen at 'J J
o'clock Sabbath morning.
In Robinson's Building, Quern Street,
582-ly
FOKT STREET CHURCH—Corner of Fort snd Beretanla
streets—Key. E. Corwiu Pastor. Preaching on Sundays at
C. S. BARTOW,
11 A. M. and 71 I*. M. Sabbath School at 10 A. M.
STONKOUIRCU—King street, above tho Palace—Rev. 11. 11.
Auctioneer,
Parker Pastor. Services In Hawaiian every Sunday at 'Ji Sales Room on Queen Street, one door train
M.
nii.l
:i
M.
A.
P.
ly
673
Kaahumatiu street.
CATHOLIC CHURCH—Fort street, near Berctania—under
ALLEN Si. CON WAV,
the charge of lit. Rev. Bishop Maigrct. assisted by Key,
Pierre Favens. Services every Sunday at 10 A.M. and i P.M
kiurailiae, Hawaii,
SMITH'S CHURCH—Beretanla street, near Nuuanu street—
Will continue tlie Qeneral Merchandiseand Shipptnghusiness
Rev. Lowell Smith Pastor. Services In Hawaiian every
above
the
where they are prepared lo furnish
port,
st
Sunday at 10 A. M. and 21 P. M.
the justly celebratedKawaihae Potatoes, auil
REFORMED CATHOLIC CHURCH—Corner of Kukui and
such other recruits as are required
by whale ships, at the
Nuuanu streets, under charge of Rt. Rev. Bishop Staley,
assisted by Rev. Messrs. lubutsnn, Uallagher and Elklngshortestnotice and on the most reasonable terms.
lon. English service every Sunday at 11 A. M. and 71
Ptrovtrood on Hand.
i
m.
580 ly
street, near the Sailors' Home.
SAILOR'S HOME!
'
—11'- —Hs-j,—
.
ADVERTISEiytEBXTS.
SAK'L N. CASTI.K.
Dentist,
of
666 1;
Fort and Hotel Street!.
E. HOFFMANN. M.I).
Physician and Surgeon,
Corner Merchant anil Kaahumanu sis., near Postnfflce. 680 ly
I
JOHN S. McGREW, M. D.,
Physician nnd Snrgeon.
The (v'tmla Sugar Com|iany,
The New England Mutual Life Insurance Company,
The New Yurk Phemx Marine Insurance Company.
666 ly
659 ly
C. BREWER St. CO.
Commission and Shipping Merchants,
Honolulu, Oalisi,
Of the Boston
DRUG STORK.
Cornerof Fort and Merchant Streets.
Law,
686 ly
W. N. LADD,
Importerand Healer in Hardware, Cutlery, Mechanics'
Tools, and Agricultural Implements,
ly
680
Fori Slrcrt.
C. L. RICHARDS St. CO.,
11. 1.
AUKNTS
mi.l Honolulu Pneket Line.
l-'or the Purchasennd Sn I. ~r Island Produce.
—REFER TO—
.Inns M. Moon, Esq.,
New York.
Cms. Urkwrk, &j Co.
I
Boston
JIXHSIIUNMKWSLL, Esq. J
H. 11. Swais & Co.
I
Chas. Wolcdtt llrookk Ksq. 5
San Francisco.
648 ly
11. L. Chase's Photographic Gallery!
FORT STREET.
OPEN ANO PREPARED TO
PIIOTOUHAr'IIS of any size the BssT BTYI-R
IStakeNOW
MonT
TskMS.
in
the supply of Whalersand Merchant vessels.
666 ly
JOHN THOS. WATERHOUSE,
Importer snd Dealer in General Merchandise. Honolulu, 11. I
—REFERENCES—
Honolulu
His Ex. R. C. Wyllie,. .Hon. B. F. Snow, Esq
Dimomd Son,
Thos. Spencer, Esq
Hilo
II Dickinson, Ksq... Lahaina McKuerA> Merrill. SanFrancisco
C. W. Brooks*/ Co. ..San F. 0. T. Lawton, Ksq.,
Field A Rice,
New York
Tohin, Bros. A Co.,
Wilcox, Richards A Co , Honolulu.
"
"
881-ly
«J
I. C. HSSEILL,
W. A. ALDSIt'II.
JoUSSS CBACIBS.
ALDRICH, MERRILL & Co.,
Commission Vlerclia nis
—AND—
Auctione
c i* s,
204 and 206 California Street,
53 A TAT FRAKTOXBOO.
ALSO, AGENTS OF THE
San Francisco and Honolulu Packets.
Particular attention given to the sale and purchase ot merchandise, ships' business, supplying whaleships, negotiating
All'freight arriving st SaaFrancisco, by or to the HonoluluLine of Packets, will be forwarded rasa or ooamraioa.
Honolulubought and sold. XI
XT Exchange on—asrsssscas—
Honolulu
Messrs. C. L. RioHAans k Co.,
H HAOaraLD k Co.,
0 Baawaa *> C0.,.
•
Bisiopss Oo
M
Dr. R.W.Wood
Hon. K. H. Allss,
*iLr
""
1) C. WATISMAS, Ksq
644 ly
,
otl:er notable persons.
Also—A full assortment of LARGE
E X A M ES, For Sale at Low Prices.
696 3m
AND SMALL
11. !•• Oil ASK.
Mccracken, merrill & Co.,
FORWARDING AND
COMMISSION MERCHANTS,
Portland, Oregon.
HAVING
BEEN ENGAGED IN OUR PRE*
sent business for upwards of seven yesrs, and being
located in a lire proof brick building, we are prepared to receive
snd dispose of I.iland staples, such as Sugar, Rice,Syrups, Pulu,
Coffee. Ac ,to advantage. Consignments especlslly solicited
for the Oregon market, to which personal attention wilt be paid,
and upon which cash advances will be made when required.
Bar Francisco RarKßSifcss:
Bsdgcr k Lindeuberger, Jas. Patrick At Co.,
W. T. Coleman A Co.,
Fred. Iken,
elevens, Baker It Co.
POSTLMD RrFRKIRCSD:
Ladd a Tllton.
Leonard ft Qreen.
Allen it Lewis.
Hosolvld Rsrr»R»css:
Walker* Allen,
8. Savtdie.
Manager.
DOLE.
LICENSED SHIPPING AGENT.
THK BUSINESS ON HIS OLD
CONTINTES
Plan of settling with Officers snd Seamen immediately on
either
their Shipping
his Office. Having no
connection,
at
or indirect, with any outlining establishment, and slewing no debts to be collected at his office, he hopes to give as
good satisfaction in the future us he has In the past.
direct
XT OlSce on Jas. KobiiiHoii A Co.'s Wharf, near the Y. g.
Bn>
Consulate.
**•
CAtTLE
SEWING MACHINES!
THIS MACHINE HAS ALLTIIE
LATEST
imptovements, and, Inaddition to former premiums, was
awarded the highest prise above all European and American
Sewing Machines at the World's Bihihltlon in PARIS in 1861,
and at the Exhibition in London In 1802.
The evidence ofthe superiority of this MachineIs found In the
record of its sales. In 1801—
The Orover k Baker Company, Boston,
The Florence Company, Massachusetts
The Parker Company, Connecticut,
J. M. Singer *> Co., New York,
Finkle A Lyon,
Chas. W. Howland, Delaware,
M. Greenwood k Co., Cincinnati, 0.,
I
N. 8. C. Perkins, Norwalk, 0.,
Wilson 11. Smith. Connecticut,
sold 18,600, whilst the Wheeler A Wilson Company, of Bridgeport, madeand sold 19,726 during the same period.
11M
XT Ple»se Call nnd Eiasslsr.
A
ALL KINDS OF LIGHT MACHINERY, GUNS, LOOKS, 4/c.
Fort Street, opposite Odd Felltwa' Hall. Bif
SALE AT THIS OFFICE OF THE
Passer.
FOR
Wheeler & Wilson's
MACHINIST.
Bound Volumes of the "Friend"
*
COOKE,
\(.l\is
R. W. ANDREWS,
REPAIRS
family
For a Fow
"
GEORGE WILLIAMS,
iy_
FOR
Mrs.'CRABB.
XT Persons wishing to learn the Terms will apply to hiss
6tf
or the hVlitor of Thk FslßNn."
A«D
tsi
$6
9
AT KOLOA.
REV. DANIEL
Kauai, has accommodations In his
IUIE
Boarding Scholar..
It AsoNABLK
Ship Chandlers ami Commission Merchants, and ON TDK
COPYING AND ENLARGING done In the
Healers in General Merchandise,
best manner.
Ke»p constantly on hand a fullassortment of merchandise,for
Fur Dale Cards of the Hawaiian Kings, Queens, Chiefs snd
*
Rs-
BOARDING SCHOOL AT KOLOA.
AQENTB
N. B.—Medicine Chests carefullyreplenished st the
A. F. JIDD.
Attorney and Counsellor at
.
Honolulu, April 1,1866.
AGENTS
For the Maker, YVulluk n -Y. Ilium I'ln ■■ In I ions
C. 11. WBTMORG, M. D.
PHYSICIAN k. SURGEON,
HILO, HAWAII, S. I.
HILO
M. 1. P. I.'AKTKH.
SHERMAN PECS.
Office—Over Dr. E. Hoffmann's Drugstore, cornerof Kaahu
manu and Merchant St»., opposite tin; 'Post Office.
Kksiokmos—Chnplain St., tirtwern JViiunnw and Fort IV*.
Orrics HoL'iis—From 8 to 111 A. M., and h-um 'A to 6 I*. M.
6-tf
.
Pis
CASTLE Si. COOKE,
Importers and General Merchant-.
In Fireproof Store, King street, op|>osite the Seaineu's Chapel. Ofiicors' table, with lodging, per week,.
Seiiinens' do. do.
do.
do.
Also, Agorita for
Dr. Jaynes Celebrated family Medicines,
Premise*..
Shower
Baths
on
the
Wheelers/ Wilson's Sewing Machines,
I>li. J. MOTT SMITH,
Olllce corner
iJ
AMOS H. COOKS'.
J. K. ATITKitTON.
m j.- " ißfj
" "
THE FRIEND:
PUBLISHED AND
EDITED BY
SAMUEL C. DAMON.
MONTHLY JOURNAL, DEVOTED TO TEMPERANCE, SEAMEN, MARINE AND
OENERAL INTELLIGENCE,
TERMS:
On* copy, per annum,
Two copies,
•*
Fire copies,
,
,
...
f2.00
8.00
6,00
111 X r' XI X Ml, NOVEMBER, 18(1.
104
MARINE JOURNAL.
From the Pavr. Commercial Advertiser,
Reports from Ochotsk and Arctic.
Report of Bark B. Cummings, of New Bedford—We
eailed from Honolulu April 3d, 1807, for Ochotsk ; entered the
Ochotsk May 3d, had moderate winds the whole passage.
Haw firat ice May oth, In lat 61° 20' N, longlu2 e 20'
Cruised first in N E Gulf", with good weather up lo July BM,
after thatdate strong H W winda and fogs. Took flrat whale
June 6th, and last one In the Culf Aug 6th. Haw moat whales
in July, but very wild and hard to catch. Left the Gulf Aug
lKth, and arrived at the Baya Sept lat, saw but few whales in
the Bays. Took one in Mercugr Bay Hept Bth, Had good
weather through September, with exception ofone strong N E
gale on the28th- Hept 29th. left Felikstoff for the Sandwich
Islands, came through 50th Paaaage, Oct 6th. Croaaed the
Meridian Oct 14th in lat 43° Have had calmsand light variable winda tho entire paasagc. Took the trades In lat 27 °
Oct 28th and arrived In port Oct 30th, with 760 bbla oiland
10,000 lba bone. On the 2d Hept, Ben Green, a seaman, a native of the Sandwich Islands, died of consumption, and waa
hurried on Felikstoff Island, in the Ochotsk Sea. Spoke the
following vessels at the Baya ■.
•ptt. 20—Bohr Caroline E Footo, Hazard,
.TOO hi
■
20—rthip Enropa, Manor
ooo
29—Hhip Oregon, Mainmet
110 8. 800
19 Bart Win Botch, IjuTrav,
750
.'
aw Bart Java, Enos,
700
3tK)
aw Bart Endeavour, Wilson
...
lfOf.oi.tn.iJ, Oct. 80th, 1867.
Editor l'ittKK; Cfi-ti'L Aiikbtiskk Aif .-—Agreeable to
your requeat, I hand you the following report of bark Sea
Breeze. We left the Handwich lalanda April 9th-, had a pleasARRIVALS.
ant paaaage to the OchoUk, paaaing through the 48th paaaage,
Oct I—V. 8. H. Lackawanna, Reynolds, from Island* to the morning of April oOlh. Haw the first ice evening of May 2d,
Wot ward.
to the
l-.Eng.achr Kate, Gardiner, 28daya from Alben.l, V.I. Lat. 55° 40 N., Long. 152° 38 East. Worked through
3—Eos. ahlp Douglaaa, Morrison, 17 days from Han northward into the western arm of N. E. gulf. Came to anFrancisco, and sailed fame day for Hongkong.
chor in Ell harbor 25th May, with clear water in,the harbor.
ft—Eng achr. Gold Hi ream, Martin, 21 daya fin Victoria.
on from H. W. .anting six daya, driving
I—Haw. brig Kohola, Taylor, from the Arctic with Hani" day gale came
the body of ice back and filling the bay full and came very near
400 hnls wh oil and 4,000 lbs bone.
ashore
with
two anchors and 180 fathoms of chain
A—Am wh bk Wm. Giffbrd, Fisher, fromKodiack, with driving ua
ahead. But the ice getting fast aground astern and around the
230 bbls wh otl and 2,600 lba bone.
ahlp
saved
At
thu
same time four boats were away and
ua.
0—Eng achr J. K. Thorndike, Meldran, 28 days from
could not Ret on t>oard. one being gone fourteen daya, and two
Victoria.
right
ship
of
'he
on the ice for three daya. Cruised
7—Am wh ah Almira, Oaborn, from the Antic, with 70 others in
in .V E. gulf until Auguat 20*, after that In southern pari of the
bbla riii 1,030 bbla wh and 13,000 lbs bone.
whale
May Uth, Lat. OH° :tO, and lost one
first
sea. TOO* OV
o—Fr ri B Venus, Roy, 22 guna, from I'uili.
gulf, making twenty howhead* and one peaky
ll—Achr Kitty Cartwright, Tiernay, 20 days from Aug. 7 in N. E.making
told
1500 bbls. of oil and 22,000 lba.
all
sarpint Bah,"
Fanning* Island.
right whales; struck one, lost him by
11—Schr flan Diego, Teugalmm, 30 days from How- Ixine. Haw a very tew out
night of Sept. 80.
fiftiethpassage:
taking the line. Came
of
butd'a Island.
Have had food w.-ullier all the jaissuge down. Hmught four
11—Br achr Henry Wooton. Reveley, 19 days front Vict>tr/ln,
wrecked
bark
of New Bedford,
Yours, truly,
men as ptHMMHi from
toria, Y. I.
( n mii rs Hai.sky,
Wlm was ..ad on the west part of ■qflaH (,rumpus
13—Amhark Comet, Payley, 19 day* fin San Francisco. Nye, Muster.
in
thick
and
from
log
gale
Master bark 11. Cummingi.
night
August
11111, a
the
of
14—Hr bark (Jarsiang, Griflitlis, 1.14 day* fin UnrptoL Island on
saving
nothing.
Two
and
men
btMSttM
total
W.,
loss,
■
lv—Am wh bark Oliver Crocker, Hayn-, from Arctic, H.
iron killed; alh.i second muU' and OOOpJtr badly hurt, when
with 600 bbla oiland 12000 bone.
Hainhnw. The
The Alert.-H.B.M.'s steam sloop of war Alert, 17 guns,
IS—Eng bk Celeatia, Knapp, 17 days from Noyo Hirer sin- fell over. ('apt. Nyi is OB board Of the
nan).
m ol' tbt■ killed are I-alward Burns ami Harry, a Herman. arrived here on the2flth Sept., 21 daya from Victoria. Bbc ia
20—Am wh bark flva Breexe, Hamilton, from Oebotsk,
most
entire season. I have
good
weather
of
the
very
Have
had
witli 1000 tibia oil, 19,000 lba bwne.
hound for Valparaiso and bom 1?. The following la a list of be*
20—Tah wh ahlp Norman, Sneider, from Kodiack, with aeen the ships auueved under their proper dales i
ofiicers:
li.'.O libit
300 libla oil, 2,H00 I.m hone.
,ug. 12—Hen Cuininings, liaises,
Commander—Hugh !!. Knocker.
620 «
21—Am wh ahlp Reindeer, Kaynor, from Arrtir, with
12—Midas, Drake
Lieutenant*—R. F.vans, K. M. I>. Browne.
600 "
22—Sunbeam, Barrett
1,700 bbla oil, 28,000 lba bone.
l.efray,
J\arigathifj
700
Lieutenant —\. K. Yeitch.
Rotih,
Capl
ship
Berry,
daya
from
21—Am
21
M
111—Win.
Washington,
"
Paymaster—W. O. N. Horn. v.
Lucas.
18—lurons, Mellen
MO "
OoO
Engineer
—ller>>ert Woollcy.
Baker,
BuHky.
days
"
ah
30
Yokohama.
Minnehaha,
cpt.
11—Rainbow,
21—Am
fin
Chief
AmiiMtant Surgeon—John Shields.
2HU "
21—Haw bark A J lV»i>e, (Jeerkcn, 145 daya front i\ew
12—Hercules, (lowland,
Navy—l.
Liit.
Surtttxh
A Kkelof.
Bedford.
Rainbow reports Cherokee, Kept. 10, clean; Roman, 800 bhh
Sub.lAeutenanttt V. A. [Jarston, ft. A. Brnrk.
22—Haw bark Mauna Loa, Keinking, 10 daya from IVJah. A. Hamilton.
Yours, Ate*,
I). Huat.
Navigating
Sub-Lieutenant—W.
tropaulovriki.
A*nistant Paymanter —A. Tiekney,
22—Am bark J W Heaver, Ileaney, 21 daya from KainA**i*t<mt fnrjnfntttfir Tfcntmg D.'flray, K. McCsakill.
off Holulu Oct. 20th, 1867.
achatka.
(iunner— Win. Simmons.
22—Am wh hark Three Ilrothera, Taber, front Arctir,
11. ,M. Whitney, Ksg., Dear Hr .-—Thinking that you
It oat*wain —Geo. Davenport.
with 1,600 bbla oil, 18,000 lba bone.
short account of our cruise I atrial you the followCarpenter— >mn. Trenidr.
22—Am wh bk Aeon lum Jeffrey, from Arctic, with would like a
ing rcjsirt i
Mittihiiiman —K. I>. Maude.
050 bbla oil, 10,000 lbs bone.
Qttrlu—M. \). Lewis, G. T. Carter.
22—Am ship Gay Head, Kelley, from Arrtir, with 1,100
We left Honolulu on the 30th r.f March for theArctic Ocean-,
bbla oil, 18,000 Urn bone.
up, and *,iw the ice on 23d of
23—Am sh Franklin, Burnley, 10 daya front Han Fran- had a fine and pleasant passage
3
RaExeC
pnsdir hapel.
April in hat. 01° 02' N., Long. ISO 12' W., and at the same
chico.
25—Am wh bark Cicero, Paun, from the Arctic Omm, time saw and got our first whale; took At«; head in April; found
I'aintine Chapel, Inside,
550 bbla wh oil and 7.501) lbs I -.
very little ice and fine weather until iibout the 10th of August,
Mwoirn mil,
26—Brig Kamebamena V, Htone, frenn Maker's Inland.
when it set In blowing and continued until the 12th of Hept.
1'aiiitirijr Obapeli outftlde,
tap to the 4th of Oeto20—Am wh ah Tamerlane, Winslow, fnmi Arrtir, with Paring Ike latter |»ari of Hepleiiihcr andon
Incidental Expenses, from January to November,
the
of
Left
the
Arctic
sth
October
Iht, bail fine wr:ith.T.
1000 bbls oil,
lb* bone.
Wife, oil and 2K,1i00 Mm. bone. We
26—Brit H corvette Alert, 17 guna. Knocker, 19 daya from with 21 whales, inakinj; 1700scare
$297
most of the season. Took
found the whales *hy and
Victoria.
Lecetved frf>m Foreign RnidVntg in Bnnolulu,
$90
September.
whale
2tiih
of
Han
last
mi
days
Franriarn.
our
Idaho,
Connor,
27—Am atr
fmm
DM
from Cnpti.in Tenjrstrom,
II
II
tliev
had
experienced
iuforilieil
that
but
**
BM
30—Am wh bk Nib-, Long, from Arctic, with 170 bbla
The natives
6
** from Citplviiii Stone,
one (rale <d wind fnuit the North tin* part winter, which aeUrn hone.
oil, and
—$108
Soulli
90—Am wh bk £en| Citmminga, Ilalaey, from Antic, cuuntafof titan being »o little ice in the Htraits, aa the
(TT We hope shipmnsters, officers, and seamen, visiting Hon
with 750 bbls oil, and
winds kept it buck to the North. We have li;i.l | tine run
lb* bone.
down, daring ptMad st. Lawreooa labad oa tmt '»th ofOctober, o!ulu, will assist to discharge this debt upon the Bethel.
30—Am bk Bhering, Lane, 38 daya from A moor River.
MliHilllg
from
the
Inland-.,
'.Mb.
and
heard
the
Fox
Mini
:
PORT OF HONOLULU, S. I.
.
"
,
—
on
i
.
.
. .
....
OKI'ART, KKS.
Oct
1—II- H. 8. Tuacarora, Stanly, for Ban Francisco.
s—Haw bk Berk Bern ice, Cathcart, for Hun Francisco.
s—Am wh bk Preaident, Kelley, forcrufse to westward.
12—Br achr Kate, Gardiner, for Victoria, Y. I.
16—Ant wh ahlp Niger, Cleveland, to cruise.
23—Am bark Comet, Day In, for Him Franciaco.
23—Am ahlp Franklin, Bursh-v, for Hong Kong.
19—Haw brig China Packet, Reynolds, for Hong Kong.
36— Am ah Washington, for Baker's Inland.
26—Haw bk R C Wylle, lor Bremen.
PASSENGERS.
Foa a.* Fa.NCisco—rer Brrnlrc, Oct. sth—P. T. Daring,
Mr. Bowman, wife and child—4.
Fiom Ban Fbahcisco—per Comet, Oct. 14.—E. Reynolds,
W. Kindell, T. D. Drew, W. Hyman, llenryThompson, C. M.
Darts, Cspt. M. W. Sanborn, 1. Richardson, wifr, 3 children
and servant, D. N. Flitner, J. P. Hushes, 1.. Keegnn, Mrs. J.
11. Black snd wo, G. Townsend, wife and 2 children. Miss. '■
Dayley, F. McFarlane, Mr. I.oari. J. W. Evens, J. Shclmadorc,
Y. Keegan, Mr. Phillips and 8 natives from huk Florence, R.
JLLoyd, J. Cromwell.
Farm I.ivkspool—per Qaratana, Oct. 14.—1 native.
*aon Yosohama—Per Minnehaha, Oct 21—J W Humans,
} Japanese—2.
Faoa PiTaopaui-sKi—Per Msuna Loa, October 2S—J W
Faosl Kamschatka—Per J W Beaver, Oct tt—i II Coles
Foa ■*. Fsascisco—Per Comet, Oct. 22—G Melchets, W
II Maser, «Vm Welch, Mrs Loudon and 2 children, Master
£haa Davis—7.
Faosi Baa FaiNcisco—Per Idaho Oct. 27—Capt D Hemp-
stead, Capt W H Allen, Cant Jno H I'ase, Dr W II Richsrds,
V<* R A Hawkiss, W R Frinck, E R (irinliaum, D Sefelken,
U L Emerson, wifeand two children, Mies I. C Emerson, Miss
Maggie Drum, Miss Ida Hloe.ii,Mrs Bartlett and three children,
Mrs Axgyms, asst IB nwn in the steerafe.
Fmo* Astooa ftivta—per Hhertns, Oct 30—II O O Chtse,
Usui TrtveWTsky, Russian Navy; Steerafe—Chas 11 Olllhsker, John Johnson,Ckina boy Harry, China hoy Ham.
vessels
|
cpt. 10—Minerva. IVnuilll.in
10—Massachusetts, WiU'ox,
28—Nautilus, llliven
28—Navy, Davis
*
■s.
14 Whalei
V
lo
(840 hills.) 10
•
I
10—Trident, Base
12
.ug. 28—.liri'li I'erry, Brass]
u
20—J. II. Tli"iiip*"ii, Brown
o
cpt. 20—Milo, llawes,
(1 whale and il devil Bsh.)
No Hate, Janus
PsSfpS,
4
James
Allen,
20—
8
20—Mcrlui, Thomas,...
4
Ossjgi
Mnssissl
Knuwlcs
M
,ug. 25—Corinthian, Lewis,
J
Tinker
West,
cpt. 28—John l».
.10—Alpha, Lasrton,
26—Progress,Dowden,
*»
26—Ohio, Lawrence
10
20—Roscoe, Macoiaher,
20—Heine, Hinilh,
j(
22— Florida, Forrtham,
Jj>
28—Florida 2d, Williams
24-JohnHowland, Wheldon
8
20—Robert Towns, Barker,
■
28—Julian, I.ubbera
»
,ug. 12—Kagk', Loveland,
10
rp4. 28—llae llawalf Ileppingsloue
0
1—Active, Rohiuaol
20—Harrison, Cooty,
Donations.
'rom Captain Cleavelaml,for
gratuitous
distribution ol the
"Friend."
$10
prom U. 8. 8. " Tusctrora," (or support of Sailor's Home, oi
DIED.
o
Hamkk—On Baud the 11. H. steamer Lorkawnnna, lh\. 7th,
W. G. Hanse, gunmr's mat*. He waa buried in the U.S.
Navy Lot in Nuuanu Cemetery.
a
MKi.cimia--nn Bremen, in August last, William, only son
.i
of Gustav CJfclchers, of infiainmation of the brain, m%mi fl
s
years and 6 B^nffta.
Vol* Hoi.t—At sea, June 10th,on board the Hawaiian bark
/? W. Woody Hermann yon Holi, Hanoverian Consul at Hono.i
lulu, aged ;;7 years.
Brinkminn—At the residence of J. Miller, Esq., Makawao
September 30th, Mr. Chartea Rrlnkmann, aged 24 years. A
German by birth, hut a naturalisedAmerican and Unionsoldier
during three years of thelate war of therebellion.
a
He arrived at the Islands two month! since, hoping to find
relief from bronchial affection In an equable temperature, which
■
proved delusive. He made a favoiable Impression on all whit
■
became acquainted with him, and grew In the affectionate esteem of thoeewho saw hlui most frequently- lie expressed hia
sole trust to be in Christ, and we cannot but hope that for him,
»
28—I.ydla, lluthuway,
28—George, Davis,
'to die la gain.'* He had a atrnnn desire to lire still longer,
that be might comfort and aid his widowed mother,brother and
20—Illinois, Davis,
0
sister, who reside in or near New York city ; yet he did not ex1—Kagle, McKensie,
hibit undue solicitude, hut submitted all to the decision of In10—lllhrnila,Ludlow,.. .4 right and i sperm
3
finite Wisdom. It will afford satisfaction to there bereaved
6—James Maury, Cunningham,
1*
16—Eugenia, Barnes,
relatives to learn that he received much kind attention from Mr.
October 6th—Baw ship CAomsi'on, Worth, and one other Killer and daughter, also a Christian burial at the place of hia
ship, name unknown, bound South, oft* the west end of Bt. decease.—Commokicatid.
New York city papers pleasecopy.
Lawrence Island. We have now a One breeze and .spec' <° o*
I remain yours,
Cosrot—Drowned, Aug. 1866, north of the Asore Islands, In
in port in the morning.
(laoaoa W. Ravnor, Master of ship Reindeer.
the Atlantic Ocean, James Conroy, son of Patrick Conroy, of
Baltimore, comer of West and Leadediall streets, Martin's distillery. He waa a seaman on board the ¥ Gay head."
MARRIED.
Lapham—At aea, Sept. 20th, Alruador Lapham, a
native ef
Yonkern, New York. He waa seaman on board bark "Acoaa
Oct. 17lh, at the resiVina—Valshtihu— ln Wslkapo,
Jeffrey.
His
Capt.
(at
remains
his
request) were
Barns/
dence of the bride's father, by the Rev. Thomas G. Thurston, hrought
to Honolulu, and interred lo Nuuanu Valkv Cemetery.
lisnM R. Vids M Kate 1.. Valentin*, both of Maui.
»
'
J
*
"•
E
RIEND
SetoSmts, MM, $k ll.}
HONOLULU, NOVEMBER I, 1867.
them because
fume. *
* 1 think I love
our loving
things
the
most
beautiful
are
they
Paok.
the
eye and
Creator
has
made
10
gladden
97
Tlip Hawaiian Islands and Ja]ian laefefeaglaf Plants,
97 cheer the heart of man. To me, there is
Irregularis of the 11. S. Mails,
97
Truth Told in Jest,
more loudly and clearly
97 nothing which speaks
Address of WO. Jones,E5i).,....,
*8 of the goodness of God than these delicate
:
Editor's Table,
9S
Hepburu's Japaneseand BtsJßsk Dictionary,
nnd lovely creations of his hand. When 1
Paris Exposition,
99
*9 see the beautiful lilies of this land, more
Remarkable Hymn,
100
Rev. Mr. Ellis,
beautiful than I ever saw elsewhere, I under100, 101
Letter from London
the
102 stand better the beautiful text, Consider
A Solemn Pra.ver-imvlini; at sfidotfht,
102
grow
Story,
Unake
with
a
lilies
Moral,
field,'
of
&c.
These
A
the
lilies
I^l
Marine Journal, &r.,
wild over the hills and fields of Japan."
p. S.—Since writing the above, we have
read in the Independent for September 12th,
■' a Special Plea for Lilies," or a Lecture, by
NOVEMBER 1. 1807.
Miss Isabella G. Oakley, for the study of
Japan
Exchangi
n
g
Islands
The Hawaiian
and
botany. She urges upon the young of AmerPlants.
ica the study of botany, as ennobling and
elevating. " Consider the lilies of the field,
Both the Advertiser and Gazette have re- how they grow; they toil not, neither do
cently published interesting statements re- they spin ; and I say unto you, that even
specting the efforts of Mr. Van Reed, the Solomon in all his glory was not arrayed like
Hawaiian Consul-General, to forward Japan- one of these."
ese seeds, plants and fowls to these Islands.
While Mr. Van Reed was there engaged in Irregularity of the U. S. Mails.-—We
making his preparations for a shipment, a exceedingly regret any irregularity of the
somewhat similar effort was made in Hono- mails with San Francisco at this season of
the year. It is the only opportunity for
lulu in behalf of Japan.
In the month of June last, through our so- American whalemen visiting Honolulu to oblicitation, Dr. Hillebrand sent off a fine col- tain their letters. But very few American
lection of seeds, bulbs, Sec., to Mrs. Hepburn, letters were received by the Idaho. Until the
wife of Dr. Hepburn, residing at Yokohama. affairs of the steam line can be definitely setThese packages were kindly forwarded by tled, we do think the San Francisco PostCapt. Lutke, of the Russian man-of-war master might exercise a little discretion, and
GorneUoy. They were safely delivered. In not shut down quite so summarily. From
a letter acknowledging their reception, Mrs. what we can learn, there must now be lying
Hepburn thus writes under date of August : in the San Francisco Post Office hundreds,
The box of bulbs, seeds, &c., sent by Capt. if not thousands, of letters, which ought to
Lutke, came in good order, r.nd were potted have been sent forward by the Idaho. We
as soon as opened. Will you give my sin- understand the master or agents of the Idaho
cere thanks to Dr. Hillebrand for the trouble went repeatedly to the Post Office, but the
he took in putting up these plants and seeds letter-bags were refused, because the letters
for me, and say to him that in the autumn, were not pre-paid. We hope the Hawaiian
1 will embrace the first opportunity to send Government will not fail to instruct their
him some plants, bulbs, seeds, &c. ? Two of Minister at Washington, Mr. Harris, to make
the lilies he sent me bloomed. They have a such postal arrangements that hereafter no
delicate white flower with a delicious per- such accident will occur. It is a most seri«'0 STENTS
For November, I sin.
**
'
THE FRIEND,
"
97
Ifltuo Scries, M.Jj.
ous drawback upon American commerce.
Masters of whaleships and shipping agents
are left in the dark in regard to the views of
their owners. Even in the matier of family
letters, it is rather trying and perplexing.
Truth Told in Jest.—Recently a man
called at our office at the Sailor's Home in a
state of intoxication. We urged him to reform his habits and sign the pledge. His
reply was, " Religion is needed for a man to
keep his pledge." Yes, that is the great
requisite. It is the one thing needful. It is
the pearl of great price. Another man with
whom we were conversing at the hospital,
admitted that his temper was bad and his
disposition not good, but, he added, " the
devil will never take away my bad disposition." No, the devil never helped a sinner
to give up his heart to God and reform his
life. An old divinfe once said, "It was the
devil's masterpiece to make a man think well
of himself." We should look to God for
new hearts. David prayed, " Create in me
a clean heart, O God, and renew a right
spirit within me." God, not the devil, will
create within us new hearts and right dispositions.
The Address of W. C. Jones, Esq.—At
the meeting of the Temperance Legion, Mr.
Jones favored the audience with a poetical
address. The subject was "Intemperance,
or the Perverted Will." He depicted in
glowing language the sad fate of one who
had entrusted her earthly happiness to a
young man of wealth, fashion and talent, but
who, alas, was addicted to strong drink. So
much is at stake, we wonder any young
woman dare think of marrying a man whose
character is not firmly established on the side
of total abstinence. Mr, Jones, at some future time, intimates that he will deliver" a
sequel" to this address. He also stated that
he would hereafter deliver seven addresses
upon the various branches of the subject of
intemperance.
THE t'RIKMi. NOVEMBER, 1867.
98
Editor's Table.
Eni'Mßation or Hawaiian Plants. By Horace
Maun. (From the proceedings ol the American
Academy of Arte and Sciences. Vol. VII.. September 11.186b.) Issued July, 1867. Cambridge:
Welch, Bigelow <fc Co. 18JI7.
The first noticeable and note-worthy fact
apparent on taking up this pamphlet is this,
that from the discovery of these Islands in
1778, botanists have been interested in the
Flora of Hawaii. The following paragraphs
relating to some of these botanical explorers
will be interesting to our readers :
During a visit to the Hawaiian Islands,
made for the purpose of studying especially
the Botany of the Group, and which extended
from the 4th of May, 1864, to the 18th of
May, 1865, 1 botanized over five of the largest
of these islands, and brought together a collection which tonns the basis of the following enumeration. In its preparation I have
been permitted to examine the other collections of Hawaiian plants in the Gray Herbarium ; namely, that by the United States
South Pacific Exploring Expedition under
Commodore Wilkes,—the fullest hitherto
made in these islands ; a set of the specimens
gathered by Jules Remy under the auspices
of the Paris Museum, given by that institution ; some of Macrae's plants, given by the
London Horticultural (now Royal Horticultural) Society; and a few of Gaudichaud's,
Chamisso's, Douglas's, and Nuttall's. These
materials, and all his own memoranda upon
them, were freely offered to my use by Professor Gray, without whose friendly encouragement this enumeration would never have
been undertaken, and could not have been accomplished.
The botanists who have collected at the
Hawaiian Islands, so far as known to me, are
as follows:
David Nelson, who accompanied Captain
Cook on his third voyage, and collected at
the Islands in 1778-1779. The plants collected by him are stored at the British Museum, and, excepting a few Labiata, have
scarcely been examined until recently.
Archibald Menzies, a most indefatigable
botanist and collector, visited the Islands
with Vancouver in 1792, 1793, or 1794, or
perhaps in each of these years, and made
large and valuable collections, mostly on Hawaii. Sets of his plants are in the Hookerian,
Smithian, and Banksian Herbaria.
Albert Chamisso accompanied Kotzebue in
the voyage of Romanzoff, and collected principally on Oahu, late in each of the years
1816 and 1817. He published notes and descriptions of new species in the Linncea, in
conjunction with Schlechtendal. Frederick
Eschscholtz was the physician of the expe-
dition.
Charles Gaudichaud, as botanist of the expedition under Freycinet, in the corvettes
Uranit and Physicienne, visited the Islands
in August, 1819. He returned to the Islands on the Bonite in 1836. The results of
his first expedition were published as the
Botanique dv Voyage dc V Uranie, in 1826
(a* on title-page, but really not appearing till
1830,) in 1 vol. 4to, with a folio atlas. Of
the collections of the second visit a few plates
of Hawaiian plants appeared in a folio atlas
(Bat. Voy. Bonite, bearing no date), without
descriptions, or any clew to localities. The
lower Cryptogams were elaborated and in
part figured by the late Dr. Montngne in the
same work.
James Macrae collected for the London
Horticultural Society, in Brazil, Chili, and
the Hawaiian Islands, which last he visited
in 1825. His specimens were mainly distributed to the herbaria of Bentham, Hooker,
Lindley, and Dc Candolle.
Messrs. Lay & Collie, who accompanied
Captain Beechey during the Voyage of the
Blossom, visited the Islands in 1826-1527,
and made the collections which formed the
basis of the botany of this voyage by Hooker
and Arnqjt.
Francis Julius Ferdinand Meyen accompanied Captain W. Wendt, on the Prussian
vessel Princess Louise,'aml visited these islands in 1831. After his death, descriptions
of species collected by him were published as
a volume of the Nov. Act. Acad. Cies. Leop.Carol. Nat. Cur., in 1843, here cited as the
W. T. Brigham, with whom I visited the
Islands, aided me constantly in collecting,
and remained five months after my return,
obtaining several species not in my own col-
out by the
■ David Douglas, as collectortosent
London
N.W. Amer-
There is no work connected in any way
with Japan or its language that has been
published since the opening of the country
that we have felt more pleasure in welcoming, than that, the title of which heads this
article. It has long been known to many of
our readers that Dr. J. C. Hepburn has been
engaged for years in collecting materials lor
a Japanese dictionary ; and the announcement that we are now able to make, that the
work is procurable at Mr. Carroll's, No. 38
Water Street, and that the price is fixed as
low as $12, will be received with great satisfaction. It is a very excellent specimen of
getting up, in all respects ; and the first part,
the Japanese-English portion, comprises 558
pages,—the Japanese words in small capitals.
Katakana and in Chinese characters; the
second part being " an index of Japanese
equivalents for the most common English
words." Of the general correctness of the
work, we must acknowledge ourselves incompetent to express an opinion ; but should
there be any inaccuracies, which is not improbable in a work comprising 20,000 Japanese words, we know they have not crept in
for want of, but in spite of the greatest possible care, industry and zealous study. Did
we presume to recommend the Dictionary to
our readers, we should perform a work of
supererogation. It is sufficient to announce
its appearance and the place of publication.
We most heartily congratulate Dr. Hepburn
on the completion of his work; and whilst
we feel pretty sure that the sale of it will be
such as to repay him for the labor of some
of the best years of his life, he will be far
more highly remunerated by the consciousness that he has placed within the reach of
all students the means of wonderfully facilitating their acquisition of the language, and
that his name will ever hereafter be associated in the minds of scholars, with such
men as Morrison, Gutzlaff and others who
lieliquia: Meyeniana.
Horticultural Society
ica, closed his most important explorations by
a visit to the Hawaiian Islands, which he
reached in the last week in the year 1833.
He immediately went to Hawaii, where he
collected until the 12th of May, when he met
a violent death on the flanks ofMauna Kea.
His collections are mainly in the herbaria of
the Royal Horticultural Society, and of
Hooker, Bentham, and Lindley.
Barclay was botanist on the Sulphur, commanded by Sir Edward Belcher, and visited
the Islands in 1837 or 1839.
Rev. John Diell was American Seamen's
Chaplain at Honolulu, and sent small collections to Prof. Asa Gray, which he communi-
cated to Sir W. J. Hooker.
W. D. Brackenridge and Charles Pickering made almost all the botanical collections
on the United States South Pacific Exploring Expedition, under command of Charles
Wilkes, at least those at the Hawaiian Islands, which were visited in 1840. The Polypetala? were published in full in the Botany
of the Expedition by Gray, who has also published new species of Monopetalas in Vols.
IV., Y. and VI. of the Proceedings of this
Academy. But few of the Apetals have yet
been noticed. The Ferns, by Brackenridge,
were published as a separate volume of the
Botany of the Expedition ; but nearly the
whole of the edition was destroyed by fire
Another partially published volume comprises
the Mosses by Sullivant, the Lichens by
Tuckerman, and the Alga 3by the late Professors Bailey and Harvey.
Nuttall visited the Islands in 1835, from
the Northwest Coast, and made a small collection. Most of his specimens are in the
Hookerian Herbarium; a few probably in
that of the Philadelphia Academy. He published notes and descriptions of some Hawaiian Composite, Lobeliacea and Vaccinieee in
the Transactions of the American Philosophical Society.
Jules Remy went to the Islands under the
auspices of the Paris Museum, and made a
fine collection in the years 1851-1855.
William Hillebrand, a physician resident
in Honolulu, has recently sent interesting
collections to Kew, among them a new genus
of Begoniacea, which Professor Oliver has
named after its discoverer.
lection.
Mr. Mann has enumerated in his catalogue
667 different species of plants, under the
various genera well known to botanists. A
portion of this document is occupied with
minute descriptions of Hawaiian Lichens, by
Edward Tuckerman. To all scientific persons this work of Mr. Mann will prove interesting. We suppose that very soon Mr.
Brigham will publish the results of explorations in another department of natural history. Geology, we believe, was Mr. Brigham's speciality.
Hepburn's Japanese and English Dictionary.
have labored similarly.
The object of Dr. Hepburn, however, is
but half obtained. He commenced this work,
not merely and solely to place a dictionary
in the hands of his countryman and others
who would study Japanese, but as a preliminary to his own thorough mastery of the
language that he might do his great Master's
work as a missionary, by lending his aid in
the translation of the Scriptures into Japan-
99
THE FRIEND, NOVEMBER, 1867.
In this great work he is engaging with
all his fellow laborers in the American mission field in Japan; and as we witness the
self-denial, the devotedness and unobtrusiveness with which they nre carrying on their
most laborious occupation, we cannot but bid
them God speed, and hope that their success
may be evident in the day when their Master
maketh up his jewels, when they may see
many of those for whose admission into the
fold they are laboring, and when they may
hear the sweetest voice that ever spoke welcome them in the sweetest words that shall
ever be spoken : " Well done good and faithful servants."— Japan Herald.
ese.
Paris Exposition.
Hliiiklduki., Germany, August, 1867,
Mr. Editor :—You ask me to describe the
great Paris Exposition but by this time
your readers have doubtless seen so many
descriptions of it, that another would be useless. I use the adjective great. It is truly
a great exhibition of the arts and industries
of the world. As to magnitude and eclat, it
is all, and even more than I expected. Little
Hawaii is very honorably represented. Two
nice rooms, near the American department,
are devoted to Hawaii. Here are found exhibited with excellent taste, specimens of
;
Hawaiian products.
The departments in the Exposition are so
arranged that one can study the products of
each nation separately, or he can run through
any line of product, comparing that of each
nation with the other. For instance in the
Art Galleries. If you wish to study British
or French or any other nation's art, you may
confine yourself to that particular nation ;
but if you wish to make a comparison of the
paintings of all the nations, you pass straight
on. After a very long time, having gone
around the entire building, you return to
your starting point. 1 found it very interesting to compare different nations in this
way. I could trace well-known national
characteristics, for instance in the single
matter of coloring. Going through again 1
would test national differences in the item of
Jinis/i ; and so on indefinitely. To visit the
Exposition is work. The display is overmost
whelming in its variety and extent.
One thing was made quite evident, viz :
that the different nations of the earth supplement each other. One cannot claim all excellence. Differences of climate, of habits,
Sec., make differences of product. The Exposition is fitted to teach impressively the
natural fraternity of nations.
From Paris I passed through Belgium to
Holland, stopping at Brussels and Antwerp.
Antwerp is surrounded with treasures of art,
particularly Flemish
art. From Brussels we
made au excursion to the battle-field of
Waterloo. Belgium is becoming moderately prosperous now under King Leopold.
Antwerp is rapidly growing to Tie a great
commercial city again, as she was in the
middle ages.
The condition of the peasantry in Belgium
is lamentable. The poor ore very poor.
Even the industrious peasants who have
health and hope to gird them for toil, are in
very poor condition. Hard labor with triand crushing,
fling results, —toil,
unrelieved by the joys of an active intellect
Remarkable Hymn.—The 878th hymn
nutriment, the peasant has none. As to re- of our Plymouth Collection is the wine made
ligious wants, the empty pomps of the Roman from a crushed heart. Ajoung woman of
Cutholic faith, without great ideas or great noble connection, and great wealth, and high
sentiments, are all that he has.
standing in English society, one evening
The condition of the poor in Holland, also, dropped into a Methodist church, and was
and a cultivated heart. As to intellectual
is sad. I have often seen women toiling in
the fields. I have even seen them harnessed
to canal-boats and doing a horse's work. Indeed, it is not uncommon. Women act as
sailors on the coasting vessels. Nearly always
a woman is at the helm. Women do most
of the peddling of vegetables, milk, &c, in
the Dutch cities. They push along great
heavily loaded carts, with only the assistance
of a couple of panting dogs.
Holland and Belgium are too small to keep
up separate establishments in Europe. The
expenses of government, the elaborate and
costly fortifications necessary, are more than
they can bear. Then, too, the soil in these
flat countries is not fertile. Much of Holland is sand. Most o( it is but swamp land,
threatened by overflow almost at any moment. One must admire the sturdy Hollander who works so bravely for such slender
results.
From Holland the journey up the Rhine is
Historical memories cluster thickly about the Rhine all the way from
Cologne up to Switzerland. Then the
scenery is attractive. One sees many feudal
castles—most of them in ruins—perching
upon the crags bordering the Rhine. Drachenfels, Stotzenfels, Marksburg, Gutenfels,
Sec., are very picturesque. In the old fortress of Marksburg I saw dungeons cut into
the living rock, into which prisoners used to
be lowered by a windlass. This is one of
the largest and best preserved of the feudal
fortresses on the Rhine. I visited it alone.
The solitariness and gloom were terrible.
Let those who admire the feudal age, and
wish its return, visit some of these old casvery interesting.
tles.
The other day I passed the spot where
Caesar built his celebrated bridge across the
Rhine. The river is very rapid, and it was
a difficult work. Still, 1 doubt whether it
cost Caesar's engineers as much trouble to
construct the bridge as it costs some young
Latin scholars to translate the account of it
in the Commentaries.
Heidelburg is a delightful place. Here is
one of the oldest Universities in Germany.
In the library of the University there is a
large and valuable collection of MS. Among
the rest I noticed MS. of Thucidides and
Plutarch. Here also may be seen several
works of Luther in his own rapid, intense
Sort of handwriting.
The old castle at Heidelburg is a magnificent and mighty ruin. No castle which 1
have yet seen gives such an impression of
might. I hope it will long remain to testify
to remote ages concerning the manners of
feudal limes.
In Heidelburg is the old church to the
doors of which Jerome of Prague affixed his
J- A. D.
celebrated theses.
•'
awakened and converted; and when she
avowed her determination to unite herself
with the people of God, she found that, if she
did, she must part from all her friends. She
parted from them, and united herself with the
people of God ; and that hymn fell out of the
griefand wounds of her heart. If she had
died and only written that hymn, she might
have taken her place among the honored
names of history ; and she will have done
more work by those few sweet verses than
she could have done if she had stood a queen
at the very top of government."—[Extract
from a sermon of Rev. Henry Ward Beecher,
published in the Independent of August 20th,
1867.]
1. .li'mus, I my OHM have taken,
All to li'iive ami follow Tliee ;
Nuked, ]kkii', despised, forsaken,
Thnu, from hence, my all shalt be.
Parish every fund ambition,
All I've sought, or Imped, or known ;
.
Vet how rich is my condition !
(iod and heaven arc still my own.
2. Let the world despise nnd leave me.
They have left my Saviour, too ;
Human hearts uud looks deceive me,
Thnu nil nut, like them, untrue
Ami whilst Thou shall smile upon me,
(M of wisdom, love, and might,
Fix's may hate, and friends may scorn uic ;
Show Thy face, and all is bright.
3. Man may trouble and distress me,
'Twill but drive me to Thy breast ;
Life with trials hard may press me,
Heaven will bring me sweeter rest.
Oh ! 'tis not in grief to harm me,
While Thy love is left to me ;
Oh ! 'twere not in joy to charm me,
Were that joy unmixed with Thee.
4. Soul, then know thy full salvation,
Rise o'er sin, and fear, and care ;
Joy to find in every station
Something still to do or bear.
Think what Spirit dwells within thee ;
Think what Father's smiles arc thine ;
Think that Jesus died to win thee ;
Child of heaven, canst thou repine ?
G. Haste thee on from grace to glory,
Armed by faith, and winged by prayer;
Heaven's eternal day 's before thee,
Cod's own hand shall guide thee there.
*
Soon shall close thy earthly mission,
Soon shall pass thy pilgrim days ;
Hope shall change to glad fruition,
Faith to sight, and prayer to praise.
for Food.—The Paris corres" Blubber
of the Courrier dcs Etats Unis says
pondent
that whale's flesh has come into fashion
again. Besides the whale, the shark and
dolphin come regularly enough to the markets, where a whale's tail of from 300 to 400
kilogrammes—say 700 orBoo pounds—found
buyers, a few days ago, at high prices."
We wonder New Bedford ship-owners, so
noted for their economy, do not ship French
cooks, and thus save so large an outlay for
beef and pork.
A Yankee captain was caught in the
No torch, no appareling, no glory of
jaws of a whale, but was finally rescued
badly wounded. On being asked what he art, ever so made the house beauteous, or so
thought while in that situation, he replied : made the household happy, as the simple
morning and evening, of the blessed
"Uhought he would make about forty bar-
[ing of Glory.
*resence,
T lIE FRIEND, NOVEMBER,
100
Religious Notices.—We would
THE FRJEND.
1867.
NOVEMBER 1,
Rev. Mr. Ellis —Interesting letters have
recently been received from this veteran in
the csuse of Foreign Missions, who now
resides at Hoddesdon, Herts, in England.
" I am," he writes under date of August 28.
1867, " now closely occupied in completing
the history of the London Missionary Society." Probably no man is better fitted to
write the history of that noble Society which
first sent missionaries into the Pacific, and
for seventy years has been vigorously prosecuting the foreign missionary work in various parts of the heathen world.
a
The "Advance."—This is the name of
new, spirited, first-class and eight-paged
weekly newspaper, published under the aus-
pices of the Congregationalists of Chicago.
May success attend the enterprise. We have
carefully read over the basis upon which the
enterprise has been started,but we fear there
is not quite enough "selfishness" incorporated to insure success. Time will decide.
The West can accomplish what other people
deem impossible. We shall be glad to exchange, if a sheet broad enough to spread
over a prairie is willing to receive in return
a small sheet, too narrow to cover even a little islet in Micronesia.
The Boston Congregationalist comes
out in a new form. In character and contents, it is the very best representative of
New England Orthodox divinity and Yankee
It is not afraid of finding fault
with anybody who comes not up to its standard of excellence. Its publishers and editors
are firm believers in Plymouth Rock, and
they have allowed their belief to embody itself in a new vignette, representing the landing of the Pilgrims in 1620. This paper has
recently taken into fellowship the old Boston
Recorder, which was 52 years old, and getting rather staid and losing its former vigor.
We are always glad to receive this paper by
way of exchange.
smartness.
U. S. Mail Steamer Idaho.—It appears
have become a fixed fact that the steamers
will now have a fair trial. The Idaho, Capt.
Connor, arrived on the morning of the 27th
ult., and will leave to-morrow, the 2d inst.
We learn that she will make two more trips,
and be ready to commence the new year on
her regular monthly trips.
to
Mount Erebus.—Capt. W. Thoms published in New York in 1859 a new treatise
on navigation. In this work he states that
Mount Erebus, situated in 77 33* S. lati° is 124,000
tude, and 166 ° 58' E. longitude,
leet high ! Rather of a high mountaintwenty miles and more!
1867.
notify seamen and strangers that weekly prayer-meetings are held at the Bethel Vestry and the
Session Room ot Fort Street Church every
Wednesday evening.
Sabbath afternoon at 4, P. M., a " Union"
young men's prayer-meeting is held at the
Session Room of Fort Street Church.
Every Tuesday evening a class meeting is
held nt the Sailor's Home.
Every Saturday evening a temperance
meeting is held at the Bethel Vestry.
Public services upon the Sabbath, accord-
Letter from London.
London, Piccadilly, Sept. 1, 1867.
Rev. Mr. Damon—Dear Sir:—l wrote
you last, I believe, from Stuttgart. Since
that time, we have spent a month amongst
the Alps, wandering over the most interesting mountain passes nnd glaciers of Switzerland. The Mer dc Glace, from Mont Blanc,
was the largest and most interesting we traversed. It was about a mile in width where
we orossed it, and, looking towards Mont
Blanc, was under view for a distance of threp
or more leagues,—and its vast chasms and
pinnacles of ice were grand beyond any conceptions 1 had formed from descriptions. I
shall have occasion to remember it, for 1
ing to notice in another column.
came about as near as was possible, with esIt is the opinion, of an old shipmaster cape, of slipping into one of its yawning
cruising in the Pacific, that every shipmaster chasms.
Leaving Switzerland, we reached
sailing over this ocean oughi. toßbtain a vol- on the Rhine, via Straslmrg. WeMayence
took a.
ume of the Friend for ten or more years. steamer down the Rhine as far as Cologne,
Such as have not this publication in their pos- and theme via Antwerp and Brussels to
session, we should be glad to furnish at $1 Paris by rail. We reached Paris on the 12th
of August, and chose this month to visit the
per annum, besides the expense for binding, Exhibition,
because we had been told that
$2 50 or $3 for a large volume.
the crowds of visitors would leave Paris—as
Letter Postage.—Every single, or half all Parisians leave the city—in August. But
it happened that Napoleon's fete day, which
ounce letter, should be stamped with 10 cents
occurred on the 15thof August, had attracted
United States stamps, and 5 cents Hawaiian, innumerable hosts from all parts of France,
addi- and many more from the German States. I
if sent to the United Slates.
tional half ounce, 5 cents Hawaiian, and 10 never saw so dense a throng in any city as
cents United States. Newspapers, 2 cents blocked the Boulevards and principal streets
Puns for several days after the lflth. All
United States,and 2cents Hawaiian. Always of
the galleries and public buildings were crowdpre-paid.
ed with visitors to suffocation. It was only
Now is the time for seamen to write in the Palais of the great Exposition that we
to their friends. If they will call upon Mr. could find breathing space. We spent six or
seven days there, and were never incommoded
Dunscombe at the Sailor's Home, they will for
want of space to walk and breathe in, and
be furnished with " pen, ink, paper and en- yet all the world was there. There is
scarcely
velopes " gratis. The Reading Room is a a product or manufacture which the world
good place for writing.
produces (in France, or out of it), the workshop or factory of which was not in operaShipmasters expecting to touch at tion at the Palais, and the production of
Wellington Island, Pleasant Island, Norfolk which could not be seen in v every process or
Island, Marshall Islands, Strong's Island, or stage of its manufacture. The United States
made the smallest show of articles—that is,
Ascension, will confer a favor by reporting
comparatively. A United States locomotive
to the Editor of the Friend.
took the firs', prize, and a larger number of
medals were awarded American machinery,
Pitcairn's Island.—Reports from this isl- compared with the number of models exhiband indicate that the people are greatly in ited, than were awarded to
any other State.
want of clothing. Ships cruising in the Napoleon purchased the best reaping maSouth Pacific can obtain supplies by touch- chine, and a mowing machine received the
first prize. The American school-house from
ing there.
Illinois, was surpassed in architectural taste,
Our thanks to Mrs. Bailey, of Wai- and equaled in convenience of
arrangements,
luku, Mrs. Armstrong, of Honolulu, and the by both a Russian and Swedish school-house.
Rev. Mr. Alexander, for papersand books for Modern paintings from the United Stntes
compared favorably with collections of Engseamen.
lish and French production. There were a
We hope our foreign subscribers among less number of poor paintings in the Amerwhalemen, will improve this season to renew ican collection than were to be found in any
their subscriptions. For $2 50 a year, the of the collections from other States.
You have heard, no doubt, of the Bed,
Friend can be sent to the United States, in- White
and Blue, a full-rigged ship, two tons
cluding postage.
burthen, twenty-six feet long, and six feet one
Many thanks to some unknown per- inch beam, which crossed the Atlantic in
son for sending us full files of the Alta, Bul- thirty-eight days. Two persons constituted
captain, officers and crew. It was on exhiletin and Times, of San Francisco, per Idaho. bition at the Exposition, for which a fee of
one-half
was demanded. The raft
Our readers this month are favored Nonpareil,a franc
which came over, I believe, in
with two European letters, one from London forty-two days, is at t!#
Crystal Palace, 1 am
and the other from the Continent.
told, in London. 1 have not yet seen it.
101
THE FRIEND, NOVEMBER, 1867.
back
1 made several visits to the rooms exhibit- of the faith, once delivered to the Saints, Land —through and aroundofit, and then
next,
to
believe
comthe
12th
October
they
;
hold
to
although
Liverpool
by
ing Hawaiian products. The rooms were which I
marked " Hawaii," which I was glad to see pared with our modern New Englnnd Ortho- embark on the China for Boston.
Very truly yours,
substituted for Sandwich Islands. One room dox churches, they might be called PuritanR. W. Wood.
situated between the United States, Brazil ical.
the
The
new
of
Ritualism
in
heresy
South
American
States'
"
departments,
and
"
P. S.—At Paris I met Mr. Hamlin, from
contained samples of sugar (amongst which English Church is producing much excite- Constantinople, who made many inquiries
I saw some Koloa), pulu, rice, coffee, lava, ment and discussion here. The Church has after his Island friends—yourself, I believe,
straw hats, kapa, arrow-root, ornamental taken the matter in hand in earnest, I should among the number. To Mr. Paris and Mr.
woods, calabashes, cotton, wool, shells, to- judge. A counsel has appointed a commit- Dole, as well as yourself, he desires me to
bacco, segars, photographs, engravings, two tee to investigate the abuse. Their first re- remember him. He was a class-mate of Mr.
R. W. W.
paintings by R. C. Janion, sulphur, Custom port has already appeared in the Times, which Pans.
House statistics, and the Hawaiian Gazette. condemns the new vestments. The chief
In another room, about fifteen by eighteen advocates of the High Church party, I am
Information
Wanted.—We copy the following
feet, 'situated between flic United States, told, are young ladies of high birth, but of from the San Francisco Jllta of Oct. 14th :
Great Britain and Canadian departments, doubtful morals, who set at naught the counmanicl woman, who arrived from Ohio
" A young
there were books, feather cloaks, the Polyne- sels of theirparents ; so that in high fashion- recently,
via the overland route, is detained at the
sian newspaper, kou poi dishes, baskets, ka- able circles, High Church, Ritualism, brandy, calaboose under peculiar circumstance.-. She was insome years since, and was an inmate of the Ohio
hilis, shell ornaments, stone adzes, fish-hooks, segaritas and accompanying vices have come siiie
Insane Asylum, where her husband was employed.
native mats, fish-nets, photographs, engra- to mean about the same thing.
drafted into the U. S. Army, and was killed
The moral sense of the community has inHe was
one of the engagements which look plaoo in the
vings, leis, and over the door was painted
resides at the
Kiunchameha's coat of arms and crown, and been severely shocked by recent disclosures vicinity of Memphis. Her mother
and sent her a ticket for her fare
under which was represented in gilt a gold of the confessional of the Reformed Catholics Sandwich Islands,
from this city to Honolulu, but she is subject to fits,
medal. Whether this was intended for the here known as "Ritualists." But what seems and in one of the attacks, which occur almost daily,
of
Oxedit of arms or something else, I did not more astounding than all, the Bishop
she lost it, ami is now without menus to continue her
learn. Mr. Martin, Secretary in Charge, ford has become alarmed, and has repudiated journey. She has three children, anil her father has
to support them and her, but she has no
promised me a catalogue, but I did not meet all of which he has been the most strenuous agreed
means of rejoining him. Such, at least, is the wodenies
this.)
advocate
he
now
(although
In
as
expected.
I
him again,
man's story, and her manner is sufficiently like that
I do not remember whether 1 wrote you a convocation not long since, he declared it of a sane person to warrant au investigation of the
that your namesakes, the Damons from Con- to be his conviction that they (the Ritualists) facts.
cord (forming a party at first of seven, now should be turned out of the Church, and
Temperance Address.—At the Bethel Vestry,
of five), were traveling in Europe. We were " thanked God that he had none of them in
rethem
his
diocese."
Not
a
of
layman
evening, at 7 o'clock, Mr. lngills, a hoatSaturday
Rome.
We
from
parted
single
at
with them
there, each going in opposite directions. We spectability and standing is to be found, I am Bteerer on board the whalcship Reindeer, is expectmet them again by accident at Strasburg— told, amongst the advocates of the late inno- ed to address the Temperance Legion. From the
specimen of the young man's sjieaking on Saturday
separated, and met again at Brussels, and vation. Only the young fashionable women
alterwards in Paris, and now we find our- and their beaux of not very sober habits, are last, the audience may expect n good address. Wo
selves in the same hotel with them at Flem- supporters of the new doctrines. With such hope there will be a good attendance of seamen.
inings, Half-moon Street, Piccadilly, opposite antecedents, it is not so strange that this new
Buckingham Palace, all withoutpre-arrange- Church party should have sought Hawaii as Meeting for Chinese.-Aheong, the Christina
a field of operations.
ment.
Chinaman from Maui, being in Honolulu, will hol'l,,
In a paper issued this morning, we notice a meeting for his countrymen, at the Bethel Vestry,
After six months on the Continent, where
we have seldom heard our own language, we an order forbidding the further use of banners on Sunday evening, at 7J o'clock. Persons in Honofeel ourselves quite at home now, and enjoy and vases for flowers, and certain vestments lulu, having Chinamen in their employment, are
it exceedingly. Everywhere we have found introduced into the church of some parish kindly requested to inform them in regard to this
our English cousins cordial and friendly. since last Easter.
meeting.
The Bishop of Oxford is distinguished for
We have seen nothing of the reserve and
Seamen in forwarding letters, should
gruffness of the John Bull we have read of his social qualities and conversational powers;
in books. In London we pass for English, but everybody understands him to be a man be sure and pre-pay the postage.
and have very frequently surprised our Eng- who trims his sail to the popular breeze, now
lish acquaintances here by assuring them that blowing quite a gale against Puseyism.
Sensible, by Fanny Fern.—" I don't eat
After wandering six months amongst the
we are Americans.
nor candy, nor ice cream. I don't
pastry,
To-day (Sunday) we have been to the different nationalities of the Continent—much drink tea
—bah ! I walk, not ride. I own
as
there
is
to
in'Tabernacle," and were disappointed in not as we have enjoyed—much
ones, too! I have a waterstout
boots—pretty
hearing Rev. Air. Spurgeon, who is absent. struct, to advise and to praise—to me Engand no diamonds. * *
I go to bed
proof,
There
Europe.
found,
nevertheless,
house,
a
crowded
land
seems
the
best
of
part
We
and
at
six.
dash
out in the
I
get
up
at
ten
and heard a most effective evangelical ser- we seldom witnessed any signs of political or
rain, because it feels good on my face. I
such
inside,
is
oval
and
We
saw
there
no
thing
The
Tabernacle
an
life.
religious
mon.
don't care for clothes ; but I will be well;
has two galleries, one above the other (like as " the people," in the sense in which we and after I am buried I warn you, don't let
the old South Boston), extending entirely understand that term in the United States. any fresh air or sunlight down on my coffin,
around the building. It will hold, I judge, But one cannot be long in England without if you don't want me to get up."
over a thousand (twelve hundred) below, and feeling the pulsations of the great English
one thousand in each gallery—three thou- heart beating against his own, and in unison
New Harpoon.—A trial was made on Satsand in all. Mr. Spurgeon has still crowded with it, upon most of the great questions of
houses ; not half who apply, it is said, can the day affecting the interests of the human urday afternoon at Rotch's wharf, by Mr.
obtain seats. I never saw so attentive an race. Contrasting the institutions of Conti- Robert Smith, of Provincetown, the inventor,
audience. It was composed mostly of the nental Europe with those of England, it is of a new harpoon to be fired from a whaling
middling classes. A good work must be impossible not to desire that the latter may gun. The harpoon fits the small size gun in
remain intact in all their essential points, and common use for bomb lances, and was fired
going on in this part of London.
On the Continent, the Church of England that England may maintain her paramount by Mr. Smith four times at s barrel ten fathand the Scotch have their chapels in almost influence, at least on this side of the Atlantic, oms off, twice striking very near the improvised target, and twice going completely
every city; the former, so far as I could to the end of time.
it. There appeared to be no diffiof
We
week
Engthrough
the
accommodation
the
about
a
in
for
shall
remain
city
judge, solely
lish Episcopalians abroad. Catholicism has longer,and then leave for York and Edinburg; culty in fastening to whales with it. A numnothing to fear from them. The Scotch Pres- and after seeing what there is to be seen of ber of shipmasters who witnessed its operabyterians are more aggressive, but thoroughly English and Scotch lakes and scenery and tion appeared to think favorably of it.—iV. B.
Christian-zealous, hard-working propagators intermediate towns, we shall over to Ire- Standard.
*
THE FRIKM), NOVEMBER,
102
For Uie FriMsl.
1867.
called, all assembled to see how David
He was drawing near to his end :
with the whole ship's company gathered around him, he passed away in peace,
believing in the Lord Jesus Christ as his
only and all-sufficient Saviour. We all
knelt around the dead body, the first officer
offering prayer. Without, it was a dark and
stormy night, the ship laboring heavy in the
sea, the wind howling through the rigging,
and every now and then the sea brraking on
deck—all helped to add to the awful solemnity of the occasion, and a solemn awe seemed to rest upon us all. I believe few that
were there can ever forget that praycr-
A Solemn Prayer-meeting, at Midnight, was.
there,
in Mid-Ocaan.
While sailing on the ocean from port to
port, and traveling on land from place to
place, it has been my privilege to attend
many religious meetings ; but of all, I never
found any of equal solemnity to the one an
account of which I will now relate.
In February, 1860, the good ship Mary
Ogden, Captain Loveland, sailed from Antwerp for New York. Among those on
board was a man who the year before had
been second officer of the ship, but now was
sent home an invalid by the American Consul. He was one who, by Capt. L„ had often been warned of his sinful course ol life,
and entreated to turn and live. All the
counsel was unheeded, and on he went in
rebellion against God; but God can make
the wrath of man to praise llim. On [he
first part of the passage he was indifferent
about his soul's salvation, and thought only
of the sinful enjoyment he would have on
his arrival ih port. But how true are the
words of the poet:
unbelief is sure to err,
" Blind
And scan His work in vain ;
God ia His own interpreter,
And he will make it plain."
How often are man's plans turned by the Di-
vine hand, and it was so in his case. As we
proceeded on our passage he became more
and more restless and uneasy in his mind,
fearing that death might overtake him before
his nrrival in port.
Truly it is said, " the prayers of a righteous man availeth much"—and if two agree
on one thing, and pray in faith for the same,
it shall be granted. Mrs. Loveland, wife of
the master, a truly pious lady, was with us
on the voyage, and, with her nusband, often
in secret called upon the Lord to bless their
labors in the conversion of this man ; and
although God did not immediately answer
their prayers yet they still continued to hold
fast to His promise.
We commenced to experience very rough
weather, and David (for that was his name)
apparently grew weaker from day to day.
Often, with others, I visited him, and endeavored to persuade him to seek the salvation
of his soul. Gradually he became convinced
that he was a great sinner, and soon it could
be said of him, " Behold he prayeth." He
sought, with all his heart, the mercy of God,
and as the answer to prayer did not come
immediately, he began to think he had sinned away his day of grace ; but while on the
borders of despair, he met with the blessed
words of the Lord Jesus, where He declared,
"All things are possible to him that believeth." I do not remember passing by him
from the day of his conviction of sin until he
was 100 feeble to speak, but he would ask
me to pray for him.
On the evening of his death, the Captain,
with several of the crew, held a prayer-meeting in his room. At the close, he was urged
to believe, and to trust wholly in an all-sufficient Savicur, and was left to reflect. His
faith grew stronger and stronger ; —at lIP.
M., he cried out, "I am ready—God has
forgiven me all my sins;" and for an hour,
as he lay on the brink of death, he kept
speaking of the goodness of God in receiving
sinner,.
At midnight, as the watch waa
uieeting.
On the following morning David was buried in liis watery grave, and on the naming
ol the resurrection we believe he will risr M
one whose robes have been washed and made
white in the blood of the Lamb—a sinner
saved by grace.
The blessed meetings we enjoyed in that
ship are ever frc:di in my mind, and during
our passage seven of ihe crew were hopeA. S. T.
fully converted.
A Snake
Story,
with a Moral.
A Terrible Bedfellow. —I looked at my
neighbor with considerable curiosity. His
lace indicated a man of not over thirty years—
a period at which men are still young —but
his hair was as white as fresh-fullen snow.
One seldom sees, even on the heads of the
oldest men, hair of such immaculate whiteness. He sat by my side in a car of the
Great Western Railroad, in Canada, and
was looking out of the window. Suddenly
turning his head, he caught me in the act of
staring at him —a rudeness of which 1 was
ashamed. I was about to say words of apology, when he quietly remarked :
sir. I'm used to it."
" Don't mentionofit,this
observation plensed
The frankness
me, and in a very little while we were conversing on terms of familiar acquaintanceship, and before long he told me the whole
story.
was a soldier in the army of India,"
" and, as is often the case with soldiers, 1 was a little too fond of liquor. One
day I got drunk, and was shut up in the
black hole for it. I slumped down upon the
floor of the dungeon, and 1 was just dropping
otT to sleep, when I felt a cold, slimy shape
crawling across my right hand as it lay
stretchofl out above my head on the floor. 1
knew at once what it was—a snake ! Of
course my first impulse was to draw away
my hand; but knowing that if I did so the
poisonous reptile would probably strike its
fangs into me, 1 lay still, with my heart beating in my breast like a trip hammer. Of
course, my fright sobered me instantly. 1
realized all my peril in its fullest extent. Oh,
how 1 lamented the hour that I had touched
the liquor
In every glass of liquor there is
a serpeut; but it does not come to everybody
in the shape it came to me. With a slow,
undulating motion the reptile dragged its
carcass across my face, inch by inch, and
crept down over my breast and thirust its head
inside my jacket. As I felt the hideous
scraping of the slimy body over my cheeks,
it was only by the most tremendous effort
that I succeeded in restraining myself from
yelling loudly with mingled terror and dis-
"I
said he,
!
gust. At last I felt the tail wriggling down
toward my chin ; but imagine what 1 felt at
my heari, if you can imagine it, as 1 realized
that the dreadful creature had coiled itself
up under my jacket as I lay, and haa seemingly gone to sleep, for it was still as death.
Evidently it had no idea that I was a human
; if it had it would not have acted
in that way. All snakes are cowardly, and
they will not approach a man unless to strike
him in self-defense. Three hours I lay with
that dreadful weight in my bosom, and each
minute was like an hour to me—like a year.
1 seemed to have lived a life-lime in that
brief space.
of my life passed
through my memory in rapid succession, as
they say is the case with a drowning man.
I thought of uvy mother, away in old England ;my happy home by the Avon ; my
Mary, the girl I loved, and never expected to
see them more. For no matter how long J
bore this, I felt that it would end in death at
last. I lay as rigid as a corpse, scarcely
daring even to breathe, and all the while my
breast was growing colder and colder wh#re
the snake was lying against it, with nothing
but a thin cotton shirt between my skin and
its. I knew that if I stirred it would strike,
but 1 could not bear this much longer. Even
if I succeeded in lying still until the guard
came, I expected his opening the door and
coming in would be my death warrant all
the same; for no doubt the reptile would seethat I was it man as soon as the light was let
in at the door. At last I heard footsteps approaching. There was a rattling at the lock.
It was the guard. He opened the door. The
snake—a cobra di capello I now saw—darted
up its huge hooded head, with the hideous
rings around its eyes, as if about to strike.
I shut my eyes and murmured a prayer.
Then it glided away with a swift motion and
disappeared in the darkness. I staggered to
my feet and fell swooning in the arms of the
guard. For weeks after 1 was very sick, and
when I was able to be about I found my hair
was white as you now see it. I have not
touched a drop of liquor since."
creature
Great Voyare.—Ship Nortern Light,
Capt. Clough, arrived home at this port Monday afternoon, -ifter an absence of thirty-two
months in the Pacific and Arctic oceans, having taken during the voyage 1,350 bnrrrls
sperm oil, 850 barrels whale oil, and 13,500
pounds whalebone. The ship also brought
home every man of the crew who left home
in her, a fact ot rare occurrence in the whaling business.— Easttrn paper.
Tax, $17 50 on a Thousand.—" The valuation of Worcester, Mass., this year is $23,-856,300, an increase of about $1,250,000
over that ot last year. The rate of taxation
is $17 50 nn u thousand, which is $1 50
more than it was in 1866, owing to the large
Staje tax."
Tax on Hawaiian Islands, $2.50 per $1000.
Twenty-three different societies are
laboring to give the Gospel to India, eight of
them located in the United States. The following results are given : Population, 182,-760,764; native Christians, 163,816; communicants, 31,249 ; native catechists and
preachers, 1,364; number of native Christians to each missionary, 296 ; children under
Christian instruction, 90,706.
103
THE FRIEND, NOVEMBER, 1867..
ADVERTISEMENTS.
ADVERTISEMENTS.
PLACES OF WORSHIP.
SEAMEN'S BETHEL—Rev. S. C. Damon Chaplain—King
E. P, ADAMS,
Preaching at 11 A. M.
Seats Free. Sabbath School after the inorniiig service.
Anrtlonrer and Commission Mrrrlisnt,
Prayer meeting on Wednesday evenings at 71 o'clock.
fire proof STORK,
N. It Sabbath School or Bible Class lor Seamen at 'J J
o'clock Sabbath morning.
In Robinson's Building, Quern Street,
582-ly
FOKT STREET CHURCH—Corner of Fort snd Beretanla
streets—Key. E. Corwiu Pastor. Preaching on Sundays at
C. S. BARTOW,
11 A. M. and 71 I*. M. Sabbath School at 10 A. M.
STONKOUIRCU—King street, above tho Palace—Rev. 11. 11.
Auctioneer,
Parker Pastor. Services In Hawaiian every Sunday at 'Ji Sales Room on Queen Street, one door train
M.
nii.l
:i
M.
A.
P.
ly
673
Kaahumatiu street.
CATHOLIC CHURCH—Fort street, near Berctania—under
ALLEN Si. CON WAV,
the charge of lit. Rev. Bishop Maigrct. assisted by Key,
Pierre Favens. Services every Sunday at 10 A.M. and i P.M
kiurailiae, Hawaii,
SMITH'S CHURCH—Beretanla street, near Nuuanu street—
Will continue tlie Qeneral Merchandiseand Shipptnghusiness
Rev. Lowell Smith Pastor. Services In Hawaiian every
above
the
where they are prepared lo furnish
port,
st
Sunday at 10 A. M. and 21 P. M.
the justly celebratedKawaihae Potatoes, auil
REFORMED CATHOLIC CHURCH—Corner of Kukui and
such other recruits as are required
by whale ships, at the
Nuuanu streets, under charge of Rt. Rev. Bishop Staley,
assisted by Rev. Messrs. lubutsnn, Uallagher and Elklngshortestnotice and on the most reasonable terms.
lon. English service every Sunday at 11 A. M. and 71
Ptrovtrood on Hand.
i
m.
580 ly
street, near the Sailors' Home.
SAILOR'S HOME!
'
—11'- —Hs-j,—
.
ADVERTISEiytEBXTS.
SAK'L N. CASTI.K.
Dentist,
of
666 1;
Fort and Hotel Street!.
E. HOFFMANN. M.I).
Physician and Surgeon,
Corner Merchant anil Kaahumanu sis., near Postnfflce. 680 ly
I
JOHN S. McGREW, M. D.,
Physician nnd Snrgeon.
The (v'tmla Sugar Com|iany,
The New England Mutual Life Insurance Company,
The New Yurk Phemx Marine Insurance Company.
666 ly
659 ly
C. BREWER St. CO.
Commission and Shipping Merchants,
Honolulu, Oalisi,
Of the Boston
DRUG STORK.
Cornerof Fort and Merchant Streets.
Law,
686 ly
W. N. LADD,
Importerand Healer in Hardware, Cutlery, Mechanics'
Tools, and Agricultural Implements,
ly
680
Fori Slrcrt.
C. L. RICHARDS St. CO.,
11. 1.
AUKNTS
mi.l Honolulu Pneket Line.
l-'or the Purchasennd Sn I. ~r Island Produce.
—REFER TO—
.Inns M. Moon, Esq.,
New York.
Cms. Urkwrk, &j Co.
I
Boston
JIXHSIIUNMKWSLL, Esq. J
H. 11. Swais & Co.
I
Chas. Wolcdtt llrookk Ksq. 5
San Francisco.
648 ly
11. L. Chase's Photographic Gallery!
FORT STREET.
OPEN ANO PREPARED TO
PIIOTOUHAr'IIS of any size the BssT BTYI-R
IStakeNOW
MonT
TskMS.
in
the supply of Whalersand Merchant vessels.
666 ly
JOHN THOS. WATERHOUSE,
Importer snd Dealer in General Merchandise. Honolulu, 11. I
—REFERENCES—
Honolulu
His Ex. R. C. Wyllie,. .Hon. B. F. Snow, Esq
Dimomd Son,
Thos. Spencer, Esq
Hilo
II Dickinson, Ksq... Lahaina McKuerA> Merrill. SanFrancisco
C. W. Brooks*/ Co. ..San F. 0. T. Lawton, Ksq.,
Field A Rice,
New York
Tohin, Bros. A Co.,
Wilcox, Richards A Co , Honolulu.
"
"
881-ly
«J
I. C. HSSEILL,
W. A. ALDSIt'II.
JoUSSS CBACIBS.
ALDRICH, MERRILL & Co.,
Commission Vlerclia nis
—AND—
Auctione
c i* s,
204 and 206 California Street,
53 A TAT FRAKTOXBOO.
ALSO, AGENTS OF THE
San Francisco and Honolulu Packets.
Particular attention given to the sale and purchase ot merchandise, ships' business, supplying whaleships, negotiating
All'freight arriving st SaaFrancisco, by or to the HonoluluLine of Packets, will be forwarded rasa or ooamraioa.
Honolulubought and sold. XI
XT Exchange on—asrsssscas—
Honolulu
Messrs. C. L. RioHAans k Co.,
H HAOaraLD k Co.,
0 Baawaa *> C0.,.
•
Bisiopss Oo
M
Dr. R.W.Wood
Hon. K. H. Allss,
*iLr
""
1) C. WATISMAS, Ksq
644 ly
,
otl:er notable persons.
Also—A full assortment of LARGE
E X A M ES, For Sale at Low Prices.
696 3m
AND SMALL
11. !•• Oil ASK.
Mccracken, merrill & Co.,
FORWARDING AND
COMMISSION MERCHANTS,
Portland, Oregon.
HAVING
BEEN ENGAGED IN OUR PRE*
sent business for upwards of seven yesrs, and being
located in a lire proof brick building, we are prepared to receive
snd dispose of I.iland staples, such as Sugar, Rice,Syrups, Pulu,
Coffee. Ac ,to advantage. Consignments especlslly solicited
for the Oregon market, to which personal attention wilt be paid,
and upon which cash advances will be made when required.
Bar Francisco RarKßSifcss:
Bsdgcr k Lindeuberger, Jas. Patrick At Co.,
W. T. Coleman A Co.,
Fred. Iken,
elevens, Baker It Co.
POSTLMD RrFRKIRCSD:
Ladd a Tllton.
Leonard ft Qreen.
Allen it Lewis.
Hosolvld Rsrr»R»css:
Walker* Allen,
8. Savtdie.
Manager.
DOLE.
LICENSED SHIPPING AGENT.
THK BUSINESS ON HIS OLD
CONTINTES
Plan of settling with Officers snd Seamen immediately on
either
their Shipping
his Office. Having no
connection,
at
or indirect, with any outlining establishment, and slewing no debts to be collected at his office, he hopes to give as
good satisfaction in the future us he has In the past.
direct
XT OlSce on Jas. KobiiiHoii A Co.'s Wharf, near the Y. g.
Bn>
Consulate.
**•
CAtTLE
SEWING MACHINES!
THIS MACHINE HAS ALLTIIE
LATEST
imptovements, and, Inaddition to former premiums, was
awarded the highest prise above all European and American
Sewing Machines at the World's Bihihltlon in PARIS in 1861,
and at the Exhibition in London In 1802.
The evidence ofthe superiority of this MachineIs found In the
record of its sales. In 1801—
The Orover k Baker Company, Boston,
The Florence Company, Massachusetts
The Parker Company, Connecticut,
J. M. Singer *> Co., New York,
Finkle A Lyon,
Chas. W. Howland, Delaware,
M. Greenwood k Co., Cincinnati, 0.,
I
N. 8. C. Perkins, Norwalk, 0.,
Wilson 11. Smith. Connecticut,
sold 18,600, whilst the Wheeler A Wilson Company, of Bridgeport, madeand sold 19,726 during the same period.
11M
XT Ple»se Call nnd Eiasslsr.
A
ALL KINDS OF LIGHT MACHINERY, GUNS, LOOKS, 4/c.
Fort Street, opposite Odd Felltwa' Hall. Bif
SALE AT THIS OFFICE OF THE
Passer.
FOR
Wheeler & Wilson's
MACHINIST.
Bound Volumes of the "Friend"
*
COOKE,
\(.l\is
R. W. ANDREWS,
REPAIRS
family
For a Fow
"
GEORGE WILLIAMS,
iy_
FOR
Mrs.'CRABB.
XT Persons wishing to learn the Terms will apply to hiss
6tf
or the hVlitor of Thk FslßNn."
A«D
tsi
$6
9
AT KOLOA.
REV. DANIEL
Kauai, has accommodations In his
IUIE
Boarding Scholar..
It AsoNABLK
Ship Chandlers ami Commission Merchants, and ON TDK
COPYING AND ENLARGING done In the
Healers in General Merchandise,
best manner.
Ke»p constantly on hand a fullassortment of merchandise,for
Fur Dale Cards of the Hawaiian Kings, Queens, Chiefs snd
*
Rs-
BOARDING SCHOOL AT KOLOA.
AQENTB
N. B.—Medicine Chests carefullyreplenished st the
A. F. JIDD.
Attorney and Counsellor at
.
Honolulu, April 1,1866.
AGENTS
For the Maker, YVulluk n -Y. Ilium I'ln ■■ In I ions
C. 11. WBTMORG, M. D.
PHYSICIAN k. SURGEON,
HILO, HAWAII, S. I.
HILO
M. 1. P. I.'AKTKH.
SHERMAN PECS.
Office—Over Dr. E. Hoffmann's Drugstore, cornerof Kaahu
manu and Merchant St»., opposite tin; 'Post Office.
Kksiokmos—Chnplain St., tirtwern JViiunnw and Fort IV*.
Orrics HoL'iis—From 8 to 111 A. M., and h-um 'A to 6 I*. M.
6-tf
.
Pis
CASTLE Si. COOKE,
Importers and General Merchant-.
In Fireproof Store, King street, op|>osite the Seaineu's Chapel. Ofiicors' table, with lodging, per week,.
Seiiinens' do. do.
do.
do.
Also, Agorita for
Dr. Jaynes Celebrated family Medicines,
Premise*..
Shower
Baths
on
the
Wheelers/ Wilson's Sewing Machines,
I>li. J. MOTT SMITH,
Olllce corner
iJ
AMOS H. COOKS'.
J. K. ATITKitTON.
m j.- " ißfj
" "
THE FRIEND:
PUBLISHED AND
EDITED BY
SAMUEL C. DAMON.
MONTHLY JOURNAL, DEVOTED TO TEMPERANCE, SEAMEN, MARINE AND
OENERAL INTELLIGENCE,
TERMS:
On* copy, per annum,
Two copies,
•*
Fire copies,
,
,
...
f2.00
8.00
6,00
111 X r' XI X Ml, NOVEMBER, 18(1.
104
MARINE JOURNAL.
From the Pavr. Commercial Advertiser,
Reports from Ochotsk and Arctic.
Report of Bark B. Cummings, of New Bedford—We
eailed from Honolulu April 3d, 1807, for Ochotsk ; entered the
Ochotsk May 3d, had moderate winds the whole passage.
Haw firat ice May oth, In lat 61° 20' N, longlu2 e 20'
Cruised first in N E Gulf", with good weather up lo July BM,
after thatdate strong H W winda and fogs. Took flrat whale
June 6th, and last one In the Culf Aug 6th. Haw moat whales
in July, but very wild and hard to catch. Left the Gulf Aug
lKth, and arrived at the Baya Sept lat, saw but few whales in
the Bays. Took one in Mercugr Bay Hept Bth, Had good
weather through September, with exception ofone strong N E
gale on the28th- Hept 29th. left Felikstoff for the Sandwich
Islands, came through 50th Paaaage, Oct 6th. Croaaed the
Meridian Oct 14th in lat 43° Have had calmsand light variable winda tho entire paasagc. Took the trades In lat 27 °
Oct 28th and arrived In port Oct 30th, with 760 bbla oiland
10,000 lba bone. On the 2d Hept, Ben Green, a seaman, a native of the Sandwich Islands, died of consumption, and waa
hurried on Felikstoff Island, in the Ochotsk Sea. Spoke the
following vessels at the Baya ■.
•ptt. 20—Bohr Caroline E Footo, Hazard,
.TOO hi
■
20—rthip Enropa, Manor
ooo
29—Hhip Oregon, Mainmet
110 8. 800
19 Bart Win Botch, IjuTrav,
750
.'
aw Bart Java, Enos,
700
3tK)
aw Bart Endeavour, Wilson
...
lfOf.oi.tn.iJ, Oct. 80th, 1867.
Editor l'ittKK; Cfi-ti'L Aiikbtiskk Aif .-—Agreeable to
your requeat, I hand you the following report of bark Sea
Breeze. We left the Handwich lalanda April 9th-, had a pleasARRIVALS.
ant paaaage to the OchoUk, paaaing through the 48th paaaage,
Oct I—V. 8. H. Lackawanna, Reynolds, from Island* to the morning of April oOlh. Haw the first ice evening of May 2d,
Wot ward.
to the
l-.Eng.achr Kate, Gardiner, 28daya from Alben.l, V.I. Lat. 55° 40 N., Long. 152° 38 East. Worked through
3—Eos. ahlp Douglaaa, Morrison, 17 days from Han northward into the western arm of N. E. gulf. Came to anFrancisco, and sailed fame day for Hongkong.
chor in Ell harbor 25th May, with clear water in,the harbor.
ft—Eng achr. Gold Hi ream, Martin, 21 daya fin Victoria.
on from H. W. .anting six daya, driving
I—Haw. brig Kohola, Taylor, from the Arctic with Hani" day gale came
the body of ice back and filling the bay full and came very near
400 hnls wh oil and 4,000 lbs bone.
ashore
with
two anchors and 180 fathoms of chain
A—Am wh bk Wm. Giffbrd, Fisher, fromKodiack, with driving ua
ahead. But the ice getting fast aground astern and around the
230 bbls wh otl and 2,600 lba bone.
ahlp
saved
At
thu
same time four boats were away and
ua.
0—Eng achr J. K. Thorndike, Meldran, 28 days from
could not Ret on t>oard. one being gone fourteen daya, and two
Victoria.
right
ship
of
'he
on the ice for three daya. Cruised
7—Am wh ah Almira, Oaborn, from the Antic, with 70 others in
in .V E. gulf until Auguat 20*, after that In southern pari of the
bbla riii 1,030 bbla wh and 13,000 lbs bone.
whale
May Uth, Lat. OH° :tO, and lost one
first
sea. TOO* OV
o—Fr ri B Venus, Roy, 22 guna, from I'uili.
gulf, making twenty howhead* and one peaky
ll—Achr Kitty Cartwright, Tiernay, 20 days from Aug. 7 in N. E.making
told
1500 bbls. of oil and 22,000 lba.
all
sarpint Bah,"
Fanning* Island.
right whales; struck one, lost him by
11—Schr flan Diego, Teugalmm, 30 days from How- Ixine. Haw a very tew out
night of Sept. 80.
fiftiethpassage:
taking the line. Came
of
butd'a Island.
Have had food w.-ullier all the jaissuge down. Hmught four
11—Br achr Henry Wooton. Reveley, 19 days front Vict>tr/ln,
wrecked
bark
of New Bedford,
Yours, truly,
men as ptHMMHi from
toria, Y. I.
( n mii rs Hai.sky,
Wlm was ..ad on the west part of ■qflaH (,rumpus
13—Amhark Comet, Payley, 19 day* fin San Francisco. Nye, Muster.
in
thick
and
from
log
gale
Master bark 11. Cummingi.
night
August
11111, a
the
of
14—Hr bark (Jarsiang, Griflitlis, 1.14 day* fin UnrptoL Island on
saving
nothing.
Two
and
men
btMSttM
total
W.,
loss,
■
lv—Am wh bark Oliver Crocker, Hayn-, from Arctic, H.
iron killed; alh.i second muU' and OOOpJtr badly hurt, when
with 600 bbla oiland 12000 bone.
Hainhnw. The
The Alert.-H.B.M.'s steam sloop of war Alert, 17 guns,
IS—Eng bk Celeatia, Knapp, 17 days from Noyo Hirer sin- fell over. ('apt. Nyi is OB board Of the
nan).
m ol' tbt■ killed are I-alward Burns ami Harry, a Herman. arrived here on the2flth Sept., 21 daya from Victoria. Bbc ia
20—Am wh bark flva Breexe, Hamilton, from Oebotsk,
most
entire season. I have
good
weather
of
the
very
Have
had
witli 1000 tibia oil, 19,000 lba bwne.
hound for Valparaiso and bom 1?. The following la a list of be*
20—Tah wh ahlp Norman, Sneider, from Kodiack, with aeen the ships auueved under their proper dales i
ofiicers:
li.'.O libit
300 libla oil, 2,H00 I.m hone.
,ug. 12—Hen Cuininings, liaises,
Commander—Hugh !!. Knocker.
620 «
21—Am wh ahlp Reindeer, Kaynor, from Arrtir, with
12—Midas, Drake
Lieutenant*—R. F.vans, K. M. I>. Browne.
600 "
22—Sunbeam, Barrett
1,700 bbla oil, 28,000 lba bone.
l.efray,
J\arigathifj
700
Lieutenant —\. K. Yeitch.
Rotih,
Capl
ship
Berry,
daya
from
21—Am
21
M
111—Win.
Washington,
"
Paymaster—W. O. N. Horn. v.
Lucas.
18—lurons, Mellen
MO "
OoO
Engineer
—ller>>ert Woollcy.
Baker,
BuHky.
days
"
ah
30
Yokohama.
Minnehaha,
cpt.
11—Rainbow,
21—Am
fin
Chief
AmiiMtant Surgeon—John Shields.
2HU "
21—Haw bark A J lV»i>e, (Jeerkcn, 145 daya front i\ew
12—Hercules, (lowland,
Navy—l.
Liit.
Surtttxh
A Kkelof.
Bedford.
Rainbow reports Cherokee, Kept. 10, clean; Roman, 800 bhh
Sub.lAeutenanttt V. A. [Jarston, ft. A. Brnrk.
22—Haw bark Mauna Loa, Keinking, 10 daya from IVJah. A. Hamilton.
Yours, Ate*,
I). Huat.
Navigating
Sub-Lieutenant—W.
tropaulovriki.
A*nistant Paymanter —A. Tiekney,
22—Am bark J W Heaver, Ileaney, 21 daya from KainA**i*t<mt fnrjnfntttfir Tfcntmg D.'flray, K. McCsakill.
off Holulu Oct. 20th, 1867.
achatka.
(iunner— Win. Simmons.
22—Am wh hark Three Ilrothera, Taber, front Arctir,
11. ,M. Whitney, Ksg., Dear Hr .-—Thinking that you
It oat*wain —Geo. Davenport.
with 1,600 bbla oil, 18,000 lba bone.
short account of our cruise I atrial you the followCarpenter— >mn. Trenidr.
22—Am wh bk Aeon lum Jeffrey, from Arctic, with would like a
ing rcjsirt i
Mittihiiiman —K. I>. Maude.
050 bbla oil, 10,000 lbs bone.
Qttrlu—M. \). Lewis, G. T. Carter.
22—Am ship Gay Head, Kelley, from Arrtir, with 1,100
We left Honolulu on the 30th r.f March for theArctic Ocean-,
bbla oil, 18,000 Urn bone.
up, and *,iw the ice on 23d of
23—Am sh Franklin, Burnley, 10 daya front Han Fran- had a fine and pleasant passage
3
RaExeC
pnsdir hapel.
April in hat. 01° 02' N., Long. ISO 12' W., and at the same
chico.
25—Am wh bark Cicero, Paun, from the Arctic Omm, time saw and got our first whale; took At«; head in April; found
I'aintine Chapel, Inside,
550 bbla wh oil and 7.501) lbs I -.
very little ice and fine weather until iibout the 10th of August,
Mwoirn mil,
26—Brig Kamebamena V, Htone, frenn Maker's Inland.
when it set In blowing and continued until the 12th of Hept.
1'aiiitirijr Obapeli outftlde,
tap to the 4th of Oeto20—Am wh ah Tamerlane, Winslow, fnmi Arrtir, with Paring Ike latter |»ari of Hepleiiihcr andon
Incidental Expenses, from January to November,
the
of
Left
the
Arctic
sth
October
Iht, bail fine wr:ith.T.
1000 bbls oil,
lb* bone.
Wife, oil and 2K,1i00 Mm. bone. We
26—Brit H corvette Alert, 17 guna. Knocker, 19 daya from with 21 whales, inakinj; 1700scare
$297
most of the season. Took
found the whales *hy and
Victoria.
Lecetved frf>m Foreign RnidVntg in Bnnolulu,
$90
September.
whale
2tiih
of
Han
last
mi
days
Franriarn.
our
Idaho,
Connor,
27—Am atr
fmm
DM
from Cnpti.in Tenjrstrom,
II
II
tliev
had
experienced
iuforilieil
that
but
**
BM
30—Am wh bk Nib-, Long, from Arctic, with 170 bbla
The natives
6
** from Citplviiii Stone,
one (rale <d wind fnuit the North tin* part winter, which aeUrn hone.
oil, and
—$108
Soulli
90—Am wh bk £en| Citmminga, Ilalaey, from Antic, cuuntafof titan being »o little ice in the Htraits, aa the
(TT We hope shipmnsters, officers, and seamen, visiting Hon
with 750 bbls oil, and
winds kept it buck to the North. We have li;i.l | tine run
lb* bone.
down, daring ptMad st. Lawreooa labad oa tmt '»th ofOctober, o!ulu, will assist to discharge this debt upon the Bethel.
30—Am bk Bhering, Lane, 38 daya from A moor River.
MliHilllg
from
the
Inland-.,
'.Mb.
and
heard
the
Fox
Mini
:
PORT OF HONOLULU, S. I.
.
"
,
—
on
i
.
.
. .
....
OKI'ART, KKS.
Oct
1—II- H. 8. Tuacarora, Stanly, for Ban Francisco.
s—Haw bk Berk Bern ice, Cathcart, for Hun Francisco.
s—Am wh bk Preaident, Kelley, forcrufse to westward.
12—Br achr Kate, Gardiner, for Victoria, Y. I.
16—Ant wh ahlp Niger, Cleveland, to cruise.
23—Am bark Comet, Day In, for Him Franciaco.
23—Am ahlp Franklin, Bursh-v, for Hong Kong.
19—Haw brig China Packet, Reynolds, for Hong Kong.
36— Am ah Washington, for Baker's Inland.
26—Haw bk R C Wylle, lor Bremen.
PASSENGERS.
Foa a.* Fa.NCisco—rer Brrnlrc, Oct. sth—P. T. Daring,
Mr. Bowman, wife and child—4.
Fiom Ban Fbahcisco—per Comet, Oct. 14.—E. Reynolds,
W. Kindell, T. D. Drew, W. Hyman, llenryThompson, C. M.
Darts, Cspt. M. W. Sanborn, 1. Richardson, wifr, 3 children
and servant, D. N. Flitner, J. P. Hushes, 1.. Keegnn, Mrs. J.
11. Black snd wo, G. Townsend, wife and 2 children. Miss. '■
Dayley, F. McFarlane, Mr. I.oari. J. W. Evens, J. Shclmadorc,
Y. Keegan, Mr. Phillips and 8 natives from huk Florence, R.
JLLoyd, J. Cromwell.
Farm I.ivkspool—per Qaratana, Oct. 14.—1 native.
*aon Yosohama—Per Minnehaha, Oct 21—J W Humans,
} Japanese—2.
Faoa PiTaopaui-sKi—Per Msuna Loa, October 2S—J W
Faosl Kamschatka—Per J W Beaver, Oct tt—i II Coles
Foa ■*. Fsascisco—Per Comet, Oct. 22—G Melchets, W
II Maser, «Vm Welch, Mrs Loudon and 2 children, Master
£haa Davis—7.
Faosi Baa FaiNcisco—Per Idaho Oct. 27—Capt D Hemp-
stead, Capt W H Allen, Cant Jno H I'ase, Dr W II Richsrds,
V<* R A Hawkiss, W R Frinck, E R (irinliaum, D Sefelken,
U L Emerson, wifeand two children, Mies I. C Emerson, Miss
Maggie Drum, Miss Ida Hloe.ii,Mrs Bartlett and three children,
Mrs Axgyms, asst IB nwn in the steerafe.
Fmo* Astooa ftivta—per Hhertns, Oct 30—II O O Chtse,
Usui TrtveWTsky, Russian Navy; Steerafe—Chas 11 Olllhsker, John Johnson,Ckina boy Harry, China hoy Ham.
vessels
|
cpt. 10—Minerva. IVnuilll.in
10—Massachusetts, WiU'ox,
28—Nautilus, llliven
28—Navy, Davis
*
■s.
14 Whalei
V
lo
(840 hills.) 10
•
I
10—Trident, Base
12
.ug. 28—.liri'li I'erry, Brass]
u
20—J. II. Tli"iiip*"ii, Brown
o
cpt. 20—Milo, llawes,
(1 whale and il devil Bsh.)
No Hate, Janus
PsSfpS,
4
James
Allen,
20—
8
20—Mcrlui, Thomas,...
4
Ossjgi
Mnssissl
Knuwlcs
M
,ug. 25—Corinthian, Lewis,
J
Tinker
West,
cpt. 28—John l».
.10—Alpha, Lasrton,
26—Progress,Dowden,
*»
26—Ohio, Lawrence
10
20—Roscoe, Macoiaher,
20—Heine, Hinilh,
j(
22— Florida, Forrtham,
Jj>
28—Florida 2d, Williams
24-JohnHowland, Wheldon
8
20—Robert Towns, Barker,
■
28—Julian, I.ubbera
»
,ug. 12—Kagk', Loveland,
10
rp4. 28—llae llawalf Ileppingsloue
0
1—Active, Rohiuaol
20—Harrison, Cooty,
Donations.
'rom Captain Cleavelaml,for
gratuitous
distribution ol the
"Friend."
$10
prom U. 8. 8. " Tusctrora," (or support of Sailor's Home, oi
DIED.
o
Hamkk—On Baud the 11. H. steamer Lorkawnnna, lh\. 7th,
W. G. Hanse, gunmr's mat*. He waa buried in the U.S.
Navy Lot in Nuuanu Cemetery.
a
MKi.cimia--nn Bremen, in August last, William, only son
.i
of Gustav CJfclchers, of infiainmation of the brain, m%mi fl
s
years and 6 B^nffta.
Vol* Hoi.t—At sea, June 10th,on board the Hawaiian bark
/? W. Woody Hermann yon Holi, Hanoverian Consul at Hono.i
lulu, aged ;;7 years.
Brinkminn—At the residence of J. Miller, Esq., Makawao
September 30th, Mr. Chartea Rrlnkmann, aged 24 years. A
German by birth, hut a naturalisedAmerican and Unionsoldier
during three years of thelate war of therebellion.
a
He arrived at the Islands two month! since, hoping to find
relief from bronchial affection In an equable temperature, which
■
proved delusive. He made a favoiable Impression on all whit
■
became acquainted with him, and grew In the affectionate esteem of thoeewho saw hlui most frequently- lie expressed hia
sole trust to be in Christ, and we cannot but hope that for him,
»
28—I.ydla, lluthuway,
28—George, Davis,
'to die la gain.'* He had a atrnnn desire to lire still longer,
that be might comfort and aid his widowed mother,brother and
20—Illinois, Davis,
0
sister, who reside in or near New York city ; yet he did not ex1—Kagle, McKensie,
hibit undue solicitude, hut submitted all to the decision of In10—lllhrnila,Ludlow,.. .4 right and i sperm
3
finite Wisdom. It will afford satisfaction to there bereaved
6—James Maury, Cunningham,
1*
16—Eugenia, Barnes,
relatives to learn that he received much kind attention from Mr.
October 6th—Baw ship CAomsi'on, Worth, and one other Killer and daughter, also a Christian burial at the place of hia
ship, name unknown, bound South, oft* the west end of Bt. decease.—Commokicatid.
New York city papers pleasecopy.
Lawrence Island. We have now a One breeze and .spec' <° o*
I remain yours,
Cosrot—Drowned, Aug. 1866, north of the Asore Islands, In
in port in the morning.
(laoaoa W. Ravnor, Master of ship Reindeer.
the Atlantic Ocean, James Conroy, son of Patrick Conroy, of
Baltimore, comer of West and Leadediall streets, Martin's distillery. He waa a seaman on board the ¥ Gay head."
MARRIED.
Lapham—At aea, Sept. 20th, Alruador Lapham, a
native ef
Yonkern, New York. He waa seaman on board bark "Acoaa
Oct. 17lh, at the resiVina—Valshtihu— ln Wslkapo,
Jeffrey.
His
Capt.
(at
remains
his
request) were
Barns/
dence of the bride's father, by the Rev. Thomas G. Thurston, hrought
to Honolulu, and interred lo Nuuanu Valkv Cemetery.
lisnM R. Vids M Kate 1.. Valentin*, both of Maui.
»
'
J
*
"•