Text
1 THE FRIEND.
HONOLULU, H. 1., MARCH. ISSti.
Volumk 44.
\J
-'--*■
Corner Fort and Hotel Sts.
Olllcc N0..1 liuiliuiiinuti St., Honolulu,
Ajrent for tho
Assets, Jan. 1,1S8">, $-.f1.ir.1,'.«:, M,
imperial Fire Insurance Coiupiny, of London.
up rial
Capital. Sl-j.StlO.tKlu.iJO.
MEN'S UNO BOY'S CLOTHING !
Are the Lowest in this City,
wai ii .■'
the ensuing
.sited our store kno-v; but during
~ ock we
art going
'" " Kuc.ck the
bottom out," and Sell
Millinery, Fancy & Staple Dry Goods,
Ld\, of London.
Now York Board of Underwriters.
II jnl.miy 1]
A
W. PEIECE & CU,
SHIP
CHANDLERS
and
Commission
Merchants,
(huts
[ljanwiyl]
At MOM which two weeks bm we r-liould
have thought imnoe-aiblel
"Necessity Knows No Law!"
We must have room for oar
iitii Bombs.
ATTORNEY
At any cost, and if the getting of it lnv Ivos the selllnc of our entire Clothing stock at half cost
from the manufacturer, why, we are
sorry for it, but it can't
be helped!
During the coming week we shall offer
Great Bargains in all Departments
])OOKS !
CHAS. J. FTSIIEL,
ljautiti
AT LAW & NOTARY
St.. next
O
B. DOLE,
lo
Trust
l'oslofflcc.. janB6yl
* LAWYER, a NOTARY PUBLIC,
l~> Ka.ili
Vf
aim M
janB6yl
Honolulu, 11. I.
THOMPSON,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
Ami Solicitor In Chancery oihVK Campbell 1 Block.
second Story, Uoom- S aud !», I'.nlraiice Merchant St.
*
lj lliSliyl
\ITHITING.4
AUSTIN,
T A. MAGOON,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
.lul.l, 11. I.
lJanHßyl,
K. MILLER,
General Business Agent,
Mr. F. H. Revell. Publisher and BookBcller of Chicago, U. S. A., dtsires to call
Office i'Z Meichi.nl Street, with J. A. Mugooil.
the attention of the readers of Tub Kkiinu
lo the exceptional advantnp;es at Ih'k comAgt. for Klinkner's lied Rubber Stamps.
mand for supplying books in all depart[Ij.mBfiyij
merits of literature promptly and at the
COLLEGE,
most favorable rates.
Honolulu. Hawaiian islands.
UEV. W. 0. HBUgTTT
President
Mr. Revell desires especially to call atThli 111 -lifitioii in equipped as never before for its
work. Btsbop Hull 01 Scicnoc i.- completed and turtention to his own publications of K'eligious iiifhed.
and u thoroughly qt.iiiiflud Profesuor ln.-iullcd
works comprising Devotional Books, Hooks over this t epaitint'llt.
In; Colla*** Library Man b*en moved into plcneant
i
for Bible study, etc., etc., and including qnaltera. catalogued und enriched by the addition of
the works of Mr. D. L. Moody, Mij. I). \V. nearly aavea bandrad earafall; lelactod whHMs, Tu*
Acaduinlc KmklMi CoirM of It* years is realizing all
Whittle, and other eminent Evangelists.
thai Wii* aiillcip .Kit lor it.
htivu rcccntlydonc away with the utrlctI hr EYatJieoi
A complete catalogue will be sent post free to any lyClaaaical
UoOT***i p>abtHHuttiig therefor a Preparaaildre-s on applll lit ion.
Catalogue of standard books comnrisine; tin' best
staudaid authors may also b<- hid gratis. Also
full reduced pries list at Bibles Including the
best '* Teuetiers- Kdilionß."
The regular mail affords such a prompt,
safe and cheap means of transportation
that it can be heartily commended. Hemittnnce can be made by postal order or
"•>y U. S. Hank Hills to be had at the bankers.
Refers by permission to Rev. J. A. Cruzan. and
Kcv. E C. Ofljel, Editors of i've Priisd
It will cost but a postal card to send for
our Catalogues. Correspondence invited.
Call i arly and buy yourself rich.
.
nl
Money careful!} invested.
BOOKS ! n
Teachers Institute-*, ale.
To Arrive by First Steamer,
PUBLIC, M.-rili
Office -M Merchant St., II
Any book fromany publisher sent postpaid on re
ceipt of prlee. Special term*given to Libraries,
NEW SPRING STOCK
janßfiyl
AITM, R. CASTLE,
'DENTAL
Davis' Pain
, Killer,
MEN'S & BOY'S CLOTHING
Corner Fort and Hotel St.
Honolulu. 11. I.
ATTOKXEYrt AT LAW,
■Ja)MM Street, Honolulu,
janB6yl
No. V Kmiliunianii t-tn-el. Honolulu, II I.
Dealer* in Wbaliac Uearof all kinds, Wha'abnat*, Boat
stork, Anchor*, Chains, Artesian Well Hup,-. Wire
WHITNEY, M D., D. D. S.
T
M
Hope, 11 *■ ini> and Manila Cordage Deck. Naval Htoree,
I'alnis r.nil oil-. Bra*i and <1 ilvaiiizcl Marian HardBOOMS ON FORT ST.,
ware. Iteiluiaker*'(foods Boatbutld ir»' Hardware, Etc.
onice in Brewer* Block, corner Hotel and Fort Sts,,
AaTenia for
febStlyl
Kniiii.u ■■■, iloi.i ,street.
Brand'.t iiud Pl«roe i
UNDERWEAR,
A AS.IFORD,
ATTORNEYS AT LAW,
Capital, JEI.-4G8.01K).
Prices for
Commercial Union .-Vsauranoe 0o„
As thee
Four hue ATofUMn U /'/,/. uitnttf Cards irntrttd in Chit
columnfor $:l UO per year.
ASHFOUD
Equitable Life Assuntios SnoiHty of the U. States
A STORY WORTH READING !
Our
PROFESSIONA L CARDS.
t LEXANDEB J. CARTWRKJIIT
rtHAS. J. FISIIEL,
Number 3.
Fleming H. Revell,
Literature
and
Bible
tory ColletfO OooTMl of five yearn, w. ich given not only
a thorough preparation in Latin, Un-ek and Muthem:ti i<>. but inci'.'dea uL-o all I he national i-cieiict'n taught
in ike UolleCe, together with a yearV aludy of Bullish
Lailgaage .mil Literature. They believe tin* will provs
mi aicoedlugly deelrable end attractive course tor (he
yoonft people of theae Maud* who pian for f nthwr
ftudy übroad. In addition to taeee cour»en. the beet of
id provided in Vocal and lu.-ti umental
innirueiloii
M n.-ic aiid in Mechanical und I'ltehiind Draw.tig. 'I he
lioarAintf DepartoMHit let f*i eaoeileai condition.
Pounded an a Chrtetloo luatitulion, li la the purpose
oi lv Treat*** to make It* moral atinoaphtre and life
ac pare and tuaithi vi ac in itt> physical.
Punahou Preparatory School,
MISS K. Y. HALL, Principal.
Is rioine; excellent work in preparing its pupils for
Oahu College Those over ten years of ase acslrlni? to
enter this school, may i>e received as boarders to the
College.
n,l Uataligucs of both schools wltli full information, furnished by addressing the President. The
Warehouse,
terras f«n the year Domn as follows: —January 11.April
148 aud 160 Madison St., Chicago, U. 8. A.
11|**>T
19, and September 13, ISM.
Evangelical
'
Volume 44, No. 3.
THE FRIEND.
2
8. H, CASTLE.
J
pASTLE
& COOKE,
«• ATIIKKTON.
SHIPPING &
COMMISSION- MERCHANTS,
Importer
Agente for
The Kohala Sugar Co.,
The Haiku Sugar Co.,
Tin? I'uia Plantation,
The I'apaikmi Sugar Co.,
The Waiaiuu Plantation. It. lialntead.
The A 11. Mni:!i & Co. Plantation,
The New England Mutual Llf* In.-uraiice Co.,
The Union Marine |*a*fa*M*C*w,
The Union Fire luMuranee Co..
The
Fire In auranee Co.,
English and American
WHOLESALE AND KETAIL DEALKKS IN
I)HUGS, CHEMICALS,
and
EO.
•
MERCHANDISE
lias now a
Valuable Assortment of Goods
Ex late urrivals.
TOILET ARTICLES.
At the No.
Wilcox A Ciilib*' tSewiiiK MachineCo.,
KeralngLnu Sewing Machine Comp'y.
HALL & SON,
of
IMPORTERS,
The Oeorge K. Ulakc Manufacturing Co.,
D. M. V«*ftC*J** CtntriliiL'uln,
Jayne & Son.- Medicine*,
ljanH6yl
r T. WATERHOUSE,
I OLLISTER & CO.,
Manufacturers of
Store
10
Can be seen a
Ginger Me and Aerated Waters Great Variety of Dry Goods,
(Limited,)
IMPOKTEKS AND DEALERS IN
And at Queen Street,
II A RD WA R E
And
109 FORT STREET,
GENERAL MERCHANDISE,
CROCKERY & HARDWARE
Cor. Fort and Klag sts. Honolulu, 11. I.
and
offickbs:
WM. \V. HALL, President sod Manager.
L. C. ArILBM, Secritiiry und Treasurer. ljanBoly
W. K. ALLEN, Auditor.
ljanStiyi]
TOM MAT aid 1.0.WHITE, Directors.
II E. MoINTYRE
BREWER & COMPANY,
-*--*-*
(Limited)
General Mercantile and
COMMISSION AGT'S.,
tjucen Street, Honolulu, 11. I.
P C Jones, Jr
Joseph o Carter
W X Allen
List of Officers :
I'iesident and Manager
Treasurer and Secretary
~r
Directors :
Hon v'lius X llishop.
St
Allen.
II Water lioubc
ljunSliyl
PACIFIC
HARDWARE CO.,
Snccessors lo
B. F. Dillingham & Co., and Samuel
Nott,
IMPORTERS,
Iniporlers and Doalert* in
Groceries, Provisions and Feed.
East corner of Fort and attaaj Streets.
New Goods Received by Every
Packet from the Eastern
States and Europe.
Fresh California Produce
Hy Every Steamer.
IJanWily
pHARLES
HUSTAGE,
House Furnishing Goods,
Silver Plated Ware,
Cutlery, Chandeliers,
LAMPS,
LANTERNS,
Paints, Paint Oil, Turpentine,
Varnishes,
Kerosene Oil of the Best Quality.
IjanB6yl
ljaniloyl
HOTEL ST. MEAT , MARKET,
No, 58 llolel St
O. JT. WALLEH,
No. lIS Kinc Street. (Way's Block),
Honolulu.
JanSr.yl
[TENBY MAY &
CO~
:
Pkoprietor.
Choicest Meats from Finest Herds
At l.otrei.l Pftett.
ljanStim6
WM. McCANDLESS,
No.
(i
iji.ien si., Kioh
D*j*l*ff in
Market.
Choice Beef, Veal, Mutton, Fish, &c.
Kamily aid thlpplttg onlein carefully allemhil to.
Ll** slock fi.niir-hec] to ye***)*. at phoft Dottcr. »nd
V*g*t*M*i tif alt kind> Mipjilicd
a
GROCERIES AND PROVISIONS, -» * '
Fort .Street, Honolulu,
Hardware, Agricultural Implements,
« BRO,
PRINCIPAL STORE AND WAREHOUSES.
to order.
ljanHfiyl
lTsmith,
Importer and Dealer in
LAVA SPECIMENS, PLATED' WARE,
UorubUiattoi 3p#ctac)«j. Olaaawar*. Sewing
Klftff*i
MactalA**, PtciOre rranHe*, Va*»e», Bracket*.
janWiyl
Termi
Ktc, Etc.. Etc.
mt
eoit St reel.
strictly t'aak.
-
p
KJ*
Honolulu. 11. I.
TEA DEALERS,
I" OUTS ADLER,
A-i
Dealer in
Coffee Roaster* und
Provision
Merchants,
New Boeali received l>y every vessel from the Halted
Stale* Hud Europe. California I'roducc received by
i'vitv sii-anier.
ljanl-6yl
98 KORT STREET, HONOLULU.
MELLER
& HALBE,
Manufacturers of Fine
CANDIES & PASTEY
lj»nB6yl
Lincoln Block.Honolulu.
BOOTS AND SHOES
ljanSßyl
No. 13 Nuuanu Street.
WOOULAWN
DAIRY & STOCK
COMPANY.
MILK. CREAM. BUTTER
And Live
Ij.nBt.yl
Stock.
3
THE FRIEND.
Volume 44.
HONOLULU, H. L, MARCH, 1886.
1 lie delusion of "praying to death" exercised a
powerful influence over their minds. Chiefs H.id
Is published the first daw of e<trh month,at Honolulu, common people alike felt iis force, though the
is to bo luppoaed,seldom c tme niuier its
Jl. 1., by .\IKKHHB. CItUZAN AND OuOt'.l., pnslm « of foi nier, il
buuciul operation. Even to this day tins aoperattthe Fort-St. ami Bethel Union Churches, Subtiou exist*, tln-uioi rapidly woniuiu, nw.iv. Hike
scription rite |Bpaai*ua invai:iahl,yin advance. the rttnembrauou of goblin tile*., the infloeuee is
long lelt, alter all belief is destroyed. A* a poAer
All communications ami letters connected with the till engine ot pivernuieut and priesthood, it WU
literary department of the paper thonld he ad- to lie (onred and deprecated equally by the iiiuodressed " Bar. E. C. Oookl, Box 347, Honolulu, (vin and tliu Limn.
THE Fill KM)
H. I."
Business letters should he addressed "J. A. OuuzAN,
liox 326, Honolulu, H. 1."
A limited number of unobjectionable advertisement*
will be taken from tkoee mliom the proprietor* beHere tube honest ami reliable. Adtertisinti rates
mmle known on application.
Mil. KoßEiir Liainii, Manager of the Sailor's Home,
is Agent at' I'm: FauMD in Honolulu, and is authorized to receipt for siibserif/doiis.
Mb. James A. Makiin is Ai/eul of The Fbiend in
Hilo, ami isanthiirizeil to lerei/d far sahsrrijitions.
Extra copies of I'iik Fainro mil be found on s ile iii
J. M. O.Vl', Jl!., it Uo.'S aml at the Sailor's Hume.
For files and h .<•'. numbers a/iplij to J. A. CItUZAN.
x
•,'; ;
k. c. tXjidi'.ij,
j
FAITH—CURESREVERSED.
Many good things come from Boston,
but it does not follow that all Huston
methods are good things. That city has
recently become the center of the delation known as "Kiiili-i'u.e." An attempt
has been m.ule lo reduce Hie cure of
disease simply by faith to a system, .and
instruction is now given in Boston in an
"institution" or ••College" Iv this new
art. In calling this modem craze a delusion we would not be understood as
denying that genuine cures of certain
kinds of diseases are wrought by lakh.
Especially isiiiis trueol nervous diseases
which depend almost wholly upon the
will and the imagination. We believe
that genuine cures have been Wrought at
Lourdes,
in
France,
feipirituaiist
oi this new
sutttuieut lo esby
mediums,and by the disciples
erase. The evidence is
tablish the fact thai diseases of a certain
class have been healed by each oi these
widely different wonder-workers. But
we do Dot believe that there is anything
miraculous, or supernatural, or power
divine in the cures. Il is simply the
action of the imagination aud the arousing of a dormant will, energy aud purpose which overcomes and banishes, at
least for a time, the di-ease.
In all the discussions evoked in our
religious exchanges by this craze of
"Faith-cure" which we have read, no
one has called attention lo the fact that a
belief in the malign influence of prayer
has had equally potent effect among
superstitious pagans. The native 11awaiians are a ease in point. OpeniugOUT
copy of <'Jarves' History of the Hawaiian Islands," on page 39 we find this state-
meut:
Number 3.
below The
(N. V.) Aution's stiniiiiary and
comments on this decision:
Before ISSU the hiewuiool beer was n» free from
reatrietiou in Khiuui* as the ruilliiui uf flour, and
when the Legislature enacted h statute li i bidding
tie further Drawing of laser, it made every brewery
wortbleaje. To pass, audi law uithoiit ooiiiptnsaiuin, the owners of breweries for Hie InssislliUß
imposed upon them i* simply to legalise robbery
by society in Its nrganlimd capacity. The Federal
court* are bound to protect Hie injured oiuzeli in
bis rights if he can secure no redress train iho
fs;ati, and there is no doubt Hint the Supreme
Court will sustiiii Juduo ISrewer if the case is
curried to Wellington. Section 1 of the Fourteento Aiueudiiieiil provides that "No State shall
deprive any person of lite, liberty, or property
without due process of law,'' und the highest tribunal lias alio idy gotw OH record, iv the case uf
liarleiiioyer vs. low*, some years ago, a* holding
that, while n Stale may Kgolata, and even prohibit, til tiafllc in intoxicating liquors, it may not
deprive tua owner of properly iv which he bad invested under a pel missive system, without waking
bun due amends. The deotsi >n is of more practical importance in lowa tuiiii in Kansas. The latter Siate Ins never gone extensively into the mnnulaciuie of liquors of any kind, but tile cousus of
IMb showed lli.it lowa had 114 establishments lor
the production of malt liquors and three distilleries, wluca reported ah aggregate c.pitalo:
about
$2,100,000. li.it il moat be remembered that this
repreiente paly the v.due returned for purpose* of
.e-sesnn ut and taxation, and that the actual iuveatuuenl was much eruatcr Ih.in this estimate.
The larger share of I his was undoubtedly invested
in building* ami in icliinery, winch prohibition
rendered worthless, ami the State is thus bound
by Judge Brewer'e deoiadon l<> piy over some milli ins to the people who wore int rested in such
estublinhments when tiie law was paaasu.
•
Tlie.se words were written forty yean
ago of tlie early lluwuiinns. Hut tlii.s
old superstition still linger*) In the remnant of the native race, and is potent
still for evil. One of the ablest and
brightest of the physicians now in the
employ of the Hawaiian government, in
a conversation with the writer of this
article recently, said that he repeatedly
has to meet this superstition: "What is
the moi lor?" "They are praying me to
death I'' will be the sad hopeless reply.
And it is almost impossible to disabuse
the poor victim of his delusion. Die he
must, and die he Will, and (lie be does
in some case-; not l run disease, but from
terror, which j lining hands with some
slight functional disorder, or producing
it, causes death.
We do not doubt the genuineness of
some faith-cures, neither do we doubt
thai many llawa. ins have died nol so
much from disea ■ as froin the effects of
COUNCIL AND ORDINATION.
tiiisoUi superstition. They were "prayed
Council, composed of pastors and
A
death"
as
as
just
to
Certainly the Boston
representatives of the Fort .street,
enthusiasts pray then- patients to health. lay
Bethel Union, Kawaiahao, Kuumakapili and Kohala Churches was held in
TWO IMPORTANT DECISIONS.
the lecture room of Fort-Street Church,
Two very important decisions in refer- February 18, lHHi>.
ence to prohibitory laws have been given
The Council was tailed to order at 2:!10
recently. The first is by ,)i due Hayes, o'clock P. m. by the Rev. J. A.
Ciuz.w,
of lowa, who decides in effect that if it is who read a letter missive
from the Forto
a crime
sell liquor it is a crime to eign Church of Kohala, requesting that
buy, for the buyer becomes an accessory MR. 10. N. DvK.it, it member of (hat
10 the sale and an abettor In the viola- Church might he examined with a view
tion of the law. This is certainly logical, to his ordination to the christian minisand common-sense. One of the strong- try.
est objections to prohibitory laws has
Rev. C. M. llvde, D.l). was elected
always been the injustice ol inflicting all Moderatorand Kkv. 10. (;. Ogoei,, Scribe.
the penalty upon the seller. It (here is Tiie Moderator opened the meeting with
any crime shout the liquor business the prayer. Brother Dyer,
owing to tlio
buyer is a partner with the seller In It. a;earner A7//«/( -being detained at Hilo,
But if this decision stand it will render not being present,
the Council adjourned
the enforcement of prohibitory law* :ill to meet at the call of the Moderator.
more difficult, for success in prosecutions
The Council met again in the same
lor selling liquor must depend largely upon place on toe 14th at 2:M i\ m.
the evidence of the customers of the saThere were present: Rev. J. A. Ckuloons. It is now very difficult to compel zan witii linn J. M. Whitney
and
drinkers to testify against saloon-keepers. A. W. I'KAitfKof the Fort-Streei
Church;
11 in doing so they criminate themselves, Kkv. 10. C. Ooaw. with "irrnnss
D. P.
as would be the case under this decision, I'ktersox and J. O. Carter of the
they of course would not testify. Force Betiiel Union Church; Rev. H. H.
them to do so and perjury would be the Career with Mr. Hiram of Kawaiarule.
hSO Church; Kkv. J. Waiamau with
A still more important decision is that Messrs. Kaeama ami Kaukaxa of
made by Judge Brewer in the United Kaumakapili Church; and Dr. J. Wight
States Circuit Court at Topeka, which of Kohala Church. Invited
ministers
declares that the State of Kansas must present were: Rev. C. M. Hyde,
D.D.,
make good to the owners of a brewery Rev. Lowell Smith-, D.D., Revs.
8.
in Lawrence the value of property which JO. Bishop, W.C.Merritt, H. Bingham,
was virtually confiscated by the enact- 11. 8. Jordan and J.
Bicknell. In
ment of the prohibitory law. We give addition to these a number
of spectators
,
-
Volume 44, No. 3.
THE FRIEND.
4
and many personal friends of Mil. DYER
were pre-ent.
The Moderator requested the.liynin to
be sung: ''Stand up, stand up for Jesus"
and Key. W. ('. Meiuutt led in prayer.
The object of the Council *vas again stated
aud the examination of the candidate
proceeded with. It was conducted by
Rev. Dk. Hyde and other members of
the Council.
The examination was thorough and in
all respects satisfactory and by unanimous vote it was resolved lo ordain Mr.
Dyer to the Gospel ministry.
The
Moderatorannounced the evening services and the meeting dosed by singing
the Doxology.
At 7:30 o'clock the auditorium of Fort
Street Church was tilled in every part.
The pulpit was occupied by Rev. .1. A.
Cnt/.AX, the Pastor, and Be vs. C. M.
II v in;, D.D., 11. S. Jordan, Hiram
Binoham nudß C. Oooee. Dh. Hyde,
the Moderator, announced tint the examination had resulted favorably ami
that Brother Dyer would now be ordained to the sacred office of the Gospel
ministry. The second chapter of the Set
ond Fpistle to Timothy was read by Rev.
K. C. Ouobl. Prayer was offered by Rev.
11. S. Jordan, who also preached the
ordination sermon from 1 Corinthians,
15:25, "For He must reign till He hath
put all His enemies under His feet."
Mb, Johdan said: ••To whom do these
words referV Evidently to Jesus Christ.
He is to be this Supreme Ruler. It is
not Withclash of sabre that lie is to rule,
but by love. He is the friend and
savior, and not the enemy of mankind.
Christ's rule is noi a temporal but a spiritual one. The text plainly indicates that
the end is not yet. The sway of Christ
is not yet unhindered. There are enemies yet unsubdued. These, though
they are legion, may be summarised under three cla.ses: Satan and his kingdom; false ii ligions and false conceptions
of religion; and ilio.se who personally re.
ject Christ." These points wv.e developed in their order and made clear by
farts and illustrations. Mr. Jordan
closed hi- able discourse thus: "The
reigu of Christ will advance unto the
final triumph. Sometimes the way looks
dark, but our great Captain will lead His
Church on to complete victory. The
harbingers of victory are till around us.
Arise, youiifi men, arise, and catch the
inspiration of the limes! Awake, t hri.-t
ian men, awake, and behold the dawnlugs of a new day !''
Mr. Dyer was then set apart to the
office of the christian ministry by the
laying on ot hands, Key. K. C. OttOKL,
ottering the ordaining prayer. Key. Dr.
Hyde, on behalf of the Council, tendered
Mr. Dyer the right hand of fellowship,
prefacing the ceremony with words of
congratulation and encouragement. Rev.
J. A. Cruzan gave the charge to the
newly ordained "minister, emphasizing
the fact, that the first and greatest requisite for a minister oi the Gospel is enthusiastic, unswerving loyalty to the Lord
-
Jesus Christ, and that iv all his ways he prayer and remarks. Rev. Dr. Hyde
should l>e guided by the teachings of mid Mr. F. W. Damon followed with
Cod's Holy Word. A hymn was sting addresses, Mr. I Vkshima, a christ-
and Mr. DyEB pronounced the benediction. The musk rendered by the choir
addetl much to the interest of the services.
Rev. F. N. Dyek came from Massachusetts to these i.-lands in 1878. During bis almost eight years' residence in
this Kingdom he has been engaged in
superintending and teaching iii the Government Public School at Kohala, discharging ill an able and faithful manner
the duties of his responsible and trying
position. During these years, whenever
the Foreign Church of Kohala was without a pastor, he has from time to time
conducted the pubUc services and been
greatly helpful to the Church there in
oilier ways. And now that lie has been
ordainedto preach the glorious Gospel of
the Bon uf God, our earnest desire and
prayei i.-, that the lloiy Spirit, the Spirit
of anointing, may endue him with power
from on high, and that bis labors in the
ministry of the Word, wherever the Lord
shall tail him, may lie richly crowned
with the Divine blessing.
THE JAPANESE.
On the
14th of February last the
of I'ekiii arrived at this
poit from Yokohama, with 842 Japanese
onboard, Including about 280 women.
Appealing to be a healthy and Btrong
cla-s oi people, and of good behavior,
they are regarded as a valuable acquis!lion to the label supply of the Island.-.
Mr. K. YV. Irwin, Hawaiian Charge
d'Affaires in Japan, came with these
people; also MR. Taro Ando, the new
Japanese Consul and Diplomatic Ageul
for Hon,,lulu, and a huge stall'el physicians and Interpreters sent here hy the
steamship Ciiy
Japanese Government,
On Saturday evening, the 20th, Ma.
and Mrs. F. W. Damon gave a reception ;.: theirresidence on Chaplain's lane
to those repiesentative Jap nose. There
were present: Mis. K. \Y. Irwin, Consul
at Japan, and sou; Mb. and Mas. Taro
Axihi, and son; .Mis. and Mrs. CO.
Nacayama, Mb. and Mrs, Fuksiiima,
Mr. and Miss. Kei.iiro NaOaNO, Mr.
Tanaka; Doctors M. Yam ash ita, F.
IWAW'I and others. Some of these are
professing Christians and come from different missions in Japan, To make
their acquaintance there were also present a large number of Invited guests,
whe through this occasion of social enjoyment we're doubtless infused with u
new and stronger interest in the spiritual well-being of those Whom God in His
providence has brought so near to us.
Mb, and Miss. Damon and Mrs. Dr.
Damon made the evening a very pleasant one to all present.
At the Immigration Depot interesting
religious services were held Sunday
afternoon, the 21st. Hundreds of Japanese attended. Aoki, the young theological Student who arived in Honolulu
a year ago, opened the meeting with
ian Worker, acting
as
interpreter.
Brief
addresses were made also by Mil. Ono.mi
and byMit.T.\.\A!CA, who conies from the
Church ol Christ, with a letter from the
Key. Mr. Baixagh.
The services
were closed with prayer by the Rev.
Div Hyde. Tracts and Testaments were
then distributed.
We would ask our fellow christians on
the other Islands to keep in view the
liiglierneed.softhese Japanese, and to
strengthen the hearts anil hands of those
who aim lo lilt them up intellectually
and spiritually. Remember, we have
not crossed the sea to go to them, but
they have come to us and this greatly
increases our Indebtedness to these souls
and our responsibility to Cod.
DRINKING AS
A PRIVATE HABIT.
Drinking men affirm thai sumptuary
laws interfere with personal liberty and
private habits. No. No one desires to
interfere with a man's private habits.
But what rij;lit has a man to insist that
be shall haven public place In which to
gratify and Indulge his private Intuits T
The saloon ht not a''private right." It
Is a public curse. If any man lias an uppetite which he has fed until it has become so much his master that it has hecome a "private habit. and rules him
with iron band, let him indulge Unit
•< private habit" in private. lie has no
shadow of right to insist thai a public
place shall be established that he may
the more conveniently indulge that "private habit"—a place that will proven pitrail to young men and boys, unit surely
and inevitably prove a recruiting station,
so that when lv- falls out of tiie ranks of
the drunkards into a drunkard's grave,
one or more young men will be ready to
take his place. It is not the "personal
liberty" or "private rights" of drinkers
Which prohibitionists seek to interfere
with, but they do seek lo destroy the
next crop of drunkards. To this end wo
claim that the community bits the right
lo say to the drinker, "Indulge your
private habits if you choose, hut do it in
private. There shall be no public place
established lor Unit purpose, to stand asa
menace and dead-fall for our boys and
young men !"
—Our home used to be for a little time
in the beautiful city of WUliatnapori,
i'a. The Sational Temperance Advocate
says that o.i the lHth of .bin. the following aWfui death occurred there:
A degraded toper, tUretire*, fur a drink, but bavin no money, approached ■■< hoiel bar in that city
ami nuked for h glass ol liquor. The bartender
said: "If you drink a pint of whiskey you can have
it for nothing.'' Iss whi*key was poured nut, the
m in drank it witiiont taking tile «l,iss from ins
HpS, exclaimed a* tie fllllshsil and tottered toward
tho door, "That has made a new man of rue," litit
before be reached the door fell dead upon the
floor!
And yet we have men in Honolulu who
call Ibis deadly poison a "good creature
of God!"
THE
March, 1886.
EDITORIAL NOTES.
—Tin: door of Heaven shuts from below, not from above.
—Pirinri's Drooks' Trinity Church,
Boston, Mass., now has free seats on Sunday evenings.
—Herr IJismarck thinks
It is well often to aim at the unattainable, as we
thereby make attainable what would otherwise be
unattainable.
—In am interview reported In The
Voice, D. It. Locke (Petroleum Y. Nasby)
said of the Third-I'arty-nien :
You fellows defe itetl Hl*ink and elected Cli:ve
land. You didn't do taooli barm, however, hceausClkvkland is ;i better Republican than Hlmnk.
—Some one writing in 7he Advance
about Ma. MOODY and his work, says :
We have shut ourselves in to cert on ways of
working and certain formal rules of religions i>ropriety.Ull we have actually become almost unable to
recognise tbo are t abilities and acquireincuts of a
in in who di'.niissm all these limitations and cuts
straight to the line with bis own tools in his own
way.
Drinking in prohibition places will go OB all the
—Dr. JonN HALL, in a suggestive
s. me, unless the sentiment of the people is germon "New Year
We work against the evil by strong ore: iltisa article in The Independent
Suggestions," among other wise things,
ti ins, which endeavor tv eJnc it« the risiii" geiieration among the lower mid middle cl iMes. The Nahas this to say :
tional Temperance l,e iipie addresses itself to the
peculiarity of our ago is the rapid increase
upper classes. In tats Latter many eminent, and of One
"societies" outside the Church—i.
under no
even tilled peo.de, have taken an active part.
definite management by any Chinch, *~
but dependof
people,
money
and
Mrs.
on
of
Church
—Mr.
Collins, Oakland, ent practically
tbo
in 1 doing work which the Churches ought to do.
Cal. and Mr. and Mrs. Rowey, of There
ate forms of effort that touch civil matters
New York, arrived by the last ste oner and call tor lagisl ilion where action of this kind
for a brief visit, and express themselves is ueediiil ; but to keep ynuii,' men pure in lan-.
gangs and in life, to aid the poor, to help the
as delighted with Honolulu and our In- tempted
to resist temptation, the Church is a diMessrs Com.ixs and vinely appointed society for these vary things.
comparable el
<)
things il is sound policy to do : ta.)
of
two
ie
hist
meetROWKY were present at the
do this work i>v Church agencies or (b.) acing- of the Honolulu (Social Science As- either
quire wh it men in trade would c ill a "controlling
sociation as guests. Our vistors have al- interest*' in the s icieties. Suppose a group of
ready won for themselves many friends peoole in Ilia parish in which Dr. A. has been installed—to pre ich the Gospel, visit tho sick, and,
who will regret their departure.
with the dc moss, aid the poor-should organize a
—The si.eei'kr in church is übiqui- society to secure lb I visiting of the sick, set about
the money among the people, get a paid
tous. We are not so sorry as we ought raising
secretary ami agent, with a coins of honorary iifrlto lie, perhaps, that it. is recorded in the eeis: who does not see that sooner or 1 iter there
book of Acts (Was it for the encouragewould be trouble and loss somewhere in Dr. A.'s
ingreguti<ui
a process on lines parallel to
ment of ministers sorely tried?) that even 0theseis gutaKton Rut
in many direclions, and "prevenl'Al'l, eouhl not keep all hta hearers tion is better than cure."
inc.
imate.
—The Boston correspondent of The
awake. And we confess to a feeling of
Chrint.itui Union says:
satisfaction iv reading in a report of one
l here is a large and influential element of un- of Mr. Moody's great meetings that he
churched Christianity. .Much of it would be
-topped plump in the middle of his serchurched if there were l" ss diwina .aid inure charity, less creed and more Gospel. The reflex power mon
and said:
very
large,
taming
note
a
to
1
of the Oupcl 1*
The ushers will please open the windows. I
wards the iios;iel of iiinti who ten veu-s ago were want, a little fresh
in. let right down there where
rationalists, materialist*, agnostic*, and skeptics.
those two men are asleep. 1 don't want auvbo.ty
Hyde's
forcible
complete
go
and
—Dr.
to sleep, lain trying to wake you up.
in here lo
Nevertheless, brethren, it is not safe to
"Eight-Uaal-of-Feuowship" at Mr.
sleep in church.
Perhaps it was reDyer's ordination needs no supplementing from US, but TllE Fill ex 1> extends corded as an awful warning to the pews
a cordial welcome to the Christian minis- that Paul's sleeping auditor broke his
try to Key. E. N. Dyer, and hearty con- neck!
gratulations upon his successful examinaIn the line of the importance of the
tion and very interesting ordination early conversion of children we have
service.
seen nothing better than the following
—The Year Book of the Congrega- wise words written by an honored Prestional Churehea of the United states for byterian Doctor of Divinity of New York
1880,above that there are 4, no churches, in a private letter to his daughter, now
in Honolulu:
4,048 ministers, and 418,51il church residentyour
dally exertions and inilueiice to the
Direct
members. This Indicate* a gain of 78 early,
the immediate, conversion of your deif
churches, and 17,015 church members. children, including the younger ones. The great
The whole number in Sunday schools is error of the ( airistian ohnrun generally is to omit
and elfort for tue tarty conversion and
610,889. The benevolent contributions prayer
piety of the cuililreu under the iiiUuenc of the old
j
aggregate $1,700,236; home expenditures Siiiuno maxim that"x*uattg people must expect to
their wiid oats''for many year* before yield$4,6*57,728 ; total contributions $6,267,- sow
ing themselves to the claims of j:raoticd religion,
-9ti:i ; an average of $14.90 per member. t'tie mosl hopeful time for securing the subntraturn
Christian character is before the
There are ;il>7 Theological students, the of a thorough
child lias attained live years of age; and even belargest number ever reported.
fore three years of age the child should be brought
—Dr. Deems must have visited Ho- b> divine graoe and parents! effort to yield cheer
obedience lo bis parents and thus more readily
nolulu at some time or other, for in an fill
the child will respond to the authority of the in
he
thus visible Father and Redeemer.
article on "Church Manners"
—We know a small boy of three years
writes about us :
Take c oe liow yu« use fans. Nine-tenths of fan- of age who is very much inclined to hike
ning is n ineoessaiy. You would be niorecomf'irt- a pessimistic view of life and conseaMe if you would sit still and be quiet. The most
of lamentation" is
ot fanning is an expression of netiernl rosaineex of quently his "voice
temper. Moreover, it may anno* .ynir neighbor. frequently heard.
order to break up
In
We beard a physician say "that he tiiouglit that i this unpleasant habit his parents have
neuralgia
of
the
was
due
prevalent
large amount
to the nse of tans in church, and fell, not on thorn made an old abandoned Chinaman's room
who f,meed, but upon some of their neighbors." a "wailing place,"
and thither the
We have often beard the remark: I got but little
man
is
much
to his disgust,
young
sent,
the
yesterday,
lady
sermon
b-cauae
of
good of the
next to me, who fanned me until I was almost iv a whenever he wishos to "lift up his
shiver." What would you think of your minister voice." One evening, not long since,
if he should fan himself'while Drenching?
he had said his "Now 1 lay nic,"
—Wieeiam Noble, who is soon to after
the
"If I should die," etc.,
petition
work
Temperance
here,
begin Qospel
to
seemed
strike
the young man, aud he
says that he visitetl America many years
said: "Oan' ma, I'm going up to heaven
ago. Contrasting the state of the tem- to-night."
"Are youv" "Yes, at twelve
perance cause then and now, he says:
l)od will say: 'Little hoy!
o'clock.
And
as
as
temper1 see no eh ii.ne for the better far
ance is concerned. The temperance cause in what you doin' here? I wants no little
America lias no System, no ((rowing sentiment boys; I wants only ladies.
You go
among the rising generation. We do not try to
work througb laws iv England—it does no good. straight to the Chinaman's room.'"
"
5
FRIEND.
—I.v The Times (Philadelphia) of Jan.
27th, we find an editorial article headed
"A Report that Ought to be True" which
we would change to •'lmportant if True."
Iliee is the remarkable story as given by
The Times:
loaders are negomillion acres of
fertile 1 md in one of the islands coiiiiiosing the
Sandwich group.
There is already a Mormon
colony of four thousand members, owning six
hundred thousand acres of laud, adjoining the
proposed porefasse. lb I combined area, if the
proposed deal should be made, would be one million six hundred thousand acres, or about otieeigiiteeuih the area of Pennsylvania. Told would
do very well for a beginning, and if more room
be needed in the future another island or two
uiielit. b ■ hoi on or Seized without buying.
Dr. Rawson, late of liana, now of
Cleveland, Oiiii
we understand has a
million acres of land in Hawaii for sale,
The Story is that the Mormon
tiating wiiii a syndicate for one
,
and perhaps that is the tract which the
Mormons are about to buy. But where
Is the .Mormon colony of 4000 with its
806,000 acres of land? Laic we know,
hut who will locate this new colony for
us?
—War, famine and pestilence! Can
anything be worse than either of these ?
Can any one* thing be more terrible than
these three scourges combined ? Yes.
in his address before
the National Temperance Society in New
York said:
Canon Kakk.vr,
I do not know any body iv the world which is
less susceptible to the sudden passion for social
reiorui than the British House of Commons. I
bad the honor to attend, not at all (infrequently,
e.t their deti.lies, anil it is of all bodies perhaps
tile calmest and ieast liable to be swept by any
overpowering enthusiasm. Only twice 1 think in
my life I have seen anything like the manifests*
turn of a thrill of emotion pass through that very
impassible lm.lv ; but on ice of those occasions to
which 1 allude 1 did see a manifestation of a thrill
of emotion pas* through all those assembled members, just as the summer breeze sweeps the corn,
when some four years ago, I think it was on the
lSdi of .Match, Mb. Gladsxonk, standing, at the
table of the House of Comijions in his position of
In iie Minister, made use of the remarkable
w.ir.is, that the evils wrought by drink were more
deadly because more Oontinuous than the three
gre it historic scourges of war, famine and pestilence combined. 1 heard those words spoke i;
made in shiver, and 1 do believe they mat's
the very ooldeat member of Parliament present
who heard them, shiver. They were not original)
they were not spoken for tbe first time by Mb,
Gladstone; they were spoken foi the ttrst time by
s very eloquent and excellent man, a member of
Parliament, Chiblbs Buxton, wbo himself had
they
ire ,v..sab.c Iv give
ample testimony to the tiuth of what be said.
them;
accepted
lie quoted and
Still Mb. Gladstone
en orso.l tliein with ill the weight of Ins manifest
authority, of his hiah position, and of his vast
knowledge of mankind. Be accepted and endorsed those words, and be has never withdrawn them,
and .Vlu. Gi.uisroNE is nut a total ibst liner.
been a bewcr, u.i.l woo tenet
—It is frequently asserted, both by
24th. Obedience. Matt. 7:24-29.
so general—is n > sn Uii il outburst of feeling*
which will pass away like the earl/ dew. but tb t John 14:16-21.
it is indeed the work of tfod, for winch there wis
81st. A religion that will wear. Matt.
n gradoal preparation going on for mora than half
a century. I'uollc opinion has been constantly 7:12; (Jul. (>:(>—10; 1 Cor. 1(1:31.
growine Bgaiud the liquor traffic, and, as a conseThe annual business meeting of the
quence thereof, our laws have broom* more and
more restrictive, until now any county or city in church will be called to order as per Bythe Dominion cm entirely prohibit the traffic, Laws, March 3d, at the close of the Prethat wishes to do so.
meeting,and probably
paratory
adjourned
to some future date.
FORT-ST. CHURCH.
The ordination of PROP. E. N. DYBB
THE BETHEL UNION CHURCH.
Ministry,
prohibition orators and also by the advo-
cates of the wiiip-anil-beer antidote for
strong liquors "That the American people are the most drunken race on the to the Christian
which took
planet." We commend a study of the place in Fort-St. Church Feb. lllh, was
following from the Rochester (N. V.) one of the most notable events of the
Democrat to all such wearers of blue month.
spectacles:
*
Kkv. 11. S. Jordan, en route to the
Iv ISS4 the Statistical Hureau of Switzerland United States, spent two Sabbaths in
pu.dished an exhaustive report on the consumption of spirits in various countries of the world. Honolulu, the 14th and 2lstof Feb. On
From it we take the tollo.viug tabic, sho-iing the the morning ("if the 14th he preached in
per capita consuinpti'Ui:
Church an able sermon from the
OOUNTBY.
LKI'.llS
OOUNTKY.
Lll MIS Fort-St.
K.IIS text "Come unto me all ye that are
18JW Russia
Denmark
Netherlands
'J.s7 fiance
TJ8 weary, "etc. The same day, in the even9.40 vastro Hungary .. r>.74
f-Tiiitrlisrrl
Belgium
9.30 QtBrit iiinVlrelaiid f>.:i7 ing, he also preached the ordination seri. 4'.' mon of PaOP. E. N. Dvioh.
German Tax Union. S.li;! I lited States
oVJO
Sw-den
8.U N away
On Sunday morning Fel). 28th the
The prohibitionist will here learn that pastor exchanged witli ltev. E.
C. <><;instead of being the "most drunken" of
Church,
of
the
Bethel-Union
who
(.f.i.,
States
stands
all peoples, the United
gave the people one of his excellent sereleventh In the list, and very nearly at mons.
the head for temperance in the per capita
The Sunday evening services are well
consumption oi spirits. The advocate of attended,
and what is much better than
the use of beer and wine as a temperance
the Holy Spirit in convicting
numbers,
note
measure we trust will not fail lo
and converting power is crowning and
that Wine-making Switzerland consume
this attempt to reach the people
per ea/n'ta more than In in at much sj>ir- blessing
the Gospel. On the evening of
with
its as does the United Stales, while France
Feb. 7th in the after-meeting five perconsumes nearly twice as much!
sons
requested prayers; and notwithWe quote again:
the break caused by the ordinastanding
The p,-r c.ipita c eisuiuptiou of malt liquors in
Switzerland is about 46 gallons] in Belgium is 84; tion service, on the evening of the 21st
in England is 83; in German;, 'JO; in Denmark, 14; live more declared their purpose to begin
in the United States, 11; in the Other countries tint Christian life.
Christians are urged
named, lesser amounts.
Commenting on these statistics The ail'ectionatety and earnestly by the pastor
to heartily second in every way possible
Christian Union says:
The truth is, probably, that no people drii. k lens this effort to save souls. Work for these
.
,
-
or are less drunken tlmu those of native Aineiio in
blood. Drinking anil drunkenness are cbietly imported habits.
meetings. Uring in non-church-goers.
Plan your Sunday so that you can reguThe Independent, N. V., is publish- larly attend. Come praying for Ood's
ing a scries of articles on '< Local Option," blessing upon tin; services. Remain to
showing how it works from the testi- the after-meetings. Is all this too much
mony of competent observers. In its for the pastor to ask of you!'' Can you do
issue of December 24th, '85, Rev. W. A less without dishonoring your own coveMcKay
writes on Local Option in nant-promise, aud failing to co-operate
Canada. He says that the present suc- with the Holy Spirit?
The regular communion of the Church
cess of Local Option is "no mushroom
growth, but the fuller development of will be held Sunday March 7th. Seven
an educational process" that has been persons will be received to membership.
The pastor also urges upon the memgoing on for a long time. In the following paragraph lie gives the secret of the bers of the Church the privilege and the
present strong temperance sentiment in duty of regular attendance at the prayer
Canada, and at the same time a hint to meeting. You need the prayer meeting;
the prayer meeting needs you.
Your
temperance workers:
spiritual strength and growth largely
As early as iB.lt) th < late JonN Douoaix, of Montreal, established total abstinence societies depend upon your faithful use of the
throughout mis country. At that time the name
temperance was held in contempt by the rich, the means of grace, and among these the
fast, and the fashionable. No.v it is so popular service of prayer stands first in importthat even our opponents, the liquor sellers and ance.
their friends, call themselves by n. and wish to
MAKCH,
MKKTINGS
—
be
Volume 44, No. 3.
THE FRIEND.
6
"
desiguuted The laberal Temperance Union."
Thirty years ago there were few boys and uirls m
the land who did not belong to some temperance
society. Those societies were condemned by some
and despised by others, lint feared by none. However, the boy* and girls in them bave i ioan up, a
new generation, tilled with haired of the drink
traffic. They comprise the voters of to-day; and
the effects of their eHrly training we see at the
PRAYKH
KOH
3d. Preparatory Meeting.
"Jesus
Christ an all-sufficient and my personal
Saviour." The hour will be given to
the people for experience and testimony.
10th. Concert of Prayer. Educational
and religious work in Utah. Monthly
ballot boxes and elsewhere. The little seed has review of missions.
become a great tree, 'I'he trickling streamlet has
17th. Duly and privilege of personal
swelled into a mighty river. Our confidence and
hope is that the present movement—so powerful, work with non-ehristiuns.
.
February—Maiuii.
Sunday, the 7(h, Mus. J. D. Arxiii.n, a member of the < harch, after a
lingering illness of seven months during
Which lime she manifested uniform and
exemplary pitlenee, passed away in faith
and hope to the rest of heaven.
On Sunday evening, the 14th, the
congregation united with Fort Street
( litirch in the ordination services of
MB.
K. N. Dyi.k of Kohala.
Anumlierof Strangers from different
hinds, traveling in the pursuit of health
or of sight-seeing were present on the
evening ol the Kith at the Church .Sociable which was well attended and genOn
erally
enjoyed.
the morning of Sunday, the 21st,
the iti.v. il. s. .IouDAN preached from
"And I, if i ijo
the Master's words:
lifted up from the earth, will draw all
nun unto me." John 12:82.
On .Sabbath morning, the 28th, the
people were pleased to see and bear the
Rev. J. A. CutZAX of Fort-St. Church
who occupied the pulpit in exchange
On
with the pastor.
New members will be received on
Sunday morning, the 7th, and the Sacrament of the Lord's Sapper celebrated.
There will be a Sociable this month for
the children, the evening to be selected
by the Committee.
The following subjects are announced
for the Wednesday evening meetings:
:ird —Preparatory Lecture.
U).
10th—Monthly Concert.
17th—The love of Christ.—Eph. 3:18,
24th—Be filled with the Spirit—Eph.
5:18.
31st—The christian conflict. —Eph. 6:
12.
—Theprogressive is the aggressive.
Advance is by attack. Getting ahead is
a result of pushing on, crowding on, fighting on. World-forces, and flesh-forces,
and Devil-forces yield only to force; and
force, however manifested, commands
their respect. The lower powers
show
fight;" the higher powers must show
force, or be foiled. The individual Christian, to be successful, must be aggressive,— dead in earnest,—manifestly a
member of the Church militant; cvi*
ilently such, on the battle-field of daily
life as well as at thedrills of Bible study,
and at the parades of formal church service.—,S. 8. 'Times.
You don't believe what you don't see.
Did you eversee your hack bone ? Some
men lielieve they have a backbone, when
it is nothing but a cotton string run up
their bucks.— Sam Jones.
"
THE
March, 1886.
HAWAIIAN BO A LID
.
HONOLULU, H.
si. 0. Forbes,
I.
Editor
OFFICERS OF THE BOARD FOR 1885-6
Hon. a. Y. Judo
Hon. 11. WatihhousS
Kbv.U.M. rITOK. U l>
Rkv. A.i_i. I'miiKs
W. V7. lUI.I
P, 0. Jobs* in
President
¥ice»Pre«idenl
Recording scrutary
Oorrss|iondlnii Secretary
r
Traa
»" '••"
devoted to tko laterasts of lUe Hawaiian
This paae 1aMission*,
Board of
and th« Editor, appointed by ihe
Buanl. is responsible foi
contents.
'
"
HOW MISSIONARIES GROW RICH.
Apropos of similar charges so often
made in this quarter of the world, we
insert the following from The Christian
Advocate, which will be of some interest
to those who are not unacquainted with
tlie career of the notorious rJTEIHBEBOKH:
of some
'• All article has been going the round*
of the paper* giving an account of one Stkinm.ltnin, an adventurer, who claims to have eslablisbed a government in the Sauioan Islands, and
lor
to have had all necessary irrajujemeuts made
to th-- United State*,
the aiinexeuou ot the island:,
when he W is thwarted by a wicked combination of
the miss on-ries with the Bntisii aulhoriiies. He
claims that Secretary Hamilton 1 i.sn 'enoour iged
hue, and gave him a seiin-ollici il indorsement,'
'otiicially ilidoraed
and that tlie til ac Department
Una agent ol this
him, an 1 sent linn out us as.tor
footing
us, if poaaiole,
a
government to gain
lie vns aanimarily arreeted
in tae Si alb Pacific.' aatbotitiea,
and oarriedon
one day ■• the British
board one ol their uhips, 'without any opportunity
fortune
or
a stick of his
of
his
to Have R dollar
Austr ,iia,
property.' Ho was lauded pennilo'ss in
and had to work as a day-laborer to earn money
7
FRIEND.
most of llieoi are barely able to live on their s ,1 i
are unable to educate their children .it home
except by special assistance, when superannuate I
lies,
stnits for the nseaaaariea o(
are often in ureal leaving
coil-
no legacy to their
life, und die p or.
nreii, but that of a self-denying, devoted, and un
'd
blemish life.
•'ln very rare instances missionaries, by puroh isiiiK a little laud in the early beginning nf
foreign settlements in Oriental countries, hive
■soared a moderate competence by the natural
rise in the value of property I hot these instances
form but very slight exceptions to <«ir Reueral
statement. Wo are glad of the few that Ban be
found, because we know that a few worthy faun
lie! are saved from btnnili itin« dependence by
such foresight or good fortune.
•• ibe paragraph speaks ol 'I'ktku Haukki:' a*
an'idd ncssion iry,'no.v oue of the riehosl m
in Washington,' who 'made ajl of his lortune
skirmishing among the heathen.'
"On this we n ive a few things to say. We tin I
that there- inver was a missionary by tlie none uf
Pbtbs iIAiiKKK ill China. The mendacious writer
probably refers to the Hon. I'srsu iiAiiKi n, a.D.,
wno went out in 1831 as a medic il mission try of
the Aniericni Hood, mil opined a hospital in
Singapore, removing the next year to Canton, an I
upsuiug a hospital there, where ne gave his alien
in.n mainly to eye diseases and sargtonl opera
tions. ilowqua, the wealth) Chinese iDsrehaut,
heirieiided toe enterprise, and after Hi" Brat ye ar
gave a buildoe.', rent free, for the hospital for
twenty years. This led to the establishment ol
the Medical -iissiouirv Society, which lias patron*
is England, America, and China,aud under wuose
auspices the work has been carried on until the
;,resent time, relieving about 7liO,(iOU patient*, til
ii expense of over $116,000. Lot. J. U. Kkiui, ol
the American frssbyteriaii iltsaion, is tn* able
and ellicMii successor of Da. IiAiiKKU, who, lifter
-
■■
who has charge of the industrial branch
of our Papuan Institute. The planks on
the sides and deck of the vessel are in
one length, reaching from stein to stem.
She is copper fastened throughout. The
wood is of the best quality,and the work
has been leisurely and thoroughly well
done. The sails were made here, but
the ropes, iron and brass work, such as
we could not make, Were sent from London and Sydney. The whole has been
paid for by a kind lady ill Rngtand who,
When she heard that we were building
the vessel, oflered to bear all expenses.
All we know of the kind donor is, that
her name Is
M ny," the name we have
jriven to the vessel, she having requested
the Directors to keep her name a secret,
"The Mary is the admiration of all
Who have seen her. She is built to encounter any sea, yet handy a> a boat for moving about among reefs and banks in these
dangerous waters. I have just returned
from my first voyage, having visited all
the stations iv this branch of the mission.
She sails admirably. Four of us slept
comfortably in her cabin, with a berth to
spare. Prosperity to t, o Mary.'" llev.
K. Macfitrtune, in the London Missionary
"
—
Chronicle.
a prolonged seivice, became American Couiuiis
—One of those "pat" ideas which
simier to China, and hau (or teveraf year* the
general oliurgeuf the interests of our government when WO see them "materialized" we
there. In this position he showed ureal ability,
"that no one thought of it lieand was exceedingly useful dariug a cutieal marvel
period, i'or many years he has ten an honored fore," is the "American Hoard Almanac
and beloved resident of Washington—a man ol of Missions, I88(i," for a copy of which
purest personal character, upon snoM reputation
Smith.
Six
month*
utterenough to take passage boms.
no blot lias ever tested. He bad some money we are indebted to Dn. LOWSLL
ward he landed in Pari* 'without a oent,' but was when he lirst went to China, which ho used freely It is packed full of Mission-statistics and
fortunate enough to get a passage to New fork, in his benevolent work, tie is now iv Rood cir- Information. The monthly-calendars are
Hinco his arrival, seven years ago, he has been cumstance.;, whereat we rejoice. We do not kuo..
pressing a modest claim against our government where he made his money, Put we can, after inves- given a page each, and an engraved
for f750,000 for his services in the Samoan U- tigation, testify assuredly as to where ho did not heading; over each month contains a map
"Now, this story bears on its face so clearly the
the
marks which ally it iv close relationship with
narratives of Baron Miinoh luseu that it would be
it
for
the
not
faot
utterly unworthy of notice were
throughout the
that many people, here .aid there
mostly
sens
inews
from
their
country, getting
tiou.ll dispatohes, b ive I. id their minds unfavorthe
follow
ably afficled toward mis..oiiaries by
Ins paragraph in th* story.—
"< l'he missionaries « tit out by the various Bible
societies of the worlo have built up powerful nnp,s
countries where
in the Oriental and Se.uioivili7.ed
l'he missionary business has bethey are sent,
income one of the most profitable pursuits, the
DOM out to s: ye t ,c
dustrious missionary whosplendid
opportunities
souls of the heathen bus
made large
for setting rich. Some of them have Uabkisji, one
trade. I'kth.ii
of money in this
sum's
Washington,
and who lives
of the richest men in
on Lafayette Square, is
iv one of the liuest houses
an old missionary, lie made all of his torlune
Bkirinish'iig among the heathen.'
•• We have taken the pains to look up this extraordinary story, and have to say that it wouid
mendacity into
so ircely be possible to o.owd moreignorance
of tlllapiingn.pli of that size. The
missionaries
reference
to
writer is shown in his
sent out b-, the WW* societn s, which do not send
Supposing him.
out missiona ics, but Billies.
however, to mean missionary societies, there is not
We challenge
tuut
follows.
a word of truth iv all
any nils
him to produce a sin«le uislniicoa from
'powerful ring'
tionary held iv the world of
re.idily
acWhile
we
built up By missionaries.any
of the foreign lioldo
knowledge that in almost
a missionary has'splendid opportunities lor getting rich.' if he is willing to leave his work and
eiiiTnKo hi governmental ser-.ice or mercantile
pursuits; and while we know thita third class
clerk iv Japan, China, or India often receives
more than douule the salary paid a missionary,
inio
ami that most mission ries could step at once
of Ibe
positions in which, from their knoaleige
laHkUage and of tlie pc pie, they could command
we
from three to ten limes the salary ihey receive,
■jh.lkMiaS tin- wrirr, or say otbsr, to ares as tbs
become rich
names ol the missionaries who haveWe
know that
while engaged in missionary work.
makeit:
of some one of the mission-lands in which
(1) He did not make it in the opium trade.
the American Hoard is at work, with
CJ) lie did not make it as a missionary.
(3) He did not make it •skirmishing among the illustrations typical (if the national life,
Heathen.'"
while the daily text is made up of notLAUNCH OF THE MISSION YACHT able mission-events. To Hawaii Is given
"MARY."
the honor of heading August,(because of
SEW UUfNKA.
Ml KKAY ISI.AN'O
our climate probably I) though why the
"The 14th of May, 1886, was a great editor should not have yet learned the
day of feasting and rejoicing here, occa- true name of this group of islands passes
sioned by the launching of the mis-ion understanding. In the left of the "Sandyacht Mary, from the yard of our Papuan wich Islands" heading is a native
Industrial Sell >01, where it had been on church, evidently coral or adobe with
the stocks in the boat-shed for nearly two grass roof, and a native house very
years. We have had, of course, si great poorly done; in the center is a bold strikdeal of other work to attend to besides ing headland; and to the right a living
the building of this yacht, during the crater in furious activity.
The letterhours devoted to manual lalior ; still it pre-s, barring the outrageous cover, Is
is the chef iTazuvre of our young insti- very good, a pleasure to the eye of a
—
tution, and none among the crowd of
spectators rejoiced more heartily, or
shouted more lustily when the Jfcoy/slid
majestically out of the shed, than the
pupils who had been engaged in herconst ruction.
She is lorty-tive feet in length, twelve
feet beam and six feet deep, and carries
about twenty tons. She is constructed
expressly for work in the Papuan Gulf
and Fly Biver; is strongly built, conveniently tilted in three compartments
for passengers, crew and cargo, and sails
remarkably well. All the wood has been
cut here by the pupils of the Seminary,
and all the work done by them, under
the superintendence of a boat-builder
printer.
—Captain S. G. Moore, formerly in
charge of the first Morning Star, well
known and favorably remembered by
many Houoluluaus,
will have the sym-
pathy of all in the sudden death on January 7th, of his son George, a leading
hardware merchant of Brewster, Mass.
(Ct.) News speaks in ear-
The Danhury
nest, unqualified praise of the sterling
Mount-; and regret at his
untimely decease.
—The great end of all preaching,
and of the Church Itself, is the conversion and salvation of men. Whatever
falls short of that is a failure.
qualities of Mr.
Volume 44, No. 3.
THE FRIEND.
8
EDUCATION.
We Invitr the co-operation of Msebsr*. and of nil
friend* of iiiucutlon. in ilie i-ll'ort to mik* tat* Mgi
of Tim Kiiißsn mil) vaHiiiiblu und stimiiiailns.
Common hiitions chouid bo ncnt to Ktiv. William B.
Oleson. Flllo. H»w»lt.
_____
- -
Win. B. Oleson
Editor.
TEMPERANCE INSTRUCTION IN
OUR SCHOOLS.
Call it new education or what not,
there certainly is a spirit abroad that demands larger views as to elementary education. Not the least significant proof
of this is the intelligent interest, now so
general, in the temperance training of
youth, notably in such leading American
Commonwealths as New York and Massachusetts. The spirit of our age is
keyed to the highest Interest*of the race
in education as in philanthropy. To use
Caklyiye's phrase, education is "foursquare," for it now aims iv its best development to instruct brain, hand, heart and
muscle. Technical schools are rapidly
increasing in number and efficiency.
Drawing, as related to the art of designing, is working its 'way successfully into our elementary courses of
instruction. The simplification of methods and means m the interests of a more
natural mental training mark all present
progress in primary instruction. The
necessity for a thorough grounding in
temperance principles in view of the gigantic evil of our generation is in the
same line.
Were argument necessary, it would be
quite enough to say that if elementary
education calls for better methods, so that
a larger body of real knowledge may be
imparted within a limited period ; oi if
if calls for skilled hands and practical
knowledge of tools in the interests of industry; it certainly calls quite as loudly
for training in practical morals In the interests of civil order and economy.
But there is no call for argument. Individuals may differ as to method but it
cannot be said that they differ materially
as to the necessity of instruction in temperance principles. The stock sentiment,
even among those who cannot be called
temperance men is, that they do not wish
their young friends or their children to
fall into the same pernicious habits.
Could a vote be polled among drinking
men on the question, Shall the children
be taught the evils of intemperance ?" it
is more than likely that the 'ayes' would
be in large majority.
Public sentiment calls for tidiness and
good order as to school grounds and
buildings, and none the less us to character and conduct. So far as public sentiment is concerned,the public school teacher is amenable for every departure from
good morals and manners. His true
gauge is always correctly fixed when his
conduct and character do not harmonize
with what public sentiment recognizes as
essential in one who stands before the
young as an instructor. The school is
the natural home of all best purposes and
practices, and is a failure when it does
not come up to this high standard.
"
To teach the children the physical injury of indulgence in drink and to avoid
the first step that leads to drinking
habits, is in fullest accord with the sentiment which even among the unthinking
and immoral thus voices itself : "Here's
Tom. Teach him how lo use his hands,
and eyes, and brain; how to behave as
lie ought; and how to keep his body and
his heart clean."
Public necessity calls for temperance Instruction. Never has the emergency
seemed greater than now. We are sowing the wind here in Hawaii. Drunkenness is so common that our sensibilities
an- dulled, and we do not hear the roaring of the whirlwind that we are sure to
reap by-and-by. Systematic temperance
instruction In our schools can avail much.
Let every conscientious teacher do his
utmost to combat the sad influences that
surround our youth as they go out from
the school-room daily.
ENGLISH LANGUAGE METHODS.
I.
11l reply to a letter of inquiry, Mil. 11.
S. TtiwxsKND of Lihuc, Kauai, lias
kindly offered the following suggestions
a- tn bis methods of language Instruction.
"The teacher, meeting the pupils very
much as the mother meets the child,
takes the mother's method of teaching
First conies the object, then
the idea, and afterwards the word. This
is the natural order. The object excites
the ideas, and the idea is embalmed in
the word. The lirsl and most prominent
ideas in a child's mind on giving attention to any objects are its individuality
ami identity; anil these are expressed
by the name. To express the idea uppermost in the child's mind at all times,
is one of the highest polntu of excellence
to be reached in teaching language.
Names are best taught first, and quite
a number of objects may well be named
before other words are taught. But
while the most prominent ideas are expressed by names, othersare taking more
and more definite form. Then some
verbs follow. They are taught much
after the manner of nouns. The manner
of teaching adjectives is somewhat different. Here the idea of correlation becomes more prominent. Prepositions are
taught by developing their ideas first and
afterwards by expressing them in words.
And in this the idea of correlation la especially useful. Suppose ti child Is ready
for learning the preposition on. How is
the teacher to know whether the child's
thought is, The book is on the table; or,
The book and the table. Rut let him
put the hook on the table and then under
the table; on a chair and then under a
chair, and then returning it impressively
to its first position, say: The book is on
the tattle, and he knows that he is giving
expression to the child's thought. Other
words and sentences are taught in similar ways.
Let no ohe think that language teaching after the Pestulozzinn method can be
other than hard Work, requiring great
care and calling into use all of the teachlanguage.
er's skill and
The general
discretion..'laid
down in
plan of language work
Swioton'.s Reader Is followed, but it is
considerably modified. Questions and
answers are greatly multiplied. The
exercises In paraphrasing are very much
increased. The language of common
things is taught by means of frequent
talks with tongue and pencil about the
things seen and heard at school and out
of school, the news of the day, the
stories read and heard, the other lessons
in school, etc. Some little work approaching technical grammar is done at
this point.
Occasionally a word is translated into
the language of the pupil. Sometimes
when one of the more advanced classes
Is composed wholly of Hawaiian*, a whole
lesson is translated into Hawaiian."
We also make quotations from a reply
to our inquiry received from Miss N. J.
M.\ i,(im; of Kawaiahao Seminary. "We
do not teach technical grammar, our
work is entirely language work. We
begin by having answers made in complete sentences. .Sentence in iking, dictation exercises, reproductions of stories
read, iilling in blanks, letter-Witting,
etc., are the means we use to make our
pupil.; familiar with good English."
Prom a reply sent by Miss M. sheei.ey of Makawao Seminary we quote: "I
always combine the phonic and word
methods in the beginning, using objects
wiienever 1 can, and paying particular
attention to the articulation. Later, we
take words and from these form sentences, or 'tell stories' both oral and
written. When the meaning and pronunciation ol the words in a sentence are
known at sight, then the sentence is road
with proper Inflection and emphasis.
After this the pupils are required to get
the thought expressed in their lessons,
and encouraged to use the dictionary
and other helps in mastering the thought.
In Hie advanced classes 1 use Swinton's
Language Lessons."
—Whata ridiculous contrast there is
between the railroad train that moves
-lowly bat steadily up-grade, and the
train that goes bumping along,jerked by
an inconstant locomotive that either has
not sufficient steam for its work or has
failed to gather momentum for the upgrade tug! The temptations are great
for teachers equally with oilier professional workers to lapse into a routine spirit
that sees only the same work to be done
day after day, and undertakes the work
of each day after the same style. Rut
(his is far healthier for the atmosphere
of school-lift! than the spasmodic, efforts
that jerk a whole school ahead one day,
only to let it go bumping back the next.
Spasuiodism should never characterize a
teacher's work.
—"What that word had mean? I
not know" said a tall Omaha Indian at
Hampton. Which proves anotiier stumbling-block. Alas, that English should
be such an unexplailiable language.
Southern Workman.
—
March, 1886.
A.,
THE Y. M.11. C.
I.
HONOLULU,
Th"!■ P*ge••
tin- inter©*ti t>f the Hono.ala
Youiiii Mei:V Ulnifl iati sedation, and the Board
of Directors are responsible for tis conloot*.
devot«d
9
THE FRIEND.
i"
S. 2). Fuller,
-
- - - Editor.\
THE LONDON LECTURER.
We are looking forward with great
Interest to the coining of Ma. W.m.
NoBLB, the famous Gospel Temperance
Lecturer ot London, lie is expected to
arrive here the first or second week in
March and to remain two weeks for solid
work in the Interestof God and humanity
and against t ha drink curse in our midst.
Mk. NoaiJC comes, rich In the blessed
experience of personal salvation from the
power of drink through faith in Christ.
11 is forty-four years of age, and has
had a wonderful range of experience between height and depth, wealth and
poverty in his checkered life.
He was born In London in 1812, and
when but a mere lad he ran away from
schooUmd went to sea. Later he entered
the Royal Navy, from which his father
purchased his discharge in 1860. At
this point in his life he reformed, was
successful in business and soon aecuniulaied considerable wealth. But during
his business prosperity the habit of drink
into which he had again fallen rapidly
developed strength, until in 18,7.1he stood
stripped of business, fortune and position; bankrupt on life's great highway
by the demon drink.
Soon after this through the help of kind
friends, the solid foundation of permanent reformation was begun, upon which
he wrouglit a noble temperance work for
himself and the cause to which he then
gave all his time and energy.
In 1577 Mil. NOBLE came to America
and in company with John 15. Gough
visited theMission of Jkuuy McCaii.y In
N, Y. City. There he beard and *w
illustrated the practical value of "Faith
in Christ" as tlie sure remedy for the sin
of drunkenness and all other sins as well.
IL- went (itit from there witii a new inspiration and lias since given himself
unceasingly to the Work ol Gospel TemA few months later Mr.
perance.
Noble returned to London where he
secured tlie National Standard Theatre
With a sealing capacity for 5,000 persons
and sounded out the blessings of Gospel
■
Temperance every Sunday evening for
PERSONALS.
On the 13th the Association was honored by a call froin Sim Alexander
and Lady Stkwaht of New South
Wales, en route to London by the
Mariposa. They expressed surprise and
pleasure at the apparent prosperity of the
Y. M. ('. A. work in our Island city.
On Sunday, Feb. 21, we were happily
surprised to find at the building our old
California friend, Rev. W. Scott
Whittieb of Oakland, he having just
arrived on the Alumeda. We spent a
most enjoyable day together in attendance upon the different services in the
churches and Association. He sailed for
Sydney at midnight where he will rein, tin a few months and then continue
his journey homeward by the way of
India, Kgypt and Palestine.
We have received several pleasant
calls from RBV. 11. S. Jokiian, who was
:i fellow passenger when coining to the
Islands last May, and who with his family
lias been spending a few days in this
city before returning to the States.
MONTHLY MEETING.
The monthly meeting was held on
Thursday evening, Feb. 18, Pkkh. ATHeuton in the cli ir. The reports showed
good Interest In the Sunday evening
service, ahjo in the Saturday evening
Temperance me ings which have been
attended daring the month by a large
number*of South i- a Islanders now in
the city.
The Entertainment Committee announced an ontertalmnent to be given
by the boys' branch a:nl atlults jointly,
March 6th. Tlie General Secretary reported a growing interest in his Sunday
morning Bible Class, which had held
four sessions with an average attendance
of eight. Also an increased attendance,
day and evening at the rooms of the
Association.
Employment had been secured for two
young men.
During the month the Secretary had
attended 21 religious meetings, 4 miscellaneous meetings, and made 51 calls.
A most excellent paper written by Mil.
CirAiti.Es Montgomery of San Francisco on "Business .Methods in Our
Work," was read by the General Secre-
tary and elicited hearty connnei' lulion.
Three new members were elected.
Collection amounting to $10 was taken.
ITEMS.
Young men will find it pleasant and
profitable to spend an hour over the
Word of God in our Sunday morning
Bible class which meets in the parlor at
9:45. You are invited.
Remember that the Y. M. C. A. Singing Class affords one of the best opportunities for vocal culture in this city. It
is conducted by Puoi'. Yakniiley every
Tuesday evening and is free to members
or to any young lady.
The Boston Young Men's Christian
Association has over twelve hundred
Our doors are open 7 daysin the week. members in its eighteen evening educa-
over three months.
The work became so popular that the
friends of the cause purchased Max ton
Hall, which was opened by Mil. NOBLX
in March, 1879 aud iv Which about 2,.50n
consecutive nightly meetings have been
held. Prom the exhaustion of this constant work Mil, Noiti.E now seeks relief
and rest by an extendetl trip through
America and down to the Colonies.
Let us all unite in earnest prayer that
that lie may be greatly used by God in
this city.
''According to your faith be it unto you."
tional classes. Tin; only college in the
having a larger number of students
States
Is Harvard.
A few weeks ago when Da. Muniiall
was approaching Portland, Or., as the
steamer was Hearing the wharf, one man
remarked to another: "Well, my friend,
we shall arrive iv Portland just in time
for you logo to church." "Oh," said the
other, "I do my church going by proxy."
To which the Doctor replied: "Yes, and
you'll go to heaven by proxy, also."
Reader, are you doing business by proxy
along this liner'
Y. M. C. A. HISTORY.
The Young Men's Christian Association In London, generally known as "the
parent Association," was organized June
(i, 1814.
To-day there are 2,901) Associations distributed throughout the world—in North
America and Europe, in India, Syria,
Japan, Turkey,
Madagascar, South
Africa, New Zealand, South America,
Australia, China, West Indies, Hawaii,
etc. There have been held iv the capitals of Europe ten World's Conferences,
the first tit Paris in 1855, and the last in
Berlin, in 1881.
The first Association iv America was
organised at Montreal In 1861; the first
in the United States at Boston, a few
months later. The year following, Associations were formed at New York,
Washington, Iluffalo and Baltimore. In
1864, the first Convention of American
Associations was held at Buffalo. Tlie
twenty-sixth of these International meetings was held last May, in Atlanta, Oa.
The work in America has grown in the
[last ten years as follows: Associations
reporting, from 664 to 1)05; net value of
Association property, from $2,483,804 to
$4,863,490, libraries, from 11)8 to 325;
reading rooms, from 201 to 408; secretaries and other paid agents, from 90 to
416; Bible-classes, from 128 to 583; regular prayer and Oospel meetings, from
740 to 1,173.
During the lime sixly-one new buildIngs, valued at $2,007,055, have come
into the possession of the American
A-sociations, and fourteen more are now
in the course of erection.
!■'.',;!. i y-fivo Associations now own
buildings valued at $3,930,281.
The current expenses last year of the
American Associations amounted to
$750, 117. College Bulletin.
—
—"Do You think it would be wrong for
me to learn the noble art of self-defense?"
a religiously inclined youth inquired of
his pastor. "Certainly not," answered
the minister; "I learned it in youth myself and I have found it of great value
during my life." "Indeed, sir! Did
you learn the old English system, or Sullivan's system?" "Neither. I learned
Solomon's system?" "Solomon's system?" "Yes; you will find it laid down
iv the first verse of the fifteenth chapter
of Proverbs—< A soft answer turneth
away wrath.' It Is the best system of
self defense of which I know."
10
THE FRIEND
MANUAL OF PREACHING.
Lector, son lloanhoi-s, by 1-kanki.is
D., i'rolessor uf Bsorsd H:,«-ti>riu
Tosolofftosl Seminary.
N. Y.
.■
throughout the marks of careful thought I)
W. I'isk. 1). and Investigation.
The plan of the
in CblOMgo writer may be indicated by the treat«k Sun,
This liook comes to us with the "compliments of the author," the able and
WVored instructor iv Ilomiletics in
The
Chicago Theological Seminary.
book litis added interest to the writer of
these lines from the fact that the material used is very largely the course of
lectures which we heard from Hit. PlSK's
own lips. We miss in the printed pages
of course the contagious enthusiasm and
intense earnestness ami strong personality of the warm-hearted noble man
whom we faced In the tlas—room.
The author succinctly puts the plan of
the liook iv these words:
Th* iiiitlni.l followed ill ibis volume is, first to
take a sermon in pieces and inspect it* principil
paris, nail t lien to s aow ho. to RMftbsf -.nateii ils
and tuna n sermon, First the
synthesis.
analysis, then tlie
This plan is admirably carried out.
We have given the book an honored
place on the liomiletie shelf of our library where It stands alongside of thirteen other standard works on preaching.
Were we asked by a young preacher just
entering the mini-try, or a lay prjucher
who wished help in training himself iv
Urn forcible presentation of truth, to
loan him the most helpful of all books
from our "liomiletie shelf" we should
without hesitation hand him this new
■•Manual of Preaching." There are
other manuals more profound, others
more original, others mote fascinating
and "hiking" in style, but no other
where the tyro in preaching would find
himself so completely furnished with the
details and miuutia of sermon-making
as in Bit. Fi.-k's work.
SH.NEYD DUCATION.
MLRAIE
Uy the Mararoa, winch arrived in
this port January -(itii, there pasted
through on his way to Auckland, New
Zealand, MB. RICHARD L.visiili-.v,
ex-cliairinan oi the Auckland BouiU ol
Education, ex-uieinber oi the council ol
the Auckland University and ex-governor of the Auckland college. Mil. Laisiilkv has been, traveling In Europe, his
objcei being lo gather till pussible ivformation in relation to the principles and
metnot Is of education in England, Germany, Fiance and Holland.
We were
much pleased to meet this gentleman
daring his brief stay in Honolulu, being
introduced to him by his old friend,
Cait. (i. E. (i. Jackson, who improved tin: time In showing his distinguished
guest whatever is of interest as connected with our beautiful Island city.
We littve before us the London reprint of four essays by Mr. Laishi.kv,
entitled
Education and Educators.
The articles are headed as follows:
I. Education.—What it is.
IL Educators.—Who they should be.
111. Results of Education.—What
they should lie; and
IV. Education Boards, School Committees and State School.
Each one of these articles bears
"
Volume 44, No. 3.
"
■*
MOORE & CO.,
•
78
King St. (TelephoneIIS)
ment, for instance, of the first article. GENERAL
Thus: "What education is not. —The
definition.— Inferences from my definition.—Summary." While the perusal
of these essays would command the at-
Honotuln. 11. 1.,
MACHINISTS.
SHIP'S
BLACKSMITU 1 NCx.
ltep»lrlng .fa lands ui-atly done.
IjanSliyl
i
JOHN
I
NOTT,
tention of mii.v one at all interested in the
cause of education, they tire of special
value to those who are particularly Tin, Copper and Sheet Iron Worker,
identified with tlie work of teaching. It
Plumber, tins l-'itti r. etc.
might be well for the Uoveroment to sievesand Ranee* of kind*. Plsmberf stock und
ill
Metal*, llmise l-'iiriiis!iiiiL' (e.ods, (liuiid Hers,
procure sufficient copies of this guide to
Lamps, Kte.
instructors to plave one in the hands of IjanMyl
Knsliiliiisun St., Hoqolnin.
every teacher on the Islands.
The difference between the devil and
the penitentiary is, that the penitentiary
works you hard and boards you, hut the
devil puts you to the meanest, dirtiest
jobs in the world, and makes you board
yourself. -Sam. Jones.
MONTHLY RECORD.
S..SACHS,
V
•
Successor to A. M Melll*,
IMPORTS!! AND HEAI.KR
\ Millinery
Ladies'
and Fancy Goods,
undOcnls' Furnishing Ooods.
id) rOKT ST., HONOLULU.
jlHiitdiyl
DAOIFIC NAVIGATION
*
CO.,
commission At; :<:vrs,
Corner N.niuiiiiund C-seeu Strut*, Honolulu.
HOLT—STiI.I.M iN.- tp Honolulu, February It'th,
111 Sl. Ainlre-a
by 111" ttlgh: l£i-v. I InAOE.NTS FOB TilE SCIIOONKKS
'- I'ro--'ulhedru:.
llisllnp of I Inn e]-ll
11. Ms. -laMKS K. llol.T Iv -Miss IIKI.KN
Wallele,
Waioli,
W .lilinu.il,
Wili-llil,
K. Sra.LMAN, belli ol tins illy.
Man*,
Etiukal,
Brig Hazard.
I.OVKI.L 1.V1.1-: Al the bouse of Mr. and Mrs Malulo,
ljanSiiil
Jawe* Lylo parent* of the bride, Hoiiololu, February
l.iiti.lsbii. I.) iln- li.-v B.C. Oinel, pastor of tin- Bethel
Union Church, Ms. AltsbiiLovilx. natter mariner,
lo
l-s iua 11. 1.V1.K
oi'i-i-jii(ii:i.T L'IAKKK-ln Hits city, Pebruarj
M ni'ifacliners and Importers of
iNh.al tl.e ri-sidenee ut" the bride* parent*, i»v the Uev.
Oruian,
a.
I'aiuriirTKSOKLT
to r'AJMaefE
youugo«l
.1.
No card*.
US* ll a ■•!'l'erdniaiiil I, I'l.'irl..
Gold and Silver Wen-.
OPrBUOSLT UI.AHKK In tin- elqr,#Febniary
isili. a in- koinau Cathmlc I'uilii drill liytlie Hi In Ken Si.. Ilppejlte odd I-elioivs- Hull. Uiiiiolnlii. 11. I.
Itov a .1 the Biahcp of ( Iba. I'ini.n- OPFBttosi.T t->
Engraving and ail kinds of .I.neln made 1., order.
yoaiige»l daughter of r-'urdluaud L. Clrrke. Vial.-lies. Cluck* aud Jenelry repaired,
SadiiO,.
UanStilf
No eulds.
CA-sliiY- KMMES- In Honolulu. 11. 1., Feliniere
isih. I Bfl.itfhe n--id■•in
f the bride*
thrr. by tie I
;. v. I-: U.Oga>.i. ia-t.iriii the Bethel
Union Church,
tie li'kn i tasßtraad .Miss Ki.i/.a Kkily Bus**, Ihiili
of lie- elty.
KKKAI) \ KAOHU In this city. Feb. -jOili. ut KuSi Mi -iclianl Slu el, liinioinlii. 111.
ivalabuo Church, by the Rev. 11, 11. Parker, mi. Joss
iiiiKiri lo Miss Liv a Kaohc. all of mis city
Subscription* received for any Faper or Mamils*
publ
ilii-d.
A-l \V\'l l -IMS! Il\- |:i IBItelt) at the re-id~i eiu. older* iici-lvt-tl lei mi) I.col | üb' ljui.Miyl
enee ol Conanl Ueuersl Irwin, by J. A.(. tu;z \. pa si or llsne.l.
if 1 ■r.-siiei-t Ch'iieh. Mil. oi.oliOE Nacayama and
.di-s ,i.n .Masi ha. both i.i Japan.
MARRIAGES.
. .
•
•
BIRTHS.
-
At Sapoepoo, Kiiii.i, Hawaii, to the-wife of Albeit
Sata, a daughter
11, lids city. Fell. -Mlh. ISSii. In tlie wife of Mil. I'IIKII■BIOS iiAiuasoN. n iliiuuhter
DEATHS.
MOOMSr—IS
"llass. Gs*N*Sl Mooill-:, son
U.Moor* 11 foillier conilllalelei of the
Brewsle;
of Cajitaill S
■ Horuing sun Aged W year*.
i'I.AKK I s|, eekel-vill'. Mum. 11. 1.. January■■.Mil.
IMS*, ;;. n.Ci.AiiK.
n.mie oi Boston, Ma**.
Alt mi..11- In this eily, mi l-elirdai;: Tl b. tssii. at the
I'unehbDWl slreet. Mils. .1. 1).
re- item ■' of Mr. A
*
VllMll.ll.
k'-il.l.l'.TT -In this < il,. Fehiuar.v 17th, of effusion
nl ilie in iin. iuoMAsMAseio>Ti.i!. youageal child of
Mr.aud Mr*. Co. lielldl,ased lantooihs
l-\i.Mi-.l; -in si. mix Kaptd* lowa, .limitary-~'B. IBsd.
\1 v* A. M. I'Ai.aKii. uialber of M r. .100. A. Calmer, of
this eily..
-i A;:. KitiMuary lull.
•
-
.
in thi- rlty.al the Qneen'* Hospital.
UWh, Tiuisab .Maunkh. ii native of New
COASTING
\
U7ENNEB ft CO.,
' '
Diamonds, Fine Jewelry, Watches,
MOAT, -h-.. ftCo..
Stationers and News Dealers,
-
pEG.
„
KX(JI-:iJIAKI)T,
.
ln:|iorti-i urn [tester n,
STOVES,
l.aill|*>,
i
(.(ji--\\,U'
l'
CHANDELIERS,
I'm' kriju -m-, |iO**« | iilhicliIlnulwait*, Ai/ati-, Ircn nml Ttaware,
....
liravc-r liiock,
h't,r\ Mi-eel,
S oie formerly uccupird b<> S. NoM.uppomu Sj nckels
A Co'i Dr k.
JjatihOyl
i
prank GEirr/,
BOOT AND SHOEMAKER.
Hoots and Shoes made to Order.
IjuiiSfiyi
NO.
IM I'oltT ST..
Ili,n„|„||i.
n'TwoLuLTT moN'woitks CO.",
M.-ilillliiclurcrs nf
York. iieedaSyeiirs.
Maceration
Two-Roll
MAiil'ijS In llomiliilii. Frhrnaiy 18th, MM. lit bei
With I'utent Auliilliulic tied.
inn
M
.niiin;
-hlcnce.
fioni
the
betiuijit
coi
1
khuiks.
rV**eanm Psni ami ('leaning
loved wile el Flunk Manns, aged ill years. 1 inoiilh, 111 Doable and Trtppld Kfleet*
Han*. Stesiu and Wster Pipe*. Brsva und Iron Kittinj;*
days. Deceased was born iv Londonderry, Ireland.
of all descriptions, Kte.
IjanSliyl
HONOLULU IKON WORKS CO.
ALVIN H. KASEMANN,
■"■
BOOK BINDER,
Mills,
FaTschaefer
•
Hawaiian Oazettc liuildinif, up-stair*
ataaasfL unci BUnk Book
Alaunlaid iiritio, in all it* Brunclit-s.
ljantttyl
ljanSOyl
Qood Work aud Moderate Charge*.
Book Bindihk, Caper
& CO.,
GENERAL
Commision Merchants and Importers,
MKKCIIANT ST., HONOLULU, H.I.
co.,
nisHOP &
B. KERR,
T
11
THE FRIEND.
March, 1886.
TREGLOAN,
HS.
•
CornerKort and Hotel Street*,
BANKERS,
MERCHANT TAILOR,
27 Merchant Street.
of Fine Goods for
Importer
Gentlemen s and Youth's
Wear.
__
PRICES REASONABLE!
TITM. G.
|IJiinS(iui6]
IRWIN & CO.,
Sugar Factors & Commission Agts.
Agents for the
Oceanic Steamship Co.
[ijui-iSdylJ
H. DAVIES & CO.,
rpHEO.
KaahuniHtiu Street,
-*-
[loiiohilu.
General $■ Commission Agents
for
•
Agent
Lloyds,
: :
Hawaiian Islands,
:
Draw Exchange on
:
Honolulu.
The Bank of California, San Francisco
And their Agent* in
Huston,
Paris,
New Yurk,
Uotlischild
& Sons, London, Fraukforl.Meser* N. M.
on-the-Main.
Tlie Commercial Basking Co, of Sydney, London.
The Commercial Banking in. of Sydney, Sydney.
The Hunk of New Zeiiluiid. Auckland, and it*
llrunelies in Chiisti-hurch. Ilunedin and Wellington.
The Hunk o* British Columbia. Portland, Oregon
The Aaore and Madeira Island*.
Stockhollil. Swe-len.
The Chartered Hunk of London, tnatrslta and China,
Hongkong. Yokohama. .liipan, and
G\V.
•
B.
MACFARLANE <fc CO.,
.
INH'OIUKKS,
COMMISSION MERCHANTS
SUGAR FACTORS.
Flrc-Proof Building.
T[
.
U Queiii St., Honolulu, 11. I
lj;iliBt;iy
HACKFELJ) &
CO.,
COMMISSION . MERCHANTS
Corner
lj.-inB»yl
and Fort Street*,
Queen
Honolulu
npHOS. 0. THRUM*
linportino and Manufacturing
-■-
Stationer, Book-Seller, Printer,
Hooh-llindi r. Kte.
And Publisher of tin- Hawaiian Minutiae and Annual,
Ui-aler in Fine Stationery. Book*, Music, Toys,
and Fancy Good*,
Furl street, in-ar Hotel St., Honolulu.
ljunHoyl
pHAS.
VV
HAMMER,
Manufacturer and Ilcaler in all kind* of
pLAUS SPRECKELS
& CO.,
BANKERS,
JE.
•
WISEMAN,
Campbell's Kire-proof Block, Merchant St.,
Honolulu, 11. I.
P. 0. Box 315.
Telephone Ml.
Real Kstatc, Insurance, Hallway and (Jeiieral
I
BUSINESS AGENT.
janlßeyl
Always on
CARRIAGE M'F'G.
HAWAIIANend Dealers
Ilouoluln,
■
Hawaiian Islands
•
(I.united)
Agent* for
Kickseckcr's
Unrivalled Perfumes,
& Wagon Materials,
Hi
uei-n St., adjoining
o.
*■
ic.k leid
j
I
Proprietor* and Manufacturer* of the
Messrs.
MAILE COLOGNE!
I EWERS <fc COOKE,
JLi
And Lei Aloha Roquet.
Dealers iv
lumber and Building Material,
OlHce—B2 Kort St.
RonmiT
Lswsasj
A~LLEN
Yard em- King A Merchant SI.
ljanW'.yl
[Cua*. M. Cooks.
ljiinttillf
WILDER'S
Steamer Kinau,
KING
Dt-alcis in
COALS.
Steamer Likelike,
LOKBNZEN
Commander
Commander
Weekly Trip* forKahului and Hana.
LUMBER YARD-ROBINSON'S WHARF.
ljanStfyl
Steamer Mokolii,
I AINE & CO.,
L
HONOLULU, H. 1.,
COMMISSION MERCHANTS,
Commander
Met; It BOOK
Weekly Trips for Circuit of Molokai and l.ahuuia
Steamer Kilauea Hou,
AND
Steamer Lehua,
Importers and deuk'ra in
Hay, Grain, and General Produce.
Agents for the
For Ports on Hamakua
S. G. WILDER, Provident.
I
Coast,
S. 11. KOBE, Secretary.
[llanHßyll
Life Ins. Co.,
Pacific Mutual
Of Califo'nla.
ri .HE
J-
ljanStiyl
ITNION FEED CO.
ELITE ICE CREAM PARLORS.
No. 85 Hotel Strco.. Honolulu.
Delicious Ice Creams and Cakes.
Telephone 175.
Islandorder* solicited, and goods oelivered promptly,
ljaiitioyl
Vanillic*, Purlin*. Halls and Weddings supplied.
LAHOE STOCK OF ISLAND CUBIOS.
11. J lIAKT,
Telephines: Bell 182; Mutual 33H.
ijaiiHfiyl
Proprietor.
PHTY SHOEING SHOP,
Fort-St., oppoHite Dodd'* Stable*.
SALE,
Horse-Shoeing in all its Branches,
IN QUANTITIES TO SUIT PURCHASERS,
RICE
FRESH MILLED
RICE MILLS.
HONOLULU STEAM
J. A. HOPPER, Proprietor.
IjanB6yl
CO.,
Weekly Tripe for lliio and Way Port*.
LUMBER, BUILDING MATERIALS AND
FOR
STEAMSHIP
VLiraildd.)
& ROBINSON,
Honolulu, 11. I
Borates*. & Schreck'*
Homoeophatic Medicines,
CiunlierleiKt Coal, and all kinds of
Carriage
ljanS6yl
US aud 116 Port Street,
in Iron,
Importers
Hand.
DRUGGISTS,
Draw Exchange on the principal parts of the world,
Ijuuboyl
and transact a <Ji ncial Bunking Basin***.
COMPART,
of Goods
Jobbing und Let ml
Coruor of Queen and
Honolulu, 11. I.
OrderH from the other Uland* promptly attended to.
A First-Class Stock
BENSON, SMITH & CO.,
Chicken Feed.
SADDLERY AND HARNESS Hay, Grain and Edinburgh
streets
[Ijun&jyl]
Furnishing Goods, Hats, Etc.
ljiiiiNtlyl
—
It Mackak ane
Gentlemen**
Transact a General Banking Business,
British mid P-oretjm Murine Insurance Co.
Olßce No.
Northern AsMir.uier Company (Plre and Life).
ljanßtlyl
"Pioneer*' Lint Packet*, Liverpool Uj Honolulu.
Liverpool UttUe. Nm«. Itf mid VI The A Ibduy. ljmiStiyl
O. W, .Mackaki.ane.
MERCHANT TAILOR,
I
Done in the most workmanlike manner.
and trotting Shoe* a specialty. Rates are
reasonable. Highest award and Diploma for handmade Shoes at the Hawaii Exhibition, 1884. Horse*
taken to and from the shop whendesired.
i. W. MeDoNALD, Proprietor.
ljaoboyl
Racing
Volume 41, No. 2.
THE FRIEND.
12
riMIE ROYAL HAWAIIAN HOTEL
..
MAWAIIAN MONEY ORDERS.
MR. M.GRAHAM. MANAGER.
Terms, £,? per day.
.
. ..
.
$75 per month.
This llolel Is on-- of Hie It- idliigiiriliiti-eliiril Mrurlgfl
■-* d
..1--:p'ii nli hit-in: il-emuores of Hniioliilii. II
prise an cnlln-square of ut- in I iiu i at res. frun ling (>.- II n
.1 fi-i 11 Ihwii
tel street, i his I .a-i-nr< in" oi- aoi| ie
artistically
—.',
At
laid mi
and beiiiiiifiil milk*, which areIronical
Them are
with (loweiln- 11111111- it-d
ire--.
1 %-.%?.-,.Vtjt
i.llullig l-l.tl.
-"T
t.clv. pretty Col■«*■«l.bin .1
'*!&.
,;••, ••: ■';'-,■
-«ll nnil-r Hie lI.H. Iliiauii enien- The Hotel and ullages -ff-SSiT
■' isjg«
.flora uec
audition* for **l guests in.-Ims. mini of
J]
1'
the Hotel eontalm the Mneat bllllnid hall in tin tit\.
.lls£.
_.
'I'm- main tnli ,111 !■■ n lb- "iiia! ll "ii.tu Hie iil-lil
;^,'«.»; • •■** f[. Vr\£p. Z,
of which are tin-I'lcgunlly liimished parous ,\ I ronn
li. .1
|
11 3(/$s
in.
l-f'-.-i*
•age-way leu-Is from tin uiuiii hall lo tin- iliini
_' ■■ '■■';'
'-Q
ills op-n 01, to l.roiid v.-r niiiiis, »h. r-h ti.^J
Thee apai
i
111- ma In si en )
magniliei-nl new of the \ ~11.1111 Mo
"ii'''"if
al •■- J U337
■**' ■''■;<.
throu.'ii iho v/eallhof trop ca, fuliage ihni .unoii.d- tin-J"
'*>'tjiwhalioines. The far* dispenwd Is th hi lb* market afc^SZj
T2:
.-^-^-tii,'
inuiAß.
-JCSa&vSi*?
reapwti
lotatges
11-de
fords, and I* ilrsi-c.iss in nil
an- supplied with par* walei ftoni an *rt«*l*« well on tie- pre**!***. The ('!• k'« office is fnrnlfbed with the Tele
11! Hi"
idl bastne** 11 nils or Ho city.
phone, by which cniiiiinni, en Iion is bad
Every afbrt bus been mad*, and money In l*hiy upended and -i tie ureaeM able management
To MAKE lllls KsTWH.ISII LNT
■
,
"
..
1
'»
■
•
'
■
. ..
1:
. .
•
''
-1
_
1 ■
,
1
1
1
,
.
Domestic Postal Money Orders will be furnished on
application al any "f tin- following Money Order
Offices, payable al Ibis or any oilier Money orderOllico
named below;
11-
O. HAWAII.
•-
Makawao.
Humaknapoko,
liana,
ON OAHU.
ON KAUAI.
Honolulu,
Waluaae.
Llhne,
X in.
Wiiiiuea,
ON MOLOKAI,
Kipan,
Haualei,
Kannakakal.
Kih-llea.
1110-I justly
r*pHE LATEST AMERICAN INVENTION
Koiilalcekea,
Wiiioiniiii,
Wailuku,
Piihalu.
,
A repatStlon it now enjoy- null
Kahuliii,
Inh.inn,
Win inea,
"THE MODEL FAMILYmerits.HOTEL,"
(j.iuS(iyl)
ON MAUI.
Hilo,
Koliuln.
Honokaa,
!
FOREIGN MONEY ORDERS.
THE VICTORY OF ELECTRICITY,
•
Application for Money Orders, payable in the Untied
Since Klecll-iclty has b-en upidied for li.-11l in-.' lillr- lit Sin ill -iz-. Qelfffll of 10:1, plot- I.imp. 14 inches states, i ay l"- made 11 any Money Order Bee in this
"1 poinds; Tor lighting rooms, collar*
pose» nil effort* of Inventors have b*«n directed to weight,
ittiiag*
powder mng ,/.n■■- (or similar |il»c*< Kingdom; and they will b« drawn at the General Poat
construct a lump for general domestic o»*. Tin-mi-m
I tes.
Ipl
»In
*I»e* are le|iti. coaches. Illniiiluatlon*. office. Honolulu, on any International Money Ontei
why ibis prnlileiii mis till now -n.t In-eii Milv-d. i- that
f Iheiden gardens, niln.-s or any other industrial purpose. Pries. Office mi !i" til in-'l Statu'. <.f 1 Mcli ;i Hal r. in be leen
none of the Inventor- couldrid themselves to
the »ys- I ill.
of l'us Heating, und thatall have adhered
by Inquiringat any Hawaiian I'd-; Ofloes
l'«i Lamp ,i illvcrcd free to any part of the world,
Urn of producingl ho El-c.irieiiy n> *onic central pi lee,
Likewise Mol ey ">;>i 1- may be-drawn in the t*nii*!d
K. Medium -lz- rlerve* all rtomeatlc piirpo*e-« for
or by large machinery, instead of drst laying down the
lighting room*, houses, etc. I his Lamp I* elegantly Stabta, payable itl any Honey Order ufflce in tMi Kingprinciple thai Lamp which *honld ever become genreiiovablwhile
ground Ulas*
and 111s
{rally useful and popular, mail bo portable, like in Oil decorati-d,
dom.
Ulobe.
Lamp, and contain tin generator of Blectitclty In
,„
~,
Price, per I .-imp (inclusive of Bronze Fool and ulobe
itself i c.. in iln- fool "I im- Lamp.
GBXBRAT. I'osr OFPICS. |
delivered
IjnnSfiiyr
The .Ni'iinan lih in iet In:.- tCo has at last succeeded richly and elegantly constructed), tUX
Monoluu January 1. ISHO \
in completely re*liilng thi« ideal ol Kleetric Lighting, ] free lo any pari or the world.
and there 1* no doubt that thl* meat Important luvoii- I 0. Grand slae for Parlor, Hall, "alexin. Public Ituildtion will brin" üb,mt u complete revolution la all Ing. Ac. The Lump glvesamosl brilliant and steady
li-.-ht. has large r-in ivnlii.- whit* Ulobe. decorated
branches of lighting,
and theworkmanabtpl* both trvt-chu*
our Electric Lamp n mil i,ei!/t*e Mu.liin.try. Conduc- nn-i tastefully.Pricejßl.lo,
7.' Fort Street, Ronnlnln,
-.
tors nor any egpenslv-e outlay, and 1* neither c »mpll- andclegant.
p
1.1
hat
l-'not
l.v
111 eitll -r llionze. .lupanese, l"a!ence or
culed, ilisagiei-ahle 111 manipulation; all I
Is net
Sll»er Ozlde.
sirv is 1.1 leflll ii every four or tlv- days «ii n acid. 'l'he.
Vny *puclal sis*or design made to order. Estimate*
cost of lighting u-iil be at cKtap mt as* \% cent* per
Ammauitioa of ail Kind*.
hour I- and it na- 1.el on-1 ia latter the i iwaee ntvan- liiriiisln tl.
and
be
Machines
and all Attachments.
Sewing
use,
will
ready
producing
smoke
nor
are
for
immediate
heat,
carbonic
-rAll Lamp*
tag* of n
re- *eai, «ocurcly packed in ttrang wooden box, with
acTd, owing to which the ulr is not Impared, and
Surgical Inutriment* of nil kinds cleaned and re
uf
is
tinlor
nuanttty
o*e,
prim
ol
It
-d
directions
chemical*
1
temperature.
mains at th- sunn- degree
paired .Ith qj .;«■!■ dispatch.
ther, absolutely Inoderou*. und doe* not need to be sufficient for «ev.-..,i months'lighting md one extra
Madam** Damon st*s l*atteriui. .Mat"; ials f>r BmbroloV
A. and two for *iae* it und V The w\
kindled by match or otherwise, but »imp.y by turning iiuiu-r for *lte
and
all
kinds
of fniicy work. urdora From the other
tin-key tl'lll- ueo'iiliiui all iluni/.i iffire, explosion i-r nee—-rv eheuiieul- can be purchased in any Drug
ijanM.yl
Island* promptly attended t'>.
*■ 11■-- village.
Buffiicnt ion. us in the case of gas. If th* key I* left open; Simv. 1 yen m.
miinui',l by a written guarantee
Brery Lump l»
is
and It iiinsi be conceded hat this advantagealoo*
year,
exchangt-d.or
refunded
money
any
it
is
lurthoi
for
use
aud
be
will
preferable to
kaowo
Invaluable,
If the -a ac -Ii mid not give complete satisfaction.
kind of lighting for the following reasons:
any child -a,,
0, its manipulation is ,osi,„ P ,e t
You will alwayi find >n your arrival
:
1 1
1
•
...
.
~
, ,
.
Mrs!
TIIo.MAS laok,
[mporter and Dealer in (Jims,
i 111
•
1■
£"£
equal in power of I, b:i„g to g.s. c
(5.? That
„-,„...„.,.
. .
10
nffireis ab*„l*tehj M « tUet,
titlugulshImmediately, Itbyanysc-
ecenj danger
-a* th* light will
cideut the gut** nrrouudlng
"(«.,'
tin-
hur.u-i -hoiiid be
That it will burn, evil in Ik* (tntßgsal wind,
couipletely uimfleeted, thus being invaluable for ilium-
.,
atlons. lighting of garden*, corridor*, etc.
,
This Lamp is constructed for the present 111 three
different size*:—
~
janlBo]
pEORGE
~
»l
;
a||
iKnTs'lVrnS.
Ready to Deliver Freight and Baggage i)t Every Description
-. .
Willi Proa
Z?"~£,1Ptc'
".^on?!nd
l »v nhtr'Vt
l
"""
* ""Limps protected by law, and
Elcetrle
'... , ,
•""""'
-ii,;r
Imlmiloa
11
in-
I infrlnxeineaU will be imwecoteil
;»*-.\0.-nls. S.-.lesi.itii 11:. (~ii,i,ils-|,,i, .111,1 ConriaTuer*) fef our Lump*, wnuteil t very where. Nt>
aiH'cial kinnvl-iloe ..r caiiilal reqiiii. il.
A fortune to 1m- mule liv active ihthoiib.
'
Address: THE NORMAN l.l.KCrivIC UOHT CO.,
PHILADELPUIA, l. s. OF AMERICA.
r
LUCAS,
vl
CONTRACTOR. AND BUILDER,
Honolulu Steam Planing Mills,
i).
LANE'S
MARBLE
IH
No
WORKS,
I'url Slrt-et.
monuments!
ESPLANADE. HONOLULU, H. I.
-
ir
head
•
ll.ilel.
stones,
I'linii-. renin*. M -it.i- imi ■■-.
Manufactures all kinds of Mouldings, Ilr.-ieki-ls,
Window Frames, Illinils. Ne*ne*, Hour.., ami all kinds MAiiiu.E W>iMtX "/•' WTB9T OSH uif riox
of Woodwork Finish. Turning, scroll und Basel
in nil c IS i ir.lt ll 111 I ■ i«l 'ii.-11l n
sawing. All kind* of Plants*;, Sawing, Morticing and
Tenanting. Ordt r« prouiptly uttemled to, uinl work Monuments & Headstones Cleaned &. Reset
piiaraiitued. Order* from the oilier Islttntls *o
OngSfS from iln- oilier Island- Promptly
«lii n.1.tl 10.
ljswjr 1ljiinB6lf
lleiied,
•
'
OEDING'S B.UIUAUE EXPRESS
•
is
pine**
and De-pateli.
Oftlce. 81 Kiiilt street; Telephone. 8(i; R««ldenoe
ljllliHiyi 1
IT I-||l,i- lllxiv. 1 slre.-l.
\f"ITITURaESS,
-i-1
•
N'u. SI Kin.-
11
t. Honolulu.
Carpenter and Builder.
(i
EN ERA L EXPRESS BUSINESS.
Diaytuji and Steamer
carefolly handled.
Carriage Painting dune liyi flrstretftae workman.
•Jobbing in above lines attended to «iiii prompt noae.
mil chargen according to the amount aud quality of
IjanSliyl
.vork. UWtffi telephone*Wj Rejdence, 10H.
n E. WILLIAMS,
\J ■
Import; r. MunuT totur-T, Upholsterer and
Dealer in all kinds of Furniture.
fc'uriiituri* Warerooins In New Ftre prool Hnlldlnf,
No*, ill Port street and W Bote! ntraets.
Detroit Hafe Co F-ath.-r. hair, May and Knreka Mattresses and Pillows, ami Spring Matfreasai on
hand and made toorder. Pianos and Sew Ins Machines.
always a band tad for sale or rent. Beai Violin and
1 Uulta< Strings and all kinds of Mntlcal [natrnmanu
i fur sale as cheap as the cheapest.
OjranCT
•
j IjautKiyl
C B. WILLIAMS.
HONOLULU, H. 1., MARCH. ISSti.
Volumk 44.
\J
-'--*■
Corner Fort and Hotel Sts.
Olllcc N0..1 liuiliuiiinuti St., Honolulu,
Ajrent for tho
Assets, Jan. 1,1S8">, $-.f1.ir.1,'.«:, M,
imperial Fire Insurance Coiupiny, of London.
up rial
Capital. Sl-j.StlO.tKlu.iJO.
MEN'S UNO BOY'S CLOTHING !
Are the Lowest in this City,
wai ii .■'
the ensuing
.sited our store kno-v; but during
~ ock we
art going
'" " Kuc.ck the
bottom out," and Sell
Millinery, Fancy & Staple Dry Goods,
Ld\, of London.
Now York Board of Underwriters.
II jnl.miy 1]
A
W. PEIECE & CU,
SHIP
CHANDLERS
and
Commission
Merchants,
(huts
[ljanwiyl]
At MOM which two weeks bm we r-liould
have thought imnoe-aiblel
"Necessity Knows No Law!"
We must have room for oar
iitii Bombs.
ATTORNEY
At any cost, and if the getting of it lnv Ivos the selllnc of our entire Clothing stock at half cost
from the manufacturer, why, we are
sorry for it, but it can't
be helped!
During the coming week we shall offer
Great Bargains in all Departments
])OOKS !
CHAS. J. FTSIIEL,
ljautiti
AT LAW & NOTARY
St.. next
O
B. DOLE,
lo
Trust
l'oslofflcc.. janB6yl
* LAWYER, a NOTARY PUBLIC,
l~> Ka.ili
Vf
aim M
janB6yl
Honolulu, 11. I.
THOMPSON,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
Ami Solicitor In Chancery oihVK Campbell 1 Block.
second Story, Uoom- S aud !», I'.nlraiice Merchant St.
*
lj lliSliyl
\ITHITING.4
AUSTIN,
T A. MAGOON,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
.lul.l, 11. I.
lJanHßyl,
K. MILLER,
General Business Agent,
Mr. F. H. Revell. Publisher and BookBcller of Chicago, U. S. A., dtsires to call
Office i'Z Meichi.nl Street, with J. A. Mugooil.
the attention of the readers of Tub Kkiinu
lo the exceptional advantnp;es at Ih'k comAgt. for Klinkner's lied Rubber Stamps.
mand for supplying books in all depart[Ij.mBfiyij
merits of literature promptly and at the
COLLEGE,
most favorable rates.
Honolulu. Hawaiian islands.
UEV. W. 0. HBUgTTT
President
Mr. Revell desires especially to call atThli 111 -lifitioii in equipped as never before for its
work. Btsbop Hull 01 Scicnoc i.- completed and turtention to his own publications of K'eligious iiifhed.
and u thoroughly qt.iiiiflud Profesuor ln.-iullcd
works comprising Devotional Books, Hooks over this t epaitint'llt.
In; Colla*** Library Man b*en moved into plcneant
i
for Bible study, etc., etc., and including qnaltera. catalogued und enriched by the addition of
the works of Mr. D. L. Moody, Mij. I). \V. nearly aavea bandrad earafall; lelactod whHMs, Tu*
Acaduinlc KmklMi CoirM of It* years is realizing all
Whittle, and other eminent Evangelists.
thai Wii* aiillcip .Kit lor it.
htivu rcccntlydonc away with the utrlctI hr EYatJieoi
A complete catalogue will be sent post free to any lyClaaaical
UoOT***i p>abtHHuttiig therefor a Preparaaildre-s on applll lit ion.
Catalogue of standard books comnrisine; tin' best
staudaid authors may also b<- hid gratis. Also
full reduced pries list at Bibles Including the
best '* Teuetiers- Kdilionß."
The regular mail affords such a prompt,
safe and cheap means of transportation
that it can be heartily commended. Hemittnnce can be made by postal order or
"•>y U. S. Hank Hills to be had at the bankers.
Refers by permission to Rev. J. A. Cruzan. and
Kcv. E C. Ofljel, Editors of i've Priisd
It will cost but a postal card to send for
our Catalogues. Correspondence invited.
Call i arly and buy yourself rich.
.
nl
Money careful!} invested.
BOOKS ! n
Teachers Institute-*, ale.
To Arrive by First Steamer,
PUBLIC, M.-rili
Office -M Merchant St., II
Any book fromany publisher sent postpaid on re
ceipt of prlee. Special term*given to Libraries,
NEW SPRING STOCK
janßfiyl
AITM, R. CASTLE,
'DENTAL
Davis' Pain
, Killer,
MEN'S & BOY'S CLOTHING
Corner Fort and Hotel St.
Honolulu. 11. I.
ATTOKXEYrt AT LAW,
■Ja)MM Street, Honolulu,
janB6yl
No. V Kmiliunianii t-tn-el. Honolulu, II I.
Dealer* in Wbaliac Uearof all kinds, Wha'abnat*, Boat
stork, Anchor*, Chains, Artesian Well Hup,-. Wire
WHITNEY, M D., D. D. S.
T
M
Hope, 11 *■ ini> and Manila Cordage Deck. Naval Htoree,
I'alnis r.nil oil-. Bra*i and <1 ilvaiiizcl Marian HardBOOMS ON FORT ST.,
ware. Iteiluiaker*'(foods Boatbutld ir»' Hardware, Etc.
onice in Brewer* Block, corner Hotel and Fort Sts,,
AaTenia for
febStlyl
Kniiii.u ■■■, iloi.i ,street.
Brand'.t iiud Pl«roe i
UNDERWEAR,
A AS.IFORD,
ATTORNEYS AT LAW,
Capital, JEI.-4G8.01K).
Prices for
Commercial Union .-Vsauranoe 0o„
As thee
Four hue ATofUMn U /'/,/. uitnttf Cards irntrttd in Chit
columnfor $:l UO per year.
ASHFOUD
Equitable Life Assuntios SnoiHty of the U. States
A STORY WORTH READING !
Our
PROFESSIONA L CARDS.
t LEXANDEB J. CARTWRKJIIT
rtHAS. J. FISIIEL,
Number 3.
Fleming H. Revell,
Literature
and
Bible
tory ColletfO OooTMl of five yearn, w. ich given not only
a thorough preparation in Latin, Un-ek and Muthem:ti i<>. but inci'.'dea uL-o all I he national i-cieiict'n taught
in ike UolleCe, together with a yearV aludy of Bullish
Lailgaage .mil Literature. They believe tin* will provs
mi aicoedlugly deelrable end attractive course tor (he
yoonft people of theae Maud* who pian for f nthwr
ftudy übroad. In addition to taeee cour»en. the beet of
id provided in Vocal and lu.-ti umental
innirueiloii
M n.-ic aiid in Mechanical und I'ltehiind Draw.tig. 'I he
lioarAintf DepartoMHit let f*i eaoeileai condition.
Pounded an a Chrtetloo luatitulion, li la the purpose
oi lv Treat*** to make It* moral atinoaphtre and life
ac pare and tuaithi vi ac in itt> physical.
Punahou Preparatory School,
MISS K. Y. HALL, Principal.
Is rioine; excellent work in preparing its pupils for
Oahu College Those over ten years of ase acslrlni? to
enter this school, may i>e received as boarders to the
College.
n,l Uataligucs of both schools wltli full information, furnished by addressing the President. The
Warehouse,
terras f«n the year Domn as follows: —January 11.April
148 aud 160 Madison St., Chicago, U. 8. A.
11|**>T
19, and September 13, ISM.
Evangelical
'
Volume 44, No. 3.
THE FRIEND.
2
8. H, CASTLE.
J
pASTLE
& COOKE,
«• ATIIKKTON.
SHIPPING &
COMMISSION- MERCHANTS,
Importer
Agente for
The Kohala Sugar Co.,
The Haiku Sugar Co.,
Tin? I'uia Plantation,
The I'apaikmi Sugar Co.,
The Waiaiuu Plantation. It. lialntead.
The A 11. Mni:!i & Co. Plantation,
The New England Mutual Llf* In.-uraiice Co.,
The Union Marine |*a*fa*M*C*w,
The Union Fire luMuranee Co..
The
Fire In auranee Co.,
English and American
WHOLESALE AND KETAIL DEALKKS IN
I)HUGS, CHEMICALS,
and
EO.
•
MERCHANDISE
lias now a
Valuable Assortment of Goods
Ex late urrivals.
TOILET ARTICLES.
At the No.
Wilcox A Ciilib*' tSewiiiK MachineCo.,
KeralngLnu Sewing Machine Comp'y.
HALL & SON,
of
IMPORTERS,
The Oeorge K. Ulakc Manufacturing Co.,
D. M. V«*ftC*J** CtntriliiL'uln,
Jayne & Son.- Medicine*,
ljanH6yl
r T. WATERHOUSE,
I OLLISTER & CO.,
Manufacturers of
Store
10
Can be seen a
Ginger Me and Aerated Waters Great Variety of Dry Goods,
(Limited,)
IMPOKTEKS AND DEALERS IN
And at Queen Street,
II A RD WA R E
And
109 FORT STREET,
GENERAL MERCHANDISE,
CROCKERY & HARDWARE
Cor. Fort and Klag sts. Honolulu, 11. I.
and
offickbs:
WM. \V. HALL, President sod Manager.
L. C. ArILBM, Secritiiry und Treasurer. ljanBoly
W. K. ALLEN, Auditor.
ljanStiyi]
TOM MAT aid 1.0.WHITE, Directors.
II E. MoINTYRE
BREWER & COMPANY,
-*--*-*
(Limited)
General Mercantile and
COMMISSION AGT'S.,
tjucen Street, Honolulu, 11. I.
P C Jones, Jr
Joseph o Carter
W X Allen
List of Officers :
I'iesident and Manager
Treasurer and Secretary
~r
Directors :
Hon v'lius X llishop.
St
Allen.
II Water lioubc
ljunSliyl
PACIFIC
HARDWARE CO.,
Snccessors lo
B. F. Dillingham & Co., and Samuel
Nott,
IMPORTERS,
Iniporlers and Doalert* in
Groceries, Provisions and Feed.
East corner of Fort and attaaj Streets.
New Goods Received by Every
Packet from the Eastern
States and Europe.
Fresh California Produce
Hy Every Steamer.
IJanWily
pHARLES
HUSTAGE,
House Furnishing Goods,
Silver Plated Ware,
Cutlery, Chandeliers,
LAMPS,
LANTERNS,
Paints, Paint Oil, Turpentine,
Varnishes,
Kerosene Oil of the Best Quality.
IjanB6yl
ljaniloyl
HOTEL ST. MEAT , MARKET,
No, 58 llolel St
O. JT. WALLEH,
No. lIS Kinc Street. (Way's Block),
Honolulu.
JanSr.yl
[TENBY MAY &
CO~
:
Pkoprietor.
Choicest Meats from Finest Herds
At l.otrei.l Pftett.
ljanStim6
WM. McCANDLESS,
No.
(i
iji.ien si., Kioh
D*j*l*ff in
Market.
Choice Beef, Veal, Mutton, Fish, &c.
Kamily aid thlpplttg onlein carefully allemhil to.
Ll** slock fi.niir-hec] to ye***)*. at phoft Dottcr. »nd
V*g*t*M*i tif alt kind> Mipjilicd
a
GROCERIES AND PROVISIONS, -» * '
Fort .Street, Honolulu,
Hardware, Agricultural Implements,
« BRO,
PRINCIPAL STORE AND WAREHOUSES.
to order.
ljanHfiyl
lTsmith,
Importer and Dealer in
LAVA SPECIMENS, PLATED' WARE,
UorubUiattoi 3p#ctac)«j. Olaaawar*. Sewing
Klftff*i
MactalA**, PtciOre rranHe*, Va*»e», Bracket*.
janWiyl
Termi
Ktc, Etc.. Etc.
mt
eoit St reel.
strictly t'aak.
-
p
KJ*
Honolulu. 11. I.
TEA DEALERS,
I" OUTS ADLER,
A-i
Dealer in
Coffee Roaster* und
Provision
Merchants,
New Boeali received l>y every vessel from the Halted
Stale* Hud Europe. California I'roducc received by
i'vitv sii-anier.
ljanl-6yl
98 KORT STREET, HONOLULU.
MELLER
& HALBE,
Manufacturers of Fine
CANDIES & PASTEY
lj»nB6yl
Lincoln Block.Honolulu.
BOOTS AND SHOES
ljanSßyl
No. 13 Nuuanu Street.
WOOULAWN
DAIRY & STOCK
COMPANY.
MILK. CREAM. BUTTER
And Live
Ij.nBt.yl
Stock.
3
THE FRIEND.
Volume 44.
HONOLULU, H. L, MARCH, 1886.
1 lie delusion of "praying to death" exercised a
powerful influence over their minds. Chiefs H.id
Is published the first daw of e<trh month,at Honolulu, common people alike felt iis force, though the
is to bo luppoaed,seldom c tme niuier its
Jl. 1., by .\IKKHHB. CItUZAN AND OuOt'.l., pnslm « of foi nier, il
buuciul operation. Even to this day tins aoperattthe Fort-St. ami Bethel Union Churches, Subtiou exist*, tln-uioi rapidly woniuiu, nw.iv. Hike
scription rite |Bpaai*ua invai:iahl,yin advance. the rttnembrauou of goblin tile*., the infloeuee is
long lelt, alter all belief is destroyed. A* a poAer
All communications ami letters connected with the till engine ot pivernuieut and priesthood, it WU
literary department of the paper thonld he ad- to lie (onred and deprecated equally by the iiiuodressed " Bar. E. C. Oookl, Box 347, Honolulu, (vin and tliu Limn.
THE Fill KM)
H. I."
Business letters should he addressed "J. A. OuuzAN,
liox 326, Honolulu, H. 1."
A limited number of unobjectionable advertisement*
will be taken from tkoee mliom the proprietor* beHere tube honest ami reliable. Adtertisinti rates
mmle known on application.
Mil. KoßEiir Liainii, Manager of the Sailor's Home,
is Agent at' I'm: FauMD in Honolulu, and is authorized to receipt for siibserif/doiis.
Mb. James A. Makiin is Ai/eul of The Fbiend in
Hilo, ami isanthiirizeil to lerei/d far sahsrrijitions.
Extra copies of I'iik Fainro mil be found on s ile iii
J. M. O.Vl', Jl!., it Uo.'S aml at the Sailor's Hume.
For files and h .<•'. numbers a/iplij to J. A. CItUZAN.
x
•,'; ;
k. c. tXjidi'.ij,
j
FAITH—CURESREVERSED.
Many good things come from Boston,
but it does not follow that all Huston
methods are good things. That city has
recently become the center of the delation known as "Kiiili-i'u.e." An attempt
has been m.ule lo reduce Hie cure of
disease simply by faith to a system, .and
instruction is now given in Boston in an
"institution" or ••College" Iv this new
art. In calling this modem craze a delusion we would not be understood as
denying that genuine cures of certain
kinds of diseases are wrought by lakh.
Especially isiiiis trueol nervous diseases
which depend almost wholly upon the
will and the imagination. We believe
that genuine cures have been Wrought at
Lourdes,
in
France,
feipirituaiist
oi this new
sutttuieut lo esby
mediums,and by the disciples
erase. The evidence is
tablish the fact thai diseases of a certain
class have been healed by each oi these
widely different wonder-workers. But
we do Dot believe that there is anything
miraculous, or supernatural, or power
divine in the cures. Il is simply the
action of the imagination aud the arousing of a dormant will, energy aud purpose which overcomes and banishes, at
least for a time, the di-ease.
In all the discussions evoked in our
religious exchanges by this craze of
"Faith-cure" which we have read, no
one has called attention lo the fact that a
belief in the malign influence of prayer
has had equally potent effect among
superstitious pagans. The native 11awaiians are a ease in point. OpeniugOUT
copy of <'Jarves' History of the Hawaiian Islands," on page 39 we find this state-
meut:
Number 3.
below The
(N. V.) Aution's stiniiiiary and
comments on this decision:
Before ISSU the hiewuiool beer was n» free from
reatrietiou in Khiuui* as the ruilliiui uf flour, and
when the Legislature enacted h statute li i bidding
tie further Drawing of laser, it made every brewery
wortbleaje. To pass, audi law uithoiit ooiiiptnsaiuin, the owners of breweries for Hie InssislliUß
imposed upon them i* simply to legalise robbery
by society in Its nrganlimd capacity. The Federal
court* are bound to protect Hie injured oiuzeli in
bis rights if he can secure no redress train iho
fs;ati, and there is no doubt Hint the Supreme
Court will sustiiii Juduo ISrewer if the case is
curried to Wellington. Section 1 of the Fourteento Aiueudiiieiil provides that "No State shall
deprive any person of lite, liberty, or property
without due process of law,'' und the highest tribunal lias alio idy gotw OH record, iv the case uf
liarleiiioyer vs. low*, some years ago, a* holding
that, while n Stale may Kgolata, and even prohibit, til tiafllc in intoxicating liquors, it may not
deprive tua owner of properly iv which he bad invested under a pel missive system, without waking
bun due amends. The deotsi >n is of more practical importance in lowa tuiiii in Kansas. The latter Siate Ins never gone extensively into the mnnulaciuie of liquors of any kind, but tile cousus of
IMb showed lli.it lowa had 114 establishments lor
the production of malt liquors and three distilleries, wluca reported ah aggregate c.pitalo:
about
$2,100,000. li.it il moat be remembered that this
repreiente paly the v.due returned for purpose* of
.e-sesnn ut and taxation, and that the actual iuveatuuenl was much eruatcr Ih.in this estimate.
The larger share of I his was undoubtedly invested
in building* ami in icliinery, winch prohibition
rendered worthless, ami the State is thus bound
by Judge Brewer'e deoiadon l<> piy over some milli ins to the people who wore int rested in such
estublinhments when tiie law was paaasu.
•
Tlie.se words were written forty yean
ago of tlie early lluwuiinns. Hut tlii.s
old superstition still linger*) In the remnant of the native race, and is potent
still for evil. One of the ablest and
brightest of the physicians now in the
employ of the Hawaiian government, in
a conversation with the writer of this
article recently, said that he repeatedly
has to meet this superstition: "What is
the moi lor?" "They are praying me to
death I'' will be the sad hopeless reply.
And it is almost impossible to disabuse
the poor victim of his delusion. Die he
must, and die he Will, and (lie be does
in some case-; not l run disease, but from
terror, which j lining hands with some
slight functional disorder, or producing
it, causes death.
We do not doubt the genuineness of
some faith-cures, neither do we doubt
thai many llawa. ins have died nol so
much from disea ■ as froin the effects of
COUNCIL AND ORDINATION.
tiiisoUi superstition. They were "prayed
Council, composed of pastors and
A
death"
as
as
just
to
Certainly the Boston
representatives of the Fort .street,
enthusiasts pray then- patients to health. lay
Bethel Union, Kawaiahao, Kuumakapili and Kohala Churches was held in
TWO IMPORTANT DECISIONS.
the lecture room of Fort-Street Church,
Two very important decisions in refer- February 18, lHHi>.
ence to prohibitory laws have been given
The Council was tailed to order at 2:!10
recently. The first is by ,)i due Hayes, o'clock P. m. by the Rev. J. A.
Ciuz.w,
of lowa, who decides in effect that if it is who read a letter missive
from the Forto
a crime
sell liquor it is a crime to eign Church of Kohala, requesting that
buy, for the buyer becomes an accessory MR. 10. N. DvK.it, it member of (hat
10 the sale and an abettor In the viola- Church might he examined with a view
tion of the law. This is certainly logical, to his ordination to the christian minisand common-sense. One of the strong- try.
est objections to prohibitory laws has
Rev. C. M. llvde, D.l). was elected
always been the injustice ol inflicting all Moderatorand Kkv. 10. (;. Ogoei,, Scribe.
the penalty upon the seller. It (here is Tiie Moderator opened the meeting with
any crime shout the liquor business the prayer. Brother Dyer,
owing to tlio
buyer is a partner with the seller In It. a;earner A7//«/( -being detained at Hilo,
But if this decision stand it will render not being present,
the Council adjourned
the enforcement of prohibitory law* :ill to meet at the call of the Moderator.
more difficult, for success in prosecutions
The Council met again in the same
lor selling liquor must depend largely upon place on toe 14th at 2:M i\ m.
the evidence of the customers of the saThere were present: Rev. J. A. Ckuloons. It is now very difficult to compel zan witii linn J. M. Whitney
and
drinkers to testify against saloon-keepers. A. W. I'KAitfKof the Fort-Streei
Church;
11 in doing so they criminate themselves, Kkv. 10. C. Ooaw. with "irrnnss
D. P.
as would be the case under this decision, I'ktersox and J. O. Carter of the
they of course would not testify. Force Betiiel Union Church; Rev. H. H.
them to do so and perjury would be the Career with Mr. Hiram of Kawaiarule.
hSO Church; Kkv. J. Waiamau with
A still more important decision is that Messrs. Kaeama ami Kaukaxa of
made by Judge Brewer in the United Kaumakapili Church; and Dr. J. Wight
States Circuit Court at Topeka, which of Kohala Church. Invited
ministers
declares that the State of Kansas must present were: Rev. C. M. Hyde,
D.D.,
make good to the owners of a brewery Rev. Lowell Smith-, D.D., Revs.
8.
in Lawrence the value of property which JO. Bishop, W.C.Merritt, H. Bingham,
was virtually confiscated by the enact- 11. 8. Jordan and J.
Bicknell. In
ment of the prohibitory law. We give addition to these a number
of spectators
,
-
Volume 44, No. 3.
THE FRIEND.
4
and many personal friends of Mil. DYER
were pre-ent.
The Moderator requested the.liynin to
be sung: ''Stand up, stand up for Jesus"
and Key. W. ('. Meiuutt led in prayer.
The object of the Council *vas again stated
aud the examination of the candidate
proceeded with. It was conducted by
Rev. Dk. Hyde and other members of
the Council.
The examination was thorough and in
all respects satisfactory and by unanimous vote it was resolved lo ordain Mr.
Dyer to the Gospel ministry.
The
Moderatorannounced the evening services and the meeting dosed by singing
the Doxology.
At 7:30 o'clock the auditorium of Fort
Street Church was tilled in every part.
The pulpit was occupied by Rev. .1. A.
Cnt/.AX, the Pastor, and Be vs. C. M.
II v in;, D.D., 11. S. Jordan, Hiram
Binoham nudß C. Oooee. Dh. Hyde,
the Moderator, announced tint the examination had resulted favorably ami
that Brother Dyer would now be ordained to the sacred office of the Gospel
ministry. The second chapter of the Set
ond Fpistle to Timothy was read by Rev.
K. C. Ouobl. Prayer was offered by Rev.
11. S. Jordan, who also preached the
ordination sermon from 1 Corinthians,
15:25, "For He must reign till He hath
put all His enemies under His feet."
Mb, Johdan said: ••To whom do these
words referV Evidently to Jesus Christ.
He is to be this Supreme Ruler. It is
not Withclash of sabre that lie is to rule,
but by love. He is the friend and
savior, and not the enemy of mankind.
Christ's rule is noi a temporal but a spiritual one. The text plainly indicates that
the end is not yet. The sway of Christ
is not yet unhindered. There are enemies yet unsubdued. These, though
they are legion, may be summarised under three cla.ses: Satan and his kingdom; false ii ligions and false conceptions
of religion; and ilio.se who personally re.
ject Christ." These points wv.e developed in their order and made clear by
farts and illustrations. Mr. Jordan
closed hi- able discourse thus: "The
reigu of Christ will advance unto the
final triumph. Sometimes the way looks
dark, but our great Captain will lead His
Church on to complete victory. The
harbingers of victory are till around us.
Arise, youiifi men, arise, and catch the
inspiration of the limes! Awake, t hri.-t
ian men, awake, and behold the dawnlugs of a new day !''
Mr. Dyer was then set apart to the
office of the christian ministry by the
laying on ot hands, Key. K. C. OttOKL,
ottering the ordaining prayer. Key. Dr.
Hyde, on behalf of the Council, tendered
Mr. Dyer the right hand of fellowship,
prefacing the ceremony with words of
congratulation and encouragement. Rev.
J. A. Cruzan gave the charge to the
newly ordained "minister, emphasizing
the fact, that the first and greatest requisite for a minister oi the Gospel is enthusiastic, unswerving loyalty to the Lord
-
Jesus Christ, and that iv all his ways he prayer and remarks. Rev. Dr. Hyde
should l>e guided by the teachings of mid Mr. F. W. Damon followed with
Cod's Holy Word. A hymn was sting addresses, Mr. I Vkshima, a christ-
and Mr. DyEB pronounced the benediction. The musk rendered by the choir
addetl much to the interest of the services.
Rev. F. N. Dyek came from Massachusetts to these i.-lands in 1878. During bis almost eight years' residence in
this Kingdom he has been engaged in
superintending and teaching iii the Government Public School at Kohala, discharging ill an able and faithful manner
the duties of his responsible and trying
position. During these years, whenever
the Foreign Church of Kohala was without a pastor, he has from time to time
conducted the pubUc services and been
greatly helpful to the Church there in
oilier ways. And now that lie has been
ordainedto preach the glorious Gospel of
the Bon uf God, our earnest desire and
prayei i.-, that the lloiy Spirit, the Spirit
of anointing, may endue him with power
from on high, and that bis labors in the
ministry of the Word, wherever the Lord
shall tail him, may lie richly crowned
with the Divine blessing.
THE JAPANESE.
On the
14th of February last the
of I'ekiii arrived at this
poit from Yokohama, with 842 Japanese
onboard, Including about 280 women.
Appealing to be a healthy and Btrong
cla-s oi people, and of good behavior,
they are regarded as a valuable acquis!lion to the label supply of the Island.-.
Mr. K. YV. Irwin, Hawaiian Charge
d'Affaires in Japan, came with these
people; also MR. Taro Ando, the new
Japanese Consul and Diplomatic Ageul
for Hon,,lulu, and a huge stall'el physicians and Interpreters sent here hy the
steamship Ciiy
Japanese Government,
On Saturday evening, the 20th, Ma.
and Mrs. F. W. Damon gave a reception ;.: theirresidence on Chaplain's lane
to those repiesentative Jap nose. There
were present: Mis. K. \Y. Irwin, Consul
at Japan, and sou; Mb. and Mas. Taro
Axihi, and son; .Mis. and Mrs. CO.
Nacayama, Mb. and Mrs, Fuksiiima,
Mr. and Miss. Kei.iiro NaOaNO, Mr.
Tanaka; Doctors M. Yam ash ita, F.
IWAW'I and others. Some of these are
professing Christians and come from different missions in Japan, To make
their acquaintance there were also present a large number of Invited guests,
whe through this occasion of social enjoyment we're doubtless infused with u
new and stronger interest in the spiritual well-being of those Whom God in His
providence has brought so near to us.
Mb, and Miss. Damon and Mrs. Dr.
Damon made the evening a very pleasant one to all present.
At the Immigration Depot interesting
religious services were held Sunday
afternoon, the 21st. Hundreds of Japanese attended. Aoki, the young theological Student who arived in Honolulu
a year ago, opened the meeting with
ian Worker, acting
as
interpreter.
Brief
addresses were made also by Mil. Ono.mi
and byMit.T.\.\A!CA, who conies from the
Church ol Christ, with a letter from the
Key. Mr. Baixagh.
The services
were closed with prayer by the Rev.
Div Hyde. Tracts and Testaments were
then distributed.
We would ask our fellow christians on
the other Islands to keep in view the
liiglierneed.softhese Japanese, and to
strengthen the hearts anil hands of those
who aim lo lilt them up intellectually
and spiritually. Remember, we have
not crossed the sea to go to them, but
they have come to us and this greatly
increases our Indebtedness to these souls
and our responsibility to Cod.
DRINKING AS
A PRIVATE HABIT.
Drinking men affirm thai sumptuary
laws interfere with personal liberty and
private habits. No. No one desires to
interfere with a man's private habits.
But what rij;lit has a man to insist that
be shall haven public place In which to
gratify and Indulge his private Intuits T
The saloon ht not a''private right." It
Is a public curse. If any man lias an uppetite which he has fed until it has become so much his master that it has hecome a "private habit. and rules him
with iron band, let him indulge Unit
•< private habit" in private. lie has no
shadow of right to insist thai a public
place shall be established that he may
the more conveniently indulge that "private habit"—a place that will proven pitrail to young men and boys, unit surely
and inevitably prove a recruiting station,
so that when lv- falls out of tiie ranks of
the drunkards into a drunkard's grave,
one or more young men will be ready to
take his place. It is not the "personal
liberty" or "private rights" of drinkers
Which prohibitionists seek to interfere
with, but they do seek lo destroy the
next crop of drunkards. To this end wo
claim that the community bits the right
lo say to the drinker, "Indulge your
private habits if you choose, hut do it in
private. There shall be no public place
established lor Unit purpose, to stand asa
menace and dead-fall for our boys and
young men !"
—Our home used to be for a little time
in the beautiful city of WUliatnapori,
i'a. The Sational Temperance Advocate
says that o.i the lHth of .bin. the following aWfui death occurred there:
A degraded toper, tUretire*, fur a drink, but bavin no money, approached ■■< hoiel bar in that city
ami nuked for h glass ol liquor. The bartender
said: "If you drink a pint of whiskey you can have
it for nothing.'' Iss whi*key was poured nut, the
m in drank it witiiont taking tile «l,iss from ins
HpS, exclaimed a* tie fllllshsil and tottered toward
tho door, "That has made a new man of rue," litit
before be reached the door fell dead upon the
floor!
And yet we have men in Honolulu who
call Ibis deadly poison a "good creature
of God!"
THE
March, 1886.
EDITORIAL NOTES.
—Tin: door of Heaven shuts from below, not from above.
—Pirinri's Drooks' Trinity Church,
Boston, Mass., now has free seats on Sunday evenings.
—Herr IJismarck thinks
It is well often to aim at the unattainable, as we
thereby make attainable what would otherwise be
unattainable.
—In am interview reported In The
Voice, D. It. Locke (Petroleum Y. Nasby)
said of the Third-I'arty-nien :
You fellows defe itetl Hl*ink and elected Cli:ve
land. You didn't do taooli barm, however, hceausClkvkland is ;i better Republican than Hlmnk.
—Some one writing in 7he Advance
about Ma. MOODY and his work, says :
We have shut ourselves in to cert on ways of
working and certain formal rules of religions i>ropriety.Ull we have actually become almost unable to
recognise tbo are t abilities and acquireincuts of a
in in who di'.niissm all these limitations and cuts
straight to the line with bis own tools in his own
way.
Drinking in prohibition places will go OB all the
—Dr. JonN HALL, in a suggestive
s. me, unless the sentiment of the people is germon "New Year
We work against the evil by strong ore: iltisa article in The Independent
Suggestions," among other wise things,
ti ins, which endeavor tv eJnc it« the risiii" geiieration among the lower mid middle cl iMes. The Nahas this to say :
tional Temperance l,e iipie addresses itself to the
peculiarity of our ago is the rapid increase
upper classes. In tats Latter many eminent, and of One
"societies" outside the Church—i.
under no
even tilled peo.de, have taken an active part.
definite management by any Chinch, *~
but dependof
people,
money
and
Mrs.
on
of
Church
—Mr.
Collins, Oakland, ent practically
tbo
in 1 doing work which the Churches ought to do.
Cal. and Mr. and Mrs. Rowey, of There
ate forms of effort that touch civil matters
New York, arrived by the last ste oner and call tor lagisl ilion where action of this kind
for a brief visit, and express themselves is ueediiil ; but to keep ynuii,' men pure in lan-.
gangs and in life, to aid the poor, to help the
as delighted with Honolulu and our In- tempted
to resist temptation, the Church is a diMessrs Com.ixs and vinely appointed society for these vary things.
comparable el
<)
things il is sound policy to do : ta.)
of
two
ie
hist
meetROWKY were present at the
do this work i>v Church agencies or (b.) acing- of the Honolulu (Social Science As- either
quire wh it men in trade would c ill a "controlling
sociation as guests. Our vistors have al- interest*' in the s icieties. Suppose a group of
ready won for themselves many friends peoole in Ilia parish in which Dr. A. has been installed—to pre ich the Gospel, visit tho sick, and,
who will regret their departure.
with the dc moss, aid the poor-should organize a
—The si.eei'kr in church is übiqui- society to secure lb I visiting of the sick, set about
the money among the people, get a paid
tous. We are not so sorry as we ought raising
secretary ami agent, with a coins of honorary iifrlto lie, perhaps, that it. is recorded in the eeis: who does not see that sooner or 1 iter there
book of Acts (Was it for the encouragewould be trouble and loss somewhere in Dr. A.'s
ingreguti<ui
a process on lines parallel to
ment of ministers sorely tried?) that even 0theseis gutaKton Rut
in many direclions, and "prevenl'Al'l, eouhl not keep all hta hearers tion is better than cure."
inc.
imate.
—The Boston correspondent of The
awake. And we confess to a feeling of
Chrint.itui Union says:
satisfaction iv reading in a report of one
l here is a large and influential element of un- of Mr. Moody's great meetings that he
churched Christianity. .Much of it would be
-topped plump in the middle of his serchurched if there were l" ss diwina .aid inure charity, less creed and more Gospel. The reflex power mon
and said:
very
large,
taming
note
a
to
1
of the Oupcl 1*
The ushers will please open the windows. I
wards the iios;iel of iiinti who ten veu-s ago were want, a little fresh
in. let right down there where
rationalists, materialist*, agnostic*, and skeptics.
those two men are asleep. 1 don't want auvbo.ty
Hyde's
forcible
complete
go
and
—Dr.
to sleep, lain trying to wake you up.
in here lo
Nevertheless, brethren, it is not safe to
"Eight-Uaal-of-Feuowship" at Mr.
sleep in church.
Perhaps it was reDyer's ordination needs no supplementing from US, but TllE Fill ex 1> extends corded as an awful warning to the pews
a cordial welcome to the Christian minis- that Paul's sleeping auditor broke his
try to Key. E. N. Dyer, and hearty con- neck!
gratulations upon his successful examinaIn the line of the importance of the
tion and very interesting ordination early conversion of children we have
service.
seen nothing better than the following
—The Year Book of the Congrega- wise words written by an honored Prestional Churehea of the United states for byterian Doctor of Divinity of New York
1880,above that there are 4, no churches, in a private letter to his daughter, now
in Honolulu:
4,048 ministers, and 418,51il church residentyour
dally exertions and inilueiice to the
Direct
members. This Indicate* a gain of 78 early,
the immediate, conversion of your deif
churches, and 17,015 church members. children, including the younger ones. The great
The whole number in Sunday schools is error of the ( airistian ohnrun generally is to omit
and elfort for tue tarty conversion and
610,889. The benevolent contributions prayer
piety of the cuililreu under the iiiUuenc of the old
j
aggregate $1,700,236; home expenditures Siiiuno maxim that"x*uattg people must expect to
their wiid oats''for many year* before yield$4,6*57,728 ; total contributions $6,267,- sow
ing themselves to the claims of j:raoticd religion,
-9ti:i ; an average of $14.90 per member. t'tie mosl hopeful time for securing the subntraturn
Christian character is before the
There are ;il>7 Theological students, the of a thorough
child lias attained live years of age; and even belargest number ever reported.
fore three years of age the child should be brought
—Dr. Deems must have visited Ho- b> divine graoe and parents! effort to yield cheer
obedience lo bis parents and thus more readily
nolulu at some time or other, for in an fill
the child will respond to the authority of the in
he
thus visible Father and Redeemer.
article on "Church Manners"
—We know a small boy of three years
writes about us :
Take c oe liow yu« use fans. Nine-tenths of fan- of age who is very much inclined to hike
ning is n ineoessaiy. You would be niorecomf'irt- a pessimistic view of life and conseaMe if you would sit still and be quiet. The most
of lamentation" is
ot fanning is an expression of netiernl rosaineex of quently his "voice
temper. Moreover, it may anno* .ynir neighbor. frequently heard.
order to break up
In
We beard a physician say "that he tiiouglit that i this unpleasant habit his parents have
neuralgia
of
the
was
due
prevalent
large amount
to the nse of tans in church, and fell, not on thorn made an old abandoned Chinaman's room
who f,meed, but upon some of their neighbors." a "wailing place,"
and thither the
We have often beard the remark: I got but little
man
is
much
to his disgust,
young
sent,
the
yesterday,
lady
sermon
b-cauae
of
good of the
next to me, who fanned me until I was almost iv a whenever he wishos to "lift up his
shiver." What would you think of your minister voice." One evening, not long since,
if he should fan himself'while Drenching?
he had said his "Now 1 lay nic,"
—Wieeiam Noble, who is soon to after
the
"If I should die," etc.,
petition
work
Temperance
here,
begin Qospel
to
seemed
strike
the young man, aud he
says that he visitetl America many years
said: "Oan' ma, I'm going up to heaven
ago. Contrasting the state of the tem- to-night."
"Are youv" "Yes, at twelve
perance cause then and now, he says:
l)od will say: 'Little hoy!
o'clock.
And
as
as
temper1 see no eh ii.ne for the better far
ance is concerned. The temperance cause in what you doin' here? I wants no little
America lias no System, no ((rowing sentiment boys; I wants only ladies.
You go
among the rising generation. We do not try to
work througb laws iv England—it does no good. straight to the Chinaman's room.'"
"
5
FRIEND.
—I.v The Times (Philadelphia) of Jan.
27th, we find an editorial article headed
"A Report that Ought to be True" which
we would change to •'lmportant if True."
Iliee is the remarkable story as given by
The Times:
loaders are negomillion acres of
fertile 1 md in one of the islands coiiiiiosing the
Sandwich group.
There is already a Mormon
colony of four thousand members, owning six
hundred thousand acres of laud, adjoining the
proposed porefasse. lb I combined area, if the
proposed deal should be made, would be one million six hundred thousand acres, or about otieeigiiteeuih the area of Pennsylvania. Told would
do very well for a beginning, and if more room
be needed in the future another island or two
uiielit. b ■ hoi on or Seized without buying.
Dr. Rawson, late of liana, now of
Cleveland, Oiiii
we understand has a
million acres of land in Hawaii for sale,
The Story is that the Mormon
tiating wiiii a syndicate for one
,
and perhaps that is the tract which the
Mormons are about to buy. But where
Is the .Mormon colony of 4000 with its
806,000 acres of land? Laic we know,
hut who will locate this new colony for
us?
—War, famine and pestilence! Can
anything be worse than either of these ?
Can any one* thing be more terrible than
these three scourges combined ? Yes.
in his address before
the National Temperance Society in New
York said:
Canon Kakk.vr,
I do not know any body iv the world which is
less susceptible to the sudden passion for social
reiorui than the British House of Commons. I
bad the honor to attend, not at all (infrequently,
e.t their deti.lies, anil it is of all bodies perhaps
tile calmest and ieast liable to be swept by any
overpowering enthusiasm. Only twice 1 think in
my life I have seen anything like the manifests*
turn of a thrill of emotion pass through that very
impassible lm.lv ; but on ice of those occasions to
which 1 allude 1 did see a manifestation of a thrill
of emotion pas* through all those assembled members, just as the summer breeze sweeps the corn,
when some four years ago, I think it was on the
lSdi of .Match, Mb. Gladsxonk, standing, at the
table of the House of Comijions in his position of
In iie Minister, made use of the remarkable
w.ir.is, that the evils wrought by drink were more
deadly because more Oontinuous than the three
gre it historic scourges of war, famine and pestilence combined. 1 heard those words spoke i;
made in shiver, and 1 do believe they mat's
the very ooldeat member of Parliament present
who heard them, shiver. They were not original)
they were not spoken for tbe first time by Mb,
Gladstone; they were spoken foi the ttrst time by
s very eloquent and excellent man, a member of
Parliament, Chiblbs Buxton, wbo himself had
they
ire ,v..sab.c Iv give
ample testimony to the tiuth of what be said.
them;
accepted
lie quoted and
Still Mb. Gladstone
en orso.l tliein with ill the weight of Ins manifest
authority, of his hiah position, and of his vast
knowledge of mankind. Be accepted and endorsed those words, and be has never withdrawn them,
and .Vlu. Gi.uisroNE is nut a total ibst liner.
been a bewcr, u.i.l woo tenet
—It is frequently asserted, both by
24th. Obedience. Matt. 7:24-29.
so general—is n > sn Uii il outburst of feeling*
which will pass away like the earl/ dew. but tb t John 14:16-21.
it is indeed the work of tfod, for winch there wis
81st. A religion that will wear. Matt.
n gradoal preparation going on for mora than half
a century. I'uollc opinion has been constantly 7:12; (Jul. (>:(>—10; 1 Cor. 1(1:31.
growine Bgaiud the liquor traffic, and, as a conseThe annual business meeting of the
quence thereof, our laws have broom* more and
more restrictive, until now any county or city in church will be called to order as per Bythe Dominion cm entirely prohibit the traffic, Laws, March 3d, at the close of the Prethat wishes to do so.
meeting,and probably
paratory
adjourned
to some future date.
FORT-ST. CHURCH.
The ordination of PROP. E. N. DYBB
THE BETHEL UNION CHURCH.
Ministry,
prohibition orators and also by the advo-
cates of the wiiip-anil-beer antidote for
strong liquors "That the American people are the most drunken race on the to the Christian
which took
planet." We commend a study of the place in Fort-St. Church Feb. lllh, was
following from the Rochester (N. V.) one of the most notable events of the
Democrat to all such wearers of blue month.
spectacles:
*
Kkv. 11. S. Jordan, en route to the
Iv ISS4 the Statistical Hureau of Switzerland United States, spent two Sabbaths in
pu.dished an exhaustive report on the consumption of spirits in various countries of the world. Honolulu, the 14th and 2lstof Feb. On
From it we take the tollo.viug tabic, sho-iing the the morning ("if the 14th he preached in
per capita consuinpti'Ui:
Church an able sermon from the
OOUNTBY.
LKI'.llS
OOUNTKY.
Lll MIS Fort-St.
K.IIS text "Come unto me all ye that are
18JW Russia
Denmark
Netherlands
'J.s7 fiance
TJ8 weary, "etc. The same day, in the even9.40 vastro Hungary .. r>.74
f-Tiiitrlisrrl
Belgium
9.30 QtBrit iiinVlrelaiid f>.:i7 ing, he also preached the ordination seri. 4'.' mon of PaOP. E. N. Dvioh.
German Tax Union. S.li;! I lited States
oVJO
Sw-den
8.U N away
On Sunday morning Fel). 28th the
The prohibitionist will here learn that pastor exchanged witli ltev. E.
C. <><;instead of being the "most drunken" of
Church,
of
the
Bethel-Union
who
(.f.i.,
States
stands
all peoples, the United
gave the people one of his excellent sereleventh In the list, and very nearly at mons.
the head for temperance in the per capita
The Sunday evening services are well
consumption oi spirits. The advocate of attended,
and what is much better than
the use of beer and wine as a temperance
the Holy Spirit in convicting
numbers,
note
measure we trust will not fail lo
and converting power is crowning and
that Wine-making Switzerland consume
this attempt to reach the people
per ea/n'ta more than In in at much sj>ir- blessing
the Gospel. On the evening of
with
its as does the United Stales, while France
Feb. 7th in the after-meeting five perconsumes nearly twice as much!
sons
requested prayers; and notwithWe quote again:
the break caused by the ordinastanding
The p,-r c.ipita c eisuiuptiou of malt liquors in
Switzerland is about 46 gallons] in Belgium is 84; tion service, on the evening of the 21st
in England is 83; in German;, 'JO; in Denmark, 14; live more declared their purpose to begin
in the United States, 11; in the Other countries tint Christian life.
Christians are urged
named, lesser amounts.
Commenting on these statistics The ail'ectionatety and earnestly by the pastor
to heartily second in every way possible
Christian Union says:
The truth is, probably, that no people drii. k lens this effort to save souls. Work for these
.
,
-
or are less drunken tlmu those of native Aineiio in
blood. Drinking anil drunkenness are cbietly imported habits.
meetings. Uring in non-church-goers.
Plan your Sunday so that you can reguThe Independent, N. V., is publish- larly attend. Come praying for Ood's
ing a scries of articles on '< Local Option," blessing upon tin; services. Remain to
showing how it works from the testi- the after-meetings. Is all this too much
mony of competent observers. In its for the pastor to ask of you!'' Can you do
issue of December 24th, '85, Rev. W. A less without dishonoring your own coveMcKay
writes on Local Option in nant-promise, aud failing to co-operate
Canada. He says that the present suc- with the Holy Spirit?
The regular communion of the Church
cess of Local Option is "no mushroom
growth, but the fuller development of will be held Sunday March 7th. Seven
an educational process" that has been persons will be received to membership.
The pastor also urges upon the memgoing on for a long time. In the following paragraph lie gives the secret of the bers of the Church the privilege and the
present strong temperance sentiment in duty of regular attendance at the prayer
Canada, and at the same time a hint to meeting. You need the prayer meeting;
the prayer meeting needs you.
Your
temperance workers:
spiritual strength and growth largely
As early as iB.lt) th < late JonN Douoaix, of Montreal, established total abstinence societies depend upon your faithful use of the
throughout mis country. At that time the name
temperance was held in contempt by the rich, the means of grace, and among these the
fast, and the fashionable. No.v it is so popular service of prayer stands first in importthat even our opponents, the liquor sellers and ance.
their friends, call themselves by n. and wish to
MAKCH,
MKKTINGS
—
be
Volume 44, No. 3.
THE FRIEND.
6
"
desiguuted The laberal Temperance Union."
Thirty years ago there were few boys and uirls m
the land who did not belong to some temperance
society. Those societies were condemned by some
and despised by others, lint feared by none. However, the boy* and girls in them bave i ioan up, a
new generation, tilled with haired of the drink
traffic. They comprise the voters of to-day; and
the effects of their eHrly training we see at the
PRAYKH
KOH
3d. Preparatory Meeting.
"Jesus
Christ an all-sufficient and my personal
Saviour." The hour will be given to
the people for experience and testimony.
10th. Concert of Prayer. Educational
and religious work in Utah. Monthly
ballot boxes and elsewhere. The little seed has review of missions.
become a great tree, 'I'he trickling streamlet has
17th. Duly and privilege of personal
swelled into a mighty river. Our confidence and
hope is that the present movement—so powerful, work with non-ehristiuns.
.
February—Maiuii.
Sunday, the 7(h, Mus. J. D. Arxiii.n, a member of the < harch, after a
lingering illness of seven months during
Which lime she manifested uniform and
exemplary pitlenee, passed away in faith
and hope to the rest of heaven.
On Sunday evening, the 14th, the
congregation united with Fort Street
( litirch in the ordination services of
MB.
K. N. Dyi.k of Kohala.
Anumlierof Strangers from different
hinds, traveling in the pursuit of health
or of sight-seeing were present on the
evening ol the Kith at the Church .Sociable which was well attended and genOn
erally
enjoyed.
the morning of Sunday, the 21st,
the iti.v. il. s. .IouDAN preached from
"And I, if i ijo
the Master's words:
lifted up from the earth, will draw all
nun unto me." John 12:82.
On .Sabbath morning, the 28th, the
people were pleased to see and bear the
Rev. J. A. CutZAX of Fort-St. Church
who occupied the pulpit in exchange
On
with the pastor.
New members will be received on
Sunday morning, the 7th, and the Sacrament of the Lord's Sapper celebrated.
There will be a Sociable this month for
the children, the evening to be selected
by the Committee.
The following subjects are announced
for the Wednesday evening meetings:
:ird —Preparatory Lecture.
U).
10th—Monthly Concert.
17th—The love of Christ.—Eph. 3:18,
24th—Be filled with the Spirit—Eph.
5:18.
31st—The christian conflict. —Eph. 6:
12.
—Theprogressive is the aggressive.
Advance is by attack. Getting ahead is
a result of pushing on, crowding on, fighting on. World-forces, and flesh-forces,
and Devil-forces yield only to force; and
force, however manifested, commands
their respect. The lower powers
show
fight;" the higher powers must show
force, or be foiled. The individual Christian, to be successful, must be aggressive,— dead in earnest,—manifestly a
member of the Church militant; cvi*
ilently such, on the battle-field of daily
life as well as at thedrills of Bible study,
and at the parades of formal church service.—,S. 8. 'Times.
You don't believe what you don't see.
Did you eversee your hack bone ? Some
men lielieve they have a backbone, when
it is nothing but a cotton string run up
their bucks.— Sam Jones.
"
THE
March, 1886.
HAWAIIAN BO A LID
.
HONOLULU, H.
si. 0. Forbes,
I.
Editor
OFFICERS OF THE BOARD FOR 1885-6
Hon. a. Y. Judo
Hon. 11. WatihhousS
Kbv.U.M. rITOK. U l>
Rkv. A.i_i. I'miiKs
W. V7. lUI.I
P, 0. Jobs* in
President
¥ice»Pre«idenl
Recording scrutary
Oorrss|iondlnii Secretary
r
Traa
»" '••"
devoted to tko laterasts of lUe Hawaiian
This paae 1aMission*,
Board of
and th« Editor, appointed by ihe
Buanl. is responsible foi
contents.
'
"
HOW MISSIONARIES GROW RICH.
Apropos of similar charges so often
made in this quarter of the world, we
insert the following from The Christian
Advocate, which will be of some interest
to those who are not unacquainted with
tlie career of the notorious rJTEIHBEBOKH:
of some
'• All article has been going the round*
of the paper* giving an account of one Stkinm.ltnin, an adventurer, who claims to have eslablisbed a government in the Sauioan Islands, and
lor
to have had all necessary irrajujemeuts made
to th-- United State*,
the aiinexeuou ot the island:,
when he W is thwarted by a wicked combination of
the miss on-ries with the Bntisii aulhoriiies. He
claims that Secretary Hamilton 1 i.sn 'enoour iged
hue, and gave him a seiin-ollici il indorsement,'
'otiicially ilidoraed
and that tlie til ac Department
Una agent ol this
him, an 1 sent linn out us as.tor
footing
us, if poaaiole,
a
government to gain
lie vns aanimarily arreeted
in tae Si alb Pacific.' aatbotitiea,
and oarriedon
one day ■• the British
board one ol their uhips, 'without any opportunity
fortune
or
a stick of his
of
his
to Have R dollar
Austr ,iia,
property.' Ho was lauded pennilo'ss in
and had to work as a day-laborer to earn money
7
FRIEND.
most of llieoi are barely able to live on their s ,1 i
are unable to educate their children .it home
except by special assistance, when superannuate I
lies,
stnits for the nseaaaariea o(
are often in ureal leaving
coil-
no legacy to their
life, und die p or.
nreii, but that of a self-denying, devoted, and un
'd
blemish life.
•'ln very rare instances missionaries, by puroh isiiiK a little laud in the early beginning nf
foreign settlements in Oriental countries, hive
■soared a moderate competence by the natural
rise in the value of property I hot these instances
form but very slight exceptions to <«ir Reueral
statement. Wo are glad of the few that Ban be
found, because we know that a few worthy faun
lie! are saved from btnnili itin« dependence by
such foresight or good fortune.
•• ibe paragraph speaks ol 'I'ktku Haukki:' a*
an'idd ncssion iry,'no.v oue of the riehosl m
in Washington,' who 'made ajl of his lortune
skirmishing among the heathen.'
"On this we n ive a few things to say. We tin I
that there- inver was a missionary by tlie none uf
Pbtbs iIAiiKKK ill China. The mendacious writer
probably refers to the Hon. I'srsu iiAiiKi n, a.D.,
wno went out in 1831 as a medic il mission try of
the Aniericni Hood, mil opined a hospital in
Singapore, removing the next year to Canton, an I
upsuiug a hospital there, where ne gave his alien
in.n mainly to eye diseases and sargtonl opera
tions. ilowqua, the wealth) Chinese iDsrehaut,
heirieiided toe enterprise, and after Hi" Brat ye ar
gave a buildoe.', rent free, for the hospital for
twenty years. This led to the establishment ol
the Medical -iissiouirv Society, which lias patron*
is England, America, and China,aud under wuose
auspices the work has been carried on until the
;,resent time, relieving about 7liO,(iOU patient*, til
ii expense of over $116,000. Lot. J. U. Kkiui, ol
the American frssbyteriaii iltsaion, is tn* able
and ellicMii successor of Da. IiAiiKKU, who, lifter
-
■■
who has charge of the industrial branch
of our Papuan Institute. The planks on
the sides and deck of the vessel are in
one length, reaching from stein to stem.
She is copper fastened throughout. The
wood is of the best quality,and the work
has been leisurely and thoroughly well
done. The sails were made here, but
the ropes, iron and brass work, such as
we could not make, Were sent from London and Sydney. The whole has been
paid for by a kind lady ill Rngtand who,
When she heard that we were building
the vessel, oflered to bear all expenses.
All we know of the kind donor is, that
her name Is
M ny," the name we have
jriven to the vessel, she having requested
the Directors to keep her name a secret,
"The Mary is the admiration of all
Who have seen her. She is built to encounter any sea, yet handy a> a boat for moving about among reefs and banks in these
dangerous waters. I have just returned
from my first voyage, having visited all
the stations iv this branch of the mission.
She sails admirably. Four of us slept
comfortably in her cabin, with a berth to
spare. Prosperity to t, o Mary.'" llev.
K. Macfitrtune, in the London Missionary
"
—
Chronicle.
a prolonged seivice, became American Couiuiis
—One of those "pat" ideas which
simier to China, and hau (or teveraf year* the
general oliurgeuf the interests of our government when WO see them "materialized" we
there. In this position he showed ureal ability,
"that no one thought of it lieand was exceedingly useful dariug a cutieal marvel
period, i'or many years he has ten an honored fore," is the "American Hoard Almanac
and beloved resident of Washington—a man ol of Missions, I88(i," for a copy of which
purest personal character, upon snoM reputation
Smith.
Six
month*
utterenough to take passage boms.
no blot lias ever tested. He bad some money we are indebted to Dn. LOWSLL
ward he landed in Pari* 'without a oent,' but was when he lirst went to China, which ho used freely It is packed full of Mission-statistics and
fortunate enough to get a passage to New fork, in his benevolent work, tie is now iv Rood cir- Information. The monthly-calendars are
Hinco his arrival, seven years ago, he has been cumstance.;, whereat we rejoice. We do not kuo..
pressing a modest claim against our government where he made his money, Put we can, after inves- given a page each, and an engraved
for f750,000 for his services in the Samoan U- tigation, testify assuredly as to where ho did not heading; over each month contains a map
"Now, this story bears on its face so clearly the
the
marks which ally it iv close relationship with
narratives of Baron Miinoh luseu that it would be
it
for
the
not
faot
utterly unworthy of notice were
throughout the
that many people, here .aid there
mostly
sens
inews
from
their
country, getting
tiou.ll dispatohes, b ive I. id their minds unfavorthe
follow
ably afficled toward mis..oiiaries by
Ins paragraph in th* story.—
"< l'he missionaries « tit out by the various Bible
societies of the worlo have built up powerful nnp,s
countries where
in the Oriental and Se.uioivili7.ed
l'he missionary business has bethey are sent,
income one of the most profitable pursuits, the
DOM out to s: ye t ,c
dustrious missionary whosplendid
opportunities
souls of the heathen bus
made large
for setting rich. Some of them have Uabkisji, one
trade. I'kth.ii
of money in this
sum's
Washington,
and who lives
of the richest men in
on Lafayette Square, is
iv one of the liuest houses
an old missionary, lie made all of his torlune
Bkirinish'iig among the heathen.'
•• We have taken the pains to look up this extraordinary story, and have to say that it wouid
mendacity into
so ircely be possible to o.owd moreignorance
of tlllapiingn.pli of that size. The
missionaries
reference
to
writer is shown in his
sent out b-, the WW* societn s, which do not send
Supposing him.
out missiona ics, but Billies.
however, to mean missionary societies, there is not
We challenge
tuut
follows.
a word of truth iv all
any nils
him to produce a sin«le uislniicoa from
'powerful ring'
tionary held iv the world of
re.idily
acWhile
we
built up By missionaries.any
of the foreign lioldo
knowledge that in almost
a missionary has'splendid opportunities lor getting rich.' if he is willing to leave his work and
eiiiTnKo hi governmental ser-.ice or mercantile
pursuits; and while we know thita third class
clerk iv Japan, China, or India often receives
more than douule the salary paid a missionary,
inio
ami that most mission ries could step at once
of Ibe
positions in which, from their knoaleige
laHkUage and of tlie pc pie, they could command
we
from three to ten limes the salary ihey receive,
■jh.lkMiaS tin- wrirr, or say otbsr, to ares as tbs
become rich
names ol the missionaries who haveWe
know that
while engaged in missionary work.
makeit:
of some one of the mission-lands in which
(1) He did not make it in the opium trade.
the American Hoard is at work, with
CJ) lie did not make it as a missionary.
(3) He did not make it •skirmishing among the illustrations typical (if the national life,
Heathen.'"
while the daily text is made up of notLAUNCH OF THE MISSION YACHT able mission-events. To Hawaii Is given
"MARY."
the honor of heading August,(because of
SEW UUfNKA.
Ml KKAY ISI.AN'O
our climate probably I) though why the
"The 14th of May, 1886, was a great editor should not have yet learned the
day of feasting and rejoicing here, occa- true name of this group of islands passes
sioned by the launching of the mis-ion understanding. In the left of the "Sandyacht Mary, from the yard of our Papuan wich Islands" heading is a native
Industrial Sell >01, where it had been on church, evidently coral or adobe with
the stocks in the boat-shed for nearly two grass roof, and a native house very
years. We have had, of course, si great poorly done; in the center is a bold strikdeal of other work to attend to besides ing headland; and to the right a living
the building of this yacht, during the crater in furious activity.
The letterhours devoted to manual lalior ; still it pre-s, barring the outrageous cover, Is
is the chef iTazuvre of our young insti- very good, a pleasure to the eye of a
—
tution, and none among the crowd of
spectators rejoiced more heartily, or
shouted more lustily when the Jfcoy/slid
majestically out of the shed, than the
pupils who had been engaged in herconst ruction.
She is lorty-tive feet in length, twelve
feet beam and six feet deep, and carries
about twenty tons. She is constructed
expressly for work in the Papuan Gulf
and Fly Biver; is strongly built, conveniently tilted in three compartments
for passengers, crew and cargo, and sails
remarkably well. All the wood has been
cut here by the pupils of the Seminary,
and all the work done by them, under
the superintendence of a boat-builder
printer.
—Captain S. G. Moore, formerly in
charge of the first Morning Star, well
known and favorably remembered by
many Houoluluaus,
will have the sym-
pathy of all in the sudden death on January 7th, of his son George, a leading
hardware merchant of Brewster, Mass.
(Ct.) News speaks in ear-
The Danhury
nest, unqualified praise of the sterling
Mount-; and regret at his
untimely decease.
—The great end of all preaching,
and of the Church Itself, is the conversion and salvation of men. Whatever
falls short of that is a failure.
qualities of Mr.
Volume 44, No. 3.
THE FRIEND.
8
EDUCATION.
We Invitr the co-operation of Msebsr*. and of nil
friend* of iiiucutlon. in ilie i-ll'ort to mik* tat* Mgi
of Tim Kiiißsn mil) vaHiiiiblu und stimiiiailns.
Common hiitions chouid bo ncnt to Ktiv. William B.
Oleson. Flllo. H»w»lt.
_____
- -
Win. B. Oleson
Editor.
TEMPERANCE INSTRUCTION IN
OUR SCHOOLS.
Call it new education or what not,
there certainly is a spirit abroad that demands larger views as to elementary education. Not the least significant proof
of this is the intelligent interest, now so
general, in the temperance training of
youth, notably in such leading American
Commonwealths as New York and Massachusetts. The spirit of our age is
keyed to the highest Interest*of the race
in education as in philanthropy. To use
Caklyiye's phrase, education is "foursquare," for it now aims iv its best development to instruct brain, hand, heart and
muscle. Technical schools are rapidly
increasing in number and efficiency.
Drawing, as related to the art of designing, is working its 'way successfully into our elementary courses of
instruction. The simplification of methods and means m the interests of a more
natural mental training mark all present
progress in primary instruction. The
necessity for a thorough grounding in
temperance principles in view of the gigantic evil of our generation is in the
same line.
Were argument necessary, it would be
quite enough to say that if elementary
education calls for better methods, so that
a larger body of real knowledge may be
imparted within a limited period ; oi if
if calls for skilled hands and practical
knowledge of tools in the interests of industry; it certainly calls quite as loudly
for training in practical morals In the interests of civil order and economy.
But there is no call for argument. Individuals may differ as to method but it
cannot be said that they differ materially
as to the necessity of instruction in temperance principles. The stock sentiment,
even among those who cannot be called
temperance men is, that they do not wish
their young friends or their children to
fall into the same pernicious habits.
Could a vote be polled among drinking
men on the question, Shall the children
be taught the evils of intemperance ?" it
is more than likely that the 'ayes' would
be in large majority.
Public sentiment calls for tidiness and
good order as to school grounds and
buildings, and none the less us to character and conduct. So far as public sentiment is concerned,the public school teacher is amenable for every departure from
good morals and manners. His true
gauge is always correctly fixed when his
conduct and character do not harmonize
with what public sentiment recognizes as
essential in one who stands before the
young as an instructor. The school is
the natural home of all best purposes and
practices, and is a failure when it does
not come up to this high standard.
"
To teach the children the physical injury of indulgence in drink and to avoid
the first step that leads to drinking
habits, is in fullest accord with the sentiment which even among the unthinking
and immoral thus voices itself : "Here's
Tom. Teach him how lo use his hands,
and eyes, and brain; how to behave as
lie ought; and how to keep his body and
his heart clean."
Public necessity calls for temperance Instruction. Never has the emergency
seemed greater than now. We are sowing the wind here in Hawaii. Drunkenness is so common that our sensibilities
an- dulled, and we do not hear the roaring of the whirlwind that we are sure to
reap by-and-by. Systematic temperance
instruction In our schools can avail much.
Let every conscientious teacher do his
utmost to combat the sad influences that
surround our youth as they go out from
the school-room daily.
ENGLISH LANGUAGE METHODS.
I.
11l reply to a letter of inquiry, Mil. 11.
S. TtiwxsKND of Lihuc, Kauai, lias
kindly offered the following suggestions
a- tn bis methods of language Instruction.
"The teacher, meeting the pupils very
much as the mother meets the child,
takes the mother's method of teaching
First conies the object, then
the idea, and afterwards the word. This
is the natural order. The object excites
the ideas, and the idea is embalmed in
the word. The lirsl and most prominent
ideas in a child's mind on giving attention to any objects are its individuality
ami identity; anil these are expressed
by the name. To express the idea uppermost in the child's mind at all times,
is one of the highest polntu of excellence
to be reached in teaching language.
Names are best taught first, and quite
a number of objects may well be named
before other words are taught. But
while the most prominent ideas are expressed by names, othersare taking more
and more definite form. Then some
verbs follow. They are taught much
after the manner of nouns. The manner
of teaching adjectives is somewhat different. Here the idea of correlation becomes more prominent. Prepositions are
taught by developing their ideas first and
afterwards by expressing them in words.
And in this the idea of correlation la especially useful. Suppose ti child Is ready
for learning the preposition on. How is
the teacher to know whether the child's
thought is, The book is on the table; or,
The book and the table. Rut let him
put the hook on the table and then under
the table; on a chair and then under a
chair, and then returning it impressively
to its first position, say: The book is on
the tattle, and he knows that he is giving
expression to the child's thought. Other
words and sentences are taught in similar ways.
Let no ohe think that language teaching after the Pestulozzinn method can be
other than hard Work, requiring great
care and calling into use all of the teachlanguage.
er's skill and
The general
discretion..'laid
down in
plan of language work
Swioton'.s Reader Is followed, but it is
considerably modified. Questions and
answers are greatly multiplied. The
exercises In paraphrasing are very much
increased. The language of common
things is taught by means of frequent
talks with tongue and pencil about the
things seen and heard at school and out
of school, the news of the day, the
stories read and heard, the other lessons
in school, etc. Some little work approaching technical grammar is done at
this point.
Occasionally a word is translated into
the language of the pupil. Sometimes
when one of the more advanced classes
Is composed wholly of Hawaiian*, a whole
lesson is translated into Hawaiian."
We also make quotations from a reply
to our inquiry received from Miss N. J.
M.\ i,(im; of Kawaiahao Seminary. "We
do not teach technical grammar, our
work is entirely language work. We
begin by having answers made in complete sentences. .Sentence in iking, dictation exercises, reproductions of stories
read, iilling in blanks, letter-Witting,
etc., are the means we use to make our
pupil.; familiar with good English."
Prom a reply sent by Miss M. sheei.ey of Makawao Seminary we quote: "I
always combine the phonic and word
methods in the beginning, using objects
wiienever 1 can, and paying particular
attention to the articulation. Later, we
take words and from these form sentences, or 'tell stories' both oral and
written. When the meaning and pronunciation ol the words in a sentence are
known at sight, then the sentence is road
with proper Inflection and emphasis.
After this the pupils are required to get
the thought expressed in their lessons,
and encouraged to use the dictionary
and other helps in mastering the thought.
In Hie advanced classes 1 use Swinton's
Language Lessons."
—Whata ridiculous contrast there is
between the railroad train that moves
-lowly bat steadily up-grade, and the
train that goes bumping along,jerked by
an inconstant locomotive that either has
not sufficient steam for its work or has
failed to gather momentum for the upgrade tug! The temptations are great
for teachers equally with oilier professional workers to lapse into a routine spirit
that sees only the same work to be done
day after day, and undertakes the work
of each day after the same style. Rut
(his is far healthier for the atmosphere
of school-lift! than the spasmodic, efforts
that jerk a whole school ahead one day,
only to let it go bumping back the next.
Spasuiodism should never characterize a
teacher's work.
—"What that word had mean? I
not know" said a tall Omaha Indian at
Hampton. Which proves anotiier stumbling-block. Alas, that English should
be such an unexplailiable language.
Southern Workman.
—
March, 1886.
A.,
THE Y. M.11. C.
I.
HONOLULU,
Th"!■ P*ge••
tin- inter©*ti t>f the Hono.ala
Youiiii Mei:V Ulnifl iati sedation, and the Board
of Directors are responsible for tis conloot*.
devot«d
9
THE FRIEND.
i"
S. 2). Fuller,
-
- - - Editor.\
THE LONDON LECTURER.
We are looking forward with great
Interest to the coining of Ma. W.m.
NoBLB, the famous Gospel Temperance
Lecturer ot London, lie is expected to
arrive here the first or second week in
March and to remain two weeks for solid
work in the Interestof God and humanity
and against t ha drink curse in our midst.
Mk. NoaiJC comes, rich In the blessed
experience of personal salvation from the
power of drink through faith in Christ.
11 is forty-four years of age, and has
had a wonderful range of experience between height and depth, wealth and
poverty in his checkered life.
He was born In London in 1812, and
when but a mere lad he ran away from
schooUmd went to sea. Later he entered
the Royal Navy, from which his father
purchased his discharge in 1860. At
this point in his life he reformed, was
successful in business and soon aecuniulaied considerable wealth. But during
his business prosperity the habit of drink
into which he had again fallen rapidly
developed strength, until in 18,7.1he stood
stripped of business, fortune and position; bankrupt on life's great highway
by the demon drink.
Soon after this through the help of kind
friends, the solid foundation of permanent reformation was begun, upon which
he wrouglit a noble temperance work for
himself and the cause to which he then
gave all his time and energy.
In 1577 Mil. NOBLE came to America
and in company with John 15. Gough
visited theMission of Jkuuy McCaii.y In
N, Y. City. There he beard and *w
illustrated the practical value of "Faith
in Christ" as tlie sure remedy for the sin
of drunkenness and all other sins as well.
IL- went (itit from there witii a new inspiration and lias since given himself
unceasingly to the Work ol Gospel TemA few months later Mr.
perance.
Noble returned to London where he
secured tlie National Standard Theatre
With a sealing capacity for 5,000 persons
and sounded out the blessings of Gospel
■
Temperance every Sunday evening for
PERSONALS.
On the 13th the Association was honored by a call froin Sim Alexander
and Lady Stkwaht of New South
Wales, en route to London by the
Mariposa. They expressed surprise and
pleasure at the apparent prosperity of the
Y. M. ('. A. work in our Island city.
On Sunday, Feb. 21, we were happily
surprised to find at the building our old
California friend, Rev. W. Scott
Whittieb of Oakland, he having just
arrived on the Alumeda. We spent a
most enjoyable day together in attendance upon the different services in the
churches and Association. He sailed for
Sydney at midnight where he will rein, tin a few months and then continue
his journey homeward by the way of
India, Kgypt and Palestine.
We have received several pleasant
calls from RBV. 11. S. Jokiian, who was
:i fellow passenger when coining to the
Islands last May, and who with his family
lias been spending a few days in this
city before returning to the States.
MONTHLY MEETING.
The monthly meeting was held on
Thursday evening, Feb. 18, Pkkh. ATHeuton in the cli ir. The reports showed
good Interest In the Sunday evening
service, ahjo in the Saturday evening
Temperance me ings which have been
attended daring the month by a large
number*of South i- a Islanders now in
the city.
The Entertainment Committee announced an ontertalmnent to be given
by the boys' branch a:nl atlults jointly,
March 6th. Tlie General Secretary reported a growing interest in his Sunday
morning Bible Class, which had held
four sessions with an average attendance
of eight. Also an increased attendance,
day and evening at the rooms of the
Association.
Employment had been secured for two
young men.
During the month the Secretary had
attended 21 religious meetings, 4 miscellaneous meetings, and made 51 calls.
A most excellent paper written by Mil.
CirAiti.Es Montgomery of San Francisco on "Business .Methods in Our
Work," was read by the General Secre-
tary and elicited hearty connnei' lulion.
Three new members were elected.
Collection amounting to $10 was taken.
ITEMS.
Young men will find it pleasant and
profitable to spend an hour over the
Word of God in our Sunday morning
Bible class which meets in the parlor at
9:45. You are invited.
Remember that the Y. M. C. A. Singing Class affords one of the best opportunities for vocal culture in this city. It
is conducted by Puoi'. Yakniiley every
Tuesday evening and is free to members
or to any young lady.
The Boston Young Men's Christian
Association has over twelve hundred
Our doors are open 7 daysin the week. members in its eighteen evening educa-
over three months.
The work became so popular that the
friends of the cause purchased Max ton
Hall, which was opened by Mil. NOBLX
in March, 1879 aud iv Which about 2,.50n
consecutive nightly meetings have been
held. Prom the exhaustion of this constant work Mil, Noiti.E now seeks relief
and rest by an extendetl trip through
America and down to the Colonies.
Let us all unite in earnest prayer that
that lie may be greatly used by God in
this city.
''According to your faith be it unto you."
tional classes. Tin; only college in the
having a larger number of students
States
Is Harvard.
A few weeks ago when Da. Muniiall
was approaching Portland, Or., as the
steamer was Hearing the wharf, one man
remarked to another: "Well, my friend,
we shall arrive iv Portland just in time
for you logo to church." "Oh," said the
other, "I do my church going by proxy."
To which the Doctor replied: "Yes, and
you'll go to heaven by proxy, also."
Reader, are you doing business by proxy
along this liner'
Y. M. C. A. HISTORY.
The Young Men's Christian Association In London, generally known as "the
parent Association," was organized June
(i, 1814.
To-day there are 2,901) Associations distributed throughout the world—in North
America and Europe, in India, Syria,
Japan, Turkey,
Madagascar, South
Africa, New Zealand, South America,
Australia, China, West Indies, Hawaii,
etc. There have been held iv the capitals of Europe ten World's Conferences,
the first tit Paris in 1855, and the last in
Berlin, in 1881.
The first Association iv America was
organised at Montreal In 1861; the first
in the United States at Boston, a few
months later. The year following, Associations were formed at New York,
Washington, Iluffalo and Baltimore. In
1864, the first Convention of American
Associations was held at Buffalo. Tlie
twenty-sixth of these International meetings was held last May, in Atlanta, Oa.
The work in America has grown in the
[last ten years as follows: Associations
reporting, from 664 to 1)05; net value of
Association property, from $2,483,804 to
$4,863,490, libraries, from 11)8 to 325;
reading rooms, from 201 to 408; secretaries and other paid agents, from 90 to
416; Bible-classes, from 128 to 583; regular prayer and Oospel meetings, from
740 to 1,173.
During the lime sixly-one new buildIngs, valued at $2,007,055, have come
into the possession of the American
A-sociations, and fourteen more are now
in the course of erection.
!■'.',;!. i y-fivo Associations now own
buildings valued at $3,930,281.
The current expenses last year of the
American Associations amounted to
$750, 117. College Bulletin.
—
—"Do You think it would be wrong for
me to learn the noble art of self-defense?"
a religiously inclined youth inquired of
his pastor. "Certainly not," answered
the minister; "I learned it in youth myself and I have found it of great value
during my life." "Indeed, sir! Did
you learn the old English system, or Sullivan's system?" "Neither. I learned
Solomon's system?" "Solomon's system?" "Yes; you will find it laid down
iv the first verse of the fifteenth chapter
of Proverbs—< A soft answer turneth
away wrath.' It Is the best system of
self defense of which I know."
10
THE FRIEND
MANUAL OF PREACHING.
Lector, son lloanhoi-s, by 1-kanki.is
D., i'rolessor uf Bsorsd H:,«-ti>riu
Tosolofftosl Seminary.
N. Y.
.■
throughout the marks of careful thought I)
W. I'isk. 1). and Investigation.
The plan of the
in CblOMgo writer may be indicated by the treat«k Sun,
This liook comes to us with the "compliments of the author," the able and
WVored instructor iv Ilomiletics in
The
Chicago Theological Seminary.
book litis added interest to the writer of
these lines from the fact that the material used is very largely the course of
lectures which we heard from Hit. PlSK's
own lips. We miss in the printed pages
of course the contagious enthusiasm and
intense earnestness ami strong personality of the warm-hearted noble man
whom we faced In the tlas—room.
The author succinctly puts the plan of
the liook iv these words:
Th* iiiitlni.l followed ill ibis volume is, first to
take a sermon in pieces and inspect it* principil
paris, nail t lien to s aow ho. to RMftbsf -.nateii ils
and tuna n sermon, First the
synthesis.
analysis, then tlie
This plan is admirably carried out.
We have given the book an honored
place on the liomiletie shelf of our library where It stands alongside of thirteen other standard works on preaching.
Were we asked by a young preacher just
entering the mini-try, or a lay prjucher
who wished help in training himself iv
Urn forcible presentation of truth, to
loan him the most helpful of all books
from our "liomiletie shelf" we should
without hesitation hand him this new
■•Manual of Preaching." There are
other manuals more profound, others
more original, others mote fascinating
and "hiking" in style, but no other
where the tyro in preaching would find
himself so completely furnished with the
details and miuutia of sermon-making
as in Bit. Fi.-k's work.
SH.NEYD DUCATION.
MLRAIE
Uy the Mararoa, winch arrived in
this port January -(itii, there pasted
through on his way to Auckland, New
Zealand, MB. RICHARD L.visiili-.v,
ex-cliairinan oi the Auckland BouiU ol
Education, ex-uieinber oi the council ol
the Auckland University and ex-governor of the Auckland college. Mil. Laisiilkv has been, traveling In Europe, his
objcei being lo gather till pussible ivformation in relation to the principles and
metnot Is of education in England, Germany, Fiance and Holland.
We were
much pleased to meet this gentleman
daring his brief stay in Honolulu, being
introduced to him by his old friend,
Cait. (i. E. (i. Jackson, who improved tin: time In showing his distinguished
guest whatever is of interest as connected with our beautiful Island city.
We littve before us the London reprint of four essays by Mr. Laishi.kv,
entitled
Education and Educators.
The articles are headed as follows:
I. Education.—What it is.
IL Educators.—Who they should be.
111. Results of Education.—What
they should lie; and
IV. Education Boards, School Committees and State School.
Each one of these articles bears
"
Volume 44, No. 3.
"
■*
MOORE & CO.,
•
78
King St. (TelephoneIIS)
ment, for instance, of the first article. GENERAL
Thus: "What education is not. —The
definition.— Inferences from my definition.—Summary." While the perusal
of these essays would command the at-
Honotuln. 11. 1.,
MACHINISTS.
SHIP'S
BLACKSMITU 1 NCx.
ltep»lrlng .fa lands ui-atly done.
IjanSliyl
i
JOHN
I
NOTT,
tention of mii.v one at all interested in the
cause of education, they tire of special
value to those who are particularly Tin, Copper and Sheet Iron Worker,
identified with tlie work of teaching. It
Plumber, tins l-'itti r. etc.
might be well for the Uoveroment to sievesand Ranee* of kind*. Plsmberf stock und
ill
Metal*, llmise l-'iiriiis!iiiiL' (e.ods, (liuiid Hers,
procure sufficient copies of this guide to
Lamps, Kte.
instructors to plave one in the hands of IjanMyl
Knsliiliiisun St., Hoqolnin.
every teacher on the Islands.
The difference between the devil and
the penitentiary is, that the penitentiary
works you hard and boards you, hut the
devil puts you to the meanest, dirtiest
jobs in the world, and makes you board
yourself. -Sam. Jones.
MONTHLY RECORD.
S..SACHS,
V
•
Successor to A. M Melll*,
IMPORTS!! AND HEAI.KR
\ Millinery
Ladies'
and Fancy Goods,
undOcnls' Furnishing Ooods.
id) rOKT ST., HONOLULU.
jlHiitdiyl
DAOIFIC NAVIGATION
*
CO.,
commission At; :<:vrs,
Corner N.niuiiiiund C-seeu Strut*, Honolulu.
HOLT—STiI.I.M iN.- tp Honolulu, February It'th,
111 Sl. Ainlre-a
by 111" ttlgh: l£i-v. I InAOE.NTS FOB TilE SCIIOONKKS
'- I'ro--'ulhedru:.
llisllnp of I Inn e]-ll
11. Ms. -laMKS K. llol.T Iv -Miss IIKI.KN
Wallele,
Waioli,
W .lilinu.il,
Wili-llil,
K. Sra.LMAN, belli ol tins illy.
Man*,
Etiukal,
Brig Hazard.
I.OVKI.L 1.V1.1-: Al the bouse of Mr. and Mrs Malulo,
ljanSiiil
Jawe* Lylo parent* of the bride, Hoiiololu, February
l.iiti.lsbii. I.) iln- li.-v B.C. Oinel, pastor of tin- Bethel
Union Church, Ms. AltsbiiLovilx. natter mariner,
lo
l-s iua 11. 1.V1.K
oi'i-i-jii(ii:i.T L'IAKKK-ln Hits city, Pebruarj
M ni'ifacliners and Importers of
iNh.al tl.e ri-sidenee ut" the bride* parent*, i»v the Uev.
Oruian,
a.
I'aiuriirTKSOKLT
to r'AJMaefE
youugo«l
.1.
No card*.
US* ll a ■•!'l'erdniaiiil I, I'l.'irl..
Gold and Silver Wen-.
OPrBUOSLT UI.AHKK In tin- elqr,#Febniary
isili. a in- koinau Cathmlc I'uilii drill liytlie Hi In Ken Si.. Ilppejlte odd I-elioivs- Hull. Uiiiiolnlii. 11. I.
Itov a .1 the Biahcp of ( Iba. I'ini.n- OPFBttosi.T t->
Engraving and ail kinds of .I.neln made 1., order.
yoaiige»l daughter of r-'urdluaud L. Clrrke. Vial.-lies. Cluck* aud Jenelry repaired,
SadiiO,.
UanStilf
No eulds.
CA-sliiY- KMMES- In Honolulu. 11. 1., Feliniere
isih. I Bfl.itfhe n--id■•in
f the bride*
thrr. by tie I
;. v. I-: U.Oga>.i. ia-t.iriii the Bethel
Union Church,
tie li'kn i tasßtraad .Miss Ki.i/.a Kkily Bus**, Ihiili
of lie- elty.
KKKAI) \ KAOHU In this city. Feb. -jOili. ut KuSi Mi -iclianl Slu el, liinioinlii. 111.
ivalabuo Church, by the Rev. 11, 11. Parker, mi. Joss
iiiiKiri lo Miss Liv a Kaohc. all of mis city
Subscription* received for any Faper or Mamils*
publ
ilii-d.
A-l \V\'l l -IMS! Il\- |:i IBItelt) at the re-id~i eiu. older* iici-lvt-tl lei mi) I.col | üb' ljui.Miyl
enee ol Conanl Ueuersl Irwin, by J. A.(. tu;z \. pa si or llsne.l.
if 1 ■r.-siiei-t Ch'iieh. Mil. oi.oliOE Nacayama and
.di-s ,i.n .Masi ha. both i.i Japan.
MARRIAGES.
. .
•
•
BIRTHS.
-
At Sapoepoo, Kiiii.i, Hawaii, to the-wife of Albeit
Sata, a daughter
11, lids city. Fell. -Mlh. ISSii. In tlie wife of Mil. I'IIKII■BIOS iiAiuasoN. n iliiuuhter
DEATHS.
MOOMSr—IS
"llass. Gs*N*Sl Mooill-:, son
U.Moor* 11 foillier conilllalelei of the
Brewsle;
of Cajitaill S
■ Horuing sun Aged W year*.
i'I.AKK I s|, eekel-vill'. Mum. 11. 1.. January■■.Mil.
IMS*, ;;. n.Ci.AiiK.
n.mie oi Boston, Ma**.
Alt mi..11- In this eily, mi l-elirdai;: Tl b. tssii. at the
I'unehbDWl slreet. Mils. .1. 1).
re- item ■' of Mr. A
*
VllMll.ll.
k'-il.l.l'.TT -In this < il,. Fehiuar.v 17th, of effusion
nl ilie in iin. iuoMAsMAseio>Ti.i!. youageal child of
Mr.aud Mr*. Co. lielldl,ased lantooihs
l-\i.Mi-.l; -in si. mix Kaptd* lowa, .limitary-~'B. IBsd.
\1 v* A. M. I'Ai.aKii. uialber of M r. .100. A. Calmer, of
this eily..
-i A;:. KitiMuary lull.
•
-
.
in thi- rlty.al the Qneen'* Hospital.
UWh, Tiuisab .Maunkh. ii native of New
COASTING
\
U7ENNEB ft CO.,
' '
Diamonds, Fine Jewelry, Watches,
MOAT, -h-.. ftCo..
Stationers and News Dealers,
-
pEG.
„
KX(JI-:iJIAKI)T,
.
ln:|iorti-i urn [tester n,
STOVES,
l.aill|*>,
i
(.(ji--\\,U'
l'
CHANDELIERS,
I'm' kriju -m-, |iO**« | iilhicliIlnulwait*, Ai/ati-, Ircn nml Ttaware,
....
liravc-r liiock,
h't,r\ Mi-eel,
S oie formerly uccupird b<> S. NoM.uppomu Sj nckels
A Co'i Dr k.
JjatihOyl
i
prank GEirr/,
BOOT AND SHOEMAKER.
Hoots and Shoes made to Order.
IjuiiSfiyi
NO.
IM I'oltT ST..
Ili,n„|„||i.
n'TwoLuLTT moN'woitks CO.",
M.-ilillliiclurcrs nf
York. iieedaSyeiirs.
Maceration
Two-Roll
MAiil'ijS In llomiliilii. Frhrnaiy 18th, MM. lit bei
With I'utent Auliilliulic tied.
inn
M
.niiin;
-hlcnce.
fioni
the
betiuijit
coi
1
khuiks.
rV**eanm Psni ami ('leaning
loved wile el Flunk Manns, aged ill years. 1 inoiilh, 111 Doable and Trtppld Kfleet*
Han*. Stesiu and Wster Pipe*. Brsva und Iron Kittinj;*
days. Deceased was born iv Londonderry, Ireland.
of all descriptions, Kte.
IjanSliyl
HONOLULU IKON WORKS CO.
ALVIN H. KASEMANN,
■"■
BOOK BINDER,
Mills,
FaTschaefer
•
Hawaiian Oazettc liuildinif, up-stair*
ataaasfL unci BUnk Book
Alaunlaid iiritio, in all it* Brunclit-s.
ljantttyl
ljanSOyl
Qood Work aud Moderate Charge*.
Book Bindihk, Caper
& CO.,
GENERAL
Commision Merchants and Importers,
MKKCIIANT ST., HONOLULU, H.I.
co.,
nisHOP &
B. KERR,
T
11
THE FRIEND.
March, 1886.
TREGLOAN,
HS.
•
CornerKort and Hotel Street*,
BANKERS,
MERCHANT TAILOR,
27 Merchant Street.
of Fine Goods for
Importer
Gentlemen s and Youth's
Wear.
__
PRICES REASONABLE!
TITM. G.
|IJiinS(iui6]
IRWIN & CO.,
Sugar Factors & Commission Agts.
Agents for the
Oceanic Steamship Co.
[ijui-iSdylJ
H. DAVIES & CO.,
rpHEO.
KaahuniHtiu Street,
-*-
[loiiohilu.
General $■ Commission Agents
for
•
Agent
Lloyds,
: :
Hawaiian Islands,
:
Draw Exchange on
:
Honolulu.
The Bank of California, San Francisco
And their Agent* in
Huston,
Paris,
New Yurk,
Uotlischild
& Sons, London, Fraukforl.Meser* N. M.
on-the-Main.
Tlie Commercial Basking Co, of Sydney, London.
The Commercial Banking in. of Sydney, Sydney.
The Hunk of New Zeiiluiid. Auckland, and it*
llrunelies in Chiisti-hurch. Ilunedin and Wellington.
The Hunk o* British Columbia. Portland, Oregon
The Aaore and Madeira Island*.
Stockhollil. Swe-len.
The Chartered Hunk of London, tnatrslta and China,
Hongkong. Yokohama. .liipan, and
G\V.
•
B.
MACFARLANE <fc CO.,
.
INH'OIUKKS,
COMMISSION MERCHANTS
SUGAR FACTORS.
Flrc-Proof Building.
T[
.
U Queiii St., Honolulu, 11. I
lj;iliBt;iy
HACKFELJ) &
CO.,
COMMISSION . MERCHANTS
Corner
lj.-inB»yl
and Fort Street*,
Queen
Honolulu
npHOS. 0. THRUM*
linportino and Manufacturing
-■-
Stationer, Book-Seller, Printer,
Hooh-llindi r. Kte.
And Publisher of tin- Hawaiian Minutiae and Annual,
Ui-aler in Fine Stationery. Book*, Music, Toys,
and Fancy Good*,
Furl street, in-ar Hotel St., Honolulu.
ljunHoyl
pHAS.
VV
HAMMER,
Manufacturer and Ilcaler in all kind* of
pLAUS SPRECKELS
& CO.,
BANKERS,
JE.
•
WISEMAN,
Campbell's Kire-proof Block, Merchant St.,
Honolulu, 11. I.
P. 0. Box 315.
Telephone Ml.
Real Kstatc, Insurance, Hallway and (Jeiieral
I
BUSINESS AGENT.
janlßeyl
Always on
CARRIAGE M'F'G.
HAWAIIANend Dealers
Ilouoluln,
■
Hawaiian Islands
•
(I.united)
Agent* for
Kickseckcr's
Unrivalled Perfumes,
& Wagon Materials,
Hi
uei-n St., adjoining
o.
*■
ic.k leid
j
I
Proprietor* and Manufacturer* of the
Messrs.
MAILE COLOGNE!
I EWERS <fc COOKE,
JLi
And Lei Aloha Roquet.
Dealers iv
lumber and Building Material,
OlHce—B2 Kort St.
RonmiT
Lswsasj
A~LLEN
Yard em- King A Merchant SI.
ljanW'.yl
[Cua*. M. Cooks.
ljiinttillf
WILDER'S
Steamer Kinau,
KING
Dt-alcis in
COALS.
Steamer Likelike,
LOKBNZEN
Commander
Commander
Weekly Trip* forKahului and Hana.
LUMBER YARD-ROBINSON'S WHARF.
ljanStfyl
Steamer Mokolii,
I AINE & CO.,
L
HONOLULU, H. 1.,
COMMISSION MERCHANTS,
Commander
Met; It BOOK
Weekly Trips for Circuit of Molokai and l.ahuuia
Steamer Kilauea Hou,
AND
Steamer Lehua,
Importers and deuk'ra in
Hay, Grain, and General Produce.
Agents for the
For Ports on Hamakua
S. G. WILDER, Provident.
I
Coast,
S. 11. KOBE, Secretary.
[llanHßyll
Life Ins. Co.,
Pacific Mutual
Of Califo'nla.
ri .HE
J-
ljanStiyl
ITNION FEED CO.
ELITE ICE CREAM PARLORS.
No. 85 Hotel Strco.. Honolulu.
Delicious Ice Creams and Cakes.
Telephone 175.
Islandorder* solicited, and goods oelivered promptly,
ljaiitioyl
Vanillic*, Purlin*. Halls and Weddings supplied.
LAHOE STOCK OF ISLAND CUBIOS.
11. J lIAKT,
Telephines: Bell 182; Mutual 33H.
ijaiiHfiyl
Proprietor.
PHTY SHOEING SHOP,
Fort-St., oppoHite Dodd'* Stable*.
SALE,
Horse-Shoeing in all its Branches,
IN QUANTITIES TO SUIT PURCHASERS,
RICE
FRESH MILLED
RICE MILLS.
HONOLULU STEAM
J. A. HOPPER, Proprietor.
IjanB6yl
CO.,
Weekly Tripe for lliio and Way Port*.
LUMBER, BUILDING MATERIALS AND
FOR
STEAMSHIP
VLiraildd.)
& ROBINSON,
Honolulu, 11. I
Borates*. & Schreck'*
Homoeophatic Medicines,
CiunlierleiKt Coal, and all kinds of
Carriage
ljanS6yl
US aud 116 Port Street,
in Iron,
Importers
Hand.
DRUGGISTS,
Draw Exchange on the principal parts of the world,
Ijuuboyl
and transact a <Ji ncial Bunking Basin***.
COMPART,
of Goods
Jobbing und Let ml
Coruor of Queen and
Honolulu, 11. I.
OrderH from the other Uland* promptly attended to.
A First-Class Stock
BENSON, SMITH & CO.,
Chicken Feed.
SADDLERY AND HARNESS Hay, Grain and Edinburgh
streets
[Ijun&jyl]
Furnishing Goods, Hats, Etc.
ljiiiiNtlyl
—
It Mackak ane
Gentlemen**
Transact a General Banking Business,
British mid P-oretjm Murine Insurance Co.
Olßce No.
Northern AsMir.uier Company (Plre and Life).
ljanßtlyl
"Pioneer*' Lint Packet*, Liverpool Uj Honolulu.
Liverpool UttUe. Nm«. Itf mid VI The A Ibduy. ljmiStiyl
O. W, .Mackaki.ane.
MERCHANT TAILOR,
I
Done in the most workmanlike manner.
and trotting Shoe* a specialty. Rates are
reasonable. Highest award and Diploma for handmade Shoes at the Hawaii Exhibition, 1884. Horse*
taken to and from the shop whendesired.
i. W. MeDoNALD, Proprietor.
ljaoboyl
Racing
Volume 41, No. 2.
THE FRIEND.
12
riMIE ROYAL HAWAIIAN HOTEL
..
MAWAIIAN MONEY ORDERS.
MR. M.GRAHAM. MANAGER.
Terms, £,? per day.
.
. ..
.
$75 per month.
This llolel Is on-- of Hie It- idliigiiriliiti-eliiril Mrurlgfl
■-* d
..1--:p'ii nli hit-in: il-emuores of Hniioliilii. II
prise an cnlln-square of ut- in I iiu i at res. frun ling (>.- II n
.1 fi-i 11 Ihwii
tel street, i his I .a-i-nr< in" oi- aoi| ie
artistically
—.',
At
laid mi
and beiiiiiifiil milk*, which areIronical
Them are
with (loweiln- 11111111- it-d
ire--.
1 %-.%?.-,.Vtjt
i.llullig l-l.tl.
-"T
t.clv. pretty Col■«*■«l.bin .1
'*!&.
,;••, ••: ■';'-,■
-«ll nnil-r Hie lI.H. Iliiauii enien- The Hotel and ullages -ff-SSiT
■' isjg«
.flora uec
audition* for **l guests in.-Ims. mini of
J]
1'
the Hotel eontalm the Mneat bllllnid hall in tin tit\.
.lls£.
_.
'I'm- main tnli ,111 !■■ n lb- "iiia! ll "ii.tu Hie iil-lil
;^,'«.»; • •■** f[. Vr\£p. Z,
of which are tin-I'lcgunlly liimished parous ,\ I ronn
li. .1
|
11 3(/$s
in.
l-f'-.-i*
•age-way leu-Is from tin uiuiii hall lo tin- iliini
_' ■■ '■■';'
'-Q
ills op-n 01, to l.roiid v.-r niiiiis, »h. r-h ti.^J
Thee apai
i
111- ma In si en )
magniliei-nl new of the \ ~11.1111 Mo
"ii'''"if
al •■- J U337
■**' ■''■;<.
throu.'ii iho v/eallhof trop ca, fuliage ihni .unoii.d- tin-J"
'*>'tjiwhalioines. The far* dispenwd Is th hi lb* market afc^SZj
T2:
.-^-^-tii,'
inuiAß.
-JCSa&vSi*?
reapwti
lotatges
11-de
fords, and I* ilrsi-c.iss in nil
an- supplied with par* walei ftoni an *rt«*l*« well on tie- pre**!***. The ('!• k'« office is fnrnlfbed with the Tele
11! Hi"
idl bastne** 11 nils or Ho city.
phone, by which cniiiiinni, en Iion is bad
Every afbrt bus been mad*, and money In l*hiy upended and -i tie ureaeM able management
To MAKE lllls KsTWH.ISII LNT
■
,
"
..
1
'»
■
•
'
■
. ..
1:
. .
•
''
-1
_
1 ■
,
1
1
1
,
.
Domestic Postal Money Orders will be furnished on
application al any "f tin- following Money Order
Offices, payable al Ibis or any oilier Money orderOllico
named below;
11-
O. HAWAII.
•-
Makawao.
Humaknapoko,
liana,
ON OAHU.
ON KAUAI.
Honolulu,
Waluaae.
Llhne,
X in.
Wiiiiuea,
ON MOLOKAI,
Kipan,
Haualei,
Kannakakal.
Kih-llea.
1110-I justly
r*pHE LATEST AMERICAN INVENTION
Koiilalcekea,
Wiiioiniiii,
Wailuku,
Piihalu.
,
A repatStlon it now enjoy- null
Kahuliii,
Inh.inn,
Win inea,
"THE MODEL FAMILYmerits.HOTEL,"
(j.iuS(iyl)
ON MAUI.
Hilo,
Koliuln.
Honokaa,
!
FOREIGN MONEY ORDERS.
THE VICTORY OF ELECTRICITY,
•
Application for Money Orders, payable in the Untied
Since Klecll-iclty has b-en upidied for li.-11l in-.' lillr- lit Sin ill -iz-. Qelfffll of 10:1, plot- I.imp. 14 inches states, i ay l"- made 11 any Money Order Bee in this
"1 poinds; Tor lighting rooms, collar*
pose» nil effort* of Inventors have b*«n directed to weight,
ittiiag*
powder mng ,/.n■■- (or similar |il»c*< Kingdom; and they will b« drawn at the General Poat
construct a lump for general domestic o»*. Tin-mi-m
I tes.
Ipl
»In
*I»e* are le|iti. coaches. Illniiiluatlon*. office. Honolulu, on any International Money Ontei
why ibis prnlileiii mis till now -n.t In-eii Milv-d. i- that
f Iheiden gardens, niln.-s or any other industrial purpose. Pries. Office mi !i" til in-'l Statu'. <.f 1 Mcli ;i Hal r. in be leen
none of the Inventor- couldrid themselves to
the »ys- I ill.
of l'us Heating, und thatall have adhered
by Inquiringat any Hawaiian I'd-; Ofloes
l'«i Lamp ,i illvcrcd free to any part of the world,
Urn of producingl ho El-c.irieiiy n> *onic central pi lee,
Likewise Mol ey ">;>i 1- may be-drawn in the t*nii*!d
K. Medium -lz- rlerve* all rtomeatlc piirpo*e-« for
or by large machinery, instead of drst laying down the
lighting room*, houses, etc. I his Lamp I* elegantly Stabta, payable itl any Honey Order ufflce in tMi Kingprinciple thai Lamp which *honld ever become genreiiovablwhile
ground Ulas*
and 111s
{rally useful and popular, mail bo portable, like in Oil decorati-d,
dom.
Ulobe.
Lamp, and contain tin generator of Blectitclty In
,„
~,
Price, per I .-imp (inclusive of Bronze Fool and ulobe
itself i c.. in iln- fool "I im- Lamp.
GBXBRAT. I'osr OFPICS. |
delivered
IjnnSfiiyr
The .Ni'iinan lih in iet In:.- tCo has at last succeeded richly and elegantly constructed), tUX
Monoluu January 1. ISHO \
in completely re*liilng thi« ideal ol Kleetric Lighting, ] free lo any pari or the world.
and there 1* no doubt that thl* meat Important luvoii- I 0. Grand slae for Parlor, Hall, "alexin. Public Ituildtion will brin" üb,mt u complete revolution la all Ing. Ac. The Lump glvesamosl brilliant and steady
li-.-ht. has large r-in ivnlii.- whit* Ulobe. decorated
branches of lighting,
and theworkmanabtpl* both trvt-chu*
our Electric Lamp n mil i,ei!/t*e Mu.liin.try. Conduc- nn-i tastefully.Pricejßl.lo,
7.' Fort Street, Ronnlnln,
-.
tors nor any egpenslv-e outlay, and 1* neither c »mpll- andclegant.
p
1.1
hat
l-'not
l.v
111 eitll -r llionze. .lupanese, l"a!ence or
culed, ilisagiei-ahle 111 manipulation; all I
Is net
Sll»er Ozlde.
sirv is 1.1 leflll ii every four or tlv- days «ii n acid. 'l'he.
Vny *puclal sis*or design made to order. Estimate*
cost of lighting u-iil be at cKtap mt as* \% cent* per
Ammauitioa of ail Kind*.
hour I- and it na- 1.el on-1 ia latter the i iwaee ntvan- liiriiisln tl.
and
be
Machines
and all Attachments.
Sewing
use,
will
ready
producing
smoke
nor
are
for
immediate
heat,
carbonic
-rAll Lamp*
tag* of n
re- *eai, «ocurcly packed in ttrang wooden box, with
acTd, owing to which the ulr is not Impared, and
Surgical Inutriment* of nil kinds cleaned and re
uf
is
tinlor
nuanttty
o*e,
prim
ol
It
-d
directions
chemical*
1
temperature.
mains at th- sunn- degree
paired .Ith qj .;«■!■ dispatch.
ther, absolutely Inoderou*. und doe* not need to be sufficient for «ev.-..,i months'lighting md one extra
Madam** Damon st*s l*atteriui. .Mat"; ials f>r BmbroloV
A. and two for *iae* it und V The w\
kindled by match or otherwise, but »imp.y by turning iiuiu-r for *lte
and
all
kinds
of fniicy work. urdora From the other
tin-key tl'lll- ueo'iiliiui all iluni/.i iffire, explosion i-r nee—-rv eheuiieul- can be purchased in any Drug
ijanM.yl
Island* promptly attended t'>.
*■ 11■-- village.
Buffiicnt ion. us in the case of gas. If th* key I* left open; Simv. 1 yen m.
miinui',l by a written guarantee
Brery Lump l»
is
and It iiinsi be conceded hat this advantagealoo*
year,
exchangt-d.or
refunded
money
any
it
is
lurthoi
for
use
aud
be
will
preferable to
kaowo
Invaluable,
If the -a ac -Ii mid not give complete satisfaction.
kind of lighting for the following reasons:
any child -a,,
0, its manipulation is ,osi,„ P ,e t
You will alwayi find >n your arrival
:
1 1
1
•
...
.
~
, ,
.
Mrs!
TIIo.MAS laok,
[mporter and Dealer in (Jims,
i 111
•
1■
£"£
equal in power of I, b:i„g to g.s. c
(5.? That
„-,„...„.,.
. .
10
nffireis ab*„l*tehj M « tUet,
titlugulshImmediately, Itbyanysc-
ecenj danger
-a* th* light will
cideut the gut** nrrouudlng
"(«.,'
tin-
hur.u-i -hoiiid be
That it will burn, evil in Ik* (tntßgsal wind,
couipletely uimfleeted, thus being invaluable for ilium-
.,
atlons. lighting of garden*, corridor*, etc.
,
This Lamp is constructed for the present 111 three
different size*:—
~
janlBo]
pEORGE
~
»l
;
a||
iKnTs'lVrnS.
Ready to Deliver Freight and Baggage i)t Every Description
-. .
Willi Proa
Z?"~£,1Ptc'
".^on?!nd
l »v nhtr'Vt
l
"""
* ""Limps protected by law, and
Elcetrle
'... , ,
•""""'
-ii,;r
Imlmiloa
11
in-
I infrlnxeineaU will be imwecoteil
;»*-.\0.-nls. S.-.lesi.itii 11:. (~ii,i,ils-|,,i, .111,1 ConriaTuer*) fef our Lump*, wnuteil t very where. Nt>
aiH'cial kinnvl-iloe ..r caiiilal reqiiii. il.
A fortune to 1m- mule liv active ihthoiib.
'
Address: THE NORMAN l.l.KCrivIC UOHT CO.,
PHILADELPUIA, l. s. OF AMERICA.
r
LUCAS,
vl
CONTRACTOR. AND BUILDER,
Honolulu Steam Planing Mills,
i).
LANE'S
MARBLE
IH
No
WORKS,
I'url Slrt-et.
monuments!
ESPLANADE. HONOLULU, H. I.
-
ir
head
•
ll.ilel.
stones,
I'linii-. renin*. M -it.i- imi ■■-.
Manufactures all kinds of Mouldings, Ilr.-ieki-ls,
Window Frames, Illinils. Ne*ne*, Hour.., ami all kinds MAiiiu.E W>iMtX "/•' WTB9T OSH uif riox
of Woodwork Finish. Turning, scroll und Basel
in nil c IS i ir.lt ll 111 I ■ i«l 'ii.-11l n
sawing. All kind* of Plants*;, Sawing, Morticing and
Tenanting. Ordt r« prouiptly uttemled to, uinl work Monuments & Headstones Cleaned &. Reset
piiaraiitued. Order* from the oilier Islttntls *o
OngSfS from iln- oilier Island- Promptly
«lii n.1.tl 10.
ljswjr 1ljiinB6lf
lleiied,
•
'
OEDING'S B.UIUAUE EXPRESS
•
is
pine**
and De-pateli.
Oftlce. 81 Kiiilt street; Telephone. 8(i; R««ldenoe
ljllliHiyi 1
IT I-||l,i- lllxiv. 1 slre.-l.
\f"ITITURaESS,
-i-1
•
N'u. SI Kin.-
11
t. Honolulu.
Carpenter and Builder.
(i
EN ERA L EXPRESS BUSINESS.
Diaytuji and Steamer
carefolly handled.
Carriage Painting dune liyi flrstretftae workman.
•Jobbing in above lines attended to «iiii prompt noae.
mil chargen according to the amount aud quality of
IjanSliyl
.vork. UWtffi telephone*Wj Rejdence, 10H.
n E. WILLIAMS,
\J ■
Import; r. MunuT totur-T, Upholsterer and
Dealer in all kinds of Furniture.
fc'uriiituri* Warerooins In New Ftre prool Hnlldlnf,
No*, ill Port street and W Bote! ntraets.
Detroit Hafe Co F-ath.-r. hair, May and Knreka Mattresses and Pillows, ami Spring Matfreasai on
hand and made toorder. Pianos and Sew Ins Machines.
always a band tad for sale or rent. Beai Violin and
1 Uulta< Strings and all kinds of Mntlcal [natrnmanu
i fur sale as cheap as the cheapest.
OjranCT
•
j IjautKiyl
C B. WILLIAMS.