Newspaper Page Text
1 V i WW 'si: , J r ; if r r t V ! 5. .At the Old Stand, No. I,-COPPER & SHEET IBOfJ WORKER, PIiUZtEBING, in all its branches; ARTESIAN WEIX PIPE, all sizes; STOVES and wuvr o.ui, jwuiiiion, iwcnmonu, lip lop, 1'aiace, uper. i.erD7, wren. Aollr, Ovpny. Queen, Tansy -o f..Uvua. iuirKi uairanizea iron copper iKulers lor Galvanized Iron Water Pipe, all sizes, and laid on at Lowest Rates ; Cast & Xaad Soil Pipe. Bse Furnishing Goods ! RTJBBER HOSE AIX Lift and Force PamjM, CUtern Pomp, Galvanized Iron, Sliec-t Copp-r, rilir-et Lead, Lead Pipe, Tin Plate. Water Cloet.-. Marble Slal and Bowls, Enameled Wash Stand. - Chandeliers , Xiamps, Xianterns 1 , FULL T. X TV 13 TP GENTS' FINE FURNISHING GOODS, THE CALIFORNIA ADAMS, ' ; 1NTTTE TIIE Their -Warerooms, ios. AND. Inspect Their WHICH THE FINEST DISPLAY OF FURNITURE Ever Hliown on WE CALL IV RTI TO WHICH CANNOT FAIL iiVA-fir CHAIRS, LOTJISr&ES : .1 AND TVT ATTTESSES OF MADE TO oc7 tf GK ElNTG-LIIsTG- & CO., .c.'' 5 Nuuanu Street, Honolulu, H. I. AGENTS FOB THE it Sxxd orioi - " Stove plication. TELEPHONE 911. -jan!3 wly iTl L I V J 8 Kaahtimanu Street, RANG l.n. JUv, Contest, Grand Price. New Rival A Anuy Kange. Magna Charta. Buck. Superior. 'ah, .Minuie, in woou x utunurr fctor-s Kaiigb.s Cirainte Iron Ware, Nickf l riatod d Plain, SIZES and GRADES FMITUHI GO : : : PUBLIC TO VISIT : : : : Agent, -56 & 58 tuccn Street NEW GOOBS ! CONSIST OF these islands. CULAR ATTENTION OUR SUITS TO GIVE SATISFACTION AIX DESCRIPTIONS ORDER. E. P- ADAMS, Agent. Dealers in Stoves and Ranges. EVERY UESCBIPTION OF SHEET METAL WARE On Hand or Made to Order. PMMiu, Glittering, Etc., Contracted for. Water Pipe and Fittings, ALL SIZES. Bole Agents in these Islands fur the Montague 9 Range All Sizes in Stock. Circulars and Prices en ap- P AC IFIC CO MMERCIAL:;AD VERT IS She Would Bs a Mason- The funniest thing I ever heard. The funniest thing that ever occurred. I the story of Mx. MekiUhle pvr,ie. ho wanted to Le a Mason. Her Lneband, Tela Dyidc a Ma..ii true As gwd a Mason as ar.v ff ron : He i Tylt-r .f LU'e CYrnlean blue. And tyle acd deliver the summons duo. And fchf- wanted to bo a Manon. to, fins ridiculous Mrs. liyrde. She followed rt.;ind sj:i-; iii.niisitive w,t,- And naK'fd him and tea so i him half out tf hi life : S.j to terminate thi.- unhallowed strife. He consented at least to admit her. And first, t.. disiftiiw h.-r from bonnet an.l linnn. Thi ridiculon ladv af-exl to put ou xiis i-ntcn-au : lonnve mr. I meant rand oons: And niiraenlously did they fit her. The lodge was at work on the Master's degree The light was ablare on the letter C ; High soared the pillars J and E. The ofiicers sat like Solomon, wise : ww .... - 1 x u goai roamed wimty through th rooia ; The- candidate berced them And the.devil himself stood np at the east, a nroaa as an Alderman at a feast, nen in carne Mrs. Byrde. Oh. horrible sounds ! oh, horrible sight ' Can it be that Masons take delight In spending thus the honra of nitrht ? Ah 1 could their wires and daughters know j ne unutteraDie things thev sav and do. Their feminine hearts would burst with woe ! JCnt tins is not all my storT- Those Masons joined in a hideous rin". The candidate howling like everything, And thns in tones of death they sing (The candidate's name was Morev) ; " Blood to drink and bones to erapU Skulls to smash and lives to take. Hearts to crush and soul's to burn, Give old Morey another turn, Ana make him grim and gory." Trembling with horror stood M"- Byrde, Unable to speak a sincl- ord. She staggeredjiuft'll in the nearest chair On the Jfcmf "the Junior Warden there, Ajxisdarcely noticed, so loud the groans, yThat the chair was made of human bones. Of human bones 1 On grinuing skulls That ghastly throne of horror rolls. Those ftkulls, the skulls that Morgan bore ; Those bones, the bones that Morgan wore. His Bcalp across the top was flung. His teeth around the arms were strung. Never in romance was known Such uses made of human bone. There came a pause a pair of paws Beached through the floor, up sliding doors, And grabbed the nnhappy candidate ! how can 1, without tears, relate She saw him sink in fiery hole, She heard him scream, My soul ! My soul !" While roars of fiendish laughter roll, Ana down the yells for mercv. " Blood to drink," etc., etc. The ridiculous woman could stand no more, She fainted and fell on the checkered floor. Midst all the diabolical roar. What then, you ask me, did befall Mehitable Byrde? Why, nothing at all She dreamed she had been in & Mason's hall. Sacramento Bee. MISCELLANEOUS ITEMS. Base natures joy to see sorrows come to those they deem happy. Never turn a blessing round to see if it has a dark side to it. The interest of childhood and youth are the interests of manhood. Education may not prevent crime, but it is a crime to prevent education. Faith builds the bridge of prayer that spanj the chasm of human need. The noblest and most useful lives are made up of small acts well done. When duty seems to clash, the moral law always has the right of way."' He surely is most in want of another's patience who has none of his own. Censure is the tax a man pays to the public for being eminent. Swift. Idleness is emptiness; the tree in which the sip is stagnant is fruitless. True friendship between man and man is infinite and immortal. Plato. Trust that man in nothing who has not a conscience in everything. Sterne. Occasions do not make a man frail, but they show what he is. A'Kempis. Growth is better than permanence, and psrmanent growth is better than all. The strongest man is rarely strong enough to hold his tongue at the right time. A man's good breeding is the best security against other people s ill manners. Every man is bound to tolerate the act of which he has himself given the example. Activity is not proof of industry, any more than a handsome iace is proof of a warm heart. We love in others what we lack ourselves, and would be everything but what we are Stoddard Do not accustom yourself to consider debt only as an inconvenience; you will find it a calamity. As the activity of the body is evidence of the spirit, so works manifest the presence of faith. Herbert Spencer, who talks so much about the hurry, worry and scurry of American life, forgets that only a small proportion of our population live in great cities. He evi dently never dropped into a country town on a summer afternoon when two-thirds of the business men are lounging on dry goods boxes and the rest are pitching quoits. Philadelprna Aeirs. Lady Wilde, whose letters to the London Society has been one of the features of that vivacious periodical, recently said: ''The chattering, pert, flippant woman, with sharp manner, a silly hucjh and a ready mocking retort, is insufferole to a man of culture; but a coquette, though vain and vesatile, may still be charming, for she has the wish to please, which is the (Jrundbe griff of woman's fascination." Hard to forget: A saddle-colored lady Miss Mti!di Snowball was walking down Austin avenue when Uncle Mose, who was walking up the street looking at the circus pictures over his shoulder, ran against her. lietore he bad time to apologize, sne said 'You good-for-nuffin' oldniggah, you forgets dat l'se a 'spectacle lady." "Hit's mighty hard," said the old man. shaking his head 4hit's mighty hard ter forgit what you neb ber knowed before, but I'll try, Matildy, I'l try." Texas Sifting. "Nothing exasperates me so much as to hold a lottery ticket, and to find that the very next number has won a prize," remarked Pete Freer to Harry Andrews. "I came closer than that to winning the big prize in the Louisiana lottery." "How was that pos sible?" 'Well, you see, there was a raffle here in Austin for a clock, and I threw the identical same number that won the big prize in the Louisiana lottery," "Did you win the clock? ''No; how much good luck do you suppose a man can hive all at once?" Texas SijXings. "Would you kindly state in your next pa per what could be done to a man who often comes home in an inebriated condition, and uses very abusive language to his wife?" Wo wonld suggest that he could be enticed into an alley some dark night and pounded with a club, or his head could be held under a pump, and some cold water pumped down the back of his neck, Lots of things we might suggest that you could do to him, but we would advise you to let him alone, for if you interfere with him, his much injured wife may suddenly become very much devoted to the scoundrel, and make it very hot for you. Texas Sift hi gs. How Wood Paper is Made- L. O. Danse, C. E., writes as follows to the Mechanical Engineer: Of all the mate rials in daily use there is probably less known about paper than any other, although it is constantly about us and being used in a thousand-and-one ways. Paper can be made from any fibrous material, but the most commonly used substances are wood, munih straw, jute, linen and cotton rags. None of these materials resemble p per rery much, and perhaps none seems less likely o produce a fine grade of it than wood, yet wood is capable of being made into excellent writing or printing material. To produce a good paper it is necessary that the fibre of the raw material be preserred, and to disag gregate it, without destroyiag it, a somewhat circuitous process is necessary. At Maple- on, Pa., there is a mill where paper is made from wood, and in this mill there is a ma chine resembling in appearance a large cheese-box about six feet in diameter, send ing on its edge. In this cheese-box there revolves at an enormous speed a strong iron disk, armed with a great number of sharn steel knives, which cut ur - " shavings similar t- -uae m,de b-v a draw lx. fVnile we were looking at this ma- chine an attendant picked up a heavy stick of cord-wood, which he placed in an in clined trough at the side of the machine nd shoved it into the same. In a twinLIing the og had disappeared, and a second was sent after it, quickly followed by a . third. Al though it may seem inciedible, that machine reduced those heavy four-foot sticks - to shavings at the rate of three a minute! These shavings are carried off by con veyer to the "boiling-room" where shey are boiled for several hours in caustic soda "soda lye" which combines with all the resinous matters in the wood and reduces it to a mere fibrous pulp. The pulp is uext run into the "washing machines," which are oval tubs about fifteen feet long and six or eight feet wide, having a longitudinal parti tion in the middle, extending nearly the entire length of the vat. In one of the com partments thns formed there is a beater,' composed of a number of steel blades with rounded edges, which revolve at a high rate of speed between stationary blades in tbe bed-plate below. In the other compartmeat there is a washer," which consists of an octahedral frame covered with very fine wire gauze and inclosing a sort of water wheel. The wisher runs in the opposite direction to the beater, but very slowly, and the result is tx constant current of the pulp up one side of the machine and down the other. A stream of water is constantly scooping it up and emptying it through its hollow shaft. The beater forces all the dirt foreign matter out of the pulp, and the washer removes the dirty water so that the fibre becomes thoroughly cleansed. It is now removed to another machine similar the first, where it is bleached by means of hlnriilf rC limo ' nnrt mnriotin oift rPh washer " is dispensed with during the bleaching, after which comes another washing to remove the chemicals from the fibres, and the pulp, thoroughly softened and mixed with water, is drawn off into storage tanks, whence it is pumped into the paper machines. At one end of the latter is a box into which the pulp is pumped from the tanks. This box hns a fine horizontal slit from which the pulp flows in a steady stream on to an end less wire gauze apron, about six feet wide, which is constantly running away from the box. The rollers over which this apron runs have an " end shake " similar to that of a grain separator The apron runs over a copper ' 4 suction-box" hiving -numerous holes in the top. and from which the air and water are constantly being exhaut ed. The eflect of the suction-box is to remove most ofthe remaining water from the pulp which by this time resembles a wet sheet of paper. The damp sheet is now t iken up by a felt blanket and carried over steam-heated drums. By this time the paper is strong and dry enough to support itself, so it leaves the felt and passes unaided between the highly polished calen dar rolls which smooth it and give it a hard surface. It is now rolled up ready to be re moved to the cutting machine, where revolv ing knives reduce it to sheets, which are piled, sorted and counted, and bundled ready for shipment. If a fine paper is desired, the roll in place of being cut up into sheets is re-ground in a " rag engine," similar to the washing ma chines, still further bleached and . washed, and sent through another Fourdrinier machine," whence it issues as pure white finished paper. The size" which gives pper its glossy finish is introduced into the duId while it is in the last washing machine. At the West Newton paper . mills, rolls of paper lour miles long are regularly made, and rolls nine miles long have been made from re-ground " wood" paper. A Lime-Kiln Club Scffebeb. The Chairman ot the Committee on Sick re ported that Arctic Shotwell, a local member livino- on Beaubien street, was in bed under the doctor's care, and had applied for aid from the relief fund. Did de Committee diskiver de natur' of his complaint ?" asked President Gardner. " Not exactly, sah. De mind of de pashent seemed to wander de day we called, an' as nigh as we could make out he had fallen off a house while sa win' wood fur a poo' widder an six chiU'en." "His mind will wander worse dan dat afore he gits any money outer dis lodge," replied the President. " De cause of his sicknes am to be foun' in de fack dat one night las' week he bet fifty cents dat he could put a teacup inter his raouf. He won de bet, but when it cum to tikin' de cup out it took a doctor de best pi rt of two hours, an den he didn't purtend dat he got all da small pieces. If dar am any odder gem'lan in dis Club wha finks he kin aim his libin' by stretchin' his mouf on small wagers he mav take notis rierht now dat de Clnb will evnect him to furnish his own chicken soup an pav his own doctor bills." Detroit Free Press. E II. i FEBRUARY 10, LATE FOREIGN NEWS. Wear, indebted to Chief Engineer Butter worth of the U. S. S. Wac-hnsett for a copr of the Evimng Zu'lelU of the 19th of January, from which we glean the following nev : The Western Union Telegraph will make 23 " "c uiaiiuium rate tor a message of ten message words between its t.flioes Vermont. Massachusetts, necticut, New York City in Xew Hampshire, KhoJtt Island. Con- unl the southeastern are ulieady given to part of Maine. Orders 3 - reauce me present rate of .JO, 3o, 40 and T0 cents to a 23-cent rute. Queen Victoria gave several ponnds worth of beef and coal to the poor, Christmas. Rio Vista. January 19th. The severest and coldest norther ever experienced here for sev eral years is blowing to-day with undiminishing severity. Extreme cold weather at Denver the thermom eter regitering 13 deg. below zero. Mountain towns report the cold most intense. At George town it is 26 deg. below zero ; the coldest eTer known there. Portland. January 19th. At 4 o'clock this morning a fire broke out in Corbett & Ma cleay's wholesale grocery house, below Ash, running threugh from Front to First street, and destroyed Jthe establishment. The jrud" Fleischuer, Mayer & Co., on the north, narrow ly escaped destruction. Both suffered some damage by smoke and water. Corbett & Ma cleay's loss is 8170,000 ; insurance, $150,000. At the same time a fire broke out in a frame residence on Oak street, two blocks away, and tbe engines on the way to answer th. alarm stopped at this fire, not knowing of the more disastrous one at Corbett & Macleay's. The weather was intensely cold, an l the wind strong from the north, but the uew paid Fire Depart ment was equal to the occasion, and kept the fire within the original limits. The total loss at both fires was about $200,000. Paris, January 19th. Dornano, a Bouapar tist member of the Deputies, gave notice to the Prefect of Police last evening thut be h:id posted Prince Jerome Napoleon's manifesto outside his own bouse, .and challenged him as to the illegality of the action. Person's passing by Doruauo's house pulled the placard down. The police decline to gratify Dornano's desire for martyrdom. Figaro asserts that Prince Jerome Napoleon now regrets thut he eliminated a phrase contained in the draft of his manifesto, as follows : ' Whoever he may be, the elect of the people will be their only legitimate chief.' Prince Clotilde, wife of Prince Jerome Napo leon, has arrived at Paris. It is probable there will be no decision in the case of Prince Napo leon for the next few days. The Orleans Princes are expected to resign their commis sions in the army. Prince Krapotkiu is found cuiltv of inciting to anarchy and sentenced to five years' imprisonment and fined 2.000 francs Some of the morning papers give further detail of the alleged organization of civil war in the west of France with the help of Catholic work men's clnb. and mention the discovery of a Legitimist conspiracy called the " Catholic Alii ance ," forming a vast association directed by Baron de Charelle. They declare that thirty three lecions have been formed in the west and center. Several ofthe army officers are impli rated in the conspiracy. They have depots for arms. La V'oUuie declares tbe risinu iu La Vendee is fixed for the 2lst instant. Amsterdam. January 19. Three ternhc. ex plosions to.ik place to-day hi a gunpowder iuauu faotorv in Muideii. where nearly all the houses were nnroofed by the concussion. The neigh boring towns aud villages- were much damaged The loss of life is unknown, Imt it is ft-a ted as manv as fortv persons have perished. Windows in this city, which is eight miles from Muiden, were broken. London, January 19. The British steamer Jennie Otto, at Liverpool from Galveston, had both boats smashed and the chief engineer killed on the passage. The Bclgiau steamer W assland, from New York to Antwerp, went ashore Flush ing. Lord Roseberry's Christmas gift to the tenants on his Men t more estates was the remission of 15 per cent, of their half-yearly rent. He had done the same for six years previously. He also gave every cottager in the villages on his estate 600 weight of coal, aud a joint of beef of weight proportiomd to the size of the family. A man named Scheller has been arrested on a charge of setting fire to the Newhall House On the day before the Are Scheller removed part of his stock of liquors from the Newhall House bar-room to his private residence. The stock so removed is valued at $700. The insur ance agents Lave done nothing toward the ad jnstment of Scheller'a policies since his arrest Surprising developments are expected. The steamship Sultan while on her way to Hamburgh, and close in shore collided with the steamer Cimbria outward bound, and, it being very dark and foggy the two vessels separated. and the Sultan proceeded on her way. No one it is claimed hearing any signals from the Cim bria. The latter, however, fonnded very snd denly after the accident, aud many lives were lost. The rescued passengers say that their cries for help must have been heard on the Sul tan, aud they cannot imagine why they got no help from her. The authorities at Hamburg have seized the Sultan, and placed her officers under bail, pend iug an investigation of the sinking of the Cim bria. None of the missing passengers have yet been heard from. From Paris we barn that the Ex-Empress Engenie has arrived there, and it is said that the object of her visit is to defy the Republic to expel her. It is rumored that the Senate will be constituted a court for the trial of Prince Jerome. It is believed that the Government is only disposed to accept an amendment, de priving Princes who may be expelled of their rank and political rights. The Bonopartist members of the Chamber of Deputies have adopted resolutions declaring Prince Jerome's action, in issuing the manifesto, for which he was arrested, to be perfectly legitimate, and protesting against his arrest. The Bourse was weak on account of forced rates made owing to an apprehended Ministerial crisis. At an adjourned examination of accused con spirators against the English Government, held in Dublin, the proceedings uuveiled a plot to murder the Governmest officials. The inquiry will probably be prolonged over several weeks. A balloon, in which a member of the British Parliament was lost in December, 1881, has been found in the mountains of the Sierra del Phedrosco. Spain. Prince Charles, the Emperor of Germany's only remaining brother, died at Beilin at 2 p.m. on January 21st. He was in bis eighty-second year, lue tmperor as very inucn anecteU, and considerable anxiety is felt in regard to his ! health, From Alexandria we learn that there is great ! anxiety felt in regard to matters in Soudan, j The insurgents are devastating the country, ! burning and pillaging. I A revolution is imminent in Sonth America. The revolutionary party is triumphing in Ecuador. The port of Esmeralda has been captured, and the Dictator's troops defeated after eighteen hours' fighting. Colonel James L. Selover has entered a suit for $750,000 against U. S. Senator Chaffee of Colorado, for alleged breach of contract. 1883. S. J. LEEY CO., ISoiX to notily the HAVK : OW -V Fresh Lot FS t li A me ri ca n Wbh h com, r forbi with th ttu Will Be old at Raisins. Almonds, Walnuts, Candied Peel and Assorted Extracts, '"" " ' AItK Perfentlv rsk.. and Imported "" We Guarantee tiur Statr t. j i.l U-u Painlet an. I Bi. .tl. an l eery ali.ution (irea.lo ihf wnl mud fri.l..rii of our CuHaatu. hr a larre Suffof tfalwiucu. whieli iiuie i:ni.t alteolioo and delivery of Order. fcavr at . aecun-d IU SOLE AC3-E3STOY OF ROBERTS' CELEBRATED CANDIES ! t'H hve Constant! tn Iln.l ft Large and Trll Assortment, coil:lf of MAR STA Z I LOWS, CARAMELS. FRENCH NOUGAT, t KK4 M KlltS, I'rIAXI T BAKS, HOLLY WAIMJl CltH.MN. KCG rilEAMV A. nd. n i runclred IV !: ll VKMlV OX PER STEAMER SUEZ, JDTJJ3 DEC. 16, '82, .4 I.AIM.K. ASSOKTMKNT OK i . . Fancy Candy Boxes land Horns of Plenty ! 'J. 'ry- BUITAULU For the Christinas and Island Oi!erg Solicite d. - All Ordeii will Receive our Perouu.l Atteutlo. der9 tf . ' -;v 't'iMJTc ' " lgg- yu. ijjjL' ", i ' Zji-Cr A-15TOTKDEjIE 1 GLiOT O1 THOSE Just Arrived per X). C. Murray, 1ST O W O 1ST 15 Pioneer furniture Ware-rooms. 'JE" Parties wishing to do well to call and examine these Magnificent , Instruments before purchasing elsewhere.; THE USUAL LARGE ASS liRTMEHPT . . i . 'oir " i . . . .i Furniture, Upholstery and Musical Instruments CONSTANTLY ON 1 1 AND. C. E. WILLIAIVJS, J 1 107 1-2 and 111 Fort street, and 66 Hotel street Telephone and, Night Alarm, No, 7G. Honolulu, ; II. . RKSPFXrrKULLY ANNOUNCE TO HIH FIIIKNDH AND THE OENK ral public that he has opened a . Sm Stove & House rnniisliiiiu llanhvaic Store -...;.!... .... .0..: . I , IN CAMPBELL'S NEW BLOCK, "IE3 Opposite S. G. Wilder & Co.' s Lumber Yard, about JULY 1st, "'.' WITH A PULL LI WE OP STOVES, iSc. Goods per tk Discovery " from San Francisco, from New York ; and also from Liverpool per "Oberon." By the 4 Discovery ' I have received the" following Stoves & Kariges - 14 A t l IJyl 2Ki1"' A Ka"Ke wilh ItKOILINO II KAKTH and LAKtiB loch OVr.S, being a ripr feature In a family Range. ' Hawaii,' 'Aloha' and 4 Oahu' Ranges AXDTIIE WKLI,KNOWN hici-i;mojstjj k an gi i Built to Stand Hard Work. Wrought Iron Ranges for Plantation Use Large Assortment of Mouse 35ixrnisliiiis Hardivare, C tc. 1 lie, Well Casing and Hydraulic Pipe : Made to Order, and Work of All Kinds in mv Line promptly attended to.. P. O. BOX 294. , . . , w j a i ? . ' . t t . Y T ! f; O -ri? r lullif that thev i IANI) ANI TO" A IMU Vl'v' rocenes anil liu rop a n , 1 o ANY h hj in luwn. and wl.lrb a. Reasonable Price - ourit - Expressly for the U OL AYS J r IYANTAiR la 4t Wllb U. i jl(Ver- A NO t'KI I I &H 17 A M KM . ANUKI. FOOD. KUTKA I.KMOX I) HOfH Other Varieties UA.XO A NO KXI'Kt'T New Year Holidays. WILLI A m M 2: II T 13 IT ION secure a GOOD PIANO will IS) 'it;':', 'j" t-ij ju24 r (, 1 Jt