Newspaper Page Text
THE DAILY PACIFIC COMMECIAL ADVERTISER. IMU ALONG TIIE SEASHORE. GATHERING SEA MOSSES ON THE BEACH AT CONEY ISLAND. Preparing Specimens for the Curiosity Dealers "Mosses" Not All Vege i table "Skate Eggs" Giant Mosses and Seaweed. INew York Sun. "Found it?" asked a short, odd-looking old man, with a tin can over his shoulder, of a person who was wandering along the Coney island beach. "Found -what?" queried the latter. 44 Why, what you're huntin' for. " "I'm not hunting for anything, w said the other. "Nor I, either, " said the old man, "but that's what some one asked me a while ago. They said I looked as if I was try ing to find a gold mine. After all. every body that walks along shore rather ex pects to find something that has been washed up; it's natural. I come down every year,-" continued the old man, "and collect a few odds and ends, chiefly for the children. Shells, big-neck clams, make famous things for them to dig with, and then my girl, she's in the moss business. Never heard of the moss business? "Why, bless you! ray oldest girl makes $5 or $G a week pressin' moss. You see I come here and to Kockaway about once a week in the season, and go browsin' round and pick up the best moss I can find. You see it's generally all mixed up in the sand, and most folks wouldn't notice it, and those that did wouldn't think it was worth col lectin'. "I've found a few pieces to-day, " and the speaker opened his can and took out a handful of rich green, purple, and red weed. "Look rich, dont they? But they look better after my girl Nancy takes them in hand. How is it done? Why, easy enough. She takes and washes them in fresh water and then trims them up in just the shape she wants and puts on a wash of diluted gum arable; then they are spread on paper, and if they are delicate they are picked out into shape under or just at the surface of the water with a needle. Then she takes them out, puts a piece of clean linen over them, then another piece of paper, and then puts the whole thing in between two boards and presses it in a press. In twenty-four hours it's done, and the moss is dry and pressed into the paper, so that you can pass your finger right over it without f eelln it, and the color never fades ; it's a jov forever. She then sets them on a stiff paper, puts on the scientific name and where her old father found them -liabita, she calls it and they are ready for the market Some she sells to schools; others are bound up into books; and she's got a fine collection, I can tell you. She sells a good many to the cu riosity dealers, and so her work and mine goes all over the country. I guess we're about the only ones right in the business. Nancy's going to branch out next winter. She has a friend in Nassau and another in California; they are goin' to send her moss, so she will have specimens from widely different parts of the world. "It's astonishin', " said the old collector, "how little folks know about these ordi nary things along shore. Now, I dare say you think that all the moss rve got here Is vegetable ?" "Isn't it?" asked the listener, to humor his new acquaintance. "Why, bless you, no. I never knew it myself till one day Nancy said, 'I wonder if it hurts these animals to crush them?' Plants, you mean,' said L 'No, they're animals, she said; and she showed me the little cells the little critters lived in polygons, she called them, and I tell you it takes an expert to tell plant from ani mal in moss; they all look alike to me. Take the sand collars you often fin d here ; what do people think they are? I heard one man say they were the. print of a horse's hoof hardened. Another thought they were only sand; but if you hold one up to the . light and look through it you can see what it is in a minute: it's the eggs of the shell called the natiea. You know these black four-cornered ob jects that wash ashore? Well, they are called sea barrows, and lots of .people think they are fruit of some kind, but they are skate eggs, and nothing -else. You see the folks that come down here most don't have the time or the inclination to hunt out these things.' The beauty of a" soft c'ara is in the cooking, and of the Little Neck in the way it is served. They don't care about the habits of the creature. " Sea moss is more or less valuable all over the world. In Ireland the poorer classes depend greatly upon the carrageen moss, and some live upon, it for months in each 3rear. It is imported in large quantities, and used as blanc mange and in various ways. The Scotch have their dulse, and in the Hebrides the tangle is eaten. In South America the natives eat the moss that is known as DTrvilloea utilis. It is a giant of its kind, sometimes attains a length of several hundred feet, and is so stout that a small vessel could anchor by one. One found off the coast of Chili was so heavy that it took sixty men to drag it ashore. It grows in the breakers, and rolling about appears like Luge nake3, and often upsets " boats that become entangled in it. Larger still i3 the great weed Macrocys lis pyrifera, that attains a length of tf0 feet or more. It also grows in the break ers, and is of great importance to some coasts, as, were it not for its protection, the sea would beat so furiously that no fishes would goin shore, and so the inhab itants would he deprived of means of sup port This is especially true of the south Patagonian coast, and so important did Darwin consider it that he once wrote: Amid the leayes of this plant numerous species of fish live, which nowhere else could find food or shelter; with their "de struction the many cormorant and other fishing birds, the otters, seals, and por poises would soon persish also; and lastly, the Fuegian savage the miserable lord of this miserable land would redouble his feast, decrease in numbers, and perhanoe cease to exist " The seaweed collector cf New England uses kelp to keep him warm, and in vari ous parts of Europe it is used as a medi cine, a greater part of the iodine of trade being made from it Formerly the alkali goda used in the manufacture of soap, glass, and various articles was derived from kelp, but it is now made from other sources. In France the kelp is placed in gTeat furnaces and dried, finally., fusing into a solid mass that is known :u varec, and in Spain as ban-ilia. Abou:. twenty four tons of weed produces a single ton of varec',-that is shipped to manufacturers in the bulk, and finally used in the mnnu facture of iodine. JEWS AS FARMERS? - Mod era Degenevacy. In the good old days earthquakes were always "earthquakes, " ". hakes" or "heave u pi, " but now no patent inside weakly is too poor to refer to them as seismic shocks. w Dander-Header!. jBulwer Lyttoru Love is the most dunder-headed of all passions; it will never listen to reason. Tb very rudiments of logic are unknown to it. "Love has no wherefore, " says one of th3 Latin poets. THREE HUNDRED RUSSIAN EXILES IN SOUTH JERSEY. Visit to tlie Colony Near Vineland ilor the families Pay for Their Homes Interviewing a Member of the Community. Vineland (N. J.) Correspondent. The colony of Jewish refugees from Russia established three years ago on 1,100 acres of land near here, purchased by the Hebrew immigration society of New York and the Jewish society of London, has outlived the hardship of its first vears, and is beginning to be a pros perous community. The land is a rolling sea of little scrub oaks four or five feet high, punctuated with erect dead pine trunks. Scattered here and there among the hills and hollows of the tract, the sixty frame shanties in which the colonists live are hardly noticeable. The little patches of field, on which the grubbing up of the oaks has exposed a light, sandy soil that every breeze raises in a cloud of dust, seem mere occasional scratchings up of the face of the barrens. There are no street, no church, no stores, mills or facto ries, nor any other indication except the scattered houses that 300 people are there. ' Since the first year, when all lived to gether in barracks, the land has been di vided. Each family has about fifteen acres. Each plat cost the societies from $350 to $400, and the occupant is to pay for it one-half the cost. They must pajr3 per cent a year upon this price, and this interest is credited upon the principal, so that they practically have thirty-three years in which to pay for their homes. Under this arrangement the colonists take more interest in their work, and although they were all natives of cities, tradesmen, artisans, and mechanics, and know little of farming, they have got their small clearings into a fair state of cultivation, and wili;this year raise an abundant crop of strawberries, raspberries, and black berries. These small fruits are all the land can be made to produce profitably. Finding the colony in the wilderness is like look ing for a four-leaved clover. . A query ad dressed to the open door of a whitewashed shanty apparently several miles from any where recently: "Is there a Russian Jew colony anywhere around?" brought out a flaxen-haired man, a dark wife, with a red handkerchief hood fashion on her head, and two children. Smiles were the prominent characteristic of the group. The man talked English. The rest jab bered. "Ye-es-a; thees ees eet n "Are you one ot them?" " Ye-es-a, " with a double-sized smile. "How are you getting along nowa days?" "Coo-oom a een an' see, " and the wifo and children repeated the invitation in Russian, while the man led off the visitor's horse to a convenient tree. In side the one chair was carefully wiped with a towel before the visitor was al lowed to sit down. The man sat on a bench and contemplated a bowl of milk and some bread on the table. He hoped the gentleman would excuse-a hinvif he went on with his dinner; he had to get back to work-a. While the wife and children smiled contentedly with re flected satisfaction of hunger, and neigh bors peered in at the door and window, between bites and smiles, in his slow, un certain English the man said the sixty families in the colony were get ting along first-rate now, with the money they got from their berries and from work ing for other berry-growers in summer and chopping wood in winter. They liked the country "ver-a moo ooch; oh, zo moo ooch better than een Russia. n They were all going to vote as soon as they got their papers. They have no church, but the rabbi holds services around in the houses every Saturday. Their children all go to a district school. The wife-neighbors jabbered apparently approving comments as this information was given. When the bread and milk and the information gave out, the whole party stood outside and smiled as the stranger drove away, the wife insisting on shaking hands as she said: "Coo-oom a-a age e enl" Furthe.r on a slender, dark colonist, with a brogue like Villain Macavi in " ( ailed Back, " said he was a cloakmaker, and couldn't farm; so he got cloaks from i hiladelphia and made them up. All he and his f amilv could earn was $1. 50 a day. "Wo ould I like to go back to lioosia? Oh, wo ould I, " he exclaimed, in answer to a question, and then his English gave out for a while. "Bud vhere ish de mo-ooney?" he resumed. "Ah, no! I shall die here! ve zhall all die here! And ve are vroomde cities!" And the maker of cloaks looked mournfully away over the scrub-oak loneliness and went back to work. The owner of the sole mill and store in the vicinity said that the colonists were doing well considering that they had been ignorant of agriculture. They were orderly, honest, and industrious, and would make, he thought good citizens. They never quarreled with their neigh bors, and rarely among themselves, and always paid their debts. liuttermilk as a Summer Drink. Boston Budget. In warm summer weather many per sons feel an irresistible craving for some thing sour, and of ten gratify this desire by a free indulgence in" pickles, or veget ables made acid with vinegar. This de mand for acids indicates a deficiency in the acid secretions of the stomach, and the demand for an artificial supply is a natural one; but vinegar is not the best substituta Lactic acid is one of the chief agents that give acidity to the gastric juice of the stoma h in health Thii i9 the acid of sour milk, and therefore one of the best summer diet drinks that we can use is buttermilk. It satisfies the craving for acids by giving to the stomach a natnral supply, and at the same time furnishing in its cheesy matter a good supply of wholesome nutrition. A man will endure fatigue in hot weather better on butter milk than on any diet drink he can use. The Black Flag in Ireland. Exchange. A correspondent, writing to Notes and Queries on the subject of black flags, sayi that the soi disant "National party" in Ireland are probably so ignorant of Irish history, eta , that they are not aware of the fact that the black flags they displayed on several occasions during the progress of the prince of Wales were in reality most appropriate and expressive of loy alty. Black was the color of the royal banners of Ireland, and Cassansus states " that the arms of Ireland was a king en throned in majesty in a field sable. " Cheese rinds are disposed of by making them into cement for mending glass and porcelain. ' . The streets of the national capital are shaded by 60,000 trees. Where It Does'nt Thaw Oat. During all seasons of the year, it is said, the earth at Yakutsk, Siberia, is frozen from the depth of fifty feet to that of about 1,000 feet. . . - . Sustoess partis. ATTORarETS-AT-rAW. CLARENCE "W. A8HFOKD. VOLNEY V. A8HFOB0( As Ii ford 4z Afthrort, ATTORNEYS counselors, solicitors, ADVOCATES, ETC. Office Honolulu Kale, adjoining the Post office. lS3-n20 CECIL BROWN, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW AND Notary Public, Campbell's Block, Merchant street. 189-lym20 A. ROSA, ATTORNEY AT LAW AND NOTARY PUB LIC. Office with the Attorney General, A1U olani Hale, Honolulu, H. I. mr26-12-tf J. M. M0NSARRAT, ATTORNEY AT LAW AND NOTARY PUBLIC. . Real Estate In any part of the lLlug dom Bought, Bold aud Leased on Commission Loans Negotiated and Legal Documents Drawn. No. 27 MERCHANT STREET, Gazette Block. Honolulu. 371 -ti FURNISHED ROOMS. IN FOWLER'S YARD, CI AND 63 HOTEL street. The only one dollar honse In Hono lulu. Rooms per night, 25 cents ; rooms per week, . l3G-nlj 54 MERCHANT AND 77 QUEEN STREET. TWO ENTRANCES. ELEGANTLY FUR nished rooms. Spacious grounds and line location. Terms reasonable. 200-n22 MRS. DAVID OXLEY. RESTAURANTS. HONOLULU RESTAURANT, CORNER OP MERCHANT AND NUUANU streets. Coffee Saloon and Restaurant. Col lee and Cakes, 10 Cents ; Meals, 25 Cents ; Board f 4 50 per week. 198-tf COSMOPOLITAN RESTAURANT, 62 HOTEL street, Jun Hee, proprietor. The best cook In the city has opened the above restaurant. Everything neat and clean. Table supplied with the best the market affords.' Wire gauze doors make the place cool and fiy proof. 221-tf Mrs. Robt. Love. Fred. Johnson. LOVE'S Steam "Bakery, 73 NUUANU STREET. COFFEE ROASTED AND GROUND. OR ders for Ship Bread executed at short notice. Old bread rebaked. Every description of plain and fancy bread and biscuits. Fresh Butter, Island orders promptly attended to. COFFEE SALOON AND CHOP HOUSE in connection. Cool, airy room. Attentive waiters. Everything first-class, at reasonable rates. l7-no20 Astor House Dining Rooms, 78 Hotel street, near Fort. Hot and Cold Lunelle a Specialty. Try our meals in the new Private Dining: Room. Luxurious living:. - 190-tf GEO. CAVANAGH, Proprietor. Steam Candy Factory AND BAKERY. F. HORN, Practical Confectioner, Pastry Cook and Baker. Hotel street. 117 tf Telephone 74 YOSEMITE ROLLER FLOUR. The undersigned beg leave to anuounce that they are now manufacturing FAMILY AND BAKERS' FLOUR, By the ENTIRE ROLLER PROCESS, and are prepared to nil orders, guaranting complete satis faction. Our flours have gained an enviable tepu tatlon on the Pacitic Coast, and among bakers and general consumers are more popular that any otner. Address orders to SPLIVALO & FORMA N, No. 415 Battery street. San Francisco, Cal. 323 jylO 3mos NOTICE, THE UNDERSIGNED, EXPECTING TO leave the Kingdom for a time, offers for saile a five years' lease of the American Honse, with all furniture and appertainments thereunto be longing. Apply for teims on the premises, No. 70 Maunakea street. Z. Y. SQUIRES. Honolulu, July 17, 1885. 323-aul7 CITY SHOEING SHOP, FORT STREET, opposite Dodd'a Stables. Horse shoeing in all its branches. Racing and fancy stock a specialty. MR McDONALD received the di ploma and highest Award at the Exhibition of 884. Terms reasonable. 241-je2-ly PARTIES DESIRING TO SEND BANANAS or other Island fruits to friends and relatives on the Coast, can have the same delivered at destination by paying cost and charges to HENRY DAVIS. Manager California Produce and Provision Com pany. 343 sel&w BANKING NOTICE. The undersigned have formed a co partnership under the firm name of Claus S PR eckels & Co., for the purpose 01 carrying on a Bank of Savings and Deposits, and for trans acting a general Banking and Ex change business at Honolulu, and such other place in the Hawaiian Kingdom as may be deemed advisable. Claus Spreckels. Wm, G. Irwin. , Honolulu, April 15, 1S85. Many of the plants In the Tuileries gar dens are 200 and 300 years old. Referring to the above, we beg to inform the business public that our Banking establishment will be opened for the transaction of business on Monday, May the 4tb, when we will be prepared to receiye deposits in our Savings Bank. We will also be prepared to make loans, discount approved notes, and purchase exchange at best market rates. We will receive deposits. oii open account, make collections and con duct a general Banking and Ex change business. Our arrangements have been com pleted, so that we can draw exchange on the principal parts of the world. 105-tt Claus Spreckels & Co. IIITER-ISIaHB Steam Navigation Co. (LIMITED.) STEAMER W. G. HALL, (If ALULA N I,) BATES... commander Will run regularly to Maalaea. Maui, and Kona and Kau, Hawaii. STEAMER PLANTER, (LILINOE.) CAMERON....... ..Commander Leaves every Tuesday at 5 p. m. for Nawiliwili, Koloa, Sleele and Walmea. Returning, will leave Na will will every Saturday at 4 p. rn., ar-i lying at .Honolulu every Sunday at 5 a. m. STEAMER IWALANI, FREEMAN Commander Will run regularly to Uamoa. MauL and Kukul- baele, Monokaa and Paaubau. Hawaii. STEAMER C. R. BISHOP, MACAULEV .". Commander Leaves every Saturday at S a. m. for Waianae, Gabu, and Hanalel and Kilauea. Kauai. Return- ug, leaves Hanalei every Tuesday at 4 p. m., and touching at Walalua and Waianae Wednesdays. aud arrivlogat Honolulu same day at 4 p. m. STEAMER JAMES MAKEE, WEIR Commander Will run regularly to Kapaa, KauaTT T. R. FOSTER, President. J. Kna, ecretary. S3-ap"-ly OCEANIC STEAMSHIP CO. THE NEW AND ELEHANT NTKAMMHIPS MARIPOSA' & 'ALAMEDA.' Will leave Honolulu and San Fraisco on the FIRST and FIFTEENTH of each month. . PASSENGERS may have their names booked in advance by applying at tbe office of the Agents. PASSENGERS by this line are hereby notified that tbey will be allowed 250 pounds of baggage FREE by tbe Overland, Railway when traveling East. . EXCURSION TICKETS for round trip, f 125. Good to return by any of tbe Company's steamers within ninety days. ' - MERCHANDISE intended for shipment "by'this line will be received free of charge, in the Com pany's new warehouse, and receipts issued for same. Insurance on merchandise iu the ware bouse will be at owners' riafc. WILLIAM O. IRWIN a C O.. 384-tf PACIFIC MAIL STEAMSHIP (0 TIME CI'-A-BLuE. Pacific Mail Steamship Co. For San Franuiscc City of SydneyMMMM.M,.,...On or about August 30th For Auckland and Syuue : Zealandia .On or about September 5tb 383-tfwti mm STEAMSHIP CO, Limited). STEAMER KINAU, (King, Commander), Leaves Honolulu as per following schedule, touching at Labaina, Maalaea, MaWena. Mahu Icona, KawaibaeLanpahoehoe, Hilo and Keaubou: Tuesday, June 23, Volcano and way ports. Tuesday, June 30, Hilo and way ports. Tuesday, July 7, Hilo and way ports. Tuesday, July 14, Volcano and way ports. Tuesday, July 21, Hilo and way ports. 'Tuesday, July 28, Volcano and way ports. Tuesday, August 4, Hilo and way ports. Tuesday, August 11, Volcano and way ports. Tuesday, August 13, Hilo and way ports. Tuesday, August 25, Volcano aud way ports. Tutsday, September 1, Hilo and way ports. Tuesday, September 8, Volcano and way ports. Tuesday, September 15, Hilo and way ports. Tuesday, September 22, Volcano and way ports. Tuesday, September 29, Hilo and way ports. PASSENGER TRAINS will connect with the Kinau at Mahnlcona. The Einau WILL TOUCH at Honokaia and Paauhau on down trips from Hl'o for Passengers if a signal is made from tbe snare. STEAMER LEHUA'. (Daves, Commander) Leaves Honolulu every Monday at 4 p. m. for Ktunakakai,Kabulul, every week; Huelo, Hana and Kipahulu, Keanae, Mokulau and Nuu every other week. Returning, will stop at the above ports, arriving back Saturday mornings. For malls and passengers only. STEAMER KILAUEA HOU, (Welsbarth, Commander), Will leave regularly for Paauhan, Koholalele, Ookala, Knkaiau, Honohina, Lanpahoeboe, Haka lau and Onomea. . " . STEAMER MOKOLI1, McGregor, Commander), Leaves Honolulu each Monday at 5 p. m. for Kaunakakal, Kamalo, Pukoo, Lahalna. Moanul, Halawa, Wailan, Peleknnu and Kalaupapa. Re turning, leaves Pukao Friday 6 a.m. for Honolulu, arriving Saturday morning. ar The Company will not be responsible for any freight or packages unless receipted for, nor for personal baggage unless plainly marked. Not responsible for money or Jewelry nnless placed In charge of the Purser. All possible care will be taken of Live Stock, but tbe Company will not assume any risk of accident. HAM'L. t. WILDER, President S. B. ROSE, Secretary. OFFICE Corner Fort and Qneen streets. 23-ly Liar 30 THE GREAT REAL ESTATE AND General Business (Ices ' OF- J. E. WISEMAN, IIOXOLrLF, II. I. P. O. BOX 315. TELEPHONE 172. rEstablisbetl 1879.) The foUwinr various branches of business will enable the public on the Islands and from abroad to gain general information on all matters In the following departments: Real Estate Department Buys and sells Real Estate in all parts of tbe Kingdom. Values Real Estate and Property in city and suburbs. . Rents aud leases Houses, Cottages, Rooms and Lands. , , Attends to Insurance, Taxes, Repairing and Collecting of Rentals. Draws legal papers of every nature Searches Titles, Records, Etc. Employment Department Finds Employment in all branches of industry connected with the Islands. General Business Matters Keep Books and Accounts, collect Bills, loans or invest Moneys. Penmanship, Engrossing and all kinds of Copying done. Procures Fire and Life Insurance. - Advertisements and Correspondence attended to. Information of every description connected with the Islands coming from abroad fully answered. Custom House Brolier. Merchants will find this Department a special benefit to them, as I attend to entering goods through power of Attorney and delivering the same at a small commflon. Soliciting: Aaent for tke "MUTUAL LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY OF NEW YORK," the largest, grandest and soundest Insurance Com panj' in the world. AGENT for the "Great Burliitictoii Hallway Route,' In America. Travelers journeying by rail in America will find this route the most comfortable and most delightful. The scenery is the grandest going East, and with the PULLMAN PALACE SLEEPING CARS and good meals along the trip, polite attention from employees and reason able fare no route can excel this. MR. C. K. MILLER, my Chief Clerk, specially attends to this Department, and for information, guidebooks, maps, etc., he will extend every courtesy. AGENT for the Honolulu Itoynl Ojpera House. Managers ot llrst-elass companies abrosd will address me for terms, etc. DEPARTMENTS. Real Ustale Broker. CiiHtom I Co a so Broker. Money Broker. Fire and Ul'e Insurance Agent. Employment Ageut, Railroad Aueut and Cleneral Business Agent. ADDRESS : J. E. WISEMAN, 133-mvC-86 HONOLULU, II. I. CONOVEB BROS'. i3iAisros, 105 EAST UTH ST., NEW YORK 5 i 2-f&&a'-; :t i maois ' -iter The most artistic Upright Pianos ever prod need, both for quality of tone and wonderful and elastic actions. The coming upright pianos of the world. Send for Illustrated catalogue, description-and prices to " F. W. SPEXITR A CO., Pacific Coast Agents, 23 and 25 Fifth Street. SAN FRANCISCO. 47.' tftfw 'ONTARIO" NEVIJLL.E z CO., SOLE ACJKXTS, SAfJ FRAriCISCO MADE FROM ALABAMA BOTTOM COTTON, FRE FROII .SIZING AND NOT LIABLE TO MOULD. WARRANTED The Best aud uiost Durable Nail Duck lft THE WORLD. For Sale in Honolulu. GAUDY'S PATENT 'JO' JL S?1 1 PT O- , Made from the Very Beet Hard Wore Cotton Duck. NEVILLE & CO., NOLE AGENTS, SAN FRANCISCO. THE BEST '.-DRIVING BELT, Neither Heat or Dampness aCeets them. Tbey do not Stretch. Stronger than Leather, Better than Rubber, "WIIX OUTLAST BOTH. For. Solo in Honolulu. 155-tf rays M. W. McGHESNEY & ' HAVE RECEIVED May 8tJti-Per Mariposa, 1,754 Packager May 22&-Per Alameda, 1,922 Packages To Arrive Per Consuelo, 332 Packages, ASSGETED WHICH "Will be Sold at the JLowest Market 1 atex TsL. "W. McChesney & gon 20 -my22-ly 43 and 44 Qeeu St,m, Ho DISINFECT! DISINFECT! Carbolic cid. Carbolic PodJ Chloride Lime, i Copperas, Suluhur, BURNETT'S DISINFECTING SOLll SOLUTION CHLORINATED LIME, SOLUTION CHLORINATj.i cOi)rt( SOLUTION CHLORIDE ZINC. A large supply of the above disliilectauts on hand tt HOLLISTEE & CO.'s Nuuaxra Street. ea-apii'86 FortSfc CASTLE & COOKE HAVR RECEIVED AND OFFKR YOU NAI F, Ex. "MEND0TA," and Other Late Am From New York and San Francisco, a Iirge an.l Varti'il Awnnmeni f Merchandise, Suitable for Plantations, Country Stores and in - :OXSISTISO IN PART OF- Palace Kerosene Oilthe highest test oil in the market. Vnlcau and ElectrkL sene Oils, Lard Oil in barrels and cases, Sperm and Cylinder Oil, Albanj Ccisp'.( Plumbago, etc., Galranized and Plain Cnt and "Wrought Iron Nails, GilmsiC. rugatecllron, Plain Iron and Basket Fence Wire, PlaiD and Perforate! SL Galvanized Wire Cloth, Centrifugal Wire Cloths, Centrifugal Bnttafc, Blake Pump Company Patent Rubber Valves and Springs, I. B. B inch to 2 inch, 3 and 4 plj Steuiu ' Packing, round, square ul I ' , styles, Anvils, Vises, Hydraulic Rams, Jack Screws, Paris Steel Breaking Pi - boss plow yet; Molisse Furrowing and Breaking Plows, all hizes, Cultifctai, Hoes, Gang Plows, Planters' Hoes, our own make, inch Goose Kei I Planters' Hoes, Shovels, Spades, Rakes, Forks, Scoops, Bush Scythes, IW Cr , Cane Knives, our own make and superior quality; Lawu Mwers, Boid , Cart Axles, Fairbanks Scales, three sizes; Grindwlones, nil. sizes, A,& ( Pick and Ax Mattocks, Pick Axes, Horse Shoe, Machine BolU, lengths, a full and superior line of Shelf Hardware, Builders' Hardarp-i L6cks, Buts,' Screws, Hinges, Staples, Tacks, Brads, etc., Plan" ofd. Bailey's Patents, etc., Machinists' tools of all kindB, Hammers, etc.. Pj and Glass. White Lead and Zinc, Rubber Paint. Boiled and Raw Oil, ValentmM Turpentine, Patent Dryers, a large variety of small paints in Oils, CLinfc i t t-a i :.. T.-,Va Tin nnri IIollOW rei i, uuiupa, uamerus, u largo vuueiy, oiuiivuviy iuun, BLUE DENIMS, 8, 9 and 10 oz. at bottom rates. FINE RED SALMON, in barrels. BENICIA: MILLS Family Flour. -CRUSHED and GRANULATED SUGAR, in Lt4rreU' ' GIANT POWDER. GELATINE PtWDEE, ; j New CJootl Expected per Kteainship Alamed i BLAKE BOILER, FEED, LIGHT SERVICE and VACUUM PtpS ' 149 tr PACIFIC HARDWARE (LIMITED), BREAKERS, Double Furrow AND Xiicressor to Jjlllf nffham .' nf Rni Light Steel Plos. . v. nrm -r.-.TrT 17. mm T f .TIT DTlWHI Wft 6V UU- ' . ..w! Kohala Plantation. , rT t riciMBP' u ' It is the BEST BREAKING PLOW I ever used.' tJ ,Pf' ; Plantation. , . ... ,bLs or nJ" ot 'The VERY BEST BREAKING PLOW I ever used HORNER, lAhalna, Maul. s :o.-- twUJ'1 New Goods received per "Morninj; Star " aud "'rnbhtoB GT Ranses and Tinware; Refrigerators and Ice Chests, ous. rlof k very and Lanterns; Soap and Candles. Balance of consignment m OIL I OIL 1 OIL! OIL J OIL! OIL J . tarrf Peanut. CtfWW ,.. . . . - -..is. t Hht-wtinir. Lara. . , Paint .Oil, Turpentine, Varnishes. California .n "' solicited. rf -Hardware and Ark-ultural Implements. Correspondence so fpV W WILDER & C"' IMPORTERS '''AND 'WHALERS j Lnm"ber and C , Doors, Bash and Blinds. All kinds of BDILDEBS' eli0 Corrugated Iron, Portland Cement; STEEL NAI more. i !