Newspaper Page Text
f UAJLLv iACiIIU UOA1M1SKC1AL. Al VJEUTlSlSli-, AUGUST 7. 1813. I A Tsl ATE bit AltTIS'J S. i OFFICIAL JMKEOTOKY j l&tncral lDcrrt!scnitt3. Ocncral uiorcrticnr.rn::. it DUAL PKiiSOXALTTV. f.ecicjal r:-iir:c::i:;A cf th: ind IN C WE FIGPLE. I" iitnr- nf ( tin:;''.-x I'rrnoiuuit r J !Irt '- it In f nn of u S' C alled .!- t)iu:ili IIuiS Man 1! perlonrc ol the SItepIn; rilntl. LvMi-i:w li not v.ii;t;i: to show t!: :t v.l.:;t ra c-ail j;,r: oi:::Iity ii an extremely C.ii'-i'Jc.i l:.:r. jf. vho hr.in cf :.ril.liary J. r 1 1 !;:;! :t i s which now t-'i-.iit and change HL-f til., r:,rirt--i in a I: j. ccpe, and su'ain beconhi;; .'li.-uply dc-fin'-d tinder hcinj :;1 r.cr::i:il cor.uitl';:: cry: lallizo into tvro or more uLlir.ct groups of elriutnts, v.hith i.!tf-:::::t.cly sleep ai:d vato or even c:si -:t. The.-.e coraik-:c elements may be r.o unstable, the gTonps comjKjs intj tl.eiu roa.-tautly l-reakin up and forming new combinations, that theidca of multiple personality tloos not natural ly attach itself to them: it n only -when they become stable, and e.-iocially when each exhibit i a v.eil defined conscious ness that v-e bein to think of such a tiling. Bat bcr:dts the abnormal and diseased conditions vinch cause Euch a separation or crystallization there are othrr conditions in v.Lich in ajpear3 somewhat lcs3 distinctly. To one class of theso I desiro to call attention very briefly to that embracing what may bo called case3 of residual personality. Residual phenomena of all hinds aro particularly interesting and instructive, especially those where tho few tlnngo re maining in a group after many have been removed diner widely iu the'r collective properties from those that have been taken away, while these latter aro not in any way distinguishable from those cf tho sum cf both before the division. This is the caso often with residual per sonality. Nothing i3 more common than for a KTOv.ii of elements in wliat wo call a person to bo differentiated in one of various ways, leaving behind a residual group differing altogether in its charac teristics, though the differentiated gronp represents to us and is considered to bo identi-a! with the original person. The commonest method of such differ entiation is tlccp. The elements of sleep arc, as it were, substracted from the normal personality, but there is usually left behind a very curious some thing illogical, credulous, fantastic whoso nightly experiences the whole re united person recollects in the morning as dreams. The nest commonest case n that of the absentminded person. Tho major part of the person being absorbed in mental processes of eome sort, tho re sidual person lives its own separate men tal life, think3, feels and wills by itself, and perhaps carries cn a train of proc esses which is continuous with a preced ing train carried on tinder similar cir cumstances tho day before. This residual person may act very mechanically. Tho reunited person may fail to recollect what its acts or thoughts were and bo surprised to find how it has been making nso of his limbs while he what ho vainly regards as tho ono nn alterable ego ha3 been absorbed in thought. Bat, on tho other hand, it may be perfectly conscious and may carry oa an entirely different train of thought of its own. Almost alwa33, however, it is eccentric and betrays n weakness at one point or another. For instance, a suburban resident, whom wo will call A, is accustomed cn landing at tho New York Eide of the ferry to abandon the mechanical task of v.alking to his office entirely to his resid ual personality and to give up the major part of himself to thought. The two per sonalities act often with perfect always with practical separatcness, thoresidnal person being quite equal to the low task of evading vehicles, steering clear cf p:iss ersby and taming the proper corners. When tho ofiice is reaeli-jd and tho two person3 again become one, it is often a difficult task to remember any circum stances cf the walk. On one occasion, however, A left the Astor library on Lafayette place, as he supposed, intending to walk down Clin ton place. To do this he must turn first to the left, then to tho right and then again to tho loi t. He turned once to the left, and after some time became dimly conscious that he had walked for a long time, and that th3 place for the second turn had not been reached. Coming to himself, he found himself far down Broadway. Tracing back his course mental, he discovered that he had been in the Mercantile library in stead of the Astor. Hi firvt turn there fore had taken him down Croadway, and he of course did not reach the place for the second. .Mark now the peculiarities cf his residual person. It knew just where it was to turn and in what direc tion, and had senso enough to be uneasy when it did not come to the proper place to turn, but it had not intelligence enough to knew that it was on tho wrong etreet. Its mind was too weak to be trusted further than it was accustomed to go. This residual person, in short, Avas about on a par with a harmless idiot. Again, B, a New Yorker, is walking along absorbed in a process of thought, when Ids residual personality sees his friend C approaching. It is net aston ished, for he is rearCs lodgings, but as the person supposed to bo C comes near er, it sees that he only slightly resembles C lie has on shabby clothes, and his face is entirely different. Tho natural conclusion would be that the person ap proaching was not C. Tho residnal per son, however, does not argue thus. It concludes that U has greatly changed, that he has becomo poor and that hi3 appearance has altered for the worse. Pity and surprise are plainly felt by the residual person. During these men tal processes, so similar to those of a drera residual, the major person has kept on with his own train of thought. Finally, however, on the close approach of tho supposed C, they unite in a flash Into tho normal person, the two separate coniciousnesses become one, and tho trctli is recognized at once. No doubt theso cases can be paralleled by thou sands of others. It seems to mo that they aro r.s true instances of double per sonality as any exhibited by epileptic or hypr-MOtio persons. A. E. Eostwick in The Illustrated Tourists' Guide That popular work, "Thb Tourists Guide Teeocgh thb Hawaiian Isl ands," is meeting with a steady sale both at heme and abroad. Tourists and others 'visiting theso islands should be In possession of a copy of it. It is a per fect mined information relating to tna ecenes and attractions to be met with here. Copies in wrappers can bo had at the publication otneo, 46 Merchant street, and at the News Dealers. Price CO cents. th; pcr.sc.N3 who vcr.K re; PLEASURE AND MOTOr.IZTY T:v i;t-i.: of the .Imaimr ur.'l How It I AfTt-tin tho Various J'rofVi'r III V."l.!!i :.: in!ti:i! I Trj J113 to l'.itru : I.ii in;j A ?! t rojio!itas View. The other day a company of American artists seated at the cheap but filling re faction of Gniw; cheese and the lecr i.f the country amused itself l y uisc::s:? ing the serious want of putronaje which American art is j v-t now suffer ing. "I tell yon," cried a young painter of great tah nt, that the professional art ist in this country is worse oil than ever. There was a time some l"i or CO years ago when his prospects . looked bright and Lis outlook cheerful. But today he wastes all his time and energy on pot boiling, and even his pot boiiers have to go at a sacrifice.' There are too many of r.s," quoth one of his hearers. '-The supply ex ceeds the demand, and wo are simply paying, as in other walks of life, for the crime of overproduction." 'There aro not too manj of us," re lated the f;rst speaker. "It's tho infer nal amateurs who aro doing work al most as good as. ours, and who are un derselling us. Ic is the reign of the am ateurs which has taken all the gilt off the gingerbread of the professional." True, absolutely true, in almost every highwaj and byway cf modern industry. The amateur is rapidly displacing tho professional to his own slight some times imperceptible benefit, and always to tho other's injury. When ono stops to consider this truism, cue is fairl' stunned by the magnitude and quantity of the illustrations which prove it. Take, for instance, the field to which tho dis cussion above quoted has relation. The woods are full of amateur "artists. Hardly a family now eri ;ts but has an 'artistic" son or daughter who neces sarily babbles the jargon of tho craft and spoils more canvas and wastes more paint in a week than most professional artists can afford in a year. Not only do their execrable composi tions degrade the standard of art, they do worse and more material harm by making A-alnes ridiculously cheap. Cllad to get aii3-thing at all half tho cost Qinetimes of the material they use. Tho amateur painters of Iu York alont vronstitntc unconsciously a f"ni''l which practically starves out the profession. And the worst of it is that the amateurs work is nothing like as conspicuously bad in all instances as it u-ed to be. sketchy and thin as the best of it may be, it certainly complies with the ele mentary rules of art, and ho must in deed bo a bold critic who, comparing it with tho effort of trained and expert professionals, should unhesitatingly pro nounce it without exception rot and rub bish. The amateur actor and tho amateur actress have inflicted incalculable injury on what calls itself specifically the pro fession. It is an open secret, for exam ple, that the once profitable city of Brooklyn has been made a positively "bad show town," as the phrase goes, by the number and audacity of its amateurs During the season they undertake per formances of tho severest professional character with' a prodigality of energy and expenditure almost amounting to profligate extravagance which utterly eclipses the productions of the regular theaters. In fact, tho Brooklyn amateurs have all but destroyed the professional Irama in that city. Again, the concert rooms of New York fairly swarm with unpaid vocalists who acquit themselves in many instances quite a3 well as their professional sisters and brothers, and there are already so many amateur instrumentalists in this city eager to play in public who have no nrgent pecuniary need to do so that it is doubtful if the Musical Protective union dare order another general strike here, so enonnor.s would be tho rush of fairl competent amateur fiddlers and others to take the places of the strikers. Rising higher in the social world, we find howling swells like SutTern Tailer basing their reputations entirety on their knack of driving four-in-hands en ama teur, so that the amateur coachman has become really an important public char acter and worthy of incessant notice. The amateur wing shot is another so cial lion. Compared with tho feats of tho plain, uncelebrated every day pot Lrnters of Maryland and Pennsylvania, th-.1 performances afield of George Work and Edgar Murphy and De Forrest Mau rice and the rest of them seem positively puerile. But none the less aro these lat tir knights of the trigger exalted and ex tolled by the newspapers as marvels of skill and vaunted among the possessions of which we ought all to be enthusiastic ally proud. For are they not amateurs? At the present rate of development or.e cannot be certain of tho ultimate Hunt cf amateur expansion. We shall, beyond doubt, havo amateur surgeons, amateur lawyers, amateur journalists, amateur barbers, amateur tailors, ama teur plumbers, amateur icemen, even amateur day laborers, perhaps. Our streets will be patrolled by amateur po licemen, our conflagrations extinguished by amateur firemen. And who can tell when the amateur will have so profound ly exhausted the honest occupations that he will haive to become an amateur crim inal? Then shall we have our amateur bur glars, our amateur pickpockets, our am ateur highwaymen, our amateur murder ers. The amateur shoplifter is already a formidable extant fact. What on earth is there in our social code to make the amateur homicide and tho amateur river pirate impossible? Yes. i' faith, this is the reign of the amateur with a vengeance. Archibald Gordon in New York Recorder. The Trouble With the Water. Mistress What makes your potatoes so soggy? New Cook Please, mum, the water they was boiled in was very wet. New York Weekly. Notice. rpiIE UNDERSIGNED HAYING -B- been appointed Executor of the Estate of Andre Alexandre Corniot, de ceased, requests all persons having claims against that Estate to present them within six months from date or tl'.ey will be forever barred, and all persons indebted to the above Fstate to make immediate payment. F. A. SCHAEFER, Executor with the Will annexed of A. A. Corniot, deceased. 343G-10t 14S9-U lToviitioiial Government of the Hawaiian Islands. Executive Council. 8. V.. Dole, President of the Provisional Government of the Hawaiian Isl ands, and Minister of Foreign Af fairs. J. A. King, Minister of the Interior. S. M. Damon, Minister of Finance. W. O. Smith, Attorney-General. Advisory Council. W.C. Wilder. Yiee-rresident of the Pro visional Government of the Hawaiian Islands. C. Bolte, John Emmeluth, Cecil Brown, E. D. Tenney, John Nott, W. F. Allen," John Ena, Henry Waterhouse, James F. Morgan, A. Yoang, Ed. Suhr F. M. Hatch. Jos. P. Mendonca. Chas. T. Rodgers, Secretary Ex. and Adv. Councils. Supreme Court. Hon. A. F. Judd, Chief Justice. Hon. R. F. Eickerton, First Associate Justice. Hon. W. F. Frear, Second Associate Justice. Henry Smith, Chief Clerk. Fred Wundenberg, Deputy Clerk. Geo. Lucas, Second Deputy Clerk. J. Walter Jones, Stenographer. Circuit Judges. FtetOirc-il: Oal.a. Second Circuit: (Maui) A.N. Kepoikai. Third and Fourth Circuit: ( Hawaii) S. L Austin. Fifth Circuit: (Kauai) J. Hardy. Offices and Court-room in Court House, King street. Sitting iu Honolulu The first Monday in February, May, August and November. L' K r A itT MUST OK FoEUOS AFFAIRS. Office in Capilol Euildit-g, King street. II i3 Excellent y Sanford IS. Dole, Minis ter of Foreign Affairs. Geo. C. Potter, Secretary. W. Horace Wright, Ed. Stiles, Lionel Hart, Clerks. Department of tus Interior. Ofiice in Capitol Building, King street, His Excellency J. A. King, Minister of the Interior. Chief Clerk, John A. Hassinger. Assistant Clerk3: James II. Boyd, M. K. Keohokalole, James Aholo, Stephen Mahaulu, George C. Ross, Edward S. Boyd. Chiefs of Bureaus, Interior Depart ment. Surveyor-General, W.D. Alexander. Supt. Public Works, W. E. Rowell. Supt. Water Works, Andrew Brown. Inspector, Electric Lights, John Cassidy. Registrar of Conveyances, T. G. Thrum. Road Supervisor, Honolulu, W. H.Cum mings. Chief Engineer Fire Dept., Bupt. Insane Asylum, Dr. A. Mo Wayne Department of Finance. Office, Capital Building, King Etreet. Minister of Finance, Ili3 Excellency S. M. Damon. Auditor-General, George J. R033. Registrar of Accounts, Geo. E. Smithies. Clerk to Finance Office. Carl Widemann. Collector-General of Customs, Jas. B. Castle. Tax Assessor, Oahu, Jona. Shaw. Deputy Tax Assessor, W. C. Weedon. Postmaster-General, J. Mort Oat. Customs Bureau. Office, Ciistom House, Esplanade, Fort street. Collector-General, Jas. B. Castle. Deputy-Collector, F. B. McStocker. Harbormaster, Captain A. Fuller. Port Surveyor, M. N. Sanders. Storekeeper, George C. Stratemeyer. Department op Attorney-General. Office in Capitol Building, King street. Attorney-General, W, O. Smith. Deputy Attorney-General, G. K. Wilder. Clerk, J. M. Kea. Marshal, E. G. Hitchcock. Clerk to Marshal, II. M. Dow. Deputy Marshal, Arthur M. Brown. Jailor Oahu Prison, J. A. Low. Prison rhysician, Dr. C. B. Cooper. Board of Immigration. President, His Excellency J. A. King. Members of the Board cf Immigration: Hon. J. B. Atherton, Jas. B. Castle, Hon. A. S. Cleghorn, James G. Spencer, Mark P. Robinson. Secretary, Vray Tajdor. Board of Health. Office in grounds of Court House Build ing, corner of Mililani and Queen streets. Members Dr. Day, Dr. Miner, Dr. Andrews, J.T. Waterhouse, Jr., John Ena, Theo. F. Lansing and Attorney General Smith. President Hon. W. O. Smith. Secretary Chas. Wilcox. Executive Officer C. B. Reynolds. Inspector and Manager of Garbage Ser vice L. L. La Tierre. Inspector G. W. C. Jones. Tort rhysician, Dr. G. Trousseau. Dispensary, Dr. H. McGrew. Leper Settlement, Dr. R. K. Oliver. Board of Education. Court House Building, King street. President, Hon. C. R. Bishop. Secretary, V. James Smith. Inspector cf Schools, A. T. Atkinson. District Court. Police Station Building, Merchant street. William Foster, Magistrate. ' Jamea Thompson, Clerk. MKvY GOODS a Fine Assortment. i'lLES F0I1 FLOOB And for Decorating Purposes; Matt in q op all Kinds, Manila Cigars. Chinese Fire Crackers, Rockets and bombs, Japanese Provision and Soy. H&ni-p&inted Porcelain Dinner Sat. A Its of fhese tine bund-embroidered aiist ana swti:n sckeenb, 1C30KY FitAMES, AbSortsJ colors and patterns of Crepe 8:ik Khakis. Eu-s.int Tete-a te Caps and Saucers. A Cne lot of BOATS AND ACCESSORIES A i?:v of those handy Uosquito Urns. Ai.;o, an assortment of new styles cf RrUtan Chairs and Tables Also, asmall selection of JAPANE3K WING WO CHAN k CO. Ko. 2 Nuuanu Street. mi. . n t i iii! Hawaiian Newspapers DAILY AND WEEKLY Wilh a combined Circulation of 4.SOO COPIES Furnish tiic best medium for advertising in the Hawaiian language, and are the only recognized leading Journals. LssT Advertisements and subscriptions received at tho office of the Hawaiian Gazette Co., 4G Merchant Street, Honolulu. Hawaiian Stamps YANTED. T WILL PAY CASH, FOR EITHER JL large or small quantities of used Ha waiian Postage Stamps, as follows: (These offers are per hundred and any quantity will be accepted, no matter luvw email, at the same rates.) 1 cent, violet $ 75 1 cent, blue 75 1 cent, green 40 2 cent, vermilion 1 50 2 cent, brown 75 2 cent, rose SO 2 cent, violet, 1891 issue 50 5 cent, dark blue 1 50 5 cent, ultramarine blue 1 00 6 cent, green 2 60 10 cent, black 4 00 10 cent, vermilion 5 00 10 cent, brown 2 60 12 cent, black 6 00 12 cent, mauve 6 00 15 cent, brown - 5 00 18 cent, red - 10 00 25 cent, purple 10 00 50 cent, red 25 00 $1, carmine 25 00 1 cent envelope 50 2 cent envelope 75 4 cent envelope.. 2 00 5 cent envelope 2 00 10 cent envelope - 5 00 fNo torn stamps wanted at any price. Address : GEO. E. WASHBURN, P. O. Box 2063. San Francisco, Cal. 3021 1418-tf The Planters' Monthly TABLE OF CONTENTS. JULY 1S93. Notes. Advance in the Trice of Sugar. Cocoanuts and other Palms. Commissioner Marsden's Report. Hawaiian Crown Lands Estate. The Watson ville (Cal.) Beet Sugar Factory. Report of the Hawaiian Forestry Commission. Palms. Green Manuring. Potatoes as a Crop. The Cultivation of Rape. The Banana Its Description, Varie ties and Manner of Cultivation. California Fig Trees. The Chicago Stock Yards. Sandwiches. Tiie care of Tools. MISS BURROWS Dressmaking Rooms 99 HOTEL STREET. Prices lower than elsewhere in Hono lulu. Latest styles as worn in London and Paris. A specialty of Washing Dress es. All work neatly and promptly finished. 3340 Send a copy of this week's Ha waiian Gazette with your foreign letter. IC 1 OBDWAY Robis-cn Block, Eet:-1 Street, Furnitu.re, AND 0-VI3I3STET O KLEGANT DESIGNS IN WICKER WAKE, ANTIQUE OAK, BEDROOM SUITS, OREFFONIERS, SIDE-BOARDS, ETC., ETC., ETC. ISiPMatting laying a specialty. All orders attended to. " BELL TELEPHONE 525. 3" MUTUAL (i!5. JOHN IMPORTER AND DEALER IN- M Steei and Iron lianges, Stoves and Fixtures, HOUSEKEEPING G00D3 AND KITCHEN UTENSILS, AGATE WARE IN GREAT VARIETY. While, Gray and Silver-plated. LIFT AND FORCE PUMPS. WATER CLOSETS, METALS, Plumbers' Stock, Water and Soil Pipes. Plumbing, Tin, Copper and Sheet Iron Work, BIMOND EL00K, 05 fAIIA ABSOLUTELY PURE! One Hundred Founds Worth Two Hundred of Any Other. M. W. McChesney & Sons 3301-ly I! Great Clearance Salef B commencing; TJ1 MONDAY, JUNE 26, 1893. V"e will oflVr anvtiiiii" In our fa! Lame Stock 0 At Greatly Reduced Prices! ;;2 CSCall and see 'for offering in all Department?. Egan & Gnim, Fort Street. JXJST A.RRIVED 3?ER I5VIiIv C. 33. EltYANT. BABY CARRIAGES of all styles, CARPETS, RUGS, and .MATS in the latest patterns, " Household 59 SeT no; Maclriires Hand Sewing Machines, all with tiie latest improvements. Also on hand Westermayer's Celebrated Cottage Pianos ! Parlor Organs, Guitars and other Musical Instruments. t5For sale by ED. HOFFSCHLAEGER & CO., King Street, opposite Castle & Cooke. 'ORTER, between Fort snd Nuumu. Upholstery MAKING. NOTT, hi HOSE ! and 97 KING STREET. -o- A.G-753STTS. 3 8 of Goods ! 5 yourself, the bargains we are I j 2 I ! M 3 SOAP COA I At MoKuiU'V 1 it-en STOVi: COAL At $12 n lou i GT"Ie!ivrrt'l to hjiv j.arl of Hono lulu FKLK. JItVSTACK & Co. iSejrKhig up No. IM on Colli Tele- pliUIK'S. . 317-Mf TIIE HAWAIIAN GUIDE BOOS 1892. 1892, AH tVl 11 T I L'dV'l il'tit iwuiiiril rt 11 1' I US'. Though h Hawaiian Islands H. M. WHITNEY, Editoh. Price in Honolulu. 60 Cents per Cof!) The liOok has 1 7i h oi i 1 1 . 20 full Page lliwtraiiut tf hhvd ami a desicriution of the IVarl JlfciLor Kailway ontcrpriKf, an.i wurronndinc country. ' It has nlso FOUIl MAI'S of the larger islands, prepared expressly for it. The GUIDE gives a I ull description each of the principal Islands and Bettle ments in this Group, and will prove an invaluable hand-book for touiifits, and for residents to send to their friends abroad. Some of the illustrations in the l(.w book are very line specimens of the i'hoto tint procev.v of engraving, and airuiatrlv represent the ecenee portrnj td. fDSr-l'or sale nt JJanniian hewn Corn pauy's, and at T. U. Thrum's Ut.-town Stationc-rj htore. dAwd The. Ouide will be mailed to any psrl o the islands for frl Cent a per Copy. Or, to any foreign country for 70 (Vntn filSf Published by the H1W1II1N GAZETTE PUBLISHING ,C0... 4a ZVlerohant St., THE HAWAIIAN Fertilizing Company While tl mnkful to the PlanterH for I heir generous Bupjort dnrii; the pafet year, do now oQ'er a few tons of Various Grades of Fertilizers Still remaining fii hand, anJ itmlyfor immediate delivery : Complete High Grade Ftrlilizerp, FISH GUANO, Hotted Stable Manure and Land Tlapler, Sulphate Potash and Muriate Potash, Nitrate of Soda and Dried Blood, Dissolved Layeen Island Guano, Pure Raw Bone Meal Ground Coral Lime Stone, Lie, Etc., Etc. Having disposed of Large Quantities of Manures and High Grade lerf ilizers during the year 1892, we are now pre- fared to receive orders lor 1893, de ivery in quantities to suit. yVe will give tenders for any Quantity and of any Grades desired. Fertilizers made to order, and .r:y analysis guaranteed. S27"While making your orders for 1893, give us a call, or Fend yemr orders to A. F. COOKE, Manager Hawaiian Fertilizting Co. HAWAIIAN Pork Packing Co. The ahove Company is prepared to buy HAWAIIAN HOGS ! In any quantity at Highest Market Price. "Pigs for Koasting, Dresoed or on Foot. Manufac!urcr3 of Extra Eeaf Lard, Guaranteed pure, and made under the inspection of the Hoard of Health. jTPo? t Office Pox 314 ; Mutual Tel . 66. . &ar Slaughter Yards and Pens, IwUei. BQTQ&cq, West cor. Maunakea and KingSts. V