Title | Friend, 1876-11 |
Subject | Christians-Hawaii--Newspapers; Missions--Hawaii--Newspapers; Sailors-Hawaii--Newspapers; Temperance--Newspapers |
Description | Published by the Rev. Samuel Chenery Damon from 1845 to 1885, The Friend focused on temperance and Christian mission to seamen. It began as a monthly newspaper that included news from both American and English newspapers, and gradually expanded to adding announcements of upcoming events, reprints of sermons, poetry, local news, editorials, ship arrivals and departures and a listing of marriages and deaths. From 1885 through 1887, it was co-edited by the Revs. Cruzan and Oggel. The editorship then passed to Rev. Sereno Bishop, who held the post until the publication of the paper fell under the auspices of the Board of the Hawaiian Evangelical Association in April of 1902 where it remained until June 1954. Since then, it has continued in a different format under the Hawaii Conference-United Church of Christ up to the present day, making it the oldest existing newspaper in the Pacific. Note that there are some irregularities in the numbering of individual issues, so that two issues may have the same volume and number, but different dates will distinguish them. |
OCR Text | Show --·---- - --- - - - - - - - - -- - - ------- ---- ---·-----·---- ---- CONTE1'TS For N0Yembe1• 1, 1876. PAG"- Chinese Problem ..•.••••.••• • .•••••. • ••..••••••••••.•••. 89 Prompt Pum~hm ent in the· Routh Seas ••...••..•••.••. 89, 90 Death of Dr. Bacon ................. a ................ . ... 90 Death of Prof. Snell .••..••. . ....••••....•.• •.•••••.••. 91 Death of Mrs. Th u rston •••.••....•..••.•••.•••••••.•••. 91 Original Poem .•..••.•..•.•••••••..•.•••.•••.•••.••••••. 92 Huxley 111 Addresses ..................................... 92 Marine Journal. •• . ...•.••..••...•••.•..••...••.••••.••. 93 Another Arctic Disaster .•••.••••••••••.••••.•. • •••.•. 93, 9:l Y. 1\1. C. A ............................................ . 96 THE FRIEND. NOVEMBEll I, 1816. • t CHINESE PROBLEM, "Taken in whatever aspect we will, the coming of the Chinese to Arnericn. is P.x:celled in importance by uo other event since the disc0very of America. ~t ~s one of the impulses beyou<l n.11 human conception _or management by which God is moving the bist~ry of mankind onward to its great consummation." The above paragraph we copy from China ctnd tlie [Jnited States, by tl}e Rev. W. Speer, D. D , and originally published in 1872. Every year's development only verifies more and more the truthfulness of the statement. So impressed has Dr. Speer be~ome with the importance of the Chinese question and its ultimate results upon America and the world, that he has resigned his position as Secretary of the Pres byterian Board of .Education in Philadelphia, and started for China. It will be remembered that Dr. Speer was formerly a missionary in Chma and isubsequeutly m California. but in consequence of ill health was compelled to resign his duties. With re~tored health he has resigned his office, and now goes again to China to obtain information relative to the Chinese question, and returning to the U n_ited States will endeavor to enlighten the public mind. Dr. Speer is engaged in a good work. His visit to Honolulu will be remembered-about twenty years ago. He is a good Chinese scholar. During our recent visit to Philadelphia we had frequent interviews with him, in which he fully laid before us his plans. Most heartily we ran pray for his success. We have received a letter from him, dated on board of the steamship Alaska, bound from San Francisco to Yokohama, dated August 24th, we copy as follows: Prompt Punishment in the" South Seas." 1793-1876. Some months ago news came that a native of A paiang, one of the Gilbert Islands, had murdered an Englishman. We believe the American Missionaries reported the case to the English Government. The man-of-war Renard was ordered to visit the island and see that the guilty murderer was ptrnished. "Ro here we are half wav th e • to Yokohama. ! I ns t ea d , h owever, of s ta nd.mg by, as d"d I . Everything prosperous and pleasant thus far. ; t E h N. · t C t · v grea ng11s av1ga or, ap am ancouWe expect to be in Japan a month; in North d • •i · t d · . . ver, un er s1m1 ar c1rcums ances, an seerng Chrna till the close of th e year; at Canton that the island authorities executed the tHl the beginning of March ; about the 15th, guilty murderer, the commander of this will start homewarg .'' vessel acted as executioner, or the punishment was inflicted by some of his own U Qr. Scott, United States Consul at officers and crew. The following is the rethis po:r~, de~erves much credit for his manport as published in the Hemld, an Auckagen~ent of the large number of seamen sudland paper: d.e nly cast upon the Consulate. He sent " Amongst our items of news from the PS as boarders to the " Home," ahd in ten South Seas, per Ephemey, we hear of severe 4ay~ 100 have shipped or been sent to the retribution or. the Line ls landers, at Apaiang·, p nited States. or have ceased to be an ex- one of the Gilbert Group, who committed n. pense to the Consulate. Only about twenty cold.blooded murder some months Rgo, and remain at the " Horne." It is quite note- which we have alread y recorded. The savworthy that not a sick man has been report- age entered the st.ore of a white settler, and ed for the hospital. We have no doubt asked for some hair oil. On being told that $2,000 or less will cover the entire expense there was none in stock, he answered that to the United Rtates Consulate, of the the store-keeper Mr. Keys, should have reserved some for him. After a few more wrecked ships in the Arctic. · words he presented a revolver, and deliberately shot Mr. Keys, the wound proving "THE CoRNER."-With an oc~asional in- fatal. The ruffian then decamped, and fearterval Dr. Hoffmann has occupied the prem- ing vengeance, to another island. 'l'he ises from which he is now removing, during cold-blooded and wanton murder being the past twenty-seven years. His careful noised abroad, H. M. S. R enard was sent and exact method of putting up prescriptions to search for the murderer, but until lately he has eluded all vigilancl:'. In June last th·o has rendered his drug-store quite noted, Renm·d was at Apaiang, and hearing that while the oracular and wise sayings which the man was on the island. a message was have issued from "the corner" have ren- sent to the missionary, Mr. Taylor, demanddered the spot almost as famous as the ing his surrender. Through the influence Oracle of Delphi. May many years of use• of the missionary this wa& accomplishecli there being no douqt a~ t,p his identity, h~ folness await the " doctor " in his new store, was ordered to be executed summarily. T4e where the public may rest assured the very mode of capital punishment was very simbest of drugs and perfumery, and no others, ple. He war;; blown from a gun. and SQ will be put up. On "the corner," we learn complete was his destrqction by this means that Bishop &; Co. will immediately erect a that nothing r~m~tneq of l1im qui his legs.'' 'l'he foregoing stater1epts ~pnfirmed new banking house. No better ]oration could have beefl selected by letters fn>~ the Hawaiian MissionarieR ns 90 'I' H E }' R I t~ N D . N O V II B E R . I 8 76. transliited and published in the Gazette of the .Dcedalus, approached Oi:thu, and lay off ashore at Waikiki Bay and execute the Waimea, on the north side of the island. Its criminals by ordering them to be "blown October 18th·; closing with this additional : advent seems to have produced all the from a gun." The essential facts in the two "April 29.-About half-past eight this amazement that ,vas excited by Cook's arrival morning two boats came ashore from the at Hawaii in 1778. The first thought of cases are strikingly alike. In the language man-of-war bringing the Captain and Lieu- the n11tives was that the coral rocks were of Shakespeare, we close : tenant and a number of marines, together floatina, and when thev saw the officers and " Look upon this picture, and on this." with the prisoner who was to be executed . crew they took them be gods on account I A cannon was placed close to the sea s hnre of the brightness of their eyes. Unfortunately, Death of the Rev. G. B. Bacon: D. D. and loaded with powder, and the pn~oner whilst the seamen were watering the ship, a wa s lashed with his back against the muzzle dispute arose between them and the inhabi"\Ve see notices in all the recent New of the gun. The Captain then made a few tants which resulted in the death of a, PortuYork papers of the death of this distinguishremarks on the subject of murder, at the guese sailor. Lieutenant Hergest, who had conclusion of which the piece was di:scharged, charge of the shore party, and the Astrono- ed Divine and Pastor of the Congregational and the poor wretrh was blown to atom~. mer, Mr. Gouch, not aware of the f racas, Church in Orange, N. J. These notices are " We felt sad to see this terrible death. had wandered to some distance and fell into t appreciative and eulogistic. In a priRum was at the bottom of the murder of the the hands of a lawless band of natives, who, vate letter, dated Orange, Sept. 28th, we white man, and this execution was in ac- it appears, owned allegiance to none of the cordance with law; but the chief who killed local chiefs. Again the same process was have more foll particulars respecting his three Hawaiians, still goes unpunished, and gone through as with Cook-first, there was sickness and the closing days of his useful is living at Butaritari" the belief that the foreigners were divine, life. '' Throughout his sickness," ,•.rrites Respecting the guilt of the . native thus and belonged to the expected Lono; then the our correspondent, " he manifested the same horribly executed there can be no doubt nor discovery that they were mortals, which triumphant faith which had characterized seems to have been a sufficient signal for atany question respecting the fact that he tack, and the two unfortunate officers were him always, and whenever we think of the s hould be punished. In regard, however, to killed. The .Dmclaltts worked nearer land, glorious rest into which he has entered and the manner in which the punishment was and fired on ~hore till evening, when she the fulness of joy of which his great heart ex·e cuted, we shall be much surprised if the took her departure. The presence of parties and spirit are now participating, we feel that Commander of the R ena1-cl receives the of depredators roaming about the islands grief at our loss should stand rebuked." was a consequence of tbe kings and chiefs approval of the people of England and of Dr. Bacon's visit, with his family, to Hobeing engaged in their dissensions and wars. the civilized world. Such a method of punnolulu, will be kindly remembered by all "To stamp on the native mind the great ishment is not that commonly practiced lesson of retributive justice, Vancouver con- forming his personal acquaintance. One of among civilized nations. Besides. ought sidered it proper to punish the people of his sermons preached in Honolulu, " _There not the Commander of the R enm·cl to have Oahu for the murder of Lieut. Hergest, of is a way out," will long be remembered from compelled the King of Apaiang to execute the .Dmdalus, Mr. Gouch and the Portuguese the helpful insp1ratio0 which it imparted to the murderer or order it done? For it ap- sailor. The chiefs of th<.> islands cleared the hearer. We copy the following notice themselves before him of any complicity in pears from the narrative as published that the crime; and three mPn had already been from the Christian llnion : he was arrested and delivered c,ver by the executed by their orders for participation iu " The funeral services of the late Dr. G. King's order. the murder. However, as Vancouver de- B. Bacon were largely attended at the We now call tbe reflder·s attention to the termined to bring the matter 111to the light Orange Valley Cburch, Sept. 18th. The of day, three more men were sent on board train from New York brought a large delecase of a murder perpetrated by the natives his ship and tried; and after evidence which gation of friends and ministers of all denomof the Island of Oahu, and the manner of seemed satisfactory as to their guilt, sentence inations, sorrowing Ht their loss, rejoicing in the punishment inflicted by the great navi• was passed on them, and they were handed their brother's gain. TIie eatholicity of Bro. gator, Captain Vancouver. A narrative of over to the chiefs, by whom they were shot Bacon's spirit had endeared him to a wide before a large concourse of people. It is true circle, which showed itself as Drs. Crosby the transaction will be found in the second that it was afterwards affirmed that the three and Robinson, of the Presbyterian Church, volume of his voyages. "I demanded,'! men who were thus killed were not the real Dr. Hare, of the M. E . Church, Dr. Tiffany, writes Vancouver, "that the principals in murderers, and that they were sacrificed to (Episcopalian,) Drs. EldE:T and Macarth~r. the horrid act should be sought and pun- appease the English Captain's anger. If (Baptist,) with Drs. Storrs, Burlington, . ished according to the heinousness of their this were so, it is to be regretted that so good Taylor, Clapp, and numerous other brethren a man should have made so great a mistake; paused beside this faithful. scholarly, Chriscrime, not by ns, but by themRelve.~, without and that the execution which he ordered tian minister exalted to "king and priest." tlw lecu~t £nte,:f'erence on ow· pm·t. " should have taken effect on innocent victims. Rev. G. M. Boyntqu, of Newark, delivered On Capt. Vancouver's arrival at Waikiki Vancouver's vessels left the islands on the a most appropriate address, outlining the character of the deceased in choice and fitin March, 1793, he demanded of the King 30th of M_arch.n ting phrase. The service was such as our of Oahu the surrender of the murderers of We think any and every impartial reader brother would have had it-simple, sincere, Lieut. Hergest and Mr. Gouch, the Astrono- will approve of the course pursued by Van- Christian-:rnd all joined heartily in the mer, who was attached to the British store- couver before that of the Commander of the prayers of Rev. Mr. Ely. thankful for hi'! s hip JJcedalus. So peremptory was his R enm·d, although Vancouver may have life in its richness and sweetness, and for his demand, that three natives were given up been deceived respecting the innocence of calm, peaceful entrance into eternal joy and service. " Perhaps to-morrow I shall touch and put to q.eath, but su~sequeut discoveries the unfortunate natives thus executed. We the hem of His garment," said our dying lead to the Qe}ief that they were innocent of think it may admit of a question whether, brother. He touched and lives forever, above ihe crime with which they were charged. according to the strict ·rules of international the power of sickness or distre~s. A!l sym• An acconnt Q[ the visit of the .Dmdohts, jurisprudence, the subjects of one nation path1ze with Dr. Leonard Bacon in the and th~t of Vancouver, when he sought ret- may become the executioners of criminals sorrow of his old age. " ribution, we copy from the work of Manley in another, although the guilty criminals Though some few drops of love may run Hopkins, Hawaii~11 Consul-General in belonged to a savage tribe. Vancouver evibeside to our kindred and alli,.mce, yet the London: dently took this view of this question. It full torrent must run out after Christ; rela"On the 11th of May, in thP year of was certainly to the credit of Vancouver tions may lie in the bosom, but Chnst must Vanconver's first vi sit, an English store-ship, that he did not order his marines and sailors lie in the heart. to T U ~; F R I E N D, N Or ): ~1 BER , 18 76. Death of Professor E. S. Snell. ____ - _-·---·-···----····•·•..:..:·==========- 91 !From the P. C. Atlverti~1n·, October 21st.] abundantly confirmed by reading the two THEJ LAST OJ<' THI:<: l'mNKt•:H::;.-We htiet:ly an• "eight~paged" New York Tribu.ne extras The papers just received announce the nounced lait week the <l1•cease of Mi's. 'l'htlrston, relating to the centennial, in which a genthe survivor of ti.le lin;t, company of missionaries death of Prof. Snell, who was a member of eral survey is taken of all the various exhi- who anin~d at these i:o1la11ds from Boston. on the the first class entering Amherst College in bits of the nations represented. :118t ol March, 1820. W c quo Le from the Gazette: 1821, and who has, as a Tutor and ProfesWearisome days and nights were appointed her sor, been connected with that institution ever for many lonf! weeks. a11tl her patience or h0p1:1 REv. C. T. MILLS, D.D.~ We are glad to was SPVerdy ti-ied. and had iti- perfect work. Mrs. since his graduation. It was our privilege Th11l'slu11 arrived a ~ the [slancls in 1820. and after welcome, per th· e last steamer, from Califorto have enjoyed his instruction during our twenty years ut' missionai-y work at Kai.Ina, she college days. Forty-four years ago we re- nia, this gentlemau, who has become so embarked tor her 11i.t1n• laud with l.ter fivechilurnn, ill company with I,lr.llinglJam and fumilv. Unring member him as a teacher of Natural Philos- identified with female education on the the visit occuned t.he death ol her <laughter. Lncy. ophy, and during subsequent years have Pacific Coast. Dr. and Mrs. NJ ills originally of' whom 1~ memoi1· wa;:; p11bliRlwd. 1n 1852 she returned to the IslandA wiLb hn Lwo younger chil• went out as missionaries of the American dt·t'n. watched his career with u~feigned deligh Compdled to l<•1tv1• Kailua by the increar-• As an instructor he was a rare man, and in Board to Ceylon, on account of ill health ing inlirnntiei- of )Ir. Tll1trl'ton. they vi:eited tlwir daughter, Mrs. Taylor, in California. ancl thi,n took all his intercourse with students so won they returned and came to these islands, up t,lwir ahodt> at Honolnl11 , wht>rn )Ir. 'l'hnt·ston and from 1860 to 1864 presided successfully died in 18ti8. But tllonih a wi,iow. and fol' a time their love and esteem, that the fragrance living alon~. Mrs. 'l'lrnrston ·enjoyed life. With a at Oahu College. Returning to the United of his memory will long be cherished by the treasure l11id up in heaven. and a hope full of imhundreds and thousands of Amherst grad- States they taught at Benec1a, and than es- mortitlity. wby should sbe nol? Only a short time her departure. she remarked that life was tablished "Mills' Seminary," respecting this bPfore uates. pleal"ant. One of the most. int~H•Fltini,r 1wrformDuring our visits to Amherst in 1869 and institution, one of our correspondents thus ances ot the Jubilee. in 1870. was .Mrs. Thnrst.on ·s n•miniscencf's. Iler style was vigorous and ori~in1876, it was our privilege to be a guest in writes, under date of Oct. 1st. a1; and she knew how to self'ct those factfl and his family, and long shall we remember the pleasant days of June, 1876, when we enjoyed the pJeasure of his society and looked out from the window of the prophet's chamber, at early dawn, and saw him working in his garden and brushing the dew from the plants. ·The following paragraph contains a sentiment beautifully illustrated by his useful life and serene old age : " In the life of the good man there is an Indian summer more beautiful than that of the seasons; richer, sunnier, and more sublime thau the most glorious Indian summer the world ever knew- 1t i an Indian summer of the soul. When the glow of youth has departed, when the warmth of middleage is gone, and the buds and blossoms of spring are changing to the sere a_nd yellow leaf, then the mind of the good man, still ripe and vigorous, relaxes its labors, and the memories of a well-spent life gush forth from their secret fountains, enriching, rejoicing and fertilizing; then the trustful resignation of the Christian sheds around a 8Weet and holy warmth, and the soul, assuming a heavenly lustre, is no longer restricted to the narrow confines of businE>ss, but soars far beyond the wrnter of age, and dwells peacefully and happily upon that bright spring and summer which await him within the gates of Paradise, evermore. Let us stri,·e for and look trustingly forward to an lndian sumrp.er like this." 0..7 An Englishman lecturing in Philadelphia remarked that the great exposition of London in 1851 had this good influen~e, that 1t most eff~ctually took the self-conceit out of John Bull. He found there Were other people in the world as inventive, artistic, skillful, learned and enterprising as himself. He added that the result of the great centennial would be the same in the United States upon Brother Jonathan. This is just our idea exactly, and we have not failed to give expression of the same both publicly and privately. TlllS "·iew of the subject is " The half had not been told me in regard to Mills' Seminary. 1 expected a great deal and was not rl.isappointed. The emerald geen, velvety·lawn in front of the Seminary is one of the most exquisite bits of color I ever saw. Its coolness and dewiness in the midst of the heat and glare of the day was perfectly delicious and refreshing. Of course, I shall not attempt any description of the building, as you know all about it. The arrangements seemed complete. If 1 ever indulged in any scepticism in regard to the Seminary, it is fast fading. The mere surroundings arb an education in themselves. thong!Jts which wonld interest her hearers, or readers. Any publisher wonld be glad to jlet po8session of those reminiscencf's with any addition she may have made to tht>m. It wonld makP a l.>0ok of Hawaiian lifo and misRionary labors Sill"· passed in interest by tll)Ott ever written. TEACHING BLIND JAPANESE TO REAJ).--An American missionary in Japan has devot~d his attention to the philanthropic work of providing a literature for the blind in that country. This was no easy task, for. al• though a raised type could be made without difficulty, to make a raised type in Japanese that would be legible to the touch required considerable ingenuity. ln the Kalakana or ' current language of Japan there are seventy• eight characters, which represent as many PR01'', HUXLEY'S OPINION OF AMERICANS.- sounds, 1-nd many of them so closely resemIn his address at Buffalo, he remarked as ble each other, and are bP.side so intricate in in their composition, as to ·pr~sent a difficulfollows: ty in the way of their application to a blind "1 have visited some of your great uni- syllabary which can only be imagined by Yersities, and met men as well known in students of the language. This difficulty the old world as in the new. I find certain was overcome by applying- the Rornanizeq. differences here. The English universities equivalents (which are seldom of more than are the product of the government, yours of two letters each, and seldom exceed thret:.1) private munificence. The latter among us of ,the sounds to the foundation of a syllabary. is unknown. The general notion of an fhe success of this system has been tl.ne.Englishman when he gets rich is to found quivocal a1;id complete Pupils learn the an estate and benefit his family. The gen- new lang-uage with marvellous facility, and eral notion of an American, when fortunate, the government of Japan, it j5 stated, 1s takis to do something for the good of the peo- ing measures to have it introduced into the ple, 11nd from which benefits shall continue bl(nd schools and asylums throughout th~ to flow. 1 need hardly say which 1 regard empire. It is probable that at some futun~ as the nobler of these ambitions.' 1 day thfl education of the blind in Japan and elsewhere will reach a point far beyond that "TRIBUNE ExTRAs."-We would acknowl- which has been hith.e rto attained. There is really no reason why blind persons should edge from the office of the New York not distinguish themselves in various ways. 'Tribune, a file of " Extras., containing The absence of one sense renders the other Huxley's lectures, centennial reports, &c. senses rnore keen, and the blind are often Any person desirous of valuable information remarkable for an intelligence and reasoningon current events, science, &c., could not power not to be found in many persons blessed w~th - good eyesight that does not subscribe for mote valuable publications. even require the aid of spectacles.-Pafl !U' The persons borrowing of the editor " History of Germany " "Author~hip of 'l k ,, d ' :S ia espeare an other books, are request-I ed to return t~e ~ame, and we shall be ready to loan other oooK~. .Llfotl Gazette. U · --- A Maori namf'd N 1komina, died late- ly at Patea in New Zealand, in the province · sa1'd t o h ave seen C apof T arana k.·1, w h o 1s tain _Cook. Nikomina is suppos_ed. to have attamed the extreme old age of 120 year:s. 92 THE THE FRIEND, =======--=--======---====--=-:NOVEMUER l, 1 876. [Original.] Mrs. Lucy G. Thurston. 1JY REV. D, DOLE, To the spirit world departed, Nobly has the raee been run; Not in sorrow, heavy hearte,l. Grieve we that the prize is won. Not desponding, not in sadness Bid we her a ~hort farewell; Ilnt we rest iu gruteful gladne ~s That her work is done so well. ' i\lid tile tlarkness of Kailua Long she shone, a hea.venly light ; Guide-there was none kinder, truer, Leading wanderers to the right. Pa,ss~d in cheerful :self-clenial, Eighty y,arij sped swiftly hy, Then .commenced tlie grievous trial, Gold from dross to purify. N O V E lU B E ll , I 8 7 6. - - -- - - - · -- Ephron the Hittite. It is gratifying to no• tice the fact that the merchants of Sau O'er the river frequent glancei; 8ought some heavenly glory there, Glory, which the soul entrances, Glory, which the ransomed share. Came at length the welcome me8sage•• Cross the rive1·, waiting one," ' Twas indeed a joyous presage Of a lriumph nobly won; Won through gnice, ia Christ believing, All the praise to him belongs; From his fullness still receiving, Ne'er shall cease her grateful 8ongs. -P. C. Advertiser, Oct. 21. ·--- Selected for - - - - - -- - - - - THE FRIEND. From Farrar' s Life of Christ. "Verily, verily I say unto you, before Abraham came into. existence, I am." John, Huxley's Addresses and Lectures, 8:58. While in the United States, are all to be There could be no more distinct assertion found in the September extra of the '1.11·ib- of his divine nature. Those who deny this wne. As this gentleman is regarded as the · must either prove that he never spoke these best exponent of the Darwinian theory, words, or mtist believe that he, the most which is making so much discmsion, it is lowly, and sinless, and meek-hearted of men, gratifying- t0 have the views and opinions of was guilty of a colos:::al and almost frantic those distinguished men in a condensed and intoxication of vanity and arrogance. For portable form. Huxley's lectures, containing e Jews, more. intensely than any other his peculiar view:s on evolution, were deliv- nation, recognized the infinite transcendence erecl in New York. He presents his opin- of God; and therefore for a Jew, being ions under three hypotheses : first, that the me1·ely rnctn, 1o claim divinity, would not present order of things bas existed from all only be inconsistent with ordinary sense and eternity; second, that the present order of virtue, but inconsistent with anything bu,t uature has only a limited duration, (this is sliee1· blctspliernoits insanity. HEALTH AMONG THE WRECKED SEAMEN.- It is quite remarkable that not a single sick sailor was landed from among the large number of wrecked men. The only instance of death which we have beard of in the Arctic during the season, is that of Mr. Samuel Knipes, third officer of the bark .Desmond, Capt. Green. He died of consumption and was buried at sea, Sept. 17th. When tbe ships were abandoned his shipmates drew him in a boat for three days over land and water, in order to put him on board the as O'll1' p1·esent lcnoiolecl{!e goes, is the Three Brothe?·s. common foundation (~/' life." We notice that N.d. Huxley is very cautious and chary• about introducing the term God or ac!lrnowledging Divine Providence, although he has. much to say about "nature," " the order of nature," and even " nature of Nature." The only instance that the term God is found in his lectures or addresRes, is in a quotation from Milton. The writer of the first chapter of Genesis repeats the name of God twenty-nine times. Modern scientists of the advanced school dispense with even the name of God. Would that we might credit Mr. Huxley with a disuse of the name of God on the same principle that the Jews of old refrained. viz., reverence. Unless Darwin, Huxley, and others have somP-thing more satisfactory upon which to rest our faith than is to be9 found in these lectures, we shall still go on singing the good old hymn, WE HAVE received two circulars from Sao Francisco, . relating to the treaty and planters. One is signed " Pacific Slo(le" and the other "Amicus Hawaii." It will hardly be expected of the FRIEND a discussion of the topics introduced into these circulars. There is a single point noticed in the circular by ·'Amicus Hawaii,'' that interested and amused us: " The experience and practice of the commercial world, from the commencement the historic period, shows the necessity and importance of ' middle men.' The earliest trade recorded in history, and involving only the sum of 'four hundred shekels of silver, current money with the merchant,' was made through a third party or negotiator. See Genesis, 23d chapter. Nor will this principle be found to be exceptional in the "How firm a foundation, )'e saints of the Lord, ~uccessful management of the important 18 laid for your faith in his excellent word." business of the Hawaiian people, in its new Scientists of this school may be learned and .condition under the Reciprocity Treaty." deeply versed in theoretical and experi« Middle men" we take to be commission mental speculations, but they evidently illustrate the truthfulness of that saying of Christ meil'chants ! Now in referring to Genesis in his sermon upon the Mount, "lf there23d, we notice the mention of " middle fore the light that is in thee be darkness, · men," hut it does n0t appear that they how great is that darkness! " charged " five per cent.," but merely acted TEMPERANCE LEcTUR_E .-President Pratt as friends. If "Amicus Hawaii" is ready to negotiate without the usual charges, his ser- of Oahu College, delivered a. most timely, vices will be ~ver acceptable ! The FRIEND appropriate and eloquent lecture at the Lyhas been advocating the Treaty, hut has re- ceum last Friday evening. w ·e hope the and the subject ceived nothing more than the " middle ball will be kept ro.llino-, b ,m en" who negotiated between Abrahan~ and continue to be agitated. • ---·- --~ Francisco are familiar with the Bible. the Mosaic or Miltonic); and third, that the present order of nature has but a limited duration, but it supposes that the present order of things proceeded by a natural process from an antecedent order, and that from another order and so on. After discussing and discarding the first and second, he proceeds folly to d1scuss and endorse the third. After much discussion he arrives at tbe conclusion, finally, that there exists " a gelatinous rnass which, so Long in weariness she waited, Sulfering waited, longed and prayed, Prayed with fervor una.hate1l, Still the summons was delayed. Octobet· 14, 1876. FltlENO, NAY.U,.-The following are tbe officers attached to H. B. M. SloO!) J?antom.e, which arrived at this pot·t from Victorh..,on the 1st: Commander-Sa.muel Long. Lieutj-m1arles N. Robin~on, F. C. l\l. Noel. .Nat'. Lieut-W. F. Chambre. Strqf' Surgeon-G. B. Beale, 111. D. Paymaster-Tl10s. Clayton. Su/J. Lieut-.Jas. B. Milton. Engineers-Jas. Paterson .•las. ~lcL,trPn. Gunner-John '5mith. t:arpenter-John A. King. ENGLISH M1ssrnNARY VEsSELs.--The Wesleyan Mission brig ,John Wesley arrived at Samoa, on the 8th July, from Sydney via Fiji, and left again for New Guinea on the 20th. The London Missil'.>nary Society's bark ,John lVilliams arrived at Apia on the 21st July, from a three months' cruise, and sailed again for Sydney on the 27th. A train of ohe hundred and ten cars, with more than 5,000 passengers on board, ran from PittsburQ" to the centennial the other day. It was the largest train ever on the Pennsylvania road, and probflbly the largest passenger train ever run on any road. It made its way on time without interfermg at all with the regular trains. Information Wanted. I Respecting WILLIUI LL'f TLE•"IELD, who left Enirland about fifty years ago, on board the whaling ship Fame ,-for a. cruise in the Pacific, and reported as wrecked at the Marquesas lt1lands. The ship is reported to have been taken to ValpHraiso, and there condemne,l. There WM a, report that said William Lltllefield Jett the .Marquesas lshmds and came to Honolulu with two of his shipmates. He had two brothers, James and Cornelius. The latter went to America, anc.1 i,i now living with his son, William Littlefield. 168 :1<:ast 82<l street, New York City If any information can be furni,he,I it will he most gratefully received. Letters mav be address~ct to William Little~eld 168 Ea~t 82d street. New _York , or to_ th e Editor ot THE J! nrnl'io, or Pacific Commerc.wl Advertiser. Honolulu . l.i'ltlEND, NOVE~I BER, NIARlNE JUUltNAL. POB.T OF HONOLULU, S. I. ARRIVALS. Oct, 1-H B M's ss Fantome, Com S Long, fm Victoria. 1-Am schr (; l\l Ward, Briggs, 20 days from Baker's Island. 4-Am l:!Chr Bonanza, 28 days from Hakodate, Japan. 9-1' 1\1 ss City of Sydney, Dow, 9 days fro111 Kanda vu 10-Am bk Edward May, ,Johnson, 17 dys fm San J!'ran 20-Am bk D C Murray. Fuller. 22 days Jin San Fran. 20-Am bk Mary Belle ltoberts, Grey, 18½ dys from San Francisco. !!0-R M ss Zealam.lia, Ferries, 9 d~s from S Francisco ~0-Am wh bk Three Brothers, from A retie, with 1050 walrus, 650 bowhead, 12,000 lbs bone, 5000 do ivory. 21-Am bk Sonoma, Newbury, 22 day':! lrom San Fran. 21-Am bk American Lloyds, Park, 21 days from San Francisco. 31-Brit bk Colombo, Huer, 42 days from Victoria, V I, en route for Hongkong. Oct. 7-Am bktne Nellie M Slade, Atwood, for San Fran. 9-ll 8 ~1 S Myrmidon, Com Hare, lor Valparaiso. 10-P N ss City of8ydney, Dow, for San Francisco. 12-A m hk Edward May, Johnson. for Hongkong. 14-Am bk Willard Mudgett, I;>ickey, for San lfranciseo 19-Haw bk R C Wylie, Wolters, for San Francisco. 20--R M ss Zealaudia, Ferries, for Sydney. 20-H B M'8 ss Fantome, Com S Long, for Kealakekua. ::?l-Am bk Sonoma, Newbury, for guano islands. 23-Am ecnr C M Ward, Ross, for guano islands. 23-Haw brig Pomare. Chave, for Tahiti. ' 26--Am brig North Star, Davis, for San Francisco. 30-Am bk DC Murray, Fuller, for San Francisco. DEPARTURES. MEMORANDA. REPORT 01'' Al\1ERICAN SCHOONER BONANZA.-Left Honolulu April 19th-was 25 days to l'etropaulov,;k; wais 15 days from l'etropaulov,k to Ca~tries Bay, Gulf of Tartary, aud thence 2 days to Nicholavsk, Amur River, Bast.em Siberia; from thence to Vladivostok (l!ort May), in the .Japan Sea, l!) day$; from thence to Hakodate, Japan, 4 days; from Hakodatc to thttse i~lands '28 days. The schr Ocean l:'earl, Capt Grinnell, left Nicholavsk .July 10th, for San ~•rnncisco via Hakodate. 'l'he .1 B Ford, Capt .Jenks, left Hakodatc August 30th, for San lfrancisco direct, 1vith a cargo of !SUiphur. There wa,; a report at Hakoda1e that two otter ~chooners had been taken lty a .Japanese gun boat at the Kuril Islands. During the entire voyage have experieuced mostly southerly weather. REPORT OF PM SFl CITY OF SYDNEY, JNO O Dow, COMM ANDER.-Left Sydney August 25th, 3 .li> pm, auo arrived at Kandavu on the 31st at 2 .lU p m, discharged mails and yiai;sengers into ss Zealandia; .:-ept 7th receivrl mails and passen" ers from ss City of San Fra11ci>1co. and left port same day at 1.35 pm, bound for New Zealand ports; 11th arrived al. Auckland; J'ort Cl!almers 16th; 20th left Port Chalmers and arrived at Auckland on the 25th; left Auckland the same day and arrived at Kandavu on the 29th, trnnsforred mails, pas,;engers aud cargo from ss Australia, and lert for Honolulu the same day at 6.48 p m. Runuing time from Sydney to Kandavu 5 days, 23 hour,i, 45 minutes; Kanda vu to Auckland 3 days, 21 hours. 50 minute~; Auckland to Port Chalmers 3 days. 12 hours, 30 minute~; Port Gh&.lmers to Auckland 3 days, 12 hours, 25 minutes; Auckland to Ka.ndavu 3 days, 19 hours, 55 minutes; arrived at ll onolum on the 9th at 4 .30 pm Weather from Auckland to Honolulu tine; passed ss City of New York on 30th, 9.30 p m, bound for Kandavtt. J O LYMAN, Pur.~er. REPORT 01'' ,\M BK DC MURRAY, FULLER, Co~UU.NDER.J,eft San Francisco Wednesday Sept 27th, at 6 pm, and anchored otf Black Point on account of fog; towed out to sea next morning and made sail at 11 am. The firs~ 6 days we have bad a succetsliion of calms and foggy weather rn company with several vesseli;; next we had light westerly winds till 12 days out in lat 27 ° 20' N, h,ng 136 ° lo' W. when we got the trades very ligot. with fine weather and heavy NW 8Well. Made Molokai Oct 19th, 6 a m, distance 15 miles, bearing WSW; last three days have had considerable rain. :Saturday, Oct 7th, at 7 am. was boarded by a boat from sh W R Grace, Capt fllack, l22 days from New York, to1vards Sa.n Francisco, lat 30° N, long 131 ° W. REPOR'f OF AM BK 1\lAI\Y BELLE RoBE!tTS. GREY, CoMMANDER.-Left 8an Francisco Oct 1st; had light breeze the entire pasisage; made Molokai yesterday at 1 pm. REPORT OF R M ss Zt,;ALANDIA. FERRIES, COMMANDER.Left San Francisco Oct 11th, 9 .15 am-dense fog-going dead slow, discharged pilot at Golden Gate, 1 lJ m;_ fog lif~ed l .?O; up to the 14th experienced strong westerly wmds with l11gh confuse<! sea, ship probably ou ::IE edge ol cyclone; 15th to 17th light winds from S to SE; 18th entered trade:s wind at ESE, afterwards moderate and ofine to port; arrived at 11.15 a m on the 20th. R McDONALD, Pur.,er. PASSENGERS. FRo~t BAKER'S Isu.No-Per C l\I Ward, Oct 2d-J Green, D Kennedy and 22 native laborers. FROllt HAKODA.TE-Per Bonanza, Oct 4th-J H Black. Fo1t SAN FnANCisco-Pcr City of 8ydney, Oct 10th -Hon Mrs Hare, nurse and infant, J T Waterhouse and wife, Mrs J Scott, E P Adams. Mrs W G Poole. Miss Poole, TH llobron, wife and son, L\liss K Grny, R llri~gs, 1.\-liss E C Smith, R W :\Iyer H C Ledya.rd, Mrs .J . B Atherton , l\I Hyman. Thrn1 G Thru:0, Rev H H Pa,rker, ,I U Glade , W f Glad e. CT Sand M, {.; O Comstock . Dr Adams, ·G Schaner , Tho:. Renwick , Jas Green, W Kroom . 93 I 8 7 6. .l!'HOl( SAN FRANCISCO-Per D C Murray, Oct 20th-Mrs ,J H Sumner and child, Miss Jenny Scott, Miss Hattie Ellis, Mrs J Lindermann, Mrs Mc8haue, Miss lJ McShane, H T Gavit, J M Davidson, L l:' Fisher, 8 Smith, Col 8 Norris, P Gibson, P Lihlan, F Hosmer, I Clark, I is Milton. FROM SAN }'RANCisco-Per Mary Belle RohertN, Oct ZOC Coaks and wife. Miss '.l' K Pogue, Chas de Ro, Jl Smith, J C Canigan, P Quenan, B Kearnes, Mri. Briggs, Mr Campbell, J L' .Mackey. FROM SAN FRANc1sco-Per Zealanuia. Oct 20-Mr and J\Irs Dillingham, Mr~ and Miss Bishop ..fohu Morton, C L Cordiner, Mrs C F Wolfe, Capt AN Tripp and son, Geo Toni; l\liss Toni, Christine .v.turray, EE Smith, Rev CT l\lills, S G Wilder, wife and family, E O llall and son, Mark Thompson, Mrs W W Hall, infant and uurse, Miss Lucy White. J U Mills, G P Castle, and 24 in the steerage. ] 'OR SYDNEY -Per Zealandia, Oct 20-Chas Gentner. Fo1t '.l'AHI'rI-l'er Pomare, Oct 23-G O Laus, F Mossman, and 3 others. . l•'oR GUANO lsLANDs-Per CM Ward, Oct 23-Mrs Kmney. and 8 laborers. FORS.AN FRANCISCO-Per North Stat', Oct 26-1\Ir Hahn. Fol\ SAN l<'HANCISCO-Per DC .&iurray, Oct 30th-l\11·s Ira Richardson, Col Norris, l\lrs Haake and 2 children, Mrs Gasland, .I C Culver, A J McKay. [From the 1'. C. Adverti8er, October 2lst.J ANOTHER ARCTIC DISASTER ! By the arrival last evening of the whaling bark Three Brothers, Capt. Owen, from the Arctic Ocean, · we are in receipt of the unwelcome news that another crushing blow has been given to the North Pacific whaling business. similar to that which it sustained in 1871, when 33 ships were lost. This time, thirteen, comprising the bulk of the fleet, have been abandoned in the ice. The Three Brothers has brought to this po1·t some 190 of the shipwrecked officers and crews; the bark Florence gone to San Francisco. has the remainder, with the exception of about sixty men, who persisted in remaining by the wrecks, and of whom we expect to hear that but few have survived the rigors of the Arctic winter. MA.RIUED. 1'be following narrnti ves. pl'epared respectGERTZ-TON1.-In this city Oct 21st, by th~ Rev Mr W ively by Capt. Owen and Capt. Benj. Whitney, Frear, Mr CHIUSTIAN GER1'Z to Miss MARY TONI of Sau l!'ranlate of the bark Ai·ctic, will be read with intert-st: cisco. 1lepo1.·t of' Btl.l'k 'l'hrcc Brotbci•s. DIED. WJDDIFIELD,-At Waikapu, Maui, Oct 9th, HENRY CORN• WELL, eldest child of John W and Mary E Widdifield, aged 6 years, 5 months and 15 days. a::, New York papers please copy. CALLOW.-ln this city Oct 13th, l\lr THOMAS CALLOW. aged 53 years, a native of Uouglass, Isle of Man. Hat! resided on these islands for many years. THURSTON.-ln this city, on Friday afternoon, Oct 13th, Lucy G THURSTON, widow of the late Rev Asa Thurston, aged 80 years, 11 months and 15 days. She was the last of the pioneer company of missionaries who arrived here in March, 1820. 'I TO THE PUBLIC! ~HE l<,IRST PREMI UM GOLD MEDAL wa11 awarded at tbe ludustrial 1!:xhibition, 1875, Lo BRADLEY & RULOFSON ! For the best Photogra1>l1s &. Crayons in San Fl'aucisco THE NA'l'lONAI, MW llrnDAL: }'or the Best Photographs in the United States? AND THE VIENNA MEDAL ! For the Best in the World! OFFICE OF BRADLEY & RtJLOFSON'S ART GALLERY No. -129 Montgomery street, Sa::n. Fra:n.ci&ce>. ([]" You are cordially invited to an inspection of our immense collection of Photographs, Drawings, Celebrities, Stel'eosco11ic '.'iews, ard Landscape Views of the whole Pacific Coast. PACIFIC MAIL STEAMSHIP COMPANY! 1 ~HE FOLLOWING MAGNIFICENT SHIPS of the Company will leave Honolulu as per 'rime Table below:SS CI'l'Y OF SAN FRANCISCO ..•••. 3400 Tons SS 7,EALANDIA. ..................... 3200 l'ons SS CITY OF NEW YORK ............ ~400 Tons SS A USl'RALIA .•••••••.•••.•••.•••• 3200 Tons SS CITY OE SYDNEY ............... 3400 Tons I For l!'iji, Ports in New Zea Jl'or San Francisco, I land, and Syd,ney, NS W,. ;:,n or abouton or aboutMarch ••••••••.••••••••••• 1 March •••••••.•••••••.• .- •••• 9 l\Iar<•h .................... 29 April ..................... 6 April. ... . ................ 26 May ......................... 4 May ..................... 21,June ................... .- •• 1 June ...................... '..ll ,Tune ...................... 29 July ...................... 19 .July ........... .-.: ...... 27 Augnst. ................... 16 August ........... . .. , •••• 24 September ••••.•••••••.•••. )3 September •••••••••••••••• 21 October ................... 11 October • • • • • • • • • ......... J9 November ................. 8 November ................. 16 December ................. 6 December ................ 14 !I]" For ra~8age, JfrtighL ply to ruh187 6 am.I all further information, ap'"' H. HACKll.., ELD &, co .. AG~Nl'S-. 8aiied from B.ouolnlu for tbe Arctic Ocean on the 26th of March. 'rvuched at Kauai tho :.lith, and on the 19th of April passed into Behring Sea, tltrougl! the 172 passage ; made _the ice on the :?3d, and Cape Na Hill on tho 24th;_ th e weatl!cr was cold, I.mt much leg~ ice than I expected t,0 see·, On the !!6th fell in with ship 1\larengo, with Ca.pt. Jfruser and tho officers and cre.w of the \,ark Illinois on board. 'fhe latter had been ruu into Uy the Marn11go and sunk, a f~w·_ days previous. 'fook ou bo,ird of my ship an otticer and I.JOats crew of the wrecked people. Cruised iu Arctic Se~ . two or three weeks, and saw hut verY few wlmlea. Pttssed· into Hel1ring Strnits May Hth, a.nd got a bohead that daJ, Ou the 18th h,ul a 811Hll t S 1£ gale, aud Just, tho at.arhQilt1.l. bow boat. Cruised in th e ::itraits until June ;Jd, and tl,en passed iuto tl!o Arctic Ocean, and commenced walrussiug. Took al>out 16iJiJ walrus during the uto11tb, which made m; 1050 barre18 oil. \Vorked uv tbc east shore towards rQin t Barrow, and passed Icy Cape July 12th , and Poi ut Belcber, on the 14th. Here we beard of the lmrk Arctic being lo~t, having l.Jceu crusl!ed in the ice. T!Je captain and Cl'f'W w,,rked acru~s tl!·e ice, a.ntl we in compuuy with Lhe hai-k s Onwark and De8utond, sent a l.Juat to their r elit>f. aurl gu t tbem on board of our 8hips on the 18th in~t. Trn.nsfon,Hl some of them to the Cornelius Howlan,l auu ltaiubow th e same ui::;bt. .l!'rom tl!is date worked up tlie O;tst sl101 ii agam slowly, autlcontinned i11 company with the harks.Ru.ii; ~ 1.Jc,w n.nd others. 'fl.Je ltainl.Jow ~ot ashore on the 2<ltb, an tf they had to break eYerytl!ing out tc, gut her off. Assisted him to get off, and we got 111> to l'oi11t U:urow tl!e :!7th of July. Could not ~o any furth er with th e sltiµ, and had 1n wait tl!ern until Anguot 14th, before we ~aw >1.ny wlrnle~ l<'rom this <late until the h18t of tl!e mont.li; took 8 whale.~ iu the vicinity of 1he Poiut. Havit,!!; h11<l mucl1 wester!~· and snuthwe~terly wiuds, aud been tron 1.Jled a good dt>:al witl! ice prol.J11bly 011 acco1111t of so mnclt westerly wind, we found it a lllnch more icy season than we anticipated, aud tl!e latter part of August, about the 24th, 1 he ice closed i 11 on the land, and beset tl!e most of the fleet, and drifted them to the eastwa.1·d outside of tho 11,round ice, passing Urn Point on the 27th, wl!er e two of us were anchored, protect<•rl by the grouud ice, yet packed iu by a b .. a,·y aud impenetrable ltody of ice, exteucling far away to tl!e northwf'at, uortl! and northeast, a111.l iu this the tcu ships were drifliin ,:: h elplesoly past. We lost sight ,,f them on the 28th, and a ~ clay after day pa8~ed with nothing but ice, ice, icu to sea ward, our situation beg,tn to look serious. On tl!e 9th ut' 1:-ept. we ~aw a large party co111inµ; from the east'l\·ard, through the lagoons, with boats crowded fnll of people t .. the nnmber of twenty in a. boat, which told us of tbe loss c,f their ships, abandoned, hopelessly beset in tl!e iee. Aull they found us still closed iu l.Jy tl!e same great pack aa tf10,1· had drifted in for 50 or 60 miles duri11g the ten uays previous. And now there si;ierned gravo approhensio11s of the futon•. r.,r although there are prob:1hly two or three vessels outside somewl!erP, yet it wad found impossible 1o go to the i:: . W. even to tl!e end of the ice, or to ()pen WM.Ell', on stccount of tl!ere being no boat passage, nnd the imp0s~ibility of transporting boabs ov<'r laud. So they all returned to · l'oil,t Barrow and c"ntemplated· building Winter quartr·.rs, tllld forming a sort of Co-operative Uuion, to rn,ik:e a commou stock out ol! al I tlrn scanty stock of proviai.ons 011 board th" fonr vessels, namely : The Rainbow, Tho Three Brother~, l•'lorenc.e aud Clara Boll. The two latter vessels laying eigllt, and sixteen miles to the 8. W ., bnt just as hopeless!)• closed in as ourselves. And to help us tu live nud support life, a strong party was to keep constantly ont in the boat1>. loukiug for whales, and catcl! all that tl!oy posi;ibly couhl for food for ns to tiat. All of this and mauy more things were thought of and contemplated, and neglecting to send shore paFties to tho f:S. W. to try and communicate with the outside vesRtll,-. But it was un expectedly worked out by the l1a11ds of Pro- · villence in a much brighter and bette1· way. even after tlte manner of His great work, which t.o us seem so convincing that over tho <lestinies of man a Merciful Ruler presides, · and to Him bu om· thanks due. The winds breezed up from the Eastward 011 tbr 11th of September, and freBhened hy th e 13th so that the Flor!Jnce set s_ i gnab _thnt 8be could }Hi work ed out, and all th e wrecked _peovl e depa1:t-.e d for h.er, and 1~ the af'tcru oou uf 1.~1tt;day W (! aaw_li er 6 <it out" e.nd .s~il • 94 T H E . R I E N D, I 8 7 6. I and settling fast. At 8 am of the 10th nothing was to be seen Li1tt of Ship "\Vreclrnd Per110111t JU!r Bai•II. of the ship's hull, but about one h11lf of the port side. Three Brothea••• By observation on the ice, Refuge Inlet bore W. distant 20 I miles. All hands started for the shore, hauling one whale bo:,t Bk Arctic, Capt Benjamin Whitney. and the yawl boat, with what prov isions we collld carry. Uk ,Java, Capt Jame~ Fi~her; mate, Thoi1 l\lcPherson; 2d do, Hauled th.i whaL boat about 2 miles, when the ice being so John Ba!Jcock; 3d do, John Morgan; 4th do, Thomas Smith; full of hummocks, found it would take a number of d:1ys to cooper, John Cook; boat-steerers, Geo Hell, (Oick, Davis, and haul her Lo the shore, aml so were forced to abaudoa her, th tJ Daniel, Hawaiian~); cook, Robt Plunkett; boy . Mike Onward; men carrying what they could on their backs. At 9 A. M., on crew, Pa Papta, 8olomon, Jas Dorsett, Jim Lemons, Bill Roluthe 11th, the first P"rty reached the shore, and at 12 ~I., th e mah, Simon, Wil iarn George. David (Hawaiian), John Maro, second party arrived. At 9 A. M . of the 12th, the third party Dau (Hawaiian), .John Cato, Tom Moore, Ulick, Antone Sylwith the yawl bo_at arrived, :i,~d al' . .M. the fourth and 108t via. Hibernia, liarr01v, l\lanuel Martenus, Ben Jones, Jim Poparty c11me. makmg the ~hips co~pany comp_lete, all la nd cd meroy, Jno l\lartin, (Bill, Henry, Hawaiian!), Geo Adams-37. safely on the land, but w!lh Yety little }Jr0\'1sions, and only , , . .• ., . onb shift of clothing. Landed at Woody Inlet pretty well Slnp tit Georµe-bont-steerer, James l:!ulhva_n; crew, George d (Hawauar.), John Carr, Alex lnstop, .loe l'ianto, Augustu11 us1ul~pi3th, the ser.ond and third mates with a party of men, L~wis, Mar~~n De 'l~ory, William (Hawaiian), Franciis W:tun, started Houth to try and find a ship; they travelled by land, Jun Lopes, :Sunon F,!i•her-11. · . Bk Acors lfarnes•mate, Philip H Omey; 3d do, Frank Juwalking as far as Sea llorije Islands, where they found three ships laying at anch<Jr; the barks Three Brothers, Onward and hen; 4th \lo, Gilbert Parme~ter; boat-header, i\Jr Adam"; Desmond; they sent three boats to our assistance, as soon as crew, E l\11lls, Andre1v llo~krns, Harry Jack8on, Ow.en Mcthey beard that we required it. At :.-s P . l\L on the 13th the Cunes, _John H Taber, 11:1 I• arey, Geo ~ooney, ,John Pie, wind breezing up from the!!:. N. E . the ice commenced open• Assenc1on, ,John Cole, Geo Bodger, Bismarck, Jos Fara, Jun Ing and moving oil' shore, and on the mornini,! of the 17th, Sylvia, Lepo-19. the @hore being all clear of ice, the captain w.th the re,;t of the Bark James Allen-second mate, Thomas W !\.f anchester; officers and crew started south, some in the small boat, and the third mate, A lh'ert A Lyons; fourth mate, .lames Kaaui; rest by lanrl, walking along the ebore In about three hours bolltsteerers . Frank F ranci~, .John Coffin, Joe F Coffin; crew, after we started, we fell in with two ho-its, one from the b~rK Augu8tus Carson, John Grey, Ah Tha, Augustus Uobbra, Three Brothers and one from the Onward, who were look1ng Mike Frank, Joe Strong-, John flory, John Ro,e. lien Cam ma, for 11s. 'fhey took us all in the boats, and we arrived on board John de Conn, 1\'lanuel 8t Anna, Jack l'arpoose, B Kapanuau, of the ships ,July 18th where we were kindly received by Cap- Jacji Assencion, Harry Campbell, John 8ylvia, Andrew ta.ins Owen, Lapham and Green. Snution, Bradhock, Wilham Linn, Jarues Fisher; Cook, BENJ, WHITNEY, Simon Ruggs-27. ~hip Cornelius Howland-second mate, .1 Rice; third mate, Manuel I< rancis; boat-steerer;;, Timothy H Al'cia, Edward Report of Bark De1nnon1l. Whee,er, Samuel Brown; crew, Friday, Jack Assencion. Left Ilonolulu on the 26th of February, and sailed to the Peter Gomez, llarry Kanaka, 'l'oby Assencion, .Joag11inn westward a_s far as Morell Islands in search of sperm whales; Prarey, David Tahiti, Nicholas l'ruk, David Rora tango, Wallace Humphrey, Charlie llolabola, George As~eneion, remained there 10 days with a heavy gale. Left there on ::!pun Yarn, John Jason, .J Bolabola, ,John Force, l.\Januel the 20th of March, bound for the Arctic Ocean; made Cow- Gonsales, Jack Owen; cook, Charles Williams; steward, per Island on the 29th, Cape Navarene April 7th; saw no ice; l'edro Laun-25. Bark Clara Bell-second mate. Thomas Randall; third steering north t'l lat 64 10, where we saw the first ice. On mate, Aaron Cuffee; fourth mate, Henry T Devoll-3. the 11th of April had a heavy gale of wind from NW; saw no Uk Onward, mate, Moses 8 Walker; 3d do Andrew P Rowhale11 . On the 16th saw the Marengo aud Cornelius Ho1v- binson; 4th do Chas Weir; boat header, Jas Prosser; boat land; went on board Ma~ngo and heard ol the loss of bark steerer, ,Jno Galligher, i:-am Rotumah, Harry Julius; crew, Illinois, Capt Fraser; took some of th"' Illinois men on board Jnck (Hawaiian), Joo L McKau, Arthur .lohnson. David Murray, Bob (Tahitian), C H Abbott, ,Jose Nicholas, Jno Williams, and stood north in company with above ships . Took first Jeo Peter~, Peter (Hawaiian), Toby, Jno foot, Geo Culleu. Joo whale on the l~t of MHy; went through Behring Straits on the Ascension, ,Jno ,\dams-22. 25th; ~6th took firijt walrus. On the 26th ,June bad 800 walBk Camilla, third mate, Roht :IJooney; hout steerer, Andrew rus on board, making 500 bbls oil; run down in St Lawrence l>avisia, Harry (Hawaiian), Jack J3oston; cook, Jas Carter; Report of Bnrk Arc1ic. crew. l' Powers, Ro 11t ~cott. (Henry, Tom (Hawaiians). \Vm Left Honolulu March 20, 1876, bound to the Arctic Ocean. Bay to try out, in company with Three Brothers; got under- Whitney. {Bill. Charlie, lla.1Vaiians), Harry :.\1isHen, Chas Hild very bad "·eather on the pasoai{e up to the Fox Islands. way from St Lawrence Bay to go north on the 20th of .July, in Selah. Ben Cruise, :-lam Pahau, Antone Domingo-17. Ship Josephine, hoat hea,ler, Sam Graves; :!•l mate, Loui!! F Went through the 172 Passage April 19, and had good weather a heavy 8W gale; made Cape Lisbon on the 28th, heavy gale Potter; 3d do A ·r Simmons; 4th <lo P Morgan: boat steerer, from there up to Cape Novereae. Made the ice oft'Cap"' Tlaad- from S. Capt Owen came ~\ong in the Three Brothers, and ,Jos Cruise, Johu Carroll, .lot! ilul~boh~; c·ook, Wm Daley; deus April 25. Saw a ftlw whales oft' Rhore. Got in close to we in company steered north for Point Harrow; on July 10th crew, Soo t,ugust, B Peirce, S Raney, Wm Haufmann, Antone Franciis, 8 Roberts, Jos Sylvi.L-16. Pl~ver l.lay }fay 12, 1 o ice there. Found plenty of ictl in the sighted the bark Onward, Capt La.pham, Jymg at Point BelBk Desmond, Capt F M Green; mate, 1\1 Mayo: 2d do Jos Straits antl also plenty of walrns. Got the first walrus May cher; got repnrt. of hark Arctic, Capt Whitney, being closed Whitford; buat he~der, A Coster; boat steerer, H Chapen, 2.'3, off King's Island. Went through Bhel'ing's Straits into in in the icti drifting north; a few days after received a part of 81im (Hawaiian); crew, Chas Seward, Jas Dayton, A Bronza, the Arctic Ocean on th~ 3d of June. Stowed down the lrtst Jot rhe Arctic's crew on board, the remamder going on board of Geo Wilson, J llenry-11. 8hip Marengo, seaman, David (Hawaiian). of walru$ July 3d, on the 4th of July was off Point Hopti in Three Brothers and Onward; we kept them on hoard until we Boy Frates, Wm Weight-these la~t two ha.ve been pa8seocompany with the Onward, steering te> the northward. llad fell in with the ship Cornelius Howland and bark Rainbow, gers on boar<l the Three Brothers nearly ull the 11eason. Total, when we distributed a portion of the men bet1veen them; we light southerly winds, no ice in srght. 190. .July 5th, light winds from south, steering to the northward then steered north for Point Barrow; latter part of.July was nl,,ng the land in company with the bark Onward. Passed off Point Barrow; commenced whaling early in August; ships ENGLISH MISSIONARY AMONG CHINESE IN Icy Cape, saw scattering ice off short>, and plenty of walrus. in all doing well; took our last whale on 24th August, making us 830 bbls oil. 9,000 lhs bone, 3,500 do ivory all told; wind came the water. NEW ZEALANn .-The Rev. Hugh Cowie. out rrom SW, ice closing around; ships commenced to work S, ,Tuly 6th, first part fresh southerly winds and pleasnnt to clear it; reached as far as Wood· Inlet and the ice closed in the recently appointed missionary to our weather-steering along the land, which was distant six mlles. on land; on the 26th the fhip frnzt! solid in the ice, 5 miles off Mr. land; f,,und ourselver drifting N, about 15 or 20 miles per day. Chinese immigrants, is now among us. Saw the ice 12 miles oft' shore. Luffed to by the wind. Saw On the 28th went by Point Harrow, 8 miles from the !ind; 29th, Cowie has the experiPnce of over ten years walrus on the ice and Jow,ered for them, but drove them off land nut of sight; soundell and found 75 fathoms water, driftDur,vithout getting any. Stood off shore to the ice, the wind ing ESE; on the 5th September abandone I the ship; 3 days in the Presbyterian mission of Amoy . dying out to a calm, and it coming in a thick fog, anchored in and 2 nights on thQ ice before we reached the shore; on the 9th ing the voyage he had the sad trial of losing reached Point Barrow and went on board barks Rainbow and 14 fath oms of _w ater. The Onward about two miles off. Found 'J Jiree Brothers; found them t'nclosed in the ice still; stopped Mrs. Cowie, from rupture of a pulmonary the current running about four knots an hour. At 8 P. 1\1, there one night and started south on the 10th, as far as Cape abscess; a trial which will, to some extent, the ice surrounded us, and striking the bark very heavy, was Smith; went on board the bk Florence, Ca.pt Williams; found that we could not go any farther; ice closed in on land hard; He comes among us, obliged to heave up the anchor and drift with the ice to keep on the lltb went back to Point Barrow and commenced build- cripple bis labors. Cowie is from being stove. Drifted along between the groun<l ice and ing winter quarters; wind out from the NE. On the 12th the however, in vigorous health. the pack iee, the ice striking the vessel very heavy and rolling Florence set her colors as a signal that we ceuld get out; acquainting himself with the Cantonese diaknocked olf work, all went on board t.k Florence; found when her from one side to th~ other-the ice getting under the bark's getting on boarrl that there was a passage out through the lect, with a view to his missionary work. bottom and lifting her up, tearing copper and sheathing off. grouud ice; afler get tiug out sleererl south to the bk Clara We ask for him and his work the prayers July 7th.-Begins with a thick fog. 8hip still in the ice. Bell; mate of her came on bo,1rd aPd told us that they would abandon their ship on the 17th Sept, if they did not get and the sympathy of the Church.-.D-unedin At 7 A. M, the fog lifting, found we had drifted about 30 miles clear of the ice; wanted us to go sou1h oftbe ice and wait till we 1. to the northward, Sea Horse Island, in sight. At 10 P. M. the heard of them; on the 20th Three Broihers made her appearice openeu a little, and the wind breezing up from the 8. E. ance, with Capt Williams aud his crew on hoard. Capt Owen taking half of the men fro~ the Florence and stood off to St l\lade all sail and worked the ship to the south; clear water Lawrence Bay, where we arriveil on the 2::1,1, and the Threti Mr. Ruskin says in the London Garden: about 12 miles off. .At 3 pm the wind breezing up ;iud haul- Brothers and ~•1orence divided up their provisions; after laying te> the SW. and the ice packiPg all around us. l\fade the in~ r.here for 2 days got underway and started fo1• Honolulu, Suppose the captain of a frigate were by any bark fast to u large floe of ice, layini,t quite easy until halfF :\1 GREEN, y,ast eleven; the ice then beginning to work ,md grind around where we arrived Oct 20th, all well. away to the ;:,. W . 'J'hl!l raioed ou1· hopes tlmt we, toe, cou Id soon get out. but lls day after day padsed and did not i;pring oue trap, aud tl.10 young ice was makin~ fnuly, !t 'began to urnke U8 ag,tin view the pro~pccts ot <Ill ~retie ,viuter here, with n,, pll:l>1,s>1nt th<mghtti, All the time a !ltrong Eastt1rly gf,le had been blowing, that we thought 48 honrs of such ll gfde would ,ml'ely reli., ve 11,;, and 1et we had it fur six days and 110 sig;us of relief. But wlien we bad really begun to t.lespair, the sa11 11> invi~ible Uand opoued fo1· us a. narro·w passa(!ti 50 f.,et iu width. and w-, 6ailed out; tb:tnkful, iude-,tl, but I fear not in such a. man11er as we ought. We went immediately down tu thti CliLra. Bell for cunsultatiou, nnd I proposed that aR tl1e .1!'1ortiuce had been gune 4 or 5 !.lays, and not thinking we should fiud her, to reloase Captrtin Cngan from ~oill;?;, and leave him to pursue his ~eHwn, ,lnd I would take >tll the wrecked peoplo on board aud look for the Florence, a(1d, fairing tn fintl her, would take them lo Honolulu ns q111ck as I euuld ~o, au<l if Captnln C. shonlcl get enough oil to make him up 1000 b:irrel8 that the Rai1obow Hhould '1:ive the '.l'hl'ee B10tliers 0110 good whale. '£his was a:1;reed to b,v all. and each expres5ed hims.,lf perfectly sati~fied, anci, wisbing C;-1ptam C. better fortune, we lef~ him to pursue bis whaling. while we WP.lit to look for the Flure11ce, and the reijult was we did find her, and tonk on hoartl ont>-h:ilf his people, and proceedeci to St Lawrence Ba.y, made all final arrangements and sailed for onr respective ports of destination, and were iu ~ornpany nnt.il we came out through the Onimack pas~age on tliti 27th of September. Fro111 thence to lat. 30 N. bad a st,muy and unpleas.,.nt passage. From thence to port hrtd it pleadant. 'l'ook the Trndes in lat, 27 N. I have 190 paestmger~, excl11~ive of my own ship's company, 11.ll well, but deserving of much charity. There were nbout 60 men left behind on board tbei r ships, preferriug to rem>lin behind riither than tu t.Hktl th" chance of rt!aching the shore. My si,asou's c;ttch is as follows; 1050 barrels walrus oil; 650 l.Jl\rrel.s uobead oil; 1a,ooo lbs whalebone; 5000 lbs iv~Jru~ ivory. Also raport Bark Ilainbo\v, Sept. 18th, with 600 barrels oil and 14,000 lbB wll!.llehone. t,. o report from Northern Light or Norman since, Walrnsing on tbe 18th of July, wheu they were duin;.,; wull. L. C. OwE~. 1\11\ster, Dark Three Brothers. P. S.-Bark Florence of San Francisco took the balance of the wrecked people to that port. Iler report is 600 bbls walrus oil and 1 bow head. HONOLULU. Oct 24, 1876.-In my report of the 21st inst I omitted to mention the death of an officer on board of my ship, belonging to the bark Desmoud, who was brought across_the ice by Capt Green, and heing too low 10 go farther remamed on board the Three Brothers. He died 8ept 17th of consuinption; Sam Knipe,r was his name. He wa,g buried at sea. Respect.fully yours, LC OWEN. "'.m Mr. Evangelist, Sept. the bark; one large cake of ice working and striking thti ve8sel very ha.rd under the counter. Hearing a loud era.eking nuder the counter as of plank hreakiaf.?, sounded the pumps and found 30 inches water In the hold. Started the pump8, and taking off the run scuttle found the water coming in with a. rush each side of the stern post, about 6 feet from the water's edge . It looked as though the wood ends were started from the stern post ellch sicle. :Sounded the pumps again and foullll the w~t.er had gained 16 inches in ten minutes. Commenced getting the boats and provisions on the ice, the bllrk filling fas, and the ice grinding around her very heavy. At 1 am on thti 8th the ice packed solid around the vessel, holding her up; all hands on the ice. The hold filled so quick that we Gould not t1ave but t very small q_~antity of provisions. At 4 pm on the ~:b t!'Je i6~ loosi!ning a.round t.he ~hip, Ghe fell over on her side, el.rrying away her fore top-ma11t and main top -gallant mast, • chance obliged to place his own son in the position of a common sailor; as he would Report of the Catch of the Abandoned Ve• • then treat his son, he is bound always to • el111 np to the Thne o1 Their LOH• treat those men under him. So, also, supBark Acors Barnes, 850 bbls walru~ oil, 1 bowhead. posing the mastflr of a rnanufactory saw it Shir, Cornelius Howland. 1000 hhls walrus oil, 4 bowheadiJ. right to place his own son in the position of Bark James Allen, 1200 bbls walrus oil. 7 howheads. Bark ,Ja.va 2d, 680 bbls walms oil. 2 bowhe11,ls. an ordinary workman-as he would then Ship Jos.ephine, 1000 bbls walrus oil, 5 howheads. Bark Onward, 600 bbls walrus oil. 8 bowheads. treat his son, he is bound alwavs to treat Ship Marengo, 1000 b.l!ls walrus oil, 2 howhendP, I every one of his men. This is the only Ship St. George, 1300obls walrus nil, 1 howhead. Bark Camilla.. 185 bbls sperm oil, 3 howheii.ds. , effective, true, or practicable rule which can Uark Desmond , 600 hbls walrus oil, 3 bowhea.d111. 1 be given on this point of politicul econom y. Bark Ciara. Bell, 600 bbh1 wairus oil. Late 111a.,ter Haw bk Desmond. • 'l' HE FRIEND, NOVEMBER. ADVER TISElY.1.El\TTS. Places of Worship. SEA.MEN'S BETHEL--Rev. S. C. Damon, Chaplain, King street, near the Sailors 1 Home. Preaching at 11 A. l\1. Seats free. Sabbath School before the morning service. Prnyer meeting on Wednesday evenings at 7& o'clock. FoR'l' S'fRg~T CHURCH--Rcv. W. Frear. Pastor, cornet· of Port and Beretania stre11ts. Preaching on Sundays at 11 A. l\!. and 7½ P. M. Sabbath School at 10 A. M. KAWAIAHAO 0HURCH--Rev. H. H. Parker. Pastor, · •King street, above the Palace. Services in Hawaiian every Snnday at 94 A. M. and 3 P. M • .ROMAN CATHOLIC CHURCH--Under the charge of Rt. Rev. Bishop Maigret. assisted by Rev. Father · He1·mann ; Fort street. nt>at· Beretania. Services every Sunday at 10 A. M. and 2 P. M. KAUMAKAPILI CHURCH--Rev. lf. Kuaea, Pastor, Beretania street. neat· Nnuann. Services in Hawaiian every Sunday at 10 A. M. and 2~ P. M. Tm:: ANGLICAN 0HURCH--Bishop. the Rt. Rev. Alfred Willis. D. D.; Clergy. Rev. Rob't Dnnn, M.A., -Rev. Alex. Mackintosh. St. Andrew's 'l'emporary Cathedral, Beretania street. opposite the Hot1•l. English services on S11ndays at ti~ and 11 A. \L, and 2½ and 7 P. M. Sunday School at tbe Clergy House at 10 A. M. TIIOS. G. THRIJJJI, '!'he above will be mailert tn nny part of the world on receipt of price anrl postag<J. Any Books published pertaining to the Islands will be procured to orde1·. Pby1dcin11 and Sur,;eo11, vv. P • &, CO.• Commission Merchants, LEWERS D,lCKSON, k Dealers in Lmnber and Building Mate1·frtls. Fort Street, Honolulu, H. I. E. HOFFM_i.NN, M. D., Physician and Surgeon, Corner Merchant and Kaahumanu Streets, near the Post Office C. BREWER & Officers' Table, with lodging, pet· week, Seamen's do. do. do. c?·· Commission and Shipping Merchants, E. ED. DUNSCOlUBE. Manager. Honlnln. January 1, 1875. ADAMS. CJarriage 1'1aking and rl'rimming? .lluction and Cornmission Merchant, I Firn-Proof Store, in Robinson's Building, Queen Street. MOTT 6 Shower Baths on the Premises. Honolulu, Oanu. II. I. P. $6 SMITH, WOULD RESPECTFULLY INFORM YOU THAT I now employ the best Mechanics in the liue of Oa1·riage Jliaking, Gat-riage and Genera.l Blaclcsrnith-ing, Painting. Repafring, &:c., On the Hawaiian Group ; and it is a well established J)entist, Having resumed practice, can be found at his rooms ovel' E SLrehz & Co.'s Drug Store, corner of Fort and lintel ets. fact that oar Carriage Trimming, by Mr. R. Wbitman, is as well executed as any in New York City or elsewhere. I therefore feel warranted in saying that Late Surgeon D. S. Army, I we can manufacture as good a clnss of work in HoCan be consulted at his residence on Hotel street, between nolulu as oan be found in any part of the world. I Alakea and Fort streets. will also state here that we fully intend to work at the lowest possible rates. G. WEST, "\VEST, J OH N G. S. Mc GR E W, M. D ., I M. DICKSONJ Photographer, Wagon and Carriage Builder, 74 and 76 King Street, Honolulu. [O" Island orders p1omptly executed at lowest rates A. "\,V • PIERUE &, 61 Fort Street, Honolulu, A CO •• (Succeso1·s to C. L. Richards & Co.) LWA t·s ON HAND A CHOICE ASSORT• :UEN'r OF PHOTOGRAPHIC STOCK, A Large Collection of Beautiful Views of Hawaiian Scenery, &c., &c. Ship Chandlers and General Commission Mer chants, Honolulu, Oahu, Hawaii9r~ Is\a,nd~. I CUltIOSITY HUNTI<mS will find at this establishment a SPLENDID COLLECTION OF Agents Pnnloa Salt Works, Brand's B~Wlt ~~~ces, 1 V~lJiani., Specimen"'• Tlh)S. G. THRUM'S • 1 R \VIN G. Plantation and Insurance Agents, Honolulu, H. I. Honolulu. ACKAGES 01<"' READING MATTER-OF Papers and Magazines, back numbers-put up to order at reduced rates for parties going to sea. ly THE HAWAIIAN HOTEL! I And Pt,,rry Dn~·i"'' Pain J{nle.:-. .- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -·-··_, _ _ _ STATIONERY AND NEWS DEPOT, No. 19 Mcrcluuat St1••~et, • HOME! Office at Drug Store, corner o( Fort and Merchant Streets; Residence, Nuuanu Avenue, near School Street. Office Hours, 9 to 11 A. M. fol '7il MERCHANT STREET, HONOLULU. Jarvis' History of the Sandwich Islands .......... Price, $2 50 Ilennett's Historical Sketch ot the Hawaiian Islands, •• l 50 Hawaiian Club Papers, 1868.. ... .... ............ " 1 50 Ha1va1ian Almanac and Annual for 1876 and 1876, 50 cts each The Second Interregnum, \Vith cabinet photograph of His Majesty Kalakana, c mtaining an account or all the events incident to his election to the Throne .••..•..•• Price, $1 50 Hassinger's Ha1vaiian 'l'arilf and Digest of Laws and Regulations of the Customs. &c, in paper & hoards, price $1 & 1.2& Andrews' I'lawa1ian Dictionary, sheep ............ Price $5 00 Hawaiian Phrase Book.......................... " 60 Synopsis of Hawaiian Grammar.................. " 75 Jarvis' Kiana, A Romance of the Sandwich Islands, " 1 50 Charts of the Hawaiian Islands, $1.50 each, and Letter Sheet Maps of same, $1.00 per qui1·e. Sets of Hawaiian Postage St\lmps, with specimen Hawaiian Flag, price $1.00. Photograph View of Honolulu, 9x24 inches, mounte,l or unmounted, p1ice $2.00 and $2.50. SAILORS' DR. I<"'. B. HUTCHINSON, S'rATIONER, NEWS AGENT AND BOOK BINDER, ON HAND THE FOLLOWING Works pertaining t.o the Hawaiian Island~: K E~PS 95 I 8 7 6. C D. N. Fl .. l'rNElt, ()ornhi, Sb~llo. \Vn1· lmplement11, Fe1•11•, Mnt11, Kapa11, 4nd a (J:req,t Variety of othei· Hawaiian and Micronesian Gur-iosities. ONTINUES HIS OLD BUSINESS IN T#E 1''IR.l!l-P1WOF lluilding, Kaahumar.iu Street. ,. CHRONOMETERS rated by observations of the sun and stars with a transit instrument accurately adjusted to the meridian of Honolulu. Particular attention given to Fine Watch Repairing f:-extant and quadrant glasses silvered and adjusted. Charts and nautical instruments co11stantly on ha.ad and for sale. fol ·· ~li;TURli! FR~MES A SPECIALITY: • jal 1874 0-f\.-BTLE & COOKE~ tUPORTERS AND DEALERS IN GENERAL MERCHANDISE ! NOTICE TO SHIP MASTERS. ,HE REGULAR. 'I DILLINGHAM & CO., -'4.GENTSOF- Nos. 95 and 97 King Street, KEEP A FINE ASSORTMENT OF 'l".1HE PROPRIF.TOR WILL SPARE NO pains to make this _ EX:...EG-A..N'T :E3:C>T.EX.. First-Class in Every Particular ! ROOHS CAN BE BAD BY THE NIGHT OR WEEK I with or without board. HALI, AND LARGE ROOMS TO LET FOR· j yl PUBLIC l\U1ETfNG8, OR SOCIFJTIES. 1, PORTLAND LINE OF' Packets, New Knglaml Mutual Lifa Insurance ·c ompany, The Union Marine Insurance Company;San Francii1C:o. The Koba.la 811gar Company, 'l'he Haiku Sugar Company. The Hawaiian Sugar Mill, W. H. Bailey, The Hamakua Sugar Company, 'l'he Waiaiua Sug-ar Plantation, The Wheeler & Wilson Sewin(! Machine Company. Dr. Jayne & Sons Celebrated Family Medicines. tt Goods Suitable for Trade. " THE FRIEND '" MASTERS VISITING THIS PORT during the last Six Years can testify from personal exSHIP perience that the undersigned keep the best assortment of ..t1 Temperance, Seamen, Marine and General L,telligence. GOODS FOR.TRADE SAMUEL C. DAMON. An<l Sell . Cheaper than any other Rouse in the Kingdom. DILLINGHAM &; 00. ,&. . MONTHLY JOURNAL DEVOTED TO PUBLISHED AND EDITED BY: TERMS: One Copy per anl'.lum ••••••••• ··-··········• .. ·····•··$2.00 Two Copies per nnnum •••..•..••••••• , .••.••..•.•••••• 3.00 Foreign Subscribers, incltlding postage .. . .••.••••.•••.. 2.60 ·~oung ltm's ·QLYristian ~ssotiation of Jjonolnln. Pm·e 1·eligfon and undefiled bej01·e Goel, the Fathe1·, is thfa: To 'V'is-it the jathe1·less and widows 'in the-ir ajJtictfon, and to keep one's self unspotted from the wo'r ld. · Edited by a CommittBB of the Y, M. C, A. air our rooms. WP do not keep the doors with opportunity to the level of the fountainand windows shut, and throw in chemicals, head, and no higher. A man selfish at trusting that they will ma-ster and renew the heart and in ordinary behavior, cannot be ., Man-like i~ it t.o fall into sin, Fiend-like i~ it to dwell therein, vitiated element : we open all the doors and unselfish when unselfishness would be re·Uhrist-like is it for sin to grieve, windows and ventilators, and let God's pure warded openly. If he . will not be unsefish God-like is it all sin to leave." air flow in from without,-a strong-, crisp when he ought, he cannot be so when he The poet who thus expressed his thoughts current through every door and window,- would. Js it not a -question practical for had experienced what thousands of other and thus we purify our chambers. So it is every home? vVhat sort of characters nm men have felt. It is when the soul i:s bur- with God. The purifying influences come we, parents and childrens, forming by everydened with a sense of the nature of sin, that from without. not from within. He throws day habits of thought and action 1 Ernerit turns and seeks for truth and purity. And open all the windows of t.he soul,-the win- gencies are but experimental tests of our dows of feeling, of impulse, of imagination, strength or weakness; and we shall bear it yearns for more light, for clearer concep- of purpose,-and sends a strong current of i them, not according to sudden resolve, but tions of God and Heaven. vitalizing grare sweeping through them, un- i according to the quality of 0ur daily living. In its seeking for a higher life it is sure to ti] every element of our nature is re-oxygen- The oak does not encounter more than two be met with the conviction of the proneness ized and made bealthy and bracing. Neg-a- or three whirlwinds during its long life; but tives do not express religious duty: the it lays up its solid strength through years of of the heart to sin, of its ever tending to evil. ·• shall nots" are less frequent than the peace and sunshine, and when its hour of And often, oh so often after failures in at- "shalls." ·we love to think that religious trial comes it is ready.-.Scribnm·'s 1l1onthly. I tempts to overcome sin does the knowledge life is the growth of all the f~cµlties, and A False Christian. that it is man-like to commit come with not a slow strangulation of them. As we look at it religion no more cramps a man overpowering force to the heart and mind. ['rhe Interior.] than wing~ do a bird, or fins <lp a fish. It It is then the soul must turn to something supplies him with propelling power. A The testimony now most exclusively aphigher than and beyond itself for aid. Christian man should be an acti've man,- plied in deciding the value of a minister's ln coming to God through Christ the active in every fibre, vibrating ,vith energy. time and the desirability of the ser~ices is Mediator, the Savior from sin, can there be Great injury has been done religion by allowing people to regard it as a mild form of his eloquence in the pulpit. This is the greater comfort than in the assurance that slavery, a kind of bondage to goodness, in lowest, rather than the hiQ'hest test. It is he grieves for sin, that he can sympathize which people . consented to be tieq up that really applicable only to th~ lecturer, actor, with us, "for in that he himself hath suffer- they might not hurt themselves or others. and partisan politician. The business man ed, being tempted, he is able to succor them But there is no such religion as this; at knows better that to select his lawyer by the glibness of his tongue. He pays his money that are tempted," that he "was in all points least, in the New Testament. The gospel tor more solid qualities, and cares next to Christ taught and Paul preached is a gospel t.empted like ~s we are yet without sin." of liberty, and not of slavery. Th!:} more nothing whether his lawyer be an orator or A.s it ha~ been written, "we can enter no that faith in Christ works out its legitimate not. A plosent and effer.tive delivery in the region qf trial where he has not gone be- effect in man, the more is he emancipated, pulpit is highly desirable, b11t the pastor dof's equally precious work out of the pulyond us; -vve tread no dark and gloomy way the freer he becomes. :pit. The church member will carry his " Stand fast, therefore, in the Fberty where ha~ not gone before us. And let us wherewith Christ has made us free, and be <lollbts and fears and troubles to his pastor, remember that he had a nature like ours ; not entangled again in the yoke of boqc~age." and go away with new light and joy. The pastor must carry spiritual healing to every _he conde~cended to appear as one of our so~e heart, and guidance to every uncertain race,, wit~ all the innocent propensities and Heroism Begins at Home, step of his flock. To do this requires expassic;>ns ,9f a r:nan. He was subjected to all perience, study, profound knowledge of ~;he kjnds of trial to which we can be, and We often hear of people speak of a heroic human nature and of spiritual experience. he 1s there.fore, able to sympathize with us action with a certain surpris~ at its per.for- All these are almost incalculably more valu~nd aid Uf3. He was tempted." So indeed mance not altogether complimentary to the able to the congregation, and to every family does he grieve for sin knowing its power and performer. " He forgot himself," they say; in it, than any degree of the fascinating power of eloquence. A pastor who has i,t s c1i1rse. "he surpassed himself," " he was carried given his best thoughts to these wants of And if God is purity itself, and cannot away by a noble impulse." This is not true. his people is above all price-a veritable A man does not forget himself in emer- angel of the Church. look on sin .~u,t with abhorrence, then surely gency; he asserts himself, rather; that ~s iit G-od-~ike ?,l_l .s in to leave. which is deepest and strongest in hiri breaks 'fHE AMERICAN TRACT SOCIETY, 150 Nassau Street, suddenly through the exterior of calm con- New York City, has estahlisherl A DEPOSITORY Al' 757 ventionalities, and for a moment you know MAJ:lKl'l'f STRJ!lE'r, SAN lm./\.NCISCO, with Rev Frederick ~eli~iou not a Restraint. his real value; you get a measure of his E Shearer a8 District Secretary fo1· the Pacific Coast. ThiH [Golden ltulc.J capacity. But this capacity is not created, Depositpry is the Head.quarters of the Coast for ALL SUNDAY SCHOOL AND Rl~Ll(HOUS LITERA'fURI<J, and People talk abc;>l,lt religion being a restraint as some say, by t.he emergency. No man has the special agcucy for the C ALIFORN fA DIBLE SOCIEY. THI<; AMElllUAN SUNDAY SCHOOL UNION. CONcan be carried faather by the demands of the 'f Gltl<~GA1'10NAL PUBLTSHii\G socrn·rv, PilESBYTf11.2pon men. A.nd so it is, in one sense; but moment than his com.:Oon aspiration; and )l[AN BOAB.D OF POBLICA1'10N. ll1!1NRY HOY'f. JWB''l' it is a yery small sense indeed. There are sober purposes have prepared him to go. A CARTER & BRC., RANDOLPH & CO., and othcl" lt'A<li'n!?: pul.Jlishers. SUNllAY SCHOOL LIBRARU.:S will be selectrd in -man certain destructive tendencies,-pas- brave man does not rise to the occasion ; the with great care, and sold at New York prices and discounts. BOOKS WILL BE SENT BY MAIL TO MINISTER~ at the sions which make him their sport, appetites occasion rises to him. His bravery was in discount allowed by Ne1v York Houses, and postage added,the price and postage payable m United Rtates Currency. which coe,r ce his better judgment; and reli- him before-dormant, but alive; unknown Thus Sunday Schools and Ministers will be supplied at New perhaps to himself; for we are not apt to ap- York rates, aml receive any book to be found in San Francisco gion·put~ a curl;> 1i1pon . these, and reins them preciate the slow, sure gains of convictions in the shortest po~sible time. - - - -- - - - -- -- in. But _religi~~ has other . and larger uses of duty steadily followed; of patient continuBound Volumes at Reduced Price ! than this. Fetters _a nd cords and gags do ance in well-doing ; of daily victories over not represent it. lt diverts more than it self, until a sudden draft upon· us shows '-JI.TE ·w ILL FURNISH BOU N,P VOLUMES 'f 'f of the l~riend 11.t one dollar per annnm (suhscripti,w da_m s np; it germinates more .than it stamps what they have amounted to. We are lik~ price $2), for any number of yen,l'R from 1852 \o the 11re&e11t o.u't. God purifies the· son! ve1-y, much as WP. water-springs , whose pent-up streams rise tirnP. ~:.? Addini~ th~ cost of hinding, ----------- I |
Contributors | Damon, Samuel Chenery, 1815-1885 |
Date | 1876-11 |
Type | Text |
Format | application/pdf |
Language | eng |
Spatial Coverage | Hawaii |
Rights Management | https://rightsstatements.org/vocab/CNE/1.0/ |
Scanning Technician | Kepler Sticka-Jones |
Call Number | AN2.H5 F7; Record ID 9928996630102001 |
ARK | ark:/87278/s6101f11 |
Setname | uum_rbc |
ID | 1396041 |
Reference URL | https://collections.lib.utah.edu/ark:/87278/s6101f11 |