I XTYQFI RST A N N UA L REPO RT

‘ O F T H E

auan Mission 0 n s Stacie

. W I T H T H E

NA M ES A N D A D D R ESS ES O F AC T I V E M E M B E R S

S I XTY - FI RST A N N UA L R EPO RT

O F TH E

’ Hawauan Mission ren s Susie

1 9 1 3

W I T H T H E

N A M ES A N D A D D R ESSES O F AC TI V E M E M B E R S

\ H O N O LULU , T I L

PA R A D I SE o r T H E PA C I F I C PR I N T 1 91 3 OFFI CER F - S OR 1 9 1 3 1 9 1 4 .

J UDD Vi ce-Pr esiden t

W ANDREWS - ecr etar M R . . S RS. y L DI CK EY . A . R W . .

BOARD OF ANA ER M G S.

A TLE B F DI LLI N H A O S M RS. . . G . M AM BERLAI N F LY AN S. CH . M M R T RI CH A D S. . R S M R M AY WI L X S. CO N I L ' X . W G . CO

UBLI ATI ON ND LI BRAR Y C M M I TTEE P C A O .

Th Rec r der an d the Secr et r o the oci et x— i o e o a S e o ei . y f y, fi

n t r on tin M r M . aci e C u e or n s . M y s f o e year

A n e - Z n tin O Alexa d r . . Co u es or two ear . . f y s A o . oin t o G . Car t n . e r thr e r s R . pp d f e yea ’ The H awai i an M ission Children s Society

AL M EETI NG TH E ANNU .

’ The Annual Meeting of the H awan an Mission Children s Society 1 9 1 91 3 was held in the Old Mission Home on April , , just ninety three years from the landing of the pioneer company of mis r i s si on a e . of Twelve frames , containing the pictures the Fathers and Mothers in the twelve companies of missionaries to the Sandwich e Islands , wer hung that morning on the walls of the Old Mission

Home , and proved a great attraction .

In the tent , another innovation greeted the eye . Not since the early days of the “ Veranda Brigade ” were there so many children ’ assembled at Cousins Meeting . The fourth generation were there in ff b e force , and some of the fifth , and looked as if the whole a air longed to them . Twelve very small boys , representing the twelve companies , stood with pennants bearing the name of the ship on which their ancestors came .

Then five little girls read letters written by Sarah Ruggles , the eldest daughter of one of the pioneers , who at the age of six years left her parents and was on her way to Boston around Cape l haodrn . Herman Alexander read a remarkable letter from his g reat uncle , Sereno Bishop , aged ten and a half years , and Theodore Forbes read one from Samuel Whitney written when he was but nine years old . The calling of the roll by the names of ancestors revealed the fact that there were more Cookes presen t than descendents of any

. other family The counting was quite lively for a time . Twenty t eight Cookes answered o the Cooke call . Last year the Alexanders led with eleven . Next year the Judds should win unless the Bald wins rally to the call . A S a great package of one hundred and fifty or more letter s . ,

i . wr tten to Mr and Mrs . Ruggles by their friends in the mission , 1 820 1 836 with dates ranging from to , had just been received from

, Chicago some of these were read to the assembled Cousins . These letters were handled reverently, and if the Fathers and Mothers were looking down they must have been pleased with the interest shown in this , their message from the past .

Extracts from letters from Mr . and Mrs . Bingham and from her -

. . great grandparents Mr and Mrs Whitney , were read by Mrs . Ran ney Scott . Other extracts from letters of Doctor and Mrs . Judd ,

Dr . Baldwin and from her grandmother Mrs . Green , were read by , s Mrs . May Green Wilcox . Mrs . May Atherton Richard read parts of letters from Mr . and Mrs . Forbes , Dr . Chapin , and from her en grandfather , Mr . Cooke . The story of sickness and health , r em en t cou ag and despondency in the work , with here and there a touch of romance such as the courts hip of Mr . Chamberlain and in Miss Patten and the marriage of Mr . and Mrs . Cooke , held the er s t t e of all .

The last letter , written by Mr . Levi Chamberlain , telling of the formation of the first laws of the land , was read by Dr . N . B . Emer son , and though rather long was filled with items of historic interest .

This in teresting meeting was conducted by President W . F .

Dillingham .

fi er d 0 o e . Rev . . H . Gulick prayer ; Mrs May Richards led in sing “ ” ing Blest be the Tie that Binds ; the minutes of the last meeting were read ; the Board of Managers reported ; new officers were

— F - elected . C . Atherton as president and A . F . Judd as vice presi dent ; a committee of five was appointed to collect data an d secure a historian to write up the history of the mission ; a collection amounting to was taken up ; and from th e missionary fund 7 5 1 0 0 $ was appropriated for Isabella Hulu , $ for the work of 50 Cousin Fannie Andrews Shepard in Aintab , Turkey, and $ for the Nauru Mission . The meeting adj ourned without the time honored song From ’ ’ s Greenland Icy Mountains .

TH E SECRETA RY’ S REPORT

I n t od ct n r u io .

The manuscript of the Annual Report for 1 91 2 w as sent to the printer on May 1 and the b ooks were mailed or delivered on or 25 1 91 2 before July , . Since then the chief items of interest have been the Gulick Re ce ti on 8 p held on March ; the collecting , and framing , by A . L . C Jr h urrey . , of twelve groups of pictures of the Mission Fat ers and

Mothers ; and the copying for the printer , the Thaddeus Journal . Some of the gifts received have been photographs and pamphlets

- from Miss Julia Gulick and Mrs . Gulick ; three koa framed litho 1 857 graphs of taken by G . H . Burgess in and donated by “ Mrs . H . P . Baldwin ; an old embroidered picture of Jesus at the ” un Well which belonged to A t Nellie Judd , given by Mrs . A . Frances Judd ; and a package of one hundred and fifty or more letters from C . G . Peck of Chicago , grandson of pioneer Ruggles , 5

2 - 1 83 6 s with dates from 1 8 0 . These letters contained the autograph

of fifty or more of the missionaries .

Next year we shall endeavor to secure more autographs , more

letters and j ournals , and the remaining genealo gies . The Recorder earnestly desires a short character sketch of each

missionary , in an article of eight hundred words , or less , preferably

written by one of their children .

We wish , also , pictures of the four Morning Stars and certificates

of stock in the same . A collection of photo g raphs of the second generation is desired ,

. and 1 f each member will interest himself in the proj ect such a col i. lect on should be easily secured .

I NARI E M I SS O S.

1 3 De a te . M r . l por in a letter to Dr Scudder , February , tells of

the Nauru Christmas tree on Christmas Eve , after a day when the temperature registered Among the gifts was a fine parlor organ from Miss Kate Atherton which is the pride and life of the mission house . ’ On New Year s Day they celebrated Communion , and as Janu ary 2 7 was Emperor William ’ s birthday they held Thanksgiving

service , when the largest crowd that ever assembled in the new building attended . Regul ar day sch ools are maintained at three different points on 229 s the island with a total attendance of scholar . The Bible is “ ” ; naturally the chief text book Nauru for Christ is the aim . During the last six months they e njoyed glorious weather as f far as rain was concerned . The trees are bearing fine and no ear 1 91 3 for a shortage of food for need be harbored . They can export , after every one is fed , one million pounds of dry cocoanuts annually . 1 1 2 c it - As the traders pay / . per pound will amount to or i an annual income per head of This s exceptional . W The ireless station is still in course of construction , and they fear no messages can be sent till June . They expect to be able to send direct to Australia , and as the distance is only three hundred miles shorter than to Honolulu they hope to wave occasionally to friends here . The principal islands of the Pacifi c will eventually be W connected by wireless , says Mr . Delaporte , and then hat a change G P . on o e an d there will be since the days of Dr ulick at p Dr . Bing t A ian ham a p g .

All are well but Mrs . Delaporte who must have a change durin g - M i z e the summer May July . Miss e t n r is doing well and is happy in w ” her ork . 6

Honolulu has been blessed by a series of calls from other gospel ” e pione rs . 2 Dr A th Smith In April 1 91 . r ur and his wife swept through , , Honolulu like a cyclone of information and enthusiasm from the

new Republic of China . They were on their way back after a 1 5 vacation spent in the homeland . On April Dr . Smith addressed ’ “ about one hun dred and sixty men at the Men s League on The ” i Re e en d M r s . P e s on Future of the Pacific World . v r and r also passed through in April and interested all i n their work in north

Japan . R M r s M a s e n d . a In Jul y vere and , very interesting German mis , i r i e s on a s on their way to the Marshall Islands , won many lasting friends to themselves and their caus e in the few hours -they were

here . Their introduction to Honolulu friends was pursuant to an

engagement made with Reverend and Mrs . Horace Chamberlain at Chicago Theological Seminary where both couples had been tem l r r i un . . p o a y living der the same roof Mr Chamberlain , not being “ in Honolulu to minister an at home to the traveling missionaries ,

and welcome them to Kalihi personally, it was arranged that his people should do the honors in the form of a miniature luau ” at 1 2 the Kalihi Settlement Chapel on July . The scheme was success fully carried out to the delight and profit of all concerned— a way ” side blossom of good -cheer and promise to develop into fruitage farther on . D M r s R w d i ct an d . an In September , o or o l , stopp ng over for eight

days on their return from the mainland to Japan , were the guests

of Miss Julia Gulick . Mr . Rowland visited the Japanese churches

of the city, of Ewa and of Waialua , and preached to large and

appreciative audiences . “ ” R P W h I n ev . a l ate o s e is August , our Cousin u r u and h bride , both of whom have had a theological training, on their way from

Pasadena to Japan , spent a short time in nei . They visited

a br ther Dr . A . H . Waterhouse f and friends here . They o , , o , U addressed Central nion congregation , Sabbath school , Christian A Endeavor and Y . M . C . . , and greatly interested the youn g people in the Omi mission and the province of Lake Niva . U M r In October the new missionaries of Central nion Church , . an d M rs Dean Rockwe l Wi cks . l , spent sixteen days in Honolulu . They first united with this church and then were commissioned by her , as missionaries to China , Rev . A . A . Ebersole preaching the sermon , Dr . Scudder presenting the commission on behalf of the M Prudential Committee of the A . B . C . F . . , and Rev . W . B . Oleson ff r r o ering the prayer of consecration . They were greeted by ep e s en tatives from deacons , deaconesses , standing committee , trustees , ’ ’ ’ Bible school , Woman s Board of Missions , Woman s Society, Men s ’ ’ Cl ean er s League , Layman s Mission , Endeavorers , and minister s ff C b class ; also by the di erent nationalities of the a uan Association ,

- . Hawaiian , Chinese , Japanese , Portuguese and Anglo Saxon at During their stay Mr . and Mrs . Wickes were entertained

- twenty fi ve or thirty homes and were given by Mr . Bowen in the ’ name of the Bible school a two days automobile outing, seeing

sights about the city . They talked at the church service , prayer ’ ’ ’ meeting, Woman s Board , Woman s Society, Gleaners , and Men s

League and in every case endeared themselves to the people . ou n eo l e Mr . and Mrs . Wickes are y g p p , graduates from Vassar and Chicago University and especially educated in Manual Train the post in

this newest Republic of China . M r E C Scu dde en d s . . and . r, for thirty years missionaries in India , visited for a few days , their brother , Rev . ad Frank Scudder , and their cousin , Dr . Doremus Scudder , and in r es s es before the people gave vivid pictures of the slowly pene tr atin g power of the gospel in that land . Re e d M r s Ch an n e n . n In February, v r and o with two children stopped overnight with Mrs . Agnes Judd . They have gone on to

Pomona where they have a son , and will perhaps go to Oberlin , but their plans are not matured as to what they will do or when they on e will return . As there is some on Ocean Island who can relieve

‘ them of that work , for a time , Mr . Channon would like to find ’ col l e s something to do in a g town for his children s sake . And shall we not speak of our own missionaries "Where shall M r M r El h M s . c we find more heroic work than that of . and ij a K en zie , living in the heart of the Chinese district , their quarters b ‘ so crowded that the house , the edroom kitchen or diningroom is apt to be invaded at any time , and often reeks with the odors ’ of Chinese cooking from the neighbor s kitchens . This mission has been growing until attention was called to its congested Q uar ters , and now the Hawaiian Board is having them enlarged , and the family will have a little space to call their own and room for deep breathing . M r R . M r s ide K akaako Then there are also and . r in the Mission . Nightly they gather the children from the street for song and Bible study . The small playground with its swings and sandpile lure the ’ little ones from temptation , while the sewing school and boys

clubs help the older children . Drunkards are reformed women , r and child en are protected , and now a factory is giving employment

to the girls .

. B h . at n Mr and Mrs and Mr . a d Mrs . Spencer Bowen at Palama

Settlement are doing an even broader greater work . , 8

SCH OOLS .

The schools of Hawaii will ever be dear to the Cousins , and progress in these schools is a fair indication of the growing pros r i p e ty of this fair land .

Oa C e e hu oll g .

fift - — Punahou, with y four names on the list of its faculty twenty

— of them being in the Preparatory grades and about seven hundred.

pupils attending during the year , has greatly changed during the b memory of the first pupils , who gathered a out their four hard

. . . . n worked teachers , Rev Daniel Dole , Mr and Mrs W H . Rice a d

Miss Marcia Smith , seventy years ago . Last summer the Preparatory School graduated a class of forty

fi ve - fi v e , and Oahu College itself had twenty graduates at its com m en cem en t 2 2 1 91 2 exercises on June , . The Preparatory School held a most brilliant historical pageant 1 1 91 2 on May , , which displayed remarkable training on the part

- of Principal Fitts , Vice Principal Miss Mary Winne , and the

- teachers . It represented the history of man from the cave dwellers

- and tree dwellers , down through the ages of civilization to the

present time , each grade of pupils representing some of these

ages .

The exercises were held in the College campus , and the audience e n its lf was a wo derful sight , filling as it did the terraces , broad r e steps , galleries and windows of Bishop Hall . The pageant was p eat ed on May 2 for the pleasure and profit of the children of the public schools . 1 7 n K akaako On May the Hui Pauahi held a Pu ahou night at , K k ko a aa . chiefly musical , where both Punahou and boys took part For three years the college boys have been actively connected with 1 91 1 - 1 2 club work , and every Friday night during , a teacher and two or three students have conducted a reading and games ’ night for the fifty or more K akaako boys at the gymnasium behind K a waiah ao chur ch . The splendid gift of from the Castle estate has enabled the trustees to erect a substantial building to replace the girls ’ fi r e . dormitory destroyed by , and this is now almost finished

n . The give in memory of his wife by P . C Jones for an in fi r m ar ife y , was a most acceptable g .

Mr . D . Howard Hitchcock presented as a parting gift to Puna ” M on t en ebl ea hou his painting , The Road to , the picture , which , exhibited in Paris , first won him honor in art circles abroad . Before Christmas Punahou Preparatory gave a most entertain ing exercise . After Miss Ethel Dam n had vividly t ld f her o o o _ l Christmas in Germany , there was reproduced in play a real Ger 9

family on Christmas Eve , with its individual tables , its stock ‘

s its . g , its tree and games M un ol u a a .

M aun a l u u o , with its quiet , healthful location and beautif l scenery

blessed with a full school and a full s t afi of teachers . Miss

still the efficient principal , harmonizing the various tem r of teachers and pupils and creating a real family spi it ,

c and optimistic in the work , and filled with belief in M au n a l u good of o . in n continues to be practical every way , and the st what the girls can use when school days are e have their own gardens of flowers , and the larg ,

ives ample room for exercise . The kitchen that work can be done much more easily road of easy grade has added much charm ew r th e f om main building , and the latest addition of h t g s has increased the safety and comfort of the school . The Cousin ’ s protege is doing well and is said to be one of the best girls in school . T The school greatly missed the ministrations of Rev . Mr . urner last year , but as Rev . Mr . Dodge occasionally preached for them , interest in the best things was maintained , and nine united with t h e church .

The teachers are Miss E . M . Heusner , Mrs . Elizabeth A . Calvert , M r s . . Grace P Haven , Miss Fern Haynes , Miss Gladys Vanderhoof , M M La M K M Sh ezai iss Alma Mills, iss Mary y , iss atherine Case , iss ka and Miss Kane Morris .

i d-Pacin o M .

The splendid buildings of the Mid -Pacifi c schools add greatly

the beauty of Manoa , either when seen from afar or near at

e structures , and the beautiful blending

while it enriches the landscape . held June 20 in the great f the two schools uniting in

Winne . Eleven girls were K aw ai ah ao graduated from and thirteen boys from Mills . K awaiah ao 1 25 has had an average attendance of girls this year . The seventh and eighth grade pupils h ave made complete outfits

‘ for the younger girls , and have cut and fitted their own undercloth in d T r v g and ress es . heir training has cove ed e ery l ine of gene r al housework , including the practical work of getting meals for the students and faculty . Those in the eighth grade have taken up a s imple chemistry of foods for reasons of health, and an invitation was accepted from the College of Hawaii to attend a meat - cutting 1 0

demonstration by the Metropolitan Market , that they might learn ff the di erent cuts of meat and the nutritious value of each . A trained nurse conducts gymnastic exercises and has charge of the health of the girls . f th e Miss Bosher the e ficient principal , has been absent during year , but her place has been ably filled by Miss Goolde . M cL od K awai ah ao . e r Miss K . C , forme principal of Seminary, k e O an a . n . now at the head of g College , Summerland , B C writes for the September Friend a very interesting article on Higher

Education Behind the Gold Range . u 1 50 The Mills School has a reg lar attendance of students . The farm is in excellent condition and the course in agriculture h as been very popular .

n . n s The new pri cipal , Mr . Stephen S Myrick , has won many frie d e during his stay, who regret greatly his near departure . His plac M c au h e a C . will be filled by Mr . Vaughan g y

H B i h l ilo oard n g Sc oo . The Hilo Boarding School graduated four students from as i 4th 1 91 2 many national ties on the of June , . The subj ects of their “ ” “ - in essays were very practical , Butter making Hawaii, Ar “ or taro , Cherry Blossoms , by a Japanese boy, and the C “ ” - boy wrote about Horse shoeing .

1 91 2 - 1 3 We are told , the year opened under promising ’ tions . The Home Crafts classes are interesting the boys very much . One class is spending one and a quarter hours a week learning that knots and splicing of ropes require great skill . Another is learning to set window glass , and has repaired all the broken windows about

. an the institution One , to repair leaking faucets ; one , harness ; and th eif other to care for horses ; groom them thoroughly , care for feet , put a harness together, oil and blacken the harness , and to harness a horse for driving either single or double , to wash and ” n oil the carriage , and to put a rope o a horse and not choke him .

Th Kameh ameh S h ol e a c o s .

The Twenty-fifth Annual Commencement of these schools was 1 91 2 e held in the Bishop Memorial Chapel on . There were twelv girls and eighteen boys in the graduation class . Eighteen received academic certificates , three graduated in domestic art , one in do m es tic - science , two in type writing, three in forge shop , one in sh machine Op and three in printing . “ 1 7 On May the girls gave a lawn fete under the W itching moon, that was pronounced extremely fine . e As usual the schools honored their founder , Princess Bernic 1 9 1 91 2 Pauahi Bishop , on December , .

1 2

GENERAL I TEM S .

” ’ “ r l for M Ap i , Cousins eeting takes the place of Saturday ” Nearest the Full Moon , in the long ago .

1 9 1 91 2 - The Annual Meeting on April , , just ninety two t af er the landing of the first missionaries , follow “ ’ ” The Grandmothers Tea Party, were for us the year, but they were not only recorded in last year The Friend ” devoted the May number of its valu an account of them , mailing a copy to each family of May 4 was “ May Day for the kindergartens at and was as unique a sight as one can well imagine . hundred or more little folks from almost every n th e sun ,

— quite as fancy as special dress . They formed a procession a ocar ts the square with velocipedes , g , express wagons and soap on wooden wheels all decorated with flowers for the occasion . h - I k t ere were cow boys, ndians , faries , elves , rabbits, mi ado l M h G mandarins , b ossoms and ot er oose characters , and dear

- Japanese maidens with their fancy sun shades . They played romped and danced around the bandstand to the music of B

t . band , and then they had refreshmen s ’ On May 1 6 Captain Berger was granted a six- months leave “ ” absence and returned to the Fatherland where honor s we showered upon him . 2 1 On May Bishop Willis , after years of residence on T returned to Honolulu on a visit . On June 2 The Alice M acI n t os h Memorial Tower was de

This adds a finishing touch to the fine collection of St . buildings . The trustees have also bought the Morgan pr joining . On June 4 the Annual Meeting of t sions held its all - day session with its many interesting reports plans , and the admirable address of its president , Mrs . May At ton Richards .

On June 1 1 the statue of the first monarch of All-Hawaii draped in maile and flowers , aquatic sports were engage Union Bible school held its annual picnic at Punahou as

M oan al u a . Sabbath schools went to Waikiki , Pearl Harbor , , etc , th and crowds were left for e races . On June 1 3 the anti -billboard campaign was planned n Lowr e such e ergetic ladies as our cousins , Mrs . F . J .

Geo . Sherman . One by one the enemy has fallen , and Beautiful ” is the watchword that acts as a magic 1 3

1 81 3 of The February , number The Friend , devoted to that ,

is a beautiful edition .

June 1 9 the Punahou alumni met at the college grounds . June 30 searching parties were sent out to find a band of

in the Koolau mountains . After three the foot of a precipice down which one

allen .

rs , the Star and Bulletin ,

2 . On July Lyle A . Dickey was appointed Circuit Judge of Kauai

On July 1 1 Hawaii mourn ed the death of the Jap anese emperor . On July 1 4 the cornerstone of the Methodist Japanese church

3 laid . Fo Sun 22 . On July occurred the marriage of Sun , son of Dr

one of our Chinese girls . l 22 3 1 y Dr . Charles W. Elliot spent his time with us in

27 occurred the opening of the Poulsen wireless between

an Francisco . 29 ff , through the e orts of W . W . Pogue , chairman of

and others , the Maui County Farm and c or tuber ulosis patients . 1 1 - 1 7 the ninetieth annual meeting of the Hawaiian Association took place at Lihue and was a remarkable

tion . Those who hitherto have accepted hospitality from the n d hostesses of the Garden Island need but a few paragraphs

picturesque description by a malihini , Miss E . V . Warriner ,

Friend , and the whole scene is before them . throng of expectant people with open minds and shining and cordial hospitality on every hand — two quaint houses of worship nestling in the heart of a stalwart — a anches formed, a natural cathedral ’ — m village of brown army tents rugged , verdure clad ountains waving cane fi el d s — bracing air and the fragrance of wild bananas — these were the first impressions of Lihue on the eve of the asso . el ation . “ Landing from small boats in the darkness which precedes the

dawn , the three delegations of visitors were welcomed by a flash

of lanterns and the voices of Rev . J . M . Lydgate , moderator of the

association , and his assistants , resonant with good cheer and hearty

. n o welcome There was confusion , no delay , and in less than an

hour the village had settled down to slumber . “ The first session was Opened July 1 1 with a hymn and prayer b y . . Rev Timoteo The address of welcome , happily worded and i i r ng ng with sincerity , was given by Rev . Lydgate and followed by n s an address of greeting by Rev . Ha s I enberg . The morning meet 1 4 ing demonstrated the fact that no building in Lihue could ac modat e the crowds , and thereafter all the general sessions were out of doors . “ The salient feature of the afternoon was

W . H . Rice . Mr . Rice is the veteran Sunday school of islands, having been president the association f and superintendent of the Lihue S un day school since

five years of age . His sterling Christian character, generosity of spirit, have endeared him to thousands s e Territory . As he advanced to the church t point of vantage for the speakers , leaning on his shoulders erect , white hair and long white beard fl n sun , steady blue eyes beaming with kindli ess , he was ” r the g eatest enthusiasm .

Such were the beginnings . Then there were the daily prayer meetings — one in memory of Mother Rice by the b “ ” monument of grief ; the daily Bible studies conducted at difi er en t difi er en t in five languages at five places , that in being held in the cosy living room of the Lydgate home ; “ ” “ W i eussions on , The Word Made Flesh , The ” “ ” “ ” Heaven , The Risen Lord , The Abiding Christ ; the H oiki Rally ; the S . S . ; the Christian Endeavor Rally where un u ff h dred gathered in conference ; the m sical contest , di schools vying for the new banner presented by Miss Kate Ather the reports of the Corresponding Secretary and Treasurer ; an excursion and picnic . ’ According to the Secretary s report , the membership of n 8394 4931 churches u der the Hawaiian Board is , of which are waiian s - 1 272 230 distributed among sixty eight churches ; Japanese , 3 87 fift members having been received during the year ; Chinese , y three received this year ; the Portuguese , small but encouraging . f Among the benevolences , nine social settlements a filiated with 7 50 0 the Board are receiving small grants , aggregating $ ; plans for the Ber etan ia Settlement work were outlined ; and a Memorial

Building , worthy of the men and women who brought the message of Christ , was talked of for the centennial anniversary , eight years hence .

- The old time hospitality still exists on Kauai , and with it won der fu l generosity and executive ability . For the English - speaking delegates breakfasts and dinners were served by individual hostesses , and at noon all gathered around n tables placed u der the spreading trees .

For this vast company, it is said there were provided thirty 21 6 tents , cot beds , six big loads of dried grass , eight shower baths , cooking utensils , dishes , a bench es ; and for provisions 1 5

,two forty barrels of poi , ten bags sweet potatoes cases condensed 60 0 30 0 0 milk, pounds sugar , fifty loaves of bread a day, pounds

- fish seventy pounds coffee and twenty eight pounds tea . , D D 4 . . . On August Rev . Frank L Goodspeed , , of Oakland , arrived

to fill the pulpit of Central Union Church during the month . The Christian Extension Committee secured for him the use of the

Bijou theater for four Sunday evenings and this was filled , each

evening, by an interested audience .

But August is vacation month when Sunday schools are small,

church congregations are reduced , and society has gone to the

mountains or to the sea shore to rest . September is the homing month for birds of passage ; schools

open , and men and women reluctantly settle down to the business

of the year . 1 On September Reverend and Mrs . A . Craig Bowdish came to

take charge of the Paia church , Maui . ’ On September 1 2 Rosa Bonheur s paintin gs were exhibited at the K l oh an n i a Club rooms by Miss An a Klumpke . 1 8 On September a hibiscus show was held at the Y . M . C . A . hall . 2 1 On September Regatta Day was celebrated .

2 5 Dr f hi On S . s eptember Scudder returned rom vacation, but n Mrs . Scudder extended her visit to friends in Boston , retur ing by

way of Chicago , where she made an address at the annual meeting of ’ the Woman s Board of Missions of the Interior , having once been oflicer an in that Board . 1 3 K au maka il i On October the memorial windows in p church ,

for Reverend and Mrs . Lowell Smith , were dedicated , O . H . Gulick ,

“ . . m E W . B . h fi J P rdman and Oleson being among t ose who of ciated . On October 24 the Honolulu Reading Room and Library was merged with the Library of Hawaii as the Territorial Library As

sociation . On November 3 Tuberculosis Day was celebrated by a mass meet

ing, presided over by Governor Frear and addressed by Dr . Sinclair

and J . A . Rath . 8 On November Arbor Day was observed by the schools . 25 On November Dr . J . S . B . Pratt was made president of the Ter ritor ial Board of Health . On Nocember 28 Thanksgiving Union Services were held in Cen U ’ tral nion , and the King s Daughters complected for the Old ’ People s Home . On December 6 Scientists descended fo ur hu ndred feet into the ,

crater of Kilauea to secure gasses . On December 8 the Federal Telegraph Company ’ s wireless men of “ Oahu got into communication with Washington— the longest dis

tance ever crossed by wireless . 1 6

On December 20 - 23 Christmas exercises at Central Union included the Sunbeam Class tree , the Bible School Sunday exercises the ,

Bible school tree , the Christmas sermon , and an elaborate cantata ” , The Coming of the King . On December 25 two thousand five hundred little folks were made “ happy at the Malihini Christmas Tree . On December 2 6 the Salvation Army made glad the h eear ts of many little folks . Time will not wait for us to tell of all the churches and mis sions that vied in making joyous the birthday of our Lord ; of the beautiful music box sent to the Leper Settlement , and of the chil dren of the public schools piling cans , fruit , potatoes , vegetables , clothing and toys into carts for the Associated Charities to dis tribute to the needy . 3 1 ’ But on December , New Year s Eve , a part of the city was “ ” Th e - C d r given over to gay ety . Open Air arnival was hel unde thousands of incandescent lights which vied with the stars in the blue vault above . The mercury stood at and with floating streamers , tripping feet , summer gowns , laughter and song , Hono a was lulu seemed fairies rendezvous, and not till the New Year

u . shered in by whistles and gong, did the people disperse In January a few quiet days followed the strenuous holidays and gave rest to business men , society people , philanthropists and revelers . 1 0 20 1 On January the Y . M . C . A . planned a campaign to secure 50 1 new members , but they registered . This fine organization 1 60 0 with its members is doing a great work in Honolulu .

The Y . W . C . A . has also made some advances during the year .

In October , Miss Boyer , who had so long and so faithfully given out of the best of her life for the institution , resigned , and

Miss Erickson , a young , strong woman has taken her place , bringing u - - 20 th with her , p to date century methods . The historic Castle Homestead has b ecome too small to hold those seeking its privi - u m leges . The out door classes are very pop lar , especially the swi ’ s ming classes which are held in Mr . Castle swimming pool down at ’ Waikiki . On Mother Castle s birthday Mrs . Theodore Richards ’ gave a very interesting talk about Mother Castle s beautiful life .

Almost all the Board of Managers of this society are Cousins . 2 2 Dil l in h am n On January Mrs . g gave a most delightful excursio x to Haleiwa in honor of W . H . Gulick . On January 23 the annual chowder supper at Central Union

church was held , and the reports of the year were read . These reports d b of 1 1 0 9 th e d d r showe a mem ership , and money expende u ing the year , Of this , was spent for the central church ; for home mission and settlement work ; $90 7 6 for foreign 1 7

the American Missionary Ass ociation ; $21 96 r e ork and $20 0 for ministerial relief . The

heer showing the church prosperous , and the ,

for many years . A Bible class for young - fi v e . Ebersole as teacher , numbers seventy a Bible class of ladies on Thursday morn r e 1 0 0 than . may well be called a man “ ’ ” working for men , so identified is he with the Men s League “ ” r un of the chu ch , the Men and Religion movement , and Yo g ’ Men s Christian Association . His sermons , also , strong in thought

and incentive to action , are for those strong in physique as well

. as . in mental ability 20 1 91 2 The Interchurch Federation , organized about April , , united in monthly meetings held in the Bijou theater and secured k r as such s p ea e s Dr . Goodspeed and Colonel Cox of the Salvation

Army . l In con n ection with the Men and Re igion movement , they se 23 -29 i . . n . cured , October, Mr Harry N Holmes , and in January

Fred B . Smith and Raymond Robins with their quartet of fine

singers . These men with their wonderful personality and powerful

presentation of the message of salvation swayed great audiences . “ ’ ” “ ” “ They held institutes where , Boys Work , Bible Study, Evan ' l i ” “ ” e s tic . g Missions , and Social Service were the topics discussed

The meetings were held at the theater, schools , iron works , churches

and Y . M . C . A . building . ii e the new Library of Hawa op n ed t o the public . tt en d n ce a ; addresses were made by President A . and the first card was handed out

W . F . Frear . ’ on February 1 2 Lincoln s Gettysburg Tablet was un veiled at the

Liliuokalani school at Kaimuki , Cousin Harriet Needham , principal , “ ” and the address Memories of Lincoln was given by C . H . Dickey . 1 7 On February the first passenger train from Kahului to Haiku , 235 crossed the Maliko bridge , the highest in the Territory, feet , 1 25 and the Haiku bridge feet high . This road , a wonderful feat of

engineering , opens up the valuable Haiku pineapple lands , and ’ v will add materially to Maui s ad ancement . ’ On February 1 9 - 22 the four- days carnival brought many tourists n hbor in from abroad and guests from eg g islands . The Garden K a iol an i Party in p park , for the benefit of the Army Relief Fund , “ ” was largely attended ; The Tourist at the Opera House was an at “ ” traction , and the great Luau given by the Catholic sisters was

patronized . On February 2 1 the spectacular representation of the landing a at W ikiki of Kamehameha the Great , clad in feather cloak and c b r m helmet, and ac ompanied y retinue and warrio s was an i posing sight . On February 2 2 the great M il it ar y Par ad e in the morning and the

Floral Parade in the afternoon were never b etter . Cars and

floats , original dainty, elaborate and expensive were displayed , an - with the ever attractive p riders , but p erhaps the most rare was the car with the Silver Sword grown from volcanic ashes in the

crater of Haleakala . On February 28 the Castle estate presented to Palama Settlement e a large number of doubl cottages . Though the rental of these n - will be low, it is i tended to be a self paying investment . On March 7 a company of thirty members of the “ World ’s Sun ” day School Association en route to the conference at Z urich arrived in early and were taken automobiles to the Aquarium , Fort Ruger -Pacifi c and Kaimuki , Oahu College grounds , Manoa , Mid Institute , the Pali and Kamehameha Schools . They were entertained at U luncheon at Central nion where Dr . Scudder was toastmaster , and then addressed the Oahu Sunday School Convention held at the K h 4 waia a . a o . old church , returning to their steamer at p m On March 1 5 Hale Lan akil a a branch of Kaiul ani Home was

O o . pened at the foot of Robell lane , near the pineapple factories It

contains parlor, diningroom , kitchen , pantries and lanai below, and

above an assembly room , while the wings contain bright , well ventilated bedrooms . The charges for rooms , including the use of laundry and electric irons is very reasonable , and a cafeteria n breakfast, lu ch and dinner will be served at such prices that girls

can have nourishing food at small cost . “ ” U The quiet talks of S . D . Gordon in Central nion and in the theater during a fortnight in March were very helpful to the

growing audiences who heard them . The series of lectures during Lent by the pastors of the city on “ The Religions of the Nations ” was much appreciated by the ladies of the Union Mission Study u Class , there being an average of one h ndred and ten present .

2 0

' - mountains , spends the week ends at Lihue . Recently a grandson , r D . W. Dean , was made by Judge Dickey , clerk of cou t , and with his charming wife is now in Lihue . Mrs . Alice Dean Hoskins , of

California has a son , John Hardy Hoskins .

Mrs . Mary Andrews Nott was treated by her son , Lorrin Nott , Y to an excursion to osemite in July, and writes with the enthusiasm of a young girl , of the wild flowers , birds , gray squirrels and straw fi r e- berries , the fish , the fall and the kind lovely people she met . A d e 0 — n r ws ( . Miss Lucy Andrews writes that through the sale of Arminian laces they have netted enough money (about 50 0 0 - A $ ) to put up a much needed building for the mission in intab , and this year they hope to clear enough to furnish an u p -to - date surgical ward for Dr . Shepard wh is the best urgeon in A ia o s , s

wi r . Minor . Mrs . Shepard is spending a part of the n t e at Oor fa introducing new industries and p er feectin g the old ones among 1 91 . 0 the widows and orphans there Her daughter Alice , who in H ar oot married the president of p College , has a little son , Lorrin 1 1 Andrews Riggs , born on June , Kamehameha Day . Miss Florence Shepard returned to Turkey with her mother but her brother fi Lorrin remained to nish his education . The daughter of Luella An drews Kilborne passed through H o n ol ul u , but we deeply regret that , as no one here knew the name of her husband or the vessel she traveled on , there was no one to meet her . Armstron g — The delightful Armstrong Memorial service 30 held at Punahou January , is spoken of in another place . e A letter from Mrs . E . A . Weaver, written in D cember speaks of herself as “ a bird of passage ” and tells of her “ flight from Y Hudson , N . . , where Clarisse and Sherman have their happy home , to the bewildering city of New York for a short time ; to lake As quam in N . H . with Mrs . S . C . Armstrong in her charming summer camp ; back to New York with sister Jennie and daughter Hen riotta and our beloved Sarah Waters ; and then to Hampton In st itu te which has long been my mecca . And it fully answers ex p ectation s — th e atmosphere of the place is inspiring— everybody is learning to do something in the best possible way , and I marvel at the great hive of human industries — fourteen hundred colored ff boys and girls trained to become e icient world workers .

Mrs . Weaver is there this winter as the guest of the school . Next year she hopes to have her sister with her in Hampton . She speaks ’ of the Grandmothers Tea Party as a fond remembrance and says , “ It gives me a thrill of j oy to think of all the good things that were said and done at the “ hookupu ” by those “ kamaainas ” and 2 1

Cousins to make me feel and realize the Tie that binds our hearts ” in Christian love . be Mr . P . L . Weaver will soon living in his new residence in

Nuuanu Valley, near the Country Club .

Bail e — y Miss Caroline Bailey, daughter of Charles A .

Bailey, who was the only Bailey present at the annual meeting roll call last year, completed her delightful trip to Hawaii nei , visiting ul Kauai , Maui and Hawaii , as well as Oahu . She returned in J y to her home on the mountains near Grass Valley, Cal .

Mrs . James Bailey of Berkeley has sent photographs of Father and Mother Bailey for the group pictures photographs taken at ” in a time when most island people remember them . She had i t v t e . d . . Mrs Lou Smith o meet her sister, Mrs Lorrin A Andrews and they had a very enjoyable time rehearsing Maui and Maui people .

B dwi n - al David Dwight Baldwin , after eighty years resi 1 6 1 91 2 dence here , passed away on June , . His grandson and name sake , Dwight Baldwin , son of Erdman Dwight Baldwin , graduated at Oahu College in June and entered Yale in September earning dau h high marks in his entering examinations . Edith Baldwin , g O ter of Lincoln M . Baldwin , graduated from ahu College last year and is now at the home of her parents in Wailuku , Maui . On 1 2 1 91 2 n August , , a son , Charles Morris Baldwi , entered the home of Charles W . Baldwin .

Mrs . H . P . Baldwin , from her quiet Maui home keeps her hand upon the enterprises her husband left behind , and the old men in the Baldwin Home are cared for , electric lights flash and other “ ” M au n aol u improvements are carried on at , a sick cousin in Cali for n ia receives monthly aid , rare pictures are deposited in the Old

Mission Home , and many people are made happy through her .

. o t Mr and Mrs . Harry Baldwin mot red hrough California during 1 91 2 the summer of . Doctor and Mrs . W . D . Baldwin traveled through Europe , and Mr . and Mrs . Samuel A . Baldwin received into their home a little daughter , Barbara Ethel Baldwin .

B n h m — i g a Mrs . L . B . Coan continues to be interested in ’ ’ Woman s Board , Woman s Society, church and prayer meeting . Even ’ during the months of Miss Reynold s vacation in the States , she was to be found at her post .

Mrs . Clara Moseley Cooke Sutherland is now in Honolulu visit in g her two daughters , Mrs . Juliette Cooke Jones and Mrs . Clara A r l ei h n Sutherland g . Mrs . Sutherland greatly e j oyed visiting the

Old Mission Home , pointing out the spot where she stood as a bride , 2 2

and telling of the rooms on the Waikiki side , now demolished , where fi she first kept house and where her rst daughter was born .

Mrs . Lillian Crocker Brown has a little boy a year and a half old , named Robert .

Dr . Hiram Bingham has made another trip to South America , being absent four and a half months and making a careful in ves ti g ation of the most important archaeological points in South

America . They endured many hardships , including the determined opposition of the Peruvian government which blocked their ad

' vance for seven w eeks ; a plague of smallpox and typhoid fever ; the refusal of their mules to advance farther on account of deep snow and their stampede down the mountain ; and t hen the des er tion by the guides , who left them in the night , alone , where no white man had ever been before . ’ Bish o - On 1 2 1 91 3 p Mother Bishop s birthday, January , , many cousins and other kamaainas called to extend their con g r atu l tion a s . As the Alexanders , Gulicks , Andrews , Castles , Cookes , Judds and other cousins came and went it seemed like a gathering “ ’ h l — M h of t e c Ei S a real Cousins M eeting . And dear ot er Bishop “ m said , I enj oy it so . I like to meet my friends . I live in a lovely home atmosphere , but I do love to receive the outside friends . ’ n And as good wishes were showered upon her she said , Do t wish

- me many days , but congratulate me on having had eighty seven ” “ such delightful years . Her latest message is , Tell them I am just outside the bar waiting for the Pilot to come and land me ” safe on the beautiful shore .

Though her eyes are darkened her heart is full of sunshine , and all who come near her are warmed by her cheery presence . Her devoted children , Della and Mr . Shaw, and their daughter Ruth , are with her . Jessie , who taught art in the College of Hawaii last U ear year is taking advanced studies at Columbia niversity this y , Sh e s pent her Thanksgiving vacation with her sister Margaret at Mount Holyoke , and Margaret was with her in New York for the Christmas holidays . Ruth and Jessie spent the summer vaca t ion on Maui and Hawaii . B n d — o Dr . B . D . Bond of Kohala visits Honolulu occa i n al l s o . . y Mrs . Bond is a member of the Board of Education The l 1 n d eldest son , Howell , reports from Valparaiso Col ege , , and n Alice is enj oying her first winter in Oberlin . The you ger boys ,

Kenneth and James are at Punahou .

Mr . E . C . Bond is in Honolulu . Mr . Robert Bond is on Maui , m anaging the Wailuku El ectric Lighting Plant . h e t Mrs . Bicknell has removed from t e old hom on Kukui stree 2 3

and with Mr . and Mrs . Storey is enjoying the new one on Young street . Mr . and Mrs . Storey have another daughter, Alice May 5 1 91 2 S l . torey, born on Apri , ’ Mr . and Mrs . O brian with their little son have left Florida and

‘ are now at Kohala , Hawaii . 8 — tl e M r . . h Cas . ( . . and Mrs W R Castle , wit their daughter

c . . . Beatri e , returned from their European trip in December W R ’ Jr U Castle . , Professor at Harvard niversity , given a year s leave of absence to recover from a recent illness , traveled through south ern Europe , is now at Algiers , and expects to be back at Harvard in September . A . L . Castle and family returned some time ago from Europe . h er Mrs . Coleman is still enjoying the company of daughter and grandson , but when the weather is settled on the mainland these guests will follow the husband and father , Mr . S . N . Castle , who h i s o . returned to duties in New York in February . S on after Mr r James Castles return from abroad , came the bu ning of the new Ol aa lumber mill at , which was a great loss to the company , but such is their faith in the enterprise that they immediatel y rebuilt a larger mill than before . Mr . Harold Castle is one of the Hawaii

Polo Club that is winning such laurels at the C oast .

Mr . George Castle and family are in New York where Miss Mar 1 0 n l garet is to be married on April . After li gering a ittle while her mother and sister will return by way of Arizona , visiting the

Grand Canyon by the way .

Mrs . Mabel Castle and daughter , Miss Eleanor , are expected in

i . . s Honolulu for the summer Mrs . Mead , also planning to be here ’ - Mr . and Mrs . Westervelt made a six months trip through New Z ealand and Australia . They traveled for a time with the Chap man evangelists and were interested in their quiet but powerful r e work and their enthusiastic reception in Australia . Since their M r turn , . and Mrs . Westervelt are living at their new home , the old Irwin place at Waikiki . Cham e ain - r e b rl Rev . H . W . Chamberlain and his wife en turned from their trip to the States invigorated in body , and thu s iasti c over new plans for Kalihi Settlement which they have ’ s faithfully carried out . Mr . W . W . Chamberlain also , for his health fi e b en e tt d . sake , took a trip to the mainland and returned much

Mr . Warren Chamberlain , now with his son W . W . Chamber at lain , calls occasionally the Old Mission Home , although his eighty feeebl e four years of active life have left him quite . “ ” Aunt Mattie Chamberlain is able to sit in her chair with a book , and dearly enjoys short calls from old friends . 2 4

Ch amberl ain — Miss Abbie Chamberlain has sent some in 1 81 9 verses , written probably by her grandmother , prior to the “ sailing of the Thaddeus for the Sandwich Islands . She also er u sh sent two other memoirs , written at the time of Mrs . J a Cham ’ ber l ain s death .

. W e . have had a letter from Walter O Chamberlain , son of “ Nathan Chamberlain , giving facts about the family for the Big ” Book of records . C a k E — A l r ( . marriage in the Clark family , and another soon to take place are the most interesting items that have been r e 1 1 1 91 2 ported . On December , , Mr . C . Jonathan Austin and Miss U Barbara Mathilda nger were married . They are residing in Hilo .

Mrs . Caroline Austin is with her daughter, Mrs . Baker, at Kona ,

Hawaii . At the Kona Q uarterly Conference , presided over by Rev .

A . S . Baker, a novel feature was a Bible Drill Match , like an old “ ” fashioned spelling match , where Bible questions were answered

instead of words spelled . A Sacred Concert which was highly praised was conducted by Miss Marion Austin who had recently

returned from Wellesley because of eye trouble . Herbert Ashford Aust in has entered Cornell University from

which his brother Hale Austin has recently graduated .

Mrs . Severance and Miss Helen Severance were in Honolulu some

time since , visiting their many friends .

News has just arrived of the death of Mr . Alvah Clark in Oak 29 1 91 3 land , March , . C — I n 1 91 2 an . o August , , a letter from Miss Harriet C Leete “ was received , enclosing a program of the Memorial ” n 5 1 81 2 Service at Killingworth , Con , on June , , and the dedica “ tion of the tablet in his honor . The day was perfect , she said, “ l r emin is and the church filled . Dr . Coan spoke interesting y and c n tl e y . It is good to hold the memory of good men . Would the world were full of them "” : The Treasurer hands us the following from T . Munson Coan I ‘ ’ enclose my small contribution and very gladly . The memory of the old Hawaiian days is very green and fresh— indeed I am a better islander , perhaps , than statesman or American . My set of n 1 853 be An ual Reports , complete from the first number ( ) stands

‘ - i So fore me n a beautiful binding as they deserve . you see I am

one of the faithful . Yours with aloha mau ,

M UNSON . T . COAN C e A — A 24 ook ( . wedding of interest occurred on October , 1 91 2 M el an h , when Mr . Edmond Francis p y won for his bride our fair cousin Juliette Annis Cooke . Miss Juliette and her mother 2 5

h ad spent the summer in Boston . Miss Margaret Cooke traveled in

Europe during her vacation . ’ Mr . J . P . Cooke was elected President of the Planters Associa t ion . Mrs . Cooke , busy with her interesting family and many guests ,

fi nds much time for active work in church and society . Miss Grace

Cooke is home again from Europe and busy with her benevolences .

r . M . Gardner Cooke and his wife have been on a visit to Honolulu

Mr . C . H . Cooke is now a member of the Legislature . He and his family spent some months abroad . Mr . Richard Cooke and his family also visited on the mainland and in Europe . The arrival on ’ O 28 1 91 1 u ctober , , of Anna Garen s sister, Alice Montag e Cooke , ’ was omitted from last year s report . f Mr . George P . Cooke is also a member o the present legislature . d u h Mr . and Mrs . C . H . Atherton with their three charming a g ters are occupy ing at present , the old Atherton Homestead . Their daughter Juliette will be married in April . Mrs . J . B . Atherton s eems to have taken on a new lease of life since moving to Manoa , h an d wit . o her many charities , large and small , is a very busy woman Miss Kate Atherton is intensely interested in her K akaako kinder garten and in a new factory that gives employment to Hawaiian g irls . Twenty-two sewing machines run by electric power for making

s itu at ed in . clothing, a large , airy room , are provided for the use of the workers . A comfortable rest room is provided , and a kit

" c n ou r ish in fi ve henette and refectory where wholesome , g , and ten “ ” c ent lunches are obtained . It is called the Kealoha Manufactory .

- Mr . F . C . Atherton , our worthy vice president , has been made one of the trustees of Oahu College . Another son arrived in the h 28 ome of Mr . Atherton on March . Mrs . Richards with her beau “ tiful home life , prophets chamber and missionary activities , has also her musical , social and athletic interests that round out a life of ffi wonderful e ciency . Ruth and Atherton Richards were home for 1 91 2 vacation and Atherton won , while here , the tennis cham ion shi p p of Hawaii .

Dam n S — A o ( . quiet but beautiful wedding took place at M oan al u a 21 on November , when Mrs . Gertrude Damon became the f of . . . bride Mr Henry F Damon , Mr . H . H . Parker o ficiating . Mrs

S . M . Damon , as president of the Humane Society , has been very busy in securing homes for destitute children .

“ Miss Ethel Damon , after graduating from Ge r and spending two years studying in Germany, is now teaching man and French at Oahu College . It was a great pleasure to the 2 6

kamaainas to hear and see her in Central Union choir where h er

beloved mother sang for so many years .

l . C r e . U y Damon, son of F W Damon is at Harvard niversity taking an active part in athletics and glee club work as ” well as in

the regular course of study . Miss Vera Damon , who spent some

months in Europe , is now in Boston taking lessons in voice culture .

Doctor and Mrs . Putman (Violet Damon ) are also in Boston , after

a European trip , and expect to return to Hawaii this summer . in Daphne and Bernard are Honolulu . Dimon d — St an en al m Mrs . g w d is one of the few people who ” e the absent cousins would recogniz as belonging to olden times . She may be met in the accustomed places and looks no older as

the years go by . Mr . and Mrs . Albert Waterhouse with their son

and daughter still reside at the Peninsula . Mr . and Mrs . H . M .

Wells with their children have located at Haiku, Maui . m s Mrs . T . W . Hobron and her daughter Gladys spent so e month in Honolulu where they were welcomed by their many friends .

The Dimonds also lay claim , in part , to the beautiful little girl ,

Cornelia Hall Jones . D — ole The portrait by Torrey of Judge Sanford B . Dole , ii the first and only President of the Republic of Hawa , was secured e by some of his many friends and presented , with appropriat

c . r spee hes , to the It has been hung in the uppe hall of the Executive building with those of the other rulers of th e

Hawaiian Islands . was s In June , at Riverside , Norman Eliot Dole married to Mis

Dorothy Wheelock , and in October , at Pacific Grove , Alfred Rowell

Dole married Miss Edna Rust .

1 91 2 . . In April , , in New York City, there came to Mr and Mrs

Herbert Dole , a daughter, Winifred Dole ; at Riverside , Cal . , in

. August, John Ethelbert Dole arrived at the home of Mr . and Mrs

George Ethelbert Dole ; and in March , in Oakland , to Mr . Emmet

R . Jones and Mrs . Marian Dole Jones , came a son, Emmet Hath away Jones . M r . and Mrs . James D . Dole , with their two boys , went to Bos ’ s ton last summer, to visit Mr . Dole father, and now, March ’ e they are leaving for another two months trip . This time the thre

. children will remain with their grandmother , Mrs . C . H . Dickey

Eme s n J — 7 1 91 3 r o ( . The birth of a son , on March , , to Paul n ew Eliot Emerson and his wife , Grace Vary Emerson , ushers in a ’ . generation of Emerson s . Paul is the eldest son of Dr . Justin E Emerson of Detroit and this is the first great grandchild to be born to Father and Mother Emerson .

2 8

s : erious surgical operation , writes You may have heard that I ll was in the hospital for an operation last December , but you wi ’ u be glad to know that I am out of it now and nder doctor s orders, u c n am rusticating in Kar izawa , where the old wi ter climate is sup t posed o be good for me . Certainly I have enjoyed it very much ” and my strength seems to be fully restored . e Miss Louise , daught r of Dr . John Gulick , was one of the first class to receive a degree from the College of Hawaii . Her mother ha s been spending some months with relatives in the East . Miss Julia spent her vacation in Hilo but rejoiced that she could r ot and entertain so many friends .

- Mr . William Gulick , after an absence of forty one years in Sp is spending the winter here . Mrs . Dike , his daughter, has children .

H al E — M r l ( . s . W . W . Hall and Miss Charlotte Hall from their leisurely trip through Europe and The States . Florence Macintyre greatl y enj oys motoring in the afternoons with her little girls . the Mr . P . C . Jones , with his daughter , Mrs . A . Gartley , spent 1 1 2 9 . . summer of on the mainland , returning for the winter Mr

and Mrs . A . Lewis spent some time in Europe .

Mrs . E . A . Jones has leased her home on Nuuanu street for a

number of years , and with her three daughters is living with i mother, Mrs . Fuller, in Nuuanu valley . The g rls are all at P

- un hou , Helen taking a post graduate course , and in J e p ect to go to the Atlantic States for a few years where the

finish their education .

E . Austin Jones and his wife have welcomed to their home

beautiful baby girl , Cornelia Hall Jones .

— H t ck H . c . i hco ( The death of Mrs . H R . Hitchcock of M lokai left a sad b lank in that family ; even though ol des t is sons were all away from home . Rexford , the ,

mark at Harvard , not only as an athlete interested

baseball and swimming, but he has been made presi U class and secretary of the Harvard nion . Last year he summered New in England . Randolph Hitchcock graduated at Oahu College i s . s last year and is at Exeter, Mas , now William senior at Oahu

College .

David Townsend is president of the Hawaii Club of Cornell .

Miss Almeda Townsend , who has been at Birmingham , is now at

the Conservatory of Music at Oberlin College , Ohio .

D . Howard Hitchcock spent some time sketching on Molokai

and Kauai , and in May held an exhibition of some of his later 2 9

Kil oh an a 1 91 3 r e paintings in the Club rooms . In February, , he turn ed from California where he had exhibited some of his recent canvases and received great honor and commendation . His beau “ ” 20 0 0 tiful landscape Hanalei was sold to a famous collector for $ . C — M r e . H yd ( . Henry K . Hyde has informed us of the death E n ar d a 1 91 1 of Mrs . Camille y (Miss Sylvia S ge Hyde ) in August , , and of Miss Sarah R . Sage in March of the same year . Our Mrs .

Hyde has been in Europe , spending some time in England , but as o ’ the climate of England did not agree with her s n s family, she brought them to America with her and Mr . Charles , his wife and

s . two little girls are now living in Ware , Mas , near his mother John son — Miss Frances Johnson and her sister Ellen ar e still occupying their quiet home at Pearl City Peninsula . 1 3 1 91 2 On August , , after months of failing health , Mr . Frank h us o Martyn Bindt , band of L uise Johnson , passed away . His son

Rudolph Bindt , on the Advertiser force , has been enlarging his cottage at Waikiki to accommodate his family of three growing boys . His eldest son , Henry, a handsome boy of eleven , lost his ' efizor ts eyesight the past year , but through the of his teacher in the Bible school , Mrs . Emerson , he has been successful in securing a scholarship in the school for the blind in Berkeley, Cal . He is a bright boy , learned his raised letters in one day and is quite happy in the thought that he may learn to use a typ ewriter and take music lessons .

— J d G P. J d . e u ( Mrs . Elizabeth G . Wilder celebrat d her eighty

5 1 91 2 - second birthday on July , , when children , grandchildren and great grandchildren assembled to do her honor . Three sons were present, but Mrs . Laura Wight was in Germany, and Helen Wilder made her visit later . 7 On November Mr . Gerrit Wilder and wife celebrated the

-fifth twenty anniversary of their marriage .

Helen , the daughter of S . G . Wilder , is said to stand at the head W ckh am of her class at y , Rye , school . Another Judd of the fifth 2 1 91 2 generation , Samuel Gerrit Wight was born on April , .

Mrs . George Sherman has entered heart and soul into the life of Honolulu , and with Mrs . Lowrey and others in the Outdoor Circle has accomplished much toward realizing “ The City Beauti f l ” u . 28 Her daughter, Miss Laura Nott , was married , June to

Mr . Herbert Dowsett .

Hon . G . R . Carter and family were away for some months , but since his return he is using his influence to protect Hawaii from ff ” the e ects of a Free Sugar bill .

A . F . Judd went east in June to attend a reunion of his class 3 0

at Yale . Since his return he has been probing tenements and im

' of Bish o estat e proving the homes the poor on the p . Doctor and “ ” in Mrs . Judd , while Italy, had almost a Cousins Meeting with Gil m ' . ari Mrs Hall and Charlotte , Marj ory , Mrs . Day and others .

Rev . Henry P . Judd has left Kahului and moved to Honolulu, t and his work for the present is o be Bible school work entirely .

Mr . Lawrence Judd and his wife have another daughter, Agnes El z h i ag et .

In March Miss Pauahi Judd , for years a resident in Germany, h er returned to Honolulu with mother and her sister , Mrs . Farley . K n n e - i y Mrs . Selma Kinney has sent us a beautiful pic ’ ture of her husband s mother, to be framed in the company group and hung on the walls of the Old Mission Home . L man B — y ( . Miss Ellen Lyman has added fi ve new “ ” to the roll of Cousins , and they are all very welcome . M cCl u ske One of the new members is Robert y , son of M cCl u ske M cCl u s ke y and Esther Lyman y , born February An other son has arrived in th e family of David Belden Lym at Koloa , Kauai , David Beldon Lyman Jr . m 27 1 91 2 Sarah Irene Beatrice Ly an was married on June , ,

Mr . James Reid of Hilo . First Lieutenant Clarence Lyman arrived in Honolulu with

Fourth Regiment of Cavalry . He brought with him a bri the daughter of Colonel and Mrs . James Locket . The 21 1 91 2 took place at Fort Riley, Kansas , August , . L n s — dau h ter ~ of y o Mrs . A . W . Richardson , g Mr .

Curtis J . Lyons , who is visiting in Honolulu from H ’ an old j ournal of her grandmother s and is making a typ ewr i “ d ” copy of it . This little girl gran mother , as she calls her, c 1 882 in the fifth company of missionaries , in , and was the youn of all the missionaries , being only nineteen years old when she arrived . She was beautiful in face and character, talented and ’ cultured , and her diary , kept through her five years residence on the islands , breathes a spirit of singular love and devotion . But she

- died at the age of twenty four , leaving behind her one little boy.

Had she lived she would now be one hundred years old , and Mrs . Richardson had just been placing flowers on her grave in the ol d

Mission cemetery . A letter had just been r eceived from Aunt Edith telling of ’ ” Bert s travels in France and Spain where he was perfecting his knowledge of the languages for use in his work as professor in Ann

Arbor, Mich .

Miss Lucia Lions is home from Pang Chuang, China . . 3 1

Pa is J — r ( . Miss Anna Paris spent some time at the Coast

with her sister . Miss Ella Paris has sent pictures of her parents to be framed ’ the Old Mission Home . ke B — Par r ( . Miss Mary Parker is still a tru stee of Luna

Home . She was chosen a trustee when the Home was founded ,

ago . Because she was brought up with these people , d an knew their language , their habits , their modes of thinking and e their former life , she has been able to understand them and to lov m them as few can do . Many changes and great i provements have

occurred during these years , and she has aided in them all . To a reach the Home she used to walk across from Judd street , back of Pun chbowl ; then the tramcars landed her at Ber etan ia street ; I t h as and now the Rapid Transit takes her almost to the doors . t become a habit of her life o call upon , sympathize with and com

fort these old Hawaiian people . m H . Rice is co missioner of education on to make the Kauai schools the best in

- land . He , it is said , introduced the one room schoolhouse having

windows , but with the upper part open to free circulation of n the openi g overhung by an awning to keep out rain . ff W. H . Rice Jr . is sheri of the County of Kauai . Charles A .

e , manager of Lihue Ranch , was selected senator from Kauai He was also a delegate to the Republican convention to

nominate Taft . Arthur Rice is in business in Honolulu with John ' E . Co . O L Fleming , in the James L . Morg an . , Ltd Just now he is “ - with the All Hawaii Polo Team winning honors for the islands . n l F Philip L . Rice has resig ed as c erk of the ifth Circuit Court , to

take up private business . 1 Elsewhere is given a glimpse of the Rice family (including th e I s en ber s L d at es W il coxes g , y g and ) as entertainers at the ninetieth H i ' Ev l i l annual meeting of the awai an an g e ca Association . Richards — Letters have been received from Hiss Helen

t . Brewer of Bozeman , Mon , and from Mrs Williston of Boston , “ ” filled with valuable statistics for the Big Book of records . “ ’ Rowel l G — I n 1 91 2 ( . April , , just as our Cousin s year

began , and even before our last Annual Meeting, occurred the

death of Mrs . Marion E . Rowell Gay . In the Dole branch of the Rowell family there have been two m arriages , that of Norman Eliot Dole , and later of Alfred Rowell

Dole . There have also been born two sons and one daughter of

the fourth generation , but these have all been named in the Dole

family . 3 2

Ru l es — A gg letter has been received from Mr . C . G . Peck

of Chicago , brother of Mrs . Loomis whom we al l know through her

interesting letters , and a grandson of Mr . and Mrs . Ruggles . He Q enclosed four letters , one written by his grandfather Samuel Rug ,

1 920 - gles , in , partly on board the Thaddeus , one a twelve page e m l tter from Mr . Cha berlain telling of the framing of the first M laws for Hawaii , a letter from ercy Whitney to Mrs . Ruggles and ,

a circular letter from Mr . Bingham after his return from th lands .

There are many more of these letters , formerly the prop ort “ ” the pioneer Samuel Ruggles , which Mr . Peck has promised

Society as soon as he has time to look them over . We thank

Peck very heartily, for this is just what the Cousins are now try

— to do collect and store these valuable documents . S i ma W — M r n . . h h p ( Oliver T . Shipman is manager of t

Keaau Ranch , near Kilauea , Hawaii .

Mr . and Mrs . W . H . Shipman are still in their beautiful b orn

l i Fl or en c at Reeds Island , Hilo , and their three daughters , Caro ne , and Margaret and the son Herbert , make the home a merry 0

Miss Florence is a teacher in the Free Kindergarten .

Mr . Ollie T . Shipman also resides in Hilo and is in business

Shipman and Gillespie .

Smith — That the absent Cousins may remember Mrs . E m a Dillingham as she was and is , with her gracious manner showering her friends with abiding memories of j oy and we ’ copy entire in another place , Mr . W . H . Gulick s article in ” Advertiser on Delightful Hospitality .

The return of Governor and Mrs . Frear was welcomed by

“ ” ‘ A t - people of Honolulu , and at the Homes given on the

Monday of each month , hundreds of island people as well a stran “ ” were greeted at beautiful Arcadia . On August 30 a garden party and reception was give ator and Mrs . Knox . Among the guests were forme okal an i K al an ian aol e and Princess , Judge Sanford

President of Hawaii ; Rear Admiral Reynolds , representing Army and Navy, and other ladies note . For two hours a went from the spacious grounds . Tea was

Japanese maids in national costume , and the seated under a large banyan tree , played ’ Hawaiian melodies . Mrs . Frear s spirit ca down to society ’s demands or to 3 3

’ ws in gems of verse such as New Year s Blessings on a 1 91 3 foun d in the January Friend .

Dillingham our H . M . C . President has been on the

e d . some tim ; eeply engaged in the polo contest as h e ' Al l - Hawaii team . Ben fi el d Smith has been spending the win ter and

Martha Beckwith , seeing delightful

people and getting the rest she needs . “ ’ Smi th J — ( . Into W . O . Smith s family has come a little t granddaughter, Barbara Baldwin , the daughter of Katherine Smi h in h er Baldwin . Mrs . Harry Baldwin is visit g her parents while

husband is away at the polo contest . H awan an Mr . Alfred Smith , with his proficiency in the lan guage and knowledge of the Hawaiian people is said to be the Lu n l l o right man in the right place at a i Home . General Hartwell died on August 30 leaving behind him a splen

ul . did record as able patriot, honest lawyer and faithf judge Miss

Juliette Hartwell was married in May to Mr . Olaf Sorenson , and Al fin e s on Hawaii . Mr . and Mrs . fred Carter have built a

n ce . in Honolulu, and their children are at m In August Rev . Paul Waterhouse (son of Mr . Willia Water

house and Melicent Smith Waterhouse ) and his bride , passed Umi through Honolulu on their way to , Japan . He had previously an d s spent some time in the Y . M . C . A . work there now return as a minister of the gospel . Th to — urs n Lorrin A . Thurston and family left Honolulu

at the close of school in June , and being joined at the Coast by their

eldest son , Robert , they traveled leisurely to their destination , the

- P ifi un ac c . White Mo tains , by way of the Canadian route After a

delightful summer Mr . Thurston returned to business and the chil

dren to school , but Mrs . Thurston remaining in Oakland , became

ill and did not reach home till January . In the mean time , Mr . ’ - Robert Thurston , who had completed a four years course in sugar

culture and sugar making, accepted a position with the Waialua y Agricultural Compan and is again on his native islands . Young Lorrin is a member of the Philatelic So ciety and has quite an in t er estin m g collection of sta ps . Miss May Kl u eg el returned from her European trip looking

remarkably well . For a few weeks she visited with her brother George ’s family and other friends in Honolulu and then proceeded

to Hilo where her father and mother were anxiously awaiting her . un r Miss Mary Winne , vice principal of P ahou Preparato y, having ’ e Ro a y ar s leave of absence , has been spending a part of it in me . 3 4

Miss Jane Winne is mus ical instructor in the High School and , '

. n n Al exan der an d Mr James Wi e has a position with Baldwin . Tin ke — A r recent letter from Mrs . Mary Tinker Harvey - 1 91 2 tells of the home going in November, , of her husband Dr. , of Leon Harvey of New Rochelle , and the lonely household . Only a beefor e few months , in April, her only remaining sister, Mrs . Sarah as s d th e Tinker Gray, p away at home of her daughter, in James town , N . Y . Of the original Tinker family there are now left two brothers besides herself . Van D zee W — u ( . Letters come occasionally from Miss Grace ’ c Van Duz e . She has been greatly interested in the King s Dau g h ’ ters Home— that is to b e— and thinks a home for gentlefolk in such a climate as this would be as near an approach to heaven as lonely people could wish below . Du zee 1 91 2 Miss Stella Van , an invalid sister , died in April , . c Miss Cyrene Van Duz e , after many years in the foreign field is now employing such time strength and means as are given her in “ ” D ze . u e little errands for the Master Miss Mary Van , away in far Persia is in the midst of opportunities long worked for and t prayed for, but lacking the strength wi h which to gather in the harvest .

W etmo e C — A - n r ( . post card from Mrs . Catherine W . Deaco locates her at Davis , California . r ecen tl An excellent photograph of Dr . C . H . Wetmore was received for the company group from Dr . Frances We n Hilo , and from Mrs . Lewis comes the an ouncement of niece , Elinor Winans Deacon , daughter of Charles W. Deacon . Whitn ey — The marriage of Miss Catherine Warren Good

U . to Lieutenant Rawson Warren, Fifth Regiment of Cavalry, . S 1 5 1 91 2 r on June , , is the greatest bit of news that has eached from the Whitney family . h Mr . Henry W . W itney is still chief clerk and passenger

Co. . of C . Brewer , Ltd u A long letter from Mrs . Mercy Whitney to Mrs . R ggles , n 1 837 in Ju e , , has been sent to the Old Mission Home from by Mr . Peck , a grandson of Mr . Ruggles , the pioneer .

- Wil cox A Missionary Memorial was erected at Waioli , (now often included in the district of Hanalei ) by the brothers

George and Albert Wilcox . It was a special memorial to their parents , Abner and Lucy Wilcox , but was also in honor of their Ed A . fellow missionaries at this station , Rev . W . P . lexander , Rev

. ward Johnson and Rev . George R . Rowell , with their wives The con im odiou s memorial is a modern , attractive and building which

3 6

and are occupying a little cottage in the Settlement . Surely the r mission spi it has not departed from this generation . M r e Bean . Jo l , our honored friend , was sick for a time last sum mer and so we missed his cheery messag e . , ‘ l i r — M rs7 3 eckwith i a an d f , writ ng from Pasadena , California , in “ November said , Mary and I have been here a year now . We have

' no plans— only thinkings— bu t m ay return to our home in Mount

- clair in late summer . We visited Piedmont and Berkeley ” very happy with the old friends and beautiful scenery . B ck visited Mrs . S . C . Alexander while Mary e wi man were in the mountains in the enjoyment Nott has changed wonder fully l ittl calm sweetness she ever had— the ” dren can be only a j oy to her . Mrs . B been much interested in the work at Chino “ 110 e . She writes , Mary has b en called i Two weeks ago she had a hurry call to go and help in the for a few days — foun d ten or twelve boys not very si br enough to be j olly, but in a few days a newcomer was and proved to have scarlet fever . The rest were promptly and Mary was quarantined with him— there was no other ” “ she had been fully exposed . Martha is in her fourth i teacher at Vassar , and is hop ng to come to the Coast and ” islands next summer . We have since heard that Martha and

n . Clara B . Smith are spendi g the winter at Poughkeepsie

M ss H E Ca en te fi r m i . . rp r, though growing more frail , writes a hand and keeps up her interest in all the Cousins and the dear old friends of Hawaii nei . She is spending the winter with distant relatives in Bristol , R . I . M i Li l i S Cath ca t ss an . The address of l r of the Normal School, H el en Orange Park , Florida , has been received through our cousin N S but S No t n . . . r o . She has been for many years at Kings Mountain , , retired a few years ago on accoun t of ill health . But after a year Al a of rest , she took a less responsible position at Talladega in bama , and this year is assisting at Orange Park , Florida .

F en c H owe C ozie lor e r r, daughter of our cousin Adeline Cam 4 1 91 2 1 . . Crozier , was married on May , , to Mr . Caleb E S of Paia . M r M a a et B F wl e sum s . rg r rewer o r was traveling in Europe last mer and hoped to meet her mother and sister in Egypt .

R W l F e D D in ev a te a . . r r r, with his wife and daughter , arrived

'

Honolulu for a visit in January , just in time to meet his old friend, 3 7

H is a t e Dr . Alexander, before he left . coming, welcome any tim , was most opportun e . A H osme r ofes P of F . r . . r and wife are still at Amherst and the p f or t sor has a Bible class o y students . M rs W M Kin caid n ff Our dear . . . writes , My i terest and a ection toward the society couldn ’ t be warmer if I were a really and truly a blood cousin . You will see we have ch nged our address , and are ’ at present keeping house in an apartment— one of New York s , ‘ ’ rabbit warrens built for people keeping house in a small, way It has been a joy to see many island people in the city during the past year and more . Billy is making good progress in his music studies and enj oying it all . He retains his aloha for Hawaii and some day hopes to see it again . M rs M a de Kitt ed e Nich o s M a rice . u r g l and her twin brother u C Kitt ed e . r g , who have not been at the islands since their childhood , returned just before the Floral Parade . They remained longer in Honolulu than they planned and we were glad to have them at the

O . M . H . for the Gulick reception . Soon after they left for Maui and Hawaii , where their childhood years were spent . Rev J M o an Lewis . . rg , at Weaverville , California , is pastor and

Co. . general missionary for Trinity , Calif M r A l en Low e n . l r y has been winni g laurels in many branches of athletics . He has also been president of his class , of the Social

' ’ Cl u b Stu den ts Science , Council and of Philips Brooks House , thus being at the head of the organized religious and philanthropic work of the university . Surely Hawaii has a right to be proud of her sons . M iss Al ice Ol eson returned from the Atlantic States enthusiastic ” “ - -fi r e over the play ground work , Camp Girls , etc . Her sister,

Mrs . Elder, is visiting in Honolulu after many years of absence .

Mrs . Rachel Ewing is living very happily in Florida and ate her Christmas dinner with five other Honolulu people at the home of ’

. O Br ien Mrs Nellie Bicknell . M iss J l ia E Sn ow u . spent a delightful vacation in Yosemite . R v W e . E. . Th i n w g , of the International Reform Bureau in ffi China , has been appointed an o cial adviser of the new Board of h Education of the Chinese Republic , which has establis ed a depart “ m o ent of S cial Service . Among other reforms an Intern ational ’ ” School Children s Temperance League has been formed . “ M is s H en iett M S ee r a . p r writes , We always keep up our inter in est foreign missions , especially among the Chinese as that was my ’ father s work both in China in his early days and later when h e ” started the San Francisco Mission . 3 8

M rs E izabeth W ate h o se . l r u and Miss Margaret left in March

for a trip to Japan . They and Miss Pinder had been enj oying their

home for the past year, and were engaged as usual in Sunday Eés ie School Church and Mission work . Mrs . W . Stubbs and her

little boy, from London , have been spending the winter here where

she has been largely entertained . Mrs . Marion Wilcox spent some n months with her husband on the mai land . A daughter, Mar

garet Elizabeth , arrived in the home of Mrs . Eleanor Waterhouse

Isenberg in August . Mr . Fred Waterhouse and Dr . Ernest Water H house , with their families , have been absent from onolulu most ’ of the year, though Mr . Fred s have now returned and are living on

Puunui street . Mr . John Waterhouse and Mr . George , with their r families , have also taken trips to the Coast du ing the year .

M ARRI ED .

An - — I h 1 4 1 91 2 An drews Almy . Honolulu , April , , Mr . Lorrin

drews to Mrs . Elsa Carolyn Almy .

-U — I n 1 1 1 91 2 Austin nger . Honolulu , December , , Mr . Charles U Jonathan Austin to Miss Barbara Mathilda nger .

- — 4 I 1 1 91 2 . n . Burns Crozier . Honolulu , May , , Mr . Caleb E S

Burns to Miss Florence Howe Crozier .

- — I 21 1 1 2 n 9 . Damon Damon . Honolulu , Nov . , , Mr . Henry F

Damon to Mrs . Gertrude M . Damon .

- — A t 1 2 1 91 2 . Cal Dole Rust Pacific Grove , , October , , Alfred

Rowell Dole to Miss Edna Rust .

- — A n 22 1 91 2 t . Dole Wheelock . Riverside , Ju e , , Mr Norman Eliot

Dole to Miss Dorothy Wheelock .

- — 2 2 1 1 . I 8 9 . . n Dowsett Nott Honolulu, June , , Mr Herbert M

Dowsett to Miss Laura Nott .

m - — 21 1 1 2 A 9 . t . Ly an Locket . Fort Riley, Kan , August , , Lieut a Clarence K . Lym n to Miss Helen Locket , daughter of Colonel and

Mrs . James Locket .

M l h - — 24 1 91 2 e an . I n . p y Cooke Honolulu , October , , Mr Edward M el an h Francis p y to Miss Juliette Annis Cooke .

- — I 27 1 1 2 . . n n 9 . Reid Lyman Hilo , Hawaii , Ju e , , Mr James S m Reid to Miss Sarah Irene Beatrice Ly an .

S - — I 1 8 1 91 2 n . orenson Hartwell . Honolulu , May , , Mr Olaf Lauritz

Sorenson to Miss Juliette Hartwell . - — 1 5 1 91 2 I . . n Warren Goodale Honolulu , June , , Lieut Rawson

Warren to Miss Catherine Goodale . 3 9

BORN.

— 28 1 91 3 F I n M r . . . n t . Atherto Honolulu, March , , o and Mrs C

Atherton , a son , Alexander Simpson Atherton . — I n l 6 1 91 2 o t . n . Baldwi Honolu u , August , , Mr and Mrs Charles

W. Baldwin , a son , Charles Morris Baldwin . — 1 6 1 2 I 91 . n n . Baldwi Honolulu, September , , to Mr and Mrs

Samuel A . Baldwin , a daughter , Barbara Ethel Baldwin . — 20 1 91 1 I n . . Bingham New Haven , Conn , November , , to Mr and Mrs . Hiram Bingham , a son , Mitchell Bingham . ul k — I n 23 1 91 1 B loc Shanghai , China , December , , to Reverend l u . and Mrs . Amasa A . Bullock , a son , Anson Burlingame B lock — I n I l l 1 91 1 n . . . e Brow Wilmette , , , to Mr and Mrs . J Melvill

Brown , a son , Robert Brown . e — I n 28 1 91 1 d Cook Honolulu, October , , to Mr . and Mrs . Richar

Cooke , a daughter, Alice Montague Cooke . — I 1 4 1 91 2 n n . . Deaco San Luis Obispo , Cal , October , , to Mr and m . n Mrs Charles Wet ore Deacon , a daughter, Eli or Winans Deacon . — At 5 1 91 2 M r e . . . Dol Riverside , Cal , August , , to and Mrs . Geo

Ethelbert Dole , a son , John Ethelbert Dole . e — I n 21 1 91 2 Dol New York City, April , , to Mr . and Mrs . Her bert Dole , a daughter , Winifred Dole .

' — I 7 1 91 3 r M M . n n h t o . Emerso Detroit , Mic , arch , , and Mrs

Paul Eliot Emerson , a son , Judson Vary Emerson . i h — I n Engl s Hilo , Hawaii , to Mr . and Mrs . Otis English , a son . F — I h 1 4 1 81 2 an d isher . Tokio , Japan , September , , to Reverend

. i . Mrs Galen M . Fisher, a daughter, Eleanor Talcott F sher — 1 1 2 I n 8 9 . Hoskins . California , January , , to Mr . and Mrs H .

. n T Hoskins , a son , John Hardy Hoski s . — I s 6 1 91 2 n u t . Isenberg Honolulu , Aug , , to Mr . and Mrs Georg I senberg , a daughter, Margaret Elizabeth Isenberg . — I 3 1 91 2 s n . Jone Oakland , Cal . , March , , to Mr . and Mrs Em met Jones (Marion Dole ) , a son , Emmet Hathaway Dole . s — I n 29 1 91 2 s Jone Honolulu , August , , to Mr . and Mrs . Au tin

Jones , a daughter , Cornelia Hall Jones . d — I n 1 1 1 91 2 Jud Honolulu , October , , to Mr . and Mrs . Law

n . rence Judd , a daughter , Ag es Elizabeth Judd n — I n 1 1 1 91 3 Lyma Koloa , Kauai , January , , to Mr . and Mrs .

David Beldon Lyman , a son , David Beldon Lyman Jr . — I 1 3 1 91 3 . n . . Lowrey Honolulu , March , , to Mr and Mrs Sher

wood Lowrey , a daughter , Jane Lowrey . M cCl u k — I 7 1 1 3 s e 9 . . n y Hilo , Hawaii , February , , to Mr . and Mrs M cCl us k M Cl u ske e c . William y (Esther Lyman ) , a son , Robert y 40

s — I n H ar oot 1 1 Rigg p , Turkey, June , to Mr . and Mrs .

Ernest Riggs (Alice Shepard ) , a son , Riggs .

— I n 5 1 91 2 t Storey Honolulu , April , , o, Mr . and Mrs . William

Storey (Annie Bicknell) , a daughter, Alice May Storey .

— I 2 1 2 t n 1 9 . . k Wigh Honolulu, April , , to Mr and Mrs Fran a Wight , a son , S muel Gerrit Wight .

DI ED .

— I n 22 1 91 3 Alexander . Honolulu, February , , William Dewitt

Alexander, LL . D .

r — I 2 1 91 3 n . Alexande Honolulu , April , , Mrs Abigail Charlotte

(Baldwin ) Alexander .

n — I n 22 1 91 2 Alle Honolulu, September , , Mrs . Cordelia C .

(Bishop ) Allen .

n — I n 1 6 1 91 2 Baldwi Honolulu , June , , Mr . David Dwight Bald win

— I 2 1 1 9 3 . k h . 9 . Clar Oakland , Cal , March , , Mr . Alvah K Clark

E n ar d — I h s 1 9 1 91 1 y Ware , Mas , August , , Mrs . Sylvia Hyde E n ar E r d d . n a y (Mrs Camille y ) .

— I 1 1 1 91 2 . n l Gay Sonoma , Cal . , April , , Mrs . Marion E . Rowel Ga y .

l — I n 30 1 91 2 Hartwel Honolulu , August , , Gen . Alfred Stedman

Hartwell .

— I 1 9 1 91 2 n s . Harvey New Rochelle , Mas , November , , Dr Leon

Harvey .

k — I 2 1 1 1 2 n 9 . Hitchcoc Kaluaaha , Molokai , May , , Mrs Hannah

Meyers Hitchcock .

— I r 1 6 1 91 3 d n u . Howar Los Angeles , Cal . , Feb ary , , Mrs Hester o L . (Dicks n) Howard .

— 25 1 1 3 I 9 . . n . Leadingham Pomona , Cal , January , , Mrs Anna

Mayo (Rich ) Leadingham .

— I l ii 21 1 91 2 . n O aa Renwick Glenwood , , Hawa , November , , Isa bella Renwick .

— I 1 1 27 1 9 . e n s . Sag Ware , Mas , March , , Miss Sarah R Sage

W — I 1 2 1 1 2 a . n 9 eedon Honolulu , August , , Mr . Walter Cl yton

Weedon .

x — I n 20 1 91 2 Wilco Lihue , Kauai , October , , Mr . Samuel Ma h el on a Wilcox . 4 1

OBI TUARI E S. ’ De W i tt

Wil l iam M Al an de LL. D . in Febr u ex r, , died Honolulu on 22 1 91 3 ary , .

Dr . Alexander was one of the original members of this society, n abSen t 1 858 u one of the fou dation stones , although till , a tr e “ ” Cousin in heart and spirit . Twice he acted as its president and “ ” was many times editor of the Maile Wreath , for which he has written valuable articles . 2 1 833 William Dewitt Alexander was born in Honolulu , April , , spent his early childhood in Waioli , Kauai , and later his vacations at Lahainaluna . He received his early education at Punahou , and 1 849 n in sailed around The Horn to Harrisburg, Pen , where he Un i prepared for college , and then completed his studies at Yale 855 1 . versity , graduating with honor in i W s . He taught at Beloit College , , and at Vincennes , Ind , but ff being o ered the Greek professorship at Oahu College , he returned 1 858 1 864 in . As professor he remained till , when Dr . Beckwith resigned and Prof . Alexander was appointed to the presidency where he continued till 1 870 when he accepted the charge of or an izin g g and carrying on the Bureau of Government Survey , which he held for more than thirty years . n Dr . Alexander was a member of the Privy Council u der King K al akau a and Q ueen Liliuokalani , and was a member of the Board 1 887 1 90 0 n of Education from to . He was sent to Washingto to represent the Hawaiian Government in the International Meridian C 1 893 onference where forty governments were represented , and in a in the interests of the Annexation P rty . He was honored by Yale with the degree of Doctor of Laws , was made a fellow of the Royal

Geographical Society, a member of the Astronomical Society, and was one of the founders of the Hawaiian Historical Society .

Intellectually, Dr . Alexander was a great man and a brilliant

. t o scholar His education in practical , up date knowledge was remarkable . Language , mathematics , science , theology, social ques tions , all were concisely arranged in his mind and ready to be called forth at any moment . He was charming and attractive as “ ” a writer . His Brief History of the Hawaiian People was per haps his greatest work , though he was busily engaged in preparing l I an en arged History of the Hawaiian slands at the time of his death .

But it was the heart of him that was greatest . This he showed in his quiet , unassuming love and service for the church of which he was deacon for many years , in his courtesy to strangers , patience

i - with unskilled employes , inspiration as a teacher , the l fe long 4 2

friendship enjoyed with the comrades of his youth and with old

p upils , and the close bond of fellowship between him and his chil

dren . The intimacy between himself and his brother James , with m whom he corresponded every week , was re arkable , and of married “ a life he said , on his golden wedding day, All the rom ntic dreams

of youth have fallen far short of the solid happiness of life . With

: all this love and joy in living, he could yet say

But the truer life draws higher

Every year, And the truer life draws nigher

Every year , ’ Earth s hold on us grows slighter,

And the heavy burden lighter,

And the Dawn Immortal brighter , ” Every year . M r s Co del ia Chur ch Bish o Al l en . r p died in Honolulu , Septem 22 1 81 2 ber , . Y 1 837 Co . . . Mrs . Allen was born in Caldwell , Warren , N . , in 1 863 She came to Honolulu in as guest of her cousin Hon . Charles

R . Bishop and his wife Princess Bernice Pauahi Bishop . Here she m et m Al 1 865 her future husband , Col . Willia F . len , and in the

marriage took place in San Francisco . Since that time she has resided in Honolulu . About nine years ago Col . Allen died and ' after h er t soon health began o fail . M r s n . . Alle had a beautiful face and charming manners She dressed in exquisite taste and her winning personality made friends a everywhere . She was literary in her tastes and in the e rly days ’ belonged to a Reading Club which often met at Mr . Bishop s in the

old Paki residence near where the Young Hotel now stands . They read Shakespeare and the then popular authors . Among the mem R bers were W. W . Hall and wife , Mr . and Mrs . John Paty, everend

. an d and Mrs . Church , Mr . and Mrs . P . C . Jones , R . W Andrews

Mr . and Mrs . H A . P . Carter. It was said of the club that if it

accomplished nothing more it was a success , in that it introduced

Colonel and Mrs . Allen . ’ fin But Mrs . Allen s social qualities were not con ed to society, for in the church strangers were sought out and welcomed , and all were greeted as friends . In Sunday school her personal touch was shown by class meetings where social joys and refreshments were supplemented and the union cemented by kneeling together, and consecrating their lives to the great Teacher . When sickness laid her low she sent her carriage for other shut

4 4

Alexander , who , eight months later, followed him to the better s o land ) . Mr . Baldwin was one of the original members of this o th ciety and a contribut r to the Maile Wrea . M iss El iz abeth Ch a in s s p died in Winchester, Ma , in October, 1 0 8 9 . Last summer a letter was received from her neighbor and “ friend , Mrs . J . C . Adams , giving date and telling that death was caused by a paralytic stroke after which she lay unconscious for ” two days when God called her home to live with Him . “ was She a very active member of the Congregational Church , being one of the church visitors . In our missionary society she -fi ve was treasurer for more than twenty years . She was always doing good , helping the needy and distressed , who always went ‘ to her for comfort , sympathy and aid . We called her Saint Eliza ’ u beth . D ring her last years with us she was not able to get around very well , but until the last she was interested in everything and ” was beloved by us all . Al Ki 22 1 1 3 vah tt ed e Cl a k 9 . r g r died in Oakland , Cal . , March , ’ a Alvah Clark s boyhood was spent in Lahainalun and Wailuku , in which places his father was a missionary teacher and preacher . His Wail u ku home had previously been the childhood home of Gen eral S . C . Armstrong . He was also one of the early students of

Punahou School . 1 849 Leaving the islands in , with other missionary children , he n made the voyage around Cape Hor , landing in New Bedford ,

Conn . , and thence went to relatives in Boston in order to pursue r e his education . His stay in the States , however, was short , and turning to Honolulu he engaged in business with his brother -in

0 . law , H . Gulick . The firm of Gulick and Clark was established on the northeast side of King street , on the site now occupied by the

Metropolitan Meat Market of Honolulu . This firm witnessed the c ommencement of the business of Hall Dimond , and preceded the founding of Castle Cooke . For a short time he was postmaster,

succeeding Henry M . Whitney who founded the institution of post office in Honolulu . He was also part owner of the clipper schooner Nettie Merrill which was built for him in New York City and came

to these islands through the Straits of Magellan . 1 85 Mr . Clark was married in Honolulu in 7 to Mrs . Harriet 1 861 Merrill Hutchinson , who died in , leaving two children , the

survivor of whom is Mrs . John A . Scott of Hilo . Soon after the F death of his wife he left for San rancisco , and has resided there his and in Oakland the most of the time since . He married, for 4 5

-fi ve s econd wife , Mrs . Rebecca Bonny , who , after forty years of happy married life still survives him . r eat r eader Mr . Clark was a g j and a most interesting and lively companion . He was heir to a modest and lovely disposition , and will be mourned by all who kn ew h im and by many of the best people of Oakland . w Ga 1 1 i E. Ro el M rs M a on l . . r ( ) y died in Sonoma , Cal , April ,

1 2 - 1 9 . A life long friend writes

Marion Rowell was born at Waimea , Kauai , where she was taught by her mother with her brothers and sisters un til the time ’ came for each to go to Koloa to Rev . Daniel Dole s school . “ fin e Her personal beauty, mental powers and high character have formed a vivid picture in the minds of those who have known her from her youth up . “ She was in Mills Seminary as student and teacher for some was n years . Mr . Mills said that hers one of the fi est minds he had ever had to train . She gave up her position there to return to her island home to teach in the family of Mrs . Gay on Niihau , where after a short time she married an older brother of her pupils , and remained on Niihau , cheerful and contented in that secluded spot , oc cupied with her household , the care and teaching of her children ,

i . and with her music , until the fam ly moved to California Her sisters lived near her there . Friends were more accessible . Though her central interest was her home and family, her keen mind was ’ alive to all the world s progress . “

Death came unexpectedly after a brief illness . Those who knew her best were deeply attached to her .

Jud e Al f ed Stedman H a twell 30 1 91 2 H o g r r died , August , , in m olulu . s 1 1 1 836 He was born in Dedham , Mas , June , , and was educated 1 858 LLB 1 867 at Harvard , receiving the degree A . B . in and . in . -fi ve At the age of twenty he enlisted in the Civil War as a corporal , a year later became lieutenant , and then captain . He was brevetted al an tr 1 864 for g y and made brigadier general in , and was mustered 1 866 out of service at the close of the war in . After the war he returned to Harvard and finished his course in the law school , practiced law in Boston , was elected a member 1 867 1 868 H a of the Legislature in , and in came to 1 8 4 waii as Associate Justice of the Su preme Court . In 7 he was appointed attorney general of the kingdom , serving but a few 1 8 6 months , but occupying the position a second time from 7 to 1 878 . He then practiced law in Honolulu , becoming a leading mem 4 6

ber of the bar, and having as pupils many of our present ablest lawyers . 1 90 4 In , General Hartwell became Associate Justice of the e ur 1 90 7 th e f Suprem Co t, and in was raised to position of Chie a 1 91 1 Justice , where he continued his remarkable record till M rch , .

He then resigned and went abroad for a rest , but because of illness u while in London he ret rned to his Hawaiian home . General Hartwell was married in 1 87 2 to our cousin Char ’ 1 885 s a lotte Elizabeth Smith , and in became a member of the Cousin — a Society member of whom the society may well be proud . He fi r e was a lawyer with whom truth , honor and justice were rst u is it es q , an advocate for temperance and all movements conducive ii to the welfare of the Hawa an people , and with a home life singu l ar l y beautiful, he was , like Washington , great in war , great in peace and great in the hearts of his countrymen .

He was a good soldier of Jesus , fighting evil under the C eacefu of our Salvation , and so he could go bravely, humbly, p and j oyfully to answer the last earthly rollcall— the summons the King .

Dr Leo F i H Y . n e d n an d a ve . r r y died at New Rochelle , N . , 9 1 91 2 November , .

Dr . Harvey was the husband of Mary Tinker Harvey . He 20 1 837 born October , , was a good man , and led a very active He had enjoyed everything in the way of travel but his two v ff l r to Hawaii a orded him the keenest p eaasu e of all .

In July last he was ill with cholera , but through September October was able to receive friends in his pleasant enjoy many drives . He realized that he was gradua an d on life , without a word of complaint but with a swee tion , he bowed to the inevitable , and painlessly, peacefully passed through the shadow of death . We are glad to have names of such men on the list of our beloved dead . M r s H an n ah M e e s H tch cock . y r i died at Kaluaaha , Molokai , 21 1 91 2 old Hitchcock home , May , .

Mrs . Hitchcock was the third daughter of R . W . and Kalama F 2 6 1 866 D . Meyer . She was born at Kalae , Molokai , ebruary , , and was married at the same place to Harvey Rexford Hitchcock on 1 8 1 8 91 . February ,

Three stalwart sons have risen up to do her honor . Each has d made an enviable record at Punahou ; the eldest , Harvey Rexfor ’ Jr . is winning honors at old Harvard , his father s alma mater ; the H . . ; second , Randolph Howard entered Exeter , N , last September 4 7

while William Charles is now a senior at Oahu College , in favor alike with teachers and pupils .

All t hat was mortal of Mrs . Hitchcock was buried on the hill i K al u aah a back of the old Church , along side of Grandfather Hitch

a . cock, plot held sacred by the family

She was a true wife and a loving mother . Her children arise ” up and do her honor, her husband also , and he praiseth her . H e te Dickson H owa d 1 6 1 91 3 s r r entered into rest February , , at her home in Highland Park , Los Angeles , Cal . “ Ever since her beloved husband closed his eyes on earthly

s . cenes , about a year ago , life had lost its charms for our dear sister ff She strove to minister to those about her, in spite of the su erings fi rheumatism brought to her weary body . But nally her courage failed her , her strength gave out , and after a few days spent in n her bed , she , too , closed her eyes o earthly scenes and j oined her husband in the home above , there to receive the reward which come wh to those o love their Lord and faithfully serve Him . “ l eft ' H on ol u l u It is many years since Mrs . Howard for a resi in dence California , but the memory of her beautiful life spent in these islands can never be forgotten . Her home has always been in the abode of all that is desirable and helpful life , and there are ‘ many friends who will long for the touch of a vanished hand , and ’ the sound of a voice that is still . A . H . B . J . “ ’ M rs oh n Leadin h am . J g , one of earth s choicest examples of de -s acr ifi cin voted and self g mother, was called to her heavenly home 2 6th on the of January last . “ When the news of her sudden death came to her friends they without exception mourned the loss of one who had ever . been to them an inspiration and pattern . “ t She was a woman endowed with rare mental gif s , with a deep th e love of the beautiful , the charm of conversation , a ready pen , ability to impart knowledge and the art of making and holding friends . “

Her highest aim was to be like her Savior, and her next devo l r tion to her husband and children . All thought of self was ob ite ated , she lived more truly for others than anyone I ever knew.

She coveted the best gifts and education for her children , and vir tual l y gave herself for their attainment . What time she could spare from the multiplicity of duties in a the c re of her large family , she gave freely to the church and m issionary organizations . All who came within her touch were m an d m en ade truer better and women through her influence . “

Her spiritual life was beautiful , her faith uplifting and her frail 4 8

‘ s body was upheld day after day by uch promises as , As thy days ’ ‘ ffi so shall thy strength be , My grace is su cient for thee , Come un to me all ye that labor and are heavy laden and I will give you ’ rest . “ ’ She ever sought to walk in her Master s footsteps and His spirit i shone in every line of her face . As one of her fr ends wrote of her after a short visit from her a few weeks previous to her tr an s l a ‘ - t ul tion , I looked into her care worn face and always his verse wo d ’ s come to me , I shall be atisfied when I awake in Thy likeness . ’ i ctu r td His likeness was even then p upon her face . M . A . R . M ss I sabel l a Ren wi ck Ol aa 21 i died in , Hawaii, on November , 1 91 2 . 1 884 a n . Miss Renwick came from Harwick, Scotl nd , to Hawa in ’ s She was for many years a member of Mother Castle family, where by her thoughtful , loving companionship she was a great to Castle in his last illness ; less ; was with Mrs . Henry Castle in England when wreck arrived , and first got into communication and ’ ti cu l ar s of the disaster ; and during Mother Castle s comfort and stay . For two years Miss Renwick was matron at ary, and then she became one of the small farmer where her sturdy Scotch principles and kindness of heart made a blessing to the community . M r W al te C a t n W eedon . r l y o died in Honolulu on August 1 91 2 , of pneumonia after a short illness .

- Mr . Weeden was born sixty four years ago in Middlesex, E t o land , and came Honolulu when a youth of ab ’ 1 868 as clerk in Waterhouse s store . In he was visit the volcano of Kilauea , walking overland to Hilo . In un (1 he married a P ahou teacher, Miss Ida Sloan , who with one tor , Mrs . Alexander G . Horn , survives him . 1 87 1 In Mr . and Mrs . Weeden went to Kansas City, Mis and remained twenty years on the mainland . He was one pioneers in the typewriting business , and in this and in sto he made and lost a fortune . After his return to Honolulu in 1 891 he engaged in industry, in real estate and in insurance . He made an U tour of the nited States on promotion work , giving 1 lectures in many leading cities . He also traveled

- - business , going far up the Yang tse kiang river . a M . . Mr . Weedon was a charter member of the Y . . C A and 4 9

former president . He was an elder in the Christian Church , super in ten den t of the Sabbath school and an active worker of the mission school, giving freely of time and money . 1 869 ’ In he became a life member of the Cousin s Society, was l n ever interested its work and members , and was one of the editors “ ” of the Maile Wreath . M r Sam el M ahel on a Wil co . u x, who died at Lihue , Kauai, Octo 20 1 91 2 e ber , , had been a m mber of this society but one year when h e was called to lay down the strength of his young manhood and t o enter the dark valley where the boatman stood ready to carry h im to the other shore . i h R e M r E r d S l i H e M Sa a . Sa s . n a a d ss r g , and y as y v y , have long b “ een on our roll of members , now to be transferred to that of The B ” ook of Life above . ‘ Among th ose who have gone to the brink of the River of ” Death with parting friends are Fr ances and Rudolph Bindt whose f n 1 9 1 91 3 ather , Frank Marty Bindt died in Honolulu , August , , after an illness of some months . ’ 1 1 1 91 2 Mr . W . A . Bowen s brother left him on June , ; and the brother of Miss Julia E . Snow died in May . ’ Rev Sim son a Mrs . Frank Atherton s father , . p p ssed away on ’ 25 20 M r s An n ie Se e June ; and on June , Jennie Park s mother, . v r an ce Pa k n on r died , after li gering long the threshold of the city of the King .

’ M rs Sa ah Tin ke G a Mrs . Harvey s sister , . r r r y was released

fi er i 4 - 1 91 2 s n n . from weariness and g at sunset of Thursday , April , The end was peaceful and the exchange of world ’ s a happy one for ’ t h e pain- worn pilgrim who had for many month s been patiently ” waiting the clear call . Mrs . Gray was born at Wailuku , and spent

‘ h er at K ol oa early childhood , before her parents left the islands i 1 840 n .

M s Stel a Van Duzee is l , sister of our cousins , Cyrene and Grace V an Du zee See ff , long an invalid , after going to her doctor , in Bu alo , a complained of great weariness , and th t day, April she slept , to awake in a home where weariness and pain can enter no more .

M r s E z W i . a Scott de li l r, aunt of many of our Cousins , wife o f l 9 1 91 2 the late William Wilder , died in Honolu u on March , . “ ” M r . Wil l am Bail e i y , son of our late cousin Edward Bailey , d 1 1 91 3 ied in Honolulu , January , . 29 u On October the infant da ghter of Doctor and Mrs . James P . 21 l ittl l Judd ; and on January the e daughter of Allan W . Judd 5 0

were taken to be with the angels . These little one came , and they ” were not , for God took them .

Dr Ch a l es A . Pete son l r . r r , in the midst of great usefu ness , afte 0 l th e a very short il ness , was called to be with Great Physician who h as other work for him to do . M r S sa M il l s s . n u , the beloved friend and teacher of so many s 1 2 1 91 2 cousin died at Mills College , Oakland, December , , at - n the age of eighty six . Her ill ess was very short as the trouble was with her heart . By request , the funeral services were very l simple . The floral tributes were beautifu , and the college girls , n n all in white , marched , singing, from the Seminary Hall to Su y ” side , and there the casket , quite hidden in violets , was lowered

- into the flower lined grave .

Dorothy M . Castle

Mr . and Mrs . G . P . Castle

Margaret T . Castle

S . N . Castle i L . T . Chamberla n

Rev . C . A . Clark and wife a Mrs . Lydia B . Co n

T . Munson Coan

Mrs . Harriet Castle Coleman

J . P . Cooke and wife

Douglas A . Cooke

Emily M . Cooke

Fred M . Cooke

Henry B . Cooke

J . P . Cooke Jr .

Maud P . Cooke

Mrs . Lydia S . B . Cox

Mrs . Harriet S . Crawford

S . M . Damon

Mrs . Julia Lyman Day

C . H . Dickey

Walter F . Dillingham R A . . Dole

Arthur W . Emerson

J . S . Emerson

Dr . N . B . Emerson and wife

Rev . Oliver P . Emerson

Mrs . John P . Erdman

W . F . Frear Charles Furneaux

Mrs . Ada J . Gartley

Charles W . Goodale

Mrs . Harriet P . Green

Laura C . Green Hervey Gulick

Dr . John T . Gulick

Rev . Sidney L . Gulick

Rev . Wm . H . Gulick

A . S . Hartwell

Mrs . Mary Tinker Harvey

Mrs . Grace P . Haven 5 3

L . Hopper

Hopper . n Dickson Howard Hustace Hyde ces Gulick Jewett

F . Jones

Susan K ekel a Kelley Luella Andrews Kilbourne Ellen Douglas Kincaid

Lucy L . Conde King Kl u e el C . H . g r F ances S . Loomis

and Mrs . Levi C . Lyman Mr . and Mrs . Malcolm Macintyre

Dr . George H . Martin M c l Caroline E . Ca l M c l k Mrs . Esther C u s ey

Mrs . John N . Mills

Helen S . Norton

Mrs . Mary E . Nott

Jane S . Parke a Christin W . Paulding

Harriet C . Peirce us S an M . Potter

. Mr and Mrs . Harold W. Rice

Mrs . Mary A . Richards

W. E . Rowell S usan A . Searle Helen Severance

Mrs . L . Severance W . O . Smith

Henrietta M . Speer Stan en wal d Mrs . A . M . g z Dr . Mary A . Stol Elnora Stur geon

W . S . Terry U r n Mrs . l ich Thompso

Mrs . Annie H . Tufts r Charlotte L . Tu n er

Mrs . Beulah Logan Tuthill

Mrs . Elizabeth B . Waterhous e

Mrs . Ida W . Waterhouse

Mrs . Ellen A . Weaver Al ice K . West

Rev . W . D . Westervelt and wife An drew C . Westervelt

H . M . Whitney

A . S . Wilcox

Chas . Hart Wilcox

Chas . Henry Wilcox

Mrs . Frances A . Wilcox

Geo . N . Wilcox M rs . May T . Wilcox

Norton E . Wilcox

Mr . and Mrs . R . L . Wilcox

Total receipts

Expenditures .

T . H . Davies Co . loan of crockery for annual meeting and cartage

Palm Ice Cream Parlors , loan teaspoons and lost teaspoons Taxes of Pearl City lot for 1 91 2

Co . . Henry May , tea . , etc , for annual meeting,

‘ ’ G r s r u r e . e y , Ltd , enlarging picture for annual

Envelopes and postage for annual report 850 copies of sixtieth annual report ’ 70 0 treasurer s annual circulars 5 5

2 - cent envelopes for treasurer ’ 1 91 2 - 3 rotary s salary,

“ Total expenditures .

31 1 91 3 ch , , balance on hand

U THE MISSIONARY F ND .

Bond Fund 1 1 91 2 , , balance on hand te e received from W. R . Castle , trus e

for Isabella Hulu

work at Aintab , Turkey I AN MISSION— B I SSI OD work at Nauru Island

ance on hand

FU THE MAINTENANCE ND .

1 1 91 2 l , , balance on hand 30 1 91 2 , , interest, Bank of Hawaii or 3 1 1 91 2 , , interest , Bank of Hawan , Honolulu . 31 1 91 2 December , , interest , Bank of Hawaii , Lihue . ctober 1 1 91 2 interest on Hil R . R . B nd g , , o o

Life Membership Fees .

Charles Jonathan Austin ( 1 s t-5th instalments) Barbara Ethel Baldwin Mina (Prime ) Baldwin ( 2d instalment ) Frances Baldwin (2d instalment ) William Prime Baldwin Mary Louise (Beals ) Bates Esther Nichols (Robson) Bowen Ethelinda ( Schaefer) Castle Al fred Lowrey Castle Jr .

S . Isabelle (Fay er weath er ) Colcord Francis Judd Cooke Maud Perrine Cooke Sybil Cr eh or e Lowell Smith Dill ingham

Rev . John Pinney Erdman l s t Bernhard E . Fernow Jr . ( instalment) Dorothy Beckwith Hair (3 r d-5th instalments ) Harlan Page Ives ( 3d instalmen t ) Elvira Elizabeth (Vaill ) Ives ( 3 d instalment) Joseph Marks Ives ( 3 d instalment) Mary Brainard Ives ( 3d instalment ) Harriet Evelyn Ives ( 3 d instalment) Charles Gulick Ives ( 2d instalment ) Agnes Elizabeth Judd David Stuart Judd Edward Bailey Judd Martha ( Case) Judd (2d instalment) Ella (Dayton) Lyman Francis Al drich Lyman Howard Bertram Lyman Mame (Aldrich ) Lyman Edith Emma Sl og g ett Sc ar e 6th Rev . A . V . s ( instalment) Scar es 6th Mrs . A . V . ( instalment) 2 Henry S . Towsend ( d instalment ) Almeda Elizabeth Townsend (2 d instalment)

Marion B . (Waterhouse ) Wilcox Samuel Wh itney Wilcox Robert M cCl u skey

Total receipts 1 695 Hilo R . R . Bond No .

Balance on hand

LYLE A . D

Audited and found correct .

F . C . ATHERTON ,

- Vice President . 5 7

M EM ORIA L TRUST FUND

N MR . FRA K C . ATHERTON ,

- Vice President of H . M . C . S .

last Annual Report showed (on page 7 5 ) a balance in ” e Accoun t at the Hawaiian Trust Company of and t ies and cash in the savin gs department of th e forming the “ Reserve Account of year you r Trustees purchased for accoun t of

’ Two Thousand Ol aa 6 per cent Bonds at a cost of withdrawing this latter amount from the savings bank

The Reserve’ Fund has been increased during this year by

interest earned . On “ Revenue Account your Trustees have disbursed in care of grounds , painting the Mission Home and services of Mrs .

Andrews . They still have a balance at the Hawaiian Trust Com pany in this account of as shown by the seventh statement herewith submitted .

e R . . CARTER, H CLARENCE . COOKE , A B . . CLARK,

’ Trustees of the Memorial Fund of the Hawaiian Mission Cil dr en s

Society .

Se en h Sta eme t B th T te th M em ia F n d v t t n y e rus es of e or l u .

1 1 91 2 3 1 1 91 3 April , , to March , .

Revenue Account 51 in dividuals contributed

Contribution , box receipts Specific contributions Old balance Disbursements ui Plans for renovation, Chamberlain b lding Care and upkeep of grounds n Pai ting, Old Mission Home n Services of Mrs . A drews

New balance

Reserve Account Received interes t on bonds Received interest on savin gs account Old balance

Disbursement 3 1 91 2 Ol aa April , , purchased bonds

New balance savings account

N w m ar M a ch 31 1 91 3 e Su m y r ,

3 Hila Railway Bonds 2 Ol aa b onds 3 Mutual Telephone bonds Bank of Hawaii savings account

60

C I N TH E WI LLIA M H . GULICK RE EPT O

8 1 91 3 K On March , , the Old Mission ome wore its holiday atti i an The white walls were outlined with v nes , palm branches d d delicate begonias . The large tent in the rear was also decorate b with g reens , flags and flowers , all skilfully and exquisitely done y

Misses Laura Atherton and Cleo Case .

- Wh ile the reception was given in honor of Mr . Wm . H . it was thought well to include in the reception the whole — a family unique family, originally made up of seven brothers exce t ' Ch ar l es one sister , all of whom, p who died in early manh were afterward scattered about the earth as missionaries .

The eldest brother, Halsey, for whom and through whom fou n ded a society was , , missionary to Micr

Spain and China , has gone to his reward , family of children and grandchildren who Thomas died in Africa and Theodore is now Th the Jews of M ilwaukee . e rest were in attendance at this un ion .

- in - The daughters law, also deserve praise , if we may credi remark overheard more than thirty years ag o by one who had u s “ s o n . o a Gulick It was , How remarkable , that all the Guli ” sh ould get such excel lent wives " After the reception committee had introduced guests “ the

M r . . . M R ev . honor ; Wm H Gulick and his sister, iss Julia, ul G ick and his wife , and Dr . John Gulick and his daughter Louise ; all gathered into the tent .

- The Vice President , F . C . Atherton , called the meeting to order,

0 . Rev . . H Gulick led in prayer, and the special guest , Mr . William

Gulick, was called upon to speak .

M R WM GULI CK ’ S REM ARKS . . .

The old adage , Out of Sight , Out of Mind , is surely a true one , and y et we are enabled by using the agencies th at are within our p ower to counteract that lapse of memory which is the result of - T l ong continued absence . hose of us who live far away from home must be dependent upon some very special agency to maintain th e T bond of u nion with th e parent stock . hat has been suppl ied to us by the activity and generosity of the Cousins wh o have stay ed at h b h b th e R ome and y t ose allied to them , y Annual eport ; this has r h m eac ed me regularly for the forty years of y residence in Spain .

61

I t is worthy of all praise that on the part of those residing in the H awaiian I sl ands there should have been sufficient interest to keep m up that report for so long a ti e . I notice that the catalogue last printed shows 9 93 members of our

— Society just about an even thousand . Beyond these has extended a great cloud of witnesses related to the primal thousand, so that um m if some angel, or host of angels, should s mon fro the skies those l who are related to this Society of Cousins to appear in Honolu u, E th e we would see the trains from the ast and from West, and the r fi h wh o b g eat ships of the sea, lled wit those would assem le at the I n m S c . all late years not a few of the have visited us in pain, and th e H these have greatly strengthened bond of union with awaii . I want to bear testimony to the fact that the Gospel which has done so much for Hawaii accomplishes its result wherever its testi l mony is presented to the peopl e . Historica ly Spain is a Christian I nation . remember one of our own number who had his own ideas ; : Wh saying y should we send missionaries to Spain, to the people ” in all the world most saturated with Christianity "I t is true that some of them possess a simple and deep Christian idealism th e pre copts of which are found in their pray er books . I t has been my privilege to often lead th e pray ers at our schools in M adrid and Barcelona and I have read the Scripture passages an d prayers from the breviary of the Spanish Roman Catholic

un . Church , and in it the Gospel truth is fo d However, in Spain h - A and in the Spanis speaking countries of merica, the simple mes of G sage the ospel, in our opinion, is so clouded that in many cases it hardly exists for them . I t has been my privilege to help remove some of this accumulation of tradition and to put the Scriptures in their own beautiful lan m guage into the hands of our Spanish friends, inviting the to read for themselves that upon which their church is nominally based ; and it has been our delight to see the shadows and prejudices pass away an d the joy of th e Gospel enter into the h earts of those who had lived in life long fear . For a long time a large part of those with whom we came in con l tact belonged to the aboring classes, but in the last eight or ten years we have been cheered by the approach of a number of the " fl I n more in uential classes . not a few of these cases it has been in response to the offers of our boarding schools for girls in Madrid T and Barcelona . hey have come in contact with us enough to learn w we w s a fi n d ou t our methods, to see hat do, to hear hat we y , to what manner of people we are, and their opinions have changed greatly , and especially so since th e war with Spain . 62

I m a o we When went to Spain with y young wife forty years g , T went in a polemical mood . here was no need of denying it then nor is there of emphasizing it now ; it was th e Spirit that prevailed R B I w at that time respecting oman Catholics . ( u t am illing to admit and I frankly confess at this moment that during the last ten or fi m fteen years y mind has considerably changed on that subj ect . When a Spanish l ady accompanied by a friend comes into my library to take an informal cu p of tea— a refi ned and gracious lady R h I and a good oman Cat olic, do not feel it necessary to begin a

discussion . But perhaps she will lead to th e subj ect by beginning :

M r . h ow ou th e ou s "I Gulick, do y explain religion that y profe s t I w h seems to me, so far as can understand it, that it the freedom y ou preach there would be am ong y ou as many different religions ” w h as there are persons . So in this kindly and spontaneous ay s e opens up th e whole great question between the Roman Catholic h Church and the Evangelical C ristian Church . I n th e fi n e b Barcelona a lady , mistress of a mansion near y , had h da c l . S e noticed our s hoo had seen the girls every y , she had heard from her neighbors of the beautiful s ocial and school functions held t r e in our gardens and in our halls , and her interes could not be h v . S e strained called and introduced herself, gi ing her name and “ address and almost plaintively said : ‘ I want to ask y ou to explain to me if you can in a simple way wh at makes you difi er en t from ” s th e us . So the principal of the chool takes her over building and shows her everything and expl ains everything . A few days later this lady sends to th e school some twenty tickets to a pleasing enter tain m en t of moving p ictures . N w am I n k h s o , to thi that t e e two ladies are hopelessly beyond th e pale of evangelical salvation becaus e they are both devout Roman Cath olics "I s it not better to fi n d out what th ere is in common be tween u s and not let our differences act as a barrier to a genuine friendship which m ay lead to a mutual understanding on deeper things 2 i I n the M iss on of the American Board in Spain, except on rare occasions , polemical discourses are not encouraged in the regular T w a public meetings . his does not stand in the y of frank discus “ I f an : s ion if this is desired . y one comes and asks What is in ” the way of our getting up a meeting for debating certain questions " “ ” w s we answer : There is n othing in the ay . At such meeting those who come know what is to be th e program and those not in ter ested stay away . I wh o ct b s magine the case of one , attra ed y the inging in one of h the c apels, has lingered and hesitated though evidently longing to 63

enter . At last he musters up courage and slipping within the door fi drops into the rst seat within his reach . Suppose then that in the fi rst Protestant meeting that he has ventured to attend he sh oul d ‘ hear an attack upon the ch areh of his infancy — of his country "Al most inevitably he would be forced into an attitude of defence and into a spirit of combat and that soul would probably be alienated from us and lost to us . I s a So y , in our regular meetings to which the public is invited we draw as much as possible on the sources comm on to both churches and on like beliefs, leaving debated questions for special occasions . An d I s a th e l I here must also y , to the credit of peop e with whom now live and of that country which is now m y home— m y s egu n da atr iot — h I n u p t at it is something wonderful, something can hardly der stan d th e , how the Spanish people have so accepted the results of h T t e . war, to them so deeply painful at time of the disaster here is s et fi n d h no people who e love of country is more intense, y we t at the fl memory of the con ict does not operate as an obstacle between us . I have reasoned it out this way : That the thinking people among th em “ sa ou y of us, Well, we know y did not have anything to do with the ”

ou c . war, so we will not blame y for the action of your ountry But r fi I t at oe not cover t e oun su cient . s it n t more u l ex h d s h g d , f ly o f l y “ ” plained by the fact that the masses in general and the more in tel l i in gent particular, experience a distinct sense of relief in being rid of the rebellious col onies on which so much blood and money has been "F r o spent this reason, perhaps, the sense of loss is consciously or

ou sl y largely mitigated . e than k you for the warm welcome which y ou have given me m I v I is probably y last visit to Hawaii . ha e no idea shall m I n k ou far away from y new home . tha y for all I fift - kindnesses . t does not seem strange to me that y one y ears r v be d have made g eat changes in indi iduals, but it is hard to th at like changes have taken place in myself during these fifty O y et the spirit of th e old days remains the same . nce again ” than k y ou . Dr oh n G ick was The following paper from . J ul read by his M L daughter, iss ouise

A Brief Sket ch of th e Lives of Peter John son Gul ick an d his Chi ldren

The Dutch name Gulick seems to be allied to the German name J l ich u e u . , and the Roman name Juli s In Nideggen , Eifel , in Ger m any, near the border of Belgium and Holland , stands a castle , the a ncestral seat of the Counts and Dukes of Guliche . 64

Not l J far away in Ho land dwelt our ancestor the ohn Gulick,, who migrated to the American coast . “ Ou r father Peter Johnson Gulick and our mother Fanny Thomas 30 1 828 r Gulick arrived in Honolulu, April , . For sixteen years thei fi n field of work was on the Island of Kauai , rst at Waimea and the 1 844 1 846 at Koloa . From to the family home was on Molokai , and after that at Waialua , on Oahu . “ I n N v 1 84 0 th e o ember of , while at Koloa, family of seven sons r th e was to n apart, when the eldest son , Luther Halsey, sailed for

in . States the whaleship William Penn . The one daughter , Julia E fi ve Ann liza, was born nearly y ears later ; so it came to pass that the family were never all together . “ n ar ative That my may gain a little color, I will reproduce few lines presenting some of my memories of those early years .

THE GREAT SPOUTING HORN

M os t en thr allin g of al l wa s th e gr eat s p ou tin g hor n ,

’ Th e mighties t s p ell of m y life s ear l m or n y , A s it s wept thr ou gh m y s ou l with it s thun der in g r olls ,

O n th e coas t , in th e fr in ge of th e s ea wher e th e ca es , v , r om which cam e th e wild s hr iek of th e in comin g waves F , Like a geys er on ru s hin g t o bu r s t fr om it s holes

en th e ee o ow r oar of t h e ou tr o n s u r e Th d p h ll lli g g , t u ver s m r m m Wi h q i o e dis al than gloo i es t dir ge .

M Y E NE ’ E E E N BROTH R BOR OFF O R TH OC A .

W e wen t down to th e s hor e with m br oth er hat d a y t y ,

For t e s a h was o n far a e f r awa . h y id g i g , y

No c ou e e th e s k t a r t v r o n l d v il d y , h t b igh s il e y m r An d th e gr as s hopp er s tr illed their b r ight s on g in th e gr as s

A n d th e heaven s wer e al l blu e like a vau ltin g of glas s ,

A s we cam e to th e s e a th e r eat ou t n n , by g s p i g hor .

Th e wild s ur ge of th e s ea thr ou gh m b ein g h as flowed y ,

Sin ce my br other w en t ofi on that vas t op en r oad

’ was th e s a es t of a s s n ce th d a a n T dd d y i e y I w s b or .

’ I n th e s te n of th e b oat n ea h h is b r oad dr oopin g h at r , t

W hile th e other s r owe d har d i n th e s ter n ther e h e s at , ,

a ar r ll p t b ave s ilen t for lor n . A , , ,

66

5 1 . . his missionary work . On the th of July Mr and Mrs . Snow, Mr and Mrs . Sturgis , and my brother and his wife sailed for Micronesia , w r E. . M . W Clark and myself going ith them , that we might bring back ful l report of the conditions u n dem which they commenced their work . “ After eight years of service on the Island of Ponape , my brother ’ s health and strength being largely exhausted he returned to Hawaii , and afterward to California and the Eastern States , where h e recovered health and served largely as a public speaker on mission work . “ Physicians not approving of any attempt to renew work in 1 864 Micronesia , he returned to Hawaii in January, , and became an important agent of the mission in stirring up the Hawaiian churches ,

t - i i and organizing them in me hods of self support, and in fore gn m s r K u okoa s ion a y work . He became both proprietor and editor of the i which was a source of inspiration for Hawaiian Chr stian workers . “ In 1 87OHalsey Gulick resigned his place in this work and asked the American Board to send him again to some foreign field , ex t o a . pressing preference for Japan They , however, induced him

O . pen a new field in Spain , his brother William going with him “ In 1 87 6 he became the agent of the American Bible Society in 1 881 China and Japan , and in , when the work was divided , he chose 1 889 China as his field, his home being in Shanghai till when failing s health cau ed him to resign , his death coming two years later while i s - n Springfield , Mas , after sixty three years of most strenuous life . “ Th e Sec n d B oth e Orr amel H n ckl e G ick Born Oct 7 o r r, i y ul . , ’ 1 830 Or r mel . My brother a s first missionary service was several years of strenuous work as mate of the Morning Star . He after ward became pastor of the Hawaiian Church at Waiohinu, Kau , on W the Island of Hawaii , here with the aid of his wife a school for 1 865 girls was opened . In they moved with the school to Waialua ,

Oahu , where the teaching of Hawaiian girls in their own language was their work for six years . “ In 1 87 1 they went as missionaries of the American Board to

’ 1 892 fi r . s h i i Japan , where they labored till The t C r s t an newspaper h in Japan was a weekly started by him . W en they came back to n Hawaii they co tinued work for both Japanese and Hawaiians . “ Th e Thi d B oth e J h Th m G o n o as ick Bo n M a ch 1 3 1 832 . r r r, ul , r r , 1 861 In , having completed two years study in Union Theological

Seminary in New York City , I was in great need of a prolonged outing, and decided to go on a shell collecting tour , on the Andes of New Granada , now called Colombia . On reaching Panama I 67 heard that the W hole country to the South was in the turmoil of a revolution . I , therefore , determined to continue my j ourney to Japan in which coun tr y I was hoping some day to fin d work as a , ) 1 862 missionary . I arrived in Japan in April , where I remained l for a year and a ha f, supporting myself as a photographer and a teacher . “ Though it was a period of fierce opposition by some of the lead at ing daimios to the admission of foreigners , resulting in bloody on tacks the foreign legations , and on individuals meeting retinues on the highways , I was desirous of finding permanent work there . e i In correspondenc with the Amer can Board I learned , that owing to a deficiency in their receipts , on account of the Civil War, they a were unable to open work in a new field , but were ready to p poin t me as their missionary to any field in which they already 1 864 a had workers . In , while in Hongkong , I received ppointment to the North China Mission ; and myself and W ife on our passage by sail vessel to our field in the north , had one of the most exciting experiences of our lives ; for our vessel was wrecked on Pratas

Shoals , where no land was in sight , and except for the aid of Chi nese pirates , who took us back to Hongkong , we should have per ish ed 1 864 1 87 5 in the deep . From to our field was in north China . 1 875 1 899 From to my work was in Japan . “ The Fo th B th e Cha e F n n e G l ick B n A i 1 0 ur ro r, rl s i y u , or pr l , 1 834 . Charles, the fourth of the children, died in Glenhaven , N . Y . 1 8 5 4 wh n w a e. in , e about t enty years of g “ Fifth B th e W l i m H ok G k Bo 8 8 5 a o e u c Nov. 1 1 3 ro r, i l r li , rn , . ‘ Sou th A mer i ca After plans for work in that took him to Venezuela , U . . t and the S of Colombia , in the latter par of the sixties , brother William joined with his brother Halsey in opening mission work in ’ 1 87 1 - Spain in the year . In co operation with his wife girl s schools of a higher grade than any before known in Spain , have been car ried on for many years . These institutions are now centered in ’ Barcelona and Madrid . My brother s present furlough comes twen ty - one years since the previous one , at which time he also had the pleasure of coming back to his old home on these islands . “ The Si th B th e Th e do e W e d Gul ck B n M a 8 1 837 x ro r, o r l i , or y , h s w as t h as s m s t thoug commencing profes ional ork a dentis , pent o of his life as a missionary worker . For twenty years he was in

. Japan While teacher in a government school , he secured the ’ establishment of the first student s Y . M . C . A . in the city of Kyoto ; later he became a missionary of the Christian Alliance and after that was in Home Mission work in Pennsylvania and in the West , 68

fi ul . and then in work for the Jews, rst in D uth , Minn , and now in

Milwaukee , Wis . “ The Seven th B oth e Th omas Lafo Gul ick Bo n A ril 1 0 r r, p , r p , 1 839 , was for a number of years associated with his brother Wil s liam in missionary work in Spain , and afterward filled the pas or t t a e at Paia , on Maui , and finally became chaplain of two branches of the Presbyterian Hospital of Philadelphia , the Homes for Con val es cen ts and for Incurables , located at Devon , fifteen miles from the city . “ 1 90 4 Samu e In , while touring with his friend LThomas Alex ander, in eastern Africa , his health broke down and he was obliged to turn back to fin d shelter in the home of a missionary friend at

Kijabe , where he soon died , though carefully attended by a mis r s ion a y physician . “ Our S ste l a A n n E za G l ick Bo n n e 5 1 845 i r, Ju i li u , r Ju , , remain ed with our parents , while her brothers scattered to distant lands .

' In time , however, it became apparent that a change was desirable ; and , with the approval of the American Board , it was arranged

- that our parents who had been in Hawaii for forty eight years , fin d should go to Japan , and with their daughter a retreat in the i r r m l 1 874 O a e . home of the r son in Kobe The move was made in , of 1 877 our parents remaining there till the death father in , at the

1 883 -fi ve age of eighty , and of mother in , at the age of eighty . “ Julia remained in mission work in Japan till 1 90 8 soon after which she came to Honolulu taking up mission work for Japanese , in connection with the Woman ’s Board of Missions of the Central ” Union Church .

M i l G i k ss Ju ia. ul c read the following

REM I NI SCENCES .

My earliest recollection is of watching a ship sail out of the

off n - harbor and i to the great unknown , from some house top in

Honolulu . It was the one which carried John to Oregon for his health . “ Later I remember M other’ s distress wh en she heard that

John had left the friends in Oregon , and started for the California

Gold Mines . There was great rejoicing when he returned after two ’ his years absence , in good health and with money in his pocket for education . “ “ Th e but R v l narrow deep Waialua i er as we ca led it, was 6 9

a joy to the boys but a source of anxiety for Mother . A little boy of the Locke family, who lived there before us , fell into the

u t . river and was drowned , p not missed till hours afterwards So the Gulick boys were required to ask permission when they wanted the fun of making a boat of the rushes which fringed the river brink or the excitement of a plun ge from the fi ft een -foot bank , and a swim in the cool stream . The Hawaiian church which we all attended was across the river about a third of a mile from our home , as a bird flies , but was reached by a detour to the mouth of the river where it could be afforded (near where the Haleiwa Hotel now stands ) which doubled the distance and made horses necessary , until at a late date e a k r the the stream was spanned by a singl pl n , the fore unner of present bridge . “ At church we heard Father Emerson preach to a house full of Hawaiians and Mother Emerson lead the singing with energy un and precision . The Hawaiian yo g ladies , of the choir, produced a sensation one Sunday by al l appearing in p rettily stamped tap a T n b h h ol oku s . capes, made y t emselves, over their calico apa maki g h ct b h was an art not muc pra iced y the younger women, even in t ose days . “ Though the children did not by any means un ders tand all of

- the Hawaiian sermons which they heard , church going habits were established which have lasted through life . “ h at W en all the brothers went away to school Punahou , the monotony of lonely hours was sometimes pleasantly broken by a call, or visit from the Emerson family, our only American neighbors , two of the boys being about my own age ; the one daughter was

u . four years yo nger One day, however , there was war in the camp ; a visitor had said that dolls were ‘little idols ’ and girls were idol worshipers . This insult to both dolls and girls was n ever forgotten . “ In vacations the boys returned and there was great excite m ent , and much romping . Stick horses were in demand u ntil pro motion to the real animal was attained . “ l l But it was not all play even in vacation . On account of i health Father had resigned from the American Board and was sup porting his family by gardening and farming , and the boys helped i n i var ous ways . “ When peanuts were a new cr0 p in these islands seed was , ecured and s a large section of our garden planted with them . They w produced finely and were sold at a good price in to n . A little triangular bit of ground was set aside for Julie Ann , as she was 7 0

then called, the brothers dug it up and helped her plant the peanuts fift -fi ve but did not claim a share in the harvest , which netted y cents , a very large sum for her , more than she had ever had at any one time before . Sunday evening when it was her proud privilege to circulate the family miss ionary box the whole sum was with great satisfaction deposited in the missionar y bank for there were no candy carts , nor toy stores , or moving picture shows in

Waialua in those days to compete with the contribution box . “ Training colts had the double advantage of being both excit ing sport and valuable work, for the colts must be trained to make t ’ hem bring the money needed for boys education . “ I have vivid recollections of seeing William and Thomas seated on rearing, bucking steeds which tried in vain to rid themselves of un their welcome burden . “ When I was seven years old Halsey, whom I had never seen , returned , with his wife , on his way to Micronesia . During the few months of their stay I became acquainted with the first sister I had ever known but only slightly with my brother , who had to renew acquaintance with parents and brothers whom he had not seen since he left for a voyage around Cape Horn at twelve years

i tim ~ . s u of age He instilled missionary ideals nto his brothers , and “ ” effor t lated the Cousins to form a society for Missionary , as well as social and intellectual benefit . After Or r am el arrived at the dignity of being a storekeeper r in Honolulu he retu ned occasionally to the Waialua home , always in the evening when little sister was fast asleep , so it seemed to her e d an d er h a s that he must hav come in the mid le of the night , p p it ‘ l r eaa . was y so But at whatever hour the arrival , there was great rejoicing in the morning . To this day. the delight experienced when a row of ten little glass red birds was discovered on the parlor table , m m Th h er h e r d s s i s is b . t on nodding ba e , d tinctly re e ered en t e was i e on the big brother ’ s shoulder which made her so tall that she could touch the top of the door . “ ’ Th e grandeur of Or r am el and Annie s wedding in th e Ol d School House at an Annual Meeting of the “ Cousin ’ s Society impressed me more than that of any wedding I have since attended . ’ Kitt er ed e Carrie and Sarah Clark were bride s maids , and Charles g ’ Kitt er ed e . ( afterwards Dr . g ) and William Gulick , groom s men These two couples preceded the bridal couple and the proce s sion made a deep impression on my youthful mind . The ladies all wore f w m l s th e ample fluf y hite us in dres es , and bride had a veil, she w l ei of f s s a also ore a ragrant white j es amine and the maids , of papai 7 1

’ " blossoms . And didn t I have a share in stringing the flowers f Which made me a proprietor in the whole grand af air .

REM I NI CENCES O F REV ORRAM E H ULI CK S . L . G .

’ Or r am el s n Rev . recollections carried him back to the fou ding ’ of the Cousin s So ciety in 1 852 which was due primarily to the return of his brother from the States on his mission abroad to r Micronesia . He told of the retu n of his brother Halsey from Amer r ica , with his b ide , all aglow with zeal for mission work . r - Cal ifor He pictured Mr . Asa Thu ston with his broad brimmed

' m u stach e wh o h ad r nia hat and curled up , also just eturned with

- his cousin Warren Goodale . He seemed a real knight errant who

entered into the scheme for the support of our new missionary, drew up the constitution and enlisted the help of others in its suc w as . cess . He made its first president “ ” m l Or r a e . I , said Mr . , had the honor of naming the Society ' As our fathers and mothers in mission meetin gs and elsewhere ‘ ’ ‘ ’ called each other brother and sister, so we , their children , were ‘ ’ ’

n . cousins . He ce the name , Cousin s Society This Society has been the nucleus of the children and grand f am t o children o the missionaries of Hawaii . I glad say that it has had a quiet but an influential part in all the conditions of H a

waii today . It is not desirable that I should go into political dis eussions ; but I can say that the only party that had un ity enough

to keep the peace and assist the natives in forming a Republic , the n t o ly par y that brought peace and held peace , was the missionary

stock , their children and grandchildren . But for them there is no

telling what the bloodshed might have been . The conservative influence of the missionary party in these Q

islands was not confined to Hawaii . Hawaii contributed a vast exhibition of missionary work out of its purpose to educate a heathen s people . It has helped to build up the work of mis ions in China ,

Japan and India . The success of missions in Hawaii was one of iden ces of the triumph of the cross in our wicked and needy Newcomers know little of the facts of the past but live t presence of prosperity, the resul of the work and wisdom of

ast .

s children of the missionaries we have occasion , not to be

but to honor our parents and to respect their memory . I 1dren of the Hawaiian mission have great God that we were children of ‘such worthy 7 2

This delightful meeting closed with the singing of Waft , Waft ” Ye Winds His Story . By request the only livin g ab s ent member of the Gulick family sent a very interesting paper which for want of space has been

greatly shortened .

M IR TH EODORE GU I CK ’ CONTRI BUTI O . L N S .

One of my earliest recollections is of tumbling over the side of one of our coasting schooners , and of one of my brothers catching my dress just in time to save me from plungin g head foremost into the ocean . “ Wh ol d en fourteen years , after quite a severe struggle, grace un triumphed , the peace of God which passeth all derstanding filled ff my soul , and from that hour to the present I have never su ered from doubts . “ I n early manh ood I spent two delightful y ears with brother

Halsey in Micronesia , then later , a year in California , a part of it H aw n in the gold mines with two small companies of a an s . “ ’ N m 5 1 8 67 I N ew Y k ove ber , married in or City , one of nature s — an noble daughters earnest , active , consecrated , Christian woman . When al l th e other sons h ad l eft for mission work in foreign

fields , we spent three years in the Makiki home with my parents and sister , and returned to the States when they removed to Japan . “ ‘ ’ I n 1 87 9 we als o moved to th e Land of th e R i s ing Su n where

I practiced dentistry for about three years , till engaged to teach English in a Government Marine Engineering College near Yoko hama , and also to teach about forty naval doctors evenings . After two and a half years in this college and another in Osaka I moved

a . to Kyoto , with the school , and taught there several ye rs God ’ honored my wife s prayers in behalf of the members of the Y . M .

C . A . who came weekly to our home for their meeting, and led a

ff . . . . Bu alo gentleman to contribute for a Y . M C A property

This has since been added t o and is now the center of Y . M . C . A .

U r . work for the whole nive sity , of some five thousand students “ f 1 r h l h s A te teachingb in gove nment sc oo s seven or eig t y ear , and of a ao having charge the Christian Alli nce Mission four years , on ’

of W a . count my ife s failing he lth , we returned to the States Five years later the Lord promoted my beloved Agnes . “ Since her departure I h ave s erved H ome M issionary church es in Minnesota six years , and more than four years have been given ’ to direct work for God s chosen people , the Jews ; in Duluth and

74

the old road from Waialua to Honolulu , over which I had not I ridden a hundred times , had never before been at Waianae . “ W h m w it all y ild riding and mountaineering , Waianae was to me n h as distant , u known and beyond reac , as the Balkan Peninsula n th e l as t So . has been u til , few months to most Europeans imagine e the surprise and delight , as in this newly discov red country we s rode through endless fields of sugar cane and sisal , and fea ted our eyes on the grand and beautiful scenery that opened before us as ’ we rou nded Barber s Point — the Ultima Thule of my youthful dreams— and along the iron -boun d coast against which the ever s l restless sea beat , and the solemn va leys veiled in silence and t u s mists stretching back into the hear of the mo ntain . “ Wh en we turned th e point of K aen a and moved directly east ward toward K awaih ap ai my heart leaped as there suddenly bur st upon my view the glorious old mountains of Mokuleia deeply cut an d by the numerous valleys that pierce their hearts , that open out upon the s preading plains on which on horseback I spent so much s of my youthful year . Indeed they were the salvation of a boy h is who was always , in health , the weekly one among fellows , the

result being that all the vacations from school at Punahou, and

sometimes entire terms , were spent on horseback ranging up and down that glorious stretch of land boun ded by the cloud- capped hills on one side and the bursting breakers of the great sea on the e other . Alas "the pen can not describe the beauti s and the glori es of these wonderful scenes— the inspiration of the high hills and the solemn awe of the ceaseless breaking of the ocean rollers upon the e ext nded coast . Perhaps it is worth while to have been expatriated ’ for a term of forty or fifty years to experience on return to one s natal shores the thrilling shock the uplift and the unspeakable j oy as one gazes again on these wonderful pictures of sea and land a n d sky that abound in our delightful islands . “ Twenty- fi v e of us sat down at the delicately decorated and neatly spread table presided over by our generous and genial

hostess . It was the subj ect of some comment amongst us that among

- fi ve ff s these twenty , nine di erent mi sionary families were represent ed and that seven descendants were seated side by side of the third company of missionaries that arrived at the Hawaiian Islands in 1 828 the ship Parthian , in March , . “ After the luncheon we strolled out to the site of the premises

owned and occupied by the family of the Rev . J . S . Emerson for so m any years , and which I believe are still in the possession of the

family . A smaller company crossed the stream and visited the

ruins of the house for many years occupied by the Rev . P . J . Gulick 7 5

ur and his family . The wide premises s rounding this house and extending up the valley are now under the cultivation of the Wai alua plantation . It is to this spot that from my distant home in h Spain, and whenever I t ink of the abode of my childhood and youth , my heart turns with joy and intense longing . “ Every day must have it ending , and s this delightful excur s o , sion came to its close with no incidents to mar the pleasure of every one of the little company that for so many hou rs had en joyed the gracious hospitality of Mr . and Mrs . Dillingham . TH E A RM STRONG M EM ORIA L

The Civic Federation of Honolulu in 1 90 6 proposed a plan to

erect, at Punahou , a memorial to General Samuel Chapman Arm

strong, and appointed an Armstrong Memorial committee . This committee selected as the memorial a portrait bas relief in br on z , the work of an English artist , A . Bertram Pegram , which

is a replica of one in marble at Hampton Institute . The funds were contributed mostly by schoolmates of General Armstrong ,

and their descendants . The Memorial will be placed permanently

in the corridor of Pauahi Hall .

The dedication of the Armstrong Memorial at Pun ahou took

30 1 91 3 i - place on January , , that be ng the seventy fourth birthday

of General Armstrong . The exercises were held at the entrance

to Pauahi Hall . The speakers sat at the foot of the steps , and the

Oahu College glee clubs seated on the right - hand terrace sang ” “ ” u r Armstrong and The Song of the Armstrong Leag e , du ing

the program . At the left sat Mary Claire Weaver and Ida Eleanor

u n Weaver , grand nieces of General Armstrong , who afterward

veiled the Memorial , and a company of little girls in white , descend

ants of the missionaries , who draped the tablet with wreaths of ff green tied with the college colors , bu and blue . Towering in the background was Pauahi Hall, solid as the hills with its blue basaltic

rock covered with Hawaiian ivy . In front was the audience , gray

haired men and women , playmates and schoolmates of General

Armstrong, some natives amid the fairer faces ; while the children

and grandchildren of his friends , students at Oahu College made a

' fringe of youth and beauty that shut them off from the broad expanse of emerald campus with its royal palms and feathery

algaroba .

Judge Sanford B . Dole , chairman of the executive committee ,

- and life long friend of General Armstrong, presided . Following 7 7

the opening hymn by Oahu College glee clubs , and prayer by Rev

0 . H . Gulick , Judge Dole called upon Rev . W . H . Gulick to give

reminiscences . He spoke in part , as follows

J AM UEL ARM TRONG AT UNAH U S S P O .

“ i“ To those of us who were boys and girls together with

Sam Armstrong the campus on which we are gathered , and the u rooms of old College Hall , the only remaining b ilding I believe

of the olden time , are full of memories and of voices . Out— of- door life had a large place in the development of the

bodies and minds of the young people in this school . In all of the games and frolics Sam Armstrong took the natural part of a healthy

-of- and active boy that he was . There was the tug war, an exciting sport if “ Baseball, played under the good old rules that allowed of the

participation in every game , of all the older boys , was a favorite of game . The schol arly Father Dole , early p rincipal

the school , in his day was a great batter . He would throw a ball

into the air, and as it fell, with a swing of the whole body , would

hit it with the report of a pistol , sending it straight up into the

air almost out of sight . “ Foot racing was much in vogue . Through Sam Armstrong,

$3, Frank Judd , Sam Alexander, Thomas Gulick , Nat Emerson , myself

and others were , in those days in the younger set , we emulated the

" h e ’ wil l fast running of some of the older boys . Perhaps have for it gotten by this time , but William Dewitte Alexander , later dis tin u is h ed g senior and high honor man of Yale , and president of r e Oahu College , was the fleet runner of his set . Perhaps he will member that once when sprinting on the road if he threw tr his right hip out of joint . Father Rice had to carry him into the

house , and Dr . Judd was called to set the joint . This made him

our hero , and Sam Armstrong and the other small boys often dis cussed how we could dislocate our hips while racing before the

admiring school . “ out— Horseback riding . The custom was to sally ten , fifteen ,

twenty of us , almost every Friday evening , and on occasional Sat u r da s y on longer rides , boys and girls in about equal numbers , all

good riders , not to say hard riders . Here was sport worthy of the “ ” him name . But I must not mount the horse now , as I love so m uch and love the theme so much , I fear that with the bit in his teeth with headlong speed he would carry me far beyond the time

, i l mits set for us this afternoon . Only I must say that in all the 7 8 story of man I do not believe there was ever another such a com munity the boys and girls playing and riding and studying together in such unrestricted freedom and in such perfect companionship , and with such good results . The words cha peron and duenna were unknown to us . “ Who of that time could ever forget our Friday afternoons "The gala day of the school . It was the time set apart for declamations and dialogues and the reading of compositions . The boys and girls ’ dressed in their Sunday s best , and the older people who came out from town to witness the performances , equally recognizing the s olemnity of the day . “ n It was on one of these occasions that Mr . Beckwith first e cou r ag ed the young orators to avoid pieces from Cicero and Demos thones and the like , and to try our own wings on original speeches , not committed to memory . Right here and then , on the platform of Old College Hall , Samuel Armstrong commenced his definite training for the great enterprise in which his life culminated and which involved so much speaking . “ In this connection mention should be made of the Debating So ci t e y . Once a month a public debate was held . We boldly dis “ ” “ cussed such subj ects as Church and State , Taxation , Direct or I ” “ ” ndirect , Slavery and the like . I well remember that when the r es id latter subj ect was to be debated , Samuel Armstrong was the p f ing o ficer . Somehow it happened that I was placed among the pro - slavery champions ; probably because it was well known that n o my youthful pri ciples were on the other side . My eloquent p

on en ts . p read up on Henry Ward Beecher , Dr George Cheever ,

William Lloyd Garrison , Wendell Philipps and Theodore Parker . v My resources were reduced to the Bible and the New York Obser er . After the debate Sam Armstrong remarked that when I was orating one white handkerchief dangled from my coattail pocket , while with another I wiped my fevered brow— suggesting unlimited h an dker reserves , and that nobody could resist such a battery of chiefs . My father , a convinced abolitionist , deeply pained , said B el i el in s that my speech reminded him of , who one of the council “ r ecid ed in hell p over by Satan , as described by Milton in Paradise ” Lost made the worse appear the better reason . Incredible as it may seem there were some in the audience from whom I received ’ sincere praise . Sam Armstrong s ironic remarks presaged the active public part that some day he would take on th is burning question . “ In long vacations , excursions to the neighboring islands helped

in in our education , and cementing the bonds of youthful friend r of ship . Once Armstrong and myself found ou selves the g uests 7 9

Father Green , at Makawao , whose isolated home under the moun

tain mists was enlivened by the cheery greeting of the ever youthful ,

coy and sprightly Mary Green . w One day , with a Ha aiian guide , we started up the side of Hale

akala . We went down into the crater and walked toward the cleft

in the rim from which could be seen the Island of Hawaii . Night

came while we were in the depths of the crater. The guide led us to a place where we could make a bed of grass under the shelter of

some shrubs . Within a few feet , a little to the side of the trail , he ’

n . poi ted out a stone , somewhat smaller than a man s hat He lifted up the stone disclosing a hole in the ground . In a nich of the rocks near by he found hidden away from sight a broken coco anut shell .

With this in hand , lying flat upon the ground and reaching down ’ into the hole at arm s length , we brought up the rustling cup drip ping full with the coolest , sweetest water that we ever drank . This , with sweet potato and baked taro gave us an evening meal that n either of us ever forgot . “ The next night we spent at Kaupo at the foot of the gap on the 0 shore , and the following day we reached Hana . The Rev . W . . r Baldwin and Mrs . Baldwin , missionaries somewhat recently ar ived , were showing the strain of that lonely life in that remote station .

Mr . Baldwin naturally perhaps , requisitioned our presence and help t I r r o a the meeting the next morning in the Hawaiian church . es p n sible youngsters that we were , we tried to squirm out of the com

A r m q promise , but we had to yield . I do not remember what Sam strong said but I have no doubt that it was vigorous and to the un point . Good fort e brought to my memory snatches of a sermon that I had once heard Sam ’s father preach to a congregation of ‘ entranced Hawaiians : Didst thou ever see a cat walking on the

‘ " ti o s l s u r el ridge p le f a h use H w steadily cau u y y , it treads o o "o o , , the narrow path Neither hastened by noises , nor enticed by calls to turn to one side or the other it keeps straight on to the end . So ’ a Christian should walk through this life . This was perhaps one of the first series of steps that eventually brought our friend into close contact with Hawaiians and into a position of large public influence among them . It can hardly be doubted that this experience of the mind and soul of a different m effi race fro his own , materially helped him to understand and cien tl y aid in the uplift of the other race with which later he h e “ came so deeply identified . He quickly learned the language of the country to understand the inarticulated wants of their hearts , the longing of their souls . And to this , undoubtedly , was l argely due the secret of his power over them . 8 0

The language of the country ; the soul of the race "Can it be d r enied that General Armstrong as but few othe s of his time , came i s r el ation shi with nto thi sing ular and potent p a the recently eman cip at ed p eople of our land "That he was accepted by them as a

brother and leader , not only as the captain of their armed hosts in battle array but as their teacher and master in the gentle arts of peace "Armstrong had caught the spirit of the brave Hawaiian

K al aimoku t warrior , , who , as recorded by Miss Mary Charlot e

Alexander , on the eve of j oining battle with the forces risen in ‘ rebellion against Kamehameha II . , addressed his soldiers Be l i va en t . calm , be voiceless , be Drink of the bitter waters , my sons . Turn not back "Onward "”

and — In closing , I would be disloyal to our friend comrade to h is his birth , his boyhood , his young manhood and manly life if I

did not call attention to the confessed source of strength . Was it talents or accident r s cial connections r g vernmental p r ot ec ", , o o o o tion General Armstrong may have had all of these , but he would have been the first to say that the secret was not in them Those who have read the “ Memoranda found when his will was i“ opened , will have noticed the frank admission that he ‘ had seized upon and used in his own behalf , the greatest thing in ’ the world , prayer . Prayer, that means belief in God , belief in Divine and dominating power that controls our destinies and shapes

our way ; prayer that moves the arm that moves the universe .

‘ “ ’ In the house of the sun , in the crater of Haleakala , the youth , n Samuel Armstrong , stretched upon the ground , reached dow into

the cleft of the rock from which he drew a draught of the sweetest , coolest water that had ever gathered in the seams of the eternal mountain . But , later , General Armstrong drew strength for his ‘ mighty task from the pure river of water of life , clear as crystal , ’ proceeding out of the throne of God and of the Lamb .

A RI BU T TE.

By Emma L . Dillingham .

r A royal he itage was thine , n A soul imbued with love divi e , A heart that throbbed with sympathy l A ife for service through eternity .

8 2

D th e afi air s of the kingdom . uring this time , also , he became ‘ ’

an d in . editor of the Hae Hawaii , and his energy ability this cause is evidenced by the fact that the subscription list more than c doubled during his incumbency . “ 1 860 R In September, , ichard Armstrong, his father , died , and

feeling that he could not help the family by remaining , and earn ’ es tl y desiring to fulfil his father s life -long wish that he should

become a pupil of Mark Hopkins , he left in the latter part of Sep tember of that year and entered the junior class at Williams Col

; lege . His career as a college student, in the army and otherwise

will be recited by abler tongues than mine . 1 880 In General Armstrong returned to the islands for a visit , 1 891 to renew former acquaintances , and for his health . In , having accepted the appointment to deliver the leading address at th e

jubilee of Oahu College , he again returned to the islands and spent m 1 893 in a few onths among us . His death occurred in the fall of ” the . m . o h is Mr Castle then spoke f the man himself, parentage , fro which he inherited grand and noble qualities ; and his environ s aw ment . With his strong and impressionable nature , what he

and heard and did marked itself in strong lines upon his chars

acter . Thrown in constant touch with a people who were simple

and ignorant , the relationship developed strong paternal instincts , and his attitude toward the Hawaiians was always that of a pro t ectin g and guiding influence . Armstrong was not only of a deep religious nature but was a ’ s deep thinker . To illustrate this , Mr . Castle read from Armstrong ’ closing address before the Hawaiian Mission Children s meeting,

when president of that society at the age of nineteen . This address . 1 858 may be found in the Annual Report of .

’ Armstrong s mind was always active ; his aspirations and de

sires ever upward . He was an extremely unselfish man , and as of he continually developed , particularly after the establishment

the Hampton School, he was filled with questionings as to the effe ct upon simple races— those who need protection an d good in flu en ces — of h t e life which today dominates the United States .

Mr . Castle then quoted from the inspiring address delivered 1 891 at the Punahou Jubilee meeting in . Speaking of the past ,

Mr . Armstrong said : “ It is high time that the recollections of that period were writ s ten by one of the then big boys ; there is infinite humor and interest if in it all . Those were days of simple things , of severe dis 83

ci l in e of pecul iar experience too rich and rare to lose . We p ,

. s tudied hard , we played hard , and we thought earnestly The ” it battle of life is often won at school . i im Of the fate of Hawai he said , How the people live is as 1 850 p ortant as what they know or do . In , when they had been pronounced christianized by the American Board , some m having been gathered into the churches , I accompanied y father, s then Minister of Public Instruction , on one of his inspection tour a round the islands , and found them living in pretty much the old

— i w ay n grass houses without partitions , quite well clothed , with m inimum of household furniture and of home regularity, always charmingly hospitable . There was no struggle for life . Slight ‘ d aily effor t s u fii ced for existence . All were happy and careless of d 1 880 the future . When I again made the tour of the islan s , in , the grass cabin was the exception ; the partition frame house was the rule ; but there was not a corresponding change in personal h abits . There had been an advance , however , and the compara tivel y refined clas of gentle manners and decent ways of living, h a d appeared . There was a marked growth of industrial life . From the needs of and the good wages offered by the sugar plan t ation s e this increased activity was most wholesom and helpful , b u t it has been at the expense of home life . The comfortable cabins p rovided are not their own , and the man is part of a great machine .

In this as in every country, the future is safe and sure only as the educated and rich shall act out the principle expressed in “ noblesse ” o blige . There is no place in modern civilization for an idle class . I t is as dangerous as the lowest class . There is no salvation for those who do not work . You will get what you work for . But d o not complain if you do not get other things that make home and

ou . country safer and better , unless y work for them San ctifi ed and common sense is the force that wins . Work for God man is full of detail . It needs organization and that requires sub , o i f i“ . rdination God helps those who help themselves . The power to think clear and straight comes from proper training , but

- is most successful when that training is obtained from self help , w n ’ hich u derlies the best work of all men . Our father s homes were plain and we were brought up on small allowances . Thank heaven or " f that simple life It is not for us all to live so plainly now .

The comparative luxury today is legitimate ; for it is honest , at no n ecessary sacrifice of any obligation . But we must think and work ’ for Hawaii , for God and country wherever we are . Of our father s , W e may say it is for us to finish the work which they so nobly be 84

gan , as Lincoln said in the presence of the dead at Gettysburg . ”i “ : Mr . Castle closed his address by saying We honor

Armstrong, not only because he was a great man and a Hawaiian , but because that what he did , and what his life means is well worthy of our emulation , and whenever we look at this beautiful memorial we should be filled with the spirit that animated General ” s Arm trong in his great life .

SAM UEL ARM STRONG— T DE T A R S U N ND SOLDI E .

Dr . N . B . Emerson , after reading a letter of greeting from Wil liams College to Oahu College and a beautiful tribute to Gen er al

Armstrong from his Alma Mater, spoke in part , as follows “ For — o r my part , though I knew Armstrong well thought I

— did as a fellow student at Punahou , at Williams College , and dur ing his presidency of the Hampton Institute I fin d it very difficul t to express in words the many versatile phases and tumul tuous s u r

f efi or t s . prises o his character and actions . The to do this remind ‘ me of the poets attempt to answer the question : How does the water come down at Lodore "’ I have the satisfaction that has ’ grown with the study of Armstrong s character and career that , whether in the tossing spray and bubbling efi er ves cen ce of th e ’ n youthful rivulet , or in young manhood s rushi g torrent , or in the strong river current of full maturity the element that made up h is life current was at all times pure and wholesome . “ For such a man as Armstrong , after Punahou School , the Royal. School and Oahu Col l eg e / u n der the inspiring teaching of Edward n ff Beckwith , Williams College , presided over by Dr . Hopki s , a orded , u as it now seems to me , conditions almost ideal for the building p

‘ of his character, the furnishing of the mind , and the ripening of all his faculties for the great work that Providence had in store f r o him . “ Armstrong ’s coming to Williams had the nature of an inva ‘ : sion . One of his classmates wrote of it in these words It was , I 1 860 think , in the winter of , when I was rooming in East College , of at Williams , that into my introspective life nature flung a sort cataclasm named Sam Armstrong, like other cyclones from the

South Seas ; a Sandwich Islander , a son of a missionary There w as a quality in him that defied the ordinary English vocab T e e do ulary . o use the eastern Ten n s e dialect which alone could ” ‘ s r i or ou s . a him justice he was plumb s u v g To begin with , Mark ‘

Twain might express it , he had been fortunate in the selection of of his parents . The roots of his nature struck deep into the soil 8 5

" his con s titu two races . Then , too , he was an islander ; tion smacked of the seas . There was about him something of the high courage and jollity of the tar ; he carried with him the vital l l . a ities of the ocean Like those South Sea Islanders , he had been brought up to the water ; it had imparted to him a sort of mental as well as physical amphibiousness . It seemed natural for him to strike out in any element . He could manage a boat in a storm , teach school , edit a newspaper , assist in carrying on a gov er n men t , take up a mechanical industry at will , understand the natives , sympathize with missionaries , talk with profound theorists , k h recite well in Gree and mat ematics , conduct an advanced class ' i“ if i“ in geometry , and make an end of fun for little children . Sometimes he seemed to have little respect for the spiritual ; he shocked people by his irreverence and levity . Yet there was about

' him at all times a profound reverence of spirit , of God , manhood , womanhood , and all sacred realities . He was the most strenuous man I ever saw . Naturally he was a problem to u s ‘ : what would he come to . Dr . Arnold said of himself Aut Caesar, ’ ‘ ’

. : aut nullus Armstrong said of himself Missionary or pirate . “ On of graduation , to Armstrong was assigned the honor the ethical oration . As he neared the end of college life he felt that he w ‘ ’ must ans er the question pirate or missionary . The air was alive with voices calling here and there . The country was in the throes of a life and death struggle ; there was war in the land . Armstrong felt like the captain of a ship leaving port under sealed orders . i“ it The call to arms was however, the one that sounded loudest in his ears . Armstrong became a soldier because he was f s tu fi of the that makes a patriot . When stirred by the burning words of Major Anderson at a great patriotic meeting in ‘ : New York , he wrote home I shall go to the war if I am needed , but not till then ; were I an American as I am a Hawaiian , I should ’ ofl be in a hurry . “ Armstrong was quite willing to take a place in the ranks , but a suggestion from a classmate opened up a better way . He went to Y Troy, N . . , and though a stranger , started to enlist a company for the One Hundred an d Twenty-fifth New York Regiment of

Volunteers , and he made a success of it . The character that shone in his face and manner attracted the better class of men so that his ‘ ’ company came to be called the Sunday School Company . “ With the assistance of his Colonel , he girded himself to the task of acquiring the essential knowledge of soldiering and tactics . During his entire military career Armstrong continued to be a diligent student of military art and science . While drilling and 8 6

fi r s t— organizing his company, from the and this was a principle that he adhered to at all times he made it a point to gain and d keep friendly relations with the men of his comman , in a word , ’“ to be a sort of father to them . f “ 2 1 862 September , , found Captain Armstrong with his regiment at Martinsburg, Virginia , one of the most exposed points of the

Federal lines . The situation may be summed up in one word ; it ’ ‘ was the time of Lee s darin g invasion of Maryland ; Stonewall

Jackson was at the front ; the air was full of discomforting alarms . Armstrong found himself and his command bottled up at Harper ’s F fi r erry, and thus it came about that his st experience of war was r that of being taken prisone with his whole command. The fact that men of war besides himself shared his fate , did not alleviate the unpleasantness . “ With the opening of the Gettysburg campaign fortune came to ’ Armstrong s relief , and with it his first opportunity for military n distinction . On the third day of that great battle , Armstrong fou d th e ~ l eft himself, at a supreme moment , on flank of the force that ’ made up P1 ckett s memorable charge . His quick mind took in the situation at a glance . Collecting all the men he could muster, he

- - led them on the double quick and posted them behind a rail fence . The deadly volleys he could thus pour into the enemies flank were a service that contributed in no small degree to the success of the U ffi nion arms on that day . Of the five o cers with him he was the only survivor .

As a natural consequence of this brilliant action , Armstrong was promoted to the rank of major , and thereupon was detailed to r be engage in the work of rec uiting , the center of his operations T ing New York . But his ambition looked higher . here had been talk of raising a negro regiment to be put under his command ; but the State authorities were opposed to it , and nothing came of it . The idea of giving the colored man a chance to work out his own salvation and prove his manhood , took deep root in Arm ’ strong s mind . With that purpose he passed examinations which entitled him to a colonelcy of colored troops . It had been deter

— — mined wisely that only men of character , education and deter mination should be chosen for the command of negro troops . It i e was not a fashionable serv ce , and the Confederat Congress had virtually declared that ‘no quarter was to be given to nigger offi ’ fers . Such a threat did not phase Armstrong . “ 1 863 December , found Armstrong at Benedict , a little town , in southern Maryland , in command of nine companies of the Ninth ‘ ’ ‘

R U S. egiment , . , colored troops ; a horrid hole , he writes , a ren 87

zvou - de s for blockade runners , deserters and such trash ; good for ’

. t nothing but oysters There was good , however , o come out of Benedict ; one good thing was a night-school and an extemporaneous a s . college , with Armstrong president “ -of- - The next move was to Hilton Head , an out the way place

in South Carolina . A sore trial , this to Armstrong, whose ambition

- was to be where there was something a doing . Relief from this

stagnation came in August . At Petersburg, with Grant in command ,

there could be no cause for complaint on the score of nothing doing . ‘ ’ The question was : would the colored man make good "He made ’ ‘ — good under Armstrong s leading . Listen : There is a bloody as ’ saul t on the enemy s works— we took the r ifle-pits ; for fifteen min

utes or more we had it hot and heavy . My men fell fast , but never i h d i“ it fl n c e . . They fired coolly and won great praise Finally however , the rebs flanked us on the left and forced us out . It was an d impossible to hold the position , I ordered them to walk , and un they did so the whole distance , shot at by the seen enemy as they went , and having to climb over fallen trees and go through rough ’ n i grou d . Dur ng his enforced absence in the hospital at Fort Mon roe , his regiment was sent to do an impossible piece of work , out of which they came with sadly thinned ranks . “ f ’ A ter Lee s surrender at Appomattox , Armstrong , who was present and active to the last , was brevetted brigadier general of n i volu teers ; but he continued to wear the eagles of a colonel , say ng, ‘ ’ ’ I guess I ll stick to the old birds . “ 30 His brigade was ordered to Texas , May , to give aid and countenance to the republicans of Mexico , in view of the French invasion of that country ; and in Texas he remained until his dis h 1 865 - c arge from the army came in October , , and set him foot free - e and heart free , r ady for any call of duty . And thus ended his experience as a soldier .

Let my last word h e an attempt to analyze briefly the qualities that lifted Armstrong out of the ordinar y rut of military perform

— — ance and made him a splendid I would almost say a great soldier .

In the first place , Armstrong had rare personal courage , of the kind that disregards personal safety , yet does not lose consciousness of danger . Akin to this gift of courage , he had that fine quality that makes democratic appeal to every heart and which we call magnetism . It was the combination of these two qualities that made Armstrong a superb leader , the leader of his men ; and he never cal led on them to face any danger to which he himself th ’ was not equally exposed . At e siege of Petersburg , Armstrong s 8 8 tent was in open view of the enemies batteries ; his men were shelt

- ered in bomb proofs .

As a soldier , Armstrong owed not a little to his possession of - min df T u a keen , well trained , mathematical ho gh not accounted a logician he was a good reasoner and could hold his own in debate . In Armstrong the mental connection between perception and action was short and the response s o p r ompt an d transmitted with such speed as almost to vie with electricity . “ f c A very capable Prussian o fi er who was a general in our army, ‘ : e seeing Colonel Armstrong handle his regiment , exclaimed Ther ’ is a man "I would trust him anywhere— but he will soon get killed "

— He did not get killed God had a work for him to do at Hampton . ” That is a story another will tell .

0 11 After the address of Dr . Emerson , there followed an to ” Lim ikaika Dr N B Em er a . . s on (Armstrong) written by . and chant K ih i an . . a en u . ed with touching pathos by aged Hawaiian , J P p A letter of greeting to Oahu College and tribute of love to H on 0 General Armstrong from Hampton Institute was read by . . A C ttr il . o l, after which came the closing address . We have tried to string together some of the pearls from the precedi ng discourses enough to follow the life of this honored cousin through child hood , youth and young manhood , but when we come to his greatest ‘ work as told by C . A . Cottrill in his address Armstrong and Hamp ’ ‘ ’ n ton , we feel unequal to the task . Hampto Institute is a large subj ect, and Hampton Institute as it was inspired in the brain of

General Armstrong, and worked out year by year and step by step by this versatile , strenuous , optimistic son of Hawaii , would be a l wonderfu theme in the hands of any orator ; but coming as it did , bubbling from the heart of one of that race for whom Armstrong created Hampton , the plain facts and encomiums on the printed page fail to express the torrent of gratitude , esteem , love and respect poured out in this tribute to General Armstrong . “ Among his last words were these

To Hampton Institute and its great influence for good , and to l the splendid character, lofty ideals and tireless work of Genera Armstrong may be credited a large share of real advan ceem en t of the colored race . “ In these ceremonies we are honoring the memory of one of the ’ e world s greatest men . General Samuel C . Armstrong was a tru disciple of Christian social service— a true fri end of struggling and s unfortunate humanity . His sympathies were ever with , and labor

n . always for, the races further dow

90

LI FE M EM BERS OF TH E H AWAI I AN M I SSI ON

CH I LDREN ’ S SOCI ETY 1 91 1 , .

SY M BOLS I N TH E LI ST OF M EM BERS.

m m s of th e c e h e c l d e m s Original e ber So iety , wh t r hi r n of i sion a es or m s h a e h n m n d in th e l man ri elect ember , v t eir a es pri te usua n er Th e e r ch r r e de b n e n d s e . a e d o s a names of th i ild en pr ce y tar, tho ’ of e children s childr n by two stars . m l mar In many cases the name is preceded by a sy bo in the g in , ’ which denotes the person s missionary parentage or ancestry ; an d th e s s a key to the symbols is the li t below , in which the mi sion ry n ar e ames given , but no titles .

le an r o . P. x e D . T . n e L on s W A d C d , Ly

n r ews A . S. oo e J. D . Par is L . A d C k

W . Par er An r ews 8 . C . amon B . k 8 . L . d D

S . . ice n ews . ibble W H R C . B . A dr D

n . ic ar s r m s t on H . imo d W R h d R . A r g D

o e E . H . Rogers E aile . l . B y D D owe mer s on G . B . R ll S . E J. D . Baldwin 5 3 11 19 8 or es 8 8 C . F b W. 0 . Baldwin S man W . C . hip J. S. G reen H . Bin gham Smit ul c L . h P. J. G i k . is A B hop m t . S i J. W h E . all . 0 H

E . B on d C . S . Stewar t H . R . Hitchcock N as tle 8 . . C . u r s ton M . e C . Hyd A Th am er la n . Ch b i n er D M ves R . i k . I T am er lain . Ch b E W S . Van uzce Jo n s on . L . h D

. a n e Ch pi C . H . W etmor A G . P. Ju dd

E ar . h tn e . . K in n e S i W Cl k H . y W y

man . cox oan . . i T . C D B Ly A W l

NAM ES AND ADDRESSES.

N Y . 82 St . . Adams Rev . John Q uincy North , Auburn , ,

. Adams , Clara ( Southgate ) , Mrs . J . Q

82 . . North St Auburn , N Y

F . . . Aiken , Jennie (Wills) , Mrs . S Fall River, Mass * A O M M iken, Worth sburn akawao , aui a” iken . . . i C3 A , Helen M . ( Chamberlain) , Mrs W O Makawao , Mau 9 1

‘ Alexander, William Douglas Phoenix , Ariz . ‘ Alexander , Arthur Chambers 0 5 ’ 7 32 . . 0 . Judd B ldg , P Box , Honolulu "‘ n Alexander . Mary (Hillebra d ) , Mrs . A . C .

Jones and Parker Sts . , Honolulu “

U . Alexander, William Patterson Yale niversity , Conn “ n Alexander, Helen Co stance Honolulu “ Alexander, Arthur De Witt Honolulu M ‘ Al exan d er , Herman Hillebrand Honolulu “ Alexander , Mary Douglas Honolulu ”‘ 1 5 0 8 n St . Alexander, Mary Charlotte Pu ahou , Honolulu ”‘ A 1 50 t 8 S . Alexander , gnes Baldwin Punahou , Honolulu

Alexander , Mary E . (Webster ) , Mrs . J . M . 3 1 6 . Warwick Ave . , Oakland , Cal f Al exan der t i , Frank Alvan El e , Kaua * K Alexander, Pearl (Swan) Mrs . F . A . Eleele , auai ”“ 61 l 3 a . Alexander , Mary Edith Warwick Ave . , Oakland , C ”“ Alexander , Edgar William , M . D . n Shreve Bldg , San Fra cisco , Cal .

Alexander , Martha E . ( Cooke) Mrs . S . T .

92 . v Ave . Sea iew , Piedmont, Cal * 0 0 6 t n . n 1 1 6 h t . Alexa der , Juliette W . S , Oakla d , Cal * Alexander , Annie Montgomery

92 v Ave. . Sea iew , Piedmont, Cal it“ Al exan d er M cKin n e , Wallace y i l . A exander Baldwin , San Franc sco , Cal ii Al exan er d . . . , Mary (Barker ) Mrs W M

Uni n an in Ave . ie mont a . " o d K g , P d , C l r Alexander . Martha Barke

U n Ave. . nion and Ki g , Piedmont, Cal AI Alexander , Mary Jane

Cal . 92 . Seaview Ave , Piedmont,

Helen G . (Thurston ) , Mrs . C . H .

2268 Nuuanu Ave . , Honolulu * Cc . . Alexander , Charles Frederic Garibaldi , Tillamook , Or * er n 2268 . Alexand . Helen A drews Nuuanu Ave , Honolulu

A . c o . . . . Alexander , Mary E . | Y W C , Detroit , Mich

n A l s ab ei M rs . . . drade , (Ferreira ) , J S

21 1 . n . Second Ave , Hu tsville , Ala 7 0 7 l Andrews , Robert Wilson Wyllie St Honolu u

Andrews , Maria ( Sheeley) , Mrs . R . W .

70 7 St . u Wyllie , Honolul ‘ l 7 43 St . Andrews , Carl Bowers Wyllie , Honolu u 92

*

n . M r s . A drews , Laura A (Merrill) , C . B . 743 t H on l S . o Wyllie , An s m 367 r . n drew , Willia G and Ave , Brookly , N . Y . r e W s Os can n M r s . a . And ew , Adel ( y ) , 3 6 r A e d v . 7 a n . G n , Brookly , N Y. * A L 3 M ndrews, orrin 7 erchant St . Honolulu “ 367 n Andrews , Lorrin , Jr . Grand Ave . , Brookly , N . Y . ‘ n m er 367 n e kl Y o a d Av . o N o n . Andrews , Ethel M tg o y Gr , Br y , . h M r s . . Andrews , Sara (Dyar) , G . P r t r Braina d S . , Det oit , Mich . * P r n el i r n ch a a a d St . e . Andrews , Winifred y B i r , D troit, M i

Andrews , Samuel Chester 1 1 0 1 n o : Washi gton Boulevard , Chicag , Ill . A L 3 A 65 P e. E . v O N . . ndrews, ucy Caroline ark , range, J

Appleby, Grace (Colcord) , Mrs . H . O . 5 69 1 84 W . h . . Y t St N . t , Ci y * A F 5 9 A . 6 . 1 84 h . . t St N . ppleby , lorence W , Y City e t n il Appl o , L la Estelle Fayette , Iowa * A V a . . rmstrong, Richard Hampton , * s a . Armstrong, Matthew Chalmer H mpton , Va * M Armstrong , organ Kalani 1 B 62 8 . L M f Co. s N c o . t | Best Wall g , ational Bk , Chi * 1 0 8 PL Armstrong, Dorothy Waverly , N . Y . A M m rmstrong , ary Jane Graha

2 . 3 5 St . c o . . ‘Morgan A Jones , Allen , Hudson , N Y

l . c M r . . Ar mstrong , Mary A i e , s . S C Hampton, Va ”" Ar r . mstrong, Margaret Ma shall Hampton , Va * Armstrong, Daniel Williams Naval Academy, Annapolis , Md .

2434 s e . . Armstrong , Amelia Hamilton Hill id Ave , Berkeley , Cal

M acon dr a Co . . Arundel , John T . Care y , San Francisco , Cal

e e M r s . . . Atherton , Juliett M . (Cook ) , J B l 2 1 3 5 O Ave. ahu , Hono ulu "“ 7 52 St . Atherton Charles Henry King , Honolulu , * M r s . . . Atherton , Minnie (Merriam ) , C H 5 t l 7 2 S . King , Hono ulu ” 2 t u 7 5 S . Atherton Violet Merriam King , Honol lu , ” 7 52 St . Atherton Laura Annis King , Honolulu , i“ Ath er t on r 1 25 St . , F ank Cooke Merchant , , Honolulu “ ar ab h Atherton , M jory Eliz et

m m a Av . n 2234 Ka eha eh , Ho olulu " Honolulu Atherton , Joseph Ballard * M 2 1 3 5 O Ave . u Atherton, Kate arion ahu , Honolul

94

a”‘ Bal dwin 1 0 29 , Arthur Douglas , Garfield Bldg . Cleveland O , * Baldwin, Reba Louise (Williams ) , Mrs . A . D . 334 0 . Bolton Ave , Cleveland , “ s c Baldwin , Henry William Cleveland , 0 . M “ Bal dwin 0 , Louise Mason Cleveland , ” Baldwin , Frederick Chambers Cleveland , “ Baldwin, Arthur Alexander Cleveland , ” an o Baldwin , Sarah Granger Clevel d , Ohi * r Baldwin, F ank Fowler Puunene , Maui * F . u u Baldwin, Harriet (Kittredge ) , Mrs . F . Pu nene , Ma i “ Baldwin , Edward Henry Kittredge Puunene , Maui “ A s a F u "Baldwin , rederick Puunene , Ma i d n r Al e u Bal wi , Law ence exand r Puunene , Ma i * 1 93 6 N n u u a u a St . u Baldwin, Samuel Alexander , Honolul ”i B l d in A a w . , nna Kathrine (Smith ) , Mrs S . A . 3 1 9 6 N St . u uuanu , Honolul M Bal dwin , Helen Gray Honolulu M “ Bal dwin H on ol u l u i , Richard Hobron * * E h Baldwin, Barbara t el Honolulu

Co . . . Baldwin , William Dane Groton , Tompkins , N Y

29 1 3t n . 1 h St . Baldwin , Mrs . Mary A . (Morris ) , Portla d , Or * n n h R f M H on ol u l Ba ing , Bern ard udol agoon Block, * Barber , Mabel P . (Andrews ) , Mrs . Clarence W . f B r kh n a c au s e . . , Mrs Julie P (Isenberg ) h mk r fi 20 Ru o . Str , , Hanover , German Dr Los Barnett, . Joseph Gatos, t Bartle t , George Lincoln 1 2 7 . Bates , Dudley Conant Grand Ave , San Rafael ,

D . . M L l M r s . Bates, ary ouise (Bea s) C R l 2 1 7 . Grand Ave , San afae , ”“ e Bayl y , Mrs . Mary Richards ( Clark ) 4 t n 1 3 S . Marlborough , Bosto , * * t 1 34 S . Bayley , Harriet Marlborough , Boston ,

. m . Minnie H . (Bailey) , Mrs Benja in V

Co . Burlingame , San Mateo ,

Beckwith Prof . Maurice Goodale Bristol , Vir , " U New Beckwith , Holmes Columbia niversity, York

Beckwith , Harriet ( Goodale ) , Mrs . G . E .

El M Ave. 4 3 2 N . olino , Pasadena, ‘ Beckwith , Mary Goodale

l M Ave. 4 3 2 N . E olino , Pasadena, * r u h . Beckwith , Martha War en Vassar College , Po g keepsie , N M r El M . s . Bicknell, len (Bond) , James

1 82 8 St . Young , Hon 95

1" l 1 264 a St . Bicknel , James Kin u , Honolulu ” l Bicknell, Doreen Aimee Honolu u * 21 . St n Bicknell , William Bond Harvard . , Charlestow , Mass . * E A u . Bindt, rnest ug st * A R Bindt, rthur Paul udolph 3 2 5 8 M Ave. onsarrat , Honolulu i“ in e 61 0 B dt . St . , Bertha Franc s S King , Honolulu =" Ph Bingham , Hiram , . D .

Casa Alegre , Prospect Hill , New Haven , Conn . “ n . . Bi gham , Alfreda (Mitchell) , Mrs H New Haven , Conn . M Bin h am n g , Woodbridge New Haven , Con . “ Bingham , Hiram IV . New Haven , Conn . “ n Bi gham , Alfred Mitchell New Haven , Conn . M Bin h am ff g , Charles Ti any New Haven , Conn . M ‘ Bin h am n g , Brewster New Haven , Con . “ n Bingham , Mitchell New Haven , Co n .

Birnie , Rev . Douglas Putnam Rye , N . Y .

n r . M s . Bishop , Cornelia A . ( Sessio s) , S E .

2 2 50 O Ave. ahu , Honolulu * F s . . Bishop , John Session , M D orest Grove , Or i“Bi h s o F . , Alice (Mo re ) , Mr . J . . rest Grove Or " p o s S o , Bishop , Helen Cornelia Forest Grove , Or . M Bish o . p , John Egbert Forest Grove , Or r s m Bissell , M . E ily (Pomeroy) L n 1 1 o to . . Bliss , Harriet , care Harry P . y , Broadway , N Y City S Bond , George hepard Kohala , Hawaii 50 6 . 0 . Bond , Elias Cornelius P Box , Honolulu "‘ 1 0 3 Stan en wal d . Bond , Robert Elias g Bldg , Honolulu a Bond , Willi m Lee

0 64 Co. . P . . Box , West Branch , Ogemaw , Mich

Bond , Benj amin Davis , M . D . Kohala , Hawaii

M r s . Bond , Emma M . (Renton) , . B D . Kohala , Hawaii f Bon d U . . , Benjamin Howell Valparaiso niv , Valparaiso Ind * l m ber 0 . Bond Alice Renton Oberlin College , O , “ , Bond , Kenneth Davis Kohala , Hawaii ‘ Bond , James Douglas Kohala , Hawaii

Bond , Caroline Sophia Kohala , Hawaii

Bond , Abbie Steele Batavia , Ill .

Bond , Julia Page Kohala , Hawaii l 61 0 Stan en wa d . Bowen , William Alfred g Bldg , Honolulu

M r s . . . Bowen , Emma (Kennedy) , W A l t 1 1 K e a S . 70 w o , Honolulu ‘ n Bowen , William Spe cer Palama Settlement , Honolulu *

E M r s . . . u N . R Bowen, sther ( obson) W S Honolul 96

d e . M e Boy , Netti E Calais , .

Bray, Mary E . (Hosea ) , Mrs . I . Q uarantine Island Honolulu "“ , Brewer , Helen R . Bozeman Mont . " , Brewer, Mary E . Mt . Pleasant , Iowa * Brewer, Grace Lyman Pony , Montana ”‘ . m s Brewer, Prof Willia Fi k 2 r 7 0 3 d . So. Ave , Bozeman , Mont . *

. . a Brewer, Albert David , M D Belgrade , Montan * Brig man, Annie W . (Nott ) , Mrs . M . 674 32n d St . , Oakland , Cal: A I u c o E . . u Brown, Charles ug stus | Spalding, Honolul i‘ Br own 39 t S . , George Ii Merchant , Honolulu ”“ n 3 9 t Brow , Francis Hyde Merchant S . Honolulu “ , Brown . Lillian ( Crocker) , Mrs . J . Melville 3 1 1 I l l 7 8 th St . , Wilmette, E N 3 1 1 m I l l 7 8 th St . lizabeth orton , Wil ette,

Brown , Mary Ella (Spooner ) , Mrs . Julius W . 2 0 . Clifton Ave , Springfield , Mass . M Bu l l ock , Ruth (Beckwith ) , Mrs . Amasa A . i Presb . Mission, Nank ng, China * Burke , Caroline (Frear) , Mrs . F . Ross Valley , Cal . 1 2 u 7 8 . Campbell , Elizabeth Nuuanu Ave , Honolul

Carpenter , Helen Elizabeth W . Woodstock , Conn . 1 4 . 7 9 . Carter , Mary N Nuuanu Ave , Honolulu 4 l 1 7 9 . u Carter, Charlotte Adelaide Nuuanu Ave , Honol u

Co . Carter, Joseph Oliver Bank of Bishop , Honolulu ” - 1 5 . . . Carter , Henry A . P . Washington Ave , Albany, N Y “ 1 5 . . Carter , Grace Stevens Washington Ave . , Albany , N Y a"‘ 2 t r ter 47 S . Ca , George Robert Judd , Honolulu "" 4 2 t 7 S . Carter , Helen ( Strong) , Mrs . G . R . Judd , Honolulu “ l u Carter , Elizabeth Honolu “ Carter , Phoebe Honolulu M Car ter . , George Robert , Jr Honolulu * Carter, Edith M . (Hartwell) , Mrs . A . W . t u 5 1 . 0 . S N Judd , Honolul * l Eth el w n C Castle , Hattie y Alfred

270 7 K al akau a . Ave , Hono * Castle , Samuel Northrup

-Ne c 30 St . w C . ur c o . | Gen Electric , Ch ch , York

* ' Cas tl e An n a . . . . , E (Haviland ) , Mrs S N New York M Castl e Northrup Haviland New York ,

R 1 2 5 M e St . Castle, William ichards rchant , Hon

Castle , Ida B . (Lowrey) , Mrs . W . R .

1 30 1 c a St . Vi tori ,

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B4 M r s . Coan , Lydia (Bingham) , T . 1 439 r t l S . " Alexande , Hono ulu G3 b e . Gamwel l M r L F den s . . e R I Cob , Louis C ( ) , . Provi c , . .

. An 0 Colcord, Capt Charles drew 5 M D 8 n St . Ct. ai , anbury , I . Fa r h r we r M . e at e s . . Colcord, S sabelle ( y ) C A D anbury , Ct .

Coleman, Charles Carson

e A . e r s M s . Coleman, Harri t ( Ca tl ) , C . C . 2 . 0 . 88 c P Box , Pacifi Heights , Honolulu e n Coleman , Horac Emery Tokyo , Japa F M r s . . . a n Coleman , loy (Rhode) , H E Tokyo , J pa 4 . 9 7 . U Conde , Rev Samuel Lee S nion Ave . , Los Angeles , Cal . R Conde , Pauline Wright ockford , Ill . 20 2 Conde , Charles Albert Herman St Germantown , Pa . 1 20 6 Conde , Henry Toll Broadway , Indianapolis , Ind . * 2 4 n l 0 St a en wa d . Cooke , Joseph Platt g Bldg , Honolulu ‘ M r s . Cooke , Maud M . (Baldwin) , J . P .

1 30 2 Noweweh i St . , Honolulu “ w r 1 3 2 No ewehi t . J . 0 S Cooke , Joseph Platt , Honolulu “ 1 30 2 No eweh i t w S . Cooke , Emily Montague , Honolulu “ 1 30 2 we ehi t No w S . Cooke , Henry Baldwin , Honolulu “ 3 2 eweh i t e 1 0 Now . Cook Do glas Ale ande S , Honolul " , u x r u 3 ew hi t e F d 1 0 2 Now e S . Cook , re Wilder , Honolulu * * M 1 3 0 2 w hi Nowe e St . Cooke , aud Perrine , Honolulu ‘ l r O . Cooke , G ace Montague ahu Ave , College Hil s , Honolulu * Cooke, William Gardner fi l d Pl in e N . . 1 4 0 0 . a Prospect Ave , , J

An . Cooke , na C . (Rice ) , Mrs . C . M 80 2 Ber etan ia Honolulu ill“ Cooke . , Charles Montague Oahu Ave , Honolulu * Cooke , Clarence Hyde Bank of Hawaii , Honolulu if Cooke . . . , Lily (Love ) , Mrs C H k t n 1 646 K eeau mo u S . , Ho olulu “ 1 646 K eeau moku St . Cooke , Dorothea Alice , Honolulu “ k t 1 646 K eeau mo u S . Cooke , Martha Love , Honolulu " n F 1 646 K eeaumoku St . Cooke , A na rances , Honolulu " m t l 1 646 K eeau oku S . Cooke , Clarence Hyde , Jr . , Hono ulu i‘ Cooke , George Paul Molokai Ranch , Kaunakakai , Molokai ‘ e . . . . Cook , Sophie B (Judd ) , Mrs G P

Molokai Ranch , Kaunakakai , Molokai “ u Cooke , Dora Ka nakakai , Molokai “ Cooke , George Paul, Jr . Kaunakakai , Molokai 99

F un M rancis Judd Ka akakai, olokai “ R c a d Al e an der N n A ve l l Cooke , i h r x uua u . , Hono u u ‘ r 80 2 Ber e n i ta a St . Cooke , Alice Theodo a , Honolulu ‘ ’ A . Cooke , Theodore therton St Luke s School , Wayne , Penn . 20 2 M cC n dl e s a s s . Cooke , Amo Frank Bldg , Honolulu

o e Lil ian et a e M r s . . . m i l Co k , (Lydg t ) , A F Kai uk , Honolu u * 1 230 Cooke , Marg aret Montague Amsterdam Ave . , N . Y. ‘ r M r s e M . s e . . Corb tt, ary S (Wate hou ) , D W . w Middleto n , N. Y . r h n d 1 50 St Co win, Jo Howar Nassau . , New York City r es Co win , Charl 1 1 9 28th t Ne r i . . S . w Corw n , Cecil S E , Yo k City 5 1 3 3 . t . . S . s . C Corwin , Arthur Mill , M D W Monroe , hicago , Ill ‘ h i e r COW er t wa t M s . . p , Clara (Pierp ont) , W 244 ll e Ave er l 8 . Ca . Co eg , B keley,

Cox, Lydia S . (Bean) , Mrs . C . E . 55 8 t . S . Chapman , San Jose , Cal 1 1 2 h i 9 9 t . Cox, Cathar ne (Bean) , Mrs I . M . Ave , Honolulu

o r . Crawf rd , Harriet J . (Stu ges) , Mrs . M . A . Claremont , Cal h r 37 ff d s Cr e o e . . , Frederic M Su olk Roa , Chestnut Hill, Ma s * h Cr e or e . . . . , Frances I ( Carter) , Mrs F M M Chestnut Hill, ass . * * h l Cr e or e M . , Sybil Chestnut Hil , ass "‘ 4339 Crocker , Charles W. Hazel Ave . , Chicago ” 4339 Crocker , Charles Henry Hazel Ave . , Chicago “ 433 9 . Crocker, Catherine Hazel Ave , Chicago

Crockett , Grace L . (Wing) , Mrs . A . W . Chico , Cal . ”“

r n is . . . C o e . , Rose F (Kittredge ) , Mrs C H

1 5 t a . 63 S . Bath , Santa Barb ra , Cal l l r er d am e M s . . Crozi , A eline D . (C pb ) , C .

1 50 6 Pu koi St . , Honolulu

Cu mm m E M r s . . . s M F . O g , arie ( ckley ) , S 3 5 . Box , Oxnard, Cal ‘ e en il e an d r s . . R . I . Dalton , H l L . (H l br ) , M W

h . E. s 451 0 2n d A ve . . , N , Seattle , Wa

M Cc . Damon , Samuel ills Bank of Bishop , Honolulu

r . . Damon , Har iet M . (Baldwin) , Mrs . S M

1 72 Ave . 8 Nuuanu , Honolulu " Damon , Gertrude Esme Honolulu M ‘ Damon Heathe Jean H nolulu " , r o e n Damon , Samuel R n y Honolulu “ s 1 728 . Damon , May Mill Nuuanu Ave , Honolulu * l Damon , Henry Fowler Honolu u ‘ l Damon , Douglas Wi fred Honolulu 1 0 0

‘ D1 e c wi h Damon , Fred rick Be k t Bank of Hawan Honolulu “ , D1 m r Damon , Willia F ancis 5 0 3 4 h t . I l l Was ing on Ave , Chicago, . ”" ' L d rii fil l ou o e Co. Damon , Maurice Sherman , Albany , N . Y . "“ Damon , Ethel Moseley Honolulu

s . 0 . 586 Damon , Francis William P Box , Honolulu

M r s . . . M oan al u a Damon , Mary (Happer) , F W , Oahu

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. r s M . Davis , Mary H ( Scott) , C . E . 1 5 Washington Ave . , Albany, N . Y . M rs . a r u Dawson, Bell (Ma tin) Hon apo , Hawaii "“ a Day , Juli H . ( Lyman) , Mrs . W . H . 94 L 6 . U . os S nion Ave , Angeles , Cal . Co Deacon , Kate (Wetmore) , Mrs . Henry Davis , Yolo . , Cal . ii Deacon , Charles W . California 21 8 Co. . . 0 . Clyde P Box , Davis , Yolo , Cal =" 2 1 8 . 0 . . Deacon , Sheldon P Box , Davis , Yolo Co Cal * D A H r D M . . L M . s ean, argaret ( ardy ) , ihue, Kauai

De La Vergne , Col . George 1 21 t n l 7 . S . . S Bonnie Brae , Los A ge es , Cal ”“ De La Vergne , George Harrison New York * De La Vergne , Bertha (Hickman) , Mrs . G . H . New York "‘ F De La Vergne , Paul inley L A 61 6 . V Ave. os . S irgil , ngeles, Cal * De La Vergne , Clara (Kennedy) , Mrs . P . F .

1 An . 6 6 . Virgil Ave , Los geles , Cal ” De La Vergne , Margery Kennedy

1 . 6 6 . Virgil Ave , Los Angeles , Cal “ n De La Verg e , Paul Kennedy

1 6 Lo n . 6 Virg il Ave . , s A geles , Cal

Delaporte , Rev . Philip Adam M icr on es m Pleasant Is . , Marshall Is . ,

h er . Sc aeif . . Delaporte , Salome ( ) , Mrs P A I i t . Pleasan , Micrones a f Del or te ap , Augusta Salome Castle Home , Honolulu

a“ ' Del a or t e Pau l Godfr e p , y Castle Home , Honolulu

=" Delaporte , Mabel Dorothy Castle Home , Honolulu

1 586 . Dickey Charles Henry Nuuanu Ave , Honolulu ,

I . . . . A Dickey , Ann E (Alexander) , Mrs C H

1 586 . Nuuanu Ave , Honolulu “ L K L le A exan er ihue, aua Dickey , y l d i

* BL O . k harl es illiam 4 1 9 entra . aklan , al Dic ey, C W , C l Bk , d C f Di cke Frances (Kinney) , Mrs . C . W . y ,

22 a . . 1 Dracen Ave , Piedmont , Cal

1 0 2

1 3 “ t 9 . l . S Emerson , Nathaniel Bright , M . D S . School , Honolu u B Emerson , Sarah Eliza (Peirce ) , Mrs . N . . 3 t 1 9 . S School S . , Honolulu 0 * A 3 3 5 E 2 W. 1 st St . N . . merson, rthur Webster , Y City t u 1 2 . s 8 S . Emerson , J stin Edward , M . D . Henry , Detroit , Mich E r . E . . . E. M r s . me son , W H ( liot) , J . , M D

1 t . r c 28 S M . Henry , Det oit , i h ‘ 1 2 t 8 S . Emerson , Paul Eliot Henry , Detroit , Mich . “

L t . aw 1 28 S . Emerson , Philip Henry , Detroit , Mich ‘ 2 t 1 8 S . . Emerson , Ralph Pomeroy Henry , Detroit , Mich 2 80 St . Emerson , Joseph Swift Spencer , Honolulu

ea mb r s . . . Emerson , Doroth (La ) , M J S 2 t 80 S . Spencer , Honolulu * r O H u dl es ton 80 2 St . Eme son , liver Spencer , Honolulu r Emerson , Rev . Olive Pomeroy

5 . . 8 2 . Broadway , E Providence , R I

i . . Emerson, Eugenie (Homer) , Mrs . O . P . E . Prov dence , R I * E v 1 5 3 6 K ew l St . R e . a o rdman, John Pinney , Honolulu * D M r . . E M E . s . rdman, arion ( illingham) , J P Honolulu E r n a d . . y , Sylvia Sage (Hyde ) , Mrs Camile H ‘i l F r . a e . . y , Helen (Judd ) , Mrs Arthur C Wellesley Hills , Mass ” Farley, Emily Wellesley Hills , Mass .

Charles Judd Inwood , W . Va . * F E. r . ernow, Bernhard , J , 3 M . 80 T Ave . errace , ilwaukee, Wis i “ A2 F r n ow Ber n ic e e . . . , P (Andrews ) , Mrs Bernhard E

380 . Terrace Ave . , Milwaukee , Wis F M O erreira, ary Waimanalo, ahu F rr r l e M r e a de s . . e eri, E . Cha lott (A x n r) , G Vi z M I l 7 a . c S Vin en o , ilan , ta y h i ken er . F c s c . , Edith ( Cruzan) , Mrs A R 2 960 O . Summit oad, akland, Cal * M . F E L. isher, lla Galen 22 Goch om e Fu l KO l maChi Tokyo , Japan , j Micho , J

Flaxman , Margaret

- - Sefton Cottage , Grange over sands , Lancashire , England 1 3 A F 2 5 O ve. u laxman, Sarah ahu , Honolul ‘ 1 1 0 t ca 7 S . Forbes , Maria Rebec Punahou , Honolulu * 1 2 5 M F l St . orbes, Wi liam Joseph erchant , Honolulu “ F . . . orbes , Kate (Watson ) , Mrs W J 1 1 t l 0 7 n S . Pu ahou , Hono ulu ‘F 1 1 0 7 n h ul orbes , Harriet Gordon Pu a ou St Honol u 1 0 3

F s . U Forbe , Gen . Theodore , . S . A . “ The Connecticut , Washington, D . C . w Fowler, Margaret A . (Bre er) , Mrs . E . M . 3 63 St a Grove . , Pasaden , Cal . r l er 1 461 . . . St . . Frea , Rev Wa t , D D Tenth , Oakland , Cal F E F M a n ces s e rs . . Fre r, ra . ( o t r) , W 1 461 T e h St . O . nt , akland , Cal 1"F rear, Hugo Pinckney Burlingame , Cal . “ 1 434 . u St . Frear , Hon Walter Francis P nahou , Honolulu “ m . F Frear , Mary E (Dillingha ) , Mrs . W . . 1 434 t u Punahou S . , Honolul “ F 1 434 u St . rear, Virginia Punaho , Honolulu ‘ 1 461 l 0 th Frear, Henrietta St . , Oakland , Cal . ‘ F l r D 1 40 2 l a s e D S . u St . u re r, Phi ip Fo t , P nahou , Honolu F uller, Ellen Elizabeth 6 o 0 . 9 . . . C P Box , East Auburn , Placer , Cal F i urneaux , Charles H lo , Hawaii

M r s . a n Fyfe , Juli C . (Johnso ) 1 0 R . F . D 2 5 . No. Co. . , Box , Santa Cruz , Cal ‘F K yfe . David . , Jr ‘ 2 b t R 23 5 S . Galt , John andolph Lili a , Honolulu ‘ 2325 Lil ih t n s e r . Galt , Ag e ( Cart ) M s . J . R . a S , Honol lu " r , u hn Galt , Jo Connecticut ” n a te Galt, Charles Lu t C r r Connecticut M l l Gamwe 6 Ave . . . , Lauriston Wesleyan , Providence , R I f Gar tl e y , Ada (Jones ) , Mrs . Alonzo 2 2 0 8 . Kamehameha Ave , Honolulu ff r m r a . M s . . Gi a d , Juli M (Da on) , H B .

1 729 K eeau moku St . , Honolulu * 220 7 Gilman , Carrie A . Waialae Road , Honolulu ' ‘ os e h Gilman , J p Atherton 220 1 Kalia Road , Waikiki , Honolulu ‘ e n M r s . . . Gilman , Minni (Brow ) , J A

- l Kalia Road , Waikiki , Honolu u “ Gilman , Joseph Atherton , Jr .

t . S . 1 7 6 Hancock , Cambridge , Mass " Gilman , Cordelia Atherton Kalia Road , Waikiki , Honolulu ‘ d r l s e Goo ale , Cha e Warr n Butte , Montana

Goodale , William Whitmore Waialua , Oahu ‘* d . Goo ale , Emma M . (Whitney) , Mrs . W . W Waialua , Oahu “ s . Goodale , David Marlboro , Mas

M r s . . Green, Harriet F . (Parker) , . J P t u 83 Judd S . , Honol lu 1 0 4

F n k . 6 69 T St . r O e. Green, ra Chapin, Jr hurman , Portland, 2 1 7 3 7 t G S . Green , Laura Capron Makiki , Honolulu

Green, Adam Treadwell Oak Knoll , Pasadena , Cal . M r s l M . . P . . e Green, ary A (Paris) , J E 2521 t S . Clement , San Francisco , Cal . * r G een , John Harrison Oakland, Cal . * . m Greer, Helen C (Ly an) , Mrs . Howard , Jr . 1 247 Ave Judson . , Evanston , Ill . * M . M r s . Guard, Juliette (Atherton) John Buel Honolulu q l ick Rev s Nas hin okich o , . Sidney Lewi , Kyoto , Japan l i k q c . , Cara M (Fisher) , Mrs . S . L . Kyoto , Japan * * F 1 4 61 1 0 th Gulick, Susan isher Ohio * * l L 1 1 1 4 6 0 th St . O O Gu ick, uther Halsey , berlin, hio q l i ck , Rev . Edward Leeds Hanover , N . H . * H F r M s . E . L. N Gulick, arriet ( arnsworth) , Hanover, . H . “ Gulick, Leeds Hanover, N . H . i” i ck Gul . . , Helen Farnsworth Hanover, N H “ Gulick , Carolyn Palmer Hanover, N . H . * r ls e . Gulick , Luthe Ha y, M D . B Ne r i d . ca w of Edu tion, Yo k C ty

r e er . . . Gulick , Cha lott E . (Vett ) , Mrs L H 2 3 84 t 6 . W . th S , New York City r m l R ev . O r a e Gulick, Hinckley

2 4 5 1 Ave . Woodlawn , Honolulu

Gulick, Anna E . ( Clark) , Mrs . O . H .

Woodlawn Ave . , Honolulu ”" n . Gulick , Paul Adams Ma ila , P . I D Ph . h T . R ev. Gulick, Jo n homas,

2 3 2 9 Ave. Woodlawn , Honolulu

F s . . . Gulick , rance ( Stevens) , Mrs J T Honolulu * M o. 2 1 M . Gulick , Addison 7 issouri Ave , Columbia,

G l i L 2 3 2 9 . u ck, ouise Woodlawn Ave , Honolulu 5 For tu n u r . G lick , Rev . William Hooke No , y , Madrid , Spain Rev Gulick , . Theodore Weld

u s . Milwa kee Rescue Mi sion Milwaukee , Wis * l D . V . Gu ick, Walter ose, M

T . 7 0 7 N R . ational ealty Bldg , acoma, Wash * H E . M . Gulick, ervey ,

Dr V i T . c o . . | Walter Gul ck, acoma Wash

J E 2 4 5 1 d Ave. Gulick, ulia Ann liza Woo land , Honolulu

Gulick , Sarepta A . (Duncan) , Mrs . C . T . l 1 0 3 0 G l . u ick Ave , Ka ihi , Honolulu * Hair , C . Amelia (Beckwith ) , Mrs . J . J . Hamakuapoko , Maui ” Hair, Dorothy Beckwith Hamakuapoko , Maui

1 0 6

Holloway, Irene (Ii) , Mrs . C . S . Honolulu ‘ 1 88 St . M Holmes , Samuel Judd Park , ontclair, N . J . “ r Holmes , Josephine (B autigam ) , Mrs . S . J . 1 r 88 Pa t . S , M ontclair N . J . " k , 1 88 r Holmes , Warren Goodale Pa k St Montclair, N . J . ‘ M e 1 93 n l l e 9 Bo s a o Av . An Holmes , ary Goodal Los geles , Cal . ”“ 32 6 . . Holmes , David Goodale Park Ave , E Orange , N . J . “ 22 Holmes , George Day Waterbury Road , Montclair, N . J. o S 565 0 . H pper , usan Vreeland P . . Box , Williamstown , Mass Lewer 1 40 4 e t s H ul u S . Hopper, Margaret , Honolulu 1 0 2 ee m ku t 8 K au o S . u Hopper, Bessie Templeton , Honolul “ I I m r 22 os e St . , Frank Alvan N . Prospect , Amherst , Mass m Hos er , Esther (Kellogg) , Mrs . F . A . 22 St . N . Prospect , Amherst , Mass . * Hough , Elizabeth W . (Nott) , Mrs . Walter Carroll .

30 74 . Richmond Boulevard , Oakland , Cal

W h eaten . h 70 1 e e . Houston, Jo n A . Coll g Ave , , Ill l n Wh t . 70 1 e . ea e Houston , Albert Rhea Col ge Ave , , Ill

Howard , Albert Spaulding Townsend , Mass

M r s . . . . Howard , Ellen ( Goodale ) , A S Townsend, Mass 1" rr n w a . Howard , Lewis Wa e To nsend , M ss ‘ D e T . Howard , avid Goodal ownsend , Mass r n 1 0 71 Ber etan ia ul u Howard , Walte Lincol St Honol

Howard , Margaret (Hare ) , Mrs . W . L . i t l l u 1 0 71 Ber etan a S . , Hono u “ L M r s . . Howard , Edith H . (Bond) , 42 8 . S. Prospect Ave , Hartford , Conn Ber t n ia t " n G 880 e a S . Hustace , A nie avarly S . , Honolulu

r s M 23 El m St . s . Hyde , Mary (Knight ) , M . C . , Ware , Ma s

e n . Hyd , Henry K ight Ware , Mass

L a . M r . u c . s . . Hyde , y R (Hyde ) , H K W re , Mass “ Hyde , Ruth Ware . Mass . ‘ c e ss Hyde , William M Ewen War , Ma

M . Hyde, Charles Knight Ware, ass

e r a s . Hyde , Harriet Sag Wa e , M s

I mh l l ul u. ff F 1 0 61 K St . o a s an M r . a o , Hain (A w ) , s . E . i i , Hon

Inch , Clara H . (Dibble ) , Mrs . Philip / 2 t . . c o 5 S . Robt . A . Inch , Wall , N Y City ‘ s ul I enberg, Pa Rice Waialae , Honolulu 1 "‘ e a s Isenb rg , Rev . H n Lihue . Kauai * i r r s . Isenberg, Dora (Isenbe g ) , M H . Lihue , Kaua :

Isenberg , Beta ( Glade) , Mrs . Paul t e 1 9 m Con r scarpe, Bre en, Ger 1 0 7

a" en r s I s be g , Johanne Carl Tr aven or t , Post Gnissau , Holstein , Germany * I R M . 9 senberg , ichard Contrescarpe 1 , Bremen, Germany 1 1 PL Ives , Harlan Page Bennett , Danbury, Conn .

Ives , Elvira Elizabeth ( Vaill) Mrs . H . P . 1 1 P n L . Ben ett , Danbury , Conn * I M 1 1 D n n ves, Joseph ark Bennett Place , anbury , Co . * I N ves, Charles Gulick orwalk, Conn . 1 1 PL Ives , Mary Brainard Bennett , Danbury , Conn . ill“ I e 1 1 PL v s ur . , Harriet Evelyn Bennett , Danb y, Conn ‘ s e r M r s . . . Ive , H len ( Chambe lain) , C G Pecatonica , Ill . ‘i Jar boe . r . , Mrs Eleano S (Dimond) * F M r F s . n k F . Jewett, Sarah rances, (Gulick) , ra 3 7 . s St . O 0 . S Profe sor , berlin,

. 0 . . Job , Susan (Adams) , Mrs Daniel Carlisle , Mass F c s Johnson, Abby ran e Pearl City , Oahu 3 861 St . . Johnson , Henry F , San Diego , Cal s s a O John on , Ellen Aug u t Pearl City, ahu ‘ r Jones , Clarisse C . (Weave ) , Mrs . Morgan Akin 3 N . . 2 5 St . s Allen Hud on, Y “ , Jon e e . s ul M o e M r s . . . o , J i tte (C k ) , A H in 2 20 9 M cK l e St . y , Honolulu * * J L 2 20 9 M cK in l e St . ones, Carol ydia y , Honolulu s er Jone , Pet Cushman l e u Room 20 5 M cCan d s s Bldg . , Honol lu “ I bel l e l o es r E A . F l e M s . J n , sa ( u r) , .

1 1 N Ave. 8 4 uuanu , Honolulu “ 2 . Jones Edwin Austin 2 30 Kamehameha Ave , Honolulu " , on es H el en 1 81 4 Ave. "J , Nuuanu , Honolulu o es M a a t 1 81 4 . l J n , rg re Nuuanu Ave , Hono ulu “ s a h er i e H a 1 81 4 N . Jone , C t n y uuanu Ave , Honolulu * Jones , Marion F . (Dole ) , Mrs . Emmet R .

T . 3 h St . 3 81 2 N . 9t , acoma, Wash s Jone , John Josiah Paia , Maui

u u s M r s . . . J dd , Emily (C tt ) , C H 3 Reich s tr . 1 , Dresden , Germany “ d h tr 1 3 Reic s . Jud , Emily Pauahi , Dresden , Germany ‘ d h n O Ju d , C arles Has ti g s Waikane , ahu “ 3r . Judd , Charles Hastings d Indianapolis , Ind dd F. es . d M rs . . Ju , Agn H (Boy ) , A

6 6 St . Wyllie , Honolulu * A E 6 6 St . u Judd, gnes lizabeth Wyllie , Honol lu ‘ 622 St . u Judd , , Honolul 1" r rs Judd Madeline (Ha twell) M . A . F . " , , d n ce 622 dd St Ju d , Ber i Ju . , " d 622 St . Jud , Dorothy Judd , ” t F a s Jr e 2 . 6 2 d t u S . Judd , Alber r nci , J d , ”‘ . 1 63 Ber et i t . an a S . Judd , James Robert , M D , i‘ Ju dd . . . H on e , Alice Louise (Marshall) , Mrs J R * n Judd , Allan Wilkes Chino , San Ber ardino , “ ; Allan Wilkes , Jr Chino , San Bernardino , Judd , * * E Judd, dward Bailey Chino, San Bernardino, Cal . * Liam R ev . Judd, Henry Pratt Honolul u * M h M r . s . . Judd, art a ( Case) , H P Honolulu * * D Judd, avid Stuart Honolul u ”“ U. . Judd , Charles Sheldon S Forestry , Portland , Ore . * Judd , Gerrit Parmelee 2 4 3 l T ck n . . S u eco e t . W p , Germantown, Pa * M cCul l Judd , Lawrence y H on e Alexander Baldwin, Ltd . , * * F r 9 1 9 P Sf" H on e Judd, Helen lo ence rospect : * * J E 9 1 9 udd, Agnes lizabeth Pro “ h e K au n . a . , Sarah (Martin ) , Mrs S “ o M r s . K kela , Susan 1 0 30 Kelley , Kate S . King

s . Kilborne , Luella (Andrew ) , Mrs . C T .

t . r . . 84 Hillye S , E Orange , N

M n r os . a e . . Kimball , Lottie ( ) , Mrs J D

79 St . Fountain , Orange , Ma

Kincaid , Ellen (Douglas ) , Mrs . W . M .

1 l 3 h . N . 5 0 8 . t St W , Y Rockfor 22 St . n e . . 6 . Ki g , Lucy (Cond ) , Mrs . J H N Main ,

h e fi . Sc u der . Kinney, Selma S . ( a ) , Mrs H i t H on e 1 20 n a un S . 8 A p , ‘ H n e m m e 1 820 A n a u n i St . o Kinney, Maud Miria Ki o le p , * 3 2 95 . M . Kittredge, aurice C Hillegass Ave , Berkeley, “ T l M r Kl u e el M s . . . g , ary ( ay or) , C H 41 6 P . 0 . Box Hilo , Ha

e r M r s . . . Kofoid , Prudenc ( Winte ) , C A

Cal . 261 6 St . Etna , Berkeley,

Lambert , Ellen L . (Rowell) , Mrs . William J . G .

. 351 t . Cajon S , Redlands , Cal

1 31 4 St . L w e F . a r nce , rances E Emma , Honolulu

340 . . Leadingham , Rev . John West Holt Ave , Pomona , Cal 1 220 St . Leete Harriet Cornelia Chapel , New Haven , Conn , , Lewer s m , Willia Henry New York City 7 1 6 20 th s . Lewis , Charle S

1 1 0

* L E D M E. t r s . E . yman, lla ( ay on) , Waialua, O m a d r in a d 1 33 r in Ave. La a e Ly an, D vi B a r Sp g , Gr ng , Cos s itt M r L s . . . a r Lyman, Mary ( ) , D B G ang e , i‘ ‘ L m an Jr . 63 St y , David Brainard , , Division . , Chicago , * B Jr Lyman , Edith (Rowe) , Mrs . D . . , . , 63 t S . Division , Chicago , “ 63 Jr . St . Lyman , David Brainard , II , Division , Chicago , “ a 6 Lyman , P rmelee 3 Division St Chicago “ , n r Jr . Lyman , Rufus A de son , Hilo , Ha =ll‘ L man er y , Henry Join Kapoho , Puna , Ha “ ‘ el l Lyman , Richard Jew Hilo , Ha "‘ s Lyman , Eugene Holli Hilo , Ha * L N K al an il eh u a yman, orman Puna, * L E D n D yman, nsign avid Belde Box , Koloa * L m Sch ofi el d y an, Albert Kualii Barr * R . s Lyman , Charles Bi hop d m es t i a ca . . Milit ry A e y, W Po nt, N Y ‘ Lyman , Thornton Hilo , Hawaii

Lyman , Francis Ogden 1 30 t 8 69 S . . Room , W . Washington , Chicago , Ill * 2 . 67 . Lyman Charlotte Dana Graceland Ave , Chicago Ill , , , ”“ 60 0 . . Lyman , Richard Dana Dickson Bldg , Norfolk , Va

s s 1 50 8 St . Lyon , Curti Jere Alexander , Honolulu

n E n o M r s . . . Lyo s , Julia . (Ver n) , C J u 1 50 8 r St . Alexande , Honolul

’ =" 1 50 8 St . Lyons , Emma Curtis Alexander ,

s F a 1 0 70 Ber et an ia St . Lyon , idelia Mari ,

1 0 2 . Lyons , Albert Brown , M . D . Alger Ave , Detroit

M r s . . . Lyons , Edith (Eddy) , A B

2 Ave. 1 0 Alger , Detroit ,

"" Te- Lyons , Edith Lucia Pang Chuang, chou * Al An n Lyons , bert Eddy Arbor,

5 . 1 6 . Mackenzie , Rev . Robert D . D . Fifth Ave , N Y

M cLeod . . Mackenzie , Lydia Ann ( ) , Mrs R

1 56 Fifth Ave . , N . Y at H in l e i t h . M ack n os , Mrs Carrie ( g y ) Salt Lake City , ”“ H n e 20 1 M cCan dl es s . o Macintyre , Malcolm Bldg , * M r . H s . Macintyre , Florence ( all) , M H on e St . Armstrong , M “ St . H on e M acin t r e Cornelia Hall Armstrong , y ,

Malone , Nancy J .

1 380 St . n H . M . . Marti , George , D Sutter , 1 1 1

es M r s M r s a . . . a que , Laur (Pir ) , J D

Kamehameha Ave . Honolul u "" , 30 3 Stan en wal d . Marx, Benjamin Lodge g Bldg , Honolul u ‘ e a Marx , Mary Elois ) ( C stle ) , Mrs . B . L . Honolulu " l s . Mas ey, Ruth (Farley) , Mrs Wi liam

Ridgewood , Winchester , Va . 24 t S . Mathews , Mabel Rebecca High , Belfast , Me . * M cCal l E , Caroline ly Saybrook , Conn . “ l e M cC u sk . y , Esther R (Lyman) , Mrs . William Hilo , Hawaii * * M cCl u ske R y , obert Hilo, Hawaii

Co . . . . A M c . F y , Henry J Y M C , San rancisco , Cal . l M cCul . y , Rev Charles Gardiner Calais , Me . l l r e r . M eCu F s M s . . y , rance (Po t r) , C G Calais , Me . ‘ M cCul l e y , Emma Lawrenc Calais , Me . M cCul l e y , Anna Calais , M .

M . U . ead, Prof George Herbert niv of Chicago , Chicago , Ill .

M r s . . . M . ead , Helen K ( Castle) , G H 60 1 6 Stony Island Ave . , Chicago , Ill . "‘ 60 1 I ll 6 . . Mead , Henry Albert Stony Island Ave , Chicago , * l h A r E F M n l . M s . e a u . p y , J iette ( Cooke) , dmond Honolulu

Meredith , Caroline ( Thompson) Mrs . R . R . A 8 5 . E . N ve . uclid , Pasadena, Cal * A M M . errill, rthur erton Collinsville, Cal * M D M r s A . . . errill, Grace ( ickey ) . A Collinsville, Cal

M R v . e . erritt, William Carter Claremont, Cal D M M r . . . M s . erritt, arie ( ickenson) , W C Claremont, Cal

Mills , Kate G . (Vose ) , Mrs . George S . Bennington , Vt .

Mitchell, Mary L .

1 St . e e r . 9 6 Moor , Nelli (Low ey) , Mrs . W . L Green , Honolulu i M M fEmil 2 3 3 . ontague, y Bliss Box S Hadley , ass

M i T m M r s . . orrison, Carol ne L . ( ho p son) , D

l ever ban k n r . C , Cathcart , Glasgow, Scotland ‘ s m To l Co. Mo eley, Hiram Bingha Hill p , Doug as , Colorado

- F c . . . . s Moses, Clare L ( as ett Hitch ock) , Mrs E H Hilo , Hawaii ” D. . i . Murdoch , Mary E . (Baldw n) , Mrs B Paia , Maui D e Needham , Harriet il a Road , Honolulu

N . s M r s . . . . ewberry, Emma P (Eell ) , A St J

0 . 46th St . 20 77 E . , Cleveland ,

. w . Ne ton , Mrs Edna (Harvey) Kenduskeag, Me s 74 l St . . Nichols , C . Fessenden , M . D . Boy ston , Boston , Mas * . Nichols , Maude C . (Kittredge ) , Mrs . Austin P

. 4 Highland Ave . , Haverhill , Mass Howell Michigan Norton , Helen Sarah , . An e s r s Nott, Mary E ( dr w ) , M . S . 40 1 8 Ave. Ellston , Oakland , Cal . ‘ 40 1 8 Nott , Mary Andrews Elston Ave . , Oakland , Cal . * 40 1 8 Nott , Sarah Thurston Elston Ave . , Oakland , Cal . “ 29 55 . St . Nott , Frederick Dickson E th , New York * ’ O Br ien , Ellen (Bicknell) Kohala , Hawaii

. r er Oleson , Rev William B ewst e ms Al ake t Hawaiian Board Re . a S . , Honolulu "“ c/o Oleson , Edward Prince Davis Banister, Worcester, Mass . * Oleson , David Lyman Montclair , N . J. i" Pal m er 1 2 . 0 St . , Rev Frank Herbert Boylston , Boston , Mass . “ 1 20 St Bos t on Palmer , Herbert Hall Boylston . , , Mass . n 288 . 0 . Paris , An a Matilda P Box , Honolulu

Paris , Ella Hudson Kealakekua , Hawaii n Paris , Joh Davis Kealakekua , Hawaii

Paris , Hannah (Johnson) , Mrs . J . D . Kealakekua , Hawaii ‘ h Paris , Jo n Davis , Jr . Kealakekua , Hawaii ‘ i 1 51 9 Ber etan a St . Paris , James Robert , Honolulu

Park , Annie C . Bennington , Vt . H l 1 1 3 9 Ber etan i a St . Parke, Jane Severance , ono ulu t 41 . . 1 S Parker , Rev Henry Hodges Judd , Honolulu ' K amiah I dah o Paulding , Christina Wood , l M e . Pays n, Ade e

A 1 0 3 r . N . . VV. d S ve. an d t Amsterdam , Y C E M Jr M D Pease, dmund orris , . , . . Box A l M i , Ka amazoo,

1 39 St . h Peirce , Harriet C . S . School , Ho ol

Pe o n . p o , Helen C 0 1 43 . U Perry , Charles Frederick P . Box , rbana , B 4 F . F o 1 3 . U Perry, rances B ( Martin) , Mrs . C . x , rbana , R v e . Perry, Silas Prowse Fairhaven , El l i da . . Perry, (Oleson) , Mrs S P . Fairhaven , ii B Per r a . y , e trice Fairhaven * Peters , Mary D . (Kittredge ) , Mrs . C . A .

6 St . High , Amherst , M * H on ol Lewer s 1 639 K eeau m oku St . Peterson , Margaret ,

Pierson , Mary t H on ol S . Pinder , Susan Edith Wyllie , m 20 2 St . Pitman , Benja in Franklin Boylston , Boston , M “ 1 35 . 0 . Po g ue , Jane Knox P Box , Santa C ”" Eu Po gue , William Fawcett Kailua , ( 61 0 Stan en wal d Pond , Percy Martyn g

Pond , Edith (Eldredge ) , Mrs . P . M . ‘ Pond , Eldredg e Bowen

1 1 4

“ r d Fe n Box 20 6 H n a d . 0 . Schoen , Bert an rdin P , ilo , Hawa "‘ F “ . oc choen , Mabel (Hitchc k ) Mr . B . . Hilo Hawaii "S W , s , n n e a i Schoe , Evely Henri tt Hilo , Hawa i “ e Fer choen , Clyd dinan d ilo Hawaii "S H , h as l e Schoen, Art ur C t Hilo , Hawaii “ r c a Schoen , Frede i k Hilo , H waii "S E choen , dward Hitchcock Hilo , Hawaii Sch oflel d N m N . , athan Yaki a, Wash .

. A . M r s . O Scott, H , James Hamilton , hio “ t E m r a M s . . . Scot , m ( Clark) , J A Hilo , Hawaii “ on l i Scott , Alvah Allis Hi o , Hawa i " I Scott , rwin Hilo , Hawaii " i Scott , Margaret H lo , Hawaii “ M . c M rs . . Scott , ary E (Ri e ) , W H . 251 2 u . . Benven e Ave , Berkeley, Cal ‘ L r V ms s . a to a. . M . . Scoville , ouise H (Ar trong) . W H H mp n ,

S cudder, Harriet (Dutton) , Mrs . David C .

25 t . 0 S . Newbury , Boston, Mass

o . Searle, Susan Anette Kobe C llege, Kobe, Japan l Ca . Katalena H ( Clark ) , Mrs . C . E . Dixon , M r L il o ii e a M . s . . a a Severanc , Lucind (Clark) , H , H w “ n e i Severa c , Helen Hilo , Hawai “

r e r e r e M as s . Seve anc , Allen Pa k Ba r ,

Severance , Rev . Claude Milton

1 m n . Box , Noxen , Wyo i g. Co Pa “ x a Se ton . . , Emily Dole (Rice ) , Mrs Leo . L Hilo , Haw ii * 5 n l e l 20 M cCa d s s . Shaw, Jonathan Bldg , Hono ulu ‘ h h r E z h D. M s . . S aw, li abet (Bis op ) , J

l u . 22 50 O h u: Ave. H n " a , o o ul a 2250 Ave n l ul Shaw, Ruth Corneli Oahu Ho o u * * J m U N . . Shaw, essie Cunningham Colu bia niversity Y City “ Shaw , Margaret Fenton ok l e s s Mt . Holy e College , So . Had y Ma ab F D. M . . Shep ard , red . , D Aint , Turkey T n M r s . . . n Shepard , Fa ny (Andrews) , F D Ai tab , urkey “ F o a Shepard , l rence Alm ‘ 25 5 t o l u 3 a u S . Sherman , George Nuu n , H nolu ‘ h r m n L F Dicks on M r s . G S e a , aura . ( ) , . t H n l ul u z 2535 S . o o Nuuanu ,

n m . a Shipma , Willia H Hilo , Haw ii n r a l can o us i Shipma , Olive T ylor Vo Ho e , Hawa i * Sil ver ston M r s m Bos ton ss . , . Eleanor S . (Di ond ) , Ma

h . e . Simpson , Elizab t W Christiansburg, Va 1 1 5

e F 321 5 N : m : O St . W . . a h n Si pson, Marg ar t , , W s ing to , D. 0 .

Ph an dor a . . Simpson, J . , M D d ma h m d Goo Sa ritan Hospital , J elu , I n ia “ H n e M r s . im . S pson , elen Jg, (Kin y) , J A . 1 0 69 t S . Milwaukee , Denver, Col. “ Sl o ett H ehr M g g , y Digby Hamakuapoko , aui “ l t u . r s S o et M . . . k i g g , L cy E (Wilcox) , H D Hamakuapo o , Mau * * S o ett l g g , Richard Henry Hamakuapoko , Maui “ Sl o ett M i g g , Margaret El lery Hamakuapoko , au * ’ ‘ 3 Sl o ett f g g Anna Dorothea Hamakuapoko , Maui * * l e ett E Em M S gg , dith ma Hamakuapoko, aui ’ ‘ el M rs S ra Ben fi d . . . mith , . Cla ( ) , A L 24 r kel e t Be . s 9 y , Bo ton , M a . _ S s s / c o Co . Smith , Emma Clarissa Guardian Trust , Honolulu m m l a . 0 . S ith, Willi Owen Judd Bldg (P . Box Honolu u i M r r s W . i . O Sm M a . . th , y A (Hobron) , fl 2 l 0 0 2 N St . uuanu , Honolu u m F ith , Clarence Hobron Near Boulog ne , Pas de Calais , rance * A e H L 2 4 87 v . Smith, orrin Knapp Woodlawn , onolulu Lu n al il o H Smith, Alfred Holly Home, onolulu * r Smith , Raymond Whittake Keokea , Kona , Hawaii M i R . . m . rs . ith , M ary E (Paris) , W Keokea , Kona , Hawai * i U v N . . Smith, Al ce Winona Columbia ni ersity , Y City l e Smith , Luci la (Bates ) , Mrs . Th odore E . fi 1 1 1 4th St . c . , Paci Grove, Cal

L . M r s . Smith, ouise Sargeant

c o M acu ical 4 64 29th . | Mrs . , Oakland , Cal

F . F T t c o s n Co. S. . Smith , rank allan | Ala ka Packi g , , Cal l l ce M cCu . Smith , Ali ( y ) , Mrs . Francis W

24 9th . 23 . Ave , Oakland , Cal ”“ O 0 0 0 0 Car ol l n e n i V 1 ew H awa1 1 Snow , Mou ta n , f Sn ow t , Fred . Galen Moun ain View , Hawaii ”“ Snow, Mary R . (Hitchcock ) , Mrs . F . G . H Mountain View, awaii

l i sE 61 St . Ju a l ean or 0 . Snow, a S King , Honolulu Sc ar es V i t r in 1 483 l . c u o , . Rev Antonio Kinau Lane Honolu u

Soar cs Ar een i . . a . , (Fernandez ) , Mrs A V Honolulu * O L. l M r s . Sorenson, Juliette (Hartwel ) laf n Kamuela , Hawa

M St . . M . 6 8 . Speer, Henrietta W aiden , Washington , Pa t n S a en wal d A n n M . . g , . (Dimond ) , Mrs H 0 1 7 7 . Nuuanu Ave , Honolulu ‘

A . 4 th U. . . Stewart , Cecil Capt . Artillery , S , Portland , Or l “ F 3850 St . . Sto z , Fred . Leopold Jackson , San rancisco , Cal 1 1 6

z M R e l M r s L Stol , ary A . ( ow l ) , . . R M . D . 351 t S . s Cajon , Redland , Cal

. M r s s . . Sturg eon , Juliet M (Sturg e ) , J

550 . H ll wo o d . E Franklin Ave . , y g Sta , Los Angeles , Cal . e l 641 u l a 1 . Sturg on , Margaret E nor , Nuuan Ave , Honolu u u r M r e ‘ s . a 1 387 i l un s . St . n ul S the land, M t (Br ) S K ng , Ho o u *

L. M r L M s . L Sutherland, Clara ( oseley ) , ouis . 3 4 1 Ave. M 8 Park , inneapolis ' Swan z e d F f M r s . . y , Juli t (Jud ) , . M l n St . u a n u Pu ahou , ma k , Ho olu n Swanzy, Nora Hasti gs Bryn Mawr College , Pa . “ m a St . Swanzy, Rosa ond Pun hou , Honolulu ‘ T E h m r s . . albot , dit H. (Ar t ong ) , Mrs W . P m h N . Ply out , . H ‘ T 799 l ul aylor, James Townsend P . 0 . Box , Hono u

Terry, Willard S . Hilo , Hawaii Ul dr ick Sch ool Thompson, Kamehameha , Hon olulu

A . U. Thompson , lice (Haviland) , Mrs a Kamehameh School , Honolulu

Thompson . Alice Ranney Kamehameha S chool Honolulu T R N ew hompson, ebecca Hull Westerly , York F 370 e Thompson , Rev . rank Casilla , Valparaiso , Chil F l e Thomp on , Lo i e , Mr . . Valparaiso , Chi s u s s , ‘ M r s . z a Thorne , Margaret (Hitchcock) , Prescott, Ari on l T 1 50 8 T St . hrum , Thomas G . hurston , Honolu u T T m n n rs . . o M . . hru , A na L (Br w ) , G 1 50 8 Thur ston St Honol ul u ‘ r n s Thu ston , Lorrin A drew 4 4 n e l 0 t n w . Room S a g a d Bldg , Honolulu , “ * * T R O hurston, obert Shipman Waialua, ahu " t t r S . Thurston, Margaret Car e Bates , Honolulu “ T u St . h rston , Lorrin Potter Bates , Honolulu ‘ r L l N . . Thu ston , ucy Viele Taylorsvi le , C * T l N . . D . v T A s a M . hurston , , aylors il e, C T Thwing, Rev . Edward Waite ientsin , China “ m F s . Tobin , Mrs . Mary G . (Di ond) San ranci co , Cal * Tomlinson , Sarah E . (Alexander ) , Mrs . Henry W .

5 8 t . 8 Jean S . , Oakland , Cal * I T M . . ownsend, Henry Schuler anila, P * I M r M . . H 2 T s . . . ownsend, Cora (Hitchcock) , H S anila, P ‘H H 2 Town sen d A E O O , lmeda lizabeth berlin, hio * M r s M . T zz T . Cl e er M . , argaret ( Castle) , Alfred

Car l es at e . g , E . Boston , Mass

LLS

ilk W at er h ou s e , Melicent E . Univ . of Chicago

. . E Waters , Mrs Sarah E ( Coan) , Mrs . E . . 1 1 3 43d St W. . , New York E E A M r P s . L. Weaver, llen ( rmstrong ) , . m I i H n Ha pton nst tute, ampto ,

”‘ ‘ W eddick i , W nifred M . (Baldwin ) , Mrs . John Wailuku , W . . am Le l eh u a Weinrich , Ada R ( hitney) , Mrs Willi i , M H M r . M n n s ; . Wells, ildred (Ki ey ) , Haiku, e d r s W n roth , Clara (Isenberg) , M . s i Mu sen , post Wensin, Holste n , Germany . es W t , Alice

Westervelt Rev . William Drake 60 8 St an en wal d g Bldg . , Honolulu D Westervelt, Caroline . ( Castle ) , Mrs . W . D . 270 9 K al akau a Ave . on lul , , H o u * e 270 9 K l k a a au a . West rvelt , Andrew Castle Ave , e l . H Wetmor , Frances Matilda , M D . i ‘ 1 1 1 6 O . White , Edwin scar Wilder Ave , M ‘ W hite ff 1 31 5 , Cli ord Franklin Wilder Ave . ,

Whitman , Russell

r o. Henry Martyn C . Brewe C ,

. H on e Whitney, John Morgan , D . D . S Boston Bldg . , 1 325 un t . . . S . e Whitney, Mary (Rice ) , Mrs J M P ahou , Hon ‘ h 1 625 m t H on e S . W itney, William Locke Bing ha , F Whitney, Edward iske

Whitney, Mary E .

* ' r L S e er er s r 1 0 Berl in iv M s . t Wight, aura (Wilder) p y , , G

Wilcox , Fran ces A . (Van Meter) , Mrs . C . H . 1 2 7 K . O empton Ave , akland , ‘ 1 72 Ave Wilcox, Charles Hart Kempton . , Oakland , ”“ 1 7 2 Wilcox , Norton Edward Kempton Ave . , Oakland ,

Wilcox, George Norton Lihue , K

W 1 29 . ilcox , Edward Payson Meadow St Winsted , Conn

M r s . . . Wilcox , Mary (Rockwell) , E P

1 29 : Meadow St Winsted ,

Wilcox , Albert Spencer Lihue ,

Wilcox , Emma (Napoleon) , Mrs . A . S . Lihue , * M Wilcox , ary Kaui Lihue , "“ Al M ah el on a Wilcox . len Lihue

Wilcox , Samuel Whitney Lihue ,

Wilcox , Emma W . (Lyman) , Mrs . S . Lihue , ”" h Wilcox , Ralph Lyman Li ue , ‘ M r s . . . W i ltzox . , Anna C (Rice ) , R L Lihue , “ Wilcox , Elsie Hart Lihue , 1 1 9

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T m 1 0 0 1 otal A ctive M e bers hip .