Hawaii Holomua, Volume III, Number 183, 8 August 1894 — Hawaiian Hardware Comp'y. [ARTICLE]

Hawaiian Hardware Comp'y.

•J u1 y 24 In “Padtlenhead Wilaou’? Philosophv’’ Mark Twainsavs: ‘*Pot a)i of yonr eggs in one basket — anJ watch that basket ' Eg«;5 on are not the on!y tbings to whieh tiiis applies, we ean make it fit stoves and change eggs into t do’lars and make it read—Invest , yonr eoin in a Pansv Stove—aud i . * j the stove will watch itself, We | have been watching these stoves • for the past five years, aiul find ' them the best iron stove sold in • this murket for the money, Where else thau at our store eau ' you get a stove that will do overy thiug that a #50 stove will doand get it for #15? Eoho answers, ‘the plaee isn’t built.’ We have sold hnndreds of these stoves iu Houolulu, and never had a eomplaiut. Two weeks ago, we sold ' one to a gentlemau ou Hawaii, and yesterday he ordered another for a frieud. The stove sells itself through its fuel saving ; qualities. and because, it is a good baker. Tou ean get other ' styles of stoves if you are not particular as to the quantity of fuel yOu buru or how yonr food is cooked. Tbere’s uo dys - pepsia iu meals prepared ou a i PANST. We received last week a lot of wire clothes-lines that hold washed clothes without using pins. It is a sort of double wire arrangement aud the pieces are held iu between;the harder the wind blows tbe tighterthe pieces are held to the liue. There is absolotely no danger of the j clothing being torn as there is nothing sharp about tbe line. While the cost is a trifie greater than rope, this new style will last so mueh louger that it is eeonomieal to bny the pinless line. The CLAUSS is one cf the uew fangled snw-edge kuives that cuts warm bread withont !eaving it heavy and iced eake without making orumbs There are two or three d ttereut m kes of these knives, all on the samo pnneiple and eaeh one prononnced the best on enrth by the mannfacturers. We selected the Clauss, whieh we believe as a disinterested spectator to be better thau its ueighbors. Tou never bad anythiug in your life tbat give as mneh satisfaction for a dollar. If you were buying the other sort you would get only ono. The favorite sewing maehine in any community is tbe one that does the most for the levst money ■ and whieh rnus the easiest. In the “Weiiheim” you have a maehine that sews three distinct stitches—The Lock, Cbain and Embroiderv aud runs easier than w anybther maehine, and you pay twenty dollars less for it. Eeon- j omy stands bold!y every side when you bny a Wertheim. In tucking the ehain stitch is preferable, but in other kimls of work. the loek stitch is the best. If )ou buy a maehiue that sews the loek, unless it is a Wertheim. it wou’t sew a ehain stitch. There’s no particolar saving in { buying a maehine with but one stitcb, the Wertheia does three and saves yon iots of tronble and work, We ve jnst unpacked six casks of stand lamps that were built for hard times. They have metal

■ bases and are decorated so as to ; make a very oeat appearanoe in a room. We don’t tbink yon ean get as good a lamp any where else for the money, try as hard asyou please. Onr stock of table cntiery, | spoons and forks is as Iarge as yoa will find in any store in San Francisco, and our prices compare favorably with those in New . York. I . m Hawaiiai Hariiare Ca. I 807 Fort StrMt •" . HSS =