Hawaii Holomua, Volume III, Number 195, 23 August 1894 — Hawaiian Hardware Comp’y. [ARTICLE]

Hawaiian Hardware Comp’y.

July 24 »S£4. Iu ‘ Paddenbead Wilson’* !’b I1 oaopkv’’ M*rk Tvaio»«vs: "P»it ali of your eggs iu oue basket — aod watcb tbat basvet EgjT* are not the only tbir»gs to wiiieh this app!ies, we ean make t fit stoves «nd cbange eggs iuto do tars and make it read — Inresl your eoin in a Pansy Stove —and tbe stove will w,itch itself. We bave been watchiog tbese stoves for tbe p st five years. and find i tbem the best iron stove sold m tbis market for tbe rnoney. Where else than at our store ean yon get a stove that will do overy tbing that a 150 stove will do and 1 get it for $15? Eeho answers. ‘the plaee isn’t bnilt.’ We hsve sold hundreds of these stoves in Houolulu, aud never had a eoiu1 plaint. Two weeks ago, we sold ■ one to a gentieman ou Hawaii, and yesterday he ordered another for a friend. The stove sells I itself tbr ugh its fnel saviog qualities. aud because, it is a good baker. You ean get other stvles of stoves if you are uot particular as to the quantity of fuel yOu burn or how yonr food is cooked. There’s no dyspepsia in mea!s prepared on a PANSY. We received last week a lot of wire clothes-15nes that hold washed clothes without usicg pius. It is a sort of double wire arrangement and the pieces are held in between; the harder the wiud blows the tightertlie pieces are held to the Hne. There is absolutely no danger of the clothing being torn as there is nothing sharp about the line. While the cost is a tr.fle gre.iter thau rope, this new style will last so mueh longer that it is eeonomieal to buy the piuless line. The CLAUSS is nno of tbe uew fungled s»w-edge kt>ivcs th »t cuts wanu bread w.thoi.t leaving it heavy and iced eako without making crumbs There are tw ■ or three d tferent iu kes of these knives, all on the same piineiple aud. e.'ieh one prouounceil tlie best on earth by tlie muuufac turers. We selected the Ciauss, - whieh we believe as a disinterested spectator to be better tban its ueighbors. You never had anythiug in your life thnt give as mneh satisfuction for a dollai. If you were buying the other sort you would get only one. The favorite sewing maehine in any commuuity is tbe one tbat does the iuost for the le *st money and whieh runs the easiest. lu the “Wertheiiu” you have » maehine that sews three distinct stitches—The Loek. Cbain and Embroidery aud runs easier than ■ any other maehine, and you pay twenty dollars less for it. Eeonomy stands boldly every side when you bny a Wertheim. In tucking the ehain stitch is pre- > ferable, but in «ther kinds of work. the loek stitch is tbe best. If you buy a maehine that sews the loek, uniess it is a Wertbeira, :it won’t sew a ehain stitch. There’s no particuiar saving m buying a maehine with but one stitch, the Wertheim does three and saves you lots of trouble and work. We ve jnst unpacked six casks of staod lampe that were built for j bard tiraes. Tbey have metai bases and are deeorated so as to mnke a veiy ueat appeamnee in a room. We don.t th:nk you ean get as good a lamp any where else for tbe money, trv as hard asyou > please. Oor stock of table cutlery, spoons and forks is as large as yoo will find in any store in Francisco, and our piicescotupare favorab!r «itb tbose in New YorkTke Eanui Hartwsre Ca. 307 Fort