Hawaii Holomua, Volume III, Number 174, 27 July 1894 — Hawaiian Hardware Comp'y. [ARTICLE]

Hawaiian Hardware Comp'y.

r ; I July 24 1891 In“Puddenhea(A\'ilson'3 Phil- ! osopby M Mark Twain says; “Put j all of your eggs in one basket— ! : and watch that basket. M Eggs I are not the only things to whieh tbis applies, we ean make it fit j stoves and change eggs into 1 dollars and make it read—Invest j , your eoin in a Pansy Stove—and i tbe stove will watch itself. We have been watching these stoves , for the past five years, and find them the best iron stove sold in this market for the money, T\*here else than at our store ean you get a stove that will do oven rtbing that a 150 stove will doand get it for $15? Eeho answers, ‘the plaee isn’t built.’ We have sold hundreds of these stoves in Honolulu, and never had a eomplaint. Two weeks ago, we sold one to a gentleman on Hawaii, aml yesterday he ordered another for a friend. Tbe stove sells itself through its fuel saving qualities. aud because, it is a good baker. You ean get other styles of stoves if you are not particular as to the quantity of fuel you burn or how your food is cooked. There’s no dyspepsia in meals prepared on a PANSY. 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 and tho pieces are held in between; the harder the wind blows the lighter the pieces are held to the line. There is absolutely no danger of the clothing being torn as there is nothing sharp about the line, While the cost is a trifle greater than rope, this new style will last so mueh longer that it is eeouomieal to buy the pinless iine. The CLAUSS is one of the uew fangled saw-edge knives that cuts warm 3 bread without leaving it heavy and iced eake without making crumbs There are two or three diflerent makes of these knives, all on the same principle and eaeh one prononnced the best on oarth by the manufacturers. We selected the Clauss, whieh we believe as a disintere6ted spectator to be better than its neighbors. You never had anything in your life that give as mueh satisfaction for a dol!ar. If you were buying the other sort you would get only one. Tbe favorite sewing maehine in any community is tbe one that does the most for the le?*«t money and whieh runs the easiest. In the “WeHheim” you have a maehine that sews three distinct stitches—The Loek, Chain and Embroidery and runs easier than any other maehine, and you pay twenty dollars less for it. Eeonomy stands boldly every side when you buy a Wertheim. In tucking the ehain stitch is preferable, but in other kinds of work, the loek stitch is tbe best. Jf you buy a maehine that sews tbe loek, unless a Wertheim, it won'i sew a ohain stiteh. There’s no particoiar eaving in buying a maehine with bot one stitch, the Wertheim does throe and saves you lots of trooble and work. We’re jnst uupacked aix casks of stand lampethat were built for bard times. They bare meial bases and are decorated so as to j make a vexy neat appearance in a , room. Wedon’t ihink you ean | get as good a lamp anywhere else i for the money, try as hard asyoo j pleaae. Oor stock of table cotlery, apoona and forks isas large as 1 yoo will find in.any atore in San Franciaoo.aitdoarpricesoompere favorably wiih ihoee in New York. m kMa Mm V > ■ 1 KT I