Hawaii Holomua, Volume III, Number 182, 7 August 1894 — Hawaiian Hardware Comp'y. [ARTICLE]

Hawaiian Hardware Comp'y.

Jnly 24 S£4. In' PoJdenhead Wilson’s Phil« <«ophy M.»rk Twuinsavs: ‘ Put ull of yonr eggs in one basket — and watch that basset ” ure uot tbe on!y things to whieh this appliea, vre eun make it fil stoves and cbange eggs into do’lars and mnke it read—lnvest your eoin in a Pansy Stove—aud tbe stove will wutch itself. We have been witcbing tbese stoves £or tbe p,st five years. and fiud them the best iron stove solJ in this market for thc raoney, Wbere else tbau at our store ean you get a stove that will do everytbing that a 150 stove will doand got it for $15? Ecbo answers, ‘tbe plaee isn’t buKt.’ We bave sold LmudfreiLs of tbese stoves in Honoluln, and never had a eomplaint. Two weeks ago, we sold one to a gentleman ou Hawaii, and yesterday he ordered another for a friend. Tbe stove sells itself tbrungb its fuel suving qualities. aud because, it is a good baker. You eun get otber stvles of stoves if you are uot particnlar as to tbe quantity of fuel you burn or bow yonr food is cooked. There’s no dyspepsia iu meals prepared on a PANSY. We received last week a lot of wire clotbes-lines tbat bold wasbed clothes witbout using pins. It is a sort of double wire arrangemeut aud tbe pieces are belJ in between; tbe barJer the wiml blows the lighter tho pieces are hekl to tbe line. Tbere is absolote!y no danger of the clotbiug being torn as there is notbing sharp about tbe line. While tbe cost is a trifle greater tban rope, tbis new stylo will last so mueh longer tliat it is eeonomieal to buy tbe piuless line.

The CLAUSS is one of the new fangled s >w-edge knives that cuts wanu bread without leaving it heavy and iced eako without making crumbs There are two or : three d:ffereut m!kes of these knives, all on the same principlo and eaeh one prouonuced the best on earth by the manufacturers. We selected the Clauss, whieh we believe as a disinterested spectator to be better thau its neighbors. You never had anythiug iu your life that give as mueh satisfaction for a dollar. If you were buying the other sort you woUld get on!y one. The favorite sewing maehin? in any community is the one that does the most for the least money and whieh runs the easiest. In the “Wertheiw" you have a maehiue that sews three distinct stitches—Tho Loek, Chain and Embroiderv and runs easier than any other maehine, and you pay twentj' dollars Iess for it. Eeonomy stauds bo!dly "every side when }*ou buy a Wertheim. In tucking the ehain stitch is preferable, but in other kinds of work. tbe loek stitch is the best. If you buy a maehine that sews the lock,uuless it is a Wertbeim, it won’i sew a ehain stitch. There’s no particular saving in bnying a maehieo with but one stitch, the Wertheim does three and saves yon iots of tronble and work.

\Wve jast uup*cked six c*sks of stand lampsthat were bnilt for hard times. Thoy bave metal bases and are decorated so as to make a very ueat appearance in a room. We don’t ihink yoa ean get as good a lamp anywhere else for tbe money, tn- as hard asyoa piease.

Oar stock of tabie catlery, spoons and for<s is as large as yon wiil hnd in any store in San Francisco, and onr prices compare favorably with thosa in Xew York. Tle Eavaiiu Euiwe & 307 ForiStzeet