36 HA WAIIAN G VIDE B OK. 



ing in "which are the court-room, post-office, &c, is in 

 open sight, and here the traveler may debark for his 

 trip around Maui, or continue to the Bay, a few miles 

 farther east. 



Lahaina has no hotel or public place of entertainment ; 

 yet for a very reasonable stipend furnished dwellings 

 can be obtained by the day or week for an individual, 

 a family or a party ; while meals can be obtained of 

 Chinese cooks at fair rates by the day or week. Let- 

 ters of introduction from friends abroad or in Honolulu 

 to the foreigners residing here, will always open wide 

 the doors of a generous hospitality, and assure the 

 bearers of as kind a welcome as can be found in the 

 world. In the same respect and to the same degree, do 

 proper credentials assure the visitor a kind reception 

 anywhere and everywhere on the islands. The pro- 

 prietors of plantations, the officers of government, 

 and merchants and foreigners in general are always 

 willing, and more than willing to do all in their power 

 to make visitors comfortable. Questions will always be 

 answered, information freely given, and aid extended 

 to the courteous and reasonable traveler, who will find 

 some one ready to answer all his demands for a fair re- 

 muneration. 



There is not much to interest the traveler in this 

 place. The Court House, the native churches, Protest- 

 ant and Catholic, the Anglican " Sister's School," the 

 sugar plantation of Messrs. Campbell & Turton, and the 

 Native Hawaiian College at Lahainaluna are the princi- 

 pal objects of interest. The latter institution is located 

 six hundred and fifty- two feet above the sea, two miles 

 back of Lahaina, — an oasis of green on the slope of a 



