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resplendent in blue broadcloth and gilt buttons, 
always made a profound impression on our bare¬ 
footed squad, but it was a considerable consolation 
to find that we could easily hold our own in the 
wrestling matches and running races that were soon 
organized on every such occasion.*’ 
* p. 18. Juliet Isabel Judd, usually called “Sweety,” 
was the youngest of the children of Dr. and Mrs. 
G. P. Judd. She died at the age of eleven, in 1857. 
* p. 19. Jane Loeau, one of the chiefesses who 
attended the Royal School, married Mr. Jasper, 1848. 
* p. 20, The King’s Place, a neglected ruin of 
stone and concrete, may still be seen in the jungle 
mauka of Luakaha in Nuuanu. 
* p. 27. From “Honolulu,” Laura Fish Judd. 
“September 6th, 1849. Dr. Judd returned from 
Privy Council and handed me the following: It has 
pleased the King to nominate G. P. Judd his Minister 
of Finance, as His Majesty’s Special Commissioner 
and Plenipotentiary Extraordinary to the Govern¬ 
ment of France, England and the United States. 
September 11th. Dr. Judd is gone. He sailed in 
the schooner “Honolulu,” Captain Newell, bound for 
San Francisco, accompanied by the two princes, 
Alexander Liholiho and Lot Kamehameha/’ 
(See “Honolulu” for details of months spent in 
Europe.) 
1850. “After a visit to Niagara and spending om 
week with Dr. Judd’s aged, widowed mother, lb* 
embassy returned to the Inlands via Panama 
been absent two days lens than a liar Tin* yn®m% 
princes were in excellent health ami spirits, and 
much improved in mind and manners and looking 
quite handsome.” 
* p. 35. Reference is made here to the untimely 
death of Aaron B. Howe on November 13, 1852, at the 
age of twenty-six years. Nellie was engaged to marry 
the young man, hence her grief. She remained 
faithful to his memory, although it is said that she 
received many offers of marriage during her life. 
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who arrived in Honolulu about i§4§. He bate 
of trust under five successive Hawaiian Kings. 
“Little Britain” was the name of the Luce home on 
King Street, and the family w r as well and favorably 
known in the old days. 
* p. 53. Charles H. Judd, with mother and sisters, 
traveled to the U. S. in 1855, returning in 1856. 
* p. 75. Emily Catherine Cults and Charles Hast¬ 
ings Judd were married on Not. 1, 1859, in Honolulu 
and sailed shortly thereafter to Baker’s Island. 
*p 76 * Surrey note* —This, aha!, is the 
lovely 1*6 v w f&tm- birthday we celebrate: the world's 
r*mother-in-law.—J. P. M.) 
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