Hawaii Holomua, Volume III, Number 87, 14 April 1894 Edition 02 — Goodby Adams! [ARTICLE]

Goodby Adams!

Tbe U. S. S. A.bms !eaves the port of Honoluln toraorrow. Unlike sorae of the predecessors in these waters of an American , raan-of-war, the Adaras carries with her the goodwill of all the diderent classes of Honolnlu. Her officers have had the won- 1 derful gift of abstaining from politics and keeping aloof frora the bitter feeling created by tho un- ! usual, uneducated, and prominently vulgar set of officors who comraanded the Bostou, and from villfying the Hawaiian girls of Hawaii basked in the favors of the select crowd of unhine haole who have left their o»-iginal occupation of cooking and sweeping, b}- joining themselves iuto marriago with i j the imported “clerking” coolies | who generally skipped their own : countrv to avoid militarv service 1 [ or the psalm—singingspeculators j who make their monev through * J O | j the unparalelled inAuenee of the 1 W. C. T. U. It is to be hoped j that the meu of tbe Adams i : wlll visit these shores agaln. ' : They have been gentloman!y, considerate and we IWpe, appre- : | ciated. Without mentioning any ' names especially we believe that I we express the sentiments of the : best society iu Honolulu by sayiug that Mr. ElIiot, Chief MeKee, the genial Paymaster McDona!d, |“Felicia” Carter, Vogelgesang! I and manv others will be sorelv ! • i i raissed. If steru dutiescall thera i to Behring Sea they ean have one i | cousolation—aud that is there | is a warm spot in Ilawaii —if not forgotten. The 1 popular Commander who only has had a few weeks here j will always know that there is a gun, a chowder, a goodcompauy, | a eup, for him whenever his vessel anchors in Hawaii. . I