Hawaii Holomua, Volume III, Number 285, 16 August 1893 — Untitled [ARTICLE]

TilB to cre.»te racPfee!ing betw*en the Muwiiian? »nd ihe l< r» igners «re g» ltii;g more and m»>re pn*oouDCcd on the ptrt of ti:e pnpi»ortt*r? of Vr. J»*hn 1.. >tevens’ x*r!»v i5sis>na I g*>wrnmer»t. A native pa|n.r called the Kn'>k«>a. whieh bv the vr«y eannol boa»t of being a repre»ient«tive Ha>vaiian pa|K*r, i? 8tek.ii g lo bpread th< impresH<>n that the infainou8 treaty whieh Mr. W. D. Alexand**r carried t > Wasbington wae nol gennine. ard that Mr. D->le has denied lhat 9uch a lreat\' or prop»>eitioii f»>r a lreaty ever Uft the office of the Minister «»f Foreign Aff,iir9. It i9 etited that it is ix>5»ible that the correepK)ndent for the A88ociated Pres» did 9end the tenor »>f a treaty whieh px*rhaps waa found in the wa8te-basket of the government,but Mr. l) »le, it is elaimeil, repudihtes ihe in?trument in toto. We would eall tbe attention of the ai-called reverend p»rtj' whodoes s»*rv:ce f »r the Kuokoa to the remarkable fact, th.it none of the government’9 oflieial journals —beg p.ird‘in. ivoi*ldbe ollieial j >urnal,«, \ve eh.iuld sjv —whieh are edited in English,have contained one word whieh c>uld iiidic-.lv that tlie treaty aa published in ihe Auienean pn|>ers lhrongh tbe corre»pondence of Editor ,T»>hngtone is bogu9, or is not the true text of Ihe instriictiou8 to Profeseor Alexand»r. The people here ean rest assu.td that if the paternJtv of that outrageous document cou!d not lie laid nt the d >or of Mr. DoIe and his seventeen imitators, the aunexation press here wouki have rnshed to the defense of thnr *'adverti8ing” governnient, and raised a geiieral cry ag >inst our criticism of the alloged treaty. Oh nt>. the treaty as pnnted in the United St.it* 8 papers is genuinc enoueh, and it bear the slampof the prinpiples whieh govern the provisional rnler9 on its fac«. It s curcs as we have previou9'y t»oiiited out, a five years oligirchy :n the hands of Mr. Dole aml the other 9eventeen chumps who now enj >y the bliss of b?ing bosses \vhcre they aren’t fit to be s!iives. It virtually di9franchi8es Ihe people of these Islands, and it tramples the righf9 of the aona of the soil—the H iwaiians into the dust. It begs the Umted States of America to do the | olicing and 9oldtering of these lslands for five years. and asks for a guard of h >nor, or a guard of proicV!l!>tl l.!!UCT 1v»J V4>8 ujCH uhu w ish lo e?labli9h a tyranny over a free, a civili*ed and independent I>eople. Snch is the firsl move on the part of Mr. Slevens’ abettor9. who now are tolerated for the sake of peaee by the Hawaiian people. All their lies that their mtentious are quite different, will not help. btcause evtry day the Hawailan gets more aud more Convinced that the revolutiuu and the motives whieh brought it on wen? based on the devp r«ce-hatred for the Hawaitan9of the wbiteadventurers imported here, or born bere aeeidentally of raissionary pareots sent here on tbe teu-cent eub9criptioos of the Suoday-echool children in ihe Unitod States.