Hawaii Holomua, Volume II, Number 36, 15 February 1894 — A Woman's Views on Hawaii. [ARTICLE]

A Woman's Views on Hawaii.

Mrs. Willis. the wife of the new Minister to Hawaii, writes to a 1 L o fivj 1 of prnise of the people, the Ameriean annexationists; in Honolnlu. Sho says tbat they are “lovely”. It becomes more and more evi dent that Minister Willis is not the m.m to use unconstitutional ur extra-constitutional means of over throwing or embarassing the Prorisioual Government of the Hawaiian Islands. His Kentuckv instincts in favor of a “white mans government,” his religious sympathies with the missionaries and their descendants, and his wife s good brste in the matter of social relations. all eomhine to render the restoration of Liliuokalaui a task for whieh he ean have no stomach. Cleveland should have selected for his agent in Hawaii some man who hated rel : ginn, and had a grudge against civilizitiou and society. Such a person might have been fv>und araong the Iarge aud by no raeans ehoiee assortment of otlice-seekers who have been brgging for governmont employment ever since last March, and yet it seems that the mistake was raade of appoi nting a gentleman who is very mueh an American.— Transcrij>t.