Hawaii Holomua, Volume III, Number 173, 26 July 1894 — A DENIAL. [ARTICLE]

A DENIAL.

Mr. G. Carson Kenyon has t iken tbe tronble to refuto the statements raade by the Honolulu , correspondont of tbe United Press Company in regard to his »lleged conrso of bribing Murray, j Klemme and other promiuent p. g. politicians. We ean hardly understand that Mr. Kenyon has had patience enough to take anything Berienx whieh emanates from S. E. Bishop the reputed correspon- ! dent of the United Press. Mr. Kenyon has for some years been the butt of the facetionsness and bile of the AdveiiiMr, and he has bee.i classified as a man a little worse than an ordinarv raurderer or even a stage villain. Nobody, thougb, has so far accused bim of an idiot. lt was left to tbo revereud corrēspondent to the United Press to plaee that stigma on Carson’s grey hair aud goldriramed glasses. Only a double-distilled, supernatural fool would ever dream of paying $5000 to either Klemme or Murray, for political services _# hich none of thera could reuder. Ouly a triple distilled, especially patented idiot would ever hand Carsou $10,000 to be used as a political bribe. Neither he or CornwelI have yet aspired to reserved seats in tbe insano asylum and the accusationof S E Bishop the reputod correspondent of the United Press reachos the piunaele. Mr. CornweIl s failure to “put up’’ on Johnny IIayward agaiust Nevadu may have led the old sport to baliove that all the gallant colonel’s roady cash bas found its way into the coffers of Kenyon-Klerarae aud Murray.