Hawaii Holomua, Volume III, Number 182, 7 August 1894 — Untitled [ARTICLE]

Aku onee agun tbe >}>eclacleJ dispeiuer o( verb I tn the go.ts whieh p«y 75 cenfj* per tn»ntb for politic>l information r onee again be mounU tlic etlitoriai trī|Kxi r*nJ in e3ruest w ird-s tteiupU to *bow lh.it epon tbe br. a»l eboablers of Pres.deut Cleveiaud raust be placetl tbe weight of uiiscarri«ge whieh bas deve!oped frora tbe birth of the baby Repab!ic and most paipably presenUd to pablic view iu the onabiltty of tbe wheeU of the, so-calIed, jastice of Hawaii to raove freely.clogged, «8 they are, by the deadlock oow exi=ting in tbe irapanelling of jaries Iha fa!sily of his position. and hia plea. is showa in a:iother e<l{toria! in whieh he is p'.eased to te'l tbe g»ats that raasticate the ‘ solid chuuks" of *isdom whieh are thrown theni. that, instead of any great struggle beicg necessaiy to overcorae this “poiut a factor, President Cleveland,” he stutes that the hloeka.le “will prove to be oaly temporary, bat, if it should b« otherwise it ean easily be raet by appropriate legislation/’ Yes. poor slaves, neither the loqu sition nor the Council of Ten eouhl press on the screws or legislate so easily as the loeal magnates whieh eonslitute tho “Coancils of Stute.”