Hawaii Holomua, Volume III, Number 289, 23 August 1893 — Untitled [ARTICLE]

I the nutoriou3 Spreoise.s eane as | I sr;ven lhat i.apt-r is made out «>f j * whole eloih. Mr. Cra!ghto« nerer j apol< on behalfofthe royalists ; n r d d the g»vernment t»ke any j 1 **further etc{ S." The cxi>l -»nat t\ : lett r whīeh Mr. Creighton sent t-> j Mr. I>..le did not suit the e>vern- [ meni beciuse >t c»nt>ined some ; unpleusant truth' ī >vli;ch the g">'' ■ erntnent did n t dtsire to sh<*w to Minister Blount. The letter was I theref *re r»‘turued, and the rn.ilter I dropi>ed as far as Ihe governnaent |is coneemed. Mr. Creight >n forj warded a c<>py of the letter to Mr. . Blo ii t who expressed himself perfectly satiffitd w;th the explanation saying among cther things “that if tbey (the annexationists) have any right to put my name in a paper ns a victimof some s*>ciety, I cannot see why you haveu’tjust as gxxl a right to out it on a stick.” The Chronicle corrcspondent here, it is underst<xxi is a young man of great talent for slock-speculation. He shou!d c>nfime himself to that business and to peddling pln8ter3 # C->nisalves. and chewing gum and dr»p nevvspaper writing. Hisbump of veracity is not sufficiently deve!oped to make him a success m that career.