Hawaii Holomua, Volume I, Number 64, 2 December 1893 — More Lies, Same Liars! [ARTICLE]

More Lies, Same Liars!

I Stevens and Th.urston on the Hampage Again. The Australia biings newspapers in whieh Mr. Thurston. tbe present diplo«at and Mr. Stevens the past diplomat have entered into an interesting eompetition in their efibrts to heeome thecbampion liarsof the centan-. It is a pity that the two gentlemen did not coosult eaeh other before they started out lo contradict the plain and trathful facts conUined in Blount’s report, so they could have avoided contradicting eaeh other iu getting worse than tangled in 9 u their attempts to clear themselves. Mr. Thurston states, that Stevens aud W ilt>o, landed the Boston troops on their owu responsibility. and without the kuowledge of the revolutionists, while Stevenssays, that he woald never have asked Wilt.se to land his forces if it r badn't beea that Mr. Thurston ou behalf of the so called eommittee of safety had requested him to do so. Mr. Stevens says, that there was no eonspiracy, no secrecv, underhanded business in the whole revolution, bnt at tho same time, Attoruey General W. O. Smith accuses Mr. Wandeuberg of having divulged the proceedings at secret meetings and betrayed the confidences of his co-conspirators. If the devil makes an entr)- in his ledger of eaeh lie uttered on earth. he must have beeu very busy since the Hawaiiau revolutiou started and the pages devoted to our Christian friends, the annexationists raust be filled to overfiow. Among smaller liars, we notice a fellow who signs himself Garrett, and who in a'letter to tho Exarainer indulges in a lot of abnses against Mr. Wundenburg of whom he says, he onee was a partner, and whose “wicked character' he had ample opportunity to heeome acquainted with. There was onee a fellow here who absconded and uever paid his lawful debts, but he was ueither a partner, uor iu auy way intimate with Mr. T\ undeuberg. He simply was as he seems to be now, a rascal and a liar.