Hawaii Holomua, Volume II, Number 38, 19 February 1894 Edition 02 — Who is Dole? [ARTICLE]
Who is Dole?
Several Senators and Representatives seem to regard Mr. Sanford B. DoIe of Honolulu as the President of the United States. Mr. Dole is merely the leader of a mob which holds control of the capital of Hawaii by virtue, or, rather by vice of a crime committed by Minister Stevens. But partisanship closely allied to treason gives the utterances the force of a Presedential message to several members of Congress. His mob revolt was as swaggering as Jack Cade’s and his government is as ridicu fous as that of Sancho Panza over Barratrovia. Yet he parades and preys and prays in the stolen muniments, with the applause of American partisans who are never so happy as when in moral alii ance with an enemy of their own government, This insular Sancho Panza has a wife who shies her bonnet into the ring. She has written a letter concern ing the Liberty bell, one of the patriotic properties of this Republic which we put into the staying great days and times, and therein takes occasion to insult the President of the United States by saving that he is des- troying liberty in Hawaii. This reference is so nasty under the circumstances that it must rank with Miss Eva Evans' remarks about her "Pa,” must mean that Mr. CIeveland has refused to receive stolea goods from Mr. Dole, nml that persun tinds longer hidiag difficult The sort of liberty L*“ has established in H..waii 1 1 ; > s no analogne ou eartli at this nioraeut except in the Kingdora of Dahoraey, under a negro ruler with a copper riug iu his nose, slit ears, and a gashed d> wlap. Mrs. S. B. Dole raay not be blamed for assuiuing tbat the Aiuerican people dislike their own govfcruraent, aud liko to have the foreigners abuse it, for she takes her idons frora a few| Ainer can papers and partisans.! B.;t ū|»on furtber iuquiry she, will learn that we resent such! indeceneies as her Dolefni has ! band hns coraruitted. Jo*m /’. lriih in the U'nee. —————— {