Ka Leo o ka Lahui, Volume II, Number 154, 20 March 1891 — ON DIT. [ARTICLE]

ON DIT.

t That Mr. J. 0. Carter said in the Legislature of 1872, that the voiee of the peo]>le was the voice of God. His advice in 1891 wus eoptrary to h is former opi niona. Mun ch3nges but first .pr.incipl.es never. Associations of over twenty years have a great inilueneē ovcr a man's oninions. That Bishou Willis will go to the Lepdrs"' jKala, Molokai, to repeat the cure practiced by the Droohet on Naaman. bv eontinnous bathing i n a metiicated bath, —a late supposed cure. That John. Bt. Patrick Kamehamelia 111, Curnmin's birthday was celebrated on the 17 instant; the whole performancē wound up in the evening .wilh ;> ealieo f:uidango. j That the Stockholders of one of our daily newspapers are agita-ted at the prospects before them. That owing to ancestral refationship wilh a certain cabinet officer, a certai n autocratic c:al at th e head of a bureau will be saved from decapitation. ' That what ve printed in tlie /Ka Leo" as to the discontent of the H*twaiians about the way things are managed, and the desire of some for a change of form of gov--e^nment f has created quite a stir, and has been trans!ated and published in t,he P. C. A. That quite a number of suspect,s were allowed their libertv, after suffering the risk of infecticn by being penned up jimong lepers. That personal friendship and favoritesm seem to be the order of the day. . That. Wilcox, who was said to have conspired for sornebody J s sake, has been left ont entirely in the cold by somebody for somebody! elses sake. Put not your trust in Princes, —Robert. That Samuel finds he is being petti-coated, mstead of , being sugar-coated. That Whiting is not such a know nothing as some know nothings elaim. That rnmored changes still infest the street corners. That Consul McKinley is knighted before he wIU be*bemghted. Those whom the wish to destroy, triey first mu'ie mad with jov. That Ex-Miriister Thurstr»n lias a well laid plan in view, and on!y waits partnesr to carrv them out. That- the republican S!>irit of thcse latter days, seem »to have reached theloval Hawaiians. That a Hare is after a fut govcrnmerit rabbit, eo it is s:iid. That Tt*ll, formerly an Agent of the l>oanl of Heaith. is the newlv made (u>vernor, of Kalaupapa. His sulvjecU are a lepro:is en'w. Tnat Madamo lVle is ve:itino; her spleen the way attairs nre i)e'inir That Ilon." 11. A. Wul-n-nn likely to be s?;;pf rv c<h d by ll.e

Hon. Charles B. "n ,■;(•< •>unt of the failing hc;vlth of lonuei-. That the onlv (>f aii;iexation desirable to the Plawaiiaii. is as a State, with all the rights of a Stats, to the Federal l T nion. Just thimk of President J.ohiv Edward Hush t setting in the Executive Chair at \Vashington, guardeii by an Eagle or two, and Oolonol tho Uonorable Waik.apu as Kquerry-in-Waiting and Major Dandvfunk as spittoon earrier. Well who knows. Thar was Brazil, you know, *and Portugal,:.:Soain. and oth«.rs will follow. ĪEven the people of Ponape are fighting with the view of estab lishing a 8;niall republican <;entVdereaey. That the President &f the Board of Uealth says that the Head of the Bureau is not responsible for the act of his agents. Time to have a new President.