Ka Leo o ka Lahui, Volume II, Number 171, 14 April 1891 — ON DIT. [ARTICLE]

ON DIT.

the Queen's visit to the conr try, will we afraid v not be very pleasant to lier womanly weakheBses, and that her popu* lant) among the people will ouly uo proven by the manner in :which she exerc ; sos her govemmeu tly powers, otherwise, we yh;* will reeeive the cold shoulder; Ttyat the (iueen wishes to statq 7)r. Lutz as Medical Su!>erintendent of. thb ĪJener Hospit:il, but (Jarter, who . Buperintendcnts the I>oard. dues rfot. r f

Thai the discliarged po'ieeuien are gotng to bri«g suit f v r their clothes, whkh was paid for from fcheir salaries.

Thafc the Eev. H. H. Parker hās open«d the rel|gio-politico campaigii . laSt Bunday evenir.gj by a sernaon condetnning the Leo and its Editor as «nchristian, besause it says things a¥out thera without a coat of varnish.

That Rev. Parker's sngar plantation has proved as unsucceesfhl as his career as a preacher.

That His Royal Highness the Prince Consort, is improvijig in health, and ean be seen mornings and evenings taking an airitig.

That an allianee, we henr, has been perfectcd b»Hwe&n the Minister of the Interior and the Buperintendent of Road \Vorks. oflensive and defensive, called and understood as the dual aliianee in like manner as that between D:\mon and Pvthias, and that nothing short of a danamite bomb ea;n break the allianee.

That because Road Supervisor Hebbard said a revolution -put hini in office, nothiiig but a revolution cari put him out, and this saying has reached Charlie. and his colleagues, and has scared the quart«tte. Good for Hebbard

That even : aboard Unele Sam's floating territory v the most popular literature read «is the tl Voice of the People" (Ka Leo).

That orders from Hilo have been received for the Ka Leo in considerable numbers. Hurrah !

That a new point has been decided by the Hawaiian Court. When her Majesty goes out on ceremonial occasions, sh£ must ride with one of her ladies-in-waiting, in the royal carriage drawn by a eouple of ordinary haek hor£es, while his highness the Prince C(|nsort must follow in a chinainan's haek dr«gged along by .a third horse; tor it is not' 4 good form " that tbe Queen and herConsort should be seen together in the same (return from Waianae). How yould it be if "I" and the Queen were to go out together?

That the Elele'B ideal of fine literature for the moraf education of the u magses"lis the constant report in full of pugilistic feats; evidently according to | that paoer, the poor unsophisticatpd kanaka will never be u civilized. , |' in the emerald's sense of the term, until he has learned the mauly'j art of breakiug his fellow man's ;nose and poaching his eyes. i

That the ladies in town, —and el sewhere, —decla re that the Leo is the only readable and spicy newspaper of the |lslands. (Hilo Record please copy) and theirsuhseriptions go to prove |that their opinion is earnest. | That the Congregational Protestant pulpits and newspapers : editors and preachers thrown in» have been Boughtand hired for the election canipaign % for a consideraticn. The Kawaiahao |preacher and pulpit sturted the gj|me last Sunday. That tlte prewaturely. oM Pastor of Kawaiaha|o toa\i his text, so we are |credibly in(brmed % — " And the Ku Leo o ka Lahui said

tfaattfae&ry b"d oKj)|iigjjM mantle that 4isguised tbtir forefatherg > haTti% «inei%!i \/lj of the natives fands and mot%&jf t@ "J st«nd ceiiopetition with any oew■■-■ | conāers, they had heen jērri«g > | mammen opealy." We are ' ] undejretaiid that he the truih of the text» and ex<msed him?elf for having taken politics, and for admittlng evil dirp«sed * ! people to shoot some of the n§tive« whieh his father eame here t<» The nngt<.r in holding thedrorope?> for to mo«nt the ehurgh bei~ frv arid cnrvy out his hellishdesign was on!y icaitating Paul when he was looking on wlth a sardoniegritt «nd urging the murder of the poor ina rtyr—Bteplien ; for teliing the tben h vpocrites, just whafc the Leo is p©inting out in the same way to the saaie ei:-tss uf sinners.