Ka Leo o ka Lahui, Volume II, Number 192, 13 May 1891 — WAHT THEY SAY OF US. [ARTICLE]

WAHT THEY SAY OF US.

Ho». John E. Bush maintain» a warm English paper in his native paper, u Ka Leo oka Hawaii" (The Voice of Hawaii). Mr. Bush was a great stickler for the " rights of royalty onee, but finding hi«tself again in the pottag« on the accession of Que«n Liliu#kalani. the rankeet republicaniscn is preached in his paper, and it is showing its influence, too, in the talk of natiyes. John is about three-quafters white, a convert to the tenets of the SeTenth Day Adventists, ar.d, to say the l«ast somewhat fearless in both politics and religion. He was lately before the Supreme Court in banco for an editorial th.at appeared in his paper, charging 802ae of the judges with being aaurderers, for having ordered riflemen to sh«ot Kanakae in the insurrection of 1890. The Court let him when one Kekoa, a native ex-member of the Ijegislature, admitted he f had inserted the article witheut the proprietor'B knowledge.—The(N. Y.) Journalut.