Ka Leo o ka Lahui, Volume II, Number 287, 24 September 1891 — Protection. [ARTICLE]

Protection.

people shoul<L..be _pro-J talists will require just as many Loutb of labor per day as human nature ean bear. For a man to get up before day light and work m aft«*^4ife another. His life is apent in want and toil, and such talue. We cannot see, in justice, low any man who does nothing ean insist that others should work ten or twelve hours a day: on the luxunes of life ean find*itin his heai;k,tff;i&iiia jHW. that the poor should be satisfied $rsßss;ā]|d >«QS^* h iBt S«fe- ' !'ii The first great remedv is in the • . ... • t v'' -— i t>allot. The poor are in the majori*r. Tf the law oppresse&them, it: i- fault. They have followed uie and drum of some party; *io man should go with a party nnless it is going his wav. Wealth is not a crime nor is poverty a virtue, alth©pgh yirtue has generally beettJf&oc ' l K