Ka Leo o ka Lahui, Volume II, Number 346, 16 December 1891 — ON DIT. [ARTICLE]

ON DIT.

That our three legged Cabinet will hobble aloog in some snrt of & j shambling fashion «ntil th©y are j,expelled frow their seata by a diaappointed and diBgusted aBsembly of the peoples representatives. No man of oommon sen6e oan be found to accept a se&t with theni now on tbe eve of their diBComfiture. The hyphen ouly t«ok it ag a stepping i stone to his higher ambition. That h militi\ry tin eoldi?r recently disoharged hiR barkeeper, heeauee he rofused to fornicate his freedom to eatisfy this fiddlere demand to leave the National Party and join the Queeniit* v or Boodk»rs. \A la Nōbfr MuUer, JB9O )

Tbat the P. C. Advertiser d«ing well io unearthing the opium aixd f>ther Boodlers that controls thp _ 4 ' That Mr. Horatio Barbet well and favorably | known on ,the lalande, is now engaged ai the ōld Commercial. _. - -v| That at last Thnrsday's meeting of the McehanicB Union, the ~msn Friday was aeen in a promment ieat in the parqnette. Thatthe Marahal still recoives his allowanee of scourging from the uncoßapromlsinj{ hand of the P. C. A, man, wlthout an audible groan «ad with only ian inw«rd grunt ( That the Ka Heo proposes to w box" the Eleie! with its U peculiar Ēnglish" until we drāw out tbe poliiieal ftht»Bks that is skulking like a lot of peijured N«bles and representatives, withn fowopium boodler» t behind a plashtered Bowlder or a demented Stone. That Mr. Bfenry CaM& sadly feefe the negleot of hia early Hawaiian education ? and in his,yearning to know how advises n» to star a hula school in order to leam *the duck like motions of the hulakui to aoffcen the harsh an<d ? iH£gamly ean-ean whiehhe :s lat%ly lpara<sdin Europe. v ' That the public have heard the Irish patriot frothing twp years ago about his love| of country v ! wfeen he had 35,0Q0 at stak& to j Boodle, and a down Stsne, that \®ould take no man's filfth, but.both a scraping up the mud as cantoceers with! a lettered stripe on their arms to distingbish them from the eommon Jheard — rea4ing thus u r-e-n'e-g-|a-4:e I" • That the P. ©. Advertiser xives no report of the upfitair m«etings of the Select 500, that tHough those .meetingB polit^alare seleet, and not open to ordinary newspsper re~ poHeni in gewral,it is always open |ot,he P. C. A. man. who is oneoi ths solect ~ 600. Meehaniea and workingmen ean do as all is fair in politics, love and war. That a saloon |:eeper is .omnipotent with the officiaJs of Aliiolani Hale, haring stirred their spirits up to refuse •onfirmation,of a sale of *land tuade to the estate of A. 80l fiter .decased, after the p«irchase m«ney had been paid 4n. ddlar, whiskey opium will carry, away the beat andab]est me'n, umleBs fortified wiUi the true spittt of m&mhood and a loWforth« tpith.', ; K

That at the nieeting of the Hul Kalaiaina, ther<) were ordy prcgent, the President, Messrs. J. L. Kaulukou, J. Testa, X Poe, and the old patriarch J. Kanui, afler k w&itinp for two hours, ttie hghts were put outin pree»nc« ty seats and the hall left in iis c uiet repose, never raore orobably 1,0 hear tlie ear-split-ting voice of John L. K. and the conceited grunt of his younger eolleague preaent. all buoyant wi h the hope of pre«entlng a deelaration of principles for the Hui Kalaiaina, that beats be IT. B. Doclaration ofln* de>endejūtcc s and make &n br«y

SMAIX FASM7NG AJS£) HOME STEADS. 10. Tii« weaHhy fraetion oat popolaoion haye hitherfco>revent€d the deveioptnent of an independent c!ass of citizens; the public lands have been acqaired and have been up i» a few hands or parcelled to ssoit > fafY©ntesL' and «mall fermersand ph«tttiTB have beea drive» 9nt by corporations tsr ' coß3bmations o( capitalistB; but as small feifmipp jg >condncive tothe etability of ther State t it ehould pe enceuraj2ed ü by a new Ftid/ more liheral Homegtead act, by the ownerahip o£ emall tr»cte of laad" and the Bettlement thereon of fantties of our present popnlation,—&ndespecialī ly of the native Hawāiians who hav« feeen left almoet homeleaa in there eonn-try.-shoi»ld be rendered pogß«fele. To that end t the &ad &r<twn lande,, (in eo far as dj>se without invadinK vepted jrights ) ahould be devoted as soon as poesible to home£teadß. and conferred upon bosit*Sde eettl«ra free oi talea for a limitsd '&wā* It ehould be the further aim olfov9m* i mept j», at onee, so far the xneanB of transporfe tio»,—loeai, natfonal and >to provide, m j āll the di6tricfcs, of cemveying the pr#duct of th*a©il to MiU KLECTORAL fSßt&t 11. We hold that npright*nd manhood, and not the po«gfefeaitHi «S wealth, arbitrarajrfixed, the right to vote for nohlea as representatives, and no raoxe »hould be accorded to the baHot of rich man than to the bailot of the poor Man. The discmiinatKsh im favbr of wealthhow made m •ur Constitution is contrary to alī the eternal principles of right and justice. and mu«t he,abolished; p&pii&imāī we w>li favor a level~ of the presezrt disttection of wealth and claeeefe whieh blemish our lawp with respect of tiie right to vote for nobles, thereby restoring to the nativc Hawaiiana privileges whichrpertain t© them in their owh country, aftdof whieh they have been unjaiftly deprived. INTERNAL IMPROVKMENTB ' 12 We £avor the egpenditure of sufficient su2bs to secure a mtisber of needed puhlie improvementB cmOahu and oth«r Islands; eehool, railroad* and harbora aad wharvee, puhlie liglit; and aleo a thorongb i*sferw»re and water-work», not only «wHonolulu, but throusch-ontthe other lelanka^