Ka Nupepa Elele, Volume XIV, Number 6, 6 February 1892 — The Straight Ticket. [ARTICLE]

The Straight Ticket.

1 If animus is more important than tiie great questioDS of the day, the • Befurm voters liave folleweu. tlie Advertiser's adviee' If the. neglect to consolt the AdvertUer about ithe nominations was an efTront to the Reform party, then, was it necessary to turn the government over to the Liberals in order to avenge tbe AdveHiser faraily. That family is not the Reforp party by a long way. L. Jt. Thuston was really the head of the Reform movement and of tbe Cabinet that has been known by his name. No man has be<fe truer to liis party allagiance ōr better infogned as to the political "situation. He ad-

vised all to vote the straigbt ticket. Is Ms opinion not worth more thati that of your»g Henry Castl3 josl from college and more receutly frora the bear gardens of Bohemia. It is like a youug gradaafe to see in a fancied Blight, greater \mport than in fche ihreatened of tho constitution. Reformers, shonld think of the yeai\s of discouragi»g. struggle they enoountered iu up setting the old rotten governinent. White men had no Tote, when the now liberal party was in fu!l power. White men enjoyed few rights 0r except to pay enorinous taxes to provide &alaries for a)ot of gross and ineoa*petent office holders. Is all that has been aecoxupiished \vith so niuoh labor to

be gifen up on .iccount of the dis-| satisfāction of a little clique of* bōre i heads like Henry Castle and I)r, 4Holgers? They say you should not ivccept th"e advice of such men as Thurston and Boldwin; why then should anybody follow Jthi3 lead of such a man as Dr. Rogors. The: iaentioned gentlemen gavc up their pnrty pride and feeling, in secnre general l|ttev is recaīeitrant because he seea no immediate prospoct of a *jt>b. Whom will you follow? *"