Ka Leo o ka Lahui, Volume II, Number 144, 6 March 1891 — Page 4

Page PDF (1.04 MB)

This text was transcribed by:  Johnney Alford
This work is dedicated to:  Awaiaulu

                                                          KA LEO O KA LAHUI.

"E Mau ke Ea o ka Aina i ka Pono."

 

The New French Cure for Leprosy.

EXPERIMENT IN PARIS.

     Two members of Nantes medical faculty, Dr. Bertin ana Dr. Pieq, recently gave a demonstration in the presence of their Paris colleagues of a new system for the treatment of tuberculosis which they have for a long time been earnestly investigating.  The treatment is based on the fact that goats are incapable of being infected with tuberculsosis, just as rats are exempt from attacks of diphtheria, and rabbit from those of tetanus.  The theory of the Nantes doctors is, that inasmuch as the blood of goats must possess prophylactic properties which protect them against tubercular disease, the transfusion of the blood of those animals into that of human sufferers from tuberculosis must give to the latter the power to resist the attack of the malady.  Yesterday two consumptive patients were successfully inoculated with fifteen grammes of goat’s blood, which was injected into the muscular tissues of the thigh.  Both operations succeded perfectly.  The results remains to be ascertained.  MM. Bertin and Picq furnished their professional brethren with full explanations regarding the genesis of their method, which they said had nothing in common with the laboratory experiments previously carried out with lymphs or serums, for the injections under the new system must, in order to be efficacious, be renewed every ten days.

 

Government Enterprises.

     The late Legislature made liberal appropriations for public enterprises which all were to tend to increase the prosperity of the country.  The first and most important of these was the removeing of the bar and the deepening of the harbor of Honolulu.  We hope the new Government will push forward this scheme without unnecessary delay.  We must keep abreast with the times, and be prepared to take advantage of all the benefits to accrue from the commerce which the enterprise of foreign nations would send to and through our port.  With the great steamship and cable enterprises that are being promoted in Canada and America, embracering Honolulu in their schemes, we will soon find our port the entre@ot of an active commerce which with our present facilities we could not accommadate.  We must not be idle in the face of all this outside activity, and the first work of the goverment should be to undertake all of the harbor and wharf improvements for which the Legislature made provision.  With a cable communication to the Pacific coast, and a harbor capable of accommodating the largest ships afloat, the port of Honolulu will develop with rapid strides into great activity, and for many years to come will resound with the building of dock and wharves.  Let the persent government make the best of their opportunities to obtain a lasting credit by laying the foundation for the new era of commercial importance that appears about to dawn upon us.

 

AMERICAN MILLIONAIRES

     The daily income of four American millionaires is as follows:  Jay Gould $7,505; Cornelius Vanderbilt $15,880; J.D. Rockfeller $19,240; W.W. Astor $24,575.

     A workman would require to work thirty-one years if he earned $15 a week before he earned the daily pay of Astor; and to save the amount that Astor receives in one day, the worker presuming he saved two and a half dollars every week, would have to work and save for one hundred and eight-nine years.

     The combined yearly income of these four men is twenty-four millions five hundred and twenty-eight thousand dollars.  A companion picture to this is the fact that in the United states there is a standing army of seven hundred and fifty thousand men constanty on the move in search of employment, called tramps.  Some day, in the not-very remote future, the Democracy of the United states will insist that the public lands and other sources if natural wealth were created for the whole people, and not for those who toil not nor spin, and then industrial and moral worth, and not gambling for wealth, will be the true standard of individual and national greatness.

     The development and aggressiveness of great capitalists and corporations is an alarming feature of our time and if not checked will lead to the degredation of the toiling masses whose birthright it is to share in the full enjoyment of the wealth they created, and to deny them which, is to rob them of their honest share in the gains and honors of advancing civilization.

     In Hawaii we have individuals and corporations whose financial and land power acquired on a few short years, surpass by comparison, anything in the United States.  The luck of our men of health and political dictation or their fathers arrived here with a carpet bag and a bible and what they stood up in and “a great wealth of intellect” (?) and... soc brass, and a great deal of the “tinckling cymbal.”

 

PAUAHI MA IWILEI.

     Ma ka wanaao Poaha iho nei, ua hoohikilele ia ke kapitala nei e ka leo o ka @ele pauahi, e kahea ana i na lime kokua o ka poe i haawi i ko lakou ola no ia-hana, a i ka maopopo pono ana o kahi o ke ahi i a ai, ua holo aku la na kaawi ilaila, a i ka hiki ana aku i kahi pauahi aohe hale ua hala i Ma-na Ua nui na hoao ana a na lima kokua o ke aloha e hoopakele ae, aka aole e hiki.  no ka mea, aole i lawa loa kela wahi me ka wai.  nolaila i nui ai ka poino.

     O ke kuma o keia pauahi i manao ia ai.  mai kekahi kapuahi aila mahu mai, a o kahi mea nae hoi i kanaaho iki ai.  ola ka pakele ana o na ukana makamae a pau, a koe aku na wahi mea hilii.

     O keia hale, oia ka hale o ke kaikuahine o ko makou makamaka oiaio Lolena Kelekona.  Nolaila me ka luuluu makou e hoike aku nei, no ka ili ana iho o keia poino maluna o kela ohana.

     A ua pono ia mai no hoi makou aole loa i lawa ka wai no kela wahi, a mamuli oia kumu kekahi, nolaila he mea pono i ke Kuhina Kalaiaina e haawi aku i na kokua ana i keia wahi, oiai he poe hookaa auhau lakou.  Ma ka aoao o ka lahui he mea pono e hana ia.

 

Ua ku anei i ke Kanawal.

     I ka Poakahi e hiki mai ana e noonoo ia ai ke koho ana i Hooilina Kalaunu no Hawaii nei, i ku like ai me ke Kumukanawai.  Oia hoi ka Moiwahine Liliuokalani ma ka Noho’lii.  nana e koho, a na na ‘lii o ka Ahaolelo e apono.

     Nolaila ke @oike aku nei KA LEO i ola honua, o keia hana ana, aole loa ia he kaulike, oiai aia i na aina e kekahi poe, a he ekolu hoi o na ‘lii i kaawale mai ia kulana ae, mamuli o keia kumu, ke manao nei makou aole i pono, oiai.  aole i koho hou ia i mau hoa hou.  ma kahi o na ‘lii i pau, a aole no hoi i haawi ia i manawa kupono e lohe ai kala poe ma na aina e.  a ke hana ia nei keia hana me ka pupuahulu.

     A nolaila, ua manao kakou, aole no keia he hana pono, aka, aia no ia i ka manao o ka mea nana e mele ana, aka, no makou iho. ua maopopo ia makou aole loa e holopono ana;  a hookahi wale no kahua e loaa ai ka lanakila.  oia ka Hale Ahaolelo; aka.  hoi, ina e ko ke au i Halaea, alaila aohe olelo ana.  Aka na ke Akua o kokua mai ia oe e ka Moiwahine, a e kakoo ana ka lahui i na wa a pau, ma ka aoao o ka pono.

 

Olelo Hoolaha.

     Ke hoolaha aku nei ka mea nona ka inoa malalo iho nei; e wehe aku ana ola he Kaa Hooponiuniu,  makai iho o kahi o Mr. Heleluhe, mawahe o Waikiki.

MR. YOUNG.

Mar. 5, 1891.     1w-d-

 

Hoolaha Hookahekahe Wai.

HONOLULU H.I., AUG. 9, 1890.

     O ka poe a pau i loaa na pono hookahekahe Wai, a i ole, e uku ana paha i ka Auhau Wai, ke hoike ia aku nei ma keia na hora no ka hookahekahe wai ana mai ka hora 6 a 8 a.m., a mai ka hora 4 a 6 p.m.  CHAS. B. WILSON.

Luna Wai Nui o Honolulu.

Aponoia:

C.N. SPENCER.

Kuhina Kalaiaina.     92-dtf.

 

Hoolaha Hookapu.

     Ke papa loa ia aku nei na kanaka a pau o keia a me keia ano, @ole e hele wale e kiki i na ano manu a pau ma na palena a pau o ka aina o Halekou a me Kaluapuhi ma Kaneohe, Hoolaupoko.  Oahu, o ka mea a mau mea paha e kue ana i keia, e hopu ia no lakou a hoopii ia ma ke kanawai.

MRS. C.I. HIRAM.

Haimoeipo, Honolulu.  Oct. 8, 1890.

Sws.---d.

 

I na Luna Lawe Nupepa a pau.

     Ke poloai ia aku nei oakou a pau hookaa pono mai ma keia keena i na dala o na Nupe@a i na Po@lima a me na Poakahi i ka mea nona ka moa malalo iho, aole hoi ia ha’i aku.  E like me ka nele ma ia oukou.  pela no e nele pu aku ai ka @upepa.  Ua hana ia keia rula i man ai k@ ola o ka maka a me ka Wahaolelo hopo oie no ka o@a@o a me ka pono o ka Lanui.

J.E. BUSH.

Luna Hooponopono Nui.

 

Egana a me Gunn.

(Telepona Mutuala Helu 436---Alanui @ei, Honolulu H.I.)

Na mea Hookomo mai FARANI mai, ENELANI ‘a me

AMERIKA, i na

Lako Hoonani kino o-kela a

me keia ano!

     KE HOIKE AKU NEI MAUA IMUA O KE AKEA, UA MAKAUKAU

MAUA E HOOLAWA AKU I NA KOIIKOI A ME NA HOOU’IU’I ANA A

KO KE KULANAKAUHALE NEI, ME KEIA MAU WAIWAI O NA LOI E,

A ME NA LAKO HOOU’IU’I MALALO H O:

 

NA LOLE SILIKA ELEELE!

Na Kakimea

Na Merino eleele

Lole Heneriata

Na Kinamu

Na Kalakoa

Na Lipine

Na Hainaka Silika

 

NA KANAHAI ELEELE!

Na Lole naina maikai loa

Na Lole wawae eleele

Papale eleele he lehulehu

Kakini eleele o na ano a pau

Leia-i o na ano a pau

Na Palule o na ano a pau

Na Mikilima ili me lole

 

 

Na Haina Lilina Ka’e Kanikau.

Na Mikilima Ilikao Eleele

Na Kanikau maikai loa .75ct $1.00 $1.50.

Na Kakini o na Lede me na Ooio.

 

     A ma ka hoopokole ana ae. ua makaukau mau maua e hoolawa aku ma na ano a pau, i ko makou poe kuai i kela a me@keia mea kahiko e@ pili ana ilol o o keia manawa o ke kaumaha no ko kakou Moi i aloha nui ia.  122 tf-d

 

Hoolaha Hou!

B.F. EHLERS & CO.,---Painapa.

Ua loaa mai nei ia makou he mau waiwai hou loa, oia hoi na

KAKIMIA,

KINAMU,

KE@ K@O HALU’A,

CHALLI.

VIKOLIA KEOKEO

---@ A.M. @NA---

Mikilima o na ano a pau, a me na paku puka anlan@ e kela a me keia a@o, ne na kuniukuai haahaa loa.

B.F. EHLERS & CO.

Alanui Papu, Honolulu.---23---d8m.