Ka Leo o ka Lahui, Volume II, Number 321, 11 November 1891 — ON DIT. [ARTICLE]

ON DIT.

Tbat -lapaneae 'tāV;era get fifty cents a <3ay and linu them6elvcs at a cost of i iot 1 tha ;.i thirty eents a day. llow mueh oheapor eau labor be .expect(ikl to toil ihan Mutt? That Japs and Ohinese are; runfor economy sake. expensive pumping ionohlnery at the Ewa Plantation, whieh wil) need soon cxpensive repairs by white niechanicb\ Tin»t two lbr revolution are already falrlv advaneed and have seeretlv eoiisideralde stabi!itv in Hawaiian so says the /. s iCco il'ttalia, c>f Kew* York. vk: one is to dethrono the Queen and up a repuhlki» the other to hnve her ābvlic:ite in favor of Hon. I\oWrto tiugiieimo \Vilcox, who the V>aper o!aīuis i« an lta!o>Awaiiano. Ilurrah for the lulo - Awaiiano i Pi'inee. itiarriage we :»re | afrakl f»tands in a uay of a peaee- | ful so;v»tion o{" hvj? |>eci>ininp ruler'of i Hawpi» nc\.

Tliat the illiistrious iiving £tnci drad dre ofteq., . aad defamed by-oiir - poljti- | unl opponentsi as was the case (P. j C. A., v Oct. 30) in an article upon i President BaJmaceda and Hon. 11. , W. Wilcox. j, That the planters is all honey | now, but as soon as they get what! they want, the white mechanics > wilj be supplanted by eheap Asiatic carpenters, blacksmiths, sxigar boilers, machinists, and engineers. We know something aboutthis ourselves. i.' - > That a boat eame ashore in the harbor, from the schooner -Beagle, after having landed a cargo of that viacidi sticky, black stinking Bttiff, resembling black tar t somewhere else. Instead of sovereigns she had what is equally as profitable a« sugar and as good as gold o» board. | Thaf our cotemporaries should give us the result of Mr. Staples Superintendency of the Sailor'B Hom« in San Francisco, as a sequel to their congratulations of his pointment, when the Captain was 'first gazetled. It wiU be both interesting and mstructive to somt> who nursed him while here. That a cartoon is going the rounds in an Italian newpaper ia New York, whieh of course has no foundation in fact, that some Consul in Hawaii t use to, wait on n. certain Don ae a aarzdne di botteaa. How an imkind and imjust act is some» times made toi be a ground of persecution, as we are led to believe is intended to be! in this case. ■ , ■ i —— . That a rotton old Bu lloek dray broke down at Pahala, Hawaii, for whieh three natives was socked $25 eaeh. This nejcessitated reshipping the men. īt is thus that many Hawaiians have been kept as slaves on plantations!till their deaths. Very often a loose character is set on to lure these po<>r fellows before the expiration of their time, when they are arrested, fined, ānd reshipped for another th ree years. Mow true the scriptUre feaying: Ve eannot serve God and Mummon. But some try to, very h4ril, and fhink: thoy t*uecefed.