Ka Leo o ka Lahui, Volume II, Number 142, 4 March 1891 — On Dit. [ARTICLE]

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On Dit.

That Mcrchant street is bauntsd by the sad ud fprlorn conntenance ofpnewli \s falien from ahigh estate. , *. That tfee well laid plane of the Chit»ese gambUng fraternit}'' are ali «pset b>* the change of adrainistration. That the Native Sons of Ilawaii obj#cted to the semi-military qharacter given to the organzation and are not Cummin<out any niore. Th%t /ortnna J'acii fatuis is a good motto for a lucky H\irvives political fate. That the record of the late cabinet itt their insolent attitude to the Queen, wiUlse a blot on the pages of Hawaiian history. That the ex-police ranchers of Koolau 'will soon have a schooner arrive from San Frahcisc® with «oiiie queer fish as stock in trade. That the iisning snaacks attached 1o the Koolau ranch ean outsail -any smnggler on the coagt. That opium smuggling is not Larceny. but a recognized adjunct rural enterprises. That the death of King Kalakatia and all the events connected therewitli have itnbued the natives with profound feelings of aloha and friendship for Ani(*rici and the Americans. That when a certain governnient ofticfo 1 is reti red there will bc a new partiiership formed under the sryle of B. & W. dealcrs in spite, treachery and all .the dingy tricks < f politics. That the new Secretarv iof thc Foreign Oflice is a good man, but had better heen out sent to fill an oflice about 2100 miles fr©m here. ihut sadiv require a new brooni. That the political headsman is L*'..-tting- his work in and so far we iike the e lean edges of his clayuiore. That- tlic S. F. Fxamitier's aec«u:it of the Naiion grief is a vulgar and contejnptible specimen of journalism. whieh 110 decent paper would ever have produced, and whieh has excited universal indignation here. That Mr. v ßigelow the Examiner reparter has insulted Adoairal Brown, who accorded h-im'a passage here, the Royal Family who allowed him everv privilege, the photographer whose private infiuenc<4 <;btained the pictures fbr liim, and ti)e whoie Ilawaiian people who are maae ihe subjects of his īll considered buffoonery. That if Bigelow visits Honolulu again ;he will. bc publicly ; horse•vhippe;i and sent home with a t ual of tar and feathers.