Ka Leo o ka Lahui, Volume II, Number 194, 15 May 1891 — ON DIT. [ARTICLE]
ON DIT.
That unless our papers are mailed aboard the steamers they are not received at there destaintions. It is about time that we got a change in th# Post office.
Tbat the Leo notwithstanding the dirty way in wh ch the missionarieB and their satell?tes try to boycott it rises Phoenix-like from the ashes with renewed vigor to eontinue the battle. That we again note with ple«sure a growing tendency in onr contemporary. the P. C. Advcrtiser to point out the weaknesses o r f the peo* ple, th®ugh in a very indirect manner, for instance by its critieism in its editorial and qaotHtions from foreign, papers on the great tragediene Sara. That the httle Marquis of lao takes hia departure to-dav for his eool and verdant Marquisate, disgusted that ooe of his political bedfellowē pcsitivelv refused to imbibe with him, all on accouat of unfulfilled promises. Put not your trust in Marquises, Jeck ! That the little noble from the Valley, like a vermillion r®se, has be«n anxiously looking towards H©ng Kong, for his deputy, who is overdue; we trust in getting ia the Btufi that he and his confrere will get their juat dues. That fired by ihe descnption of our famous Hawaiin ean-ean, eome of the foreign exotics now implanted in Hotei soū eogaged & room on Puneh Btreet, wtth fl>ur leimamogirls and a eunueh (the male eex beiug Btrictly tabued) to thumb the taro-Datch fiddle: and that there the yuong ladiea were iuitiated iato the mystic crv of how to domeeticate their evontuai huBbanda.