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— THE EVEN all NG STAR: WASHINGTON, D. C.. oe A APRI FULL OF BIG SCHEMES! é «i L 30, 1892—-SIXTEEN PAGES. THE NATIONAL GUARD |stats eects FROM THE HEART. ‘That is the Way Ministers Speak. On one occasion a client of two young law- yers who. by some peculiar chain of circum- stances had been convicted of @ crime, was re- leased from the penitentiary and given the the na I told Maj. Harrison this — Tush in. ny ceply to his chalionge, Sal be | Problems, Game, Gatations and Selvere— ‘@ matoh Notes. MARS AT SHORT RANGE since the time of ever—n 1 —and the ‘ir William Herschel, how- tement had become Chicago Getting Ready for Its Great ONDERS NOW TO BE SEEN A Visit to the Exposition Grounds---Men Whore Brainy Buzz With Big Plans---All Kinds of Business Projects---Ex-Congress- man Mason's Latest Story. Correspot of The Evening Star, at Curcaco, April 27, 1892. HICAGO— BUT WHAT in the world is the use of saying anything about Chicago? Take customary suit of new clothes. His attorneys were on hand to welcome him back to li erty and secured looking imitation of s man, Taking “him between them they entered Casey’ proceeded to the stove, piscing tho achair. A low but exc’ ace ai jummy he shouted. Casey put bot up the and glasses and the lawyer ‘ib- the old garments the nd in iting colloquy ensued, and at last one of the lawyers said: Well that stickse you. Three whiskies, Cases, tle poured out three drinks, saying he would take them over to his friends, He returned the empty glasses and with his friend walked out, appar- ently bidding their “friend” good night. 1hey siammed the front door. but remained bebii the screen to await developments. waited a few moments and then remarked: “Thim drinks air farty cints.” ind Casey Of course there was no answer from the figure behind the stove, Casey was quick tempered and began to grow An Army Officer Presents a Brand NO MILITIA AND NO WAR. A Second Chapter as to the Refasal of Lieut. Graham to Accept Maj. Harrison's Chal- lenge—There Will Be Rifle Matches at the _ Printers’ Fair, ANY OF THE BEST of men and o great many very sensible men are officers of the United States army. answered that he hoped that suc! might be arranged. ‘So. that instead of there being ‘no chance for a match’ the indications are very favorable for an interesting mateh as that Ishouid be glad to meet any other team in the National Guard on the open range, and I wish to repeat it here, but with somewhat greater emphasis, to show the confidence I have in my ritle team. hereby challenge any team from any rifle organization in the District of Columbia toa rifle match under the following conditions: ‘The match to be on the open range at not less than three distances and not less than five shots per man at each distance, military rifles and regulation ammunition to be used, and Blunt's small-arms firing regulations to govern, teams to consist of any number of men not ex- ceeding twelve. “The first battalion or regimental team to accept this challenge will be the first enter- tained. If it is not accepted by any one else T hope Major Pollard will select a team from A MOST WONDERFUL ARRAY OF OUTAPOKEN €TATR- PROBLEM No. 112. By F. A. COOLEY. (Composed for Tue Evextxe Sran.) nase Cees SnemEET MINISTERS OF THE cow, rizoner wore, when sentenced, ‘They soon. as. the open-range work is ies Show, Pesceeded "to stuff them straw New Theory, in the coming summer’ I” also. stated ES. and old rags until they had quite a respectable in my reply to the challenge mentioned interest on the we ifas on all subjects, Of lat coming well versed tn those things which contribute to the physical ay well as spiritual comfurt of people. Many pastors are also ans, and all feck earnestly for thone things which they balseve te be worthy and ¥ The following «i made by ministers of the oapel, bearing Upon this important poiut, are moet vall pactore are be ith, Marblehead, Mass uf red trom formation of gall stoves pend my pestoral work, © wwout with White to play and 1 im two (2) sn0ves, @ thorous: - <1 was entices re current in our text books that Mars has no all the superlatives in | ot under his coliar. Sometimes one or more | the remainder of the brigade and shoot the aes. Sage e Aes eee. = otemaed prnekwsasrmehne moon, My search for a satellite began early x ‘2 ‘ome, come now,” he said, “pay foor thim of these officers write | engineer corps team.” & wW } 3 ae) ) 2 8 fed that Some any eomteestben eummaty to Gam —— in August, as soon as the geocentic motion of all the languages, ar-| dhrinks. ' Shure and we kape no slate heer an’ most interestingly and un MAIN QUESTION AVOIDED, i ese i£& GU 2% “ pik Daman the pianet made the detection of asatellite easy. range them m 8/ th’ divila bit av shlapin wull we have, d’ ye — ey : - les abe sock AtQS QB2OKEt KKte KR3 9 Q7 viptensr ies 7 Astronomers Expect to Know the| atirst my attention was directed to faint ob: nearly understandable, | moind.”” profitably; occasionally | Lieut, Graham's position is very clearly age —aae . : jects at some distance from the planet, a translatable and rhet-| _ His remarks were treated with contemptuous RL_tome other kind of an | stated in the foregoing. but be has avoided the | fp & > i FY 44% : sttineniy mn janet Bel the ve fixed stare 10th | silence. All the K in Casey's make- "i aite be weil-knowe Sate Car Pianet Betton tm: Augasts | We ees erat erga oral order ax pnsble | Mates, al tne alkenny in Cy’ make <eoticet Iannchoa ann] main question which bis refuaal to ehoct |caq uy QF KES KKM E32 G2 3 gba} tiuuisinl thine wettnown Warr” bale Oa a planet and withia the glare of light that sur- with the help of Lind- | starter and his fingers closed over its handle Sis bstantiad bark on the | brows callscy would Sot te Meee ateeates White to play and mate in thros (3) moves end eo-called tncure n i ss DARTH. | rounds it ley Murray's and Rich- | with a determined grip. a “sea of literature, and if cyan sar pers eas p meg percep “ MUCH LIKE TH EARTH. ji nothing, The i as “Ye I i Se a 3 wigs ship. If it means that it would not be GAME NO 5 * 5 a a priser eaeg aed painserag Sed Great We ed ic te aoe erg’ re fmost | the frail thing survives it has a decidedly worn- | of outdoor marksmanship he simply states t The following partie Zu the pending match | Wet See aa shiek ——— - = ot ee eee at 20: i e cl ecded ver , but if he de- | vetween Showalter and Lipschutz for the o jam | O18 of beth ochocta,| props parse beanbag anf: momma = howls and you would | hv thim far-i-ty conte Or'll bate yure dirty face | Ot and even ridiculous appearance. Licut. A. Ss on cded by every one, but if he de- | vetreen Showaltze and Lipecbuts for the champwom- | rf Dthecoots the emnety a A Planet Eleven Million Years Ahead of Us--| ptanet I did not see them. ‘The sweep around not commence to ex- | off'n yez,” K. Taylor of the nineteenth infantry bas con- | clares 1 itp then hs Dukpa against a eond Gambit Refused. euevinced thet Sor Ere “ ge pns as to the Beings Inhabiting | the planet was repeated several times on the | press that energy, that enterprise, that marvel-| No anawer to this frenzicd Casey and he | tributed to Tho United Service a lengthy chap- wall, "Uip't this thie ma ope hes claimed thant ica oe akan stares, no remedy hei cover can be bel 1t_Vansual Opportunities Soon to Be Of. | Bight of the 11th. and at 2:30 o'clock I found 4 | ous aggregation of wonderful activity directed | threw the bung starter with terrific force and ter on “Company Discipline. lor | indoor practice could supplant work on the | SO‘ rr ag br Mall, New Cast - fered for Siudy—The Moons of Mara. Fe ee te hse eens fide and odittle | + the common end of progress and pros- chat pum, Knocking tho dummy out of the | is one of the few military men of this enlight- | range. but there are innumerable authorities | 2 B.Q4,, ee ee a RON ins to bo the onter satellite. Before Thad hardly | perity that men call Chicago. ‘The seven | Ut. the two jokers rey cea at aBiCKIS | ened ago who oppose tho National Guard and | cluding Maj. Vollard and Capt Cash —wbo | % Met (ing arery-lpeolanepheer-gremprrerersly 4 ——— time to get a good look at the discovery « bank | wonders of the world and the MeGarrahan | of them ina frightenel vere mene oe advocate its discouragement, He goes upon | Will testify to the value of the gallery as a) 3 Ti @ Oo As he Satine a goood - RE HUMAN fog swept up from the Potomac river and | clsim sink into utter insignificance beside it. |" «My God, Casey, I'm afraid you've killed | the rather strange theory that the existence | WRK tho ibsuh KGcckoia oncutn gate meee ” . York, who RE THERE HUMAN | obscured the vision. For several days there- | When one has b nt from the place for | our friend.” of a volunteer force must inevitably result in | SHots, If as Ticut, Graham says, the gallery Riad? 5 | found my Raids dally nape civemen beings on the planet after the weather remained cloudy. On the | two years he fiuds himsclf uimost a stranger | °'--Wull,” said Casoy, stoutly, “it's sorry Oi be. ewer soldiers would five greater | sajueseas Gxcept for recruits, why do the k Dimcowe, with liyaline caste aba commenced ’ What are the | night of Ausust 15 the sky cleared up at 11/ when he returus. There have been stich Lyut Onil tache any ditty ide ned oe aloes ances of peace, is tho argument. If] members of his platoon spend eo much time Warners Sate « readegre voy. MY conditions of their life, | o'clock and the search was resumed, but the | changes in the mighty kaleidoscope. but they | knoife on me!” He had outhned hie defense {that line of discussion be unassailable lash Kava area (iscanaas ok aati pales ack a Said tho state of their civi- | atmosphere was very bad and nothing war | have been all for the Dest. Tv ive, fifteen and | n'a second, Civs Cromwent, | Why not wipe out the | entire army | men tare fred thomsands of rounds . ve. After ‘ ne | 8€R Of the object, which we know now was at | eighteen-story buildings rise where were for- = nnd make the condition of affairs permanently | Pristice during the past three months, sr wzati What is the | thas time so near the plan be invisible. | merly the three or four-story landmarks that REDS : pacific? ‘Thero is good advice for the army | ,TROre seems to be some error as to Capt. woth only stery of that creat | On Augnst 16 the object nd again on} you — used to steer b; Lal one _ thing STORY OF TWO INS! officer and the listed man im the introductory fio, the caphals hah saad ndaet trciteanys aslight trecest albumen. The Govtur said the conte et, sister world, | the following side of the plane iGasat-| remains the «ame, and that is, e portion of the chapter, but the remainder o: -_ The capta # read a wore of the * acter and that 1b Dé to this, ter- | elite, was near one of its elangatious,” On Aw | tho irresistible power that Kecps moving it| They Have Omnivorous Appetites, Which | PoFtou of the chapter, but the remainder of ee a ee oe hada very marrow owas . - s Pe phere? What | SUst17. while waiting and watching for the | forward with iucouceivable velocity, over- Make Them Dreaded. In one place Lieut. Taslor exes: "The | €b9,e020 mot in the gallery exnnot shoo ets Menty Westwood DAP. Providenen, Wty , ee ts | uter satellite, I discovered the inner one. | wheiming eversthing in its journcy to great-| «The most terrible of insects are the ‘driver’ | expected and proper defenders of our flag are he ea always do good work in. the gallery. ry petted lly gmt peeved e ’ are the developments | ‘The observations of the 17th aml 18th put be-| ness except its board of aldermen and its 2 aay S those to whom it means country and citize: a ES 3. | Shoe and derived so much bene ®t from at ™ I P upon that earth since | yond a donbt the character of these objects, | peculiarly decayed style of politics, A 100-ton | 22% of West Africa,” said an entomologist to a gest ibe tani seani cepsous 5 fe gallery presents one of the best teste of & ~ebennesthy ‘satin s taathooanstel bn Oe it began its swift flight } and the discovery was publicly announced by | trip hammer working #s rapidily asa cen- | STAR writer, “They are so called because they as he suggests, 75.000) American ' abil-ty to nold a rifle, va thts wine dand thes some ot my f proved the neeaad co 18,000,- | Admiral Rogers, “Stull, tor several days the in- | tritugel drying machine couldn't phase that | drive before them while on march all other | citizens who will consent to enlist in the arme CHANCES FoR SiHAnPSHOOTERS. to) Evidently he can't take the r sonny tac nacho —— = on moon was a put ale. It would spear on | part ef Chicago in 4,006,000 eternitics, and that | living creatures, uo animal being able to with- | in nc peace sesomiething not sos under-| There is going to be some shooting at the 4 me the apie <f @hés eansiedh one, different sides of the planet in the same night, | is not exaggeration either. 1 he expects too much for the mou da’ "Tensicanbioa’ ae 0 . se are questions that astronomers the | and at first I thought’ there were two or three | ‘Thereare good many Washingtonians here, : sas oes ene ones: But the haunting fear which makes the lie | CMmbin Typographical Union fair, An in i cnaehian ana cabantbihtiia ld over are asking today. Astronomical | inner moons, since it seemed te me very im- | and ax I was interested in the world’s fair and | (ares to cross their track, and they will destroy | {Chant ohiver is net forth in the remark, teresting program has been arranged and Se eee lg gece rt e the last ten years have re-| Probuble thata satellite should revolve aronnd | wanted to examme the entire thing on the | i! a single night all tne pigs and fowls on a| yay well ask if it is a part of wisdom to qua prizes to the value of $175 are offered. The | The fol'e > The sortase 8 urement ies bd ¢, just | #8 primary in less time than that in which its | ground floor, soto speak, 1 visited the head-| farm, The huge iguana lizards fail vie-|jucnin the profession of arms and send the gallery is on the third floor of the union | (a0ay Peds, BP athy-vor gt vealed many secrets of the martial plane oe Primary rotates, ‘To decide this point 1 | quarters of the «xposition managers nnd sought | tims to them, as do snakes and all other | into civil hfe, where their amilita pall in which the fair is to be held—and Position after black's eighteenth move. meth to indicate the presence of hed thi gh the nig! tA eo jessrs, Richard Lee ‘aad #& ‘Chao: i 0 " erupt leader ere entries wil ceive ening. a as rare cen erwonders yet tobe dicloneds [SOs hand Seu er eg Boe ea | ce ee eseaeee rents sud S. Chap" | reptlen It isan thas they begin thr artack ster g Upmainer ec Mesera: It I Smythe and 3. Koberis will bo Se a Enough has been learned about this little | ome inner moon, which made its revolution | tary of the forcign affairs division of the out. | 00 the snake by biting its eyos and ‘0 blinding,| “Then he continues: “Civil and political | in charze of the gallery. ed to rum ater sister to the earth to prove that it p sea | round the primary in less than one-third the | tit. the prey, which, instead of running away, | cruptions are always possible ina republic.and | Following is the program: Cure, which Tam pleased a counterpart of our piry-ical conditions and to | time of its primary’s rotation. a ease unique in WELCOMED IN A FOREIGN TONGUE. writhes helplessly im one spot. Natives of | we have today two dangerous elements at work NATIONAL GUARD MATCH. bees cern tae . t heait give gro oF the belief that there may be | our solar system, I named the ir cm the | Mr. Fearn was formerly the Washington cor- | Africa assert that when the raeegt portion) tegg | In Ome iidas) widet edna] or Akbar must be} Open to members @f the Bistrict National $f é e & a $$é ne = Buman beings upon its surface, @ race, per- nd Phobos, the names give respondent of the Brooklyn Eagle and Mr, | ¢shed its captive in its folds it does not de- | tet and cach disp 1 OnE STROT Good: “twenly woke ins, fee inlnatek: i 2 a a haps, whick by rea boasts of «| horses which drew the chariot of Mars. : yu Eagle vour it at ouce, but makes a circuit of at least | the government, A martial spirit introduced ned mae 9 was Nored fromm many Civilization to whic enlightenment of this REVELATIONS THAT 3AY DE MADE. j Simms was connected with the Washington | y mite in diameter in order to see whether an | mong a peo} ntagonistic to a continu. | entrance fee, $1. First prize, gold medal, pre- a ; by Warner's Safe worid is but comparative barbarism, What discoveries will next August bring? | ‘an. Both gentlemen welcomed | army of driver ants is on then ation of pence wation warlike and | sented by ee pufacturing Jewelry wre, Te vats mn bal the world * eighborhood. it glide you will certain: r, woonel er, on | Co f e. twelve-inch miero- ev. William €, Powe monk SC ® x yom avavsr, || Why should not science hope fer revelations r | doisiie icc ohich wineeoer beeen ds. Sow in this’ way a distaste for | scope with case,presented by the Claflin Optical following kraphic assertion “My wife wuffered next is expected to | which will astonish the world? went, but their words were Leyoud my ken. | ant . 5 ants, the avocations of peace and you will substitute Company alove for the camp and a desire for military tiird prize, gold-headed cane pre- sented by W. Willie for years from au al h wes di ot cobatant if not wonderful and sensa- ar what Camille Flammarion says: They sozred as far over my he: dase queen | +f an army of these ants approaché ms. ne study of our myste- eo has recently made one of those un- | full towers above a nine high flush. To Le | lage the entire population Ww eeuveiied to He, | achievement, ; TYPOGRAPHICAE, UNION scare: cp Aer stati enn hw : woman, On the 5th | pected discoveries which. by asingle bound, | “in it” 2 returned | thei 6 In| Sometimes the people m “It would ecem that the best interests of the nto members of Columbia Typographi- beeen yo-uinw cm crrive at @ point op- | Streteh the horizon of our knowledge toa pro-| choice Chinook that I picked | to the water in order to sive thenmeives. ‘The | People would be euhauced by leaving almost | _ Dich fo members of Columbia Tspographi- * 7 this earth. which it reaches but once in | digious What a strange achieve-| up from watching Siwas In insects Wavel im the mght and on cloudy days, | €X¢lusive! ry establishment in the cine aieak su ‘oily x eae see whee e between the | Ment! Itconcerns itself with orbs the human | gathering clams up on Paget sound. ‘They | pecause they are quickly killed by the dine: ive, disciplined body, | entrance fee, 21. First prize. silver compos- § cen Shab auth: auvent and congue two planets will be resi ‘om 141,000,000 | €¥e has never seen, which it camnot see ioda} ntly puzzled at iny language, but! rays of the sun, Suiould the sun come out while | 18 ‘Standing army, increasing its strength as | ing stick.presented by the fair committee; sec- he a rae froma the heart that they amas to 208 mile nm that mht a} Which in all probability it never will see. Jooked at each and then g: Pityingly upon | they are making a Journey they coustract a} te needs of the country from time to time | ond prize, bronzes tte. presented by sincere aud that they are made because these man = i teleccopes will be leveled av the |. “Ob, Mystery of Infinity! Man, the terres-| me and down into the vernacular of News- | continuous arch over their. path out of | #eke pi and jessen the prominence in | Schmedtie Bros.; third prize.100 Havana cigars, intern efthe Guapd imow beyond quatien utah hich will poxe im refalgent beauty in | tial homunculus, is unable to sound thy depths, | paper Kow. Th cmpt, however, toreach | earth agglutinated by a fluid excreted | Pesce of the militia system of organization, | presented by Johu J. Higgins, WHITE—M. JANOWSKL they speak? And dors it not show how valusole thie skies and a thousand eves will | D¥t thou compassest about him as the ocean | the level was to write it, but] {from their mouth: In cloudy weather |80W receiving so much encouragement ALL COMERS’ MATCH. And the came proceeded. reat cure becomes to those whe are in need? sie thar vail 4k Gidenee TG swallows the grain of sand falling into its | both M ms have been cor-|an arch for. the protection’ of. the | throughout the couatry. Opec oil Remesten baa auoes Shea ew ica mn | SUEKBGn km ;wiedge for which science thirsts. bosses. responding with the crowned heads of the | marching workers is constructed of the bodics » can but regard it as opposed to sound ee ee Renghicsicentiase he night is beautifal, sperkling with suns: translucent space, reaching into infinity, is Peopled with myriads of worlds; but all is silent, The universe would remain forever | mute but for the interrogations of astronomy and only by rare monosyilabies dees the mighty sphynx respond to our questions, We have but entered the vestibule of our | acquaintance with the universe, Let our be- | world 0 conversing 0 — frequentiy sentati of the forcizn nations that they caunot speak their mother tongue without |apronounecd accent. Mr. Fearn’s accent is rench, like that which one runs across on the bill of fare in « Texas hotel, while Mr. Simms speaks with a soit Castilian brogae, which he attributes to his diurnal correspondence with Wonderful ri much the marvel im astronon of late and have by i by reason of el : with — repre ut have mstruments within fif- the last most favorable . With the powerful © appliances of to- y Visitor, tempted ty. fad drawn nearer to this earth y and prejudicial to discipline, the allow. officers and men of the permanent es- nent to be associated at the various an- atial en nts throughout the country IGuard. IP the ideas of some ge the entire structure of our y should prevail, the salutary operation of certain present taws will be deteated and we shall be left without a proper incentive to of the larger sovdier ants, whose widel; tended jaws, loug legs and projecting anten intertwining, form # sort of network, fu case ofan alarm the arch is instantly broken and the insects which composed it join other soldiers on tho flanks of the Line, who seem to be acting as scouts, running about furiously in | pursuitof the enemy. The alarm over, the areh is renewed aud the column proceeds as one-half minutes; entfies, 0 cents, Prizes in this match to be won on the aggregate of three scores, First prize, shaving mirror (sconce), brass-mounted, presented by Carl Peterse second prize, smoking case, presented by Burkhart; third prize, leather collar-and- - cuff box, presented by F. A, Lutz, ‘THE STAR'S SECOND SOLVING TOURNEY. As Tir Stan chessists probably foresaw, from ex- 3 AND SOLVERS. *-Q5. Foand by A. V. ice” Geo. Heintz, Kunieht, O. 1. Moistad, td for several of our Waar Grasry wHaT Ii yod Lave leard and bluster listen. t G@RasTy SAxS POOL SHOOTING. eatltes 10.000 miles aws lief in the existence of but one single and soli- | William E. Carts, who is in charge of | before, er pride, ambition or fidelity. The stand- Pool tickets will be sold for 5 cents each, en- | last Saturday's published score, first prize was the ~- ops wil maznify her | try eternal Utopia be lost in theweil-grounded | the Latin-American department end sen-| =the floods which are frequent in tropical eet fcacral protection | titling holder to one shot, At the end of each | gained by Mr. E. M. Borlett with the fine score father tat abc: the’e: = distance of but 1.500 | faith that some day we may 0 alittle farther |sibly remains in’ Washington. | Meeting, Gountries would destroy the colonies of tho ation, trained and. dieeipimed teed | C¥ewing the pool receipts, less one-half for ex-| of 125 points, Mr. Goo, Heintz takes second #2000 with The Ev 00 ® away! ard, and stil is er ams but for a remarkable hc panantia toasted Ay = wo 2 vide e i We hronotcrs are’ feverish | , “Letus notcompiain too much, It is glorious | Volapak I wes shortly supplied witlt the neces. | Uutt impels them, as. oun as the water on and its methods its own propert penses, will be divided pro rate among thoze | place with 116 points Mr. I. It. Exdorf and ‘ $8oon as the water cn- croaches upon their premises, to ren together and form themselves into balls about the size of base b . the smaliest und weakest indi- viduals being in the middie and the big and powerful soldiers on the outside. These balls are much lighter than water nd consequently float “on the surface until the iloods retire. ‘These insects form waders in a surprisi ingenious man- ner, achitin of them swinging from a branch aud caiching upon another uch below thus formun, nsit of their feth . itis said that they even cross streams by means of such bridges, a chain of them bemg swung from th of a bouzh that overhangs the ut adds to the length of the xtremity nd the floating part is | thened until the free cud is | to already have our eyes open toward im- mensity and to be able to throw a glance along | the work ont at Garfield Park in its most minute the avenues of space and time. We are be-! details, Mr. Fearn also gave me a lurge col- ginning to spell ont the first pages of the | lection of forcign postage stamps m order that grand volume of the universe, ‘Ihere are,| { might improve ty linguistic stauding on my other suns and other lights in the itinite, | out to the secue of the worl other days and other ages besides our own, and | greatest exhibition, ilo Mr. H. O. the earth is but one islet im the celestial | Edmunds, also an old Evexixe Stan attache, who is now secretary to the world's fair commissioners, burdened me with various maps of the site. interspersed with some Maj. Handy's excellent tract. En passint L may mention that Mr. Fearn has any qtuntity of foreign stamps in duplicates, which inforn tion Tam sure will be weleon many young stamp collectors in Washington whose albums are incomplete. ox THR FAI The trip to the fair grounds over the IMinois Central is short and rapid, ‘The train is loaded down with the same class of pugsengers which will patronize all the roads, multiplied a thou- sand times, a year hence, Arriving at the park you are overwheimed. “There as a chaos of % to come! documents to IONS WILL BE SADE. » from the naval vat cure,for it was dome by the Potomac made that Mars has two moons, Asaph Hall, fur- vestig © progres of making bull's-e: op seoap hip ote corminl ‘Ali other shooting will be charged for at the rate of two shots for 5 cents, During the last week of the fair there will be a team match, for which a suitable trophy will be offered, Teams will consist of five members Irom each company im the Natioual Guard. Al matches will be shot on one of the Ull- man electric targets, wit THE crete company. Tho weather for the past month has been very unfavorable to the eycle soldiers and four or five drill nigts were spent indoors and with- out whee ‘The time was not waeted, how- { ever, but was utilized in getting an idea of th ovements and manual of arms, But good weather is particularly eyele weather even for National (iu: vn.aud when the sun [appeared last week it gladdened the heart of every member of the second separate com- pan, The Monday night drill or this week ely, aud on Jast Thursday night Jader no circumstances should it be used a training school for the National Guard n not in the service of the United States nor brought into afiliation or intimate associa- tion on so-called duty with the auilitis of the respective states, 1, however, it is a wise p secks ty educate and train the youth of this country to bear arms and to make the National Guard of the respective states a great military wer, We are of the opinion thatin peace times ince to educate and train otticers for the miliuia is at West Point or at the Fort Leave worth schol, to be accomplished by a suitabl provision of law, and notin onr calups or gar risons, In our opinion the enlisted men of the in mat- service by such up with our ine and in in the w ent iy it not pra ers belonging to the panies of the infantry and cavalry be place with the Naticnal ir. F, A. Cooley tie for third place with 114 points each, closely followed by Mr. A. V. Loatrite with 113 points and Mr, H. C, Painter with 109, The only other contestant out of the nineteen who entered the tourney making a clean score was “C, J. ML,” 94 points, | NOTES, In the Austrian championship tourney Albin took first place, Csank second, Marko third and Englisch fourth, The playing strength of the first three masters must be very great, as is shown by the fact that Englisch, who has been prominent in international tournaments for the past fifteen years, was compelled to satisfy himself with foarta place, In the Brookiyn tournament Pollock i of second place and may get first unless Hodges, who is his only dangerous competitor, wins ail the remaining games, A correspoydert desires the names of the ten greatest hving masters and also the ten greaicst masters of the nineteenth century. Of the living trains with “the complished at white icy that now wHaT GrasTy Says a in Celfornia astronomical station at The history of religious worship and of re- ligious buildings im America is, in this aspect j of it, asexceptional as it is inconsistent. I presume it wouid be safe to sy that ther: no other land in Christendom where so many ph sious worship bear witness to the » Supremaey of the spiritof caste. For what if the spirit of easte if 1t be mot the spirit conditions and relationships which, seemiag to exclude distinctions imply ing superiority or interiority of persons, insists * | upon aflirming ‘And is there any other wuaT GRASTY bays R GEO 14, 80 ¢ oldicrs in eamps of joi vast bodies of ice | | Theant at the end of the chi | stick or stone. grasping it so tirmly that the chain is held tightly and the whole army can pass over as apon a suspension bridge, “Phe termite ants,” so. dre wuaT GRASTY wtera probably the greatest ee dee - Sap ine we haw earth” We can furniak 5 u y rmost per-lare Steimitz, Tarfasch, Lasker, Blackburne, Remar ro, pte b'ekian th Ever, th institution which, in the face of the plain| everything in the building akd beaat- | for their destruc ace not in reality | ‘ie Fespective stteo as routine and diseyplinar has yet putup. Atrip of |‘Tchigorine.’ Weiss, Gunsberg, Schallopp, A teachings of the religion of Jesus Christ—as| fying line, out of which au army {ants at all, y Of ‘quite a differcat | ustruectors. such service based ou requisition | four oF tive miles was made through the streets Barn, Of the century: Morphs,| GRasTY = re in the Epistie of St. James it is naid: | of busy mechanics and laborers aro bring. | family, being aliied to the dragon thes. Each sat of Conaresee bates aud sanc- | of the city, the march being varied by drill Bourdonnais, Zukertort, Anders- ars Cam the Fr = stron My brethren, have uot the faith of our Lord| ing shape and symmetry. All over «| colony is founded by a single pair, called the iad Sic pee maucuvers. A pretty sight was made by th idor, Tarrasch, Staunton, ‘ami. ae French as Ine r, 7 thousand acres of ground the to ing their allotted tasks. An cutire iasue of T Srar would not suffice to describe and one wonders to Le seen on every | were the pen adequate to the task. Pheenician happening to be on the | Nile wher felt eon fille one for the _ first state. It is the only word for it. bus must think of it Jesus Christ, the Lord of glory, w spect of persons. For if ther come unto your | assembly a man with a gold ring. in goodiy ap- parel, aud there come in also poor man in vile raiment; and ye have respect to hi eth the gay clothing and say unto him, Sit thou | here in # good plac y to the poor. thou there, or sit here under my foot stool: Are Ye not then partial in you: and are be- ‘come judges of evil thouzht~?" (1. e.. di uate from unworthy motives)—is there, I ask, any other institution which. in the face of the plain teaching of its Founder, departs so radi- cally and habitually from that teaching as thus jersare puran- | king aud qu ue rest of the’ population consists of males and females, intended to pe petuate the species by founding fres and of individuals of both sc xes und sexually, termed ‘neuters.’ The neuter are the soldiers, haviag huge heads and po-ter. ful jaws; the neuer females are the workers, ery small, The sol creatures and can bite severely is to detend the nest, Whenever 1 Hs are broken they come swarming out and attack the invaders. ‘A tall-vized nest of African termites is ten feet in hei highest respect and cordial good 1: for the other. whose life and aims t, We think it a self-evident fact that ps are better upart im their training education.” Perhaps Lieat, Ti day to tell a i, World wherein is the dis- wilarity%f aime ‘The Nationa! Guard is pre- cit to preserve order and to derend it euch defeuse should ever be What is th ¥ program! + PILCHER HAS NO PRAMS, One army ofiicer who does not tear the re- in a ree “if tong line of lighted lamps. Be a short driil was had in tront of Mansion, where there is plenty of room for practicing the more. d:flicult movements. Marching in company front was tried tor the first time and a very creditable line of twenty wheelmen stretched from eurb to curb. Although carbines have becn issued to the mumbers the company has been riding with- out arms because no device had been adopted for secari It has finally been decided that the gua be carvied strapped to the back, ax iu that position it does not interfer rsing i Of course the opinions of every e Executive chess player vary as to who are (or were) the greatest masters, but the above lists probabiy zpproximate to the truth. ‘The score in the Showaiter-Lipschultz match is 2 to nothing in the latter's favor with three games drawn, The New Yorker is now a very strong favorite, ‘There is a big hitch in the arrangements for the New York-Philadelphia telegraph mate, New York wanted to play last Saturday, but Philadelphia wasn't ready and wouldn't play, ow the New Yorkers are ve y. the GRASTY Dowbie storys. F isle-d With each purchase o: car fare. THE PUSHER. ‘Chima, &e. Jan». or wore we 61 t we examine when we see the in summer, the con- intervening seas and gnifs, and note its beautiful and varied We cannot choose illuminates that re on no liv + fructify nothing, if reathed “by a single world of Mars, as it rolis is _hke « railway train telescope ‘The early ks of the | n Cheops was being built must have ng like who ylor will take time some Prurarartoxs Fon Sraixo ti its alling. T wonder what Colam- fin hie wraith-like state, at CREDIT HOUSR Newspaper men generally do not expericne ight or even ing “Balls of | sclis of training men toc anilitacy service and way with the rider or the wheel, aud is | Philadelphians even more #o and tt be Teh st. Bw, 8s, Without passengers aud | given as does the modern pewed church? Mr, | much dificulty in depicting in type the thi are as brick and baving the form of a | Sts of training Saat ae Y service and | witina easy reach for iuuediate use. The | look us if the affair would break up in a Tow. seas udea that the | Webster once said that it was an evidence of sec for the reading public's benetit, cone with smalier cones grouped around turning them loose in the community is | origmal idea was to atta bines to the —— Written for The Evening . ASunny Shower, Did you ever sce it raining When the sum was shining bright, z thus about the any living soul 3 So inconsistent that it i difi- ‘onception, By what of sterilization could the the divine origin of Christianity that it nad so long survived its being preached in tab pulpita, It will be a stronger evidence of it 1f in America | the it survives the enormous incongruity of the pew system, intellect of the profession concen- great effurt could not give but aintest idea of the present state of the world’s Columbian exposition, Whether the national leg James on the di Building ‘The traveler is always glad to sec oue of these nests, becuse he is nearly sure its surfuce studded with Pilcher, M.D. Iu au article pility of physteal training —The soldier, he calls it—Capt, Fil- whcels, but a trifle of thought made that the man and the gun’ should not by ted. Any wheelman can see how mu means, expecially when whecis are stacked. A small cash Geposit, the balance in#mail weekly or Monthly payments, nonotes to sien and G per cont discount on all eettioments made within thirty days, miracle lators give such six ay oF pansion J parehaas of any article of or ture isa labyrinth of subterranean 1 the superior physical training of one BRUSH UP. And the ercat drop) fel! a-twinkle nadie ok RALEORN CMEETR, MATTER OS Sry pny hog ratio = & the requested aid’ Chicago will fin- | gulleries of great extent, in the excavation ut Arties 'o so great 2 contest ss the | Inspections during the coming week will be Lake splashes of tw lirtts eponcepahauengener soenrgeaasinaad annews — A Plea for Coedueation, h ull the buildings aud complete them in the | which most of the material composing tie | Franco-Prussian war is kuown to have becn Salisa When merry May had dauced her way ‘The coming of apring necessitates many cl believe ourselves in some earthly aca 6s finest mauner as well. There will be nothing | cones above ground is obtained, When a king | the fores that turned the tide of victory ia iss | *2°! ‘Across the fields of flowers, ne 2. islanda, streams, | 7" gingerbreadish about it, The | be solid with the solidity whie | characteristic of the windy city, About the house, Such things as Mattings and Refrum erators demand your attention, Right Lere we desire toeay that we Lave made unusual preparation in these Linea Ourstock of Matting, Linoleum and Qilcloth incomplete. We lay them on your floor without extre ‘cost. ‘We know that you will not be disappointed im our stock of Refriverators—we never carried #0 many be~ fore. All sizes, all prices, from @6to @50. Made by R. Armiger & Son, and captured the highest Parie ‘award in 1889. We never tire of talking to you about the Plush or Hair Cloth Parlor Suites we sell for 828 cash or $30 on tune. We bave sold uundreds of them and have yet to hear the firet complaint. We should like tohave see the Plush-covered ParlorSuite we fell for 845; nix pieces, frames of soll oak. Our high- rade Parior Suites iu Plush, Brocatelie, Tapestry an@ Wilton Bug are percent cheaper than any house im he city, When vou visit usask to see the Solid Oak Bed Room Suite for $17 cash, #18 ontime, Myow ‘need e carpet our Hrassels at G0c.per yard cash or 650 josition will Monday—Gencral staff and non-commi is the chici sioned brigade staff, 8 o'clock; third battalion, themselves totorm a Education is for the purpose of developing ove out of th and cultivating the thinking power. It is to the end of making « knowing, thinking mind. The higher education is for the realization of broud knowledge and wide thinking. When we know this we know that the sister in a houschold should be educated as her brother is educated: that the mother shonid have the power. by reason of her own serious thought on literature, history. art. the varied god things of life to guide and train the thought power of her children; that the wife should be im intellectual oneness with her husbaud, ever stimulating and inspiring him by her thinking and never giving him opportunity to depreciate | n7hicr studies into the interesting salject tobe oF seem to depreciate her mental capacity in | DEUCE ey comparison with his own. It 1s too late in the | Proseented. Rackey nan weit Forld’s history to think thats woman's mind | aa4 child over twelve years of ago in this c is not of as mach consequence usa man's mind | 1". Shinesting itself. into Wows of eke or that, whatever may be her peculiar sphere, | Gators! with nothing but she ix not to be richiy, broadiy and, if we may | CHicagor prose igle arti. dha use the word, thoughtfully educated as well as | }Neuse man “uras ‘taby Conservative favor, the United States cannot afford to rejeet it, Smee training the 2 ysical vigor will resuit in keeping fro Tt names of those who would otherwise ly iday degenerate mto depend nts upon th Looks papers aud property of the before bount ctical vegnomy itself dictates its | mentioued battalions will be inspected by the adopt Moreover. it will not ouly resul¢ | adjutant general and quartermaster zeneral on inva vast Increase in the cflicieney of the muli- | the same evenings. Looks, papers, &e., of the tary service, but it will have a broader in- | tirst separate Lattalion will be examined on fiucace upon the entire commonwealth. As | Monday evening at 9:30, i piss by it will throw out into the | Inspector Generai Macauley will be assisted ty. upon their dischasge from the | by Capt. Horton of the gencral staff and Capt. a class of men by their physical develop- | Jesse Mx Bassett, ntal ¢ ¥ qualified to be more y useful eitizens. By its neces- And Aprif's tardy tears camedown An scuds of shininz showers!— ‘When all the lilies lifted hich ‘Their goblets lined with gold, And every rosy blossomn-cap ‘War full us it could hold, As itafay had sped her way Along a sunbeam path ‘And ordered all iu readiness ‘To take a morning bath? «it is cxample's force, And fairy people small, Incited by their sister fay When wanting baths for all, Each orders-one of rain and sua, For I have heard ‘us true ‘That when the rain and sunshine meet *Twill rain the noxt day, too. ‘Harrig WarTxEr. 2857 Arcenal street, Bt Louis. oe Virtues of Pumice Stone. From the St. Louis Giobe-Democrat, (3, springs, clouds, inun. winter and | autumn, the alternation ning and morning—are to nost as they are here. ‘The r, for they last six hundred and ven days, but the intense temperature son is absolutely the same as with us, imelination of t xis being exactly the in both planets. The days there are also au our own, because the daily four hours, thirty- hree seconds; but 3 you uce that the fa this diurnal rotation being determined within the tenth of @ second.” 11,000,000 Years ameaD oF va. Astronomers say that Mars reached the geo- logical state now possessed by this eartn over 11,000,000 years ago, being probably fit for habitation at that time. olouy they never The queen, on beginning to breed, increases in diy that she ‘can hardly crawl, the bdomen swelling uutil it is more. tha tro inches 1m lengts.” She prodaccs eggs by thous. auds, which are carried off by the workers aid chrefully tended, the grubs batched from them are trausformed into the A CiTY FULL oF scurNes, | One who has spent a lifetime in Washington | and intimately mixed with the surface of af- lfairs as well as their nether side lis necessarily familiar with schemes lof all varieties from the Utopian | dreams of selicrs to the more practical. r | forms which need but a substantial appropris | tionto result in much public benefit. Such | person, however, has not even pi the pri- | mary grade in schemes until he has visited Chicazo, and now is the accepted tine for the —Second battalion, § o'clock. perfect insec “The Afr superior deli and to obtain then: they make a hole in the nest, sweeping into a vessel the workers which swarm out {or the purpose of defense, But the greatest en- emy of these creaiures is the ant-bear, which tears down the walls of the nests und licks up | the inhabitants. The termites feed apon any- thing that is vezetable, and in countries where they are plentiful they we a most serious plague, devouring everything i: a house that isnot of metal, even to the furniture, which they hollow out until nothing but tho mere shells of tables, chairs and bedsteads are left. wy ment and sores, Capt. Cash smiles grimly when any one sug- gests that the second regiment can produce nine men who will this year be able to shoot their way on to the brigade team. He has xt loast six “cracks” who have their faccs turned toward victory. and manly inclinations in the youth of the couutry. ‘Through its adoption by the Na- tional Guard, always quick to absorb the best features of the reg it will dissemi- nate physicel development and iutellectual activity throughout the young men of the nation, In every elass Of society, in every ‘Those whose gailery scores are still deficient wiil help the ofticial records materially by tak- he. If there are people there what a civilization it must be which has 11.000,000 years the start of Edison. of Morse, of Fulton and of the trolley Wire eystem! ‘The planet Mars has two moons. They are small bodies of matter, one of them within 3.000 mile f the planet and the other 15,000 It there are in- habitants upon Mars they witness the peculiar sight of one moon rising in the east and setting in the west and the other rising im the west and setting in the “east. both shining at the same fume and crossing each other's path in mid- heaven ‘The day of Mars is twenty-four hours and thirty-seven minutes m length. The inner moon goes around Mars in seven hours and thirty-nine minutes, while it takes the outer moon thirty hours aud cighteen minutes to describe its cireurt. The pheaomenen of the two moons meeting is caused by the more rapid fight of the inner moon, ‘The moons of Mars were discovered by Prof. Hall at the Naval observatory in this city while the two satel- lites were whirling through space 35,000,000 miles away. ‘The dixcovery created a sensa- tion and revived the interest in Mara, which had flagged somewhat since the days of Sir Wiltam Herschel, in 1 Prof. Hall gives the following interesting ac- eovnt of his diseovery of the moons of Mars: in the spring of i837 the approaching fav- erable opposition of the planet Mars attracted my attention, and the idea occurred to me to search with our large Clark re- fractor for « satellite cf this planet. The lit- erature of the planets, however, showed such a number of observations of various kinds made byth» most experienced and skilled astronomers and the chance of finding a satellite a 0 very slight that I might have abandoned the search had itnot been for the encouragement Othe can't Excited Individusl— @f my wife. Very little search bad been made sandwich in the pareel, © clergyman who, gambling. announced the following text: And the Lord opened the eyes of the young man and he sa\ —_-_—_ Not a Very Good Hand. From Life. It was not a Dr. Parkhurst but » Baltimore | begiaming a sermon on | '—2 Kings, 6, 17. —_. A Crowning Misfortune 8, On that seat, propositions of the most fanciful character that give promise of profit during 1893, His managers and his clerks, his oflice boy and | his messengers, his porters and his teamsters are none the less full of schemes and no less terested beewuse their ideas are humble. | From the erection of mammonth hoteis, the: | ters and hippodromes to the sale of cheap pop- | corn the gamut of schemes is run aud the fingers of ali persons’ of all conditions and | They will even exexvate the beame and oth tumbers of a dwelling so that it will fall es, ‘Trees are gutted by them, way to dei and kill the king and queen, they survive the swarms eruited.” because xo foug So The Morality of Factory Women. classes, run over the ki thing like it was ever seen in the heavens above, or the earth below, or the waters under the earth, It} wouldn't be surprising if a company was . | formed to remove Luray Caverns out here for temporary sojourn during the fair, for some of the schemes are equally ax gignntic aud as seemingly impossible, EX-CONGRESSMAN MASON'S LATEST. Ex-Congressman “Billy” Muson carried around to the Centennial Club to luncheon yesterday, and the political powers that be were on hand in great plenitude. The mem- bership of the Centennial is but the roll is answered by men’ who wield enormous influence. “A more Lig nial set of Bohemians it would difficult to find. Mr. Mazon told a story that was a new one tome. Some years agoan Irishman named Casey kept a saloon next to the old erimi- nal court here, He was quite a character and from henring the various jcer—“Well, you can ‘em over ag’in, too.” “Yes; but there wase Garroll D. Wright im the Yorum, er to he only roy them ix to jind the nest itself are continually re With reference to moral conditions I am in- clined to think that the popular impression is that, so far as wage workers are concerned, the morals of women are not up to the standard under the old hand system of labor, in which she took little or no part,and that her entrance into the industrial ficld has lowered her moral standard, and the statement is constantly made that low wi naturally compel. women supplement t this view to be to earnings by an immoral life. belie: that the workingwomen of this or any other civilized country are upon as high a purity as any class in the community. ‘this statement upon Hible, but not s0 fat ae Lope to aneeh . but notre far an to the: and in whatever direction I ha = omitive investigations jar as it has been pos~ m5 grade of life, wherever health is’ understood Rud leagth of life desired, ite i felt und its effects appreciated, LIEUT. GRANAM EXPLAINS IS POSITION, Lieut. F. L. Graham, who commands the sharpshooters’ platoon of the engince is not exactly pleased with the posi which he tinds himeelf on account of his de- clining to shoot « gallery m: ‘d battalion, He thinks the reference made to the matter in h ing, because all the facts were uot given. kt would appear from the article in ques- he writes, “that 1 declined Major Harri- ‘s challenge’ uuconditionally, I have fre- ently announced, verbally, that I would not shoot a toatch in the gallery with any team, because I did uot consider it's proper test of marksmanship. It was for that reason, as you stated, that I declined Major Harrison's chal- Ie nd for the same reason I would have declined to meet any other team in a match in the gallery. Biiave never said anything against gallery work as a means of instructing recruits; on the ‘ary, I believe it to be most beneficial as a ing advantage of the daily possibilities of prac- tice. ‘The gallery is open from 3 to 5 each week day and on every Wednesday evening until 10 o’elock, Pumice stone is the best thing in the world to take the stain off one’s hands. When ink or any other stain gets on tho-fingers its removal issometimes a matter of many days, but with a bit of pumice it may be rubbed off in a mo- ment, and no one would ever know that it had ever been there. To be sure the rubbing must be pretty ard, and there is danger, of course, of rubbing off a little more cuticle than one can conveniently sparc, but if this is watched the toilet table has no more vi accessory. done sche A Good Samaritan. Courts-martial havo not been common in the brigade—there have been too few. There will be two in the sixth battahon very shortly. Men who belong to the National Guard snouid ‘obey the law, Rifle teams from the third and sixth battal- ious will have agallery match shortly. 1s will be an interesting competition, Company D, fourth battalion (Ordway Rifies), | From Puck. will close its fair tonight, after © most success ful week of business, Domer and his men are drilling dace some of the big Omaha We stea: Toad aoe “If,” writes the laureate to Mr. Watson. hair’ you allude ite” iar ‘on time will please you. Incrain Carpet, 5c per yard cash, 40c. on time All carpets made and laid without extracost, Nocharke for waste im matching figures. We sell # Six-foot Oak Extension Table for $4.25 cash or 84.500n time. We can furmsh your house, or any part of it, at esrusll outlay of ready ‘cash, and our credit prices are Jower than cash prises 1m come stores, Gross Masorora Creorr Hovsa, 819, $21, 623 Tthet. no Bot Hand Its,