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32 THE NATIONAL GUARD Preparing for the Autumn Rifle Practice at Ordway. THE EVENING STAR, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 1896—-TWENTY-FOUR PAGES. ALL PRESBYTERIANS HOME, SWEET HOME| President Roberts Describes the Late Homestead Policy Among Hawaii’s Meeting in Glasgow. Magnificent Sugar Plantations. NEXT COUNCIL GREAT SUCCESS OF H. P, BALDWIN rects to be sufficiently recovered to go to the range for rifle practice next week. Resorted to the Code of Honor. Armory gessipers of late have not ne- glected what is reported to be a decidedly interesting incident, Two well-known and popular guardsmen are the parties directly concerned, while half a dozen others are said to have been more or less connected with the affair. So the story goes, a mis- understanding of a serious description has caused a severance of the friendly relations fermerly existing between a well-known lst Regiment quartermaster sergeant and the first sergeant of a crack drill com- peny, and, it is'said, the former openly an- neunced his intention of suggesting to the latter that the matter be decided In the cause either of selffnterest or of fear of conflict, but out of-4he deep conscientious conviction that no greater evil could come upon the modern world than war between the two great English-speaking Protestant natiors. The council adopted unanimously strongly worded fesolutions requesting the governments of Great Britain and the United States to prbsecute to an amicable and complete agreement the whole matter. The number of delegates present from the churches was large, and as might have been expected, ther ‘were many new men among them. The‘hbspitality of Glasgow to the delegates was marked and generous, and was highly enjoyed by all. Three no- table receptions were given; one by Sir James Bell, the ldrd prevost of the city, and Lady Bell; another by Lord and Lady disastrous experience at the time of build- in the Haiku ditch . With all his re- markable abilities, he had a streak of cur- fous heedlessness about bis personal safety. When a lad he once sawed off a branch be- tween himself and the tree, and got an ugly fall. One evening, after his mill at Paia had stopped gr:nding, he stood with his en- gineer by the slowly-turning roilers, and while talking pased his fingers carelessly along the fluted surface of the moving fron, Suddenly a finger was caught, and the hand began to be drawn between the relentiess crushers. The engineer darted into the building to reverse the engine. But before the great fly-wheel could be stopped, the limb had fen crushed to the thinness of pasteboard till just above the SPAIN’S PRESENT PROSPECTS, Everything She Owns Pawned to Subdue Cuba. From the London Spectator. Europe presents no spectacle more ex. traordinary than the contrast between tho nerve of the Spanish people and their in- capacity in action. For eighteen months they have endeavored to reconquer a re- volted coicny 4,000 miles away, and have in the effort used and consumed resources such as .t was hardly believed outside of Spain that they could have called up even to resist invasion. They have actually _— RENEWED LIFE IN THE ARMORY 0 BE HELD HERE A Story About a Duel That Did Some of the Subjects Discussed Irrigation the Secret of the Best Not Come Off. ABOUT GUARDSMEN NOTE: ‘The parade of the troops of the National Guard for rifle practice, beginning Mon- chivalric fashion of olden days—by a duel. Friends of both principals state that the trouble which shattered the friendship of the pair occurred while they, with others, were on a camping trip to Po:nt Lookout several weeks ago. The quartermaster ser- geant fell the victim of a band of “white- caps,” and was used rather roughly. He believed, and claimed, that the first ser- seant mentioned was one of his assailants, in spite of the plea of not guilty entered by the Prominent Divines. STATISTICS OF GROWTH There are throughout the world more than ninety national or denominational Overton, at thelr geeidence, near Dumbar- ton; and the thit? by the University of Glasgow. The latter institution celebrated shortly before the gathering of the coun- cil. the semi-centennial of the induction into his professorship of Lord Kelvin, one of the most distinguished men of science of the present day, and withal a deeply pious and simple-hearted member of the Presbyterian Church. = Some of the Results. Farming. MR. DOLE’S TOUR Special Corresyendence of ‘The Evening Star. HONOLULU, August 28, 1896. elbow joint. Since then there have been few better men with both arms than Henry Baldwin with no right arm. about, in order to test his courage for his own satisfact on, he again repeated with his left hand the previous fatal movement of his fingers upon the roller! How could he bear te do it? Not long after, he found that the workmen employed in erecting a syphon pipe 400 feet high up the west side As soon as he got forwarded to Cuba 210,000 regular troops, sufficiently equipped, a force near three times as great as that with which this country met and quelled the Indian mutiny of 1857, ard more than three times as great as the white garrison which hol’s the In- dian empire. This army, sufficient, one would think, for a defensive war against France, accomplishes nothing, but the Spanish statesmen lose neither heart nor of Maliko canyon were getting d aa getting demoralized 5 are wrilly. ; ; day rext, is the chief topic of interest just | by the latter. At all events, it is not denied | presbyterian churches. They are located| The general impression made by tI ¢| President Dole has been absent for near- by falling stones. One hundred feet was | "OP: They are wholly uncheered by vi at present for battalion and company com- | that a duel was practically arranged, and | oy ai the five continents In 187% the Rev. council was excellent and the influence 0! ly two weeks on the Island of ‘Mant. He| PetPendicular, bolted to the precipice. A | tory, they know that their soldiers die ph oma listed men as well. Meet- | that the proper location for the conflict was | { ae ee eae tE.D. then president | the meeting will be advantageously onde ee eee ene een comething of | Mader Was fastened alongside. So Baldwin | tike flies, and they are told every week rat ders and enlis en as | Meet: | Seiceted ‘by the seconds of the reported | Jzmes McCosh, D.D., 5 Las widely felt. ‘The gatherings of the alliance | S°C? as ing made a business of going up and down that | that the ‘rich island is becoming ° desert, ings of officers have been in order during | combatan A full in the arrangements | of Princeton College, led in a movement for | Widely felt. Une Rathenets through | © “Progress” through the island, and the| ladder with his one arm ‘several times a | that three-fourths of it Is going out of the past few days, and every effort is to be | has occurred, though, and it is now thought | the bringing of these churches into an or- jotot cone people have been according him rather | day. le men, after that, were ashamed | cultivation, that the lers are guitting expended to secure as large an attendance | that the matter has blown over for g00d | ganization, by means of which they would | the moral influence which It exer! ae t of| ‘stinguished attentions. Large gatherings | {0 Show fear. He was perfectly good-na- | in thousands, while those left behind are as is possible at Ordway on the days | and all. secure larger knowledge of each other end siderable ines wean Eas imme} have been held in his honor, with “luau” tured through it all. joining the insurgents; that the whole ex- — : -o-operation in foret; s ; = 2 ens e island must be mckedaled. 9 National Rifle Association. be enabled to further more actively and ef- erge of new life and courage to weak| banquets, of which many hundreds par- hs Sg ae ear ey ee aut hat oary ce +4 For the benefit of all concerned the sched- | The current issue of “Shooting and Fish-| ficiently, by their co-operation, the tnter- | ara persecuted churches, as well as in the] took. It is to be inferred that the presi-| Baldwir. is a man of abundant and ju-| creases the chanee that the American reo ule, as published in general orders, 1s | ing” has the following to say in regard to | ests of the kingdom of Christ. As a result, | promotion of the spirit of a true fret dent’s popularity with the common people | dicious munificence. All look to him for | public, with its limitless resources for w given below a eee Boe oie pas Se Nations! age aszoclation ee the “Alliance of the Reformed Churches ie er Eo Se uravival St cal. | WaS markedly shown, from the fact that | "berel aid in every educational, religious | Will intervene; and still, with a tena: tember 28; 2 attalion, Tuesday, Septem- = ‘ew weeks ago we referret 0 e or- ber 29; 3d Battalion, Wednesday, September 20; 1th Battalion, Thursday, October 1; 5th ganization of a National Rifle Association at Washington. At that time we were un- Throughout the World Holding the Presby- terian System” sprang into being, and met vinistic doctrine, and one of the churches on the continent, that of Hungary, has be- the royalist sheet in Honolulu has been very angrily and scornfully declaring that or philanthropic work. He is not inactive in politics, and in elections freely employs which Englishmen cannot but admire, they refuse to relax their hold. Be the results : : what they may, they will make no terms in its first council at Edinburgh, Scotland, in | ccme decidedly aggressive in the a only office-holders and their dependents | 8 &reat perscnal influence upon the com- j till the retels have submit uncondition- Battalion, Fridzy, October 2; ith Battalion, | able to give our readers very full informa-| 1977. Councils have been held sinze that | nance of the Reformed faith. The hove 1s) took part. munity, although I do not beliey ween parties in Spain Saturday, October 3; Ist Separate Battallon, | lon, in relation to, this new Organizavon; | date at Philadelphia, 18); Belfast, 1864; | Creer Mata ormed a aya The most notable of these gatherings was | (Pere 18 any Just foundation for the charge ceper than a political fissure s Maj. Cranford, one of the Monday, Ociober ist and 2d Separate Comraries, Tuesday, October 6; Engineer Corps, Wednesday, October 7; general staff, in the organization, was about that time taken dangerously ill, and has since died. We have. however, been favored with a London, 1888, and Toronto, 1802. The sixth general council met in the city of Glasgow on June 17, 1898, and remained years. the Reformed and Presbyterian churches, constituting, as they do, a true and cathclic or universal church, will ex- ercise to the full that beneficial influence held last week at Haiku, where over 1,000 people sat down at a luau under a beau-| ti proper manner. ve. made that he uses that influence in an im- i He is naturally cor Being in attendance on the legisla- serva- \s ever Was in this country, but upon this subject the parties act together, scarcely differing even as to means. Pitt was never firmer than tiful grove on the grounds of Henry P.| ture at the time of the queen's attempt | Senor Canovas, and never better supported general non-com ioned staff and the | communication from the inspector general | in session through June 26. The churches | for the welfare of-humanity which is the} Baldwin, the great sugar planter of that] to overturn the constitution of 18%, he, in | by a packed parliament, which, neverthe- field and staff and ron-commissioned staff | of rifle practice of the National. Guard of | in the allianeée now number eighty-six, the | natural outcome of the pure and simple] section. At this feast very cordial and]a@ peblic speech, advocated confining re- | less, represents the dominant fecling of of- regiments and battalion inspectors of | District of Columbia, George H. Harries, | only organizations not included in it being | faith which they profess. loyal speeches were made by three of the rifle practice, Friday, October 9. Special attention is called to the para- to report at the Pennsylvania railroad sta- ticr promptly at ) am. on the dates the executive officer of the association. in which he says: pieasure at the earliest possible date to furnish you with an outline of the asso- the established churches of Hglland and Switzerland. The statistics show that there elders, 795,216 communicant members, 32, %%,018 deacons end ma The seventh general council of the alli- ber, 1899, as will be fixed upon by the com- mittee Of arrangements, duly appointed. most prominent royalist natives of Mani: to refused to take the oath to the republic necessary for exercising the voting fran- sistance to strictly legal methods. years, and sound and weighty in coun- sel. This was overruled and the queen dethroned. the country. If the conscripts die ish premier sends more conseri . If the ance has been appointed to meet in the | These gentlemen had been prominent office- | Baldwin has always declined cabinet po- | peasants er the city mobs object to their graph directing organizations, excepting | “‘‘It is the intention of the association to| are 1,426 presbyteries, 31,925 organized | New York Avenue Presbyterian Church, | holders under the queen, and had remained | sitions, but has been senator the past two | dispatch, both are silenced by an unhesi- the gereral staif and officers and non-com- | be a national affair. and it will be my | churches, 27,043 ministers, 130,083 ruling | Washington, D. C., at such time in Septem-| her stanch adherents. They have hither- missicr-ed officers required to shoot with it, tating appeal to the military law, which makes resistance to the conscription one A really historical person died here late- | of the mest deadly of offenses. If the ciation’s plans. As you and every other! bath scho-ls, 318,665 Sabbath school tcach- | The Rev. J. Marshall Lang, D.D., of Glas-| chise. At the Haiku gathering they pro-|1ly who bore no unimportant part in deter- | Philippines rise in insurrection, the pre- assigted for their annual practice, in un- | rifleman must know. the old National Rifle | ers and officers, 3,345,654 Sabbath school | gcw was chosen as the fourth president of | claimed themselves as realy to join in] mining the course of affairs under the | miler offers to send an army there also, dress uniform, armed and equipped. It was | Association is . practically defunct; for | scholars, the contributions to self-support | the alliance, the office by rule alternating | loyally with the present government. the general rule last year for the com- mands to reach the depot anywhere from ten to twenty-five minutes behind the schedvled time, and, in consequence, bat- talion commarders found it necessary to explain the tardiness to the adjutant gen- eral. As to Duty as Markers. years before it went out of existence it lacked everything of being national. Rightly or wrongly, some of us here have come to the conclusion that a truly national concern can only exist at the national cap- ital; elsewhere it would necessarily be dominated by state influences. We propose to. put things on the broadest possible ba- and home missions being $31,521,150 for cne year, and to foreign missions $2,375,310. The total number of Presbytertans in the world, communicants and adherents, is es- timated at 25,000,000, The place of the last meeting has been notable in the history of the British churches. Evangelists penetrated into Scot- between the eastern and the western sec- tions. Ordinarily, when a council meets in Europe, an /merican is in the chatr, and wher it meets in America a European oc- cupies the presidency. The gathering of the seventh council should be looked forward to with large expectaticn and with earnest Frayer that God may make the alliance The Independent, of course, abuses these men as werthless renegades, animated only by desire for office. It represents that the large assembly was gathered by de- sire to enjoy the ample hospitality of the wealthy planter, or drawn in through his personal influence as the man of power in native monarchy. The aged lady of eighty- five years, Mrs. Juliette Montague Cooke, had been for twelve years about half a century ago the chief spirit in the royal school for young chiefs, and the very be- loved and influential teacher of six youths, who afterward ascended the throne Hawaii. of It was beyond question her high even an army of cavalry, if that will be the arm most required. If the people of the United States mutter or threaten In- terference, the premier ransacks the world for cruisers reaay built, or builders who will build quickly, giving enormous prices, in two cases three-quarters of a million per ship, for the needed vessels. If the that region. It cannot, however, be doubt-| and reasonable influence which infused | treasury is harassed, he sells everything Not a little complaint has been uttered | 8f8. and hope to be able to do something | land during the second century, and early | increasingly an instrument in His hands for} ed that the minds of the native people have | such moderation into their wayward and j that available, monopolies to the Roth- regerding the provision of the order, as | Material in the work of encouraging both | in the fifth century a chapel was built by | the bringing into a fuller co-operation in all follcws: the military and general use of the rifte.’ Ninian, the apostie of southern Scotland, Christian work those churches which are been gradually undergoing a most favor- capricious dispositions that the grow:ng schilds, privileges to the railways, p: fer- able change toward the government. They | civilization. and commerce of the country | ences to the dealers in bonds. He even “We have great hopes of this organiza-| near the site of the present Glasgow Ca- | substantially one in faith and polity. cannot always be misled by the British | was able to tolerate their reigns as long as | ventures to leave the troops in the Island “Battalion commanders will detail twenty | tion, and believe the majority of our read-| thedral. St. Patrick, the apostle of Ireland, REV. W. H. ROBERTS, D.D. | whites, who have been so systematically | it did. The later and younger two sov-| urpaid, ard for four months no soldier men for duty as markers, to be worked in | ers who are interested in this movement | was born in the adjacent region, and frem —— Teliefs. Markers will report for instruction in the rifle gallery at 8 o'clock of the even- ing preceding the day on which their com- mand is to parade.” the Name of McKinley. friends and sympathizers. The president | decessors. Mrs. Cooke was a woman of | Usten to proposals for compromi Certain officers have expressed surprise | 2™¢@dy made such a suggestion. Again, in the Glasgow Cathedral met the csi has for years given arduous labor to the| rare brightness and lovel: always a| time for which indeed has now at that the men should be reanivel to do thelr | 4; Since, the formation or reorganizaticn of | general assembly of 168, which uccom-| Bladensburg has a novelty. This ts noth-| perfecting of a homestead system, by | favorite In Honolulu society. She leaves | passed away. dais weackiog Very. posal rites oe ee the National Rifle Association was broached | plished the second Scotch reformation. | irg more nor less than an educated spider, | which the now many landless natives|a large circle of descendants, several of | The Spanish premier is a tough r Capertee ie such duties. the claim ie maa | #2 these columns we have received commu- | Glasgow has also been long noteworthy 4s it has een urged that sufficient money should be set apart from the appropriation for rifle practice with which to secure the services of the regular force of men here- will agree with Maj. Harries in the wis- dom of locating the headquarters of such an organization at our national capital; in fact, a number of our correspondents have nications from different parts of this coun- try, which show there is a general desire to see such an organization firmly estab lished. It should be national in every sense of the word, and, as we have before it and other contiguous parts of Britain issued that missionary flood of Scots which, from the seventh to the ninth centuries, in- undated Europe. a center of education, and during the nine- teenth century it has become the first com- mercial city of Scotland and the third of the united kingdom. Further, it js the most Presbyterian and the best governed WOVEN BY A GOLD BUG. A Curtous Bindensburg Spider Spins and a well-educated one at that, the repub- Neans of that vicinity stoutly maintain, though the democrats shake their heads and express pity for the misguided insect. ‘sirable farms. filling their minds with prejudice. Both Mr. Dole and his chief associates in the government have been long and well known by the native people “as their constant should be supplied without cost with de- Homestenda. Upon this subject of homesteads the pres- them wealthy. THE DERV KAM erelgns, Kalakaua and his sister, became wilful and undertook to rule arbitrarily. ither of them were ever as much under * Cooke's influence as th HAMEHA. H DEFENSES. ir pre there has seen the color of coin, been fortunate if bread and gar been served with any regularity. thing which Senor Canovas will not «do is i has there are very few Englishmen, familar they may be with the of Cuba, who will refuse him a m sympathy. more espe that his power of endurance may This spider has woven the name of William | {dent makes most of his public discourses | Those at Dongola Constrncted WIM! nor. “harshly tried. The. insurt ws ed to Loa Ronee the target | suggested, its primary object should be the | city in the united kingdom. McKinley in the center of its web. when on tours like the present one, setting aie the Philippines may prove even a the practice. When the question | development of a national arm. The Opening Session. The spider itselé is. not the ordinary in-]| ¢orth to th ieleneisent d its ad-| Am Associated Pre= atch from Don- in than the insurre ked Major George H. Harries, in-| “There should be but one such orzaniza- Sa eS sect, but is a genuine-gold bug, It has two | fort? to the people the system and is ad-} oy on the Nile says: An inspection of the ane twice mis Ear off: they spector general of rifle practice, his answer | tion; and we wish it might bring about the | When the fifth general council at To-| golden stripes down sts back, ‘and there is | Vantages, and endeavoring to induce them | BO % 0 Ul | at this place shows that thoroughly subdued. far w use of but one national arm. We hope, |ronto adjourned it was the expectation | rot a particle of silver coloring to be seen | © @vail themselves thereof. Mr. Dole also | dervish defenses a! = ; contain tribe The matter of money has nothing what-| however, to see every state represented in| that the Rev. T. W. Chambers, D. D., LL. | auywhere in {ts make-up. These same | !8 at pains personally to inspect the tracts | they were constructed with great skill: desperately ever to do with the case. Manipulating the | it and participating in its annual competi- ees re cucon, | Stripes, so the more enthusiastic residents | PTOposed to be set apart for homesteads. | that the positions were well chosen, and uvernment, and the! targets is as much the duty of a soldier as | tions.” D., would preside at Glasgow. The second | of that section who are partial to the | Lest week he visited a very desirable dis-| that if they had been held by resolute men | by a fue who, thoush as me : “I e ri ‘ 3 a 2.0 s 3 or . though not the handling of a rifle. The members of Notes. president of the alliance was, however, in | spider's candidate aver, shine at night with | trict In Kula, high up on the west face of A wees cin cen Bt ‘agian = all the crack New York regiments serve the providence of God, removed from this | a radiant, zolden light,'so that the name of | Haleakalt mountain, where many Portu-| they wou aeleare ce an Cer TTS ‘ain, who is far more lous regularly as markers, and no reason exists| First Lieut. Harvey, Company A, Engl-| 70 1) ronruery of the present year. and , : guese as well as natives have taker. up| amount of trouble and logs to the Anglo- Ir the District National Guardsmen | neer Cerps, has been granted three months’ M 2 oe id not do likewise. However, the priv- is allowed those organizations which care to look after the targets to employ the services of outsiders as mark- It should be remembered that officers or leave of absence. Lieut. Harvey will hie himself to California, and it ts said that he expects to arrange a rifle match between the engineers and a team of westerners. Major Gilbert Thompson, commanding the executive commission of the alliance chese as the third president the writer of this article, whose privilege it was to pre- s sixth council, and in the open- ing address to bear witness to Dr. Cham- bers’ worth as a man, a pastor, a scholar homesteads, and are successfully producing Potatoes, corn, cabbages, etc., as well as preparing coffee patches. This weck the president is taking the rugged overland route of forty miles to Hana across a series of frightful ravines, in order to inspect About tured, Egyptian expedition. 900 dervish prisoners, were cap- in addition to a large quantity of arms of all kinds, dates sufiici pert an enormous fighting force for a long nt to sup- ion, and who, Inst ire that the Philippine has a passion: jon. The Japane find fresh territories re ivilization will perish for want o port their growing por i any should é ation; ; best yin lees tain uplands Delieved to be desirable for| time, great quantities of grain and large Atl ree to April 1, 1886, have failed to complete |t© the city about October 1. Active work | sow Cathedral, an ancient and majestic to be constructed a few miles inland from | beats and the artillery, whose shells reach- » is their natural pl: the gallery’ practice prescribed, will not be | {i the organization will then be resumed. | Ceclesiastical edifice, dating back in some the landings at coves, where the steamers | ed the fleecing enemy far out in the desert a ere ee ae sermitted to participate In the reeular| Capt. Guy E. Jenkins, Company A, 5th | of its parts to the twelfth century, and re- aTeanee Deserters from the dervish forces con- a Se ee ee et ae permit © participate In the regular | | oP \ion. will be married to Miss Carrie | calling by its form the Roman usurpation, Me Gora inwsidestia at as asttersll eines ease nere ine thee akeen a heiBoe are thinly populated, H Oke ac of ane iti ©. Clarke, Tuesday. evening, October 6, at | durirg which it was erected. The property Foe ea ae aes ieee. eur orien aomerie minder aheedeo potion al 5 usly fertile, though liable, 1k «pf any ammunition other than | © lock. at the North Capitol Street M. B. | 6f the Scottish nation, it, with other build- eae USE ESV Hebe Uo | PD eee ted, sie AS to earthqrakes, and th elally issued on the range fs pro- | § o'clock, > tina lbtrigal (ote theaipresretormitions yericamllke have worn out deep chasms, containing| The work of perfecting the chain of de-j which, if a conques: could once be ot With, aimmanition aust te ‘Sade |. Major Edward R. Campbell of the 4th St. Giles’ Cathedral, Edinburgh, ‘has been STek on the back of avmole crawting up| Wady Haifa is teing pushed with the | Would almost exactly double the aot to the Inspector general of rifle | Hattalion has retusved to the city afer an {1 ie Simple and pure forms of the Pres: and dowr: the steep, igzagging trails, deep- | greatest energy, and from here work on the | Formosa the half-way house to the PRilip- , } a Gdonel Cell, Clay, commanding the 24 | byterian Church. The opening sermon was ly channeled and full of roc pened | pines, and they believe that on other than the range officer. + )C cient, has left the city to be gone three | delivered by the Rev. J. Marshall Lang, jourerines from yee pete att aa | asily defeat the Spani : ted by him, tb p eeetmarita te D. D., minister of the Barony parish, Glas- Srandpand oye ge of late years Soe ate on [ames Ofte ion of the 2d Regi- | SOW, who preached from the last clause of A eeu en eal bar ae pee only be ficed on tax. | Mer reeces, Thursday evening last. body of Christ.” Th puree was worthy, send animals over the prccipices, y (on tar-|™he 2d Battalion has arranged for a|of the cccasion, and drew attention in a aulhals over aie Deen ae Jed ee Re eaeel liuncheon of substantial proportions, to be | Marked way to the unifying forces which tep, but T have known of at 200, 200, 500 and 600 res will be fired by each served at the range on the ¢ for the practice of the comm: next. First Lieut. J. set apart d, Tuesday Bruce Webb, the are at work in the Christian Church, and one of which was found in the aliiance itself. vs visible. Greater is laid upon this freak of nature from the fact that it the candidate is alwa stress i s kiiled. The last casualty of the kind which I :c- memb2r was when a dozen or more young is gov ar with ment wo Spain, id ch come to light in a silver ° : : S ae ion becvecaeded |Lattalion quartermaster, is In charge of | The ccuncil was formally constituted in | man’s house. That individual stoutly main- | Ten Gm women, eal aa mete eres “How be give the arrangements. the afterncon at tie city building by the | tains, however, a publican’s Nee. a eacten tran not yr employes will be given cer- | “Gnd Lieut. Logan Prosise, jr., Com-|Ppresidert, who delivered the opening ad- | cssertion, that “When a spider gets to writ- | Shlendié ravine region of seventy miles. pote : of duty performed | | TVA, 2d Battalion, is away from the | dress, and among other things dealt therein | ing a man’s name there fs no holding him | When nearly through. and near the top of of Washing ROCA e eens Oe tnesorces: “on leave of absence. with the four scriptural princinles which | },: that Bryan does not need a spideg | the big Hcnomanu canycn, a horse per- take; but if hi In the Battalion. are fuxdam -ntal to Protestzn' section of the quarters, arms,equip- ‘apt. Eugene ©. Edwards, Company A, 2d Battalion, has made formal application mn: The first, the sovereignty of God in salvation, salva- to bring his name into prominence, an/ that all the spiders in the country cannot versely stepped up upen the narrow gra ridge outside of the rocky trough of 1 s will fight , Will receive muca s on thy 5 ake pp trail. The animal instantly shpped. | ethelgyiat ye Fe ect ype a pape > for the use of the rifle galiery for drill | tion being not of works, but of grace; the | weave enough nets to hold him down. SeCD aE ¢ ae al ds earrance am orstag ——s ete DODETS, Of ie) Com Fae second, the sovereignty of the Word of Ged | A number of people both from that section | 8rd. after a momentary truggle, ‘plimged great will patel on was made by the | “the basket ball teamt of Company A, 2d | over creed and life; the third, the rover- | of the country and this city have seen the | Gown a steep. grassy slope. and {len Over ht to win, but they will that organization Monday | pattalion, is indniging in regular practice | elgnty under God, in matters of religion, of | strange working of nature. The spider re- | 4 200-foot precipice. upon the rocks of {he | Estee Bisceenie ee oe ee See eee imilar Inspections are to oc-| and expects to meet the team of the Car- | the individual conscience, f x04 alone is | sides in the kitchen of the residenc> of Mr, | Shore. The rider Senate nae eoeuel it mey be in the temperament of her _peo- cur monthiy hereafter, and the marking | roll Irstitute in the near future. The mi- | Lerd of the conscience, nd the fourth, | Alexander Moffit, which is on the old Bla- | The young man behing S peuet ToLaantian ple, reutrali all the advanta Spain Bee % ; =| itiamen wish it understood that they have | the sovereignty of Christ in His church, | Gensburg mill property, near the Highland | horseman, and sprung his beast forwary \ought to derive fre be recorded. The figures will assist n | regated “slugging” to the past, and | and the consequent right of all believers to | station, on the Baltimore and Ohio railroad, | time to seize her by the waist as her horse j |hood, her nearly j Tmining what is to be known as the | hrcafter will engage in basket hall games | recognition as members of His body. The | ‘The house is an old structure and the spider | plunged to his doom. ‘The cavalier hat) durat-ce, and the somber geutes of the battalion. erly with the understanding that rough | two principles upon which the address laid | made his home in the rafters between two | Ing bee1 her hopeless adorer. Her effer- | rt, and for literature, fattalion, has appointed | pigy will not be attempted or tolerated. em; s, in view of present conditions beams, almost over the kitchen | tions had been set elsewhere. | Fie won} a ee ker fo arrange for a musical and) “he gymnasium of the National Guard |in the church, were the second and the ‘The phenomenon was noticed at | gratitude, but not love. She married an Pe en eae hich is to be an in-- cividual competitive drill, open to National Guardsmen, for a gold medal. Company D isn ng for the purchase of a distinct uniform, the style of which, it is expected, Athletic Association ts to be fitted up with @ complete equipment without further de- lay. Second Lieut. Charles J. Harlow, Com- pany A, 4th Battaiion, it ts said, has ten- dered his resignation. It is understood fourth, the discussion of the latter deal- ing with the need under which the Reform- ed churches lay of emphasizing the unity of the Churck of Christ as an existing con- dition and a long-established fact. six weeks ago, and a Star reporter visited the place yesterday to ascertain the real facts in the case. He found everything exactly as reported, and, although the fli and ravages of time had wrought a few other—hardly a better man. One is glad to know that the young-fellow married well afterwird and is making his way well up- ward In life. As intimated above. the great man of the | has eve her re d been able n, and eve has dra’ | not kee Holland whe cl] Fs zion is Henry P. what Irela is to England, and 5! ail Ibe 2 daar s. Topics ea’ changes in the delicate silken structure of | rich East Maiu sugar re | b5 woes Ls a ; ules Similar to that of the fatigue unt- | that a strong effort will be made to induce Se ee eer the fly-catching trap, the writing was still| Baldwin, He is now worth perhaps $2.00; |the whole of the new world after feats of sae {he Morton Cadets and National | 7 jeut. Harlow to reconsider his action. s considered at the council were } pjainly legible. | 0, chiefly in sugar plantation stock. Bald- | cong and colonization and £0 Se Gedrne ‘The office at the Ordway range has re- | concerned either with the doctrines of the England is away from on at es: trip, and during his American ¢ inent from : = x Tate ae : ot ip ‘i . he started in at planting BS Patagonia, ot 2 absence Lieut. roll Mattingly is in | M&nnet ae eee a decidedly at-| catechisms, with the developments of mod- ated veryancans he mae of aie eee tne nee Bee eae to boll sugar. Like | Norte to & pies soot 8 command of the company. Capt. Harry Douglas King, Company D, | ¢'® thought in its relation to religion, or| S'S iG chour a toot In diameter and the Licut. Shaw Has Resigned. omfortable centiy been furnished in a very 3d Battalion, returned to the city Monday churches as found in the confessions and with the work of the churches. Eighteen Whe writing itself is very nearly the size of ordin: ary large handwriting, and is situ- web is about a foot in diameter and the lines which form the writing are darker and win is a son of one of the ablest of the old born missionaries, and educated entirely Joseph, all he did prospered, and, after some four years’ apprenticeship, in 1865, he successful that to this ¢ of the Spanish cre and so far a : j at all is civil in the ‘Vhe announcement that First Lieutenant | evening last after an absence of several | addresses and papers were assigned to the| heavier than the other portions of the | Went In with his wife's brother, the now | peed Ge agai ee te — cite See peste sueaey months. He was met at the depot by the | eastern or American section: the remaind-| gavze-like structure. When the reporter | Well-known |S. T. Alexander. In peraonal | icep Cabe my Shore shen’ Wesice, or tee : = “lentire company, under the command of | er, 24 in number, to the British European, |, visited the house the files had destroyed the | Charge of the then smail Paia plantation. | Philipp’ re than Peru, and sup- ly efficient inspector of rifle practice of the | Lieut. Frederick G. Stutz, and escorted to| Austra!!an and ‘other colonial divisions. | three first strokes of the “W" and a portion | This grew under Baldwin's successful man- ate LEELracr aed th Battalion, has tendered his resignation, | a leading hotel and entertained at supper. | A resume of these papers is out of the| of the “e” and the “y,” but Mrs, James | @gement, and is now a first-class affair. ep tects seg eit : wil! undoubtedly be recetved with a mixture | Speeches were made and a general good | question in this compendious article. Cer-| Hart drew in the remaining strokes just as| After many years S. T. A. retired from | Sets domestic feuds, the ‘dey when = of surprise and regret. Lieut, Shaw has|t™e had. Capt. King has entirely re-| tain things, however, connected with the| she had seen them. Otherwise the writing | active plantation work, and Baldwin too ee ee ee ‘ ees ret. Zz : covered from his severe fllness, and it is | deliberations of the council are sing!cd out| was intact, and the occupants of the house | 0n the Haiku plantation adjaceni, and has me R en kee eee We hee: sere been one of the most valued officers of the | his intention to assume command of the | for special mention. = are willing to make affidavit, as well as the | Tun both for a long time. eae pr ner SAnrcn ys monhe eakae cepartment of rifle practice, and not only | Company and see that a pronounced burst the Sth Battalion, but the entire brigade A noteworthy discussion tock’ place upoa rest of the people who have seen the sight, Irrigation. her children to end courage which G j ome : of energy happens in the organization. the papers dealing with the-confessions| that the whole name was there in the be: ; y e - KOR fb ie pera de a hg , Foe Bo out Seek the Joss of bis services. |’ ‘The members of the 2d Separate Company | and the catechisms of the churches. The | ginning and was plainly legible. The outer | Ballwin and Alexander = were | 061 | o) Baio | fee no evidence what ver that’ the popu: his commission heause Of Ineke of | R&¥e Organized a rifle association as a | discussion on the catechisms was partici-| struc:ure of the web 1s joined by thousands | Ploneers of Irrigation on FE " | lation of popes poes Shes Bey ot ie Bae. s roperly attend to the duries of the | Urect result of the recent trip to Sea Girt. | pated in by a considerable number of the | of strands to the writing. while the letters | 18™ they constructed the great Haiku ee pea A tly igr Reage aoe ager bifice. Tertonant Shaw will probably entice | At @ meeting Tuesday evening last officers | delegates and brought out very interesting | themselves are Joined in the most approved | ditch, which tapped a number of the copi- Pet rs beste opie ine me me fn the Engincce Corps, havice. formers | of the association were elected as follows: | facts. It was shown that in the United | fashicn. ous streams in East Hamakua, and led the \ ewes otk dee aeoceee : deca a nities of tin uta Lieut. Sorrells, president; Corporal Weaver, | States, bo-n in the Reformed and the Pres-| Among those who witnessed the spider's! ater some twelve miles out upon the \ never hal the Kovern na - vice president; Corporal Eckstein, secre- ) byterian churches, the catechisms were in| handiwork are Major and Mrs. James P.! somewhat arid section of Haiku and Paia. Page oes, sed ps ry Bayonets Not to Be Used. tary-treasurer, and Capt. Wiggin, team | large use. A like testimony was borne | Hart of 618 11th street northeast; Miss An-| Some twelve ravines were crossed _b; i nahi Fale the panties Objection has been raised to the supposed | captain. for the Reformed Church of France, and | nie Hart, Miss Bell Hart, Miss Clara Hart,! syphon pipes of thirty Inches diameter. 1 CAN CORTAE Dek Eb bone MAL OE. requirement that the men participating in| Govermer Griggs of New Jersey, who is | the Waldenslan Church of Italy. It was| Mr. C. Paxton, Mr. Lewis Esper and Mr. Al-| and from 20) to 1,000 fect in length. ‘The | would enabt p enone eanah Any the ‘Ke arch é an enthusiastic rifleman, and with whom | announced in connection with the latter! bert McCunochie of S01 9th street northwest, | juilders of these came from the California ; be 2 : ° comp raat he ‘heavy marching order match at the| the District detachment became acquaint-| church that it had with great hesitancy | and, as stated qbove, are all willing to| mines. Several thousand acres of previous- se eta este & ar een ae ou meet of the National Rifle Association must | ed at the recent Sea Girt meet, has been in | prepared a catechism, compelled thereto by | make affidavit tawhat they have seen. ly unavailable land were thus made pro- voives a me nesness which probilits, ¥ear bayonets. It is explained in th's con-| the city during the past few days. a, | the, demands of the situation, and that to a ductive. : SL ce ERMAN OeERioees Sees pecti payorets that w " ‘apt. Eugene ©. Edwards, Company A, | their delight the result had been mos cFAST 0} 2 r 3 yen h s_ Spreckeis Hine e edie n nection that the bayonets that were issued 2a Battalion, expressed himself as being eratiteinge arial t BREAKFAST ON THE TROLLEY. Within two years Col. Claus Sp" to the local brigade were recently turned in by order, and the commands are therefore Lot supplied with them at present. Major Harries stated to a Star reporter that the official circular announcing the details of the several matches had not yet been prepared. As bayonets are not now issued to the guard, he sald, of course those participating in the heavy marching eréer match will not be required to appear with such as part of the equipment. Awakening of the Troop. First Lieut. Charles L. Beatty, command- j highly pleased with the manner in which the members of kis command have toed the scratch after the summer vacation. Capt. Edwards has already held two drills, and they were both marked by full attendance. ; It fs his intention to begin at the beginning of the dritl ‘regulations and work forward, with the idea of having the company as well drilled as any in the Guard. ae Hopete: From the Chicago Tribune. The voung man who was sitting straight advantageous. Presbyterian Church of England stated that they had beer unable to find a substitute for the Westminster Shorter catechism, and that it was being taught with considerable success to the children of the present day. ‘The subject of biblical criticism was dis- cussed by Prof. Zenos of Chicexa and Dr. James Kidd of Glasgow. The limitations of time which were upon tne council for- bade any extended consideration ot ths recently engressing subject. A Missionary Centennial. For the it was There Seems to Ike No Limit to the Uses of the Electric Car. From the Electrical “Werld. The utilization of ‘electric cars for spe- cial purposes otHer Yhan the mere trans- portation of passengé¥s presents one of the most Interesting ‘features connected with the operation of eléctric railways. The availability of these cars for picnic and theater parties was 600n discerned, and to meet the populag,demand for such facilities ! got possession of the great arid Wailuku plains, and opened another ditch of thrice the capacity, lower down, and reaching larger streams farther east, as well as} taking the waste water of the Haiku ditch | streams. Baldwin and Alexander were the pioneers, and, but for their Showing the way, undeubtedly many years wouid have elapsed before any capitalist Ike Spreckels would have noted the possibilities of the situation. Spreckels failed to secure good management, and, while Baldwin flour- From the be mzd> across th not h wells of sweet water does not save seve a state that she ente con y an thousand Spanish svidiers safely ence upon her sol. ven armies, and wiil The only thing cer r CUMBERLAND ARMY OF TE Gen, Rosccrans nm. jected President and Wilson of Delaware Orator. ished, Spreckels’ big Hawaii Commerciai Company, with far superior conditions, ran oad embankment best tomorrow, so The Society of the Army of the Cumber- Tr: a a specially built cars were provided by many | yy ‘sly behind for many years, and the | as to join the line being pushed southward | jand Thursday at Rockford, Ill, elected ing Troop A, has just published a circular up on his wheel drew alongside 2 man who | ~THe centennial of the organization of the | railway compariies. ‘The theater cars on rulnouely: worth next to nothing. Spreckels | as quickly as possible. i a thine shai: Pratlend. W. announcing that the regular weekly drills riding with a hump on his back. | Scottish Missionary Society was celebrated | some lines are model of luxury and art in| fried hard at one time to hire Paldvin as | All the troops are in excellent health and | 7. rants: corresponding secretary, H. V of the troop will be resumed Monday eves- | W8S Tiding wi Le ee eS in the council on Tuesday, June The | cat construction, and many gay and festive | manager, offering him $25,000 salary, but | spi and the provisions captured have spaitiaebind 5 aa ow, ing, September 28, at which time_a full at-| “Roads are fine this morning,” he ob- | aay was notable ii ae private parties ‘Avaif themselves of these | jn'van. ‘They could not have worked to-| considerably strengthened the position of | Boynton: recording secretary, * e ti wed. Lieut. Beatty adds | Served 'y was notable In many respects. It com- | seicet means of enjoyment. It is not long | gether | the Sirdii treasurer, Gen. Fullerton; historian, ( ton of the parade for rifle practice of the troop, Tuesday, October 6, will be ac- | other. “Of course, but I mean they are good enterprise In British Christendom, recalied the marvelous prosperity with which God card party on cne of the prominent Brook- lyn Mnes. The special uses of trolley cars Baldwin is a man of very choice spir and character. Utterly plain and unas- suming, quiet, pleasant and courteous, of No announcement has been made as to ion in the future, occupied in the the course of the expe everybody being busily Miflin, with one vice president from each state. Columbus, Ohio, was selected as the place of meeting next year. Major General & has biessed the mission work of the R are, however, not confined to the pursuit | ahsolut2 integrity and conscientiousness, | work of settiing down here, establishing | J 4. Wilson of Delaware was chosen as cepted Members of the organization are| considering that it rained day before yes-| formed churches iz many lands, and in. | of pleasur- alone. ‘Thus we find in some | hy carries a Iorg, clear head, and the great. | advance posts, clearing away the (elvis of | orator, “A reunion was held at the fair ry ng = ” : : 5 3 trolley fureral cars, galgal oopates ion. the disman ortific 3 eee ert eee earn Conta spired hopes for the future, based upon a | ctties trolley fur, s, built expressix | BS°S'.Giness and determination. His suc- | the the range on the date :nentioned. Accident to an Engineer. It is not known positively whether or not “Hmph.” “I see they’re getting up a McKinley bi- te club. Going to join?” Durn McKinley!" glorious past and an aggre: Missionaries from ail parts and represent:ng many and Genominaticns, part e@ present. the world, ifferent churches | furnished and finished. for mournful service, and appropriately ‘Among other uses of epectally built cars are the carrying of | cess has been uninterrupted in all his sreai ‘ar enterprises. His last one, Makaweli, gave him some trouble. but he pulled gent supniies and to reconstructing a number of them on a larger ard more important scale), landing nd ster'ng ammunition grounds yesterday afternoon. There was a banquet in the evening. -ceo——___ Sound Money Men Unite in Texas. ated in the ex.) mail matter and expzess packages, and yet Through in fine order. This ts about the j constractir camps for F possible stay of a 7 Ww ‘Ever try one of these pneumati j- | ercises. Tae mission work ef the churches | the list Is rot complete. e latest idea in | Jantation in the islands, intended | some ‘the sound money clubs of Dallas, Texas, Color Sergt. W. W. Ceoksen of the Engineer | 4:47 P ic sad-| Cr the reformation, in view of the reports | this direction ecmes from the. Brookiyn | TSS Pet oD Nome $500(Kh) were | Among the prisoners taken at Dongola is on SSANAGECR aR SeeemEA cma Corps will be numbered among those who) “One of whose pneumatic saddles?” made, is clearly on the advance, and the} grand jury, recommending trolley prison | expended In conducting the water of the {tie son of the secretary a the late Gen. | hal A paubrissisotbubes esesae: participate in the heavy marching order “Anybody’s.”” widespr expectation was voiced in the | vans to carry prisoners from the cour:s to | great Hauarere stream by heavy engineer- | Gerdor, and also one =f Gen. Gordon's | ters. e consolida tio: — + pintcll atl thal gunn muset off tha National |e NOs coune:| that a great spiritual upheaval was | the jail and pealténtiary. A g'impse into] ing works out upon the arid Makawell | clerks. Trey confirm previous accounts of | way Men's Sound Money Club, the Non- Gatés Wat 1thain devel bs “What do you think fs the proper gear | not far distant In heathendom. The for- | the future reveals the troliey restaurant | plain of Kaual. Costly milling works were | the fall of Khartoum and the death of Gor-| partisan Sound Money Club and the Mo- Rifle Association, b is developed that | ro- a twenty-two-pound roadster ma-| eign mission work of the churches of the i cate, trolley beer saloons, cigar stores, |Piectes, and. cane grown. Much over a|don, which so log remained a mystery to] 10 "a Hopart Club. It is expected he nas been indulging quite actively of late | chine?” 3 alliai.ce constitutes at least “one-fourth of:| barber shops and ‘ious other trades on | the evitized worl: y in preparations for an obstacle race. Dur- ing-a rehearsal the other day, Sergt. Cook- son caused his bicycle to collide with con- siderable force against a moving vehicle on one of the thoroughfares of the city. He ts now in constant company with a for- midable stack of good resolutions and ex- “Haven't any idea.”” “That's a mighty fine wheel you're rid- ing, anyhow. “On the contrary, it's the povrest ma- chine I ever saw. I'm going to trade it off and get a better one. The young man gave it up and fell back. the mission work of Christendom. Among the present-day cussed In the counc.i. was that of interna ticnal arbitration. The peonle of Great Britain, Judging by the temper and spirit sof the audiences at Glasgow, ate highly sensitive on this subject, and that not be- questions d wheels. The twentieth century business man will demand household facilities on_ wheels. He wili receive his shave an breakfast while going to business: in the morning, dine and be amused whiie return- ing home in the evening. Truly there are great possibiiities In the trotley! million hud been expended, when the Mo- Kinley tarif removed the duty on sugar, and ozr planters were “in the soup.” This wss hard on Makawell, and things looked dark. All fs right now. Armless, Baldwin had a strange and somewhat ‘The flag of Wad Bishara, the commander was captured, together with a mass of his correspondence and ac- count: of the derviskes, The stat Icss of the Egyptian expedition in the taking of Dongola was one officer and seven men wounded. that the Drummers’ Sound Money Club will come into the fold by tonight. The consovidated clubs have arranged for a Texas excursion to visit Major McKinley and General Palmer at their respective homes early in October, and expect 20 take 2,000 members with them.