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2 THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 13, 1902. MILIT]A ENGAGE P NS ) = ) S Realistic Representation of the Battle of Uettysburg Thrills Immense the onslaught. themselves flat a perfect fusil- The Union replied gallar to tiy t red ranks the face of reached the but they were ion detachment i vy _into play, and tle was on in<ull swing. The on both sides were fired so at the D reports seemed ced in all ¢ of drums. The Hotchkiss 8 terrible execution in the ranks 3 of the enemy. They shook the very build- s z with their thunder. By this time the detac the le battlefield w under a pall of the o A smoke, so that the spectators could not of the Na Gu distingulsh the blue from the gay. = ot S Enont £o wakihts o After the Union force brought its agtil- ey ly & W% 5o witinte auy | o the fray the Confeqerates were ene's love exclteme The boys quickly driven from the field. The boys blue t who were fro; North then retired into their gray r the night. Their bugles, how- ad scarcely sang for rest when the ates 1 retre fede returned to the attack. ning they charged the bate Union men, although taken rprise, rallied around their field and made fierce resistance. The nfederates were finally driven back, and th eat fight was over. he re programme of the evening was military in character. The opening eyent was a drill by Company 3 of Terre Haute, Ind., under command of Captain A Duddleson. hen the drilling was commenced every rilable seat in the vast Pavilion, both e gallery and on the main floor, was ren. ~ Hundreds of people were com- pelled to stand and the police had a diffi- Pavilion was in the t the com- lights their g nt on the programme ich Our lines of pianos—twenty-one in all. represent the greatest attainment in piano construction. They are not only worthy of place in the castle of any Knight or Lady, but they are easily within the financial reach of any ordinary person, by reason of our liberal terms of sale. Call and get our proposition to you. THE WILEY B. ALLEN CoO,, LEADING PIANO DEALERS, 931 MARKET STREET, San Franeisco. A1l Market-Street Onre Btop in Froat of Our Building. BRANCH—951 BROADWAY, OAKLAND cult task in keeping spectators off the [ floor. The crowd. which was composed | m the ipally of the Knights in their skirmisn | martial uniforms and the officers” with tion of the | their gold braid, made a very imposing | spectacle. IN MIMIC THRILLING AND REALISTIC REPRESENTATION OF THE BATTLE OF GETTYSBURG BY THE NAVAL MILI- TIA AND CAVALRY OF THE NATIONAL & GATHERING AT THE PAVI gramme in full is as follows: drills. ket, to City Hall avenue. 8 P. M.—Exercises and | LION pA’sm,mGHufl WARD OF CALIFOR;{IA IN ¥ IS THE PYTHIAN PARADE HE principal event of the Pythian programme _to-day is the parade, which takes place this afternoon. The’indications are that it will be a most imposing" spectacle.” The pro- 9 A. M.—Review of the Uniform Rank by Major General Carnahan and competitive 10 A. M.—Session of the Supreme Lodge and Supreme Temple of Rathbone Sisters. 3:30 P. M.—Grand parade of the Uniform Rank, commencing on Van Ness avenue, thence marching to Market, down Market to Montgomery, toCalifornia, to Kearny, to Mar- drill at Pavilion. THE PRESENCE. OF A 3 LARGEH ES o Naval Brigade of California and Troop A, Cavalry, of the National Guard, Acquit Themselves With Credit and Win Applause for Splendid Work. will probably be remembered by the visi- tors longer even than the sham battle was the drilling by the Naval Militia of Cali- fornia. Never did the members show to | better advantage. Their drilling was pronounced by army officers to be most proficient. The Knights, and especially those whq have come from InteriorStates Where mariners are never seen, enjoyed it very much. The officers who had charge of the Nayval Militia were Captain G. W. Bauer, Adjutant Dr. T. B. W. Leland, Lieutenant L e e B M THE PROBATION 'SYSTEM WITH NAVAL PRISONERS On Good Test Shows Gratifying Re- sults in Large Majority of Cases. Judge Advocate General Lemly of the navy has just summed in tabular form the results of the first complete year's record of the. probation system, inaugu- rated by him for the treatment of naval prisoners. The results are exceedingly gratifying to the officials of the depart- ment, for they indicate that almost one mwan out of two sentenced by court-mar- tial for naval offénses will reform if giv- en a chance under this system. Thus it is shown that there were twenty men on probation the 1st of July, 101 ~During the year following thirty-two sailors were so placed on probation. Of the total seventeen ‘men were unconditionally re- slored to good standing in the service. Only four deserted, while five failed to re- form and were required to serve out their sentences. One was given an honorable dischdrge and three were discharged as undesirable, leaving twenty men on pro- bation at the beginning of the present fiscal year.—Washington Star. —_————— London Tackles Spitting Problem. The more unpleasant and objectionable a thing is the more unpleasant it. is to define the objection, and this is the case h the habit of spitting in the streets and other places of public resort. The Public Health Department of the city of London has issued an appeal pointing out that this habit is not only a nuisance, but a nuisance dangerous to health. Co-ope- ration is asked for in trying to put down the practice, and it is a reasonable re- quest in the intereits of the public at| large. The exhibition of notices request- ing people “not to” does some good, as is evident in the case of smoking car- riages on the Tube line. Suggestions go a long way in the matter of public of- fenses which are often due to mere thoughtlessness, and we hope that no- tices will be prevalent and efficacious. Has it ever occurred to the peovle who are given to this unpleasant habit that if dogs and cats were prone to it they would be impossible Westminstar Gazetto. as household pets?— Thomas Harloe of the Battery platoon and Lieutenants Carl Shilling and Henry Smith. They drilled with three rapid-fire one-pound Hotchkiss guns. They exe- cuted evolutions, similar to those prac- ticed by the United States marines; they wheeled their Hotchkiss guns, which are rather unwieldy affairs and intended for actual conflicts and not for carvet war- fare, about in the most rapid manner; they set them in position ready to reply to the attack of the enemy and retreated with them in excellent order. Probably | the whole battery had drilled the four N e e i e S SRR ) TEAGHERS L05E THEIR PLAGES San Jose School Board Ousts Many Em- ployes. Speclal Dispatch to The Call. " SAN JOSE, Aug. 12—The City Board of Education' this evening dismissed. nine- teen teachers and four janitors and re- arranged affairs in the school department for the coming year. It was on the re- port of the classification committee that the teachers were dropped. Almost the entire number were placed in their posi- tlons by John D. Mackenzie and his friends. Many of those elected were for- merly in the department, but were dis- missed for political purposes. The follow- ing teachers were dismissed: High schoal, Forest Bailey; srammar schools, Edith Koch; D, T. Bateman, princigal Lincoln school; Ilma Schweyer, Daisy "Mead, Agnes Halsey, Almeida Mc- Millan, Leoline Hopkins, Emma_Barry, Blanche Wendte, Lyle Stevens, Ella Gra- ham, Mary Koerber, Nora Minahan, An- na Carroll, Eva MacKenzie, Cora Gilles- bie, Kutie O'Hara, Ben Healy, Angela An- derson Professor Rockwell D, Hunt of the Uni- versity of the Pacific was elected princi- pal of the high school, and Volney'Rat- tan and.Miss Mary Post were elected to | the faculty. Those elected to the gram- ar schools are Miss Alice Stockton; Sam Brown, principal Longfellow school; Miss Raymer; George . ells, principal Lin- coln school; Emma Richards, Etaa Hoff- | destroying them. Almost as soon as the the most exciting feature of their work was the dismounting of the guns. This is practiced in order to conceal them from the enemy or to pfevent him from order was given the boys had thelr guns in pleces and were lying prone upon the ground. FOLEY’S SECTION WINS. The boys entered with such vim into their work that several received severe bruises and two had fingers broken. After lak, Irva Gellatt, Carrie Wooster, Miss Murray, Mrs. E. A, Gordon, Ruth Erlich, Miss Farney. Father Seeks Missing Sons. SAN PEDRO, Aug. 12.—0. F. Swiley ar- rived here to-day in search of his sons, aged respectively 19 and 17 years. The boys left their home at Santa Barbara a week ago. in an open boat twenty feet long, saying they were going to San Pedro. They have not arrived. The father has visited Ventura, Hueneme, Santa Monica, Redondo and all other points of entry south of Santa Barbara. The night after the departure of the boys there was a stiff southwest gale and un- less they made one of the islands off the Santa Barbara Channel or landed at some point remote from any town, it is | feared they have been lost. L Favor Ford for Congressman. NEVADA CITY, Aug. 12—Democratic primaries were held throughout Nevada County to-day to elect delegates to the State, Congressional and district conven- tions. The delegates are favorable to Hon. Thomas S. Ford, an attorney of this city, who is a candidate for the Congres- sional nomination in the First District. fmpaired Q{yestion May not be all that is meant by dyspep- sia now, but it will be if neglected. The uneasiness after eating, fits of nervous headache, sourhess of the stom- ach and disagreeable belching may not be very bad now, but they will be if the stomach is suffered to grow weaker. Dyspepsia is such a miserable disease that the tendency to it should be given early attention. This is completely over- come by Hood’s Sarsaparilla A i e TTLE Excellent Drilling of Ensign J. J. Foley’s Section Is Rewarded With a Handsome Trophy. sections’ competed for prizes. The first| prize, $100 in gold coin, was won by the second section-of the Second Division, u der the command of Ensign J. J. Foley. The other three sections that competed were under the command of Ensigns J.i Frank Murphy, J. A. Corcoran and J. P. Brophy. All the sections drilled exceed- | ingly well. The judges of the contest .| were Brigadier General Dine Johnston, | Brigadier General H. R. Arndt, Colonel | 2. C. Jones and officers of the Uniform Rank. ! Just preceding the Naval Militia drill, | Company 8 of Terre Haute and Chevelier | Company of San Diego, under command | of Captain A. E. Spileman, gave exhibi- tion drills. Both showed that they were thoroughly drilled and both executed | many very difficult maneuvers. The | Knights from Indiania were attired in at- tractive uniforms and wore white helmets, | decorated with waving plumes. CURRY PRESENTS SEAL. Rathbone Sisters Receive Gift From Secretary of State. Secretary of State Curry presented each | of the delegates to the Supreme Temple of | the Rathbone Sisters with a handsome souvenir yesterday. It consists of a scroll, bearing a large gilt seal of the State of California, from beneath which protrude slender silk ribbons, showing the colors | of the Knights of Pythias. On the scroll in large italies is the fol- lowing history of the seal: State of California, Department of State: The Great Seal of the State of California. Adopted September 29, 1849, by the conven- { tion which framed the constitution of the State of California. Original cost $1000. De- signed by Major R. S. Garnett, U. S. A., who declined to present it to the convention for its | adoption, but gave Mr. Caleb Lyons of Lyons- | dale, N. Y., who was then assistant secretary | of ‘the convention, authority to present the same and expressed a desire that he alome should be known as its author. thus explained by its designer: ‘‘Around the head of the ring are represented thirty-one States, being the number of States of which the Union will consist upon the admission of | California. The foreground figure reprose the Goddess Minerva having sprung fufl geea | from the brain of Jupiter, 1 ‘‘She is introduced as a type birth of the State of California, wi 8one through the probation of a Ber ‘teet cronche The seal is | of political S Srobation of = Jeratios. at zly bear, feeding w the clusters from a grapevine, emblematie’or the county’s peculiar characteristies. The sheaf of wheat and bunch of grapes were adopt- €d as emblems of the agricultural and hortical. tural interests of the State. A miner is en. faged, With his rocker and bowl at his side, illustrating the golden wealth of the Sacramen: %o, UPon whose waters are seen shipping. typi- crl of commercial greatness; and. the snow- ¢lad peaks of the Sierra 'Nevada make up the background, while above is the Greek motto, Bureka (I have found it), applying either to the principle involved in the admi State, or the Upon resolu man. Ella Cox, Emma Ringo, Anna Kul- ‘Which st;engthens the whole digestive system. ton, the words “The great seal of the & California” were added to the design. Major R. F. Garnett dled July 15, 1861. Ca- ;)ebli:’yfinnn dled at Lyonsdale, N. Y., September The State capitol at Sacramento, Cal., corner stone lald in the year 1860. Compieted in 1874 gel!ghl: 240 feet] length, 282 feet; width, 128 i feet. PS thout having | sembly chamber, T6x69 feet, 48 feet high. Stx- ty rooms. Cost, 00,000. State Library contains 120,000 umes, vol Compliments of (Signed) C. F. CURRY, Secretary of State. Sacramento, August 12, 1902. Froude passed seven years in collecting materials and in writing his “History of England.” He was very careful in the se- lection of data, and spent whole days in the effort to verify a single fact or cita- tion. JOHN J. FULTON CO. SUSSLESEUN S Another Physician Degovers Bright's Disease and Diabetes Are Positively Curable. George W. Walitt, an old Californian, now a resident of South Gardiner, Maine, writes us from that place under date July 29, 1902. We extract the following: I can give one case where death was abso- lutely certain at Gardiner City, four miles from here. 1 went over with a relative to ses a very noted M. D. (Mr. Waitt gave us the name), Found him in a terrible condition. Was so swollen that it was almost impossible to move him. I told him what I knew about people in California who had been cured Bright's Disease by the Fuiton treatment. Ho | said he would send for a bottle. I told him he needed a dozen T t know how much he sent f. was enough, for | it cured him. There ‘are a number here Who | know all about this recovery.” The Mr. Waitt mentioned above is the party who told Adolph Weske of th:s' city of the Fulten Compou Mr. Weske is one of our substan ns and was one of the founders of the old California Cracker Co. He had Diab s. His re- covery was complete. He is still a resi- dent of San Francisco and can be seen in jon of thi R of L 1 pete av naw positively curable in about 7 per cent of Experience pro | | all cases. ¢ t | % e of the extrem | percentase Of the 13 per cent of faflures | can recover where the ients can have s of a ¢ | the adyantages diets, frained 1 have perfected A number of phy- S e retained ‘who are stccess sministering the Fulton Compounds tully adml ) “are three who have them- (amorsg (Mo ed). Home treatment will reretofore at $1 per bottle for the > a8 %nd $1.90 for the Diabetic Comea g;\:‘nd. send for pamphlet. Jne. J. Ful. this ich erate. city sicians Senate chamber, 58x69, 48 feet high. As- Se PoNTCe., Mills Bldg., S. F.