THE DALLES WEEKLY CHRONICLE. SATURDAY. JULY 15, 1899 The Weekly Ghroniele. Adiirliil( Itaiaa. Perme n l-t nr lesa In PailT H SO i O to inchaa and nJ (vwi Intlwa . O rr hn.r iaet aad uuA leAre incbaa O . l aeiw larbaa PAU.T 0 timt. tT cue iu-h 1 14 ja.lw liwt inches. . .... J . fi tj.e "ArDerlCSD. hcr & 0dUV 4 W awaVa un,rl!e!ed prosperity" testified to, While under the court's control the by every one, hich bas resulted ' property Lm been vistiy miroed from the enactment ot tse Dingley j in permanent ways and equipped at law, will reU all the wanderers a cost of many millions. Cure from the fold, however. If the isue are been Yewoved, grades Lave J I can be squarely drawn between pro j been lowered, new ra.ls have been : 2 1 tection and free trade in 1900 there hid, U.dgc have been buill and an ill be such an uprising iu support . k. a aft -tV'IVfV.aOk A .a , VVi f 110 101 Over l-'ur iueba uudet t weave iuehea Over taciveiarbea I. out of politics' for many years to come. . i x a uqusie supply w moncrn lucvmw tives and cars bis been procured, with the result that the company is now, for the first time in many years, in a position to compete effectually with iu rivals for business. Mean while tie company has been re organized without foreclosure pro ceedings, new capital being brought I I 1 ...... k frnm th wars in which the Pension- .w, n;.v. n.i it consumes much la ce" n ,5UCU ,u ul" ers fought, ssvs the Spokesman- iim. Take, for mnce. re-iment I lume and at such interest rates AS INCREASED PESSIOS BOLL The number of canies on the pen sion roll at the present day is nearly million. The list his grown steadily jhe muster out of military or the longer we are separated by time ganizilion is a matter requiring MC6TERIXG OCT. Review. There are men still on the ; cf 1 200 men. Each officer and en roll who saw service in the revolu-j i.;jted man bas to p&js a careful tion. With each succeeding year j physical examination, and an average and the death of many veterans cf;sargeon can examine only about the civil war, the assurance has been ; fifteen men each day. Any infirmity given cut that the top notch had j or jajuiy suffered during the term of been reached and that the pension : service must be noted on each man's list would grow smaller. The pre- J pcrer, and the cause of any dis&bil ti it. tion has not been fulfilled, bow-.jtj. or piriiil disability. A man's ever, for each congress in in turn ! complete condition must be set forth ! that the Iiallimore fc Ohio, as trans formed, is solvent and has the pros pect, wub its improved earning capacity, of continuing so. Balti more will continue, it is sUted, to be the headquarters of the company, but the control of its finances has passed into other and abler hands. The Baltimore A- Ohio takes iu place in the long list of reorganized las made larger appropriations for ! Jn writins-, and his papers on file j properties that are now being man an increased number cf rensioners. ! forever after at the war department The number of applications for ; are t0 1 referrei to if the man in pensions which have been filed to ' after vears applies for a pensioner, date, as a result of the Spanish wsr : account of disability received in the aad the rhilirpine campaign, i line of clutj . stated to I e over 1C,CCX The most j xjjg mnster-ont rol'.s are books of these grew out of the Spanish war, j wa0ie pages are 8x14 inches in size, ia which probably cot over 35.000 1 Qn these paes must be kept the men left the shores of tLe United ; cotrplete military history of each States. This will appear to be a ' maD acij CVery item of Lis service very large cumber of applications to - roUjt ie shon. The actions he has follow from a war of not over four j taken part in, the leaves of absence months duration, at least when it is i uc has had. the tice he has spent in contrasted wi'Ji the pension applies- j hospital or the guardhouse, lions made dcr:ng the civil war. whether his sickness was secured in During the twelve months from July ! line of duty; an abstract of Lis 1, 1S61, to July 1, 1?C2, the United , clothing account, and many other States bait half a million men iu the ; t'jiDTj. field, and during that period somei In mustering ont a regiment that 6.S00 union men were killed and ; Ua5 seen as much service as the were wounded. Many more Second Oregon, a statement of each died of disease. The total number j man's service might fill two pages of of applications for pensions filed j tne muster-out roll. In making up aged, not by railway kings, as in former years, but by conservative business men in the interest of bond and stock Lolders. Orcgonian. during that year was 2,45.. The j these muster-out rolls, reference whole force in the Spaaish war ; mU5i be made to all orders on file, which did fighting did not aggregate j sicjt reports, morning reports and as many men as were killed andolher regular books in which have wounded in the rebellion in the year J been recorded the daiiy duties of mentioned, an 1 yet the Spanish war j the men, and this makes their making- In ' Divid Haruin," ouc of the newest books, this sentence appears: "Do unto the other fellow the wa J lel like to do unto you an do it first." Just so; the advice is being well taken. The virus of greed per vades commercial life and the com ing of the trusts emphasizes the wisdom of the sentence quoted. In this day and generation, more than in any other, every man is for him self, except the last one, and the devil takes the hinderniost, and probably it is but the enforcement of natural law a survival of the fittest. Man has never accomplished anything in any age unless the force of circumstances and conditions drove him to make the effoit. Man is nothing without a spur. The no bilities are triumphant only in ad versity, while in prosperity the vices are more often cultivated. East Oregonian km Windmills, i m. -kit applications for pensions are seven times the cumber referred in 1601 2. If there is the usual reciprocity among senators and congressman, and pension sharks are permitted to pur sue their calling as they have in the past, it is safe to predict that a good part of these applications will be acted upon favorably. The army in the Philippines is to be increased, and campaigning in the tropics is likely to result in rraterial injury to health. The Philippine pension list for death, wounds anl disease is therefore like ly to be lntge. If one is to judge by what Las Uen done for the ex-union toldiets, there will be a very heavy out rather slow business. So explicit must everything be that a whole piinted page of the rolls is devoted to explaining just how they must be made out. In connection with the rolls is the pay account, which shows tow much money the soldier has drawn, how much is charged for ordinance, etc., aud bis signature shows that he has received what was coming to him. Where a soldier desires to buy the arms he has been using, be is gener ally allowed to do so, rnd their wear and tear is considered, and they are charged up to him at less than cost, and so appear on the muster-out war will be represented by the pen sions that will have to be provided for during the next fifty years. CUMULATIVE TESTISIQSY. pension list prowing out of the! There must be a muster-out roll Spanish wsr, and it will increase fori for each company, and after it is the next qusiter of a century. In completed, five copies of it must be fact, the heaviest expense ef that made, which rtquires much time. After the muster-out rolls are com pleted, each man signs a statement showing bis physical condition at the time of being mustered out, and he also answers a series of important questions, onj of Lic'u is: "Have you,'during term of service, received wounds or incuricd injuries that would incapacitate you from following your usual occupation?" Company commanders corroborate and sign these statements as to physical condition, according to their observation. The physical examina tion is evec mere rigid when the man is musteied out than when he is mustered in. His sight and hearing now.' 1 Lis testimony is 01 me son .... aim u:t incsi: iui.-i:i3, iui;i-iii:i niiu Says the American Economist for the cuirentweek: F. Howard Hooke, vke president of the financier com pany, has just returned from a trip through New York, Pennsylvania, Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, Minnesota, Kansas and Missouii, in the course of which he visited banks and other financial institutions in the principal cilies. He reports "unparalleled pro-perily," and says "Money was rever o cheap iu lae West as it is would cal Some of the leaders of the Ohio Democracy are only for "contiguous expansion." Contiguous in this sense is a relative terra. How contiguous? Cuba is only fifty miles from the nearest part of the United States. Hawaii is twenty-five hundred miles. The Phi'ippines are six thousand. Alaska is many hundreds. Yet one is no more distant than any one of the others, when the cable and tele graph lines are brought into service, And none of them is farther th&n across the street. In this day and age, the Democrats of Ohio, seeking for a compromise issue, make them selves ridiculous. They have made a poor straddle. Salem Statesman. We have lately taken the agency for the Aermo ter Windmill, and carry a stock on hand. We also carry a complete stock stock of Deep and Shallow Well Pumps, as well as Pitcher Spout aud Spray Pumps. See us before buying eleewhere. Tee Aerniotor Mill is considered the best ma chioe on the maiket. Call and see it. THE DEM MING Anti Freezing Windmill Force Pumps. This pump ha3 baan perfected to m?et tha requirements of tlie principal Wind mill manufacturers in tlia United States, for a better Wind.nill Forca Puiup, with three way valve, thaa hid heretofore been produced. It has become the leading Anti Freezjng three way pump, n i h accepted by Windmill manufacturers and dealers g-'neraily, as thejejt three way Wiudiuill Force Pamp on the mr.rket. The Union Klbow C iupling "for coi:nectin: to the underground cliecharge pipe ii of lirass and ran h turned to Rtiit the ilirprt ion of the itlne. Tha air ih!imhtr nina la ti diameter, which insures ease of opi'reliou and a steady flow of water. The Hose Coud A ling on the epout also adds to the convenience of this pump. -f MAIER & BENTON, Sole agents for Wasco County, The Dalles, Or. J OUR VISITORS DEPART- The KUitori Wend Their IVay Home M aid Shouting Oregon' Trait? . A Republican administration cm ried through a foreign war with a bond issue of $200,000,000 and still bas a treasury amply well filled. The record is the best to be found 111 the history of important modern wars. which 'a court of law cumulative evidence." The fact tint there is 'unparalleled prosperity in the West snd elsewhere has been thoroughly established f-r some time. It is most satisfactory , how-cv-r, to Lave the evidence roassinsi other documents, arc turned over to . i the mustering officer, ho ships them to the war department at AVashinc; ton, and there they arc sentenced to remain forever. Preparing discharges is another The "Cool" Degrca. The summer months seem to have a particularly depressing eflVct on the various lodges of our city and their members are prone to seek other haunts than the lodge room. However, a num ber of Maccabees who gathered at their headquarters last evening conceived the idea of introducing the "cool degree," which will no doubt bo a popular one during the heated term. The workings of this degree, however, are necessarily exemplified at an ice cream parlor, and therefore the Maccabees who were at (heir pott last night adjourned to Keller' when the other work bad been trans acted and appointing T. Prinz, the head officer, or toastmaster, proceeded t j initiate a candidate known as ''Ice Cream" into the internal workings of their organization. The "grip" given was a ro'.d shake, but is the best kind j for this time of the year. This degree I will be given candidates often during thei unmer and members who fail to attend will also fail to enpy lis "work ings." Eest of all they have ex pressed matlor ttii! tiL-.tt prirti it o t it limA . .... 1 UIMIlkl I J . V ' ! . J .ulldKtlt.vl ir, res;cl to the wonderfully" pros-' ,r'd all0gC.lher l,,,e , their willingness to iritia.e The Ch.oj,. a lull it'iuii:it is n inige wuustb klk rvraiirr, wuuucvur uveniMJas any that cannot be done in a day. Ore gonian. peious condition of the country.) The people of the West have been, as a rule, stsunch supporters of the protective policy. They grew weak in the faith, though, in 1672, and in I moment in the industrial world is many of them were still in- j the passage of that magnificent rail clined to tun after strange gods and ! road property, the Baltimore fc Ohio, to think that industrial salvation out of the hands of receivers. These might be obtained through some j officers have been in charge of the such degrees A diseased stomach surely unJer tninea health. It dill's the brain, killa An event of great interest and j ene,gr, destruya th? nervous system, and prrdispotes to insanity and fatal diseases. All dyspeptic troubles are quickly cured by Kodul Dyspepsia Cure. It bas cured thousands oi cafes aud Is curing them every day. Its ingredients are such that it can't help curing. Other agent than protection. The! company since February 20, 18D6.jsnipea-Kinersij Drug Co, Yesterday afternoon the last of the newspaper people, who have been our guests for the past eleven days, left the state to return to their eastern homes by way of the Canadian PaciOe, and to say that they take away much informa tion which they brought not with them, docs not express it. Of course they have read of Oregon, but what is reading compared with experiencing all that Oregon affords. Their eyes were opened and they beheld what was a revelation to them, and will not be forgotten as they return to tell their readers not of the "wild and wuolly," but of the refine ment, the geniality and the bounty which they encountered. Of course our readers are anxious to know what their impressions were of Tho Dalles, and while we were in a poeition to determine, yet, to speak paradoxically, we were not, for well they knew that were it possible to find a flaw in our city, they dared not mention the fact in the presenco of DaP.eeites. Bet evidently cuch was not their intention, for having come over the sandy desert above this place, The Dalles was to them as an oasis, where they received perhaps the beet spread of the trip and were permitted to learn and see, to a certain extent, just wtmt our resources are. The warehouses, filled with wool, were a wonder to many oi them, en j when told that the straw berries and cherries (which were the largest and best flavor they were treated to on the trip) were grown on what looked to them like barren bills, they scarcely realized the fact. They were also told much of our wheat, fruit anj salmon industries. It was a bright thought that the large salmon was displayed in the dining room at the Umatilla House, for it served to call their attention to that industry as nothing else could have done. At the Cascades the train stopped and they were permitted to see the best wheel on the river catching salmon. This greatly dellg'.ited all, and it was amus.ng to Oregouiaus to tee one editor lug a huge fish to the train and carry it to Portland. Many of our far eastern visitors were anxions to see the Indians, and this was the only place on the trip where the real blanket article was displayed, fur while the Chemawa Indian school was visited Tuesday, they of course are more civil ized, and even the little boys and girls were able to give them their autographs. So the many kodak pictures of the siwaeh taken (for thev were particularly accom modating about posing, which Is not a usual occurrence!, will be labeled at The Dalles, which although not an import ant fact, will cause them to remember our city and the many other things they saw and heard while here. One thing we mast not forget and that is, one of the moat prominent editors ot the state of Missouri said that he saw the prettiest girls in The Dalles of any place on his journey, and the prin clpal feature of their beauty was the brig'.itnei-s of their faces. So The Dalles girls will be remembered. With our city w ill be associated the thought of the beautiful flowers, which were first showered upon them here, and con tinned throughout their visit in the state. We could scarcely credit the acertion of an Illinois editor who said, "I'd five $0 if my mother had this beautiful rose In her hand this morn ing." Our wonder was deepened when welhoughtof the scarcity of the edi torial $5 pieces. Among the moat pleasant recollections of the'r trip will be those of The Dalles, for although they were here but a short time and on a very inopportune day, they learned much concerning the city, and many old uni n.w friends were greeted here. Not only Portland, but the entire state, outdid herself in the entertainment of I her guests, and we heard not a few ex- press the deaire to return and locate. We have received an advertisement which will be of incalculable value to 1 our stale. We must add that to the O. K. & N. Co.. which really did itself proud, is due much of the success of the entertaining. The Southern 1'ucirk aiso did nobly tor our visitors. W vJ A If 1 tlM Ike Dalles, FortlanJ anl Astoria Navigation Co.' sirs. KejuTator Dalles City Jiuiljr (cxcojit Sunday) between Tho Dalles, Hood River, Cascade Locks, Vancouver and Portland. Touching at wny jxiin's on Loth tides ot tho Columbia river. Itoth nf thi- bIhi-! rteainera hiive been rebuilt, mnl a-e in exit llri.t t.ti- l.ir the Mvimn ot svi. Tim ICeeulninr l.in will endeavor tOKivelln palrutia the be.t servl. e poihl. For Miiif.irt. Krnnumjr anil t'lraanrr, travel by tho tloamura uf llie Itrgulator The above Kloamera leave Th" Da'.lea at S a. m. and Cortland at 7 a. m., and arrive at detliiia tlun in anipli lime lur outgoing traina. Portland Oitlre. fba Halle. Offlee. Oak bt. Duck. I onrt Btrvet W. C. Allaway, (icneral Agont. PAHT TIMR aCHKDl'LS. AUTI F1IK i KOM LULLF.8. Fku, Fnst Suit Lake, Denver, Ft. Ft Mail Worth, Omaha, Kan- Mail 11:60 p. ui. ma ( ity, M. Louii, J;lip a Chicago and East. Spokane Walla Walla, Fpokane, Syim Fiver iltnni-anoiia. St. Kniil.i Flier. 6:40 p.m. Ju lutli, Milwaukee, :(ii.a Chicago aud hntU 8 p.m. From Portland. 4p. b. (Hvan Bteamphlps. For ban Franoi o January 22, and every live duyi tbeieaftcr. 8 p. m. 4 p.m. Ex. Sunday Columbia Rv. Ftrnmeni. El.auudlJ To Astoria and Way Saturday Lauding. I lu p. m. 1 5 a. m. WiUAMa-m Riven. ! 4:30p.m. Ex. Sunday On -Bon I Itv. NewlunT, iLUUDdi; baieiu ii Way Land i. Ta.m, Vij.iawitt iso Yak Tuea.Thur. hill Kivkaa. ;Mnn.,uil and tat. Oregon City, lnyton,j andM. and Way 1-aliduifis. J 6 a.m. Willamkttr River. Il lOp ". Tuc.Tbtir,, Portland to orvallU, Tuf.. Ibor and bat. and ay-landings. audi. Fnakr Rivkr. '"I' Lt niparia' Ripar.a U) Lewiaton. L"' jt. leys Under the direction of the Sistej-s of the Holy Name of Jesus and Mary. THE DALLES, - - OR. Thla Inatltiitlun la ph-naantly altuatcd near l!i" V i'" ,,l,e "' t'nbm Pacini; , ' ' "ii iin'i.w wild ut are loarrnrea minim table home and a iirotrrvj. , V , "lr ""'ir niti Khtrra or Mania Tha l(M.all.i.i ..I ii.. ...-I . . tho moat healthy on the Parllle aloi.e, thia lair 11(111 of lir.Ki.ii being proverbial lor lla pure . '! i iik air l( llln .iir aieiierv I li Ai'a.Kiny la Inrorpornliat and aulhorl.ed by IheHiatc t.ironfiT Arademlp honera. Il.;ar. and tuition r achola-l n year !.). Bluili.'a will Ih le.utn. il rilL'adav.HplenilMr .Mil ror d.-uul.il l.il,,n, .. ..... . ' S..rtor. .,...., Il....r.ilW lb(l"M t .v.. . . .... ...... I. ..II... at A JO f- inakina- Ulrei-l conneriiona at H ,l'PlierCi Kelnrnlng uiakingdlreeteoiineeu..ii at OTV" Junction wltli No. 1, arriving at ln lu" i.li p. in. . No. S-J, throucht (r.'lsht, east bounil, cWj J carry paaavngera; arrive! 'i.M a. m.i 3:.'1 a. in. , No 'Jl, local ftehrht, carrlea paare"'' bound: arrlvea AM) p. m., deparla nl P- "- No. M, weal bound through Ireighl, carry paaaengura; arrlvea ;15 p a " 9:.') p. m. , . mi- No. 2J, weat bound local freight. W"' eiifera; arrlvea &:li p. m., depart For full partlculara call nn O. R. agent The la Ilea, or addreaa Ocn I'M. Agt..P"ld 0t' v4!4j BO YEARS' - EXPERIENCE MM z d y 5 ' rl ... TRArc Marks Jf SIGNS COsVRIQHTt SlC. AiTnniniiinff RMHrh Anil tli-rr.Ptlott m- I h 1 1 I km i k on I'm t iita n'Mrhir M- iTiinn rmr opinion frta pmnnhiy f-iti-t.t !'!.. ( imnitiiil " 'T ' "i IT If M I IU!. ItHIHMMMlR Oil "' 1rr' M.1't mufiwv for HiKiiriiitf pnl.Mitu, " " m. bii nriro, in uV Scientific Hmericam nrlf tllnatra)Kl vaelilr. I araaat Mr. f an- arientille loiirnal. l ernia f:l 'mm. ilia, IU Hold by all nawadralem. &Co.38,"f. New York orno,. mttU Waahiogiunl; dX PLFASE HgREi, WM. MICHELL, and Erakltr. THE DALLES. OREGON. tr" Rooms on Third Street, One Block Back of French & Co.'s Bank. PICTURES FRAMED ALL PRICES AWAY DOWN. 3W 33S ONWJWOO. Ilranrh Offlee Oregon Viiivi Company, k.a.m 7. oval Frenfh'a B'lk- r. Rnt uir.re noura, iral ,u J to ii.m' . ... ait. fir. brallh lo lur. .rry Tbu rlr