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About Tillamook headlight. (Tillamook, Or.) 1888-1934 | View Entire Issue (July 31, 1891)
at all times. Vol. IV. No. 9 debts. II soliciting. TILLAMOOK. ORECON FRIDAY. JULY 31 1891 $1.50 Per Year OFFICIAL directory s-o dial Í PE st-paid I Fonntain and evç cturer, Ville L , SICKEN i •ATL SlCK Hf ADI le« ari ai ni or Conatip* the Compia Fing the BI mit thnea •• Rear U In a et ron A «r.at ( < me Genuin« >*re, ÎSe. a le. la ataaip ONIC. « the LIVI KRILITATI »THefYom T. LOUIS I J8ÏÏÏBÏ dKiad, 1 n Old or I »w teealar PARTS OF, UKITKD STATHS. B enjamin H arrison .......... L kvi 1‘. M orton J ames (!. B laine ™^,,rv ,,f state C harles F oster JSetary of Tretwury J. W. N oble ^uryofltttytot .... R kdeield P roctor . - B. F. T racy ftSÄ.ür'Ä ...J ohn W anamaker ........ W. H. II. M iller iHiirnev-Geflera* i JSaryof Acriculture . . . J eremiah R usk STATE OF OREGON ........ S. P ennoyer . Goremor ........ G. W. M c B ride j^cretai y of btate . . P hil . M etch an Supt,«fC‘‘ublic I"»tro,;lion E. B. M c E lroy F rank (’. B aker printer ...................... (R. S. S trahan Supreme Judges • . ...... <w. r. lord <R. 8. B ean | J. IL M itchell Senators | J. N. D olph B. llliRMANN Congressman . It. 3. Und Office, Oregon City { J. T. Appcrsou, Register. , B. F. Burcli, ( Receiver. third JUDICIAL DISTRICT. Joint Senator ................................. F. A. M oore Circuit Court R. P. B oise Prosecuting Attorney................. G. G. B ingham TILLAMOOK COUNTY. Representative . .......... ,W m . I). S tillwell H. F. H olden Judge 4W. T. W est Commissioner ......... I W. G. K elso ........ W. W. C onder Clerk S am D owns Sheriff*................. H. H. M c D ermott Treasurer .................. Aaessor ............................ ........... F. M. L amb . .. J ohn E dwards Surveyor ............. School nv..w. Superintendent ___ ______ ..... A. 3'. W hite Deputy Prosecuting Attorney A. W. S everance TILLAMOOK CITY'. . ................................. C. N. D rew Recorder ................................ E. E. S elph Attorney .................................. G eo . C ohn lYeusurer .........................L. L. S tillwell Marshall iJ ohn ’B arker , President ?A. P. \V 1 ¡. son Trustees (J ohn S heets beavliy en^jed.uauiely.t'ae First, Eaeonil “Uncle John” Sedgwick, gallant Reynold» o. C xiaacellorsvHls, nw). rm.nju t’nioa and Mississippi............... Third and hleventli, I uh &■ |H r ( vu U TL, .'»45 T» The highest loss sustained in any one C0.CU0 Confederates opposed. L’niou loss, Missouri.................. . .... ... KO.I II b j corps ,nn.t cl.,,,..|y | iaHudins and the venerable and revered Wadsworth. lSk885 battle, counting tbe percentage on the 11,068 killed and wounded; Confederate, Nebraska................. ... 3.157 23V the h Iflh and Twelfth « ¡th the uhovo-k»! Here the thunder tones of Hancock led the l.uu 19,735. Total, 22.123. These figures cover Nevada.................... 33 numlter engaged, occurred in the First charge at Marye’s Heights, the “Bloody about 27 per cent. 4JH! Minnesota at Gettysburg, July 2, 1863. in the losses in the whole Chuuce I lore villa New Hani|»shire...... .... XM.itf Shiloh, 1362. D*ss per cent. Union lavs Angle” aud Cohl Harbor, and rallied the New Jersey ............. .... T.1.S14 5.7M campaign. a most desiierato crisis Gen. Hancock or liS-i jh Freni. The Veterans Will defenders of Cemetery Ridge. Here "Little Mexico........... .... b. »1 277 6. Antietam. 1M2. C0,(W Union and 40.(1» Con. New New \ ork............... .... 41%«) Lundy’s tono, 1814. D ¡»er cent. 46,5:14 dered the regiment, numlM*ring only 2t3l Mac” rode along the serried line with ani federates engaged. Union loss, 11,057 killed North Caroliua ....... 3.a-I men, to chargeon an advancing brigade of Shout at Detroi A.ars-la-Tour, 1870. Germans and Trench mating gesture by Antietam’s reddened and wounded; Confederate, 9,323. Total. Ohio......................... ..... 311,186 Loss, 10 per cent. Confederates and take its colors. Tbe deed flood. Here Phil Sheridan dashed from Oregon ...................... .... 1.810 45 Waterloo, bl l. Loss, 1» per cent. Ek 1x3 was gallantly accomplisheil, blit with a loss Winchester down to save tl;e day at Cedar T. Shiloh, 1HG2. 58.000 Union and 4QJIX) Con IVnnsvi vania......... .... ar,'.«» \\ oertb, 1870. Germans and French. I. oks THE “SILVER ANNIVERSARY 1 ;tl or 75 killed, 28 |>er cent, of those engaged. federates engaged. Union loss, 10,163killed Ten 1 lessee............... . .... 3l.o!d Creek. Here the heroic sailor, Morris, 14 r cent. (¿777 Tbe wounded numbered 150. and wounded; Confedciate, ‘.',',19. Tela!. T.xw........................ , 1..-4 HI 14. Solrcrino, IO. French ami Austrians Went down with tbe ill starred Cumber l . ’ MMti. Next to the First Minnesota in high per \ ermont ....... 5,i’4 .... ÍJ,** land, shouting, when summoned to sur toss, 12 ¡»er ceut. 8. Cold Harbor, 18C4. The remarks under the V irgini 1................... On Angmrt 3 to « They Celebrato 42 centages of killed in n single battle stands 15. S’iuiowa, 10B. 1 Yus.dans render to the Merrimac, "Never! I’ll sink V\ iu>hiugton............. W4 22 heading Spottsylvnnia apply to Cold Har the Fifteenth New Jersey, which lost 24 Los», 12 per cent. Quarter Centennial of the g . A. 4.017 bor also. 118,000 Union and 64.000 Confed \\ est \ irginia.............. Gettysburg •/ \\ iseonsin............... .... Vi. tff 12.3UI percent. atSpottsylvnnin. Following this but tbo Army a» It Wax Will Be Bunker inn, Hill, erates opposed. Union loss, 10,021 killed Indian , Of these ; battles Eylau, »iinavr ....... . .... .3. VO 1.018 is the Twenty-fifth Massachusetts, which ami wounded; Confederate, comparatively Colored nations triMYpri......... ... w«.:W7 36,847 lost 24 per cent, in killed nt Cold Harbor. Toast of the Day — Compurison of Marengo, Leipsic, Lundy’s Lane «ml Wa slight. terloo were fought with smooth bore, flint U. S. volunteers...... 3.014 'The Twenty-fifth charged upon breast* Losses hi the Great Rattles of the Cen lock muskets; Stone’s River, Chickamauga, Second Bull Run, or Manassas, l$62. 63,000 Regular army.......... ................. 5.798 Works lined with men whose muskets were Union and 54JXM) Confederates engaged. tury and a Review of the Record of Antietam, Gettysburg, Shiloh and Soifer Totals.................... ,.. .2,778.304 853,523 kept loaded and handed up in relays. The Union loss, 10,100 In killed and wounded; ino, with rifled barrels and percussion the Union Army and Sonic of Its Crack Confederate, 0,365. Total. 19,V4. Tho column of deaths represents those One Hundred ami Forty first Pennsylvania caps, and Woerth and Mars la-Tour, with Stone’s River, 1803. 43,000 Union and .37,000 who died in the service, 110,000 of them also lost 24 |>er ceut. in killed at Gettys Regiments. breech loaders. At Sadowa the Prussians Confederates engaged. (Juion loss, 9,XB burg. It fought in the Peach Orchard. Manassa killed and wounded; Confederate, 0,230. from battlefield wounds. It would be un Tbe Boys io Blue will celebrate tbe "nil- had breechloaders. Becords as brilliant, in some respects, ns fair to yield the palm of glory to those Total, 18,771. If the figures for the losses at Eylan, ver anniversary,” or quarter centennial of / z- those I have cited might bo continued un states so fortunate in numl>ers as to count Fredericksburg, 1862. 113,000 Union and 00,- Marengo and Leipsic could be given with the G. A. It., at the twenty-fifth annual en 0U0 Confederates opposed. Union loss, 10,- their volunteers by hundreds of thousands, til hundreds had l»een accorded a place of ___ the exactness that applies to the battles of campment at Detroit, Aug. 3 to 8, with 884 killed ami wounded; Confederate, 4,721. and their martyrs by tens of thousands. honor. But this would display only out •y-6pell55lv4»;d(? • Total. 15.C08. lusty hurrahs, and with hearty handshakes the civil war, it is probable that the per side of the sacrifice that saved the Union. centage of losses on those fields would be and hat throwings, under a profusion of The triumph did not come through for List of battles where the tiuml>er of loru hopes alone, nor did Victory stand ut bespangled and beribboued decorative dra found less than I have estimated. killed outright reached at least 500 on each The figures handed down doubtless in the beck of those only who stood ready to peries that will form a many colored canopy side: ^p oTna ^ ox C - H * clude the prisoners or missing, thus swell “get themselves killed most beautifully” across the lines of parade. From end to I. Gaines’ Mill. I »!. 30.00) Union and «5.000 ing the loss. In the numbers given for the in order to win her smiles. Confederates engaged. Union loss, 4,«K0 civil war only the known killed ici 1 The war was one of invasion and con killed and wounded; Confederate loss only wounded are included in the account. To partially reported. Best estimates place it quest, ns well as of desperate lighting. to exact, then Stone’s River, Chickamauga, double the Uuion loss, making a total of Weary miles had to I xj marched under Suitrfk* ' Antietam, Gettysburg and Shiloh must be about 12,<X4k burning sun and through winter’s storm. 2. Seven Pines, or Fair Oaks, 1802. 51 ,(X» Union TIIE BLOODY GROUND IN THE EAST, i coni-vlered the bloodiest battles of the Sieges were hud where deadly miasma ami 35,600 Confederates opposed, but century. It should be uoted also that the alongside!” Here rose and fell the battle killed more than bullets did; marvelous not all engaged. Union loss, 4,3id killed and Union boys invariably iuflictc«! greater shouts of Hooker and Burnside. Here works of engineering, of intrenching, of wounded; Confederate, 5,729. Total, 10,113. punishment upon their foes than they Meade, with calm equipoise, guided the 3. Malvern Hill, 14*62. Izisses not recorded running saps in the face of incessant ilro, themselves received. hosts that flung back rebellion’s foaming of climbing mountains, of building cause- separately. Confederates admit over5,<XM) : ZÎ> » Vs True Patriots on Parade. killed and wounded out of 30,000 eloscly en ways for guns and ammunition trains, of tide. Here Grant baflled the exultant gaged. Tbo Union loss was probably less INTERIOR OF FORT WAYNK. patient labor day l»y day for weeks and The Grand Army claims to to a patriotic hosts of Lee and Longstreet by his ever SOCIETY DIRECTORY than half that number, and tbo total be When it came to the stern work of t he war months to get ahead a foot at a stroke to body of men, and if figures mean anything memorable battle orders, "Forward by the tween 7,(W and 8,000. when set in due order it would not be ex left flank!” 4. Winchester, or Opequon, 1831. 4.3,000 Union the test was one of manhood, of pluck and ward the skillfully defended stronghold^ travagant to claim for it pre-eminence as, The graves of the Union dead in this ‘ILI.AM00K LODGE ami 1(»,<MX) Confederates engaged. Utiiou devotion. Every state entered that con of the enemy; all this was accomplished consecrated arena number over DO,COO, and A. F. A. M., meets on the an exponent ami promulgator as well of loss,4,CS0 killed and wounded; Confederate, test, and it is interesting to give the old by voluntary exertion from men not in first Saturday nfaht of each adage the go Ly once more and compare ured to the exposure and strain involved. k<W(l I im.-’tcd’. ’F<»: ;i I. t0. national ideas. Its symbols and its cere tens of thousands more, who there re- month. Special meetings for work The proper lifework of t he masses who monies hold up the nation, the country, ; ceived their death stroke; were borne north 5. Cedar Creek, 1804. 38,000 Uuion and 13,000 the result. Front a list of ’XX) fighting regi every Friday night. Visiting breth Confederates engaged. Union loss, 4,074 ments, compiled by Col. \V. F. Fox, the stat Went to tho front was laid aside and in ren invited to attend. the Union as the object of reverence and to t heir last resting place. The plains of killed ami wounded; Confederate. 3,000 (es II. V. V. Johnson, W. M. istician, I have selected the following thousands of cases never resumed by the laudation. Aside from that it is a national Manassas, the vales through which the timated). Total. 7,074. G. O. Nolan, Sec’y. order in tbo composition of its personnel Shenandoah rolls its placid streams, the ft. Parryville, 1862. 06,000 Union and 15,000 forty live inf .intry and nine heavy artillery survivors, because of lack of strength banks of the Potomac and tbe .lames, were and in the extent of its ramifications. Confederates closely engaged. Union loss, regiments, that 10.4 over 200 killed and when the buttle was won. Bale youths The volunteers went forth to the civil altars whereon the rich blood of patriots 3,690 killed and wounded; Confederate, mortally wounded in battle, and nine cav they were, the two and a quarter millions ILLAMO0K LODGE No. airy regiments that lost over 100 each in who proudly marched away nt Fat lief 3,115. Total, fl,Ml. 94, I. O. <). F. meets in war by states, but as soon as they reached was shed ns libations to the god of nation Odd Fellow’s hall every thefiehl were inxsse I into armies as United ality. The men at Detroit will shake hands [Note—About one-sixth of the number killed battle, giving the lie to the slanderous Abraham’s call—inarched away and disap Saturday night, except the F. STEPHENSON. and wounded represents, on the 1*. verage, mot that, t hoi’vti never apoken ns alleged, peared. No one can say of the spared that States soldiers, r«.*giments of different heartily in memory of old times, but not first Saturday of each mouth. [Founder of theG. A. R.l tbe killed outright, and two-sevenths of has been widely repeated, "Who ever saw the same men came back, exactly the same states serving side by side in the various »is Idaho and Oregon to New York and W. H. Cooper, N.G. the number killed and wounded represents a dead cavalryman?” end of that long column of gray bearded corps. 'The Grand Army knows no state I Maine; rather because they were together men. To tramp all day under a load of B. F. Ely, Sec’y. very uearly the killed and mortally wound ! veterans there will not be a gloomy face lines in the regulation of its membership. at Antietam, or Gettysburg or Appomat sixty to seventy pounds under a southeri) Crack Infantry llcgimentn. ed. 1 suu, where tho roads are thick with dust, nor a heavy heart, for the rejoicing will Soldiers of every state are eligible to every tox. Total. the water stagnant and rank with decaying Oificers. To this list might lie added the follow be electric and will thrill through every 'ORINTH POST, G.A.R meets on form, banishing gloom and sadness. It post in any state. Tbe test is whether a 1 The Bloody Ground in the west is almost ing, if the losses on both sides had been Now Hampshire, 5th matter, and keep nt it until men fall, never PonnMj lviiuia, 83d.. man served his country in 1861-5, no mat- I identical with the state of Tennessee. to rise out of the chill that strikes them ns . the 1st & 3rd Tuesday night of will be a holiday crowd in a city given up ter from whence he came. In another col From Atlanta on the southern limit to recorded separately: Franklin and Nash \Vi»c<msin,7th........ 5th......... they reach the earth; then to plungo into to carnival. The boys are growing merry Knoxville on the northern is about 110 ville, 1864, where the Confederate loss in Michigan. assach uset I», 29( h each mouth in Grand Army Hull. : with their advancing years, perhaps to umn is a table showing the men furnished miles, and from Atlanta to Memphis on killed reached 560. The Uuiuu loss on both M swamps an<l stand waist deep in wntei New York, GOth.. and the losses in war by states, ami 1 cite Matuuichiiaetta, Si» w bile constructing roads an«l bridges or pry * even things up and make amends for the those figures here to make clear the fact the west about 800 miles. Within the . Maxwell, Commander. Michigan, 161 h ... ing out guns and carriages from tbe mirej self denial of early manhood, when there that the Grand Army, by reason of its com limits come Chickamauga, Stone River Pennuylviinhu l(ki H. Roberts, Adjutant. was earnest work on hand. to lx» drenched in a winter’s rain to ths Wisconsin, fttn... position, is a disseminator of national 1 and Shiloh, three of the desperate battles Massachusetts, li skin and then experience a fall of mercury Even the sober visage of Dr. Stephenson, ideas. In that list the states cf New York. of the age. For three years tbe war raged New Jersey, 1.1th. Ixdowthe freezing point without a ch.i\gd the founder of the Grand Army, as it looks Massachusetts, Pennsylvania, Ohio, Illi back and forth across the state of Tennes Wisconsin, 2<i ... of clothing ora lire to thaw the ice thatTti New York, 4-‘»lh.. down from innumerable banners upon the ncis and Indiana figure among the hun see. Fort Donelson, Nashville, Murfrees Pcnnay Ivania, 6I11. cases the limbs like armor; to maneuver CHURCH DIRECTORY happy faces of the anniversary throng, will dreds cf thousands in tbe quotas furnished 1 boro, Knoxville, Chattanooga and Corinth I ’ < nnay 1 vania. lllh and light and foil the enemy under these L----------------------------------------------- I were scenes of repeated struggles, some J seem to break into smiles in keeping with the government. New York, 46th.... last conditions, and feed meanwhile 3m Pennsylvania, 45th I the moods of the merry hour. The war’s Admitting that one-half of those men are times the Union boys giving the blow ami I T illamook C harge , M. E. C hurch horse meat ent from carcasses »lAiigbtcted New Y ork, I . ’ 1st.... i wild alarms that called these young obi dead, ami the remainder, or one-half of sometimes gallantly warding it off. Over Mi'-ldgan, 27! h....... in battle In order to hold the ground,.1 men from the cheerful fireside to the tent them, ih the ranks of the Grand Army in I i 70,000 Union «lead lie in the cemeteries of Michigan, 2d.......... Hirst Sunday in the month, Long Prairie was «lone ut Murfreesboro; to inarch l> Pennsylvania, ltuth “ ’ ” Pleasant Valley 2:30 ed field are more than a quarter century those same states today, will Gen. Veazey, that district, and tens of thousands were Michigan. 8th........ . night and fight by day for a week w n:0o forgotten, and though there are stinging ” Tillamook 1 taken north from there for burial. The Vermont, 2d........... 7:30 scars and aching bones still lingering as when be marshals the battalions on this great movements of Confederate invasion only three days’ food supply at the start, N»‘w York, illth.... 11 : go “Silver Anniversary” parade, find the .r Kjlchis was «lone in the "Seven Days,” and v U. H. Jtegulnrs, 18th 11 :o3 mementoes of the fearful days of carnage, 15,000 and odd Green Mountain boys in the , of tbo north, under Bragg and Hood, were ’’ Tillamook Illinois, 0th............. almost parallekd in the Vicksburg fl 7:30 these shall cease from troubling while the ranks where the high crowned army , met and checked in that section. MaMMwnuaet ts, 22.1. Chattanooga campaigns, this would not r • Aw0(,y School in Tillamook every Sunday 2:00 heart makes holiday through the rounds Thom is was the ‘Rock of Ciiickamaugn,” Vermont, 5(h......... hats are sprayed with evergreen? No; the * _ 5Wfer meetings Thursday _____________________ _- evenings ...................., 7:30 I xj laid down as a practical regimen for Pennsylvania, I Wth If special plstorinl service Ls desired, call on ■ of a military pageant. east has peopled the west since the war. and the bulwark of Nashville, within that Masfuich iisct 1», Pt h. young fellows of twenty to twenty two fke uiidersiRned at the Parsonage, opposite Hie Grim and grizzled cannoneers will wan ami the Grand Army has sprung up and , region, and Hooker fought above the cloud.« P cdohj 1 vania, 81st. court house. der along the parapets of old Fort W’ayne, grounded its traditions, erected its altars at Lookout Mountain there. Brave Wäl Michigan, 7lh.......... J. H. W ood , Pastor. l' lace fell there fighting for tbe rescue of the time honored guardian of the city and Pennsylvania, 55th. Maine, I7lh............. Prentiss at Shiloh. There Lytle went harbor, and shout merr*y ha has down the Vermont, 3d........... A ppointments T illamook . C ircuit M. K. iron throats of the monster guns, or amuse ' I down with the battle cry warm on bis lips: Pennsylvania. 115th C hurch S outh . i “We can die but once. Ijet us charge.” ('onnrctlrut, llth First Sunday in the month, Tillamook li. a . M. their grandchildren by tossing cannon Illinois, 361 h. .. There Corse held the fort at Altoona P.uss, I balls in mimic war across the fort parade, M. and ” ’* ” 7-3° *’ Vermont, 6th.. Second Sunday, Wallace school house. 2. r. M. Everything will speak of peace—peace 1 and noble McPherson, the richest sacrifice Ohio. 491 h........ Third Sandav, South Prairie, n. a . m . and its blessings, plenty and exuberance west of the Allegheny rang«?, died braving ' MICHIGAN SOLDIERS’ MONUMENT, New York, 51st ” . ” ‘ ldeasaut Vail y 3- >’• M- the storm of Hood’s onslaught at Bald occasions was leas. Fort Donelson, 1832, Indiana, 2iiili .... ” ” Pleasant Valley 7. r. M. of life, and means of enjoyment; peace t hat Massachusetts, 57th Hill. On the southwest border Grunt Fourth Sundy Iloquarton school house 11. a . m was fought for, was purchased with toil where the Union loss was 510 killed, the Pennsylvania, &kl.. ” Long Prairie 2-30 A. M. and blood, was won in «leath struggles, and wrested victory from disaster at Shiloh, | Confederate prolwibly less. Lookout Moun Heavy Artillery Fighters. and oil the northeast Burnside hurled given to the nation by these merry making tain, 1863, where the Union loss waa 5GC Officer». Men. Total. OKN. DEVENS. GI N. FIIEDMAN. (iF.N. T<»nt.4. Longstreet back from the gates of Knox veterans. They do not mourn, though they killed and the Confederate less, and Itesaca, Maine. 1st...................... C hristian C hurch . dll 23 423 ) [Mustered out since the last encampment.| ville. In the interior Rosccrans spurned bear hurts that in all these years have never 1364, where the Union loss was over 500 N«-w York, Hili............. . 343 10 »1 Rtdcr H B M organ . Pastor: Will pre •< 1i nt healed; they do not sulk though never a danger.•».mid the battle hail at Murfrees New York, 7th. ----- w.. .. 14 277 rn years. Hardships like that may prove th« killed, but the Confederate is not recorded. Tillamook, on the third and fifth Sunday's of painless night has soothtul their lives from ( Oline, t i< ('.(.I’d......... .i,.. 2(2 boro, and on tbe south Shermau stormed 12 354 filter of the human frame, but do not «le Where the figures for certain great battle» •uch month, nt li:«0 A. M., and 7:30 1-. m . All «W 0 241 Tunnel Hill mid Mission Ilidge, not halt are not obtainable a computation of lossea MaEMudiusetls, 1st....... boyhood up to premature old ago. They ire cordially invited. 223 Penn»} ivunhi, 2d......... .. 5 RB . velop and renew it for the strain» of ma ing until his banners floated alx>ve the last for the whole campaign will serve to show Now York, Hth............ meant it to the last breath when they wont ‘¿Hi 6 22« in rer years. Now York. ................ 204 211 : stronghold of the west, Atlanta; while on to wlmt extent the Union troops Kuffered. 10 to war saying, “’Tis glorious to fight for And mo the story of the achievement», the New York, tab.............. 1W 2m 6 P resbyterian C hurch . the waters t hat lave the western border, one’s country.” Had they not meantJt Htiffering» and endurance of the Grand In the “Seven Days’ Battles,” 1862, there B ay Cm\ chan Foote’s fleet of gun touts swept the Tlio heavy artillery regiments nuniliered Army in the day» when it was a reel army there would lx? no country as we know it were 105,000 Union against 00,000 Confed GEN. W. G. VF.AZF.Y. ncl of enemies afloat and on shore. today, and no Grand Army; perhaps, also, erate nt the outset. The Union loss in I,XX) men maximum, while the maximum could I m » conliniird until every phase of [Commander-in-chief of the G. A. R.J j .•Services every Sabbath at il a. m. and 7 p. m no ¡»‘ace. Were the veterans who cherish the mem for infantry was nlmut But in some trial known hi human experience was killed and wounded was 9,1.*»; tlie Confed A cordial invitation extended to all. But what a task these veterans went and displayed its symbols on soil where ories of this hallowed ground called upon erate, 19,195. In the Maryland or Antie instance* their looses will stand compari showh lx» have been their lot. History will J. I). Beard. Tastor. alxjut in those days when their hearts volunteering was not known In 1801. The to rise in their bivouac quarters at the tam campaign, 1862, the Union loss was son with the infantry regiment». For in do them scant justice while they live, wero light with the flow of fresh young Pacific states, the territories even have Detroit encampment and salute old com 11,060, killed and wounded; tbe Confed stance, the Eighth New York heavy ar though a grateful nation will canonize tillery lost 291 against the Fifth New their lM>nes when .lead and Consecrate the blood—campaigns the severest known to well filled ranks of the Boys in Blue, and rades in arms state lines would l»e seen erate, 14,212. tho veterans cf the great eastern and cen to melt a a ny in the rush. The l>aitlefl<d<ls modern warfare; battles the bloodiest and In the Vicksburg campaign, 1863, there 11 amp»« hint’s (infantry) 295. The Eighth soil that hohiM them ( ertailily t he annals tral states hail today from anywhere to of the Union were the nurseries of their EAST AND SOUTH most desperate of the age; hardships that were 4.3,000 (increased to 75,000) Union, and bore 2,(XX) men on its rolls, first and lust. of warfare hove no more striking page tween the oceans. There are state lines in fraternal tius. than was placed there by the Boy» in llliio all the gold that was ever mined could not 40,000 (reduced to 28,(XX)) Cm fed crates en Mini the Fifth 2,500. VIA The Bloody Bnlth-s <»f tho War. when battling for t he preservation of th« biro men to endure, not even in this age of the convention of the Grand Army, but The Brave Troopers. gaged. Union loss, 8,909, killed and wound Naturally a picturesque battle like cd; Confederate, 4,833. physical hardihood. Comparisons only for convenience in organization, and Offic er». Men. Total Union. Southern Pacific Route. boasted the smaller states combine in forming de 17.1 174 Campflru la:hu«>a. Gettysburg, or a see no cf v. bolcs.'ilv »laugh nowadays are not held in particular good In the siege of Port Hudson, 1-33, 4.OH 1*1........... ........... H l'io hu ter like Chickamauga or the Wildcrucss, Union soldiers were killed and wounded. Aihhb'an, favor, but are really not so bad when the partments. Dr. B. F. StophenMon founded the flrsi Mi< higun. '»Hi.......... ........... « 135 III So a grand encampment of tbe veterans becomes an i x imple for orators and ex 7 I’M good showing is on our own side, and it is In the Chattanooga campaign, 186-3, hi M icbi«;an, 6th.......... 135 Grand Army poHtut Decaliir, Ills., in April, SIIASTA DINE, Í) Vermont, It........... 124 134 worthwhile before going into the details is a patriotic celebration each year by bun pounders of history to ring the changes eluding Mission Ridge an 1 Lookout Moun 11» 1866, or twenty-live years ago. Gen. Alger, N-w York. 1st (Dræ;:'»unKr 4 Ul dreds of thousands of people who are, ami upon, never rearranging or taking i«do nc of what it ball about that the Grand Ar.ny tain, the Union loss was 5.165, killed ami Now J«-i»» y, 1st........ ........... 12 lift 12» jlast conirnander in-chief, and chairman of who represent, the nation’s defenders, ami count newly develop"«! fac s. The follow wounded, against a Confederate loss of N’. w Y- rk. 2rl ....... ........... V 112 131 the committee In charge of welcomlug tbo sounds the trump of exultation every year, IP lx>ys to Michigan, ha» named thia encamp Penney 1 varila, 11th.. ........... 11 Express trains leave Portland dally. as it luxs for a quarter of a century and who glorify the natiou’s triumphs ami pray ing exhibit shows that it makes but liuiv 2,341. for her perpetuation. «lifft reuet* where the fancy st i i!.e», whelln In the Atlanta campaign, 1864, t he Union Ï North. doubtless will a r re of years to come, to In the lint ment the “Silver Anniversary,” la*c:use Tl>o three Michigan regiment, The war on the northern side was n na castor west, in 1862ui ! :Lt, thes.une me:» form ranged from 75,(MH to tM,000, and the South 1 sec how their record looks alongside of wore in Custer’« famous brigade. The first the order ha» reached the quarter century p tn I Leave» Portland Arrives I 9 3' a ni some others that have scattered glory tional struggle, aud the men who fought were at it dealing the blows Ihat worvawaj Confederate from 65,(XX) to 84,000. The Vermont was in Farnsworth’s celebrated mark. lo:23p ni I Lv -Albany Ar I 6:22 a in broadcast in other days ami on other the northern battles could not fail to to the ranks of the enemy ami drnimd lib Union I ons was 27,245 killed an I wounded; charge nt Gettysburg. Custer’» brigade, Fort Wayne was Ixsgun after the 8:15a in | Ar Ban Francisco Lv | 9:00 p ni converted from New Englanders,NewYork the Confederate, 21,090. In tbo Wilder and also th«* First New Jersey, were in the war of 1812 a» n defeune against British in scenes. Take the era beginning with Na era and westerners into nationalists. They life blood. The batt!« ’ » take rank in this li>t In the desfierate cavalry buttle on the right flank ness campaign, 1861, from tbe Ripidnn to vasion. It is located on a bluff command" Above trains »top only at following stations poleon’s renowned exploits. were drawn from their separate corners to order of highest u lmcrical hms, ami to gel the James, the Union I oas was 50,499 killed at Gettysburg, July 3, lu>J. Ing the city and the river, and is near the north of Ro««biirg: East Portland. Oregon < !tv, Following are fifteen notable battles of . Woodburn. Salem. Albany, Tangent, S edd4 tbo century, where the loss in killed and mingle tbeir blood upon very narrow fields the full »ignillci.nce the showing of per and wounded. In Sheridan’s Shenandoah general (juarterM of the <*ucami>ment. In Halsey, Harrisburg, Junction City, Irving, l-.u and to go back remembering that no state centages given in the pre<-<diiig table campaign, 1864, the Union loss was 13,831 wartime» the lioya called It “bandlMix sol wounded exceeded 10 per cent, of tbe num geue. was grandest in the sacrifice, that a com should to examined in connection with killed and wounded. In theslegeof Peters diering,” to do garrison duty with “»blued ROSEBURG MAIL DAILY. ber engaged: mon altar drank the blood of all. Broadly these figures. burg, 1864, the L’ni'ja I'»ss was 29,978 killed up” »hr»'.» and poliahed accoiitrement», but Eylau, 18U7. Ruwian» and French. Loss. 3» the war was scattered over a wide area, but List of battles, in the order of the high and wounded, and inti * Appomattox cam Ar 4:00 p in Portland no doubt they’ll have admiring ejes forth« K:o0 a m Lv per cent. tbe hard fighting was narrowed <lown to cat aggregate los«, where the number paign, which include«! the final a-sauhji on Lv i2:oo in 2. Bunker Hill, 1775. Loss, 24 per cent. Albany 12 p m Lv dandy regular» who keep the Yankee armor Lv 1 6:2ft a tn Rosebnrg 5 4* P m Ar limited sections, and it might lie said tin killed outright reached l.OUOon each »ale; the Petersburg trenches, the Coion I omm In busineae trim nt Fort Wayne, on the men of tbe east aud the we t went forth as I ¿order. ALBAN V LOCAL , DAILY (EXCEPT SUNDAY) 1863. ftUIB Colon rml 7*».'*« was 8,687 killed and wounded. t? an arena to contest, in tto name of I. Gettysburg. The Michigan Soldiers’ monument. In These details need no embellishment of C'»ufe<ler..t*.« cpjsiM-d. Union loss, I LT*) union and nationality, for the mastery. 5:00 p m Lv the grand Mjuare in front of the Detroit killed and wounded; Coni<■<!<• rate. 15JM; words to strengthen the picture of what Ar 9:oft a ni Partland 9:00 p tn Ar State emulation there was, but national m city hall, wo» designed by llandolpli Total, 3,’,-' tbe veteran» endured In or«1er to win Albany Lv 5:00 a life was the prize and national glory tbe 2. Kpittsyhhi, I8CI. Hal the Confederate tbe honor» a grateful people now ac Bogera. It w / im ere« ted in honor of the LOCAL PASSENGER trains daily (EX EPT SUN- 1 in l.ilhd and woumh I «'pialed tbe ron 1» them. And it is not only wh t was reward. Michigan heroin who fell in liallle during day .) Union ut KpottaytvanU. thii buttle would suffered after the harness wsa put on, but The Bloody Groand«. tbe civil war. properly a; ? ;ir as N«i. 2. But such was not détroit KxroaiTfoM nuitmwo. Recently, on locking over the map» Albany t T« P m I.v The expoaltlon buildings are tbe general Ar 9:25 a ni the case. I lie Confe<h rale records, so i<* what was dared before the issue had gone (General quart or» of tbo<l. A. IL} stowing the scenes of the wr.r in the east Lebanon 3:15 P »U Ar 8:40 a ni quarter» provided for the veteran». The as rompi«« !, relate io those Individ :»l so far. Afu-r Shiloh and the “Seven Dai s” Albany Ar 1 4:26 p tn 7 30 « m L* The glory that liovern «tout tbe régi and in the west. I was surprised at the Ntrueture is one of tbe lurgent and finest coaunMida that tuiGvred iao®t,and cafltuat- in 1803, the government asked for .3W.OIJ0 tobanan 8:12 a m Ar Ar 1 3:40 à tr. narrowness of the area in each section Ing fojm the I•r.'tnn J given for Ibaau it b men, and 4;X),<XX) rushed to arms. After me ntal standard» might lie at¡11 fort fier of the new buildings of the city. 'The subdivided nmi the nnmtors and Dama quartern are arranged in btvounca by where the heaviest fighting ami the most evidcot that Civ ( < > federate Io-* liore 1»«» Murfrmboro, Gettysburg and Chieka- Pullman Buffet Sleepers comparison to tbe Union. The Uni«»n ! ««• rna'ign nt least a million men volunteered n arrange«!. Tnking the tell régiments ut slat cm , and the men “camp out engagements took place. In the east the in killed »ed wonixled was Ift.HI. The to keep the depleted rank» up to figbtiug the top of the list of those that lost the the floor» of the large hallo, 'I’lie Bloody Ground was 1» tw* < n Gntysburg, T ourist S leeping C ars forces oppueed vere approximat«*Iy JI’'.'«» heavirat, coiinting the f »arçon toge of killed »ide” of the board» arc |Middcd Pa., ou tbe n-*rtb an I Suffolk, Va., on I to Union and MJMM) Confederal-, 'i neso Lg- strength. For the accommodation of Second Class Passen on t be nuinkr enrolltsl, the alAjwing i» a» straw muttrt*»ses out of regard for ike south, the western limit o : j a line drawn Where They flailed from Then. gers, attached to Express Traina. folio w». through Lyne'.ibtirg, and tkj eastern dainty habits that have grown on the vet Should Conimnn«lcrdn-Chief V. az*y call FORT WATNF— MAIN ENTRANCE. through Norfolk. In this district, atout WfacOnMn, ......... Ift.7 erans »In«« the war. If that I mii ’I The West Side Division the roll of tbe voHnteers and martyrs of Main«. 1-1 < 2»! 1 Etnnc’a Rfvcr (Murfreesboro). 1862. Ix>®« 150 miles broad and 260 miles long, occ’irred toa» y ari filer) I......................... I'».t enough they may bring their own be< 1861-5 upon the plaza al the fool of Michi MuMMV.'busetiM, 31111........... . ......................... to I hire them in a iMmnling house. ZJ’4 i>cr rent. The Union troops were not thirteen battles, where the Uni n loss in BETWEE« PORTLAND AMD CORVALLIS. 17.4 gan’s Soldiers’ monument at Detroit, ask Pennlvsola. I-Hifh.................. all closely engaged, but their I om was 22 killed outright numbered over 5U0, and the A silver anniversary 1» a reminder that MAIL TRAI» DAILY (BXCXFT MHWAY.) W iM (Umili, 5,1 b ................... «....................... 17/ per cent. ing responso by stale», Ibi» would 1« hh WiwotMwri, aggregate of Union killed ami woun«led time fiien. To have done an) thing worth 7th............. 17Jt Ar| * 4. Marengo, 1806. Austrian» and French. Portland p 7:30 » in iI ¡ Lv answer: New York. Mh ........................................... 17.1 celebrating after tweiity*flv« ywini mean» was over 120,000. In tbe lexaer engage Diss, 23 per cent. Men 9 41 a m 1 I.v North Yatnhill Lv 1 3 1’P Prona) I van la. Illli ............ IM that there wmr a score or mote of year»* p I.v 1 12 Corvalis Forni» to<l. 1> lo p nt 1 Ar Pennsylvania. 1OI......... .......... IM & Chickamauga. 1^. 1/m. 21 per cent. Tbe ment* ami in xiege operation» probably . !» headway ut the »tart. In the case of the Pt tins? I vtm la. 14i»t .................................... 18.1 50,000 more were numbered with tbe ca»u Alabama...... . ............ Union troops were not all c-loaelr engage«!, t> .**» Arlan*»» ............. At Albany and Corvallis connect voth aim» tot tbeir hjaa vm 20 per cent. Th« highest numerical I om in killed nuf veteran» the hea'lway was over twenty- aitfak 15.6« ( all for ni a ........ ...... ef Orest.« r.*cific Railroad. »L'ND ÎY Tllal WKW ft. Antietam. ISK. Izwes 21 percent. Unkm Here were fought the desperate Ft rug fared by any regiment in « »ingle engage five year», »nd now they are growing vrtiy, 4j»H L«dorado.................... EXPRESS TRAINS DAILY, (EXCEPT St'Nr % Z.) troops were not tdl cHssly engaged, but gles of Gettysburg, Antietam. Malvern n» La titre I ht < 1 k'Ut meni occurred it* lb« First Maine hear/ nn«l may p»u««e to consider who will answer their low waa 1-» per cent. rr-enfor« <r I>ak<A» ................... Hill and Winchester, fields of glorious artillery. This regiment, humla rlng be “Here?” at the next roil cull, and who will Ar JMIaware.. . 4 4O p m 1! Lv Portland 7. Leipsic, Bl k AU les and French, l/wa, 21 memory to the veterans who conquered tween MO and 900 m< n, It«I a forlorn hope I m pul among the mlxMiug. Atthetw nt, Distrklof Columbia. ft 53 p m 1 Lv Worth Yamhill Lv per cent. Iz-ipsic hM I m ; n termed by the Lv hi front of Petersburg agMhiat bit.od work« fourth I'licHiiipini nt h»->t year Gen. CL rh*» Florida ..................... McMinnville 7:i5 P m 11 Ar Germans “tho battle of the nrjiuns," on there. Here the Monitor tore down tbe 15 and fornii I to Iteri e» June in, 1-64, and Devens was among the .MaMMuebiisetI »111-11 G«x>rgia. ..................... . account of the vast armies sMembfal, Merrimac, ami led off in a new era of naval J. rw v* ho welcomed the veteran«« tn B MOB. lost 210 killed end mortally woonn-led Here, too, was Appomattox. which nqmtored 46'.,ntm men. It occnmsl warfare. i-.i » Indiana f«racmpl> applr "-;l «" '*5 The highest law hi any Infantry r**gl Gen Sherman w.14 one of the merrj.Mi 0/ the year after Borodino, w hicli, until re Ba< k and forth over this b!oo<! stained of tbe WiMernew. Tb« fought their ¡ova.. ........... . lUnsM -------TO ALL POINT!*------ rnent in n single buttle was In the Fifth tbe vast throng nt the m.iiiiinoth <iempfl»*tb cent year*, baa been claMed a* the bhxid- arena the rn/iiea contemtol in the earn full .tr-bTth. tlz-. I> <.'«> I r.l .n »od 75,7'»> ntiM ky....#••*••••• New York (Diryeea Zouave»), at tto sec and Gen. K F Tobin was selected t» h M lo»t battle of modern times, tot an out paigns of th> Rappahannock, the Penm confederi«. I nion le-. «loi «xtn<b K< EAST AND SOUTH 5..z.’4 I ». liai ana.. .......... . place I*» < «»mmander-in Chief side estimate on the beat figures Mlainabl» sula, the invasion» of Maryland and Penn ert. I<«90. < onf~hTBt» r. corte loromplet«. Maine........... ÎO.I‘U ond Bull Bue. Tto regiment hm »up- m * coih I plaL^a the l«j»a at Borodin*» at about 21 pel porthig a battery, and In warding at Veawy for tl»e year I <>1 Their si I . er a1» Man Hwi L cbkk^a'i»». i«. UA>> * ticket» and full information reff^rding sylvania. the Shcnaud«>ab and tbe W ilder ir . >i < ■onfv4cr.it« «.|4 x » c 4. I nl->n k« tt> kll ■‘1 Mi--». ce»L fvtvs. map»etc., callón company »agent at North tarka In front and left Rank loot 117 killed lilverMary will be with “the grand arn f a.. M Mkhtom VamMll. •nd «r.'inded. ll.«M Coaf.-dcrato. 1-3» 8. Gettysburg. r«k tom. 9i per cent. Lnicn l*Here fell young EiUwortb, brave Pl 1J bl.olUJX U KifeMbM aad mortally woumted. trer'p» m»t all closely engogod ad I thcii ToUl. < KOF.RLRR, K r. ROGERS. Kearney, gray b-ured Mansfield, grand old WU — If ‘ T ltM.j 19 per cent. The four U nioft c »rpa moal Manager. I A Mt. fe. F and Pas». Agt. 'V-’Vète i / * riirougli Tickets R ■