F a = 5 Pin BS TE ih The Pension Building By ELMO SCOTT WATSON HAT is the most expensive thing in the world? No, it is not a rare metal, nor a8 precious stone, nor any of the other things which we common- Iy think of when the adjectives “expensive” or “costly” are ap- plied to them, The most expensive thing in the world Is war! For war, while it Is In prog- ress, not only exacts a fearful toll of lives, careers and money, but long after the last gun has been fired and the battle flags have been furled, a nation en- gaged in it continues to pay and pay and pay! The occasion for these reflections upon the costs of war Is the fact that March 12 of this year marks the one hundredth anniversary of the establishment of the United States pension burean and during that institution's career of nearly a century, it was the medium through which there were paid out staggering sums of money in pensions to veterans, their widows and their dependents. And these staggering sums were only a small part of the actual expense of the wars in which Uncle Sam has been engaged. Here are the latest available fizures on the amounts of pensions paid out from 1700 to 1032, but as will be seen later in this article even these figures do not tell all the story : War of revolution T0.000.000.00 War of 1812 §.202.720.40 £8 29 24 71 61 42 54 Indian wars War with Mexico Civil war EN War with Spain cones Regular establishment World war Unclassified TREE - DW - @ -~ Ww om MN; UN ee DL Total 187.622.19 It will be notie r small fig. ures are cited for the World war pensioners, Obviously this does not include the vast sums that have been paid out in one form or another to these veterans and the explanation is that there was a different set-up for compensating those who served in this conflict. Since the close of the World war the gov- ernment has paid out approximately £6,318, 108,733 on account of relief of World war vet- erans and their dependents—an average of about $451,300,000 annually. Some of this money was paid in insurance premiums by the veterans themselves, but the greater portion came from the treasury. Appropriations made by congress for the financing of weterans’ rellef in the fiscal year 1033 total 2027 840.000, Seven forms of relief have been provided and all are in operation. They are: Adjusted service compensation, medical care and treatment, dis ability compensation, United States insurance, term insurance paid for permanent and total disability, disability allowances, and emergency officers’ retirement pay, On June 30, 1931, the veterans administration was set up, the old pension bureau was absorbed in It and all veterans’ activities and operation of homes for veterans are now concentrated In this federal organization which is headed by Brig. Gen. Frank T. Hines as administrator, The adjusted compensation law, changed by the act of 1931, made it possible that compensa- tion certificates, maturing in 20 years, should be available to all below the rank of captain who had served In the military service more than 60 days. At maturity these certificates will vary in value from £150 to $1,505, depending on the length of the veterans’ service, and meantime money may be borrowed on them. Certificates issued up to March 1, 1031, totaled 3.498376, and had a total maturity value of $3.528.022.777. Loans made upon them approximated about $243,000000 during the same period, Under the hospitalization plan all veterans are entitled to free treatment of hospital nature either In or out of government hospitals, 51 hospitals being operated In 1031, five more be- ing built and ten more authorized hy congress. The cost of operating these institutions and ear- ing for the patients is In excess of $450,000,000 to January 1, 1081, The government relief program includes death and disability compensation, disabled emergency officers’ retirement pay and disability allowance which have cost $2,205,215,659 up to July 1. 1032, Anothey relief activity Is the grant of low-cost insurance against death or permanent disability in any multiple of $500 from £1,000 to £10,000 to any henlthy veteran who has previously applied for or has been eligible to apply for annually renewthle war-time insurance or United States rover Cleveland government life (converted) insurance, The total amount paid on these items is $1,670,157, 400, Many thousands of claims have been filed un. der the law providing monthly payment of term insurance and government life Insurance for total and permanent disability, and relief was being given In 20,105 cases on June 30, 1082. The disability allowance plan, which went into effect July 1, 1880, provides monthly payments to veterans permanently disabled to the extent of 25 per cent or more, even though their dis abllity was not incurred In or as a result of their terms of service. Another new relief law provides for the pensioning of emergency offi. cers who are 30 per cent or more disabled or in- capacitated as a result of their World war serv. ice on the same basis as retired officers of the regular army. The history of pensions for veterans of Amer. ican wars goes back to the earliest days of the republie On June 20. 1778, even before the Declaration of Independence had been adopted, the Continental congress appointed a committee to “Consider what prewision ought to be made for such as are wounded or disabled in the land or sea service” This committee made a prompt report, and on August 26, 1776, the first national pension act In America was passed by the Continental con gress. That part of the law fixing the amount was as follows: “That every commissioned offi cer, non-commissioned officer, and private soldier who shall lose a limb In any engagement, or be so disabled In the service of the United States of America as to render him incapable after. wards of getting a livelihood, shall receive, dur- Ing his life or the contimuance of such disabil)- ity, the one-half of his monthly pay from and after the time that his pay as an officer or soldier ceases” After the Constitution had been adopted and the new government had been organized, it con- tinued for a time the pensions which had been previously granted and assumed thelr payment. Soon, however, a strong demand arose for a new pension law, and on March 23, 1702. the first pension law passed by the new government went into effect. Later there grew a demand for a pension law not based upon disability incurred In the service and in his annual message to congress on De. cember 2, 1817, President Monroe recommended such a law. A bill was passed by the house on December 24, as a sort of a Christmas present to the veterans of the Revolution, passed by the senate Immediately afterwards and approved by President Monroe on March 18, 1818. The loose wording of this law, however, made frauds easy and the grant of pensions hecame a public scandal. A law passed In 1820 required all pensioners already on the rolls and future applicants to flle a statement of property as proof of their alleged dependence upon govern. ment bounty for a livelihood. As a result. the names of many pensioners were stricken from the rolls In the early days of the Republic, pensions were distributed by the secretaries of war and navy. But on March 12, 1833, a commission of pensions was set up under the direction of the secretary of war. In 1840 the pensions dis bursed by the secretary of the navy were also placed under the administration of the commis sion of pensions, which In the same year was transferred to the department of Interior and be came the pensions bureau, There it remained until 1931 when the United States veterans’ ad- ministration was established and absorbed the pensions bureau, In 1536 there began the enactment of a long James Monroe series of pension acts in favor of the widows of soldiers of the Revblution, restricted at first to those who had married before the close of the Revolution, These grew more liberal later until pensions were granted to all widows, regardless of the date of marriage. Out of these pensions, and similar ones for widows of veterans of later Wars, grew many abuses of the pension system, for it became a practice for young women to Marry aged government pension after the death of thelr hus bands, veterans In order to benefit by a The pension rolls of the Revolution had scarce ly grown to their peak when the United States became engaged in another war-—the War of 1812-—t0 add to ents drawing pensions its list of veterans and depend. And the same thing was repeated later at Intervals of two decades with the Mexican war and the Civil war. The first law pensioning soldiers of the Civil war was a disability pension act of July 14. 1882 which provided for the disabled survivors, for the widows, orphan children and dependent members of those who died because of wounds received or disease contracted while In the service of the United States and in line of duty. Rates for total dizability ranged from $8 to £30 a month, according to rank, and these same rates were applied to the widows of the soldiers laws, beginning July 4, 1564, and culminating in the recent act which increased the pensions of Civil war widows more than seventy-five years old, have increased the rates, setting fixed rates for various kinds of disability Rucceasive The Civil war changed a number of things as regards the pension treatment of war veterans In the first place, the veterans of that war were numerically of large political importance. They were able to make their influence felt In Wash- ington; consequently the march of pension leg- islation quickened after the close of the war. The passage of the arrears act In 1870 added greatly to the burden of debt which Uncle Sam bears because of the wars in which he has en. gaged. This act provided that all pensions which had been granted or might hereafter be granted should date from the time of disability, provided application were made before January 1, 1880, The effect of that law Is shown by the fact that the total sum pald for pensions jumped from £32000000 In 1879 to $56,000000 in 1880, the greatest increase in any one year In the history of our pension system, From time to time during the course of the pension history of the country various Presidents have attempted to stem the tide of pension pay- ments. Outstanding in this effort was President Grover Cleveland. A bill to establish service pensions for persons in dependent circumstances was vetoed by President Cleveland in 1888 A similar bill was passed June 27, 1500, providing that all persons who had served 90 days in the physical disability of a permanent character which Ineapacitated them from performing man- ual labor might receive pensions ranging from $6 to £12 a month, according to the degree of disability. Widows of soldiers who served 00 days who were dependent upon their daily labor for support could receive $8 a month, The most carefully worked out attempt to fore. stall the expensive and somtimes wasteful re sults of the pension system wag made when we entered the World war. It was the first time that our government had ever tried to find a sys tem at the outbreak of a war to deal with dis abled veterans in some manner other than by pensioning them, After the war, too, efforts were made to pre. vent the beginning of a pension system by giv. ing the veteran some government assistance in establishing himself. What the recult has been in the long-drawnout dispute over bonus legisla tion and other matters connected with veterans’ compensations too well known from recent events to require further comment in this article © by Western Nawspaper Union, READING OF TODAY AND THE LONG AGO It Is curious how long-forgotten things come floating Into the mind from nowhere, Once there was a story In a popular magazine written on the installment plan. The same story was given each month, as it might have been told by some well known writer such as Howells or James, but the name of the author was withheld until after the tenth number when the list of authors wns given, and you could compare it with your own guesses, I believe that 1 was not absolutely sure of many of them except the one by Henry James, whose long, precise and sometimes involved sentences were not to he disguised. As an exercise In the story writers, It was Interesting Few children of today have ever heard of the “Prudy “Dottie Dimple,” series. ut we knew them all by heart and could tell you how they put P'rudy In a great hogshead when she house on a painter's ladder, in search of heaven: how she followed sister Susie to school, and amused herself by trying to see if her knitting needle would come out the other side if pushed through her seat-mate's ear. There were many stories about these little folk of Portland, Maine, and we read them over and over, 1 have heard many oblections to sto ries in series, prob go beyond the period of childhood and approach courtship and mar riage, hut the Prudy books commit ted no such unseemly indiscretion. One of the enthusiasms of my youth was “The Princess of Thule” because they by William Black, who wrote many other novels, among then “The Strange Adventures of a Phaeton” (some one asked the other day, what was a phaeton) 1 have lately re newed my acquaintance with his “Judith Shakespeare,” which Is a good portrayal of the environment of the poet. Akin to the “Princess of Thule” was “Thelma” by Marie Corelll, “Peg Woflington,” by Charles Reade, was the story of an Eight eenth century actress, a friend of David Garrick. I do not recall the story, but might ask a certain rela ative who makes a point of reading once a year the novels of Charles Reade and Anthony Trollope. 1 think he regards the Barsetshire people as personal friends, especial- ly those of the little house at Al lington, In my youth detective stories were in ny sticate! inch unsoeph gloating over yellow backed paper books, my own harmless favorites requiring no such secrecy. At school, we were obliged to read the “Gold Bug” and the “Murders of the Rue Morgue,” as being the ploneers of Not be inclined, 1 did not like them, though it was heresy to say so, and later | could not see why anyone should want to harrow up her soul, and freeze her young blood by poring over the “Moonstone,” by Wil- kie Collinge. We domestic ones wore out the “Last “Lorna Doone,” “Joh: aitfax, Gen- tleman,” “Jane others, Incl “Red as 8 Ro and the like have been, but hs w8 compared 8 read by girls in the Indian- the current detective novels ’ sre § Pompeil, to some of the of today.—M. ©. apolis News r™ 2 Crush and Dissolve i 3 Bager Aspirin Baci:, Glass of Water. Trickle Modern medicul science now throws an entirely new light on sore throat. A way that cases the pain, rawness and irritation in as litUe as two or three minutes. Results are among the most extraordinary in medical science. On doctors’ advice, millions are fol- lowing this way . . . discarding old- time “washes” and “‘antiseptics.” For it has been found that only medi- cine can help a sore throat, Simple To Do. All you do is crush and dissolve three BAYER Aspirin Tablets in half a glass of water. Gargle with it twice—as pictured above. If you have any ndicalion of a cold — before gar- gling take 2 Bayer Aspirin Tablets with a full glass of water. This is to combat any signs of cold that have ne into your system. Keep on aking if cold has a “hold.” For Genuine Bayer Aspirin will not harm you. Your doctor will tell you, it does not depress the heart. Get a box of 12 or a bottle of 24 or 100 at any drug store. Reduces Infection, Eases Pain Instantly. Gargling with Bayer Aspirin will do three things: Relieve soreness al once. Allay inflamma- tion. AND—reduce infection; which is the important thing in fighting a sore throat. It requires medicine—like BAY- ER ASPIRIN ~—1to do these things! That "is why throat specialists throughout America are prescrib- ing this BAYER gargle in place of old-time ways. ont are quick and amazing. Be careful, however, that you t real BAYER Aspirin Tablets or this purpose. For they dissolve completely enough to gargle with- out leaving irntating particles. Watch this when you buy. REA % JONM 1. WEST, Moseger