THE STJNBAT OTIEGOXTAX, POKTLAND, XOTEMBER 8, 1914. 1? BARB WIRE TANGLE IS FEAR OF ARMY Thorny Strands Halt Progress More Effectively Than Bullet or Bayonet. INVENTION IS AMERICAN More CumTjersome Devices Displaced and Xippers Must Be Used to Clear "Way for Passage Criss cross Plan ' Most in Use. through, for every wire must bo cut at every post. Wire by tons and posts by thousands are carried with the ar mies, for be It invasion or defense no General knows when he will have the enemy behind him. In placing en tanglements deep grass, tall . grain fields, and thickets are selected where osslble, for the effectiveness of the wire is Yar greater if the attacking force hurls itself upon the obstruction unawares. Wire entanglements have about dis placed band gabions and crow's feet, but both are still used where there Is not time to put in an entanglement. Band gabions are round Iron rings con nected with, each other with wire and fastened to stakes. Only a few stakes are required, and the rings can be hitched up much more rapidly than wiro can De strung. Gabions do little barm in themselves, but thev are almost in visible and trip men and horses In a charge till an attacking army is piled pell-mell upon itself in a crushing cramble. while the enemy pours in its fire. A crow's foot consists of four pointed bolts of Bteel. each four IncheB long, so Joined at the center that, no matter how it falls or rolls, one point is always up. They are sown thickly upon ground that cavalry or artillery must pass over, and are very effective for crippling horses. They have also been known to delay Infantry long enough to spoil a charge. ' "When Joseph F. Glldden. a farmer, of De Kalb, 111., back in 1872 got the Idea of making wire fences with barbs on them, he bad no more harmful de sign than to teach horses, cattle and hogs, by the pricks they might re ceive, that wires fences were meant to keep them in or out. When Uncle Sam. on December 24. 1874, gave Farmer Glldden the Christ mas gift of a patent on his new device, his idea was heralded to the world. The Western prairies, with their lack of fencing: materials, had tried single strands of wire, but they availed little and the whole consumption of wire for fencinsr In 1874 was only 60 tons. Glid- den's barbs made the cattle think, and the farmers soon saw their worth. In 10 years the wire fences had increased 10.000-fold, and in ten years more its growth had been the foundation of the wire trust. But Glldden reaped small reward from his invention till February 29 1892, when the United States Supreme Court upheld his claims and he was able to collect royalty on all the fences that had been strung before. He lived 3 4 years to enjoy It, and died in his home town in 1906, at the age of 93. Quite naturally some animals in closed by Glldden's fencing gashed themselves on the barbs. Just as nat urally men and boys tried to climb over or under these fences and have their clothes and their flesh torn. These wounds upon man and beast and the suddenness with which Glldden's barbs halted all living things came to the attention of military men, and the barbed wire entanglement of which we now read almost every day in the war news was born. Wire Halts Maneuvering. And it may be said right here that soldiers who have been halted by wire entanglements while making a charge or maneuvering for a new position say the devil never invented anything nastier. Bullets and bayonets make wounds that cause no suffering or that Mock sensibility, but barbed wire tears and annoys and gives no escape. Possibilities seen by American mill tary students in barbed wire were soon carried to the armies of Europe and engineers in every country in the world were put to work devising means for using this new device. Natural fore runners of the barbed wire entangle ment had been in use from the earliest times. Roman soldiers had defended their positions with abatis. They had held off their barbarian enemies by felling trees, sharpening the ends of the orancfaes and massing them with their points turned away from the . Sternal City. Fralses sharp-pointed piles had been planted in the earth in front of armies for their enemies to wound themselves against or to halt the onrush of a charge till the piles could be removed or scaled. Then, later, as Europe advanced in wealth and more money and skill were put into devices offensive and defen slve, the cheval-de-f rise came into vogue, and up to the time barbed wire supplanted It, military people . looked upon it as highly effective in some cir cumstances. The cheval-de-frise is log of wood, usually square, 9 Inches by 9 inches and 12 feet long. Through this log holes are bored six inches apart, and into these holes sharp .pointed staaes oi wooa or iron are driven. This makes a device that re sembles a series of exaggerated saw- buckB. At the ends of the los are rings by which they may be locked together, making an obstruction of any desired length that cannot be rolled aside. cannot be vaulted by cavalry or climbed toy infantry till the stakes are broken off or bent aside. But the use of the cheval-de-frise 1 limited. Like abatis and fraises, it is valuable tor guarding the approach to s permanent position where there is ample time for building and placing it. The cheval-de-frise is useful for barri cading a street or road, and till recent ly European armies carried with them the materials and artisans to put them together. The material for four che-vaux-ie-frises would be a load for two horses. A mile of the special, fine, steel barbed wire made for military purposes weighs from 90 to J.QQ. pounds. And be It remembered that for cruelty - and strength this military wire is a hundred times more efficient than the ordinary agricultural fence wire of commerce. -Nobody outside of the European armies now at war knows how they are . using barbed wire entanglements or in what form they are building them, for the engineers of each army are con stantly devising new methods, and these new ideas are not divulged, even in time of peace. But the dispatches tell of cavalry and infantry running head long into meshes of unyielding steel thorns, that rouse - the imagination to the horror of the wounds they inflict. One use for barbed wire that seems to be new is reported from Belgium. There certain roads that it was desirable to have passable to the people of the coun try were made impassable to an army by building zigzag fences from side to Hide. The peasant, going to market, might pass by traveling slowly and double distance, but an army could not thread such a maze and . must halt to destroy it. Entanglement Designs Many. While the European armies probably have built entanglements on new plans, a description of how an entanglement might be effectively constructed, issued for the instruction of the British army a few years ago, will give the layman an idea of the effectiveness of such de fenses. First the ground to be pro tected and over which the enemy must pass is laid off in five-foot squares. At each corner of each square a post is driven into the ground till 18 Inches remains above the surface. This sys tem of squares extends indefinitely along the line to be defended, and the common practice is to make it six '. squares deep, thus insuring an en tanglement 30 feet wide through which the attacking forces must pass. The wire Is strung from post to pos and fastened with staples. Then other wires are strung diagonally from posts at opposite corners, and crisscrossed again and again, till a net work intricate as a bramble patch stands high enough from the earth to throw a horse or man among the terrible steel thorns. The staples are not driven home, nor are the wires stretched. If the wires were taut they could be cut with swora or bayonet blow. As they are constructed the wire gives under the blow and the only way that has been devised to get through an entangle ment is to stop and cut each wire with . nippers. These nippers are carried by soldiers nowadays, but it is a Jong; job to set JURY ACQUITS DAVIS BALLPLAYER FREED OF CHARGE FILED BY MINOR GIRL. ABOLISHMENT OF NOOSE LEADS BY 25 Vote Complete" Excepting Two Small Counties Against Capital Punishment. Prosecutor Calls Method of ''Defease Despicable and Attacks Court' Instructions Bera-ex Next. Robert Davis, ballplayer, was freed yesterday by a Jury, which returned verdict of not guilty, after consid ering the merits of the case for half an hour. Davis was charged with hav ing contributed to the delinquency of a minor girl. Yesterday was taken up by the ar guments of, opposing counsel and the charge of Judge McGinn to the Jury. Deputy District Attorney Collier ar ralgned the defense for humiliating the state's witnesses on cross-examination and said it was the most despicable action ne naa seen in any court. in nis opening argument to the iurv Deputy District Attorney Hammersly grilled Davis, and said if he were chief of police he would withdraw his officers from prosecuting a search for the midnight footpad and the red- handed murderer, but would place his men in the rooms of such men as Davis and the others involved in this series of cases to protect the young woman- nooa or the city. Attorney George Shepherd Quoted jttODDie .Burns to the jury and urged tnat tne acts of the accused were such as frail humans were prone to com mit. Judge W. W. McCredle made an effective talk to the Jury on behalf ox Davis. Judge McGinns instructions were credited with having freed Davis. Deputy Collier objected vigorously to them, as unduly favoring the defend ant, but the court declared they would stand. The next trial in the series to be heard before Judge McGinn will be that of Joe Berger, local Jeweler, who will be tried on a statutory charge. The case will be begun on Tuesday Evidence is much the same as that against the ballplayers and the same witnesses will be called. GALLOWS LIKELY TO GO Normal School Measures Are De feated and x Other Acts Fail. Chamberlain's Lead Grows, With j-combe Still Gains. VOTE BY COtnVTrES OX ABOLI TION OF DEATH PENALTY. County Yes. No. Baker. , 2.201 2,208 Benton 1,822 2,041 Clackamas. 4,284 4,852 Clatsop 1.571 1.854 Columbia. 1,890 1,498 Coos 3.050 2,337 Crook 2,082 1,874 Curry S56 333 Douglas. 1.072 1,054 Gilliam 514 613 Harney 619 538 Hood River 1.160 922 Jackson. 3,276 2,533 Josephine. 770 948 Klamath 1.258 1.287 Lane 5,803 5.291 Lincoln. . 1,001 784 Linn 3,338 4.033 Marion 5,890 6,274 Morrow 555 750 Multnomah 32,644 30,479 Polk 2,292 2,718 Sherman 398 651 Tillamook 1,309 1,154 Umatilla. 2,036 1,976 Union. 1.570 1,640 Wallowa. . .. 560 641 Wasco 1,673 2.049 Washington. 1.957 2,855 Wheeler 330 436 YamhilL 3.102 3,337 Total 89,883 89,858 Majority for, 25. LOSS IN OFFICERS 1598 British List of Casualties to October 27 Published. LONDON. Nov. 7. A tabulated list of the casualties among commissioned officers in the various regiments com posing the British expeditionary force in France between October 20 and Octo ber 27 raises the total of officers killed, wounded or missing to 1598. Among the regiments to suffer heav ily were the Royal WelBh Fusiliers, who lost seven officers ktUed. eight wounded and two missing, . and the Royal Field Artillery, 10 of whose of ficers were wounded. Chehalis Company Has Big Engine. ELM A, Wash., Nov. 7. (Special.) The largest engine in the Northwest is now in operation at the plant of the Chehalis Fir Door Company at Mc Cleary. The engine has enough power to operate the entire factory and is used alone during the day run. Whether the bill abolishing capital punishment as a penalty for murder in Oregon has been adopted by the voters Is a Question that the returns from Tuesday's election thus far have failed to reveal. With returns missing from only three of the 34 counties in the state, the measure now has a favorable majority of 25 votes. Grant. Lake and Malheur counties are the only ones that have not yet reported. As Crook, Harney and some of the other counties of Cen tral Oregon have returned slight ma jorities in favor of the bill, it is pos sible that the present lead will be maintained. However, the vote is so close that a single county may affect it either way. This is the only measure on the bal lot etill in doubt. Normal Schools Lose. Both the normal school bills seem to have lost in the state at large. With returns from 24 of the 34 counties in the state available and this includes the figures of most of the populous counties the Ashland normal is nearly 20,000 votes behind. It Is certain that the counties yet to be heard from can not affect it. The vote now stands: For the Ashland normal -5T.40O 1 Agamtc tbe Aahlana normal. . ..T7,:es Majority against ...19,760 Belated returns also continue to give adverse majorities to the Weston nor mal in Eastern Oregon. Polk and Washington counties, which reported yesterday, went heavily against both schools. The following is the vote on the Weston normal: For the Weston normal. ............ .61, X2 Against the Wc&ton normal 75,881 Majority against 14,489 Likewise the bill providing for city and county consolidation continues to tall behind. ' Many of the outlying counties, evidently not understanding the measure, have gone decidedly against it. The vote now is 55,618 for and 67,002 against a negative major ity of 11,380. Chamberlain Keeps Lead. George E. Chamberlain continues to make gains on Robert A. Booth for the Senatorship. Chamberlain now is more than 13,000 votes ahead in the state PATROLMAN'S DAUGHTER ADOPTED BY POLICE BAND " - - x ' " " " ' ' I !! - JlX :: N'ix.ipi - i :: J if isM: ' ' . - ' t if? 4 r ' - - Is ' 1 1 I : Swi 1 1 Xst:' '-' v'-v "-'I ' ' - . v . " . - ' t . 1 1 I f ' " - S ' I - V'l fff''' I - , - ' ' ''' 1 1 "' " ' ' -l - jt .- &.-.X.J.'i.,.S.v,,A. I MARGARET LOIS RUDOLPH. The youngest member of the Portland Police Band fits nicely In the horn of Patrolman Ray Ellis' big tuba. She is Margaret Lois 'Ru dolph. 10-months-old daughter of Patrolman and Mrs. M. M. Rudolph, and she formally was adopted by the band after her father, who plays a baritone, brought her to a rehearsal. She crowed, laughed, gurgled and tried to talk all the time the po liceman were playing, and when the rehearsal was over she was elected a member of the band. Next Sprg the Police Band will tour the Eastern cities boosting for Portland, and it is already ar ranged that little Margaret will go along. The Stiidebaker FOUR Appeals To You Instantly rS refined and beautiful lines satisfy at once your sense of car beauty. The color and varnish work is so distinctly above the average that yon notice it with gratification. The marks of the brush are not apparent the color, and varnish have been flowed on the surface and rubbed in through twenty operations. The color and varnish are satin-smooth, velvet-like as perfect as the color and varnish work on a fine piano. The fenders are of beautiful crown shape. Kvery line is a carve which blends harmoni ously with the perfect symmetry of the body. The running boards, covered full length with aluminum, are in studied unity with fenders and body lines. - This is the analysis of why the Studebaker FOUR appeals to you instantly, why it satis fies your sense of car beauty. ' But think for a moment! You Buy Time-Service with the Studebaker FOUR Do you buy a Studebaker FOUR just because it is beautiful the day you take it out of the show room, or do you buy it for the service, for the pleasure, for the con venience, for the happiness of your family and for a thousand other appealing things which a motor car, develops as you own and drive it? If the first appearance, the first impres- sion of your car, is the thing you buy it for, you are cheating yourself out of a large part of the real value of the Studebaker FOUR. Your Studebaker FOUR is planned and manufactured for the service it will give you, Tor a year two years five years, after you buy it. After the car has traveled ten thousand miles, its motor, if given a little care, will run as smoothly, as silently, as swiftly as it did the day you took it out of the show room. The springs will be as resilient, the whole car as tight and as noiseless, as the first day you drove up in front of your house. Studebaker manufactures time-service into the splendid Studebaker steels." The light, perfectly balanced reciproca ting parts of the motor will give hundreds and thousands of miles of smooth, silent running efficiency. The gears and axles likewise have the same quality of time-service manufactured into them. Even the lustrous and beautiful body , finish, if given reasonable care, will be bright and fresh for years after it has been exposed to rigorous service. These are the things we want you to bear in mind when you buy your Stude baker FOUR. These are the things which represent its real value to you. v These are the things which Quality means. Remember that you are not buying a car just because it looks beautiful the day you take it out of the show room. You are buying it for what it will look like and what it will run like after you have driven it a year, or two years, or five years. This is the time-service that is manufactured into Studebaker cars. Studebaker cannot afford to build any other kind of a car. This is what we mean when we tell yon to BUY IT BECAUSE IT'S A STUDEBAKER. Stadebaker Prices FOTJR Roadstet $ 98S FOUR Touring Car. 985 SIX 5-pusenger L385 SIX 7-paMcager L4S0 F. O. B. Detroit STUDEBAKER Detroit t!'-!- Applying To AB Stadebaker Cars CtrH flomtingr rear axle with Tonkas Bearinc. Electric starting- aad iicfatiac. Extra size tires. Safety tread oa the rear. Bmlt-ta windshield, on mil" type silk mobair top. Crown fenders. N-fM THE OREGON MOTOR CAR CO. Chapman, at Alder St. - Portland Dealers. Phones Main 9402, A 7656. outside of Multnomah County. Some counties have not reported their vote complete. Chamberlain carried Multno. man County by 9661, which selves him plurality of approximately 22.700. Dr. James withycombe now has a lead over Dr. C. J. Smith for the Gov ernorship in the state outside Multno mah County of 21,168. He carried Mult nomah County by 11,797, which gives him a present plurality In the state at large of 33.965. So it is reasonable to expect that the ' missing counties and the unreported precincts of those coun ties tnat nave made partial returns will swell his grand plurality to more than 35,000. 2 KBPCBIICANB RE-ELECTED Forbes or Bend and Smith of Klam- atlt Falls Solons Again. BEND, Or., Nov. 7. (Special.) Ver non A. Forbes, of Bend, and Wesley O. Smith, of Klamath Falls, both Repub licans, are re-elected as State Repre sentatives from this district, each with a comfortable margin. In Crook County, P. H. Dencer, can dldate of the Democratic and Prohibi tion parties, was defeated by Forbes by only 54 votes. The Count stands 2296 to 2242. Grant, Lake and Klamath counties gave Forbes a plurality of several hundred escb. Tn tho nrlntinc of the acts of the British Parliament the old spelling" of the word PORTLAND GETS SHOW DAHLIA SOCIETY AWARDS 115 EX POSITION TO CI.Tf. An appeal was formulated to Kepre seotatlve William Humphrey asking his aid in getting three National dahlia show gardens, one for the Atlantic Coast, another for the Middle West and the third for the Pacific seaboard. R. W. GUI was appointed chairman of a committee which will reclassify all dahlia plants and adopt a standard for each species. This will aid In judg ing at future dahlia shows. Baroness Killed by BoasA. DRESDEN, via Rome, Nov. 8, 2:10 A. M. The first woman reported to have lost her life while serving in the present war was Baroness Marga Ton Falkenhausen. Raymond VV. GUI la Chose Secretary and General Show Muartr of National Association. SEATTLE, Wash., Nov. 7. (Special.) Portland was chosen aa the place for the second annual dahlia show at the annual meeting of the National Dahlia Society of America, today in the Cham ber of Commerce assembly room. The show will take place in September, 1915. Officers of tbe organization elected for the coming year are as follows: Richard M. Buttle, Seattle, president; Mrs. W. C. D. Spike, Tacoma. first vice- president; Mrs. J. King, Everett, sec ond vice-president; Mrs. Sidney Pom eroy, Bellingham, third vice-president; Raymond W. Gill, Portland, Or., secre tary and general show manager; E. H. White, Portland, treasurer: Mrs. R. A. Small. Everett, superintendent of juve nile department. Plans for enlarging the scope of the club's work were discussed. Assistant secretaries were appointed at Short- hill, N. J., and Denver, Colo. New seed ling registration books were opened. Some Man in Portland s looking for a beautiful building site with large, stately, orna mental trees, without having to wait a lifetime for them to grow. He is looking for something individually different, some thing which distinguishes him and which the thousands cannot duplicate. He wants a place with all the usual advantages, to gether with many peculiarly unusual advantages. This - is the man I want to meet, Monday, and for a quick sale to tho right party no better buy was ever offered. For particulars sea Henry R. Dabney. DABNEY INVESTMENT COMPANY, 712 Corhett B nil ding. 0 LD ago can be made the period of great est happiness, but complete good health is necessary. As age advances the stomach and bowel muscles lose their elasticity and no longer respond read ily. The result is constipation, or dyspepsia, biliousness, sour stomach, bloating, drowsiness after eating, belching, headache, etc. The foregoing was about the condition that Mr. Wm. A. Roeker, 64 Vienna St, Rochester, N. T found himself in some time ago. A good friend persuaded him to take Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin, a widely known laxative-tonic that has been on the market for two gen erations. After a brief use of it he writes that if ha had the last bottle obtainable he would not part with it for a hundred dollars and Mr. Roeker is not an especially rich man either for he considers himself entirely welL Another noteworthy case is that of Mrs. Margaret Bar ringer, of Newark. Ohio, who is 82. Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin is without doubt America's greatest household remedy. Its mild action recommends it especially for babies, women and old folks, for these should not take drastic cathartics and purgatives such- as pills, powders, salt waters, etc. Your druggist sells Syrup Pepsin at fifty cents and one dollar a bottle, and you should always have a bottle in the house. Thousands of old users always have the dollar size, as it is mora economical. Results guaranteed or money wlU be refunded. Coupon for FREE SAMPLE Dr. Caldwell is glad to send anyone who has never tried hla remedy a free sample bottle for per sonal investigation, simply clip this coupon and Inclose in an envel ope with your name and address or write your name and address plain ly on a postcard and mail it to Dr. W. R. Caldwell. 67 Washington fcU. Mgnticello, iu. 7