THE OREGON DAILY JOURNAL, PORTLAND, MONDAY EVENING, OCTOBER 19, 1914. THE JOURNAL AW rSPEPySDKMT NEWSPAPER. c s. ucKunx .PSbtUber. FublUhert rrtrj ertnlnf (jticept Sandar) and Trr Sunday morning t The Jntiraitl Bullil. lo. Brnadwar and Vambitl Ma. Partland, Or. VBfvtvd at f poatnff at Porttaad. Or fur traumlulon tbruufb tea aaalla aa aeeond elan oiaftav. ItLKPrTOMCS Main 771; Bom. .V-eoOl- All topertaeata rwhd b thaaa a cm bars. TU tba operator rht 4uartmnt yon want. tOKKftt.N AlVKitTISI5U BKFKKUBJITATI TB Benjamin A Kaatnnr Co.. Knoawtet BMS.. 225 Klfta A'.. a York. 1218 Paopla'a Cra RM( rbtraam. atm-ifHH"a term by wall or ta aujr ad alraaa la tba CbMM KurM or Mtilea-: PA1LY. . Ooa faar SS.oo I one tant......S .M SHNDAT. Om faar I2.&A I On motif 9 DATr.Y AND SUNDAY. . k On rar $7M t On moat f .S3 53 Most Of our censure of others Is only oblique praise Of self, uttered to show the wisdom and superiority of the speaker. It ha all the invldi ousness of self praise, and all the Ill-desert of falsehood. Tryon Edwards. , WIIY? WHY dcx3, Mr. Booth send telegrams to Governor West asking for charges to be, made for Mr. Booth to answer? Mr. IJooth has never answered t.b great charge made by Judge Gilbert, of the United States court 1 of appeals, who, with two other ('judges assenting, cancelled the pat j .enta of five timber claims for fraudulent entries by the Bootb- Kelly Lumber company, made while I Mr. .Booth' was raanajor. . (See 203 1 ".Federal Reporter, pago 423.) i -1 Mr. Booth has never answered .tfic great charge made by Judge .Bean, of the United States district I court in Portland, who cancelled J the patent to the Jordan timber t claim for fraudulent entry by the f' Booth-Kelly company made while !' Mr.- Booth was manager. Though called upon to do so on September fl, 43 days ago, Mr. i Booth has never explained why he , omitted from his 10 column speech t ."of, explanation at Albany, all refer- ) cnc"to the-Jordan '.Inim, and the i fln.d"ings of the United States cir- euit court 6f appeals concerning the La Raut claims. - Why "18 Mr. Booth seeking other charges '" to answer, .when he has j never anawen-d the great judicial ' charges, made from the' United States bench and all of record in the archives of the federal courts? JUDGE BENNETTS TRIBUTE NO higher- tribute has been paid to the personal and . public worth of Dr. C. J. Smith than was that by Judge Bennett Saturday night. Judge . Bennett: was one of Dr. Smj'th's opponents in the .primaries. But they are both high minded and honorable men, and their relations throughout t-e primary , campaign were mutually generous, kindly and considerate. In his speech in . Port land Saturday evening. Judge Ben nett said: Dr. -.Smith Is exactly the man for the placo. He is an ideal1 candidate. He promised yon aTid he is a man of his word or he would not have re-' crlMgd such a - tremendous ova'tion in the primaries in Umatilla county that he ; would give you a business mans administration: . These are strong words from a strong man.' They are an indorse ment from a citizen who has known ;i)r. Smith long and- Intimately. They Are a tribute, from . a. -man whose utterances are always re ceived with- profound respect thrpugho.ufOregon. Judge Bennett added:;' " Dr. ynlth is an able man; he Is a conscientious man; he Is clean, repu table, in every way. I think you- -are being offered the best man for the Placfr. NEW GERMAN GgJNS. N engineer In the Edison lab oratories -at New York.. says Germany' is building .a, num ber of guns that will shoot' 21 to 25 miles. They will have a caliber of 19.5 and 21.45 inches and will make the 16 inch siege gunp used against LJeSge, Namux Stnd Antwerp "look like betin blowers.". j-N Under ordinary circumstances such a statement Would be given little credence,' but in a few short '-weeks of, war Germany has sur prised the world with the efficiency jof her, heavy artillery. . Never be f6re ftave such terrible engines of destruction -Jaeen carried by an in vading army as those used by' the kaiser's troops in sweeping away what ; were thought to be impreg nable Belgian fortifications. Military experts had long real ized that more powerful guns wculd be needed in the field if modern inland fortifications were to bQ re duced by an army. But there was supposed security in the assumed fact that guns large enough for such a purpose would be too large to be transported from point to point. . The development of the gasoline engine solved the transportation problem, while the- difficulty of hauling heavy weights over ordin ary 'roads was overcome by the In vention of a detachable, tread for the rims of gnn carriage wheels. With these for use on bad roads it has been possible for. the Ger mans to,ru8h. their enormous how itzers to the front, thus making available against the Belgian fort! lications. guns weighing 20 tons, engines of destruction nearly as great as American 12 Inch coast de fense guns. r There is no questioning the. fact that Germany has advanced the art of . We gun making far ahead of TIRED OF GOVERNOR WEST! D R. WITHYCOMBB declared Saturday In the Oregonian that peo ple "are disgusted with Governor West" and that "many are tired of conditions at Salem." What "people?" What people are "digusted with Governor West?" , . Asid from those who oppose law enforcement, the. Oregonian, Dr. ' Wltbycombe, a lot of high brows, some reactionaries, the road house keepers, the Copperfleld saloonkeepers, who Is "disgusted with Governor West" and "tired of conditions at Salem?" What are the things Governor ithycombe is "tired" of? Is he Is it Governor Wrest's fearless and free use of the veto that makes Dr. Withycombe "tired of conditions at Salem?" Is Dr. Withycombe "tired" of West because the governor fought the legislative machine to a standstill at the 1913 session? Is that what Dr. Withycombe, in the Oregonian, refers to as "petty politics" tn the governor's office? Is Dr. Withycombe "tired of conditions at Salem" because Gov ernor West vetoed 21 bills raising salaries of county officials ajt. the 1913 session, including two bills raising the salary Of the same'offl cial in Columbia county? Is Eh. Withycombe "tired of conditions at Salem" because Gov ernor West with the veto, prevented the legislative machine from increasing the number of circuit judges from 20 to 31, and there by saved the people $44,000 a year? What does Dr. Withycombe mean, anyway, In his declaration that so many are "disgusted with Governor West," and so many are "tired of conditions at Salem?" Are Dr. Withycombe and his "disgnsted" friends "tired" because Governor West forced the legislatures of 1911 and 1913 to loosen the hold of tne state printing steel on the taxpayers of Oregon, by which there is now a saving at the rate of $31,411 a year? Is Dr. Withycombe "tired" because Governor West by his vetoes, saved 1613,874 at the. 1911 legislative session? By his censure of Governor West on "conditions at Salem" it is evident that if elected, Dr. Withycombe does not intend to be the kind of Governor Oswald West has been. the achievement of any other coun try. The Krupp engineers have demonstrated their ability to devise a gun able to hurl steel projectiles through steel1 and concrete walls supposed to be proof against such attack. If the Edison engineer is right, the new German guns will inaugur ate an era of carnage which bur dens the imagination. A VICIOUS BrLL 1 T seems incredible that the bill to revive the assembly in Ore gon can pass. Yet nobody knows. There might be a slip. The friends of the direct primary seem asleep at the switch. The fact that the bill is on the ballot is some evidence of what is going on. There could be no morfe convincing proof that the assembly is not dead. If any citizen of Ore gon thinks it dead, let him turn to page 88 in the state pamphlet and read what is there. It took a lot of money to obtain signatures for getting this bill on the ballot. It took more money to put the argument for the meas ure in the state pamphlet. All this money is not spent for mere amuse ment. It is spent by practical gen tlemen who know exactly what they want and who often get exactly what they want. The assembly bill is the most vicious measure on the ballot. It sets up the contention that the peo ple cannot select fit candidates for office without being advised. It is a direct attempt to undermine the primary system with the conven tion system by resort to delegates, proxies, manipulators and managing men. It has been said that the people must be eternally vigilant or they will lose their liberty, and that is true. The few are forever seeking ways to exercise powers that only the many ought to exercise. The assembly bill is an effort to put into the hands of a few delegates certain privileges that are now solely in the hands of the people. Four years ago. The Journal was fighting an assembly scheme Just as it is fighting an assembly scheme now. The old scheme is exactly the samiiK the new scheme, and the new 8cheoJi is exactly the same as the old one. It Is the same old as sembly, and the same old crowd is -behind it. It makes no difference what any body says, the direct primary is a priceless Instrument of government, and if the people of this state ever let the politicians and big business brigadiers slip It away from them, they will sadly rue the day. Let the people of this state turn to page 88 of the state pamphlet and read what is there. VOTE YES I T IS 52 years since the Oregon legislature granted upland own ers the right to wharf out to deep water 'on the Willamette river. What would be thought if right of way were granted a railroad and the company did not occupy that right of way with a track in 52 years? Especially what would te thought or sucn action if no deed conveyed title to the company and the privilege of the right of way were only a franchise? Yet. that is the kind of a game that has long been worked on the people of Oregon. The present rush to build wharves ln Portland in order to comply with the terms of the original franchise before the tidelands amendment passes is the proof. It la a sample of the way public resources are passed nnder private control. The submerged lands were the people's lands. The wharf-out act was passed in 1862. To this day, 52 years afterward, the wharves have not been built out to deep water, as Is evidenced by the present scramble to build wharves. There could be no plainer proof that the tide and submerged lands legislation now on the ballot ought to pass. There ought to be an end to the process by which people's West has done at Salem that Dr. "tired" of law enforcement? lands are first leased for purposes of navigation, and then held with out exercising the privileges of the franchise for half a century, the parties meanwhile holding the lands as their own lands and final ly getting title to them. The pending tideland legislation prevents further operations of the kind. It saves to the public the remnant that is left. Vote 328 yes and 330 yea. DP W HAT if another than Cham berlain had been governor when the legislature at tempted to mutilate the di rect primary by making it a crime for a legislator to take State ment One? ' Such a governor could have used the great power of his high office to help Mr. McArthur and his co horts pass the bill and make it the law of the state. Has anybody ever stopped to consider what the far reaching ef fect might have been? Had that bill become the law. the word would have gone out to , an tne states that Statement One , was discredited in Oregon, that the ! "u ureu oi ii ana tnat a law had been passed to make it a crime for a legislative candidate to take Statement One. Today, the people of Oregon be hold themselves electing their sen ator by their own votes. That great function is not exercised for them by a legislative body, while they stand powerlessly by and look on. The people exercise this great privi lege, and the election is by ballot instead of by the notorious spec tacles and bedlam and secret man ipulations with which senators used to be elected at the state capital. But the people would not now t 1 A 1 , -a ue electing tneir senator if "the knife" had been put to Statement One. It was Statement One In Oro- I gon that gave the Deonle of th 1 c. . . fatates the present direct ; election of senator under federal ! law. i But if another kind of man than Chamberlain had been governor in the old days, a man who would have aided the scuttle of the direct primary and Statement One. the McArthurs would have succeeded, ana there would be no direct elec tion of senator now. WHAT IT MEANS D O his political opponents know what is meant by this gather ing tide of public sentiment that is swelling and surging towards Senator Chamberlain? Do they know what is meant -by the great audiences that greet him everywhere with an enthusiastic welcome? Do they know what is meant when men journey long distances from one county to another to add to the warmth and enthusiasm of the greeting? Do they know what is meant by the fact that it is not merely voters of his own party but voters of all parties that are flocking to his meetings to pay their respect to the man and make public acknowl- i let is tne one want us to adopt, edement of their annrpcintinn of!tney are PalnfwHV k in the most eugmem OI tneir appreciation Of imnortant nrt thfv hv ltft t n his great services to his state? Do these political opponents not realize that the efforts they have made to strike blows at him were feeble efforts in comparison with the great whirlwind of blows that an appreciative people are striking back in his defense? Do they not realize . that these great meetings, these crowds, these big assemblages of people mean that the futile attempts to assail Chamberlain only add to his popu larity and the certainty of his election? . Never were greater campaign blunders made. The people of this state know Senator Chamberlain, and know all about him. They know that they promoted him from one position of trust to another because in each he proved to them that he is honest, that he is able, that he is on the level, and that he is always on the peopleJs side. Therefore, when newspapers and politicians try to tell the people something different about him. they merely awaken resentment, heighten his popularity and arouse I his friends to action. ABOLISH IT 0 NE of the measures to be voted on at the coming state election is the abolishment of capital punishment. This has already been done in Michigan, Wisconsin, Maine, Rhode Island, Minnesota and - Kansas. Other states that give the jury the option to apply life imprisonment are Alabama, Arizona, California, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Georgia, Kentucky, South Dakota, Nebraska, Ohio, Oklahoma and South Caro lina. The records of the states which have abandoned capital punish ment do not show any increase in the number of murders. This indicates that execution has ! no deterrent influence on the com mission of murder. It is the same in foreign conn I tries. Hnllar.rt rwilierial oanltat Tuni3hment in i7n RttiaM.fl snow nineteen murders from 1861 to 1870, while from from 1870 to 1879 there were only seventeen murders. Finland has had no exe cutions since 1824 and there has been no loss of security of person or property. In Switzerland nine teen out of the twenty-two can tons have no capital punishment. Other countries which have abol ished the death penalty are Por tugal, Italy, Norway, Roumania, Costa Rica, Brazil, Ecuador, Guate mala and Venezuela. Denmark has had no hangings since 1890, Belgium none since 1863. Russia has abolished It save for treason. The whole tendency of human ism is opposed to capital punish ment. It does not restrain people from committing murder. Why perpetuate it? Letters From the People .? onloHons seot to The Journal for publication la tola department should be wrlt 5 ODe fcide toe Paper, ehonld not exceed 300 words in length and mnat be ac companied by the name and address of the sender. If tfca writer does not desire to hare tba name published, ha should so state.) "Dlecussion Is the greatest of all reform ers. It rationalizes everything it touches. It roha principles of all false sanctity and throws them back on their reasonableness, lit tbey hare do reasonableness, it ruthlessly rrnFhes them out of existence and aet up Its own conclusions in their stead." Woodrow W lUon. Alcohol's Functions. Gaston, Or., Oct. 15. To the Editor of The Journal W. P. Bishop of Mc Minnville says alcohol is a food, and a great aid to the laborer, stimulating nis digestive organs. I am a daughter or a laoorer, the wife of a laboring man and mother of Doys and girls who o j uv. nwia. x WcLS a resident among the laboring class in earn inpir ivinir howl nm.w t . . -.nicago ror Bl years, part of that "w"! myseir among tne labor ing women. I wish I could take Mr. Bishop and all who think like him through some of the scenes I have -witnessed illustrating the "benetit" of alcohol to the working class. One example I will cite, and I could fill the whole Journal with hundreds of similar ones. In the Columbus shirt factory at the machine next to mine sat a little pale faced woman working from 7 o'clock until 6 and during the rush season until 9 o'clock. I noticed tnat when we ate lunch she always went out. One day I discovered that she was going without lunch at noon that she might feed her five little children. I asked her if her husband were dead. She said, "I would to God it were so; he Is killing himself, soul and body, and dragging ns with him." I asked her if he drank when she mar ried him. Sho Raid "Oh rtn- Y, rls it first under a doctor's prescription. to stimulate his appetite." She said " had ftin?ulated.. nls PPete for strong arm until everyining naa he swent awav. I should like to ask Mr. Riahnn If as he says, prohibition cannot bring ocii cuuuui ui kiia.ti.tz biruug tiiaracter, it isn't just, possible it might be able to control weak characters so they cannot wreck the lives of innocent women and children? He also says alcohol is food. Alcohol is a stimulant; so is strych nine, but a food, never. MRS. HATTTE EARL. Prohibition and Penalty. Nehalem, Ore Oct. 16. If the paid agitators of the An ti-Saloon League desire the people of Oregon to try pro hibition, why do they not go back east to some of those prohibitory states and clean them, so that when they come here they can show ns a single example (just one) of what can be done under prohibition and not what is supposed to be done? But they can not show success in a single Instance. The only excuse they have to offer for the failure in those states is that the fellow they left on the job went to sleep. Do . they want to repeat that same failure in Oregon. They are most certain to do It. The law they are asking us to placo upon the statute books is one of the flimsiest sheila ever devised. It pro vides that liquor shall not be sold or manufactured (except for sacramental and other purposes), but provides no penalty for its violation. What are our prohibitory folks going to do with a man caught violating their law? If the law contained in the voters' pamph ; important part they have left out its teetn. a man violating mis law can neither be fined nor imprisoned. This gives free license to the fullest extent of the word and absolutely no means of regulation. Are the prohibitionists trying to play a fanatical Joke upon the people of Oregon? a J. COTTON. Licensing. Mt, Vernon, Or.. Oct. 14. To the Editor- of The Journal We can get accustomed to things that are worse than useless till we think we cannot do without them. To write the word "right, we use the two useless let ters "gh." Without them we would consider the word terribly mutilated. But put tHem into the word "left. Make it 'lefght.' Are they not use less? Well, so they are in right; but we are accustomed to them in the one place and not in the other. So we are accustomed to licensing saloons in our cities and towns till they seem, to some people, to be a necessary part of them. It would not do to give the, owner free rein so he must be licensed and "regulated." Now, If the correct way to manage what you cannot prohibit is to license and regulate, why not licence and reg ulate' the burglar. Say he niust select a seasonable hour to visit a house, name whsdt thine ha mur . mrxti tnixv A FEW SMILES "This ig a new business for me," whispered the chairman of a. public j meeting to a gray haired gentleman; woo naa Been se lected as the prin cipal speaker of the evening. "What shall I say In Introducing you to the audi ence?" "You might speak or me, if you choose, replied the speaker; "as the nestor of I 1 ai '1 the legal profession in this community. ! at?H "h V)11n-'t man, tlckied to That is what I have been called some- ! dath he dQsn 1 2ie.of -times." i -v-, .v, j , . . The chairman looked somewhat pnz sled, but he rose bravely to the occa sion. -Ladi eS and tfnflAmffn" ri a said. It affords me no ordinary pleas ure to present to yon Mr. Jabez Hor naday, the nest egg of the legal pro fession in this community." A pompous manufacturer of ma chinery was showing a stranger over his factory. "Pine piece of work, isn't itf he said, when they were looking at a very in genious machine. "Yes," said the visitor, ' "but you cannot hold a can dle to the goods we are turning out." . "Indeed!" said the chagrined manu facturer, "and what is your line?" "Gunpowder," was the reply. Iilttle Clarence "Pa!" His Father "Well, my won? Little Clarence "I took a walk through the ceme tery today and read the inscriptions on the tombstones." His Father "And what were your thoughts after you had done so?" Little Clarence W n y, pa, the wicked Judge, T wondered where all people were buried." not take, tell him he mast not damage what he leaves. We might License and regulata white slavery. The white slaver would willingly pay a good round fee, and so lighten the taxpayer's burden. But, joking aside, prohibition should win. Every lover of his state should say, "Whisky is a nuisance and a curse and we'll vote it out." Then if men will sell it they will be criminals and can be pnnished. W. P. "LAWRY. Q notes Lincoln on Liquor. Portland, Oct. 17. To the Editor of The Journal The Wage Earners and Taxpayers league is spending large Bums in informing our citizens of the opinions of the great and good men of the past upon the liquor ques tion by means of paid advertising in the daily papers and on the bill boards, but seeming, apparently to take very little pains to verify the authorship of the sentiments so pub lished. The following passage from , v, .. . . , v . , . ,. the works of Abraham Lincoln might be of interest to the league. There is no doubt whatever as to the au thorship of the quotation, and should the management see fit to publish it the honored president will not be obliged to apologize therefor, or to admit through the press that it was known to be a fake when spread be fore tr)e public Mr. Lincoln had been speaking oCu the political revolution of 1776 and went on to say; Turn now to the temperance revo lution. In it we shall find a stronger bondage broken, a Viler slavery man umitted, a greater tyrant deposed; ln it more of want supplied, more disease healed, more sorrow assauaged. By It no orphans, starving, no widows weeping. By it none wounded in feel ing; none injured in interest; even the dram-maker and dram-seller will have gilded Into other occupations so grad ually as never to have felt the change, and will stand ready to Join all oth ers in the universal song of gladness. And what a noble ally this to the cause of political freedom; with such an aid its march cannot fall to be on and on, till every son of earth shall drink in rich fruition the sorrow-quenching draughts of perfect liberty. "And when the victory shall be com plete, when there shall be neither a slave nor a drunkard on the earth,1 how proud the title of that land which may truly claim to be the birthplace and cradle of both those revolutions that shall have ended in that victory. How nobly distinguished that people who shall have planted and nurtured to maturity both the political and moral freedom of their species. The above may be found in vol. 2 (containing the early speeches; 1832 185i) "Works of Abraham Lincoln, published by "The University Society, Inc," of New York, 1908. It is from a speech delivered at Springfield, III, Feb. 22, 1842, C A WILLIAMS. - The God of War. Oswego, Or., Oct. 16. To the Editor of The JourruJ The war is on. The proclamation has been issued. The prayers have been said. When shall we receive a favorable reply? If it is the God of the Bible that has been appealed to I fear we have a long time to wait, for this God always fa vored and approved war, as the for- lowing inspired testimony will show: "So Jehu slew all that remained of girls of our city. Girls today for the house of Ahab in Jezreel, and all I tunately know when they are in com his great men, and his k info lk a, and his priests, until he left none remain ing." 2 Kings, 10:11. "And the Lord said unto Jehu, Be case thou hast done wen tn executing that Tuhtrrl Is T-lp-Ht tn mlna ava, a . ..... ..m hast done unto the house of Ahab according to all that was in my heart. th ,t of v, ...' shall sit on the throne of Israel.' Kings, 10:30. CaV 1 V.... 1 jjim ui(.iii iivi, ftsui airty lm j lii man and woman, infant and suckling.- 1 .Vj- , . , ... JZ, ...Send p hvt '1crZZ f L ; v v Cursed be he that keepeth back his s-word from Mood. Jer. 48:10. Slay utterly old and young, both maids and little children." Ezek. :. Atso reaa ix. ami, rs. t4:i, ueut. 7:16, and Num. Jl:7-10, E. L. DAVIDSON. Portland Temptations. Portland, Oct 17. To he Editor of The Journal. The Anti-Saloon League is distributine a circular which d. clares that the women of the under- world haunt the street corners of! Portland, laying in wait for the hus- bands, "sons and brothers of our city. This statement is false. The men who associate with such women in Khmin ifw th- these same men know that they are not enticed by the women but on the con- trary the men make definite plans to meet the women. The men who make such weak and unmanly excuses for their downfall no doubt convince their wives, mothers and sisters, should their shame, become known, that they were led astray by women of the un- derworld. who . treacherously lay in wait for them. These statements are in line with PERTINENT COMMENT SMALL. CHANGE Don't expect a medal for being a meddler. The man who butts In never makes much headway. a -And wherc's Hobson? He's acting nice a submarine. a a And the less some people give the more they expect. a - c nns utai mm uurriu can near ana speak the language of love When a chronic kicker does gain his point it is apt to be blunt. Some people are WllllnK to take al most, any old thins except a hint. Let the man who put the "z" in Frzemysl now stand forth if he dares. An honest man never has to buy space in a newspaper to advertise the fact. Successful men are those who make more money than their wives can spend. No. A. Ruetem the dogs of war. muzzled. Bey la not one of Or if he is. he's But it is easier for the average man to fail in love with a woman than it is for him to stay there. And many a girl who- thought she was marrying for a home haa dis covered later that she is tied to a man who can't even pay the rent. Long after this war Is forgotten there will still be quarreling over who started it, as you might aay, if you didn't mind using an Hlbernicism. POSTAL AND OTHER SAVINGS BANKS By John M. Oakison. Why it was proposed (in a receht bill which President Wilson vetoed) to increase the limit of deposits in the government postal savings banks from $500 to $1000 was never clear to me lt is true that the framers of the bill also buggested that the govern ment exchange its securities for the savings deposits in these banks, there by creating a big market for its bonds, and permitting a large expansion of its emergency currency. Possibly as a war-time measure the bill had merit. But when you know that the rate of Interest paid on deposits in the postal banks is properly limited to 2 per cent, it is hard to see why a saver should be encouraged to pile up more than $500. When he has got that sum in the postal bank he ought to be instructed (if be hasn't already learned the les son) in the art of getting a decent return on his savings. One thousand dollars at interest in a government savings bank will earn in a year $20 for Its owner. In a sav- FROM CATAPULT t,, , T, . , , Frank Parker Stockbridge in Popular . . . a v Mechanics. From the stones cast from slings with which the natives of Gaul sought to repel the advance of Caesar's Ro man legions to the huge German How itzers hurling 16 inch explosive shells against the allies is as long a step tne- I chanlcally as it is in ioint of time. But except for the temper of the weapons, there is no appreciable dif ference between the hand-to-hand con flicts short sword , against spear of 59 B. C and the bayonet charges of the French and English, against the Germans In 1914. For nearly 1000 years the ground on which the Great War Is being fought has been almost a continuous battlefield. Every form of weapon and every type of armor ever used by civilized man in the set tlement of international differences or private quarrels has been tried, tested and developed almost oA the same spot where the efficiency of the most mod ern Implements of warfare i now be-, ing put to the supreme test. Omitting the one distinctly modern military arm the flying corps the differences be tween the weapons of 2000 years ago and the weapons of today are differ ences in detail only, and excepting the class of weapons making use of gun powder for the propulsion of missiles, it is questionable whether there has' been any marked increase ln effi ciency, either of men or of arms. As a last resort, when the order comes to rush the enemy's Intrenchments, bat tles are still decided by brute strength and hand-to-hand fighting sword to spear, bayonet to bayonet Just as in the days when Caesar wrote, 'The Bel gians are the bravest. When Caesar invaded Gaul, his sol diers carried, besides their curved ob long shields for protection, the famous Roman short swords, sharp pointed and two edged, for close Infighting, with Javelins or throwing spears as missiles. These were also useful in hand-to-hand conflicts and were the prototype of the modern bayonet. Steel had not yet come into general use, but these soft Iron weapons had at least the merit of being easily sharpened on any convenient stone. Arid back ing up the foot soldiers and horse men, just as the artillery does today. League to the effect that the saloons 1 are the cause of the downfall of the pany or men or women wnoe morais need attention. They do not need to be told that these companion ara dangerous, for their own girl friends of higher moral character desert them, and as well as these same . - . . irle"UB are aw"" " , selected so are the girls who select such undesirable associates. j of the trouble is not with the saloons. UUL WllU -!" """S " J w. . 4 mmi m rr Tit nr r Q nrl t Via 11 1 ' Uy Tose ho have In charge the bringing up of these young ! people? The sensible mothers and I fathers of Portland know this is the j truth, : Those families who have light wines n their homes and who permit their j children to partake with the rest of ' the family are not the ones who pa- tronlze the saloons and they are not possessed with an unreasoning de mand for drink that characterises some few unfortunates who were brought up in homes where the presence of wine or beer was unknown. Drunkards do not come from homes where the use i of wine or beer is a regular thing, JAMES C. BARNETT. ' I Asks, Whose Personal Liberty? ! Portland, Oct. 17. To the Editor of The Journal A woman of refinement, ' and lovable personality, who never i . . . ... . . , . interferes with the rights of others, J ha a husband, who is the beet of I men when sober, but far otherwise j when under the influence of liquor, He interferes with her liberty, safety ! and happiness, and also with that of Sail the other occupants of the house, keeping them awake nights with his insane racket and in constant fear of some dreadful occurrence. Now, whose liberty is to be considered, that of this man'n fajullv end friend, ar hi oivn? AND NEWS IN BRIEF OllEGON SIDELIGHTS A women's auxiliary to the Klamath Fails .chamber of commerce is the la teat p-lan to be put forward by that lorganization. The Sisters correspondent of the Bend Bulletin writes: "Those who be- fre the fair in speaking of it would re tne rair in speaking or u wouia class it as 'Your rail- now speak or y- it as 'Our Fair," and are already plan- " bank, but when they b;an putting nlng what they wUl do next year.' i up cabins several blocks blek from the . ' . . ' , , river carrying-water wa too much Astoria Ifudget: Astoria has a - ' . home famim-. Hundreds of people are,rk- th' legan digging wella or seeking homes and apartments. Not building thMf ' -abiyis ner a spring. a deirame Business location in tne I H V I O fT aiiavit J a vav- a . vjrava tunity is knocking at your door. If you love your city answer the call, a Lovers of band music at Dallas axe worklne- ,out a plan for the support., of theallas band by a city tax. The : Itemizer argues tnat me Dana is road to Hortlamt so he decided to in Of the best mediums of advertising augur ate Portlands firs?' water svs the city that Dallas has ever had- and te, ln ,h" JL,? ,mi money could not be better expended i ;"'' ,,n ,,8a' ,n" ntinon council than ln its maintenance." The La Grande of&rver urges the adoption of new id-aa regarding the Union county fair. The Observer sug gests the elimination of "the buikaroo rough stuff," leaving that to towns which can put it on on a grand scale, and the working up of "racing ani other attractions in the way of higH class entertainment." Vancouver Columbian: Wasco coun ty. Oregon, haa recently completed at The Dalles a courthouse ald to be hond ha vlnif ten nold for the our- tne linest in Oregon outsiae oj -on- resident of Portland, with his partner, land, at a cost of 1160,000. Th, won- John oreen. bought the water system (ieri'ul part of this in that the building nd ,Ait. ' ' A . ? fc stent was completed and paid for out of the ; 'ay! on?e .p,,ptH n,af,e "f edwood. general funds, not a dollar's worth of I Later they put tn iron pines and pose, Waaco county h& Rood Cause ruthers' creek and Ruh-IT creek, bring to feet proud of hei court house, and , Ing the water to a reservoir on Fourth also of her county officials. , and Market street. Tby put in a , . . I fill mnln ,... 1 . i . . .1 j ..... inss bank which pay- 1 per wnl i m from th4, vjIamette Tiver : interest it will earn $35; in on which "4 nJ aruthety creeks. A' pays 4 per cent, it will earn $l. and If ! iv,iam':U W1U th" f nmon sewer the bank can afford to pay S per cent, ; ol' Albany. CoPvallls. Kalenj as a great many sound bank In the t 0,1 n fwn located, Jon its hanksi west can certainly do, the depoSt'r tr' t-r became so eontjtmlnated that is losing $30 a year by keeping his ttT' wa a great dealof complaint thousand In the postal bank. . atut it. ; Within 33 days Just before and after; In h legislature 'jpasaed an act the European war broke out th pot- Permuting Portland to fpurehafie," own office at New York city received new Tat it own water system. A savings for deposit in the govmment 'vl many wanted th (jity t acquire banks of $1,209,962. On two days th '"' '""' tprth in sist Portland; daily receipts amounted to more than ; ' thT thotJiM 8irker lk, near utwe $80,000. ;g,ret, norne wanted Crystal springs. It is to be expected that tn war f w 'he committee finally decided on C. scare times money savers should look i Xaibot's offer of Hol Run water for the safest possible depository for i right. ; - their money. In such times a good The committee appointed to secure many owners of money in sums hfreer a municipal water plant offered to than $500 would like to turn it over to a government bank and be content witn a per cent interest. But he who continues to pile up after he passes the $500 mark is neglecting his opportunity and his duty. I should be socry to see legist. tion which encouraged such Dei lee t. TO HOWITZER , the Roman artillery, consisting nleanttPUU' u"1 ,Were hUP .lm- plements for hurling large rocks into the ranks of the enemy, and the bal lista, a device working on the same principle, for throwing quantities of arrows. In each of these the propul sive, force wan produced by the sud- aen releasing of a great beam or tree trunk which bad been bent by means of ropc-s and winches to form a huge spring. A shower of arrows hurled from, a Wilis la. most have created as much iAvoc ln the ranks of the on coming Gaals as the bursting of a snra pcitl shell among the foot soldiers , - .Tw- k I ' 7; , . 1 ne original water committee con.i.t- thrown by the catapult were often aa ed of John Gates, V. C. Smith. C. H large and heavy as the shells of the ! iwis. Frank Lekumf W 8 La-ld modern ho withers. ' I Henry Falling. L. . Kliischner. W. K.' .K . 7,M. . I Smith. H. W. CorKett, J. Lowenberg. The one important addition that was ' s. G. Heed. it. B. Knap. a II John made to the armament of European , son. L. Therkelson and T. M RlcharU twdiers. prior to the introduction of vguhpowder. was the bow. It vaa nearly 1000 A. IX before the bow became what it afterward was for more than four centuries the prin cipal weapon of the Kuropean foot soldier, occupying in one form or an other the same position that the mag azine rifle does today. The superiority of the long bow over the crossbow was demonstrated at the battle of Cressy ln 1346, the decisive battle of the One Hundred Years' war between the Knglish and the French, where, aa the old chroni clers relate It, the long arrows of "the British archers flew in such clouds that they obscured the sun. The man with the long bow could shoot several arrows while the croasbowman was shooting one. - In this battle, fought only a few miles from the scene of some of the fiercest conflicts of the present war, gunpowder was used for the first time, the English forces having three crude cannon, or bombards, using the newly discovered explosive to hnrl stones at the French, Just as Caesar's catapults bad hurled stones at the Gauls. It was a hundred years or more after this, however, before the use of fire arms became at all general in warfare, and nearly two centuries before the hand gun, mounted on a stock like that of the crossbow, began seriously to displace the bow. And for whom is the money to be spent on his wife and children, or to be worse than wasted on him? I know a woman whose husband Was a saloonkeeper. He lived high, drafk ' '. up his money, mortgaged his property, ! for it the Safety FIrsf medal. Another took a sudden cold, developed pneu- J great railroad company of the east monia, and in three days was In his had "Safety First" as its motto also, coffin. It was found he left nothing i evidently, but It Is In disrepute be but a small life insurance policy, cause the meaning of the motto was which was barely sufficient to paj very different. With them safety first off the Indebtedness. His wife has to. meant safety first to Investments and rent out rooms In her home and go dividends, while the Southern Pacific out sewing by the day to support her company meant a f ety first to passen two children. She opposes the saloon, gers and employes. The present pro which, she rightly says, took her hus- hlbltlon campaign shown us forces band from her. Is her personal liberty which are acting along similar llns. to do what she enjoys, granted her? "Safety First" Is th .motto of each. In California It is found more pro- The prohibitionists sgyi safety first to fitable to feed grapes to hogs than home, chlldhd. business, schools and to sell then to the.winery. It will be every ennobling cause.; The wets cry found, better even from a business out safety first to Hie, hop industry, standpoint to engage In that which to the brewery interests, for the dens will allow all the ipeople to enjoy life, 0f vice. f ' ' i liberty and the pursuit of happiness. When the votes are counted after s- L LYMAN.. ; the election NovemUer 3 it will be found that the majority will demand Drugstore Liquor. safety first for those Interests whicn Thomas, Or., Oct. 14. To the Editor ennoble manhood and sustain legitl of The Journal I am not a prohjbi- mate business, by voting 332 X Yea, tionist. I believe -the Apostle Paul t0T Oregon dry. CURTIS P. COE. gave some very good advice to Timo- j ' " 'i 't , , a thy when he told him to "take a it-1 tie wine for his stomach's sake and ' his often infirmities." I don't believe ; in giving drugstores a monopoly of ; handling this liquor business. Not i long ago my family doctor prescribed j a little whisky for my wife. I paid j mm u cents, zor me prescription, ana paid the druggist 60 cents for -a 4 ounce bottle. If the people want to vote for this kind of robbery, all right. I will not do it. G. L.. SUTHERLAND. "Safety .First-" McMlnnville, Or.. Oct, 1. To the Editor of The Journal People of Ore gon are justly proud of the record of uut v-ioaiMi railroad, which baa won IN EARLIER PftYS By Fred Lockle. "Portland's water system, when I came here in J1841, consisted largely of going down toi the riverami dipping up a bucketful ;of water!' said Mrs. W. S. Powell of this clty. "This was all well enofigh so Irma- . ,oti, -,.,,, , - just as my stepfather, Stephen Cof- fin, started the People's; Transporta tion company's boat Jtne fo reduce the freight rates on the Willamette and the plank road from Portland to Tual- aun Ma Millsboro. to riVf the anri- ington county -farmers ifi accessible granted a franchise to 8t4then Coffin. Kobert TVntlurnl. and JaWb Cltne, to lay -mains and .pipes ln tfce streets of Portland. They built a ftlam- on Ca ruthers' creek in -the canjVin Just weat of Seventh street. Thcp lot a con tract to Job .McNamee fj bore som fir logs to serve ax wato pipes. Adam McNamee, who is null Sphere, helped bore tln-ne early water pipes." Later the company of which Mrs. Powell speaks put a pumi in a spring on Mill .street not far from the river, ln IStil H. ('. Leonard. fe-J ! curta trie eity water nutiulv from Ca ( .,K cmuuii uj nif 01. tne rtv- . cr and put up an additional reservoir at Feventh and Lincoln streets. For y-arg the entire water ..supply of Port- ; i buy the Portland Witf r company's plant. The owner ai:ei1 $H00,O.)0. It was found that the whojfi system could be duplicated for $30,400. The own ers of the Portland H'ater company were able to twice defeat an effort In the legl'lattre to fivrrease the is sue of bonds:. Finally. ;ifter fighting the municipal plant bitterly but un successfully, a compromise was ef fected and $481,676 wai paid Leonard & Green and the other stockholders tn the nrivatp wut,r rnmrtnnv . Tt, ..).- , at once cut the cost of ),water in half I A Pe llne 31 miles long was la d to Bull Hun at a-t t:t;KW tier tne supervision of IX Ii. Clarke. m January 1, l&o.l, the water committee was reelaxed froth fiirtiier service ty ine taxing ciiect of the new t itv ihar. i ter. In 1S85 the legislature gave the wa I ter committee authority! to issue an 1 j sell not to exceed $70i.()00 of nonta 1 able bonds wjiich were tt run 36 j-mn and draw 5 per rent interest. The I bonds were. iHsued on 3ainaury 1. 1T. On July , U93, an -additional bonj ',- ' Him iiF ft ' ' '.All .Will ... r . . In the spring of 1N8 ('. A. Dolph was appointed to takei the place of John Gates, who had uel. U. B. Knapp and L. Therkelson 8iryed the entire 17 years till the commute was dis charged, death and resignation having removed all the other, members. The- Ragtime 1 Muse f Misfit. He was a lofty candidate. Yet bitterly he wept. Because, you see. 1 Publicity From him was ever ;kpt. No matter what he ad or did. Or what he'd darkly ifiint. He won no faine His noble name I He could not get Irj print He went unto the party nose And meekly asked him why. With wagging head, , The other said. . "You neer 'pass the lie'; You never wear a checkered suit, You smoke no black Igar, You do not drill k-- That's why, I think. In fame you re undr par. "No Jewelled horneshe do you sport. You don't indulge tj graft; You've no, saloon l For comrades boon So people think you're daft." He was an honest candidate. And broken wan his heart. "I will resign," He said: "in fine. I do not; look the part." The Sunday Journal The Great: Home Newspaper, consists of Five news sections replete with illustrated features. Illustrated magazine of quality. Woman's pages . of rare merit. Pictorial news supplement. Superb "comic section. 5 Cents the, Copy