:r- " H m i' r TnE KEW AGE, POHTI-AXD, OREGON r I WORK ON THE CANAL President Sends Special Message to Congress. PRAISES PROGRESS BEING MADE Health on Isthmus Good and Much Headway Has Been Made on Canal. Washington, Dec' 18. President l.o.Hcvelt yesterday sent a special ines- wigw Id congress on tint I'aiiainii canal in ulih-li lu reviewed IiIh trip ncros J lie isthmus and inuili' iniitiy liiiKirtiint recommendations: Anions other things jilt' Kit hi: "An Inspection on the ground lit tin Dioight of tin nilny season served lo vonvinco mi' of I lii' wisdom of congress in refusing In adopt cithern high level fir a wu level eanal. There seems to li' a universal agreement anions all jpeojilc competent lo judge that the .I'uiiiiiiiu route, the one in'tunlly chosen, .in iiiim'Ii superior lo hot It Hie Nicaragua Mind Dnrion route.-. '"Hie wisdom of the ennui manage uiienl Iiiih been shown in nothing more clearly than in the uay In which the JoutiilalloiiH of llio work havo heeii laid. "J'ho llrst great prohlem lo besulvcd, aipmi the solution of uhleh the success of the reft of the work depended, wan Hie prohlem of sanitation. TIiIh was B'nuii Ilia outset under the direction of Dr. V. ('. (iorgus, who In to he iiiadi'ii 1'u 1 1 ineiuherof the commission, if the law as lo the eoiiiHnltion of the com mission remains unchanged. The isth liiiiH had U'eii a byword for deadly tin liealthfulncsH. Now, lifter two yearn f our occiiimiIImii, the coiiditloiiM an regards sickness and the dcalli rate omipurti favorably with rcnonably licallhy localitleH in the I'nited Slates. "It, Im curious lo note the fact that many of the most severe critics of the oiiiinlsslon criticise them for precisely ippnito reasons, Mime complaining bit lerly llial the work In not in a more ad vanced condition, while the other complain Dial it Iiiih been rushed with m idi Iwtti that there ban hccit IiihiiIII 'icn(. prcpiiratlou for the hygiene and 'oniforl of the employe.-'. Ah a mailer off.it't, neither criticism Is just. It' would have been Impossible lo go' piieker I hail the commission Iiiih gone, for Hiieb quickness would have meant insulllolent preparation. On the oilier hand, to refuse to tlo anything until iivcry possible futuru contingency had ln-cn met would have canned wholly ninwurranlcd delay. The rlplit courrc. to follow wii" exactly the course which Iiiih been followed." Tlie president goes Into ilutniln on the work of exterminating mo-Mpiiloes and then tells of the ImprovcnientH niadi' In Colon. This city Iiiih been drained, a reservoir to supply water ban been hillt with a capacity of f0, 01)0,000 gallons. PRESIDENTS EYE ON RAILROAD. Suggestion That Government Operate Railroads In Emergencies. Washington, Dec. 18. President (imkiu'hII Is IiiUIih' it denn intcrcxt in the Hituatloii im to car shnitagc, com plaint regarding which have coine from many sections of the I'tilted .StateH. Some tbno ago a Hirtta1 state ment bearing on the ear shortage was submitted to the president by the In-' lerHlato Commerce cominlHjlon, and, when tho more complete report, which i Htate and looil activity and nmko tho enthusiasm of the people contagious In ts effect on local bodies, tlniH inducing greater efforts for the child and a more glorious future for tho republic. Addresses by MIhh Juno Admin, of Hull bonne, Chicago, and United States Senator Povorldgo followed. A resolu tion wai adopted emphasizing tho be lief that It Ih the duty of tho several elates to correct evils of child labor in local manifestations, but Indorsing "cordially the principle of tho Hover-idge-Parsons bill for a national child labor law." Miss Adams urged tho desirability of uniform legislation against tho ovlls..of child labor, and declared that tho cen sus reports show America behind every Kuropcan country except Russia in po far as child laborand its effects tiro con corned. Oil Plpo Filled Whh Salt ' ls Angeles, Dec. 18. Cablegrams De-patch from firand Forks, X. D.,J ni." that tno fuel situation today pre sents the most critical condition that liit" existed In tho history of tho stnto. Careful Inquiry In every portion of the northern half of tho stale shows that there Is not a town In which coal could Im had It) supply immediate needs mid in doyens of places there Is not a pound p. lie bought, the dealers having been out of fuel for days and weeks. Freight Congestion In Los Angeles. I. h Angeles, Dec. 15. The Times w'l' print a story tomorrow morning to Hi. effect that lvt Angeles Is suffering friitn tho worst freight congestion ever experienced by tho transcontinental railways running into tho city. Accord in,: to the Times hundreds of cars con .ined to local merchants nro either il laycd or lost In tho congestion of coal ears in tho yards. Hallway olllclals deny that tho situation is of a scri (in- nature and ascribe tho freight BUILD MORE SHIPS. Dewey Says Present Policy of Con gress It Retrograde Move. Washington, Deo. 17. Admiral Dewey believes that tho authorization by congress of nt least threo largo bat tleships a year Is essential for keeping the American navy In a state of clll clency and that thu policy of one bat tleship a year now being urged by a tertaln element, would bo a positive letrogrado movement. lie was asked if tho policy suggested by Homo persons of only providing one battleship during an entire congress would result In an actual Increase In tho navy or In a virtual decrease in fighting strength. "Such a policy would bo retrograde In its eharaater," said the admiral. "It would not take up tho waste or sup ply -tho places of tho ships that are bound to deteriorate and which should bo placed out. of commission. We havo IMPROVHM LAW Congress Will Endeavor to Help Situation This Session. MANY DEFECTS IN PRESENT LAW -3ssmBI et' - j 11., . j. n. a. . i w t flMUM.fix.'n iimiii-ii h ffwia tl t Mftnriv , .X I I.Ik I IU.1 I, ,.. Until I I.I.I' 'V.- I..X I , II Itl.WW.X (lly t'tnirlt'iy nf Oi'o. .1 Sclim-for, tif HclinuforV Aililltlon to Cent ml I'lni'i' ill" I'lininticr iitCttiniiU'rrc, I'Drtlninl, Ori'KmiJ the commission Iiiih under way In the Northwe-t, has been prepared, It will Im sent to the picsident for his Infor mation In the event he decides to make any i commendations to congress on the subject, lie has not yet taken any step- Indicating Ids probable course. Among suggestions that have been made to the president Is that he recom mend legislation by congress einM)wer ing the government to take charge of tallioails and operate them under cer tain contingencies, especially in a case like the present. received at the olllco of the I'uloii Oil company, in I.os Angeles, say that their new pipe line across the Isthmus of l'anama was tilled with :.', 000 barrels of salt. When ready for uso tho oil will he pumped from the I'aclllu to the Atlantic through this pipe. The open ing of the line Is expected to solve largely the fuel problem of tho Isthmus. Fourteen thousand tons of coal are now used there monthly, hut It Is anticipat ed that oil will soon bo the fuel In use. EV.LS OF CHILD LABOR. Miss Adams Declares Amorlca Is In Class with Russia. rincMliimtl IW. 15 Itofnro lln llr. "i " .... HK-riliin it Hut elillil In I in r (iwivonl Inn here last night, Dr. Felix Atller, chair man of the national child labor com mittee and professor of iKilltlcul ami so cial ethics in Coliimlila university, sMko on "Tho Attitude of .Society To ward the Child as an Index of Civiliza tion. M I'rofessor Atller Hjxiko of the Inadequacy and iiiellluleiicyofstatt laws ami urged the necessity for a national law to furnish a background for effective Rttso Fuel Famine Minneapolis, Minn., Dec. 18. The fuel famine In the North west will he broken within 1! I hours as a result of the Interstate Commerce commission's Inquiry in this city. The commission was' represented by .lames S. Harlan, of Chicago, and Franklin K, Ijuie, of Sail Francisco. Mr. Ijiiio has charge of the fuel inquiry, while Mr. Harlan Is busi ly engaged In the car shortage Inquiry. It was decided that the fuel famine was the more inqorlant, many inoio re ports being at hand of the suffering from lack of fuel. c ingestion to unprecedented holiday shipments. Urges Immediate Action. Wa-hington, Dec. 15. Senator Flint, of California, talked with tho president today about the break in tho Colorado river, which has resulted in such a dis astrous Hood In Imperial valley, Cali fornia. When ho asked that projvr representations bo made lo Mexico, with a view to securing llnanclal redress for tho-e persona whoso properly had been injured, the president told him that the .Slate tlcNirtuunt hail already nddresed a nolo on tho subject to the Mexican government, but that thus far no reply had been recolved. North Dakota Has No Coal. St. Paul, Dec. 18. A special to the Fed Through Long pipe. Itakcrsllold, Oil., Dee. lfi. Progress in rescuing L. II. Hicks, the man im prisoned in thu mountain at the F.dlson coiiiixiuy's plant, is being made at the nite of 20 feet a day. At noon tho drift diggers bad still (10 feet farther to go iH'fore the miner can bo released. Milk is Mill being fed through the long pipe at three-hour intervals, under tho di rection of a physician. Ho is gaining in strength and it Ih believed will hold out until reached. three battleships which were flue ships in their day, but they were laid down in 181)1, about 1(1 years ago. They are thu Indiana, thu Oregon and the Massa chusetts. They have the defect of not possessing balance turrets, which causes a list when their guns are all trained to one side, thus exposing the hull below tho water lino and laying thu ships open to danger from thu tiro of an enemy on that Hide." AMERICANS FIRST CHANCE. Shonts Will Bar Foreigners From All Canal Contracts. Wsahlntgon, Deo. 17. Foreign con tractors uro to bo barred from competi tion for the contracts for thu Panama canal. Chairman Shouts of the canal commission today uiailo the announce ment. Many changes havo been agreed to In the form of contract, but the most important is tho limiting of proposals American llrms. The righlnvlll bo re served by tho commission to reject all bids, the commission will then either throw the competition open to foreign blddern or proceed with tho work with out contract. January 11! Ih tho date set for opening proposals. Was Passed for Benefit of Individual, Who is Unable to Work Land After Taking It. Washington, Dec. 15. Strcnuouu efforts will bo mado at tho .present ses sion of congress to secure tho repeal or modification of tho coal land law along tho lines recommended by President Itoosovclt in his message. That some thing will bo accomplished seems quite probable, but what form of law will bo substituted for that under which gi gantic frauds havo been perpetrated bus not yet been made apparent. Tho in lluenco of the administration will bo behind a bill proposing to cut off fur ther sales of government coal land, though permitting them to bo worked by individuals or companies on a royal ty plan. Thu president, like every other prac tical western man, knows that tho ex isting coal land law is not sensibly framed. That law was built on tho theory that tho individual could take up ami tlovolop a quarter section of coal land, just as the homestead law gives tho Individual a like area of agricultur al land. Hut no individual can tlovolop a tpiarter section or.a whole section of coal laud. Ho could not afford to .In stall the necessary machinery, or if ho could, his profit on a tpiarter section would not. recompensft him for tho out lay. Moreover, no railroad would think of building a spur onto an isolated tpiarter section of laud and the owner of the land could not afford to assume that expense. So tho Individual with a tpiarter section of coal land in IiIh K)ssessIon would have a white, or rath er a black, elephant on his bauds. Tho mineral wealth might be thero in abundance, but ho could not get it out and could not get lb to market. How to cure this evil is a question for congress to decide, ami somo solu tion is likely to bo forthcoming this winter. Some favor a eliango In tho law increasing the area of coal land that may lo purchased by individuals or by companies or corixmitioiiH to such size that they can profitably invest imil put tho coal on the market. Thcso men would Increaso the prico of coal land so that the government would reap a larg er benollt from tho sales. Portland Population 250.000 IN 1910 Purchase Property Previous Portland Property Properly Purchased Produces Prosperity WE HAVE HOUSES, LOTS, FARMS, ACREAGE, WATER FRONT AND BUSINESS CHANCES General Agents for Council Crest Park, and Waverly Heights and Other Additions INVESTMENTS IN ALL PARTS OF THE CITY H. W. LEMCKE COMPANY MAIN 550 Entire Second Floor Sixth and Washington Streets . iiumwtinr ryiM- jmus i ,A,