MORXIXG OREGONIAN, SATURDAY, AUGUST 15. 1914. DIAGRAM SHOWING COMPOSITION OF TWO GREAT OPPOSING FLEETS IN NORTH SEA FINAL PLANS MADE Fl Crew of Steamer Ancon Gets It Ready for Voyage Through New Highway Today. FULL CARGO TO BE TAKEN R CANAL OPENING Cnitcd States Finds Itself In Posi tion to Admit Commerce to Water way Fonr Months Ahead of Sclicduled Date. CANAL ZONE HISTORY M BRIEF. First crossing of Isthmus. Septem ber 23. 1513. First vessels to cross Iithmai, 1514. carried by Balboa and his men. Settlement of Old Pnm. 151T. First thought of canal, credited to Savadera. Spanlah engineer. In reign of Charles V. Flrat survey for canal. 1581. by Spanish. First British Interests, latter part 17th century. First decision to build. 1814. by Spain, blocked by colonies. First French Interests. 1825. First action by United States. 1835, Charles Blddle sent by President Jackson to visit the Isthmus and re port on routes. First report by Blddle 1836. favor ing Panama route. First railroad built, from 1849 to 1855. First canal building begun. 1878. by Universal Interoceanlc Canal Com pany. Incorporated In Paris by Ferdi nand de Lesseps. who had built the Suez Caaal. First failure, 1887. First digging by Americans. May 4. 1904. First onion of Atlantic and Pacific waters. October 10. lfllS. First vessel to steam through canal, crane boat Alexander 1 Valley. January 7. 1914. PAN'AMA. Aug:. 14 The Canal was the scene of activity tonight In prep aration for Its opening tomorrow. On board the steamship Ancon offi cers and men were busy setting every thing shipshape for her start early in the morning on the first voyage of a big ocean-going steamship through the new highway. The Ancon. 10.000 tons register, owned by the United States War Department and leased to the Panama Railroad for the New York-to-Colon trade, has not dis charged her cargo, as It Is planned to have her make the journey fully loaded. WASHINGTON', Aug. 14. More than four months ahead of the date set when the board of consulting engi neers in 1906 estimated that It would take until January. 1915. to complete th r.inama Canal along the lines then under way. the United States Gov ernment finds itself ready to begin business tomorrow in selling tickets of passage to ships of all nations through the new gateway. It is Just 10 years since the Gov ernment advertised its purpose to con nect the oceans. It Is nearly 400 years since a Spanish engineer first sug gested such a project. For a time the epoch which this tri umph of engineering marks will pass unnoticed, bo far as celebrations go. for it is not until next Spring that the great demonstration will be made, but from next Saturday on the Panama Ca nal will be an accomplished fact, and the world's -commerce will gradually accustom itself to this new groove. Questions to Be Answered. What It will mean to the world at large, and to particular nations, and especially to the United States, is, a question around which a great deal of controversy has waged, now to be answered by the Canal itself. After the passage of a Government steamer tomorrow any ship up to 10, 000 tons register applying for admis sion to the Pacific from the Atlantic, or vice versa, may be conducted through the 50-mile waterway upon payment of $1.25 for every ton (net) of cargo. Crew and passengers will not be taxed. At this expense some two months' sailing time on a 10.000-mlle voyage around the South American continent may be saved, or the expense of trans shipment by railroad done away with. If desired. Canal Cost 9400,000.000. The Canal has cost the United States nearly $400,000,000. That is approxi mately what De Lesseps. the French engineer, figured it would cost when he undertook the Job in 1889. but he spent that and more In making only a slight impression and ended in utter failure and financial disgrace. A year from this time it is figured the Government will have to show re ceipts of some $15,000,000 to pay the operating cost of the Canal, which will be about $4,000,000 yearly, and the in terest on its huge investment. Whether It will be able to do so this year, or for many years, is a moot question. Traffic experts have estimated that 10.000.000 tons of freight will be car ried through the Canal every year for the first few years and that later it will be nearly doubled. This, roughly, has been the experience of the Suez Canal. Last year nearly 6000 ships passed through the Suez, with a net tonnage of more than 30.000.000. The growth in tonnage in 10 years had been more than 70 per cent WOMAN ARTIST IS MISSING California Officers Seek Japanese Pupil on Suspicion. MONTEREY. Cal.. Aug. 14. (Spe cinl.) Miss Helen Smith, a well-known artist who has been living In Carmel for the last four years, has been miss ing since Wednesday noon and George KodanI, a Japanese, is sought by the county officers, who have been working on the theory that she has met with foul play. The Japanese has been Inter ested in art photography and has been in the habit of bringing his composi tions to Miss Smith for criticism, pre vious to submitting them to magazines. Immediately after her disappearance the Japanese came to Monterey. Medford ' Pears Are Stored. MEDFORD. Or.. Aug. 14. (Special.) The Bartlett pear crop is being har vested, but a large proportion is being put in cold storage pending a settle ment of the, war situation and the ex pected rise in prices. Heretofore a large proportion of the Rogue River Valley fruit has been sent tc Germany. Eng land. Denmark. France and Belgium and If commerce with those countries is permanently Impaired local fruitralsers Icai they will suffer material loss. J! J JUS3""" 1ST O FL X H izzzzJk, J 3 NEWS TO BE SENT French Government Proposes Newspaper for Soldiers. here, were attacked in the mountain passes near Glenalum. Sheriff's posses hastened to the scene and a search of Ihe surrounding country was begun. ASKED LINK WITH HOME DESIRED Minister of War Proposes Measure as One of Comfort for Men at Front and as Means of Arousing Emulation. totc .- 14 An official commu nication issued today says the French government has decided to issue a daily news bulletin for distribution among .i. tj. , i,mn This would be com- nit: i i-1:' i- . . - posed of reports of field operations and of important events in France, the ob ject being to create a strung tween the French soldiers in the field and their relatives. Adolphe Messimy. rrencn Minister ui War. writes: "Our armies cover a front of more than 250 miles from the North Sea to Switzerland. Each soldier Is given over to the impressions of the moment and of the place where he is. and is without news of the others and with out news of the war. "I believe it to be necessary to send to all those fighting under these con ditions the comfort of a daily news paper I would have the soldiers con stantly measure the importance of their individual effort in the national task and by this thought create among them a generous emulation. "I wish the soldiers to learn with a.. ...,. ih nation surrounds the . v, wivos and the children consecrate themselves to tneir great task a task glorious tuc sacrifices are the price of the inde pendence of our country and of the grandeur of France in the triumph of right and liberty." Premier Vivian! approved of the suggestion. BASE LINE CASE IN COURT Judge McGinn Scores County Com mission on Paving Action. Fifty-one witnesses in Circuit Judge McGinn's court yesterday testified that they had remonstrated against the hard-surfacing of the Base Line road, some because of the assessments against their properties and others be cause of their belief that the contract to the Warren Construction Company was let through fraud. Judge McGinn upheld the former. "Speaking as a citizen and not as a Judge, I think the County Commission should have gone into this matter a little more thoroughly," said Judge McGinn, "but as a Circuit Judge I have no right to settle this dispute, as it is of a political nature and not of a Judi- .(, the wives and tne cnuareii ciai one., i win let nus t Thev have left behind them while they ished before I will decide, but I am llie no... i,. (k.(, rmt ..nu. vk.i nw that T helie.ve the VICTORY REPORT SENT GERMAN AMBASSADOR AT WASH INGTON ADVISES CONSULS. Russians Have Evacuated Poland and North German Army Is Planning; for Battle, Is Word Sent. SAN FRANCISCO. Aug. 14. The Ger man Consul here has received'the fol lowing telegram from the German Am bassador at Washington: "Poland has been evacuated by the Russian troops, which are now massing their, forces farther back. The Ger man north army, after having taken possession of the greater part of Liege, advanced its outposts as far as Tirle mont and Namur, where a decisive bat tle is expected. It is only a question of short time before the forts will fall. The outer forts of Longwy are silenced. ...r.i c V. armv enrni st Relfort. which pressed our advanced guards, was thrown oaca to tne vasch -..... with heavy losses by the Fourteenth Baden Corps, whose left wing, assisted by the Fourteenth Austrian Tyrol Corps, has taken up the offensive." DEL NORTE TOWN BURNS Requa. at Mouth of Klamath River, Is Willed Out. CRESCENT CITY, Cal.. Aug. 14. The entire town of Requa, Del Norte Coun ty, at th mouth of the Klamath River, was destroyed today by fire. The village general store, the Requa Hotel, two saloons and the town public hall, were among the buildings de stroyed. Requa is a small wooden town, and the loss will not be great, though the discomfort and suffering will be severe for several days. , TWO SLAIN FOR $15,000 Robbers Attack Virginia Mine Guards Carrying Payroll Cash. ROANOKE. Va., Aug. 14. Two guards bearing $15,000 to pay miners at Glenalum. W. Va., were shot to death and robbed near there today by a band of highwaymen. The guards. Joseph Splller and D. C. Amlck, according to reports reaching GUNS TO ANNOUNCE CANAL OPENING. Twenty-one guns from the cruiser Boston firing a salute will announce to citizens of Portland this morning the exact moment of the opening of the Panama Canal to commerce, and immediately thereafter there will be a pandemonium of bells and whistles In the city In celebration of the event. The celebration will begin at about 11 o'clock. Police and fire bands will play at Fifth and Oak streets and at noon a luncheon will be held under the auspices of the Chamber of Com merce at the Commercial Club. A. H. Averlll. president of the Chamber, will preside and representatives of e'ery commercial organization in the city will be present. Speakers will be J. X. Teal and H. B. Miller. The entire celebration is under the aus pices of the Chamber. County matter. Commission should settle this LEBANON MAYOR STRICKEN Executive Dies Few Hours After At tack of Heart Disease. LEBANON. Or.. Aug. 14. (Special.) A. E. Zeising, Mayor of Lebanon, died last night of heart disease. He was stricken while at his place of business in the early afternoon and was taken to his home and at 5 o'clock had a second attack, from which he did not rally. He died at 11 o'clock. He was 54 years old. Street Railway Increases Wages. BALTIMORE, Aug. 14. Upward of 3000 employes of the Baltimore street railway system today received an ad vance ID Wilgca. .mo im, D..v,. ... , creases the company's payroll $200,000 against German. i .. n rt I tu Enrn AlMfLlwl a year and gives an average nitreoc ua 25 cents a day to the conductors and motormen. I0NLY CREDIT Morgans Explain French Loan Would Not Take Out Gold. PRODUCTS TO BE BOUGHT Proceeds Intended, Rankers Declare, for Use In Making Purchases in America Administration Will Be Obeyed. NEW YORK, Aug. 14. J. P. Morgan & Co. announced today that they had not been requested by the French gov ernment to negotiate a loan here, but had been approached on the subject by private interests, and that they would not care to- entertain the matter should there be the slightest doubt on the part of the State Department of the propriety of negotiating such a loan. "We have not been asked by the French government to make a loan." reads the announcement, "but we have been approached by private interests to know whether we would entertain negotiating a loan for the French gov ernment in case the government should desire such a loan. It was stated to us that if the loan should be made it would be for the purpose of creating a credit in the United States, the pro ceeds of which would be used to buy American products for the French peo ple, and that no part of the credit would be used for gold exports. "Immediately on receipt of this m nuirv we communicated the fact to the State Department. "We advised tne state uepai tine.,.. i....ntiv nf anv leiral right to LLIttL J. - lend to belligerents we would not care to consider the subject u tne jummu istration should have the slightest doubt in the matter. We have not as yet been advised of the attitude of the department." THRILLING ESCAPE TOLD CANADIAN STATESMAN HAS HARD TIME LEAVING AUSTRIA. Hugh Sutherland, Who Has Friends in Portland, Sees Servians Shot for Refusing to Carry Arms. Hugh Sutherland, member of the Dominion Parliament from the prov ince of Manitoba, had a thrilling es cape from Austria on the eve of the declaration of war by Great Britain Mr. Sutherland is a close mend oi Rev and Mrs. Oswald W. Taylor and Mr. and Mrs. O. M. Clark, of Portland. 1 T IS to be regretted that such an ! AMAihna mroni oc Tim rirspnina O." SB the Panama Canal should occur Hip At- lantic are engaged in settling Na tional disputes. The opening of the canal and the European difficulty are of immense Historical impor tancepost yourself now through the me dium of our geographical and historical vol umes books that in time to come will pos sess an unusual value. Special War Maps From 15c Up G ILL'S The J. K. Gill Co. Third at Alder St. A dispatch from London, under date of August 3, says: "Hugh Sutherland, of Winnipeg, ex ecutive agent o the Canadian Northern Railway, passed three startling days In returning from Vienna immediately the war was declared. He was the only Canadian in that country, and de layed leaving owing to business af fairs. "He walked two miles to the German frontier and another two before he could board a train for Belgium. It was impossible to use paper money, so a party of Englishmen clubbed to gether to get breakfast, the last meal served. "When boarding the train near the frontier a German officer attempted to haul Mr. Sutherland off. He hit him in the face and felled him. "Every seat wa taken in the train from Vienna. Hundreds struggled for standing rbom, and the usual palatial cars of the Oriental express were taken off at the first stop. "Cattle trucks were used to do the three days' trip. Near the border, while the train was standing at the station, he saw four Servians shot by Austrian officers for refusing to join the Aus trian ranks. Every few hours all the passengers were commanded to leave the cars, which were taken for troops' He changed cars ten times in one night "At Cologne the station was deserted and Mr. Sutherland carried his own baggage. He arrived at Brussels at 6 o'clock on Sunday morning. Fourteen hundred British refugees were on the boat from Ostend to Dover. Mr. Suth erland Is in good health. "He declares he found Austria apa thetic, but Germany terribly terribly bellicose." Norfolk Suits at Reduced Prices Attractive patterns in thoronphly nod wool tweeds, chev iots and fancies at decided reductions from normal prices. Boys' $ 5.00 Boys' $ 6.50 Boys' $ 7.50 Boys' $ 8.50 Boys' $10.00 Every Child's Wash Suit Hnlf-Priee Bathinp; Suits for Boys Reduced Boys' Straw Hats Half Price and Less Second Floor. BEN SELLING .Morrison Street at Fourth SHIPPING BILL ON SNAG vigorous orrosurioN IN SKNATE IGNORES PARTY LINES. itgned today, KOtldtM Mercury 9 9 at La Grande. LA GRANDE, Or.. Aug. 14. (Spe cial.) For the second time this Sum mer the thermometer registered 99 here this afternoon, a neat record seldom experienced In this valley. The total number of teachers In Illinois public schools in It I:: was :;o. Galllnger Declares Admlslon to Coastal Trade Means More to Brltnln Than War Victory. WASHINGTON, Aug. 14. Serious op Ymsition to the provision of the con ference report on tne emergency ship ping bill which would open the coast wise trade to foreign-built ships ad mitted to American register, was voiced in the Senate today by both Democratic and Republican Senators. Senator Gallinger declared foreign In terests had spent large sums of money, "directly and by way of advertising." to break down the coastwise laws. He declared the provision would bo a greater aid to Great Britain than a great victory on a battlefield. After several hours of debate, devoted chielly to arraignment of this propoaal, the opposition Senators agreed to a vote Monday. Paraguayan Treaty Signed. WASHINGTON. Aug. 14. A peace commission treaty between the United States an,l Paraguay wa ... . L . S 4 . , t, nnvpiil by Secretary Bryan. Eighteen have b ratified by tne enaie. LIMIT IS GIVEN KIDNAPER Vendor of Hand Scnl to Pi IMM for From to SO Ycnr. NEW YORK. Aug. 14. The maximum sentence of from 25 to 50 years In Sing Sing was imposed today on 1's.s quale Mllone, leader of the bnnd thnt kidnaped 8-year-old Frank Longn from his home on the East Side and held him captive for 49 days. Francesco Malacuso. another memher of the band, was sentenced to from 13 to 25 yenrs In Sing Sing, while a third member, Vlnceno Acena. was sen tenced to from 20 to .10 years. SI more alleged members of the bund are in the Tombs awaiting trial. Tli roe Killed at Km ANNA. 111.. Aua-. 14. Three men wore killed at Dongola. III., today, when the wall of a burning building lell. i n Ore destroyed halt the business section . m .u.. ....... i. ii.n hiillillnirv tiurned were the postofflce, the First Nntlonal Bank, tno ixi.ironows iisii. Hve stores and a restaurant. The losi is estimated at S200.00(K THE TAXICAB Announces That During the Months of August, September and October They Will Offer the Lowest Taxicab Rates in Portland Combining Reliable Service, Comfort, Safety, Courteous Treatment 50 Cents First Mile 10 Cents Each Additional One-Third Mile Hourly Rates, Two Dollars Touring Cars, Limousines, Landaulets, $3. 50 per Hr. Meter Is Your ProtectionPay What Tested Meter Registers All Rates Cover One or Four Passengers in Taxicabs or One or Seven Passengers in Touring Cars, Limousines or Landaulets Main 98 B A 123 1 Special Rates to All Outside Points Upon Request, Lower Than the Lowest jS 1 1 1 .2