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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (July 24, 1908)
THE OREGON DAILY JOURNAL, PORTLAND, FRIDAY EVENING, JULY 24, ' 1908. .j. i a i BE BUILT Time Required to Finish . Great Work Calculated About Seven Years May Be Required to Finish the Ditch and Locks. OREGON ELK DELEGATES AT TEXAS CONVENTION AS THEY APPEARED TO CARTOONIST BLACKMAN i By CriKDKlUC 3. HASKIV. (Copyright. ISOS. by Fredorl J Haskln. Washington, D. C, July 2 4. When the last stroke of work n the big (lam at this place hnH lpn .. struck, 1'ncle Sam will bo ready to present his gigantic ditch to an ap- plaudlng world. That time will ho . K.me years In the future, as there is much yet to be done. Twenty mil s lion cubic yards of material will have .to be put Into It, the biggest set of locks In the world, requiring 1,300,-(- 006 cubic yards of concrete ma sonry, will have to be constructed, and 14 pairs of gates will have to be designed and built. But when all the experiments have been com pleted and the work of constructing , the dam begins In earnest, it will go forward with a rush. With the three main walls of the locks aggregating eome 9,000 linear feet, it will be possible to work 20 concrete mixing plants at once. In a recent piece of . construction work In the states a single mixing plant maintained for a considerable time an average of 4 00 cublo yards of concrete put in place ' per day, ana a maximum oi sou cublo feet was reached. Assuming that on the ions only 10 .plants work constantly, with an output of ISO cublo yards each per day, they oould finish the locks In 620 working days, or two and a quarter years. At - this rat they would be using about 4,000 tons, or about 125 carloads of ma- - terlal a day, whloh Is less than a fif teenth Of the weight of material taken from Culebra cut every day. Add to this time the four years the board of consulting engineers estimated It would take to make the excavations for the look sites, and the one year they figured It . would take to build the lock gates, and even if the three operations could not be carried forward at the same time It would be only a lltUe moro than seven years from the time the work .begaA until it shall have been oom ,. pleted. But the excavations are pro ceed lag so much more rapidly that the work will probably be done several ..years earlier tnan the board of engi neers expected. It is therefore pretty safe to assume that some time not long after the end of the year 1812 that eventful dny will , dawn when the canal will be opened to traffic. It is easy to imagine that it will be a irreflt riav. No nation Is no remote from the center of civilization I Jul U Ottaorl. -crr-t B'rtT rv. m NOT MOO" ' fMcueu J m.t vmW r- "Z. , .Sij, ' ' sin ST, .! i I ' OM'' " &fC -4 luitTATTy. OF - QJJ Bmcbr co,oaeM a U,yoC fCaT.VV - u- V Wm 4f yM W M r 1 FIND TRACES OF FUGITIVES Graft Prosecution Officers Close on Trail of Al leged Dynamiters. OP 5rlW.OReM C4m. M,ool)v ots' (UulUd I'reM LeiMd Wire.) Marysville, (Tal.. July H.-Officers returning from a camp near here today announced that they had found new traces of both Peter Clnudlanes and Felix Padeauvarls, who are wanted In San Francisco In connection with the Gallagher dynamiting casus. The detectives working on the ease are convinced that both fugitives are still within five miles of this city and they are tracing half a doren clues in the hope of apprehending them. At the cami) where the officers spent most of the night, they say they learnou positively that Peter Claurtlanes had neen there recently and received as surance -4ht -I'adeauvaris had joined him. . . Tkv mnv the fmrltlves were informed of the state of affairs in Ban Francisco and of the confession of John Clau- dlanes by friends who hurriedly sent word to the camp as soon as me iniui matlon became public. inriUnir in the storv at the camp. the men Immediately struck out to Join Greeks In more seauestered Places in , .nH the Ornvllle rearlons. There are a number of these camps in whloh Greeks spend the summer months. Peter I laudlanea is Known iu imvc no, ti, trrnrih nf Julv In Chlco when John, his brother, was vainly searching , for him. ., ...... 1 The detectives realise inai iney ui h,M cane on their hands, as the Greeks here and in all the camps are afraid to give much information and undoubtedly have given aid to the fugitives, who probably are receiving regular reports of the movements of the officers. KILLER LEAVES FIBBER AS CLUE San Francisco Police Look ing for Murderer in Xeed of a Surgeon. WHAT'S THE MATTER WITH COOS BAY R. R ? E. H. Ifarriinan Will Be Asked Regarding Delayed Project by Delegation. Marahfleld, Or., July 14. For the pur pose of determining Just where B. H. Harrlman stands regarding the long d and Jorth layed railroad to Coos Bay, a delegation or prominent Aiars Bend men will make nates summer horr Falls, In a few days. rip to the mag near Klainat 1 lie action was decided on at a meet ing of the Marahfleld chamber of com merce, at which all the commercial bod ies on Coos Hay were represented. Fol lowing are the men who will wait upon Oregnn's railroad king: Mayor I J. Simpson of North Bend, C. A. Smith of the C. A. Smith Lumber A Manufacturing oompany, Mavor E. E. Btraw of Marahfleld and C. J. Mills, the Coos Bay representative of the Southern Pacific Interests. EXPRESS PAPER PESTERS BANK Bankers Start Movement to Put Companies Under Banking Laws. , (United Press Lsued Wtft.) Duluth. Minn., July 14. Demanding that express companies submit to the regulations of banks if they continue M handle money orders, members of the Minnesota Hankers' association today started a crusade which they hope will become popular throughout the United BtAtcs. The bankers allege that the express companies as common carriers have no tight to do a banking business uiiIchn they submit to examinations by tho state and federal banking departments. ExnreHS money orders sent to the banks to pe cashed cause a great deal of trou btav and annoyance and this Is believed to be the cause of the attack. At the Instance Of, and under the patronage of the United Btates government Edward R. Squibb established his Brooklyn laboratories In the year 1858. The governments of the United States, England, Oerrnany, France and Kussla are today his best customers, and that, too, only bcauss of the unapproachable ex cellence of the Squibb Product. that it will not feel the benefits canal will afford. It Is probable that no nation will consider Itself too far removed from the scene to have repre sentatives of its navy. Its merchant marine and its people there to take Fart in the great celebration. Long be ore the last shovelful of dirt has been disposed of the United States probably will send out Invitations to the nations of the earth to help celebrate the suc cessful termination of the immense task of breaking down th barrier which :v since the beginning of time has sep arated two oceans. Warships, steam ships. Bailing vessels every kind and condition of craft will brave the dan gers of the deep to help make niemor- able the event Hard to Foretell. No one is prophet enough to foretell how much the completed canal will mean to the world's commerce. W; know that it will bring every port of ! Europe nearly 7,000 miles nearer to the western part of the United Suites, Can ada and Mexico. e realize that It will bring our own Atlantic seaboard 8.000 . miles closer by water to our Pacific coast than it now is and that Canada will Snjoy a corresponding benefit. We recall that it took the Oregon 65 days - to sail around Cape Horn when, had ths canal been built, she could have made the trip in 19 days. We r told that a million tons of merchandise an? annually landed on the isthmus by th 1,000 steamers which visit Its ports m that time. We recognize that the vent trade which now noes through thc StrattS of Magellan and around the Horn will pass throuph the Panama canal. But we cannot more than roughly predict the great diversion of trade which will take place or the changes on the map of the world which Will result. The capture of Constantinople by the Turks resulted In the discovery of America. It cut off the great n.ate to India and the orient and pio;.p.-,i ti e rich trade between the west and the . east. Thus It was that Columbus whs led to sail west In search of a passage which the Turks could not cut off. it . started e Oama on his 'rip tiroi:nd th Caps of Good Hope, also l; B-r-h of another' passageway to ln1fa nml the east. The Panama ennui will not lca.ii io the discovery of another hemisphere, but as -the closing of a 1 i : . r- of travl eld leaa to tne oiscovrrv then known world, were deserted and all but abandoned. Their commercial supremacy passed ty forever. And while they were losing their grip on the maritime situation other cities be gan to rise and figure as the centers of the world's rommerce. So will It be with the ononlne of the Panama canal With a deep waterway from the great lakes to the gulf the whole of the vast Mississippi basin will find an outlet direct to the markets of the world Grain rates from Chicago. St. Louis Kansas City. New Orleans and Galveston to Pacific points will be cheaper than a railroad could ever give. l ne great central plains of Canada, with their vast output, and still vaster possibili ties, of. grain, will find it cheaper to reach the oriental markets by way of the ' 'he Mississippi river and the fanama canal, ah or this will give the great Mississippi valley an important posi tion in the commercial affalrB 'of the nation even beyond that she already noias Sir Walter Raleigh once exclaimed that the nation which controlled the Isthmus of Darlitn would rule the world The ruirillment or the prophecy seems near. A United States waterway means a deep United States Interest in the af fairs of the Pnrrlhean, and the day may yet come when the dream or Jefferson shall be realized a confederated West Indies under an American protectorate, Porto Rico Is already ours. Cuba is under our protection. Jamaica Is prov ing no longer an important asset to England, and the growing desire of the commercial Interests of the Island for annexation tn the United States may yet be gratified by friendly treaty. San liomingo and Hayti are gradually drift ing to the point where each will require a guardian and the United States will not let any other nation assume such a role. Mexloo's Ambition. Even In Mexico the wish for annexa tion Is said to be strong. President Diaz himself being reliably reported as hav ing said that within 50 years Mexico, with a half billion dollars of American money invested In her enterprises, will be seeking a political union with the I'nlted States. Stranger things have happened to the map of the world than that Canada, whose Interests, alms and aspirations are one with our own, should ultimately become a part of us. and so we may yet literally fulfill a predic tion made several hundred years ago by t he far-seeing Raleigh. It Is probable that in the decade or two following the completion of the canal the tolls collected from It will not pay for Its upkeep and t lie Interest on the investment. If It costs J3i)0,000,000, ttie Interest on that amount at only 3 per cent would be $.0on.0inj a yar. Add to that Jlinrt.nou for upkf-ep, and at the rate of toll charged bv the Suez canal $1.70 per ton -It would take 5.000,000 tons of cargo a year to yield enough toil to make the enterprise break even com mercially Hut wiille may not expect much In the awy or additions to a sink ing fund on the cost for a good while, the experience of many canals Is that It will ultimately pay ror useii commer op vom- From the Fort Worth (Tex.) Star. SO by the opening of a t,.-w llr. ,.f tn,' the canal will lead to the discovery DOW worms oi commerc-. Commercial Bupremacy. ThS action of the Tutks In cjtt!::g r f f a route to the east ended the world su premacy Of Genoa, i f Kionn e and i f Venice. Their harbors, ome t-enoni: with Shipping from the erMs of the .j (nally, nr.t to count the Immense strat f i ecic advantage It will give the United States. Tho tonnage of the Suez canal Increased from 436.609 tons In 1 B 7 0 to S 44S.3S3 In 19K. and to 13.401.83S In 1 904. The maximum yearly dividend permitted Is li per cent, and there has to be a constant lowering of tolls to keep them down to that point. Tho total tonnage of the Kiel canal has Increased from 1.-500,000 In 1 896 to 4,890.000 In 1904. Our own "Sno" canal shows remarkable Increases in traffic, perhaps beyond anything Its promoters ever dreamed of Its total tonnage to dav is about 2o,00n.no0 tons as compared with 8,i")00,000 tons in 1890. It is ex pected that ultimately the Panama canal will be as much ahead of the "Soo" canal as the "Soo" Is ahead of the Suez today. Perhaps the most immediate benefit the American people will derive from the canal will be the opening up of new trade with South America. Under the stimulus of this great waterway Amer ican enterprise will doubtless enjoy a new awakening, and will pu-h itself into the opportunities which await it In" that land of promise beyond the equator. To day South America buys only one dol lar's worth of stuff from the United States where she buys seven from Eu rope. On the other hand we buy more of her exports than all the rest nf the world put together. Rvery student of economy concedes that there Is nothing to prevent our getting as much of her import business as we get of her ex port business except indifference to the opportunity. The Panama can-il may b expected to change this, and If It does with all its tremendous cost It would still In the long run be a pretty cheap missionary. The canal Is a work which will benefit humanity as long as the world shall stand, and which will hasten the day when the federation of the world and the parliament of man will be an accomplished fact. SULTAN YIELDS 11 P Issues Imperial Edict Call ing Upon People to Elect t Parliament. (Hnlted Pres Leated Wire.) Constantinople. July 24. The sultan today Issued an Imperial proclamation calling upon the people to elect a par liament soon. It is believed this is i forerunner of the formation of a con stltutlon, which the sultan recently an nounced he would grant the people. Vienna, July 24. --Word was received here that the entire Turkish garrison of Uskub vilayet, in Kussovo. mutinied today. The dispatches state that over 500 solders are Involved in the mutiny which Includes nearly all the civilian nonulatlon. Leaders of the "Young Turkey" idea are said to be at the head of the latest revolt In the Balkan region. A force of loyalists is marching against the town and a battle is ex pec ted. RAILWAY f Ell III POLITICS Nebraska Association of Em ployes to Decide Be tween the Parties. AH canvas shoes st cut prices POe a pair for women's $1.25 white canvas oxfords; 79c a pair for boys' $1 50 can vas ehoes; 95c a pair for men's $1 50 and $1 75 canvas shoes. Sample Shoe Store Co.. 208 Morrison, also corner First and Madison. (ftx-tal Plipatch to The Journal.) Omaha. July 21. Leaders of both po litical parties are manifesting a lively interest In the meeting called for this city tomorrow of the Nebraska State Railway Employes' Protective associa tion. The association has been In ex istence six months and is aald to have a membership of 18,000. It now pro poses to enter politics as an organiza tion and It Is understood that the meet ing called for tomorrow is to discusa what course the organisation shall pur sue In regard to the presidential con test. Whether the support of the asso ciation will be thrown to Judge Taft or to Mr. Bryan is a question to which the leaders so far have declined to re turn a definite answer. (United Pre Leased Wire.) South 6an Francisco. July 24. Sher iff Robert Chatam of San Mateo coun- Is today scouring this section of the country with posses looking for an unknown Greek, of whom he had an ac curate description, and who is accused of having murdered Stoyan Steff, a witness in a murder case here yester day, because he was the only witness that could convict the defendant. Steff was stabbed 11 times in ine face bv bis unknown assailant and seven times through the body. While the fight was in progress, Steff caugh' the right forefinger of the murderer in his mouth and bit It off. The sheriff hopes to capture the murderer through the clew thus furnished. The murdered man is tne tnira man of a former bakery firm of five, jnani- bers here to be killed within tnree months. The fourth partner, Toder Kinroff is In tail awaiting trial on the charge of having killed the other two men. Steff was the only witness to the quarrel that ended in the death of the two. Steff was murdered In the basement of the Western Meat company's build- , Ing, where he was employed as watch- man. The murderer fled at the ap proach of workmen, who removed the 1 wounded man to a local hospital. Ho lived eight hours. In his dying state- j ment, he declared that he had not rec- ognlzed his assailant in the dark. j yPg Ours is a Squibb Drug Store, and Jfrtm'r if 'lie people generally only under- 9 Si ) stod. as the doctor does, the im- fj & BjrfQU mense superiority of Squibb's med- icines, as against all other manu facturers, we would simply be unable to handle our trade. A pre i scription filled with Squibb's med-rftZvy- icines means health to the sick and T3r satisfaction to the physician. Ask your doctor. Some One Week Specials FOR THIS WEEK ONLY A 1-POUND CAKE OF PARAFFINE Of A H-PINT BOTTLE SPIRITS OF CAMPHOR 25 A 50c BOX OF SEIDLITZ POWDERS 19 TWO 25c CANS OF MENNEN'S TALCUM POWDER 25f - A 25c CAKE COLGATE'S CASHMERE BOUQUET SOAP..10 A 50c BOTTLE WYETH'S PHOSPHATE OF SODA 2f) The Perkins Hotel Pharmacy THE SQUIBB DRUG STORE j Phone A1011, Main 8624 FREE DELIVERY ; NEWPORT! YAQU1NA BAY EIGHT WEST T0IXT j 3IEX ARE DISCHARGED (Special Dispatch to The Journal.) West, Point, N. Y., July 24. Hazing received another solar plexis yesterday when eight cadets In the United States military academy were summarily dis missed as the result or the practice The cidets discharged are: Will Ru.el, appointed at Q. Wever of Illinois first-class, and Byron Q Jones New York; George W. t'hase. NewSorl; Wil liam M. Prude, Alabama; Isaac Spauld lng. Oklahoma; William Moltke, Vir ginia, and James A. Gillespie of Penn sylvania, members of the third class. Last night it was learned that hazing at the academy has been going on dur ing the past three months. .Never, it can be said, was evidence of hazing so carefully and so skillfully concealed. Kven the cadet officers were kept out of tho secret, while as for the plebes, as the fourth classmen are called, all took the hazing uncomplainingly. POOR INJUN WILL Bti LANDLESS SOON Oregon's flatchless Beach Resort The Place to Go for Perfect Rest and Every Conceiv- able Form of Healthful and Delightful Recreation ITS FACILITIES ARE COMPLETE Best of food, and an t abundance of it. Fresh water from springs. All modern ne- j 2 cessities, such as telegraph, telephone, markets freshly pro- vided every day. Fuel in abundance. Cottages partly fur- nished or unfurnished to be had cheaply. Strict . municipal J sanitary regulations. J : Summer Excursion Rates I X From All Points in the Northwest arree Tnf 'ifUw ' I NEWPORT is reached by way of the Southern Pacific f 2 . members of "the 1 Albany or Corvallis, thence Corvallis & Eastern Railroad, f I ram service daily, and the trip a pleasure throughout. Leave f Portland 8:15 a. m. 1 . RATES FROM PORTLAND Season tickets, on sale daily $6.00 2 Saturday-to-Monday tickets $3.00 Correspondingly low rates from all other points. Call at the City Ticket Office of the Southern Pacific, Third and Wash- i ington streets, in Portland, or at any Southern Pacific agency J elsewhere, for complete information. " (Special Dl(patch to The JonnMl.t Chickasha, Okla., July 24. Decora tions of flags and bunting are being; put up In Entlclpatlon of the celebration tomorrow In honor of the removal of he restrictions on the Indian land. While the Indians are the onlv ones affected by the law the celebration will be participated In by the Farmers' union nd bv the citizens Renerallv. Ths chief benefit of the new law Is that it will enable the Indians to transfer their nherltances without the interference of the Washington authorities. The cele bration will Include a parade and a pro grain of outdoor festivities. WM. McMURRAY General Passenger Agent, Southern Pacific Co., Portland, Or. Dress lawns and organdies. J5c val ues, 6c yard. See Bannon's ad. page 2. Clean-Up Clothing Sale $" Takes your choice oi regular $25.00 and $20.00 Suits, this sea III son's newest makes and colors. Your size is here in some kind JL J Come and look. $3.35 SEE THE BIG WINDOW DISPLAYS Takes your choice of regular $6 and $5 Trousers, including the Celebrated Dutchess Guaranteed, for which we are the Port land agents. Lion Clothing Co. 166-170 THIRD STREET, NEAR MORRISON HELP YOUR FAVORITE Many worthy boys and girls and young men and young women are now competing in The Journal's Third Annual Contest to win a scholarship. Perhaps you know some of these ambitions students and would like to lend a helping hand. You can assist them by your subscriptions to The Oregon Journal by filling in the attached coupon and instructing The Jorunal to credit your favorite with the number of votes you,r subscription entitles you to cast for him or her Cash, of course, must accornpany the order in order to have the votes credited: Tttt 0REQ0N JOURNAL, PORTLAND' OREGON? I desire to aid to win a scholarship by subscribing to the .Journal for the period of months beginning 1908. Please credit $ to my account and deliver the paper to the following address: Indicate here whether new or old subscription. No. of rotes due (Signed) Morrison Electric Company ELECTRICAL CONTRACTORS Fixtures, Wiring, Supplies 29 1 EAST MORRISON . STREET. ,;. i FHONES: EAST 312S. B1S:5