River and Harbor Bill. Hearings on H.R. 89141924 - 139 pages |
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Page 37
... HAWLEY . The Rogue River ? Mr. NEWTON . Yes . Mr. HAWLEY . It is over a hundred miles south of the Siuslaw . Mr. NEWTON . How do these people around Medford get out ? Mr. HAWLEY . Their outlet is at Crescent City . There is a rail- road ...
... HAWLEY . The Rogue River ? Mr. NEWTON . Yes . Mr. HAWLEY . It is over a hundred miles south of the Siuslaw . Mr. NEWTON . How do these people around Medford get out ? Mr. HAWLEY . Their outlet is at Crescent City . There is a rail- road ...
Page 38
... HAWLEY . Yes , sir . The CHAIRMAN . And what they mean by the revested lands is lands that were granted to the railroads and forfeited by them on account of failure to construct ? Mr. HAWLEY . No ; not on account of failure to construct ...
... HAWLEY . Yes , sir . The CHAIRMAN . And what they mean by the revested lands is lands that were granted to the railroads and forfeited by them on account of failure to construct ? Mr. HAWLEY . No ; not on account of failure to construct ...
Page 39
... HAWLEY . About 1,000 tons - between 900 and 1,000 tons of lumber as it comes from the mill without being kiln dried . Mr. McDUFFIE . What sort of timber is that ? Mr. HAWLEY . It is fir and some spruce . I think they are now cutting ...
... HAWLEY . About 1,000 tons - between 900 and 1,000 tons of lumber as it comes from the mill without being kiln dried . Mr. McDUFFIE . What sort of timber is that ? Mr. HAWLEY . It is fir and some spruce . I think they are now cutting ...
Page 40
... HAWLEY . Umpqua is about 25 miles . Mr. LINEBERGER . But there is a mountain range there ? Mr. HAWLEY . Yes ; I think it is about 30 miles . Mr. LINEBERGER . Have you any railroads ? Mr. HAWLEY . From Eugene , through Acme , then across ...
... HAWLEY . Umpqua is about 25 miles . Mr. LINEBERGER . But there is a mountain range there ? Mr. HAWLEY . Yes ; I think it is about 30 miles . Mr. LINEBERGER . Have you any railroads ? Mr. HAWLEY . From Eugene , through Acme , then across ...
Page 41
... HAWLEY . Yes . The CHAIRMAN . That is your situation , is it ? Mr. HAWLEY . Yes . The CHAIRMAN . That you will have vessels available for the deeper channel and not for the present channel ? Mr. HAWLEY . That is what they say . Mr ...
... HAWLEY . Yes . The CHAIRMAN . That is your situation , is it ? Mr. HAWLEY . Yes . The CHAIRMAN . That you will have vessels available for the deeper channel and not for the present channel ? Mr. HAWLEY . That is what they say . Mr ...
Common terms and phrases
40 feet adopted Alaska amount barges Board of Engineers boats breakwater bridge canal cars cent CHAIRMAN channel Chief of Engineers coast commerce committee Congress considerable construction Creek Delaware River depth district engineer Doctor KINDRED dredging estimated cost expenditure expense feet deep feet wide ferry Flushing Bay Fort Madison Frankfort freight GASQUE Government Gravesend Bay HAWLEY HULL improvement increase indicating on map interests island Jamaica Bay Lake land LINEBERGER lumber LYON maintenance MANSFIELD McDUFFIE MCLAUGHLIN mean low water Miami Beach miles Muskegon navigation Navy NEWTON ocean PEAVEY Philadelphia pier Ponce port present question railroads recommendation Rivers and Harbors Salem River San Diego SEARS ship shoal side Siuslaw River Sodus Bay stream SUTHERLAND terminal tide timber tion tonnage tons traffic Trenton United vessels waterway Wilson Dam Wrangell Narrows York
Popular passages
Page 18 - ... first session, provides for an entrance jetty and a channel 12 feet deep, 250 feet wide, from that depth in the ocean, through the inlet to the Loop Causeway Bridge over Long Creek, provided that local interests contribute 50 per cent of the first cost ($1,210,000) and also provide a channel 12 feet deep at mean low water and generally 200 feet wide from the Loop Causeway Bridge over Long Creek to the head of navigation in Freeport Creek at Mill Road in Freeport.
Page 33 - STATEMENT OF HON. PHILIP D. SWING, A REPRESENTATIVE IN CONGRESS FROM THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA. Mr. SWING. The record of the harbor master, which has been filed by Mr.
Page 95 - Point to the town wharves, 4,000 feet long, 60 feet wide, and 4 feet deep at mean low water, at an estimated cost of $14,300.
Page 94 - The CHAIRMAN. The committee will now take a recess until 2 o'clock this afternoon. (Thereupon, at 12.30 o'clock pm, the committee took a recess until 2 o'clock this afternoon.) AFTER RECESS.
Page 94 - The tidal range between mean lower low water and mean higher high water is 6.9 feet at the mouth of the creek and S feet at Washington Street bridge.
Page 117 - Would it not be possible to give an authorization for $500,000, with the recommendation that $250.000 be appropriated in the first appropriation < The CHAIRMAN*. Yes. Mr. McDuFFiE. That would be all right. APPROVAL OF PERMITS FOR WATER-POWER DEVELOPMENT Mr. McDuFFiE. Here is one more. Mr. Chairman, that I invite your attention to [reading] : That on and after the passage of this act. the .Secretary of War and the Chief of Engineers shall not approve any preliminary permit or any license for the development...
Page 116 - That the Secretary of War is hereby authorized and directed to cause to be made a suitable bronze tablet, containing on it the address delivered by Abraham Lincoln, President of the United States, at Gettysburg on the nineteenth day of November, eighteen hundred and sixty-three, on the occasion of the dedication of the national cemetery at that...
Page 116 - Army, such investigations as may be necessary for the preparation of a general plan for the most effective navlgutlon improvement in combination with the most efficient development of the potential water power on those navigable streams of the United States and their tributaries where such power development appears feasible and practicable...
Page 18 - ... with $50,000 annually for maintenance: Provided, That local interests give satisfactory assurance to the Secretary of War that they will provide public terminals at Trenton having not more than 3,000 linear feet of berthing space, with adequate covered storage and mechanical equipment, capable of handling about 500,000 tons annually; will provide satisfactory rail and highway connections therewith, and will furnish without cost to the United States suitable areas, bulkheaded, if necessary, for...
Page 127 - Harbor project is maintained to a width of 200 feet and a depth of 20 feet at mean low water.